Category: News

  • India’s Innovation Front Lines 2009 (Part 4): Billionaire Democracy

    Vinit Nijhawan wrote:

    Delhi, December 29, 2009—The ruling Congress Party turned 125 years old today to muted fanfare. Founded in 1885, it became the main opposition to British rule, eventually coming to power in 1947 when India reclaimed its independence. The party remained in power for 30 years, until losing its position in 1977. Since then it has been in power off and on. One constant has been the leadership of the party, an unbroken line of Jawaharlal Nehru, his daughter Indira Gandhi (assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards), her son Rajiv Gandhi (assassinated by Sri Lankan Tamil separatists), Sonia Gandhi (Rajiv’s Italian born wife), and soon, if his mother (Sonia Ghandi) has her way, Rahul Gandhi. Apart from a brief period of emergency rule brought on by Indira Gandhi in the 70s, India’s messy democracy has somehow kept the country together.

    Nehru ruled India for close to 20 years after independence. People have faulted him for taking India down a socialist, planned economy path called the License Raj, with most industries nationalized and bureaucrats deciding who produced what. Free market liberalization began when Rajiv Gandhi came to power in 1984, bringing in a new generation of bureaucrats. True market reform was forced on India in 1993, when the country almost ran out of foreign reserves; the prime minister today, Manmohan Singh, was finance minister then. Nehru is now recognized for establishing world-class institutions that are now bearing fruit: the armed forces research centers, post-secondary educational institutes (Indian Institutes of Technology, Indian Institutes of Management, All India Institute of Medical Sciences), the Indian Space Research Organisation, Central Drug Research Institute, and the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre.

    These were institutions of hard power. India has a rich cultural history that was nearly extinguished during British rule. After independence it began to be revived, patronized by the newly wealthy in India and the Indian diaspora primarily in the U.K. and U.S. There were the classical arts and then there was Bollywood cinema. Practically every Indian, rich or poor, knows the words to all the popular film songs from movies of their generation. In a country as diverse linguistically and economically as India, Bollywood has been as instrumental in keeping the country together as democratic politics. As I have traveled around the world, in Asia, the Middle East, Russia, I have been astonished that people have known all the old time Bollywood stars. This is the projection of India’s soft power.

    The political class came to power in a time of Gandhian idealism, with the British relatively peacefully extricated from the subcontinent. The political class quickly grabbed most of the reins of power, nationalizing all major industries in the 1950s and 1960s. This power corrupted the political class, some of whom enriched themselves to obscene levels: this is what I mean by the headline “billionaire democracy.” Fortunately, the entrepreneurial middle class is slowly eclipsing the political class, and there is a feeling of inevitable reform of the government’s 40 million employees.

    The Partition of India and Pakistan was painful and has been a drag on both countries’ economies and psyches’ since Independence, but India has moved on, remaining a secular democracy driven by a free market economy. Pakistan has remained a feudal state, ruled by a tight political class supported by the military. India is coming to the realization that a stable Pakistan is better for India than a breakup of Pakistan. The middle classes of both countries have similar aspirations; the problem is that in Pakistan the political class is dominant and needs the “threat” of India to stay in that position.








  • CES 2010: Lenovo Reinvents the ThinkPad X100e With New Design and Keyboard

    x100e 1 CES 2010: Lenovo Reinvents the ThinkPad X100e With New Design and KeyboardThe ThinkPad X100e is one of many laptops that Lenovo will be introducing in 2010 that has taken a completely new design direction. This model doesn’t constrain to the typical design elements of past Lenovo ThinkPads from years gone by, instead the X100e sports a radical new keyboard with chicklet keys, along with the multitouch touchpad. But none of these changes will hinder the overall quality we have come to expect from the durable and reliable ThinkPad laptops we have come to know and love. Lenovo promises that these keyboards are just as comfortable as their previous ThinkPad keyboards, and if anything they’ve just been improved. However, the traditional ThinkPad design will still be available on other new models.

