Our holiday guests today:
• On Chocolate Cake, Candied Oranges, & Hilarious Disasters by Hannah of Honey & Jam
• Add an Extra Ingredient to Your Holiday Recipes: Love by Art of Pleasant House
Our holiday guests today:
• On Chocolate Cake, Candied Oranges, & Hilarious Disasters by Hannah of Honey & Jam
• Add an Extra Ingredient to Your Holiday Recipes: Love by Art of Pleasant House
Our holiday guests today:
• King Cake, Boiled Codfish, and a Portuguese Christmas by Gasparzinha of No Soup for You
• Christmas Croquembouche by Liz of Zested
Filed under: Etc., Technology
RoboVault says its mission is “To protect your most valuable possessions from… Everything!” Run more like an automated shipping port than your typical storage unit, the Ft. Lauderdale, Florida-based company seems to have the kit to live up to its motto. First you pull your car onto the receiving pallet, then go through a host of security measures including retinal scans and a heartbeat detector. Once you’ve been approved by the system, a robotic arm comes for your car and removes it to your assigned steel mesh container in the bowels of the building.
Those 465 units are surrounded by a concrete-and-steel-reinforced building that can withstand bullets, fires, Category 5 hurricanes, and 200-mph winds. When the inevitable hurricane does come in for a landing, power outages are countered by RoboVault’s back-up generator, which maintains 100 percent of the building’s systems including the HVAC, motion and infrared detectors.
There are safe deposit boxes for smaller items, storage for 4,000 bottles of your finest hooch and a wine tasting operation if you have some time to kill after parking your exotic. And with all that, your Ferrari might be better prepared — and more comfortable — than you are the next time Mother Nature decides to bring the nasty.
[Source: MotoBullet]
RoboVault protects your car from hurricanes, floods, Apocalypse originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 17:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Why do so many oppose a state income tax?
Editor, The Times:
State Sen. Rosa Franklin’s support of a progressive state income tax [“Washington state’s regressive tax system needs an overhaul,” Opinion, guest commentary, Dec. 14] helpfully notes that it could save us from having to choose between cutting vital services and increasing taxes on those already struggling with tax burdens.
Despite its persuasiveness, Franklin’s proposal will no doubt call forth the endless theoretical arguments opposing a state income tax.
One wonders how many would so strenuously object to an income tax if the scheme would not raise their own taxes now or in the future. Viewed from this perspective, much opposition to an income tax owes less to theoretical arguments than it does to a simple effort to preserve a personal advantage.
There is nothing wrong with preserving a personal advantage. But this principle — like all principles — must have limits. Franklin’s bill, based on the 2003 Gates Commission recommendations and countless other reports, is sensible, tested and fair. It reflects considerations broader than mere personal advantage.
It is long past time to bring these more-inclusive principles into our debates over tax policy. We are, after all, passengers on the same train.
— William R. Andersen, Seattle
Time to repeal current system
Sen. Rosa Franklin reiterates what we all know to be true. The time is now for Washington state to repeal our regressive tax system.
What if the people who earn less than $20,000 annually and are forced to pay 17.3 percent of their family income in taxes rise up and demand that our governor and legislators do the right thing and revise our regressive and outdated tax system without further delay?
In fact, why don’t those who earn between $99,000 and $198,000 join in and together form a majority to demand a fairer and more-just tax system in our state.
— Kristin Distelhorst, Seattle
People who make more, spend more
With all respect to Sen. Rosa Franklin, she skewed her numbers to fit her proposal of a state income tax. Percentages are one number, the actual dollar amount is another, much higher number in actual money.
People who make more money, spend more money in housing, cars, entertainment, etc., which all relate into tax for all the state, not just that proposed by the people in Olympia. More than an income tax, we need Olympia to live within the means we vote to give them and stop growing the state spending to six times the CPI rate for the Seattle area.
I totally disagreed with Franklin when she said, “In fact, if we’d adopted the commission’s recommendation years ago, we’d be in much less of a recession in our state today.”
Hogwash, if Olympia spent less than every dollar they took in, provided a larger rainy-day fund, hadn’t given extremely high raises, etc., we wouldn’t be in the mess we are in now.
