Category: News

  • Top 10 Xbox 360 Games of 2010

    Top 10 Xbox 360 Games of 2010

    The Xbox 360 starts strong with Mass Effect 2 and Splinter Cell: Conviction, and maintains its momentum.

    By 1UP Staff

    The beginning of the year is pretty damn packed, with a mix of exclusives (Splinter Cell: Conviction and Mass Effect 2) and multiplatform (BioShock 2, Bayonetta) titles out on shelves within the first quarter. Then we have the big heavy hitters like Crackdown 2 and Halo: Reach marked for later month(s), and we haven’t even touched upon rumored games like Gears of War 3 (we’re hearing “E3 announcement” for that one). All in all, we feel that the games below are the known ones that will help make 2010 pretty awesome for the Xbox 360. Narrowing the list down to 10 was pretty difficult, and if it went to 11, we’d be tossing in games like Dark Void, Split/Second, and Max Payne 3.

    <!– 10. –> Crackdown 2

    Dev: Ruffian | Pub: Microsoft

    Crackdown 2

    The gameplay reveal of Crackdown 2 was one of the biggest surprises at this years’ Tokyo Game Show. Although the original was initially overshadowed by the inclusion of a Halo 3 beta, Crackdown proved to be one of the breakout hits of 2007. Although development shifted away from Realtime Worlds, the team at Ruffian is comprised of many veteran developers from the first game. Orbs were the “crack” of Crackdown, and players will now be able to track down a variety of orbs around the city — each with their own power-ups. Bring on the four-player co-op, because we’re ready to return to Pacific City.

    <!– 10. –> Halo: Reach

    Dev: Bungie | Pub: Microsoft

    Halo: Reach

    With Microsoft’s taking over Halo development, Reach potentially represents Bungie’s last foray into the universe they created. The recently released first-look footage of Reach confirms that players will once again play as a Spartan. The video, from early in the story, teases several gameplay additions this time around. An entire squad of Spartans is revealed — each with a unique armor and weapon loadout hinting at character customization. The footage also teases the increasing of the co-op count to six players. We’ll no doubt be seeing plenty of Reach as 2010 roles around, but if this is Bungie’s last Halo game, you can bet it’ll go out with a bang.

    <!– 10. –> BioShock 2

    Dev: 2K Marin | Pub: 2K Games

    BioShock 2

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  • The Old Year

    Sunset at 34,000 Feet

    (Updated – I knew that I had forgotten a couple of talks…)

    I’ve spent the last week or so just… sleeping. Relaxing. Not thinking. Trying to get myself rested and ready for what looks to be another heavy year.

    2009 ended on quite a high note, with my selection by Foreign Policy magazine as one of their “Top 100 Global Thinkers for 2009,” and my being honored by the Institute for the Future as their second “Research Fellow,” something that was previously bestowed upon Howard Rheingold — so that’s terrific company to be in.

    My work at IFTF continued unabated, focusing primarily upon sustainability futures and their annual “Ten Year Forecast” program, but being pulled in on everything from food futures to global health to the future of construction equipment.

    Here’s what the rest of 2009 looked like for me:

    Travel

    Pasadena, London, Manchester, Amsterdam, Sydney, Atlanta, Toronto, New York, Chicago, Vienna, Chicago, Irvine, Chicago.

    Media

    February: Published Hacking the Earth
    March: Column for Fast Company.com starts
    April: Article in Foreign Policy
    June: Wall Street Journal article
    June: Big Atlantic Monthly article
    July: Appeared on two episodes of History Channel’s That’s Impossible
    October: Second Atlantic Monthly article

    Public Talks

    February: Future: To Go at the Art Center College Sustainable Mobility Summit.
    March: Cascio’s Laws of Robotics at the Menlo Park AI Meetup.
    June: Hacking the Earth at Futuresonic.
    June: Mobile Intelligence at Mobile Monday Amsterdam.
    June: ReMaking Tomorrow at AMPlify09.
    October: If I Can’t Dance, I Don’t Want to be Part of Your Singularity at New York Future Salon.
    November: The Next Ten Years at Futurespace Vienna.
    December: Biopolitics of Popular Culture closing talk.

    Interviews

    March: NPR/Day to Day
    April: CBC/Spark
    April: New Hampshire Public Radio
    May: Freedom Lab Amsterdam (last on page)
    May: AMP Sydney
    July: Tactical Transparency
    July: Wisconsin Public Radio/Kathleen Dunn
    August: Slate (video)
    September: CBC/Q
    October: /Message (video)
    November: Public Radio International/On the Media

    Here’s hoping that your 2010 is less exhausting than mine will be!