    Meanwhile, The new X100e is especially appealing with its sub 3lb weight and 11.6 inch display all for a price point starting below $500. Inside the system will sport an AMD Athlon Neo MV-40 / AMD M780G with ATI Radeon HD 3200 graphics with other AMD Athlon Neo and Turion options available later on in the first half of 2010.  Other specs include upto 4 GB max, 160 GB/250GB/320 GB 5400 RPM, ATI Radeon HD 3200 graphics, stereo speakers, built-in mic, optional bluetooth, Ethernet, 4-in-1 card reader slot, upto 2 hours with a 3-cell 2.2Ah battery, and up to 5 hours with a 6-cell battery. Pricing for the ThinkPad X100e starts at a very affordable $449.

    The ThinkPad X100e excels in the areas important to business users with professional-grade features, exceptional usability and outstanding mobility.

    • Professional-Grade Features – Equipped with choices of AMD Athlon Neo single and dual core processors and Turion dual core processors1, the X100e provides strong performance needed for multitasking and running typical office applications. It also has the performance needed to support corporate operating systems like Microsoft Windows 7 Professional. The X100e comes with Lenovo’s ThinkVantage Technologies, hardware-software tools that help customers deploy, manage and maintain their PCs. The laptop features global availability and technical support along with a variety of warranty options.
    • Exceptional Usability and Design – Lenovo designed the small and compact X100e to be incredibly comfortable to use. An 11.6 inch high definition display provides ample screen real estate, and an ISO full-size keyboard with a multitouch touchpad and Trackpoint make navigation easy. The new contemporary keyboard design features enlarged keys, removal of rarely used keys like System Request and the embedded number pad. The X100e also brings color to ThinkPad with a new choice of heatwave red in addition to midnight black models.
    • Outstanding Mobility – The X100e maximizes mobility with models starting under three pounds. For wireless connectivity on the go, the laptop comes with 802.11n WiFi and optional Bluetooth and 3G.

     CES 2010: Lenovo Reinvents the ThinkPad X100e With New Design and Keyboard


  • ThinkPad Line Gets Two New Consumer Models — Edge and X100e

    Lenovo let the cat out of the bag early about new additions to the ThinkPad line that are being released in time for the big CES. The ThinkPad Edge is the first consumer ThinkPad, and I’ve covered it in a video review. The other interesting addition is the ThinkPad X100e, which brings the line closer to the netbook category in features and price.

    The ThinkPad Edge is initially available in a 13-inch model, starting at $549. In the second quarter of this year the Edge will also be available in 14-inch and a 15-inch models, pricing unknown. The Edge is a solid entry into the consumer space, and continues the ThinkPad tradition with a good keyboard.

    The ThinkPad X100e is an 11.6-inch notebook that starts at a consumer-friendly price of $449. The notebook will have AMD processor options, and like all ThinkPads will leverage the ThinkVantage Technologies. Like the Edge, the X100e has both a TrackPoint and a multitouch trackpad for control of the Windows 7 interface. The X100e weighs under 3 pounds, making it the most portable ThinkPad available.

    ThinkPad Edge
    ThinkPad Edge
    ThinkPad X100e
    ThinkPad X100e

  • Syabas’ Popbox: Get Ready for the New Media Streamer Champ [Hdmediaplayers]

    Take Syabas’ Popcorn Hour C-200, the much-loved streamer of choice for AV nerds. Now make it smaller, add Netflix support and a far superior interface, and cut the price from $300 to $130. That’s the Popbox.

    The Popbox isn’t a replacement of the Popcorn Hour, which remains on as a giant hackable tank of a machine, but it does look fully ready for mainstream adoption. Here’s why: Syabas expects to slash the price down to a mere $130, yet it keeps the Popcorn’s stellar codec support and a lot of the online channels the Popcorn was missing, like Netflix, Facebook, Twitter, MLB, and a whole bunch more. (It does lose some things, like the internal hard drive bay and Bittorrent support, but it’s still all open-source so you can install games, apps, or whatever fun stuff the homebrew community can think up). Plus, Syabas’s interface (which Wilson, in his streamer roundup, described as “lame”) has been totally revamped, and actually looks, well, kind of awesome. It’s got great little touches like animated weather and automatic IMDb and AllMusic lookup for movie, TV and music info.