— Jerry Oaksmith, Edmonds
This morning I woke up at 4.1mmol/L and 1.5 hours later I am 14.1. It’s really frustrating because when I increase the insulin, I end up dropping low 3 hours afterwoods but I can’t get rid of the spike.
When I wake up at about 6.0 it spikes to 17-18mmol/L.
I currently have 2.8units/exchange at breakfast, and only 1.5 at other meals. I have fasted over breakfast before and my basal rates were fine. I am only small, so I don’t think it is insulin resistance.
I did ask my endo but she couldn’t see a pattern in my blood sugars 🙁 I think it is having a big impact on my hba1c, which increased from an average of about 7.0 to 7.6
Xbox 360 Top LIVE Titles (based on UU’s)
1 Modern Warfare 2
2 Halo 3
3 Call of Duty: WaW
4 Call of Duty 4
5 Left 4 Dead 2 (Download the Demo)
6 FIFA 10
7 Assassin's Creed II
8 GTA IV (Purchase the full game)
9 Madden NFL 10
10 Gears of War 2 (Download the demo)
Top Arcade Titles (Full Versions purchased)
1 Trials HD
2 Call of Duty Classic
3 Madden NFL Arcade
4 Castle Crashers
5 Magic: The Gathering
6 Sonic The Hedgehog 2
7 A Kingdom for Keflings
8 Hasbro Family Game Night **
9 Shadow Complex
10 Battlefield 1943
The above arcade list is based on full versions purchased.
**Combined sales of all Hasbro Family Game Night titles
Original Xbox Top Live Titles (based on UU’s)
1 Halo 2
2 Star Wars: Battlfrnt 2
3 Counter-Strike
4 Fable
5 Conker: Live Reloaded
6 Splinter Cell Chaos
7 Star Wars: Battlefront
8 Doom 3
9 Call of Duty 3
10 SW: Republic Commando
Top Indie Games (Full Versions purchased)
1 The Impossible Game
2 myChristmas
3 Avatar Drop
4 Head Shot 2
5 I MAED A GAM3 W1TH Z0MB1ES!!!1
6 Avatar Avenue
7 Dont B Nervous Talking 2 Girls
8 Inside Lacrosse's CL2010
9 A Killer's Dream
10 Miner Dig Deep
These lists are based on global unique users connected to Xbox Live or in the case of Arcade and Indie Games, full versions purchased during the week.
LIVE Activity for week of Nov. 9th
Plan on being in the car with the little ones on Christmas Eve? If so, are you an OnStar subscriber? Then you’ll want to hit that blue OnStar button and ask for a Santa update, because OnStar is teaming up with NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense Command) to keep tabs on Santa’s location as all times through the evening. Oh, what’s that? You find that to be almost as ridiculous as the Necky?
Hey, we agree, but let’s not let the silliness of this promotion get in the way of…no, you’re right. It’s silly. Silly enough that we want to try it.
Tags:
christmas,
december 24,
gps,
norad,
north american aerospace defense command,
onstar,
santa,
santa clause,
Filed under: Budget, China, GM, India, Rumormill
Though the minuscule Tata Nano hasn’t even been on the market for a complete year, the impact it’s had on the automotive world may be exactly inverse to its size and price. In other words, it’s had a huge effect, proving to the world that it’s possible to build a business plan around selling super cheap cars in rapidly expanding markets.
You can reportedly add the Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation (SAIC) and General Motors joint venture to the list of automakers that have taken notice of the Nano. According to reports rolling in from China and India, the 50:50 JV is considering a vehicle that would be positioned below the Chevy Spark/Daewoo Matiz that would sell for as little as $3,500.
So far, GM/SAIC isn’t commenting on the reports, but has indicated in the past that it plans to build small vans, SUVs and cars for emerging markets like China and India.
[Source: WheelsUnplugged | Image: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images]
REPORT: GM-SAIC pondering Tata Nano fighter? originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 17:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Today we have number 9 of Michael Gannotti’s top 10 Windows Mobile applications, being published on the Windows blog.
Number 9 is the AP Mobile App which allows him to keep up to date with the latest news from around the world in one convenient application. The AP Mobile App is available as a download on the Windows Mobile Marketplace.
