Category: News

  • New Member from Atlanta here!

    Hello everyone. I’ve been reading your threads for several months now and have found them very helpful. Thanks.

    I am a 28 year old, type 1 diabetic that was diagnosed 7/11/09. I have a great wife and 18mo. old daughter. I felt very loopy and flu-like that day (and a couple days before) when I went to the UrgentCare. I’ll never forget the doc saying "There’s no easy way to tell you this, but you’re diabetic and in DKA. I can’t release you to your wife, I must call an ambulance." Scary. My sugar was 375 and ketones were 1000+. I knew something was going on for a while, but didn’t know what. After 3 days in the hospital, I was sent home on insulin.

    Now December, I am on a Minimed 722 with CGMS and love it. I use Novolog in the pump with no other meds. I was never given the chance for pills. In September my A1c was 6.9. I didn’t see the rest of the labs (peptide, etc.). I have been working closely with a great team of doctors medtronic trainers, diabetes educators and feel very positive about where I should be with control by summer.

    It’s frustrating sometimes as I think scientifically and can’t get things under control as fast as I would like. However, I know that I can do it eventually and I have made healthy lifestyle changes due to the diagnosis (ones I needed to make anyway), so that is encouraging. I am down from 280lbs. to 220lbs., but the doc say that no matter how much weight I loose, I probably will be on insulin for life. I’m exercising more than I used to but am still having spikes and lows, which I’ll post about in other threads. I guess it took a while to get this way and you can’t fix it overnight, right?

    Thanks for listening and for sharing your knowledge!! I look forward to see you all in the threads!

  • Injustice Overturned

    Two men walked out of prison yesterday across the country from one another, both victims of wrongful convictions. Their cases are quite different, but both shed light on a broken system that continues to incarcerate countless innocent people.

    Donald Eugene Gates was freed in Arizona yesterday after 28 years in federal prisons for a 1981 Washington, D.C., murder that DNA now shows he didn’t commit. He was convicted based largely on the testimony of an FBI forensic analyst whose work was later discredited. The analyst testified that hairs from the crime scene were “microscopically indistinguishable” from Gates’ hairs — a gross exaggeration of the possibilities of hair science.

    In Georgia, Michael Marshall was freed yesterday after serving two years in prison for a 2007 carjacking, based on DNA tests obtained by the Georgia Innocence Project showing that items left by the perpetrator did not belong to Marshall. The most disturbing part of Marshall’s case is that the items that now proved his innocence were available before his conviction, but nobody chose to test them. He pled guilty to the crime he didn’t commit “out of being scared,” he wrote to the Georgia Innocence Project. (Marshall is pictured at left leaving the courthouse yesterday with Georgia Innocence Project Intern Christina Rupp)

    These two exonerations are bittersweet — two men are free for the holidays and their wrongful incarcerations have come to an end, but their freedom came with an immense cost. And they aren’t alone.  Their exonerations demonstrate exactly why wrongful convictions are so common — and why they’ll continue if we don’t address the causes.

    (more…)

  • The Iraqi Oil Auction Was Like A High-Stakes American Idol

    oil auction 2As the pseudonymous “Pepe Escobar” of Asia Times pointed out, the oil rights to the new Iraq were auctioned off at an American Idol-like televised gameshow.

    We’ve never been to American Idol, but this sounded awesome. Way more interesting and important.

    Fortunately we found a few wire photos, and we can see what he means.

    Rather than watching singers perform warmed over classics, watching Americans, Chinese, Russians, and Norwegians battle over multi-billion dollar oil fields is seriously good TV.

    Check out the show >>

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • HTC HD2 Sense UI running on the Samsung Omnia 2

    An industrious Italian Argentinian hacker named Rodrigofd over at MoDaCo using ginkage’s OpenGl v1 wrapper library has been working on porting the HTC HD2 ROM to the Samsung Omnia 2, and seems to have nearly perfected the process.

    The above video shows his work in action and seems about 90% feature complete, and combine the best of Samsung and HTC’s work.

    Read more at Hdblog.it here.