    The hardware’s been significantly revamped, too—it’s much smaller than the admitted beast that is the Popcorn Hour, and it’s fanless (AKA silent), but it’ll still pump out full 1080p video over HDMI. It’s also got 2 USB ports and an SD slot for added storage, since you lose the hard drive bay the Popcorn Hour has. It remains to be seen whether Syabas has fixed the problems users found with the Popcorn Hour’s remote control, but we’ll find that out soon enough.

    It’s set to be unveiled on January 5th at CES, where we’ll stop in and get some photos and impressions—but I’m really excited for it already. We’ll find out release date there, but they seem locked in on the $130 price point, which is super reasonable—Roku, Asus and the rest should be very scared right now. [Syabas]

    Update: Due to a typo in my notes, you may have seen an early version of this story as saying the projected price will be $100. Syabas actually expects the final price to be $130, and I need to practice my typing. Sorry for the confusion.







  • Haystack is now Sortfolio

    Back in mid November we got an email from someone claiming that we were infringing on their “Haystack” trademark. To their credit, the email was kind and calm. No legalese, no pointed cease and desist, nothing harsh — just a “Hey guys, we’ve got a problem here…” email.

    They felt our use of Haystack was infringing on their registered Haystack trademark in the “business information services” category.

    Over the next few weeks we traded a few emails back and forth. We didn’t agree with their claim, but we didn’t want to get into a protracted legal battle either. Any time you can avoid lawyers is a good time. They agreed.

    We discussed purchasing the trademark from them, but we couldn’t agree on a price. So in the end we decided we’d just rename our Haystack service. We were only a few months in, and we’re in this for the long term, so renaming early wouldn’t be a huge deal. We’d cut our losses and move on. The sooner the better.

    Sortfolio

    So today we announce that Haystack is now called Sortfolio. We kept the haystack.com domain name so the old haystack.com URLs redirect instantly to the new sortfolio.com URLs. No broken URLs, no interruption in service.

    Promotion begins again

    We poured a lot of promotional effort into Haystack during the first month. Lots of folks have been getting lots of work. Unfortunately we had to go quiet during the trademark negotiations. We didn’t want to promote a name we might have had to change.

    Now that we’re back in the clear, and Sortfolio is live, we can begin our promotional campaign again. We’ve got some big stuff planned including a special, innovative promotion we’ll be running on The Deck starting in a few days.

    We will also be giving all current paying Sortfolio customers a free month to say we’re sorry for having to pull back on promo for about 45 days. Details on this will be emailed to our paying customers shortly.

    Find a designer or get a client

    So, if you’re looking for a web designer, or you’re a web designer looking for work, check out Sortfolio today. Continued success to everyone.

  • Salvador e um pouco dos seus skylines.

    Fotos garimpadas:

    Rafa fontes, zimzim23, biel barros, mari prado, roque oliveira, udine 79, urban recycle, soteropoli.com, amigarad, gabriela gaia, eduardo pelosi, samory santos, spiggot123, xukato.

















