Category: News

  • Rugged and reliable, the GasAlertQuattro

    BW Technologies by Honeywell introduces the newest member of the GasAlert family – the GasAlertQuattro. Rugged and reliable, the GasAlertQuattro four-gas detector combines a comprehensive range of features with simple one-button operation.

    Simultaneously monitor and display H2S, CO, O2 and combustibles. With flexible power options, AA batteries or a rechargeable battery pack, the GasAlertQuattro is always ready for your shift. The large LCD with intuitive icons and backlight simplifies on-site auditing and compliance. Bump test and calibration icons are clearly identifiable, and extra-large digits are easy to read in varying light conditions. The green LED confidence flash provides continuous visual confirmation of detector operation and compliance.

    The versatile GasAlertQuattro was designed for harsh environments. A durable exterior with reinforced bumpers and integral concussion-proof boot protect the detector. Suited to a wide range of industrial applications including general confined space entry, the GasAlertQuattro offers a simple, automatic calibration procedure and is compatible with BW’s MicroDock II automatic test and calibration system.

    With the GasAlertQuattro, seeing is believing.

  • World’s First 4-port Gigabit Networking PoE Computer for High Bandwidth Networks

    Korenix unveils JetBox 9533G exclusive 4-port Gigabit Embedded networking VPN Router Computer for providing extended high-bandwidth data transmission in industrial networks. In addition to its already rich interface of LAN, WAN, DIO, Serial Console and USB ports, the RISC-based computer is designed with 4 PoE ports for delivering power along with data to high resolution cameras and other high performance PoE enabled devices. The almighty computer has a complete Layer3 routing and VPN functionality to expend networking capabilities and reduce system costs by effectively managing dynamic long-distance and secure overlay gigabit network groups. Combined with IP-31 rugged fan-less, anti vibration/shock design, and -25~70oC operating temperature, JetBox 9533G ensures the reliability and high-performance of large network infrastructures in severe industrial environments.

    Huge Network Capacity with 4 Gigabit Ports
    JetBox 9533G outstands from other VPN router computers with its exclusive design of 4 integrated Gigabit RJ45 ports. With the Giga ports the VPN computer works as a backbone networking device to connect to up to 4 gigabit switches in extended networks for delivering maximum throughput for high performance, high-density and reliable connection.

    Maximum Flexibility through All-in-One Interface
    JetBox 9533G is compliant with the IEEE802.3af PoE standard and operates as a power sourcing equipment to provide 15.4W power per port to higher resolution IP cameras, VoIP phones, Wireless Access Points, etc. IPC providers can benefit from the 4 Giga PoE ports of the computer to deliver hundreds of megapixel video streams with reduced construction, maintenance time and costs. In addition to the PoE interface, the JetBox 9533G provides 8DIO, Serial RS-232 Console, USB port for easily connecting and reading the status of RFID readers, IO devices and other data enriched products.

    Effective Group Management and Secure VPN Networking
    JetBox 9533G supports VPN functionality and therefore can expand high-bandwidth networking capabilities and reduce system costs by establishing long-distance and secured network connections over WAN.

    With its rich interface, outstanding management and L3 routing capabilities, the almighty 4-port Gigabit VPN Router Computer extends the network groups and provides huge network bandwidth connection with minimum installation costs in large scale industrial environments.

    Korenix Technology
    www.korenix.com
    +886-2-8911-1000
    [email protected]

  • TR200 promotion

    TR200 Promotion
    As long as purchased the roughness tester TR200 from our company, the software of TR200 for PC provided free!
    For more detailed information, please do not hesitate to contact with agents of each region!
    With the softeare, it is convinient for users to managing, analyzing, printing and serching measured data and graphs.

  • Back in 1986 Westech introduced the “Killer Bucket” – in 2009, it’s back!

    Westech Engineering can custom design a Loader Bucket to your specific application. We will build the bucket size to match your loader capacity and digging environment.

    1. Low Wide Profile – for better digging, dumping and visibility. Sweeps clean to save tires.

    2. Field Proven Lip Systems – Projecting lip and wing shrouds penetrate material, maximizing breakout force. Quick change replaceable points, adapters and wear parts reduce downtime costs. Other lip options are available upon request.

    3. Flush Wear Shrouds – Protect lip, eliminate lip welding and ensures flush and clean passes to protect tires.

    4. Cast Alloy Corners – Reduce Bucket Flexing, contoured for strength and better material flow, eliminate cracking and weld repair.