Michael is a Technology Specialist for the Microsoft Corporation and the author of the blog SocialMedia Talk.
Follow the series at the Windows Blog here.
By Scott Bendlock, Special Education Teacher, Brevig Mission
Every Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday evenings you can find two dozen or more students waiting outside of school at 5:30 p.m.. Why? Open Gym you might ask? No. These students are waiting to improve their math scores! For an hour and a half, three nights a week, any elementary student may come in and work math programs that will improve math skills. Way to go kids!!!
How can we keep jobs, businesses in Washington?
Mike Brown ends his column with the insightful notion that “it is ironic indeed that the cloud-computing centers that power it are being located elsewhere despite our natural competitive advantages right here at home” [“State must remove barriers that send jobs elsewhere,” Opinion, guest commentary, Dec. 12].
Yes, there is a wealth of vision and leadership of homegrown Washington companies that create the new economy, but when local companies move jobs to Charleston, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Oregon, Texas and North Carolina, then it’s hard to argue that our state truly possess natural competitive advantages.
Visionaries often have a bloated sense of entitlement that because their ideas or movements started through them, they should automatically reap the benefits of success that result from their creativity and sweat.
Granted, it’s nice when that happens, but as Brown’s commentary attests, it currently takes more than initial brilliant ideas, especially when barriers block the further progression of those ideas locally. People don’t have time to wait for barriers to be removed; they’ll simply implement stage two of their ideas where costs are cheaper and where there are less hindrances.
It’s no secret that focusing on retaining good jobs and attracting the new jobs of the new economy is absolutely imperative. But the most relevant question is, “How?”
— Steve Goodman, Mountlake Terrace
The right companies will come along soon enough
It’s curious how businessmen like Mike Brown get weak-kneed at the thought of a state or region having to compete on merit for new business and good jobs.
Our challenge isn’t to emulate South Carolina, which attempts to obtain by bribery what it could never win by merit.
South Carolina is doing what a state falls back on when it undervalues and underfunds education for a century or more, isn’t progressive and proactive, and gets tired of always losing to more attractive states — sort of like what eventually happens if everybody thinks like Tim Eyman.
If you believe that less government is better, end corporate welfare. Do the dull stuff — education and infrastructure — but do it just as well as you possibly can.
The right companies will figure out often enough that we’re the best place for them. Else we might wind up beggars like South Carolina.
— Steve Garber, Seattle
Our state’s battle for data centers
Mike Brown recently suggested that the sales tax be eliminated on equipment purchases for data centers.
It sounds like a practical way to create jobs in Washington. With low power rates, our state is an obvious location for data centers. However, the sales tax on equipment is a huge and ongoing cost so many companies build their data centers elsewhere.
Not only is Washington not receiving sales-tax revenue, but the state is forfeiting good-paying jobs.
Other states recognize the economic value of data centers and are aggressively competing for these facilities. Washington must do the same. We don’t need to provide huge economic incentives, we just need to remove barriers, like the sales tax, that make it too expensive for companies to locate here.
Building data centers will help stimulate the economy, increase property-tax revenues and, most important, create good-paying jobs — all without a huge government subsidy.
— Eileen DeArmon, Seattle
Wall Street bailout: the lesser of evils?
It appears David Sirota has misinterpreted what economists mean by moral hazard [“Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke: the mother of all moral hazards,” Opinion, syndicated column, Dec. 14]. Moral hazard exists when one is motivated to behave in a way that is contra to what is best.
For example, the Wall Street bankers were rewarded to take excess risk because it meant that their individual bonus for the year would be greater and that any fallout from the excess risk for the bank would not be felt for years into the future. Just because one makes an error in judgment does not mean that a moral hazard exists.
Sirota suggests that by rewarding Ben Bernanke by renominating him represents a moral hazard because he has admitted to an error in judgment. That is not a moral hazard as seen by economists.
Politics are also involved here. It may have been politically impossible for the Federal Reserve to have done more at the time.
The bailout of Wall Street was not done to reward Wall Street for the errors of its ways. Rather, it was the lesser of evils. Should one allow the entire financial system to collapse to simply punish Wall Street? No, instead, we should change the rules so that in the future the current moral hazard is no longer present.