    flickr – rafafonte

  • CES 2010: Lenovo Launches ThinkPad Edge, an Affordable Ultraportable Laptop

    edge1 CES 2010: Lenovo Launches ThinkPad Edge, an Affordable Ultraportable LaptopThe new Lenovo ThinkPad Edge is a new affordable ultraportable laptop that features a stylish industrial design and substantial battery life, which is perfect for students or anyone on a budget. The Edge has a 13.3 inch widescreen (16:9 aspect ratio), a 4 GB maximum for ram, all in a total body weight of 3.6 pounds. This new design is also spill resistant for sloppy kids (like us) and has a TrackPoint and 2-button multi-gesture touchpad. Available colors will be Midnight Black – Smooth, Midnight Black – Gloss, Heatwaver Red – Gloss. Battery life issn’t too shabby either, at upto 3.7 hours with a 4-cell battery, and upto 5.9 hours with a 6-cell battery (AMD), upto 5.9 hours with a 4-cell battery, and upto 8.9 hours with a 6-cell battery (Intel). Available processors for the model will be the AMD Turion Neo X2 Dual-Core Mobile Processor, AMD Athlon Neo X2 Dual-Core Processor (AMD M780G, RS780/SB710), Intel ULV SU4100, SU7300, and Intel GS45 (too many choices quite honestly). Pricing for the ThinkPad Edge will start at $549.

    edge2 CES 2010: Lenovo Launches ThinkPad Edge, an Affordable Ultraportable Laptopedge3 CES 2010: Lenovo Launches ThinkPad Edge, an Affordable Ultraportable Laptop

     CES 2010: Lenovo Launches ThinkPad Edge, an Affordable Ultraportable Laptop


  • Freescale’s $199 Smartbook Tablet Design Means Tablets For Everyone (Later This Year) [Freescale]

    Freescsale, supplier of the chip that powers the Kindle as well as about 70% of the ebook market, has just developed a 7-inch tablet reference design that will basically be the genesis of many tablets starting 2010. And it’s $199.

    Now, to be fair, those two figures are a bit preliminary. The $199 figure is the one quoted by Freescale, not the final price that OEM companies that will buy this design from Freescale and put their own spin and customization on it will charge. And, although Freescale says this tablet design will allow companies to bring the tablet to market in as low as 6 months, customizations (hardware or software) and bug killing will undoubtedly inflate that.

    Even if only on paper, this Freescale reference design is pretty damn promising. It’s powered by a netbook-esque ARM processor, a 7-inch touchscreen (resistive, unfortunately, to keep the design under $200—you’d go up to $250 if any OEM put a capacitive touchscreen on there), 512MB RAM, 4-64GB internal storage, removable microSD slot, an optional 3G modem, 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1, GPS, USB, audio ports, SIM card, speaker, microphone, 3-megapixel webcam, 1900 mAh battery, accelerometer and light sensor. Whether or not including all these options in a build will result in a machine that’s less than $200 is unclear, so there might be some sacrifices that need to be made.

    As for the OS, it’s primarily browser based, but the root of it is a customized Debian Linux build, so you could theoretically go and install Linux applications onto it. But, as a tablet, people are mostly going to be consuming media, so going with a browser, like the JooJoo did, makes sense. Freescale did come up with an interesting $50 keyboard docking station addon that you can keep at home and use as an input device if you actually need to do some typing, so it’s kind of the best of both worlds.

    The bottom line is that Freescale has made a pretty enticing design, and if a decent enough OEM picks it up and gets it to market at under $200, it could be the start if a very interesting computing category—one that’s a step higher than smartphones but a step lower than netbooks.







  • CES 2010: Lenovo ThinkPad W510 Gets New Intel Processors and 18 Hour Battery Life

    w510 CES 2010: Lenovo ThinkPad W510 Gets New Intel Processors and 18 Hour Battery LifeIf the businessmen and women were getting nervous that the latest ThinkPads are getting a bit to consumer looking in design, not to worry since the ThinkPad W510 features the same common ThinkPad features you have grown accustomed too. Instead it just has some of the latest Intel dual Core i7 processors to help speed up your workflow.  The ThinkPad W510 sports a 15.6” LED display with a 16:10 aspect ratio, up to 16GB of ram, an optional NVIDIA Quadro FX 880m card, 4 USB ports, and an ExpressCard slot,  all in a chassis that weighs 5.89lbs and it can manage up to 18 hours of battery life with a9 cell battery. Pricing will start at $1599.

    w510 2 CES 2010: Lenovo ThinkPad W510 Gets New Intel Processors and 18 Hour Battery Life