    5. Replacement Bottom Runners – Optional runners of hard alloy, protect bucket bottom from wear. These runners can be Quickly Replaced.

    6. See-Through Rock Spill Guard – Full protection with excellent visibility.

    Replaceable Bottom Runners can be quickly replaced.

  • Climate Coup – Lord Monckton vs Al Gore

    The Juice Media has an interesting debate between Al Gore and Lord Monckton about global warming – Climate Coup – Lord Monckton rap battles Al Gore – Rap News.


  • Climate Change: Scientific Fact, Not Political Issue

    Fabricio Vanden Broeck

    Fabricio Vanden Broeck

    Mario Osava

    RIO DE JANEIRO (IPS/TerraViva) – “In a year’s time, the Japanese archipelago will be completely under water.” This official announcement was made following a violent eruption of Mt. Fuji, as a series of devastating earthquakes shook the country, forcing the world to face the challenge of taking in 110 million refuges within a very short time.

    After a brutal diplomatic battle, the Japanese government managed to secure frail support from its fellow nations and evacuate 65 million people. Twenty million sank with the islands, many of them voluntarily, out of love for their country or to give younger people a better chance of fleeing. The rest are believed to have died before the islands sank, victims of the quakes, tsunamis and other natural disasters.

    This account is part of a futuristic book published in Japan in 1973, and translated into English as “Japan Sinks”. The author, Japanese novelist Komatsu Sakyo, imagines this catastrophe based on potential natural phenomena, such as the intensification and alteration of tectonic plate shifts under the Pacific Ocean.

    But outside the world of fiction, the planet today is being hit by increasingly frequent floods, and many small island states and coastal cities face the real possibility of sinking in the near future. And all of this is a result of human actions.

    The threat in real life is coming from above rather than below, but the consequences are equally tragic, even if they appear less catastrophic because they are more spread out in time and space.

    A huge cataclysm like the one depicted by Sakyo may be what the world needs to reach an effective agreement that will steer it away from the suicidal path of global warming.

    Certain changes, especially those wrought against the economic tide, are only possible after exceptional tragedies or social turmoil. Last year’s global financial crisis, for example, was not dramatic enough to bring about structural changes.

    The magnitude of Sakyo’s fictional disaster does not lie merely in the number of victims, but in the fact that it completely wipes out a rich nation like Japan, a country that many in the 1970s saw as challenging the economic power of the United States. The novel is also critical of the arrogance displayed by Japan in the post-war reconstruction period.

    The fact that tropical countries, especially small, impoverished nations, will suffer the worst effects of global warming fails to prompt cooperation that should be natural in our present circumstances, as it is a threat that affects the entire world.

    The current climate crisis highlights the multiple dimensions of the inequalities among nations, which hinder negotiations. The leading issues – such as legally-binding targets for emissions and funding for programs to address climate change – divide the world, with wealthy countries on one side and the rest of the world on the other, and a middle group of emerging nations whose intention to continue to be counted within the ranks of the poor nations (in terms of emissions cuts, etc) is rejected by the rich.

    This inequality is a spoke in the wheel of any multilateral talks, in both market, financial, patent or health matters.

    These are all opportunities for developing countries to close the gap that separates them from the rich and obtain more aid for their own development, now with the irrefutable argument that the industrialised world is responsible for the historic accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

    But when it comes to climate change, the blocs formed in other forums fall apart. Brazil, for example, is persistently under pressure from environmentalists to break away from the G77 group of 130 developing nations so that it can contribute to reaching an agreement and regaining the leadership role it had in the negotiations for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992, and the Kyoto Protocol in 1997.

    Because it has specific and feasible means to reduce greenhouse gas emissions – by curbing deforestation and increasing its already vastly developed clean energy production -, environmental activists argue that it would be to Brazil’s own advantage to commit to ambitious targets.

    China, which is associated with the G77, alienated itself from the coalition by moving closer to the United States in volume of greenhouse gases emitted, building one coal-fired electric power plant a week, and holding more than two trillion dollars in reserves.

    It’s frightening to think of 1.3 billion Chinese speeding forward towards what is now recognised as an unsustainable process of industrialisation and consumption.