    Thanks Giuseppe for the tip.

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  • Congress Gives $30 Million To Fight ‘Piracy’

    Recent studies have shown that — despite a massive recession — both the music and movie industries are having fantastic years. However, both industries are complaining about how they’re being “killed” by “piracy.” There’s no evidence of this of course, but when it comes to copyright, politicians don’t seem to believe evidence is necessary. They just spring into action. So, just as a bunch of Federal government representatives sat down for a private meeting with entertainment industry bosses, Congress agreed to earmark another $30 million to propping up their obsolete business models fighting “piracy.” It’s a nice deal. Copyright infringement should, by any honest definition of the term, be a civil issue, taken up between private parties. There is a criminal component to copyright law, but it makes little sense. However, now the Justice Department and other local officials have a pool of cash so that they can be the entertainment industry’s police force and private prosecutors.

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  • The Most Popular YouTube Videos of 2009

    YouTube is, by far, the largest video site on the planet so if you want to know what were the hottest videos of 2009, there’s no need to look any further. And since this was the biggest year for online video ever, with month after month of record-breaking audiences, there were some pretty big hits out there, most of them completely unexpected, showing that YouTube hasn’t lost its touch.

    “This year has been the biggest yet for online video, and for the first time we’re sharing our official Most Watched lists and some of the fastest-rising search terms on YouTube. Some moments were big (President Obama’s inauguration), some small (a Minnesota wedding party erupts into dance), some expected (“New Moon”), some surprising (Susan Boyle) — but all of them inspired, entertained and connected millions of people around the world via YouTube,” Jamie Davidson, associate product manager at YouTube wrote.

    The biggest video this year, without any shred of doubt was Susan Boyle’s performance at Britain’s Got Talent which went on to get more than 120 million views so far this year, easily overtaking any other popular video even from the previous years. A distant second came the David after Dentist video which was streamed 37 million times. This summer’s most talked-about video, the JK Wedding Entrance Dance, g… (read more)

  • How did our 2009 predictions fare?

    Yesterday we issued our twelve predictions for 2010. Once again, I’ll look back at our 2009 predictions and see how we did. (You can see how we assessed our 2008 predictions here.) The 2009 predictions were:

    1. Open source ECM players get an initial boost
    Yes, the recession gave them a boost, though smart customers are still asking tough questions about multi-year total cost of ownership.

    2. Office14 casts long shadow on SharePoint
    Yes, and no. SharePoint 2010 has energized Redmond’s consulting channel. The new version is mostly casting a long shadow on 3rd-party SharePoint add-ons and some enterprise procurement teams looking to delay strategic decisions.

    3. "Taxonomies are dead. Long live metadata!"
    Definitely less interest in complicated, human-maintained hierarchies.

    4. Regulatory-compliance concerns reignited
    Yes, though somewhat sector-specific.

    5. Renewed interest in pro-active e-discovery
    Not sure there was a major wave here in 2009. What do you think?

    6. SaaS vendors expand offerings
    Yes, though perhaps not as much as we predicted. Salesforce has certainly been active.

    7. Oracle falls behind in battle for knowledge workers
    Yes, but that was an easy one.

    8. New emphasis on application search
    I think so, but then again, we predict it again this year, albeit with some new twists.

    9. Social computing diffuses into the Enterprise
    Definitely.

    10. Long-awaited consolidation comes to the WCM space
    No way. What was I thinking?!?

    11. Mobile and multimedia web analytics become key requirements…and disrupters
    Multimedia for sure, mobile only half way.

    12. Buyers remain in driver’s seat
    Yes. This is another easy one. Just remember that vendors don’t chase every lead in this economy, either.

    So, I give us a cumulative score of 9 out of 12, or pretty much the same average as last year. Maybe .75 is a good co-efficient to apply to our 2010 predictions.