     CES 2010: Lenovo ThinkPad W510 Gets New Intel Processors and 18 Hour Battery Life


  • Super compact power supply for LED lighting from Optex-FA

    Optex-FA is going to launch new power supply for LED lightings OPPD series in Feb 2010

    Dimensions: W48 * H72 * D30 mm
    Output: 15W/12VDC PWM 100kHz
    Brightness adjusting: 1,000 step adjustable
    Channel: 1ch
    Display: 3 digit 7 segment display
    Input: DC24V +/- 10%
    Maximum power consumption: 0.9A/DC24V
    Operating temp./humid.: 0-50deg.C / 35-85%RH

  • 2340Z1 MityLite™ : A must-have for every toolbox, now ATEX Zone 1 (Cat. 2)

    Peli™ Products, the global leader in the design and manufacture of advanced lighting systems and virtually indestructible cases, presents the MityLite 2340Z1.
    Being certified to ATEX safe for use in high-risk hazardous locations, Zone 1 (Category 2) areas, the MityLite 2340Z1 is ideal for professionals who work in chemical, pharmaceutical, power, oil and gas, and fire or rescue industries.
    The 2340Z1 is a compact, convenient personal light, but is also a powerful professional duty light. A prefocused Xenon lamp module produces a powerful, bright white, modified spot beam. The body is made of unbreakable Xenoy that resists chemicals and water. The MityLite 2340Z1 has a push button tail for easy on/off or intermittent light. It is powered by 2 AA alkaline cells and safety approved for hazardous locations. A must-have for every toolbox.

    Like all Peli advanced lighting systems, the new MityLite 2340Z1 is covered by Peli`s Unconditional Guarantee of Excellence: “You break it, we replace it… forever™”

  • New dual output incremental encoder interface…

    …simultaneously provides analogue and digital signals

    Designed for applications requiring one or more operations to be synchronised with a motion axis, Renishaw’s TONiC™ Dual Output (DOP) encoder interface provides simultaneous digital quadrature and analogue 1 Vpp signals via a 26-way D-type connector. Typically, the interface is connected so that the analogue signals are wired to the motion controller, whilst the digital signals (with resolutions to 5 nm) are routed to the timing circuit of a synchronised operation, such as a camera flash on an inspection machine.

    TONiC DOP allows the assembly of relevant systems to be significantly less complex, yet boosts performance thanks to high-speed interpolation with advanced CORDIC algorithms. When combined with the TONiC encoder’s low-noise optical scheme and dynamic signal processing, the system provides higher speed, reduced jitter, improved repeatability and enhanced velocity control.

    The total encoder system comprises a TONiC readhead, a DOP interface which includes the interpolation electronics to match the fit and form of Renishaw’s SiGNUM™ Si interface, and a variety of high-performance linear and rotary scales to suit a wide range of applications.

    TONiC incremental linear encoders are compatible with a range of scale options, including gold tape scale with integral optical reference marks, Invar® spars with “zero” thermal expansion and ±1 µm accuracy on lengths up to 1130 mm, and robust stainless steel spars for very high accuracy on long axes. The latest addition to the range is the new FASTRACK™ RTLC linear encoder scale system, designed for ruggedness, easy installation and rapid scale replacement, combined with ±5 µm/m accuracy.

    Rotary/angle encoder options are also well served, with RESM rings available in a range of standard diameters from 52 mm to 550 mm, with even larger sizes available as special order items. Furthermore, ultra-high accuracy REXM rings have a total installed accuracy better than ±1 arc second on ring diameters greater than 100 mm, when used with dual readheads.

    As with all Renishaw encoders, TONiC incremental encoders are backed by a truly responsive global sales and support network. Furthermore the product satisfies the highest environmental standards, with both WEEE and RoHS compliance.