    The position of countries that are rich in fossil fuels differs radically from that of those dependent on imported oil. Latitudes and altitudes, the abundance or lack of forests, the threat of desertification, or the dependence on glaciers are some of the many aspects that mark the differences in how climate change impacts each country.

    Numerous small island states are already fighting for survival, so they have joined forces with those African nations that are severely affected by desertification and major crop losses to demand that 1.5 degrees C be set as the limit for the rise in temperature in this century. Exceeding that threshold will condemn entire nations to almost certain death or displacement.

    But, what power do these countries have to counter the two-degree limit adopted?

    This is not about rich countries imposing their will on poor countries, or of a class struggle between states. The goals that must be met are being dictated by scientific studies and assessments. Climate change has crowned a new absolute power: the power of science, whose findings are now determining the very existence of the world’s entire population.

    Thousands of scientists who participated in the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) agreed that a temperature rise of two degrees C by 2100 is a feasible and tolerable limit. Above that, chaos will ensue.

    Climate sceptics don’t count. They’re a tiny minority and, in many cases, have lost credibility because they are thought to defend the interests of the fossil fuel industry, or to act out because they feel attacked by attempts to prevent the great climate disaster.

    Voices have already been raised against the verdict issued by climate experts, voices that demand that society be included in decision-making, with suggestions of holding referendums. But this is a field where the premises lay outside the dynamics of “democracy.” Climate change is a fact, not an issue.

    Politics can only decide on how to handle the phenomenon. Questioning it or determining any variations in the facts is the exclusive domain of science.

    This new dimension of what many refer to as the “age of knowledge” will dictate the rules that govern many activities, demanding energy efficiency, and forcing people to change their patterns of consumption and their habits, as has already been achieved, for example, with tobacco in the field of health.
    (END/2009)

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  • This Just In From Copenhagen: Accord Reached By Key Parties!

    Attached is the draft Copenhagen Accord, which was hammered out by the United States, China, India and South Africa, and made available less than two hours ago.  The Conference of the Parties is still in session; reportedly 26 other nations are reviewing the draft and may join the Accord.  Details regarding wider acceptance of this draft are sketchy at this point.

    The major issues that have caused controversy among the delegates have been addressed, such as: a commitment by the developed world countries to provide financing to the developing world countries to assist with mitigation and adaptation, amounting to $30 billion between 2010 and 2012, rising to $100 billion by 2020; prevention of deforestation and market mechanisms to enhance forest programs; a recognition of the importance of keeping the rise in temperature to less than 2 degrees; and a commitment to reducing global greenhouse gas emissions to below 50 percent of 1990 level, with Annex I parties committing to reduce their emissions individually or jointly by 80 percent.  Finally, implementation of the Accord shall be reviewed in 2016 to determine if the long-term goal of a less than 2 degree rise in temperature should be reduced to 1.5 degrees.

  • UK Digital Economy Bill Section 124H Would Give Ability To Silently Censor Websites

    There have been lots of complaints about Peter Mandelson’s “Digital Economy Bill” in the UK, which, beyond pushing a three strikes policy on the UK, would also grant Mandelson (or whomever he or future Business Secretaries deputize) the power to automatically change copyright law at will with no oversight. Scary enough, but it gets worse. As everyone’s been focused on these clauses, they may have missed another scary one. Brian points out that another section, Section 124H, would also grant the Secretary of State the power to silently block access to any websites he dislikes. Yes, it would allow the Secretary of State to create a no-visit list that ISPs would have to block. And there would be no oversight (again). Oh, and it’s not just websites. The order could be used for something like “block all BitTorrent” traffic. Seems like a bit much, doesn’t it?

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  • Best Butter Cookies

    Best Butter Cookies

    It’s hard to beat a good butter cookie. It’s also hard to find one that is just the right combination of crispness, tenderness and a good buttery flavor. Bakeries – even otherwise good ones – are filled with bland “butter cookies” topped with a variety of colorful sprinkles to lure you into giving them a chance. I stick to making my own butter cookies these days, especially since I found a recipe that makes the best butter cookies I’ve ever had.

    The recipe is from Pam Anderson, a food writer who is a former editor of Cook’s Illustrated, whose work is regularly published in USA Weekend, and the author of several cookbooks. Her all purpose butter cookies are simple, delicious and very versatile, so hers has been my go-to recipe since I first clipped it out of the paper years ago. The dough is very easy to put together and makes a great batch of slice-and-bake cookies that you can decorate with sprinkles or nuts. There is no leavening in this dough and the cookies will spread slightly, but hold their shape well, during baking. This means that the dough also works well as dough for spritz cookies, which are made by putting cookie dough through a cookie press (common around Christmas) and pressing it into different designs.