  • The Digital Cameras of 2000 Look Awfully Good For Their Age [Decades]

    This Canon PowerShot G1, released in 2000 and listed at Best Buy for $800 in 2001, has held up well. Sure, 3.34 megapixels isn’t much, but spec for spec, this codger can almost hang with the kids.

    Seriously, you could just post this spec sheet next to a Canon in a retail store now, and most people wouldn’t bat an eye. They sure as hell wouldn’t buy it, but they probably wouldn’t say anything, either: In ten years, what have we gained? More megapixels, higher-quality video, some more ports, better low-light performance, smaller memory cards, better battery life, and a little compactness. Canon’s cheapest P&S, the 10-megapixel Powershot A480, handily outspecs the $800 G1 for just $110 (though it doesn’t have video). Today, if you hand Canon $800, they’ll hand you back a DSLR that shoots HD video:

    What’s amazing, though, is that if you did spend $800 on this camera back in 2000, you could still use it today. It’d be beaten to hell, the zoom motor would sound like it had gained sentience and learned to experience real, mammalian pain, and the 16MB CF card would have been replaced with something a little roomier, but damnit, it would work—and your Facebook friends wouldn’t know the difference. You can’t say that about many gadgets from 10 years ago, so here’s to you, Powershot: You were great, or your category moves slow. Whichever makes you feel better.







  • Resistive display not out just yet!

    This past year has brought more and more capacitive displays and it seems like resistive is making its exit, but not yet! A company called Touchco has some technology that brings resistive devices accuracy and ease of use together with capacitive’s sensitivity. The new display–from what I can get out of the video—uses crossed cords that are  constantly updated, and as your finger presses the screen the lines touch and the screen takes that as a press, and it is also pressure sensitive.

    The new screen device could bring a lot of changes to Windows Mobile phones and for the better. Capacitive is a very good display, but it does have some down sides like for example it does not support stylus’s and for people like me in the winter up here in MN, we have layers of cloths and we would not be able to use a capacitive device or even worse when you get a capacitive screen really cold and bring it inside your house, it cracks. Those are something that make this cross technology a breakthrough not only for us, but for anyone that wants the best of the two.

    Watch the video for a demo:

    Source:PN

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  • $229 Billion Fled Stocks Since 2007, Guess What Happens If It Comes Back

    Fund flows into long term U.S. stock mutual funds have just started to perk up, according to long term mutual fund data from the Investment Company Institute (ICI), which covers over 95% of industry assets.

    While an estimated $5 billion flowed out of stocks during the last four weeks, fund flows became positive, ie. net inflows, during the most recent weekly period of data, as shown below in red.

    flow

    Meanwhile the bond investment frenzy has continued, with substantial inflows each week, shown above in gray.

    Viewing ICI data on a longer time scale, from January to November 2009 $30 billion has flowed out of U.S. stocks and $349 billion has flowed into bonds.

    flow

    If we even go back to the beginning of 2007, we find that a massive $229 billion has flowed out of U.S. domestic equity mutual funds since then... while $485 billion went into bond funds.

    flow

    Thus in 2009, U.S. stock markets were able to rise despite a substantial fund flow headwind. It's hard to see how mere 'liquidity' could have driven the 2009 rally, as some skeptics claim. At least based on ICI data, U.S. equity fund flows were negative for the year.

    Rather, the 2009 rally was probably more the result of sellers becoming unwilling to sell at lower price levels. While buying demand was diminishing, selling demand at lower price levels was probably drying up at an even faster rate. Thus prices had to rise in order to clear the market.

    The combination of a rising market with negative fund flows is an encouraging sign for the future. Guess what could happen if fund flows significantly reverse and become a positive tailwind.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Green Fuels Ltd.

    FeulPodGreen Fuels Ltd makes it possible to produce your own biodiesel … with one of their FuelPod products …

    They are the " … world leading biodiesel equipment supplier, … design and manufacture … affordable biodiesel processing equipment … for small-scale, domestic usage – right up to commercial production.  … currently more than 6,500 Green Fuels and Green Fuels America processors world wide. Between them they produce more than 350 million litres of biodiesel every year"

    "If you want … ‘green’ biodiesel, but don’t want to produce it yourself, you can buy high quality fuel from one of our Green Fuels approved dealers nationwide …you will always save money compared with standard garage fuels … "

    "Biodiesel is a clean-burning biofuel produced from domestic renewable resources such as used cooking oil, oil seed crops such as rapeseed, or unused vegetable oil. It is biodegradeable, non-toxic and carbon neutral … has 80% lower emissions than mineral diesel, it dramatically reduces pollution. It is inexpensive and easy to produce at home and is safe to use in any diesel vehicle without any modifications to your engine."