  • Worldwide most-sensitive fluorescence detectors Sensitivitymergedwith efficiency

    Ultra-high sensitivity detecting trace-level compounds /
    For fast LC and ultra-fast analysis /
    Easy maintenance reduces running costs

    Shimadzu, one of the world leaders in analytical instrumentation, has introduced a new series of fluorescence detectors. The RF-20A and RF-20Axs cover the full range of applications from routine analysis to high-performance analysis particularly in food, pharmaceutical and environmental applications as well as for the determination of amino acids. The high-end version RF-20Axs is the most sensitive fluorescence detector world-wide enabling the detection of trace-level compounds.

    For fast LC and ultra-fast analysis
    The detectors complete the prominence LC / UFLC families with ultra-high sensitivity and fast LC capabilities. The RF-20A and –Axs series are based on a newly developed optical system. They offer a dual-channel mode and a data acquisition speed of up to 100 Hz, enabling ultra-fast analysis of just 10 ms response and an ultra-high sensitivity. They serve applications requiring lowest possible detection limits.

    The high-end RF-20Axs provides a cell temperature control with cooling function. It ensures a constant detector cell temperature leading to excellent reproducibility without any loss of sensitivity. Furthermore, the RF-20Axs supports automatic validation of the wavelength by a built-in Mercury lamp. This feature supports multiple components analysis.

    Ease of maintenance reduces running costs
    The flow cell and the lamp are accessible from the front-side and provide easy maintenance, reducing running costs and downtime. No tools are required to replace the flow cell. In comparison to previous models, the life time of the Xenon lamp has been extended by a factor of 4 up to 2.000 hours. Due to a pre-adjusted lamp on a special holder it is unnecessary to adjust and tune the optical system after a lamp exchange.

    Both detectors, the RF-20A and RF-20Axs offer an outstanding price-performance-ratio.

  • Wood cutting grip: XYLOCUT 300

    Designed in special steel (upper yield point treatment) for light yet strong machine,

    Blade is mounted on a mobile fitting so that the machine remains supported against the tree,

    Lower grip allows to hold the wood and to guide the blade for the cutting process,

    Can be adapted on a telescopic loader. For other carriers (excavator, crane, …) please contact us,

    Manual inclination of the machine. This can be moved hydraulically as an option (warning: an electric connexion 12V is necessary on the loader.

    Excellent principle for recycling wood:
    wood is clean because not in contact with the ground before storage or further handling or chopping.

    Hook function thanks to the 2 grips
    This allows a good hold of the wood during the cutting and during the transport.

  • READY TO INSTALL DOME PRESSURE REGULATORS FOR GAS PIPELINES

    Time is money, particularly in the plant engineering industry and as a ready solution to reduce costs, WITT, the gas safety, control, mixing and analysis equipment supplier, is now able to offer the 737 series dome pressure regulator as a complete ready-to-install system.

    Dome pressure regulators, like the 737 series, compensate for fluctuating flow rates in gas supply pipelines to ensure a consistent outlet pressure. They are suitable for use with most technical gases, including argon, nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen used in industrial and technical applications, such as steelworks and process plants.

    The WITT 737 series is one of the most powerful dome pressure regulators of its kind. It has passed a one-time inspection by the Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung (BAM/Federal Institute for Material Research and Testing) and it is burnout-safe even when exposed to oxygen at a pressure of 200 bar (2901 psi), a feature that was identified by BAM. The four models in this series provide a nominal gas flow rate of up to 650 m³/h (approx. 22950 scfh) and are designed to fit into a pipeline with limited space surrounding it.

    Previously, suitable pilot pressure regulators, upstream/downstream pressure gauges and various connection parts had to be procured and installed separately. Witt, Sales Manager, Christian Flücken said: “The new complete ready to install solution saves a lot of time, which is a very significant cost benefit for customers.”