  • Arcade: Alien Breed Episode 1

     

    Alien Breed™ Episode 1Content: Alien Breed Episode 1
    Price: 800 Microsoft Points
    Availability: All Xbox LIVE regions
    Dash Text: Better get ready for some action! The 'breed' are back and must be stopped! Choose to go it alone or buddy up with a friend offline or online and take fight to the enemy in this fast-paced action horror set in a foreboding world of dread and terror. You will have to kick fear into touch if you are to fight your way through this myriad of challenges in order to complete this seat-of-the-pants adventure…Just remember to release the safety catch! There are no refunds for this item. For more information, see www.xbox.com/live/accounts.

     

    Add Alien Breed Episode 1 to your Xbox 360 download queue

     

     

  • 30 MHz Digital Demodulation for Aeroflex 3280A Series Spectrum Analyzers

    Aeroflex announced the 3280A Series spectrum analyzers with 30 MHz digital demodulator and generic vector demodulation as standard features with no price increase over its predecessor, the 3280 Series. Digital demodulation in the 3280A Series spectrum analyzers allows engineers to analyze the transmitter characteristics of wireless devices. The 3280A Series includes many optional measurement suites including WiMAX, WLAN, UMTS, CDMA2000, and GSM/EDGE.
    The 3280A Series spectrum analyzers are accurate, flexible, and easy-to-use. By including a 30 MHz digital demodulator as standard, the 3280A Series provides even more functionality for the price—offering frequency coverage from 3 Hz to 26.5 GHz, impressive RF and microwave specifications, exceptional connectivity, and many ease-of-use features at an affordable price.
    The 3280A Series maintains a high level of accuracy as its predecessor, ±0.15 dB up to 3 GHz. Other performance features include an excellent local oscillator (LO) phase noise <-115 dBm/Hz, 1GHz/ 10 kHz offset and +18 dBm third order intermodulation (TOI) performance. Digital intermediate frequency (IF) offers resolution bandwidths from 5 MHz to 1 Hz. The Windows® XP operating system, internal hard drive and built-in CD-ROM make the 3280A Series easy to operate and allows for a wide range of interfaces, including LAN access, USB interface, RS-232, IEEE 488 (GPIB) and VGA outputs. Centronics parallel ports are provided for printer, mouse, and keyboard connectivity. An optional removable hard drive is available for when the instrument is used in a secure area. The 3280A has a large 10.4 inch LCD display with ample viewing area, so data can be easily seen–even in split screen mode, or with multiple windows open. Three traces can be displayed per window and as many as nine markers can be selected with a marker table viewable in an alternate window. Built-in functions can simplify the evaluation of many common measurements and the 3280A offers several of these, including: channel power, adjacent channel power, occupied bandwidth, spectrum emission mask, TOI measurement, harmonic distortion, X dB down, and phase noise measurement. Delivery for the 3280A is 3 weeks upon receipt of order, pending option configuration. Pricing for the series depends upon selections of bandwidth and options. Contact your Aeroflex sales representative at (800) 853-2352 or [email protected] for more details.

  • How They Roll: NYT investigates the wheels of Mexican drug cartels

    Filed under:

    The Mexican drug trade business is booming. Drugs are flowing between Mexico and the U.S. on a daily basis, overwhelming the Mexican military and U.S. border patrol officers. Most of the drugs arrive stateside via cars and trucks, and the vehicles transporting contraband range from a Rolls Royce to a VW Rabbit. The New York Times spent some time in Sinaloa, Mexico with Mexican General Federico Solórzano at what looked to be a used car lot.

    The general’s troops have seized 766 vehicles to date ranging from Jaguars to brand new SUVs to classic muscle cars. Custom choppers, pickup trucks and sports cars are all accounted for on the lot, but these vehicles are different from cars and trucks you can purchase at your local dealership: they have secret compartments for carrying drugs and weapons across the Mexican boarder. The vehicles housed untold millions of dollars in addition to automatic weapons in false sidewalls, modified bumpers and trap doors. General Solórzano reportedly told the NYT that vehicles have been retrofitted with bullet-proofing tech, machine gun turrets, secret compartments that hold sharp nails for police cruisers in hot pursuit and even a smoke machine to assist in losing the Federalis.