    " … two models in the Fuelpod range by Green Fuels – the safest way to produce high quality biodiesel at home. Both are supplied as complete systems and have minimal operating costs, with exceptionally low electricity consumption."

    Via: Green Fuels Ltd. LINK

     

  • Church of the Frescoes

    North Carolina, US | Curious Places of Worship

    A small church in North Carolina was the first to be graced by large, Italian-style frescoes painted by an American artist who studied with Italian masters.

    North Carolina native Ben Long grew up as an artist. After serving in Vietnam as a Marine Corps Combat Officer and Commander of the Combat Art Team, Long went to Florence, Italy to spend 8 years apprenticing in the art of fresco painting. Returning to the US in the mid-70’s, there wasn’t much demand for his newly honed skills. After a chance meeting with and Episcopal minister of two small churches in the mountains, Long offered to gift the churches with his talent, using locals as models for his recreation of the Last Supper painting. It is said that the minister had agreed to the paintings without even knowing what a fresco was.

    The result was a series of large scale, lifelike “true frescoes”, meaning that they are painted in the Italian tradition on wet plaster. Also true to tradition, the models for saints and apostles were local citizens.

    Long also has paintings on display in such notable collections as the Smithsonian, as well as frescoes in Italy at the Abbey of Montecassino, and 11 other frescoes in the US. More of his work in North Carolina can be seen by following the “Fresco Trail” set up in 2005.

    When visiting these small sanctuaries, people often leave comments in a guestbook. Reading the entries reveals the sense of serenity and uniqueness of this generous creative spirit of artistic work.

  • After Christmas comes a Wiseman from the east | Bad Astronomy

    wiseman_meRichard Wiseman is funny, smart, personable, and uncommonly handsome. He’ll also be giving a talk on January 5th in New York City promoting his new book 59 Seconds. Called “Investigating the Impossible”, it’s sponsored by the NYC Skeptics. It’s free and open to the public. He really is a great speaker, and if you’re near the Big Apple you should go. And tell him how good-looking he is.


  • DLO JumpStart iPhone Battery Pack Review

    dlo DLO JumpStart iPhone Battery Pack ReviewThe DLO JumpStart is a new attachable battery pack plus sync cable for the iPhone, iPhone 3GS, iPod Nano, iPod Classic, and iPod Touch. For an iPhone 3G, the JumpStart can provide you with nearly double the battery capacity, or rather – it will provide you with almost an extra 100% extra charge while you’re on the go. Using the JumpStart, you can also charge and sync your iPhone/iPod to iTunes.We tested the JumpStart with the iPhone 3G. As much as we love the iPhone, it can barely make it through a day of heavy use without needing extra power. So a battery pack is an essential iPhone accessory to carry with you.

    Design:
    The JumpStart’s design and form-factor is pretty unique. Many iPhone battery packs inconveniently attach to the bottom of the iPhone and stick out below the iPhone as a dongle or they stick out substantially below the device. Fortunately the JumpStart’s design is smarter then that. The JumpStart attaches to the bottom of the iPhone, and and to the back of your iPhone where it uses suction cups to stay securely attached to your iPhone. The suction cups do a nice job of staying securely attached to your iPhone and they’re easy to take off and reattach. The design doesn’t add too much bulk to the iPhone either and it still allows you to slip it into your pocket without too much fuss. The Jumpstart also doesn’t weigh much at all, so it wont weigh down your bag. However we do have one minor gripe with the design, the cap covering the mini usb port is a bit flimsy and looks like it can break off easily.

    Functionality and Performance:
    A mini USB cable comes with the device that plugs into it for charging and syncing. The back of the JumpStart has a button to push to let you know its current power status. While charging, a red light at the top of the device shows up.  To indicate when the device is fully charged, the light turns blue. While the device is connected to your PC, if you Dock your iPhone/iPod into it, it will also conveniently sync and charge your iPhone.

    We charged up the JumpStart several times and used it to charge up a dead iPhone 3G. Each time the JumpStart provided almost a full additional charge for the iPhone, but never quite a 100% full charge. When charging a dead iPhone 3G, within a few minutes or less the device had enough power to turn on. And it took the JumpStart almost 2 hours to charge the iPhone 3G and drain itself of its own power completely.