    The dough can be made a few days in advance and stored in the refrigerator or freezer. The dough is sticky when it is warm, so you need a well-floured surface to work on. That said, this is a good feature because it means that you can work with the dough quite a bit (if you want to try making cutout cookies, for instance) without the dough toughening up. I usually stick with the slice-n-bake cookies, rolling the edges of the cookie logs in sprinkles or nuts before slicing them into individual cookies on the cookie sheet. The cookies above have been rolled in sprinkles and in shredded coconut.

    (more…)

  • GM begins repayment to U.S. and Canadian governments

    Filed under: ,

    Good news, the check is in the mail! General Motors issued a (very) brief press release this afternoon stating that the automaker had delivered on its promise to issue its first reimbursement checks to the U.S. and Canadian governments by the end of the year. GM sent $1 billion to the feds and $192 million to the Canadian government, and GM reiterated in the statement that it would complete payments totaling $6.7 billion (to the U.S. government) by June 2010.

    Beyond the $6.7 billion GM owes the federal government is a 60 percent ownership stake Uncle Sam has on the 101-year-old automaker. When the General releases an initial public offering the resulting stock sale will (supposedly) buy the government out. Experts feel the IPO could happen as early as the second half of 2010. Hit the jump to read over the General’s succinct press release.

    [Source: GM | Image: Bill Pugliano/Getty]

    Continue reading GM begins repayment to U.S. and Canadian governments

    GM begins repayment to U.S. and Canadian governments originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • The Advantages of Launching Outside of the Valley

    siliconvalley_lead_dec09a.jpgIn 2006, Y Combinator founder Paul Graham wrote an essay entitled, “How to Be Silicon Valley.” He argues that a tech hub must have nerds and people with money. At the time, he proposed that Boulder and Portland would be the next tech hubs and indeed both have thrived. Nevertheless, as seed funds and incubators become more common, new tech centers are springing up in some of the most unlikely places. ReadWriteWeb caught up with two mentorship groups to find out the advantages of launching outside of the tech epicenter of Silicon Valley.

    Sponsor

    Bootup Labs

    bootuplabs_dec09a.jpgAfter moving from the Valley, Vancouver-based entrepreneurs Boris Mann and Danny Robinson looked for a way to continue working with startups. The duo launched Bootup Labs to fix the Northern tech ecosystem and pass some of their lessons on to budding entrepreneurs. The group accepts 6 companies per program cycle for two annual cycles. Companies receive 8 months of mentorship, free office space, administrative/legal services and a $100,000 dollar covertible line of credit. In exchange for mentorship and funding, Bootup takes 5% equity from your company. If you choose to use the entire line of credit, they will receive an additional 10%. By attracting a star-studded cast of program mentors including Guy Kawasaki, NowPublic CEO Len Brody, and investor and writer Paul Kedrosky, Mann and Robinson ensure that their program’s 12 annual spots are highly coveted.

    Says Mann, “I asked Flickr founder Stewart Butterfield why he decided to stay in Vancouver and build his new startup Tiny Speck. He answered that he loves living here. Being a place where people love to live is hard to replicate. We have the nerds, we think it’s easier for us to bring more nerds here because of immigration rules (vs. the US) AND because people love it. [We’ve got] mountains, ocean and it’s one of the most livable cities in the world.

    Bootup Labs’ choices for its January cycle include event-based community Zedmo, lifestream aggregator Statusly, location-based gaming development service Compass Engine, relevancy-based web surfing aid ReadFu, online farmer’s market Foodtree and enterprise storefront platform Blast Ramp.

    Difference Engine

    differenceengine_logo_dec09.jpgLaunched this year by Jon Bradford, Difference Engine is based in the North East of England. The group offers applicants £20,000 pounds of investment capital and a 16 week program in business development in exchange for an 8% equity stake. As of January, Difference Engine will welcome 10 teams per cycle, with 2 program cycles per year.