    The vehicles are being stored at a military base because drug traffickers have raided police facilities and took back the vehicles seized near the border. In total, the Mexican government is said to have over 14,000 vehicles in its possession, yet tons of drugs make the trip from South America to the U.S. without detection. The vehicles will eventually be sold at auction or will be used by other federal agencies, but the apparent crawl of the Mexican legal system means trials are sometimes years away. Head over to the NYT to read more about the vehicles that bring drugs from the Mexican boarder to a town near you. Pretty interesting stuff. Top tip, Mehul!

    [Source: New York Times | Image: Jesus Alcazar/AFP/Getty Images]

    How They Roll: NYT investigates the wheels of Mexican drug cartels originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 16 Dec 2009 07:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Arcade: Puzzlegeddon

     

    Puzzlegeddon™ Content: Puzzlegeddon
    Price: 800 Microsoft Points
    Availability: All Not Available in Australia, India, Japan, Korea or New Zealand
    Dash Text: Set in an array of galaxies, Puzzlegeddon™ features a clever mix of puzzle, action and strategy in a game that is fast-paced and addictive! Compete for the top spot on the planet by creating multiple combos for the quickest way to gather enough resources to blast your enemies out of this world! There are no refunds for this item. For more information, see www.xbox.com/live/accounts.

     

    Add Puzzlegeddon to your Xbox 360 download queue

     

  • Copenhagen Climate Change Conference: Day 9 Recap

    Copenhagen


    The UN Climate Change Conference is entering the decisive phase, as heads of state and government begin to arrive for the final few days of negotiations.


    While UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is saying the leaders are facing a “defining moment in history”. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, offers a more sobering assessment stating the deal “faces problems” and wonders if a deal will be reached at all.


    There are many reports coming out of the Danish capital, suggesting that mood inside the conference is just as hostile as outside where police and protestors continue clash.


    Politicians are already starting to manage the worlds expectations, and suggest the deal, if any will not be close to ideal.


    Danish minister Connie Hedegaard said in her address “in these very hours, we are balancing between success and failure. Success is within reach, but, I must also warn you, we can also fail”. Even the normally positive UN Secretary General is sounding a little defeated, stating “three years of effort have come down to three days of action. Let us not fail in the home stretch. No one will get everything they want in this negotiation”.



    Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, who is in Copenhagen without parliamentary approval of his proposed carbon trade laws, said “I think to land a strong agreement in Copenhagen we are going to have to see more compromise all round, from big developed economies as well as the emerging economies. We’ve got a lot of work ahead of us”.


    It always worries me when politician’s who by in large have spent most of their careers in some form of negotiation, come out and make obvious statements. It feels like the “spin machine” is hard at work.


    Given the name calling between super-power nations, leaders of delegations walking out in anger, you begin to sense that the globe will be getting a lump of coal in their stocking this Christmas.


    In other developments.


    South Korea announced it will cut its greenhouse gas emissions by four percent by 2020 compared to 2005 levels. This makes the country the first emerging economy to take on an absolute reduction commitment and not only a relative commitment compared to a business as usual scenario.


    When Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama lands in Copenhagen he will have very big bundle of cash with him. It is reported that Japan is ready to invest $10 billion US dollars to help developing countries fight global warming. Japan is the worlds fifth largest emitter of greenhouse gases.


    California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in a speech Tuesday he encouraged international agreements, but also said they wont be enough to combat global warming. “The worlds governments alone cannot make the progress that is needed on global climate change. They need the cities, the states, the provinces, the regions. They need the corporations, the activists the scientists, the universities” said Schwarzenegger.


    Three days to go, and by most accounts, a lot of work left to be done.

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    related.posts:

    1. Copenhagen Climate Change Conference: Day 8 Recap
    2. Copenhagen Climate Change Conference: Nearing The End
    3. Copenhagen Climate Change Conference: Week 1 Round-Up


  • Stolmen bike stand mod for carpet flooring

    This smart idea from Andrew lets you build the Stolmen bike stand on carpet flooring. Sturdy enough to hold two bikes in mid air.