    Conclusion:
    The JumpStart isn’t the highest capacity iPod battery pack on the market, and we would have liked it to have had a standby mode to conserve power, but overall it’s a well rounded device that is easy and convenient to use. Just like you would throw a pair of headphones into your bag, you really need a battery pack to get through the day if you won’t be by an outlet or USB port. I cant tell you how many times I have found myself running around an airport looking for an available outlet to charge my iPhone. The few outlets that are available are usually taken, and often there isn’t enough time to sufficiently charge the iPhone either. That is just a typical situation where an iPhone battery pack is needed, but there are many reasons to need a battery pack and the reality is that the iPhone’s battery life falls short. I definitely wont be leaving home without the JumpStart in my bag. You can pick up the DLO JumpStart for $59.99.

    The Good: Easy to use, convenient design, provides nearly an extra full charge for the iPhone 3G and other iPod models

    The Bad: No standby mode to conserve battery power, cap covering mini USB port is flimsy



     DLO JumpStart iPhone Battery Pack Review


  • Solar Stimulus in Massachusetts

    Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick launches new rebates to accelerate the state towards its goal of 250 MW of solar energy installed by 2017. The rebates will be complemented with a new renewable energy credit market for solar. …

    … “Commonwealth Solar II and Commonwealth Solar Stimulus will begin accepting rebate applications from residents and businesses seeking help financing their solar photovoltaic (PV) systems. The new rebate programs will benefit from a two-pronged funding scheme.

    Funding for Commonwealth Solar II, providing rebates for small residential and commercial photovoltaic (PV) systems (5 kilowatts or less), will come from $1 million per quarter in existing funds from the Massachusetts Renewable Energy Trust. Now, as part of the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (CEC), the Trust is financed through a small renewable energy charge on utility ratepayers’ monthly bills. ” …

    Via Massachusetts Energy and Environmental Affairs: Commonwealth Solar rebate program

    The state has made commendable progress with their solar stimulus. …

    Massachusetts Solar Progress Dashboard (PDF).

    Solar credit marketplace will be established …

    Commonwealth Solar Rebate Program: “These new rebates are specifically targeted to complement and support the introduction of the new Solar Credit market in Massachusetts in January 2010 … ”

    Via Massachusetts Clean Energy Center: Next Phase of Solar Power Enablers: “The Clean Energy Center, through the Renewable Energy Trust, looks forward to putting this new pool of funding to work providing rebates for solar projects that will get us to Governor Patrick’s goal of 250 MW of solar energy – enough to power at least 37,500 homes – by 2017 … ”

  • vitamins

    Thinking about taking some vitamins (fish oil and cinnamon) are any of you taking vitamins and what’s your experience
  • Apple’s online store brought the Merry into the 2009 Christmas season

    Filed under: , ,

    In some more bright, shiny, and happy Apple news for this first day of 2010, Computerworld is reporting that Apple’s online store took top honors for customer satisfaction in terms of the holiday shopping experience at a computer or electronics manufacturer’s site.

    The numbers from Michigan-based ForeSee Results showed Apple’s satisfaction rate at 82%, four percentage points higher than those in 2008. The market research firm measures customer satisfaction by surveying more than 10,000 visitors to the top 40 retail Web sites as ranked by annual sales revenue.

    The two closest computer and electronics sites to Apple were Newegg.com and TigerDirect.com, posting scores of 81% and 80%. Dell and HP came in at 79% and 78%, respectively, while the least satisfying shopping experience was provided by Circuit City’s Web site at 73%.

    While Apple led computer and electronics Web sites in terms of satisfaction, the company wasn’t even in the same ballpark as Amazon.com. The online shopping giant grabbed a whopping 87% customer satisfaction rating in ForeSee’s survey figures. Other companies that were ahead of Apple in the rankings were Netflix (86%) and QVC.com (83%).

    The ForeSee report also notes that the biggest retailers are getting both larger and better, at the expense of smaller online retailers. The big boys on the block can offer larger discounts, free shipping and better customer support that can’t be matched by the small fry.

    TUAWApple’s online store brought the Merry into the 2009 Christmas season originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 01 Jan 2010 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Rumormill: Apple COO Tim Cook for General Motors CEO slot?

    Filed under: ,

    A top Apple Inc. executive is reportedly be being considered for the chief executive officer post at General Motors. Over the last couple of years as the Detroit auto industry descended into financial oblivion, numerous observers from (mostly) outside the business promoted the idea of hiring Apple CEO Steve Jobs run GM. However, for a variety of reasons – not the least of which was Jobs’ health – that never came to fruition.

    This time around, according to an (admittedly unsubstantiated) rumor on Silicon Alley Insider, rather than Jobs, executive search firm Spencer Stuart is said to be promoting Tim Cook. Cook is the chief operating officer at Apple and second in command to Jobs, filling the CEO slot on an interim basis last year while Jobs was on medical leave.