    When asked why Bradford believes his program can create the basis for a good tech community he replied, “The North East of England is home to The Sage Group – one of the largest software company in the UK.  As with many other parts of Europe it is not the lack of technical expertise but the lack of pre seed capital and support which reduces the opportunities for young entrepreneurs.  Whilst there is increasing activity with angel investors, it is still less mature that the US market…The Difference Engine provides mentors the opportunity to “get up close and personal” with teams over an extended period of time [and] mentors may ultimately invest in these businesses.”

    According to Bradford, one of the advantages of starting a company is Europe is the fact that developers learn to build platforms and businesses with multi-language capabilities. This attention to global markets places European and Asian companies at a potential advantage to their US-based competitors. Difference Engine’s group’s first intake will be in February 2010, to apply for the inaugural program entrepreneurs can submit ideas via the Difference Engine application form.

    Discuss


  • Using Google Apps? 5 Ways to Avoid Getting Hacked

    Security is one of the biggest concerns for business owners when deciding whether to use an online service like Google Apps.

    So what are the best ways to protect yourself when using it?

    Amit Agarwal is a professional blogger and technology columnist. He writes digital inspiration, a world-class technology blog. But Amit got hacked this week. He wrote about it on his blog, providing some excellent advice on how to protect yourself from a similar kind of attack.

    Sponsor

    Amit wrote that he often receives false requests to change his password. He received a similar message this week, but ignored it. A few minutes later he started getting error messages. He could not get to his accounts.

    Amit had been hacked. He thinks that a hacker accessed a backup email that he had set up for his accounts.

    Amit had his service restored in about three hours, after some calls to Google. He felt obviously relieved, but also had that feeling of emptiness when you suddenly realize you have no control over your accounts.

    To help others avoid this kind of calamity, Amit summarized in five points how to make sure something like this does not happen to you:

    1. Log-in to your Gmail / Google Account and associate it with a phone number: It’s a simple set up. You will get confirmation via SMS. If you do get attacked, a notification will go to you that someone is trying to get to your password.

    2. Create a new email address: Set up the email to act as a backup and as a secondary email for your Google Apps account. Good advice by Amit: do not auto-forward your email as the whole purpose of setting it up will be defeated.

    3. Write it Down: Get out that old-fashioned pen and paper. Write down the following information so you can verify your identity just in case you do get hacked and your secondary email gets compromised, too.

    From Amit:

    • The month and year when your created your Gmail / Google Account.
    • If you created a Gmail account by invitation, write the email address of the person who first sent you that invite for Gmail.
    • The email addresses of your most frequently emailed contacts (the top 5).
    • The names of any custom labels that you may have created in your Gmail account.
    • The day/month/year when you started using various other Google services (like AdSense, Orkut, Blogger, etc.) that are associated with the Google account that you are trying to recover. If you’re not certain about some of the dates, provide your closest estimate.

    4. Run a Test! Log-out of all your Gmail / Google Accounts. Start the password recovery process. This guarantees that what you set up actually works. You want to be absolutely certain your SMS settings and secondary email addresses are configured correctly.

    5. Check your IP Address: From time to time check out the IP address in the footer of your Gmail Inbox. If you see an odd one, change your Google password immediately. Knowing IP addresses may seem too technical to some but it’s good information to know.

    You should not have to be overly concerned about Google Apps security. If people take these kinds of basic steps, the chances of getting hacked decrease considerably.

    Discuss


  • Stat Model Predicts Flat Temperatures Through 2050 by Doug L. Hoffman

    Article Tags: Doug L. Hoffman, Headline Story

    Image Attachment
    While climate skeptics have gleefully pointed to the past decade’s lack of temperature rise as proof that global warming is not happening as predicted, climate change activists have claimed that this is just “cherry picking” the data. They point to their complex and error prone general circulation models that, after significant re-factoring, are now predicting a stretch of stable temperatures followed by a resurgent global warming onslaught. In a recent paper, a new type of model, based on a test for structural breaks in surface temperature time series, is used to investigate two common claims about global warming. This statistical model predicts no temperature rise until 2050 but the more interesting prediction is what happens between 2050 and 2100.

    David R.B. Stockwell and Anthony Cox, in a paper submitted to the International Journal of Forecasting entitled “Structural break models of climatic regime-shifts: claims and forecasts,” have applied advanced statistical analysis to both Australian temperature and rainfall trends and global temperature records from the Hadley Center’s HadCRU3GL dataset. The technique they used is called the Chow test, invented by economist Gregory Chow in the early 1960s. The Chow test is a statistical test of whether the coefficients in two linear regressions on different data sets are equal. In econometrics, the Chow test is commonly used in time series analysis to test for the presence of a structural break.