— Larry Hegstad, Tacoma
Let’s ensure this doesn’t happen again
The many expressions of love and compassion shown by the greater Puget Sound community, and by those from across the country and Canada, following the recent slaying of the four police officers in Lakewood, show the deep respect we have for those who enforce the laws of the land [“Two weeks after killing, community reclaims cafe,” NWSunday, Dec. 13].
The memorial service itself was an impressive display of community, sympathy, solidarity, tenderness and love in action.
Here are a few suggestions that, if implemented, might prevent such horror in the future: Increase taxes so that every police department in every community is fully funded every year. Enforce and enact gun-control laws that keep guns out of the hands of those who cannot handle them. Ensure that those with mental illnesses get proper treatment when needed, as long as needed, and include in that treatment a healthy dose of love and a sense of worth. Improve our criminal-justice system so that our jails are not overflowing with those whose crimes hurt no one, and keep locked up those who really do pose a threat to others.
All this takes money, that’s for sure. But what is the cost to a community of one dead police officer, let alone four?
— Jim Rettig, Woodinville
Huckabee and the difference between commuted and released
What part of commuted, but not released, don’t readers understand [“Excuses, excuses, excuses,” Opinion, Northwest Voices, Dec. 11]?
It appears that those who wrote blaming former Gov. Mike Huckabee for the release of cop killer Maurice Clemmons were way off base. Also, it was nine years ago when then-Gov. Huckabee commuted — not released — Clemmons. Clemmons’ sentence was commuted from 100-plus years to 45-plus years.
It was the Arkansas courts that released him, and it was a Pierce County judge who set Clemmons free.
Maybe those who want to play the blame game should get their facts straight before they play the blame game. I also saw Fox News blaming Huckabee for the deaths of these fine, hardworking officers.
Once and for all, it was Clemmons who pulled the trigger. So don’t let him off the hook.
— Pat Gee, Federal Way
Rentcycle officially launched in October 2009. The brainchild of founder Tim Hyer, their mission is to facilitate the business of renting “stuff”. Recognizing that the process of renting equipment is both painful to customers and highly inefficient to business, Rentcycle developed a model that creates efficiencies through online scheduling, tracking and inventory management. Customers can get info, pricing and check availability of the equipment they want to rent while niche boutique business owners are finally able to create a streamlined rental process that has been up til now, a giant time suck due to the laborious manual processes of every step.
Someone just made 3 attempts to reset my Google Password. The reset notice I received includes this statement …
… If you’ve received this mail in error, it’s likely that another user entered
your email address by mistake while trying to reset a password. If you didn’t
initiate the request, you don’t need to take any further action and can safely
disregard this email….
A mistake. Suurre it’s a mistake.
I have a robust Google password, but the risk here is that someone has access to a secondary account that receives my Google password reset requests. Those have robust passwords too, but there are always weaknesses.
Just to be on the safe side I’ve reviewed my Google accounts password recovery options and they look good.
Brrr. I hate passwords. I’d have bet good money in 1996 that we’d have robust biometric authentication by now. I’d have lost every penny. A good lesson about predicting the future.
Update 11/18/09: Amit Agarwal was hacked around the same time I was attacked. It’s not clear how they hacked in.
Tuscany, Italy | Relics and Reliquaries
The legendary sword in the stone, often linked to king Arthur’s legend, does exist. Not in Avalon, of course, but in Italy. One can see it in the Montesiepi chapel, near Saint Galgano Abbey in Chiusdino, in Tuscany.
Galgano Guidotti was born in 1148 near Chiusdino. After spending his youth as a brave knight, in 1180 Galgano decided to follow the words of Jesus and retired as a hermit near his hometown.
He is said to have stuck his sword onto a rock in order to use it as a cross for his prayers. One year later Galgano died, and in 1185 Pope Lucius the 3rd declared him a saint.
According to legend after Galgano’s death, countless people have tried to steal the sword. In the chapel you can see what are said to be the mummified hands of a thief that tried to remove the sword and was then suddenly slaughtered by wild wolfs.
While the sword was considered a fake for years, recent studies examined the sword and the hands, and the dating results as well as metal and style of the sword all are consistent with the late 1100s – early 1200s. This may mean that the story on which the English sword and the stone is based on originated with Guidotti in Italy.