    Cook would certainly be an interesting choice, and if hired, would join fellow tech industry vet and new GM CFO Chris Liddell who is coming over from Microsoft. It’s not clear, however, if he would be the best choice. As COO, Cook has had plenty of operational experience at Apple, and by all accounts, he has done an outstanding job running day-to-day operations. However, according auto industry analyst Jim Hall of 2953 Analytics, the CEO at GM is traditionally the big picture/visionary position. In that respect, Cook would seem better suited to the President/COO role, a job recently awarded to Mark Reuss.

    [Source: Silicon Alley Insider]

    Rumormill: Apple COO Tim Cook for General Motors CEO slot? originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 01 Jan 2010 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • It’s Resolution Time, Salad Rules and More

    Filed under:

    Each morning, we dish out some links we love.

    It’s January 1st, time to start those promised resolutions. But instead of making grand plans, try taking smaller steps with these modest resolutions.

    Here’s a resolution that could make a big difference: Stop sabotaging your diet with binge eating.

    Sticking to salads in January? Make sure you know your salad dos and don’ts.

    What medical breakthroughs can we expect in 2010? It’s shaping up to be a pretty promising year.

    Catching up on sleep after the blur of Christmas? Make sure your bedroom is shut-eye friendly.

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  • Yes, There’s More: 2011 Honda CR-Z video captures leak out

    Filed under: , , ,

    2011 Honda CR-Z video stills Click above for image gallery

    As the 2011 Honda CR-Z gets prepares its assault on your heart and pocketbook, it is showing its face in more and more places.

    This time, the 126-combined-horsepower hybrid eco-runner has been spotted in a video, from which a number of stills have been taken. While there aren’t any additional specs to come with it, you can at least see what you’ll look like driving down the road while you get somewhere above 50 miles per gallon. We note that while we still look forward to its tidy packaging and (hopefully) nimble dynamics, the front-end looks rather unfortunate with a U.S.-sized number plate.

    The car is expected to bow for the first time in Japan sometime next month, but we hear it could show up earlier at the Detroit Auto Show. In the meantime, find all the images below in the gallery.

    [Source: Gazoo via Carscoop]

    Yes, There’s More: 2011 Honda CR-Z video captures leak out originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 01 Jan 2010 13:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • 10 New Year’s Resolutions That’ll Do You Good

    1. Give up refined foods: sugars, oils and flours.

    The single most effective thing you can do for your health in the new year is simple: remove all refined foods from your cupboards.  Give them up.  Just like that.  Yes, you may have paid good money for that bag of sugar, the gallon of vegetable oil or that bag of flour.  Sure, you may think to yourself, “I only use flour (or sugar or canola oil) occasionally.”  But, occasionally is still too often. Refined foods can leach micronutrients from your body, contribute to risk of autoimmune disease, cancers, metabolic disorders and heart disease.

    To Do: Take a big garbage bag and throw out any vegetable oil, soybean oil, canola oil, cottonseed oil, hydrogenated fats, white sugar, brown sugar, corn syrup, agave nectar, white flour, unbleached all-purpose flour, refined sea salt, iodized salt and any boxed or packaged foods containing these ingredients.

    Read More: Modern Sweeteners, When Natural Foods Aren’t Natural: Agave Nectar, A Guide to Natural Sweeteners, Role of Traditional Sweeteners

    2. Enjoy more sunshine.

    Most of the population, both children and adults, suffer from insufficient or deficient vitamin D levels.  Blame an indoor society coupled a near-paralyzing fear of skin cancer that has kept people covered up and slathered in carcinogenic sunscreens.  Yes, many sunscreens contain carcinogenic compounds.  Kinda defeats the purpose, doesn’t it? Slathering yourself in cancer-causing chemicals to, well, avoid cancer?  As a result of an indoor lifestyle coupled with a solar-phobic health community, our nation’s vitamin D levels are suffering.  Low vitamin D levels are linked to cognitive dysfunction, depression, autoimmune disorder, cancer and heart disease.  Instead, cut yourself a little slack and go outside – dare I say it – without sunscreen. If you’re particularly concerned, use a touch of coconut or sesame oil on your skin both of which have some protective effects.  Remember to cover up before you burn, so bring a wide-brimmed hat or loose, long-sleeved clothing  to avoid the pain of a sunburn.

    To Do: Head outside today, or tomorrow, and don’t cover up in sunscreen. Let the sun warm your face and skin and play to your heart’s content.