    Source: theresilientearth.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Telling the Whole Story

    The following is another interesting article by Tom Fiske:

    Thomas Fiske Who knows the reason? I can’t remember what it was, but I joined a group of people at my church that were working on their autobiographical histories. That is, members were learning from each other how to put together their own personal life stories. They wanted to pass on to their children and grandchildren not only the bare facts their progeny would learn from their genealogies, but also the reasons for those facts.

    You know—something like, “Uncle Harold got sick and died, leaving us his house in Des Moines, so we moved there during the 1940’s.” In addition members made a deliberate effort to recall mom and dad’s favorite expressions and their own as well. My father was a bit pretentious at times and might utter, “Lord love a duck!” Since he had the ability to swear prodigiously, that was more of a blessing than we realized at the time. Occasionally we made use of questionnaires that asked very probing questions. Answers to these questions led us to recall facts and stories that we hadn’t thought of in forty years.

    Each time we met (for us it was twice a month) we would read what we had prepared usually since the last meeting (although some of my published works contained stories of my childhood or of my children’s life experiences). Occasionally there were suggestions for improvement, but since all of us at heart are comma movers, we seldom talked about grammar. One of my often-used comments was, “I want to know more. Please tell me more. Why did you compare your first husband to a mule?” – or some such thing. People tend to overlook interesting stories as they forge ahead to some point that is interesting only to them (perhaps a justification).

    Sometimes people use the passive case too often. They might say, “Dinner was served,” rather than, “Mother cooked a fantastic meal of turkey and sweet potatoes that included a dash of Bourbon for flavor.”

    I recall a man in our group who had been a general in the Eighth Air Force in Europe during WWII. There was a time when about half the American bombers in the Eighth were being shot down and lives of its young men were often quite short. He talked about staying in England and meeting English civilians, recalling quite a bit about two things—their shoes and what he ate almost every meal. Oh yes—he met several famous people also: royalty, movie stars, and General Patton among them. He seldom mentioned the danger they faced with each mission.

    Another person in the autobiographical writer’s group was a German lady who had been a pretty teen-ager during the war. She was the niece of a famous rocket scientist, and as the war drew to a close in Europe, she and her sisters were captured and taken into Russia as slaves to work in the fields. She eventually escaped into Western Germany, then emigrated to Canada where she married a fellow German. Later, she moved to Southern California. When I left the group to move to another city, she was locating her elderly family and arranging visits with her sisters back into Germany. She had not seen them since 1943.

    And there was another lady whose personal life was very interesting. Furthermore her husband, a doctor, led a professional life that was and still is a national secret. She was not allowed to know anything about that part of his career, either. But when he died he told her a little of it.

    As a fellow member of the autobiographical writer’s group, I learned about myself as well as the other members. We had no idea that our hum-drum “every day” lives were so very interesting, if told in the right way. I am not talking about prurient details, either. I am talking about great patriotic heroism mostly for the United States, but in one case, for Germany.

    These were very rich and enriching meetings.

    Generally, the meetings are still available to most of us. Churches and community groups sponsor them all over the country, even today. They allot space because they know everybody has a story to tell. You don’t have to be a member of a church to belong to a group that meets in a church room, and members seldom if ever try to “convert” you, except to interesting writing.

    The autobiographical narrative can be about a segment of your life or cradle to the grave. General Electric Company moved me across the country, so my life story, at least during much of my working life, was divided evenly into sets of years spent in industrial cities across the country. Determining chapters for my autobiography was easy because I had large stops and starts in it. But for someone in America who seldom moved, chapters require some thought. And the hardest problem to solve is how you combine your three main stories: your career, your family life and your faith. I have never seen a completely satisfactory method.

    If it is hard to do, you might ask, “Why bother?” The dividend of a series of meetings is, of course, a notebook full of information for the generations ahead. All in all, you are passing along a message to the next generation. You want it to be concise and helpful. You learned something in all your years that could save the next generation and the one after that a great deal of trouble. Your autobiographical narrative is part of their heritage, and is a natural extension of your genealogy. Perhaps it belongs at the end of a bound genealogical record.

    Your story is intensely personal by itself, but when combined with others, it becomes the history of the United States of America.