    “This Ikea-hack is mainly an extension of a design already featured, that adapts said design to more applications. The Stolmen Bike Stand seemed like such a great idea, I wanted to make a similar one for my apartment. The basic design is the same, with one significant change: an adapter to use the Stolmen post on carpet.

    Normally, the Stolmen posts are only good for wood floors, as the post is held by compression between the floor and ceiling. Using the standard base on carpet, the carpet compresses over time causing the pole to become loose and eventually fall (a well documented issue). The version I made eliminates this problem by replacing the bottom connection with a different design.

    Items used:
     – 4″ diameter, 1″ thick aluminum round (from Alro metals supply store)
     – “Speaker Cabinet 3/8″ Toe Spike Set” from PartsExpress (p/n 240-725)

    Instructions:
    1. Drill a 1/2 inch diameter hole, 1/2″ deep, into the center of one side of the aluminum round.
    2. On the other side of the aluminum round, drill and tap four holes for 1/4-20 thread pattern
    3. Install speaker spikes in threaded holes.
    4. Use base instead of standard Stolmen base, placing the extendable metal nob from the post into the 1/2″ diameter hole.

    This design works because, as you tighten the post (using standard Ikea assembly methods), the speaker spikes drive through the carpet base and into the wood subfloor. This gives them a solid, non-giving, surface and allows the pole to be tightened properly and not fall over.”

    Related hack:
    Bike extension for pizza delivery


  • China Pays Rewards for Finding Porn

    90E68339-8F6D-4ED1-B3B2-CF0D29C51160.jpg

    The Chinese government does not like internet porn. So they are now paying people to surf the web to find it. Makes sense, no?

    Shocking as it may sound, this well thought out government plan has actually encouraged people to search for porn more than before. Within 24 hours of the government announcing its incentive program, the Internet Illegal Information Reporting Center received more than 500 phone calls and 13,000 online responses, according to Xinhua, the state news agency.

    The Chinese censors are offering as much as 10,000 yuan – nearly $1,500 U.S. dollars (!) – to the first person who reports a sexually obscene site. Sign me up!

    This is only the latest round in China’s attempt to weed out evil porn sites. Earlier this year Chinese authorities publicly sanctioned Google for not filtering out porn from its search results. Of course, seasoned porn hounds know that Microsoft’s Bing is the best search engine for porn.

    However, the government has backed down – for now – from a program known as Green Dam, which would have installed monitoring software on every computer sold in the country. A small step for porn, a giant leap for horny Chinese men.

    photo credit: PinkMoose

    Related posts:

    1. Bing Makes Finding Porn Just A Little Easier
    2. Google Makes Some Odd Suggestions
    3. YouTube Carpet Bombed with Porn Videos

  • 10 Tips To Make Your Dishwasher Run Better

    121609-dishwasher1.jpgThe holidays seem to test the true capacity and cleaning power of your dishwasher. Although some wash by hand, those who have dishwashers rely on them pretty heavily this time of year. Keep them running like new, or as close to it as possible with these simple tips!

    Read Full Post


  • Lithium and REE: WSJ – The Surge in Electric Cars TNR.v, CZX.v, WLC.v, LI.v, RM.v, CLQ.v, SQM, FMC, ROC, AVL.to, CCE.v, RES.v, QUC.v, HEV, AONE, NSANY

    Fisker Karma Sunset

    The main message from teaser above – Fisker Karma Sunset is that you can chose to be Electric and do not have to slow down. Electric cars are here, they are Cool and ready to go. In order to be Green and stay Cool you do not have to sacrifice on design, power or experience “Range Anxiety”, in couple of years down the road you will have plenty to chose from and they are coming on the roads already now. WSJ is taking the story to the investment mainstream and next idea will be how to capitalise on this Trend.