    Read More: Natural Sources of Vitamin D, Natural Sunscreen Protection with Real Food, Disease & Vitamin D Deficiency, Sunshine Benefits

    3. Choose only grass-fed, pastured and wild animal foods.

    Grass-fed, pasture-raised and wild caught animal foods are deeply nourishing.  Indeed, for thousands of years prior to the advent of industrial agriculture, these were the only animal foods we knew.  The manner in which an animal was raised does make a difference, not only to your health but to the health and vibrancy of your local economy and environment.  Grass-fed beef and red meat is a richer source of conjugated linoleic acid, omega-3 fatty acids, beta carotene and retinol than the meat of conventionally raised animals. Moreover, grass- and pasture-based ranching provides environmental benefits as well – nurturing the local fields, improving the diversity and proliferation of native flora and fauna.

    To Do: Investigate a source for grass-fed local meat (try Local Harvest), or buy online if high quality local meat isn’t available (see sources).

    Read More: CLA, Disease & Diet, How to Pan-fry a Great Steak, 10 Reasons to NOT Give up Red Meat, CLA: The Good Transfat, Grass-finished vs. CAFO Beef

    4. Eat more fat: butter, lard, tallow and olive oil.

    Fat nourishes our bodies just as it nourished the bodies of our ancestors.  Examinations into traditional peoples indicates that most traditional societies reveled in fat – with some peoples consuming up to 80% of their daily calories from fat alone.  Vitamins A, D, E and K are fat-soluble; that is, your body needs fat to properly absorb, metabolize and utilize these critical nutrients.  Without wholesome fats, your body is operating at a nutritional loss.  Moreover, you’ll miss their unctuous quality and the fullness of flavor they lend to the dishes you produce in your kitchen.

    To Do: Pick up some grass-fed butter and ghee (see sources), some unrefined olive oil (see sources) or perhaps even some grass-fed beef tallow (see sources).

    Read More: Ghee: A Wholesome Fat, Reader Questions: Animal Fat & Lactic Acid Fermentation, Fats for Cooking & Fats to Eat Uncooked, Fat Soluble Vitamins.

    5. Make mineral-rich stock every week.

    In our home, mineral-rich stock makes its way to the table every day: a soup, a reduction, a gravy.  Incorporating homemade stock into your kitchen is one of the most important improvements you can make for the health of your family.  Properly prepared, homemade stock is rich in micronutrients – calcium, magnesium and other minerals as well as more elusive nutrients such as glucosamine chondroitin and collagen.  These important nutrients play a role in your body’s ability to respond to infections and attacks, which is why chicken soup may be thought to have curative powers.  Besides, a good homemade stock can add subtle nuances of flavor to your dishes and a charm that is lacking in the boxed and canned broths you find at your supermarket.  Stock is affordable affordable to prepare as well – requiring only vegetable scraps, water and a few bones – making nutrient-dense food almost free.

    To Do: Set aside some time, every week, to prepare at least one gallon of stock.  The active preparation time takes minutes, and you can use stock in soups, stews, gravies, reduction sauces, as a beverage, for preparing grains and for braising vegetables.

    Read More: Chicken Feet Stock, Roast Chicken Stock, Beef Stock Recipe, Chicken Soup Cure, Benefits of Bone Broth, Broth is Beautiful

    6. If you eat dairy, make it raw or cultured.

    If you eat choose to eat dairy, take great care to make sure you’re eating high quality dairy products in the new year.  Fresh, raw milk, cream, butter and cheese from cows fed on pasture is a food held sacred to many cultures and regions across the globe: the Americas, Africa, the Middle East, South Asia and Europe.  These wholesome dairy products are rich in food enzymes, beneficial lactobacillus bacteria and natural vitamins that are otherwise destroyed by pasteurization.  And while raw milk is not a panacea for every ill, when fresh milk comes from healthy cows, it is deeply nourishing.  For those who may not be able to tolerate or who choose not to consume milk on its own, cultured dairy products like yogurt, crème fraîche and bonny clabber offer a nice alternative.  Culturing dairy products helps to restore beneficial bacteria to the food, during that process sugars are metabolized reducing the food’s overall glycemic load. Butter, ghee (clarified butter), fresh cream and raw milk cheese deserve a place in every kitchen.

    To Do: Find a source of raw milk or begin culturing your own dairy products at home (see sources for cultures an starters).