    Check the Internet under the heading, “Autobiographical Narrative” for more information.

    Thomas S. Fiske
    Fullerton, CA
    Dec. 10,2009

  • HTC HD2 coming to T-Mobile US – confirmed by ROM dump

    htchd2tmous A new ROM (version 2.01) for the HTC HD2 has just leaked, and it contains files which confirm the smartphone will be coming to T-Mobile USA.

    WMExperts have dumped the ROM, and found the following updates there:

  • Leo ROM 2.01
  • WM6.5 build 21869
  • Opera 9.7.0.35627
  • OzIM_US_1.0.5.1.139
  • Teeter 2.0 (ooh, a new version)
  • TMOUS_Manila_Core 2.5.1921401
  • WME is hearing a launch date for around March 2010, which is a bit later than expected.

    Read more at WMExperts here.

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  • NGOs Getting Ready for Mexico

    Activists meeting at Klimaforum. Credit: Daniela Estrada/IPS

    Activists meeting at Klimaforum. Credit: Daniela Estrada/IPS

    Daniela Estrada

    COPENHAGEN (IPS/TerraViva) Before the outcome of COP 15 has even emerged, Latin American social organisations are already discussing their strategies for the next climate summit, to be held in a year’s time in Mexico.

    The primary challenge is to broaden and strengthen the links between the different civil society movements and networks in the region, the international coordinator of Jubilee South, Beverly Keene, told TerraViva.

    Jubilee South is a network of social movements and people’s organisations in Latin America, the Caribbean, Africa and Asia, formed in 1999 to fight for “freedom from debt and domination” in developing countries.

    Keene spoke at a session of Klimaforum09 – the civil society meeting held parallel to the climate change summit in Copenhagen – focused on what directions to take on the road to COP 16, in December 2010 in the Mexican capital.

    “Frankly, I do not expect anything (from COP 15). We have stated very clearly that no agreement at all is better than one which only reinforces the false solutions we have been fighting,” Camila Moreno of Brazil, a member of Friends of the Earth International, told TerraViva at another Klimaforum session.

    Activists concur that the international movement for climate justice has grown stronger over the past year.

    One of its main achievements was the first hearing of the International Court of Climate Justice, celebrated in October in the eastern Bolivian city of Cochabamba by NGOs from all over the world. Seven cases, claiming environmental harm contributing to climate change, were presented by Latin American communities and civil society organisations.

    A people’s tribunal independent of formal justice systems, the aim of the Court is to pass ethical and moral judgment on transnational corporations and complicit states in order to raise the visibility of environmental crimes and the changes needed to coexist in balance with nature.

    “The invitation is to begin the journey toward Mexico 2010. This time COP is coming to our house (Latin America), and we must start mobilising,” said Lyda Fernanda Forero, of the secretariat of the Hemispheric Social Alliance (HSA), an umbrella group for over 60 social networks in the Americas.

    Nicola Bullard, of Climate Justice Now (CJN), a global network of organisations and movements, said climate change provided an opportunity to forge stronger links between the struggles of civil society against the World Trade Organisation and other multilateral institutions.

    The destruction of the environment goes hand-in-hand with social inequality, she said, at the session that was also addressed by Keene.

    The issue of climate change must become a political problem, one that challenges the capitalist model of development, and that does not allow governments and transnational corporations to take a short cut to “green capitalism,” with low greenhouse gas emissions but the same financial architecture, activists argue.

    Amparo Miciano, of the World March of Women, highlighted the fact that during the two weeks’ duration of COP 15 and Klimaforum, people from the industrialised North and the developing South joined together to confront the climate crisis.

    “I have experienced big civil society mobilisations. I’m from Porto Alegre (in southern Brazil), where the World Social Forum (WSF, an annual global gathering held as a counterpoint to the World Economic Forum) came into being, and what is happening here reminds me a lot of the first WSF there. It’s like a huge public education event,” Moreno said.

    “Copenhagen will be a watershed,” said the Brazilian activist.

    In the view of CJN’s Bullard, world public opinion is on the side of the concept of “climate justice,” and this support must be utilised.

    For his part, Diego Azzi, a Brazilian labour activist responsible for regional integration for the Trade Union Confederation of the Americas (TUCA), said that Latin American trade unionists will have a greater presence at COP 16 in Mexico.