    Tesla S


    WSJ:
    The Surge in Electric Cars

    Why should anyone buy an electric car? That’s going to be a critical question for the auto industry—and the best answer may not be “Because they’re green.”
    WSJ Editor Joseph B. White takes Tesla Motors’ all-electric 2010 Roadster for a drive and finds it’s a sporty “green” car that packs a punch.
    The Obama administration is committing billions of your money to the proposition that electric cars can become a meaningful segment in the U.S. market over the next few years. Faith in the future of such vehicles—which run all or in part on electricity straight from the grid—has waxed and waned many times over the past century, ever since the earliest electric cars were run off the American road by cheaper, more-powerful, more-versatile gasoline-fueled cars.
    We’re in one of the waxing phases now, and a big reason why is Tesla Motors Inc.
    Based in Silicon Valley, Tesla has been offering its all-electric Roadsters for nearly two years and is still the only company selling highway-capable electric vehicles to consumers in volume. That will likely change next year when Nissan Motor Co. launches the Leaf, which is a full-electric, moderately priced family car. Other electric-car offerings are in the wings, including a model from Ford Motor Co. and cars from other startups, such as Coda Automotive.
    Nissan Leaf
    Late in 2010, General Motors Co. plans to launch the Chevrolet Volt, a car the government-controlled auto maker is now promoting not as a “hybrid” but as an “electric vehicle with extended range capability.” The Volt uses a small gasoline engine to recharge its batteries after the first 40 miles of all-electric travel.
    Besides the Volt, there will be other partially electric cars hitting the market. Toyota Motor Corp. has said it will offer a “plug-in” version of its Prius hybrid by 2011. Owners will be able to recharge the car’s batteries by plugging it into a wall socket or a recharging station, allowing it to go further on electric power alone. Conventional gas-electric hybrid cars use a combination of battery power and fossil fuels, which proponents say overcomes one of the big objections to all-electric vehicles: Namely, that if you run out of juice, you could be stranded.
    Driving a Tesla Roadstar Sports model—which I did recently on an extended test drive—is like driving a plus-size go-kart. Some of the Tesla’s basic underpinnings are adapted from a Lotus Elise sports car. The steering is stiff. The suspension is jittery on rough pavement. There’s gobs of wind noise, and hitting a pothole causes the car’s carbon-fiber composite body to shake, rattle and roll. But you can have enormous fun within the legal speed limit as you whoosh around unsuspecting Camry drivers, zapping from 40 to 60 miles per hour in two seconds while the startled victims eat your electric dust.
    Tesla says it became profitable earlier this year, but it’s being buoyed by a $465 million loan from the U.S. Department of Energy awarded to help develop a seven-passenger electric sedan. The company says it will be assembled in the U.S. and sell for about $49,900, after federal tax credits.

    GM Volt

    For now, Tesla’s sole product is the $109,000 sticker-price Tesla Roadster, or $101,500 after federal tax credits. The Roadster Sport edition costs an extra $19,500. Some states offer additional consumer tax breaks for buying an electric car, topping out as much as $42,000 in Colorado. Still, the Tesla Roadster Sport is a product for an elite few.
    The Leaf and the Volt are expected to be more moderately priced. Nissan says the Leaf will cost “in the range of other typical family sedans.” The Volt is expected to carry a price tag somewhere in the $40,000 range—which makes this Chevy comparable on a price basis to a luxury car such as a BMW 3 Series sedan. In the world of electric cars, that’s “affordable.”
    The Leaf and the Volt have so far been promoted mainly as environmentally correct, advanced-technology vehicles. The Volt has become a symbol of GM’s effort at corporate revival following its bankruptcy earlier this year. The Leaf is a product of Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn’s determination to show that Nissan can be a clean-car-technology leader, driving out of rival Toyota Motor’s shadow. In promoting the Leaf, Nissan has focused on the fact that it is a “zero emission” vehicle—a traditional environmental pitch.
    The Tesla approach incorporates all the green jargon. But there’s more. The 2010 Tesla Roadster Sport takes the original Tesla’s high-performance drive system to the next level. The regular 2010 Roadster claims a 0-60 time of 3.9 seconds; the Sport will get to 60 mph 0.2 seconds faster. It also offers other refinements from the previous model. You get fast-looking forged wheels, a retro-modern push-button transmission with a “valet” mode that caps the car’s top speed, preventing a parking attendant from rat-racing your baby while you are playing golf. (Some of you will know it as the “Ferris Bueller” switch.)
    Oh yes, and there’s now a glove box in the dashboard. It’s very tiny. You could fit a pair of gloves in there.
    Interior space in the Tesla Roadster Sport is adequate—if your frame of reference is a race car. I am of average weight and height, which is to say I’m a bit short and I could lose a few pounds. My driving partner was a colleague who could play Abe Lincoln if he grew a beard and bought a top hat. He fit in the car. Barely. I had plenty of headroom, but I would have to lose an inch or two of personal width to feel really comfortable.
    These concerns became irrelevant when we got out on the 395 freeway in downtown Washington and hit the gas pedal—pardon me, the power pedal—to get around a slowpoke. I was used to driving a turbo-charged car that delivered a lot of boost in the 30-to-50 mph speed band. The Tesla put my Subaru WRX to shame.
    Tari Cash, Tesla’s Washington-area sales representative, says she has taken orders for 27 Roadsters. Some of the buyers are environmentally conscious. Most, she says, are car enthusiasts who want the New Thing.