    Read More: Milk Kefir, Homemade Yogurt, 10 Reasons to Drink Your Milk Raw, 10 Cultured Dairy Foods & How to Use Them, How to Choose an Organic Raw Milk Dairy, For the Love of Fresh Cream

    7. If you eat grain, always sprout, sour or soak it first.

    If you choose to eat grain, always sprout, sour or soak it first.  Grain is not an essential or important aspect of a wholesome, nourishing diet.  There’s nothing you can find in grain that you can’t find in greater quantities elsewhere.  While a crusty loaf of sourdough bread dipped in a fragrant olive oil might be a nice treat, it isn’t essential.  Grain should be kept to a minimum, if eaten at all.  If you choose to eat grain, this year make sure to prepare it properly in accordance with traditional, time-honored methods.  You see, whole gain contains an antinutrient called phytic acid which binds up minerals preventing their full absorption.  Which means all those whole grain cereals, crackers and cookies aren’t doing you or your family a lick of good.  The effects of these antinutrients can be mitigated by souring, sprouting or soaking which combines whole grain with warmth and slightly acidic solution.  This process activates phytase, a food enzyme, that effectively neutralizes phytic acid rendering the whole grain more digestible and its nutrients better absorbed.  Make the effort, in the new year, to sour, sprout or soak your grain.

    To Do: The next batch of bread you make should be sourdough, and plan meals ahead so you have time to properly prepare your grain for optimal nutrition.  Give sprouting a try.  If you don’t have time to soak or sour your grains, use sprouted grain flour (see sources) instead.

    Read More: Baking with Sprouted Grain Flour, Sprouted Grain: The How & Why10 Reasons to Give up Grains, Working with Sourdough: Tips & Tricks

    8. Learn to love liver, roe, kidneys, heart and other offal.

    Liver, roe, kidneys, heart, tongue: no, they don’t sound all too appealing, do they?  These organ meats are among the most nutrient-dense foods available and, for North American palates, their unique, mineral-rich flavor takes some getting used to.  They’re worth learning to like, and learning to crave.  Liver is an extraordinarily rich source of folate, vitamin A and B vitamins while roe is rich in omega-3 fatty acids and fat soluble vitamins including vitamins A and E.  These are potent, and strong foods so you needn’t eat them daily, but try to make sure that liver and roe appear at your dinner table weekly.  Take care to prepare and eat  other nutrient-dense offal periodically as well.

    To Do: Purchase a tub of fish roe from your local fishmonger or online, and stop by your market to pick up some grass-fed beef liver or pasture-raised chicken livers.  If you have trouble finding these foods locally, they are available online (see sources).  A good first recipe is Sage & Chicken Liver Pâté.

    Read More: Best Sources of Vitamins & Minerals, 10 Nutritional Powerhouses that Won’t Break the Bank, The Liver Files

    9. Eat cultured or fermented foods daily.

    Cultured and fermented foods play an enormous role in traditional diets.  First born of practicality, fermenting and actively culturing foods offers benefits beyond its practical beginning as a way to preserve food without refrigeration.  Indeed, the natural process of fermentation often increases vitamin content while reducing sugar content; moreover, fermented foods are teeming with beneficial bacteria – those wee beasties that interact with your body by strengthening your immune system, manufacturing vitamins in the gut and warding off pathogens.  Make the effort to eat fermented and cultured foods at least daily.  In our home, we eat small amounts of yogurt, kefir, sauerkraut, sour pickles, kombucha or other fermented foods with nearly every meal.

    To Do: Make your first batch of sauerkraut, homemade yogurt or water kefir.  If you need a starter culture you can find them online (see sources), and if you need recipe inspiration pick up a copy of Get Cultured, my recipe booklet detailing delicious, nourishing recipes for probiotic foods.

    Read More: 10 Dairy-free Probiotics, Prebiotics and Probiotics, Healthy Children Eat Dirt, Fermented Food for Beginners, Fermented & Cultured Foods, Benefits of Lactic Acid Fermentation

    10. Give back to your foodshed and to the real food movement.

    Lastly, this year make the effort to give back to your local foodshed and to share in the real food movement.  Support your farmers markets and CSAs through volunteer work.  Support organizations devoted to real food, farmers and consumer rights with your dollars.  Every little bit counts.  Share your experiences with your real food journey with your friends: online through social media like Facebook and Twitter and off-line in real-world, one-to-one interactions.  The movement is growing fast, don’t you want to be a part of it?

    To Do: Contact your local farmers market (find one on Local Harvest), and offer to volunteer.  Become a member of the Weston A Price Foundation. Give a donation to the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund.

    Read More: Get the Most from Your Farmers Market: 10 Tips from a Market Manager

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  • Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating


    Product DescriptionIn this book, you will find the latest information about how what you eat affects your health, the environment, and the existence of the animals who share this planet. Vegan explains clearly how simple but significant the switch to an all-plant diet can be. Adding weight to Marcus’s own arguments are in-depth discussions of ground-breaking work by these internationally respected experts: Heart specialist Dean Ornish, M. D. Nutrition scientist T. Colin Campbell, P. . . More >>
    Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating

    Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating is a post from the Vegetarian Vitamins Guide blog where you can find suggestions and advice from vegetarians and vegans on vegetarian diets, supplements, vitamins and overall nutrition.