  • New calibration LED for optical instruments

    The special feature of the new calibration LEDs in the ACS-530 Series developed by Instrument Systems is their temperature-stabilized high-power LED. This characteristic marks a significant difference from the standard LEDs used conventionally. The new calibration LEDs enable customers to check their instruments easily and reliably. It also means that the photometric value can be recalibrated by customers in conformity with the CIE International Commission on Illumination. Before testing is carried out, the LEDs are calibrated using strictly traceable standards for luminous flux and luminous intensity in the Instrument Systems test lab.

    The calibration LEDs have a reproducible and stable optical output power that is essential for reliable measurements. They also feature a particularly high photometric stability of 0.1 %. The high-power LED is housed in a casing with exceptionally low thermal conductivity together with a TEC element and a temperature sensor in order to achieve this high stability. The high-power LED is also cooled with the assistance of the TEC element. This eliminates sensitivity to external temperature fluctuations and demonstrates significantly reduced degradation behavior by comparison with heated standard LEDs.

    The calibration LEDs from Instrument Systems are supplied in the three basic colors red, green, blue, as well as in white. Over and beyond the photometric parameters luminous intensity and luminous flux, they can also be used for checking results for dominant wavelength, color coordinates and color temperature. A temperature control unit and a constant current source are necessary for operation of the calibration LEDs. They are controlled using the LED Control software developed by Instrument Systems. A PID parameter set optimized for each standard guarantees fast stabilzation and means that the entire measuring system can be deployed immediately.

  • Flange Protectors

    Stud Hole Flange Protectors require no additional fasteneing devices. The flange is easily installed by simply pushing it on. The FC series is manufactured of durable low density polyethylene making it weather and petroleum resistant. Choose from several different sizes color-coded for your convenience. Caplugs has a full line of flange protectors including die-cut, vinyl, snap-on, outside fitting, adhesive, raised face and more. Every part can be sampled for free ensuring you choose the best part and size for your application. To view our entire product line, visit www.caplugs.com. To speak with a Customer Service Representative call 1.888.CAPLUGS.

  • Logo Creation Tips for Renewable Energy Companies

    Lots of companies are jumping in to the clean energy space, and all of them will need logos that tell their story and set them apart from the competition. If you’re with one of these companies, you’re no doubt thinking, “Is there really a difference between making a logo for a clean energy company and other types of companies?” The answer is a resounding YES. Here are 5 tips every clean energy start-up should know.


  • Low-carb diets linked to atherosclerosis and impaired blood vessel growth

    Anybody seen this paper?

    Low-carb diets linked to atherosclerosis and impaired blood vessel growth

    Low-carb diets linked to atherosclerosis and impaired blood vessel growth

    Mike

  • Venture Funding Roared Back In the Fourth Quarter To Nearly $15 Billion

    After a year when venture funding was in the doldrums, it roared back in the fourth quarter of 2009 to nearly $15 billion, according to a tally of the venture rounds in CrunchBase. The total value of disclosed fundings for the quarter was $14.85 billion, up 113 percent from a year ago (when the total was $6.96 billion), and up 78 percent from the third quarter of 2009 ($8.35 billion).

    One of the big funding rounds of the quarter included Zynga’s $180 million, but clean tech cleaned up even more, with Horizon Wind Energy bringing in $318 million in financing, Silver Spring Networks adding $105 million to its coffers, and Sun Run Generation raising $90 million.

    While the quarter saw a robust return to higher levels of investing, it was not enough to counterbalance the previous three quarters of tepid investing. The total amount of capital deployed over the full year of 2009 was $32.6 billion, which was lower than the $38 billion total for 2008. The first two quarters of 2008 were relatively healthy, with $11.5 billion and $11.8 billion raised in venture rounds, respectively. It wasn’t until third quarter of 2008 that the bottom really fell out. Venture capitalists kept their purse strings tight until the third quarter of 2009, when they started to ease them open

    The total number of funding rounds increased 51 percent sequentially between the third and fourth quarters to 1,078.  The number of fundings in the third quarter of 2009 was 715, and the year before it was only 618.  So venture activity definitely picked up in both dollars and deals.  Will these new levels set the tone for 2010?

    Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.


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