These days the sword is protected by a Perspex screen to protect it from the attempts to remove it from the stone. So if the true-born king of England does indeed comes along he had better also be able to break through synthetic plastic, as well as remove the sword from the stone.

Stock market investors don’t care about homebuilders anymore.
For years, there was a surprising correlation between the National Association of Home Builders’ builder confidence and one-year lagging returns of the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock market index.
A 2006 Fortune article pointed out that from 1995 through 2005, builder confidence was a near-perfect predictor of future stock market returns.
But, as happens all too often, the Fortune story was a contrary indicator.
The correlation it noted broke down in 2006. The home builders index had begun to dramatically decline in 2005, but a year later the S&P kept climbing. Eventually, stocks did follow the home builder index downward but the timing and the degree of the declines no longer tracked.
As our chart of the day shows, the S&P-HMI correlation didn’t fare any better this year. The home builder index continued to decline in 2008, completely failing to predict the rally in the S&P in 2009. It’s as though stocks and housing have just decoupled.
This year, the home builder index briefly ticked upward before falling again. Unfortunately, this tells us nothing reliable about the stock market for 2010. (Unless, of course, this article is also a contrary indicator and the correlation comes roaring back next year.)
You can get this dropped in your inbox every afternoon as The Chart Of The Day. It’s simple. It’s convenient. It’s free. All we need is your email address (though we’d love your name and state, too, if you’re willing to share it). Sign up below!
Join the conversation about this story »
If I were an alien entity observing the earth, and I wanted to test humanity to the breaking point, I’d come up with a scheme that required China, India, America, Canada, Australia and the rest of the world to come together to solve a huge problem with uncertain consequences that unfolds relatively slowly and requires painful action from everyone on a time scale of years.
A trans-galactic gambling scheme? An alien art form?
Cue twilight zone music.
by c. odinzoff
Dinner. What a happy family. All gathered around the table celebrating one of the U.S’s oldest traditions. Thanksgiving. Mashed potatoes, green beans, stuffing, corn, cranberry sauce, yummy blueberry and apple pie and my good friend Bert the Turkey! Poor old Bert. He wasn’t even twenty yet in turkey years. Please don’t eat me! I’m too young to taste good! And if you do decide to eat me, remember, you are what you eat.
Even though turkeys may seem healthy because grain and plants, you never know if I’m sick or not. I could have the bird flu! Or, I could have some type of lice on my feathers when you pluck me. So maybe you should pick a different turkey to smother and serve on the table. You know, I often do have a lot of gas, especially when I’m unconscious. I might look like a perfect, juicy, very delicious turkey, but on the inside it’s a whole different story.
Did you know that the turkey population is endangered? Yes, that’s why you shouldn’t eat us any more. That’s one less turkey in the U.S. for you. My people (the Turkeys) are the ones that help to reproduce. It’s like biting the hand that feeds you. You should take pity on the turkeys. The turkeys have always been nice to the humans. The humans have been nice to us, until it was judgment day. Take your madness out on the chickens!
How will you feel if a group of turkeys came to your house and killed you and got you ready for thanksgiving dinner hundreds of years ago? You would probably be the one writing this paper right now, not me. You wouldn’t like getting killed just to be eaten. I might taste good, but maybe so do you. You people call it tradition, but I call it hunger.
People say this tradition has been around for hundreds of years cine the pilgrims Well, I say start a new tradition. Kill chickens for turkey’s sake! Roosters, swans, I don’t care! Anything but turkeys. The tradition is getting too old. I miss Bert. Why?! Bert was the turkeyest friend that you could ever have. He was the best. But, back to my point. No more turkey slaughter!
Please don’t eat me! or any other turkey for that matter. Turkeys can be a good pet—they don’t have to be a good tasty main dish for a family dinner. I’m asking nicely. Please don’t eat turkeys anymore.
Are you making any holiday candy to give away as gifts or serve to guests? We’ve been inspired to experiment with some new candy recipes, but first we wanted to get some expert advice. So we turned to Lauren Pett of Rich Chocolates & Candies, part of Chicago’s Sweet Collective. Before you start your next batch, check out her tips below.