    Related Vegetarian Vitamins Posts:

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  • Climate Panic?

    Grist muses over the possibility that abrupt climate change in the not-too-distant future might trigger a chaotic response.

    One morning in the not too distant future, you might wake up and walk to your mailbox. The newspaper is in there and it’s covered with shocking headlines: Coal Plants Shut Down! Airline Travel Down 50 Percent! New Federal Carbon Restrictions in Place! Governor Kicked Out of Office for Climate Indolence!

    It is exactly these economic impacts that the Glenn Becks and the Rush Limbaughs fear we’ll impose on ourselves through restrictive government regulation of energy and carbon emissions. Ironically, a “no action” approach today actually makes a climate panic much more likely over time. What we’re describing would be popularly driven, not fueled by governments or policy wonks. It would be the direct result of free will, democracy, autonomy and the information superhighway. All these forces would accelerate, not mitigate, the greatest “Aha!” moment in the history of the human species. Imagine the sub-prime mortgage bubble pop multiplied a hundred fold.

    I hesitate to argue for rationality (certainly our current climate and energy policies aren’t), but I think the physics of climate and human nature do not favor this outcome. The pain of economic dislocation is immediate. At the point of abrupt climate change, on the other hand, it would be evident that we’re stuck with it for decades, because there’s no quick way to reverse the accumulation of GHGs in the atmosphere. Even lowering emissions to zero overnight would have only a gradual climatic effect. Since that would be evident to everyone, especially those with GHG-intensive assets, it seems unlikely that rapid controls would emerge, and likely that they would be reversed when their pain was felt too keenly. I suppose macroeconomic feedbacks might make the damage irreversible, or countries might start launching cruise missiles at each others’ coal-fired power plants, but those seem like long odds.

    More likely, I suspect, is that panic would yield enormous pressure to pursue geoengineering options – the only real prospect for a quick reversal of radiative imbalance. If, at that point, we’ve triggered abrupt climate changes without warning, it seems likely that our understanding of geoengineering side-effects would still be half-baked. The nasty side effects that might emerge from efforts under such circumstances strikes me as the greater threat of climate panic.

    Setting climate aside, another panic scenario that should concern fossil-fired asset owners is a major oil supply disruption. That could de facto shut down emissions and use through high prices, no political will power required.

  • How to Clean a Toaster

    Oh, rats. The toaster is making a disgusting burned smell every time you use it, but your toast isn’t burnt after it pops up. There must be something stuck in the toaster somewhere and you need to clean it. The whole process is pretty easy, but I’ve seen a couple people do some scary and dangerous things, so I thought a review of how to clean a toaster might be helpful. clean a toaster

    • Unplug the toaster. This is your first step and should be the first step before you mess around with any appliances. An awful lot of people just shove a butter knife on in the toaster to unjam a piece of burnt bread or bagel and get a nice little jolt of electricity.
    • Take the toaster over to the trash can and turn it upside down over the can. (Some crumbs will probably fall out, which is why it makes sense to do this over the can.)
    • Open the little door on the bottom of the toaster and turn the toaster right side up over the trash can. Tap the toaster gently to get out all the loose crumbs.
    • If the outside of the toaster is dirty, wipe down the surface with a damp rag to remove grease or grime. Never put the toaster in a sink full of soapy water. If it is too dirty to clean without immersing it in water, it may be time to buy a new toaster.
    • Shut the toaster’s bottom door and set it back up.

    Do you have any additional tips for safely cleaning a toaster?

    Photo: SXC

    Post from: Blisstree

    How to Clean a Toaster

  • LG Arena GT950, mid-level touchscreen candybar gets spied on it way to AT&T

    LG_GT950_AT&T1

    Not everyone wants a super duper smartphone, some people prefer the simplicity of a feature phone and it looks like LG may be sending such a phone to AT&T. A series of leaked spy shots show a customized LG Arena KM900 sporting AT&T branding.  The GT950 will feature a 3 inch, 800×480 touchscreen display, 5 megapixel camera, GPS, WiFi, 8GB of internal memory and LG’s whizbang S-Class UI. No word on pricing or launch date but from the finished look of the product it could be quite soon. Hit the jump for a few more spy shots.

    LG_GT950_AT&T_b


    LG_GT950_AT&T_c

    [via PhoneArena]

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