    The revelation of driving the Tesla is that electric cars make really fun toys. The Tesla uses electric motors and software instead of pistons and displacement to generate its super-torquey, race-car performance. But behind the wheel, you don’t miss the gasoline.
    Fast acceleration and big helpings of torque are characteristics of electric motors, which deliver all their pulling power right away. “Tesla proves electric cars are going to be a blast to drive,” says IHS Global Insight analyst Aaron Bragman, who calls the Chevy Volt “a rocket ship.” But he says it’s important to temper the current enthusiasm for electric cars. Widespread adoption still confronts big obstacles, such as the lack of public recharging stations, the still-limited range compared with gasoline or diesel vehicles, and the cost. These issues could take another decade to resolve.
    Still, promoting electric vehicles as hot rods could be the key to making “alternative” cars mainstream. For 30 years or more, environmentalists have called on us to eschew excess, slow down and leave a smaller footprint. Many Americans pay lip service to this ideal, but most don’t choose to live it.
    The Tesla turns the frugal environmentalist aesthetic on its head. Sure, it doesn’t burn petroleum, and if plugged into a wind turbine or a nuclear plant, it would be a very low-carbon machine. But anyone who buys one will get the most satisfaction from smoking someone’s doors off. The Tesla’s message is that “green” technology can appeal to the id, not just the superego.”

  • How Far Does Your Produce Travel? GOOD

    2009_12_16-good.jpgHow far does a carrot travel from farm to store? An infographic from GOOD illustrates local and conventional produce miles – with an interesting new approach.

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  • Gold Claws Back, US Futures Up, Europe Higher Despite Fears Of Collapse

    Gold appears to finally be catching a little bit of a bid, which is good news for the masses of gold bugs that have been suffering throug this four-week debacle, which previously they’d assumed to be impossible.

    chart

    Meanwhile, US futures are pointing higher after yesterday’s slip-up, and European markets continue to shrug off woes in Britain, Ireland, Spain, Greece, and now Austria.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • GHG emission sources and amounts: new visualisation tool

    Digital view of man-made green house gas emissions in Europe, Africa and Asia

    The JRC has developed a high resolution digital view of man-made green house gas (GHG) emissions for any 10 km x 10 km area in the world. Using JRC’s work on emissions and Google Earth™, this new tool allows the visualisation of the levels of emissions locally from 1970 to 2005 and the identification of the main sources.

    Scientists from the JRC Institute for Environment and Sustainability (IES) have made it possible to visualise the distribution of GHG emissions all over the world at local level through an add-on layer to Google Earth™. Their grid size is a tenth of a geographical degree of latitude by the same extension in longitude, or simplified, a square about 10 km x 10 km, roughly the size of central Paris. Data used in the visualisation come from JRC and the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency’s (PBL) Emission Database for Global Research (EDGAR), and its dataset released in May this year (EDGAR v4.0).