    “We are trying to raise awareness among Latin American trade unionists about these environmental issues, through what we call ‘auto-reforma sindical’ (internal reforms of labour unions), which is linked to the trade union perspective on models of development, production and consumption,” he told IPS/TerraViva.

    The NGOs are planning a timetable of actions for 2010, but some priorities are already clear: working at grassroots level, raising public awareness and putting pressure on those in government.

    One of the most concrete proposals so far is to hold many more sessions and hearings before Courts of Climate Justice, and present the cases dealt with in Mexico.
    (END/2009)

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  • Climate-Gate – Michael Coren with Lord Christopher Monckton

    Article Tags: ClimateGate, Lord Monckton, YouTube

    Five part YouTube

    Climate-Gate – Michael Coren with Lord Christopher Monckton – part 1 of 5

    An hour with Lord Christopher Monckton, former science adviser to Margaret Thatcher and a critic of global warming theories.

    Read in full with comments »   


  • People from Ogaden Region Have Faith in Obama

    By Mantoe Phakathi

    COPENHAGEN (IPS/TerraViva) –

    Protesters from local Ogaden community. Credit: Mantoe Phakati

    Protesters from local Ogaden community. Credit: Mantoe Phakati

    The Ogaden region is found in the southeastern part of Ethiopia, bordering on Somalia. It is a semi-arid region that has suffered increasingly frequent droughts, with harsh consequences for its pastoralist population. But the 100 or so members of the Ogaden Community Association of Sweden (OCAS) were not outside the Bella Center to make a point on climate change.

    OCAS president Musluf Hassan said they were appealing to Obama to save them from Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, accusing Ethiopia of having invaded the territory in 1948 and making war on them ever since.

    The region was first conquered by Ethiopia in the latter part of the 19th century by Menelik II.  However, during the brief Italian colonial occupation of Ethiopia beginning in 1936, the region was administered as part of Italian Somaliland, and Ethiopia failed to convince the British to cede the territory to it after the Second World War.

    In 1948, under U.S. pressure, the territory was returned to Ethiopian control, but has remained restive, with the Ogaden National Liberation Front fighting a continued guerrilla struggle for independence.

    In 2007, Ethiopia launched a military crackdown in Ogaden. International rights organisations like Human Rights Watch have accused the Ethiopian government of committing abuses, such as torturing and killing civilians in the region.

    “We therefore appeal to world leaders – especially Obama because we have so much faith in him – to reject the proposal Zenawi made on Wednesday, which was not representative of the African position,” said Umar.

    In a press conference given by Zenawi, as coordinator of African heads of state and government on climate change, and French President Nicholas Sarkozy Wednesday, it was stated that Ethiopia had agreed on a maximum two degree temperature rise and called on the parties to make a 10 billion dollar start-up fund available. Obama then congratulated the Ethiopians on their “leadership.”

    But the G77 group of 130 developing nations and China made it clear that this was not the Africa Group’s position, which was set out in a formal submission to the UNFCCC.

    About 100 OCAS members were there to say that Zenawi, who has already suffered a great deal of criticism for his proposal, is an inappropriate leader for the African team because he has no respect for human rights.

    “Because of the war he is perpetuating against the Ogaden people, many people are raped and killed every day,” said Odal Umar. “We have lots of faith in Obama because he seems to be embracing only countries which respect human rights.”

    (END/2009)

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  • VIDEO: Porsche 911 GT3 rally cars provide perfect Friday soundtrack

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    Click above to watch the video after the jump

    Rally fans often stand at a corner or in the middle of a straight away, sometimes for hours, just to get a glimpse of their favorite car. If you’re lucky, you get a prime spot at a sharp turn or abrupt elevation that leads to airborne cars. Lucky for us, the Internets exist so that the best moments of these races are captured for our enjoyment.

    Over eight minutes of high-revving Porsche GT3 rally cars await you after the jump. Just about every shot is a keeper and the intense (and vivid) screams of the hopped up boxer engines is more than enough reason to spend a few minutes of your time watching the footage after the jump. Besides, you’ll want to remember what it is to actually drive a car before heading out of the office and into rush-hour gridlock, right?

    [Source: YouTube via 0-60]

    Continue reading VIDEO: Porsche 911 GT3 rally cars provide perfect Friday soundtrack

    VIDEO: Porsche 911 GT3 rally cars provide perfect Friday soundtrack originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 16:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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