Category: News

  • The Vegetarian Myth

    the vegetarian myth cvr The Vegetarian MythWow.

    It isn’t often that I write book reviews (have I ever? – serious question), but it isn’t often that a truly important book like Lierre Keith’s The Vegetarian Myth pops up on my radar just begging for one.

    You may remember it from a brief mention I gave back in September, or maybe from Dr. Eades’ endorsement of it. You may have even already read the book yourself. If you haven’t, read it. And if you have? Read it again or get one for a friend.

    That goes double for vegans, vegetarians, or anyone on the cusp of adopting that lifestyle. If you fit the bill, especially if you’re considering veganism/vegetarianism for moral reasons, drop what you’re doing and run to the nearest bookstore to buy this book. It’s incredibly well-written, and the author has a real knack for engaging prose, but that’s not the main reason for my endorsement. The real draw is the dual (not dueling) narratives: the transformation of a physically broken moral vegetarian into a healthier moral meat eater; and the destructive force of industrial agriculture. The “Myth” in question is the widely-held notion that vegetarianism is the best thing for our health and for our planet. On the contrary, Keith asserts that a global shift toward vegetarianism would be the absolute worst move possible. It’s vitally important. It’s definitive. It’s somewhat depressing, and it’s brutally honest. It also might be the book that changes your life.

    Lierre Keith is a former vegan/vegetarian who bowed out after twenty long years of poor health and paralyzing moral paradoxes. Her original goal was to explore the question, “Life or death?” as it pertained to food. She, like most vegetarians, assumed she had a choice between the two, that it was an either/or thing. Eating tofu and beans was life, while a burger represented death. Life didn’t have to involve death – that was the weak way out, and the honorable (and difficult, and therefore meaningful) way to live was by avoiding animal products of all kinds. No blood on your hands or on your plate meant a clean moral slate.

    Or so she thought. See, Keith began as a moral vegetarian. She never espoused the idea that meat was inherently unhealthy or physically damaging; she was simply a young kid who “cried for Iron Eyes Cody, longed… for an unmolested continent of rivers and marshes, birds and fish.” We’ve all heard of kids who “turn vegetarian” when they find out their chicken nuggets once walked, clucked, and pecked. Well, Keith was that five year old who bemoaned the “asphalt inferno of suburban sprawl” as a harbinger of “the destruction of [her] planet.” Hers was a deep-seated commitment to the preservation of all living things, not just the cute and fuzzy ones.

    That expansive scope meant she looked at the big picture, and suffered for it. She never got to enjoy that oh-so-common smug vegetarian elitism, because she was too aware. Seeds were living things, too. They may not have had faces or doting mothers, but they were alive, and that meant they could die. Killing slugs in her garden was impossible, and deciding whether to supplement the soil with actual bone meal was excruciating. Unlike most of her peers, she knew that avoiding direct animal products didn’t mean her hands were clean. They might not be dripping red, but living organisms died to make that head of lettuce possible. Fields were tilled and billions of microorganisms were destroyed, not to mention the mice, rabbits, and other wild animals whose environments are leveled to make way for industrial farming. And so whichever direction she went – home gardening, local produce, or grocery store goods – Keith was contributing directly and indirectly to death.

    What’s a moral vegetarian to do?

    She briefly entertains studying with a mystic breatharian, hoping to (tongue-in-cheekily) learn to subsist purely on oxygen. She spends hours picking slugs from her garden and goes to relocate them. Nothing works. She keeps coming back to death.

    “Let me live without harm to others. Let my life be possible without death.” Keith realizes this vegetarian plea (which “borders on a prayer”) is impossible to fulfill. She can’t live and eat without something dying, and that’s the whole point of it all. Death is necessary and natural. Circle of life, you know? Without death of some sort, life would get a whole lot worse.

    Keith ultimately sets her sights on one of our favorite human “advancements” at the Apple: agriculture! Readers of MDA already know how agriculture altered our trajectory forever, but maybe not in such vivid detail. We focus on the lowered life expectancy, reduced bone density, compromised dental health, and the stooped, shrunken skeletons of our Neolithic ancestors, but Keith shows how grain agriculture actually destroys the land it touches. The Fertile Crescent, ground zero for grain development, used to be, well, fertile. It was verdant, lush, and teeming with life – including nomadic hunter gatherers. Paradise, you might even say. Animals grazed on perennial grasses, pooped out nutrients, and gradually those nutrients would work themselves back into the soil. It was a beautiful, natural life cycle that worked great for millennia. But once grains were grown and the land was irrigated, everything changed. Perennial renewable grasses became annual grains. Animals no longer grazed and replenished the soil. The top soil was robbed of nutrients and faded away. Irrigation meant crucial annual floods were disrupted or even halted. A massive monkey wrench was thrown into the system, and rather than coexisting as a complementary aspect of nature, man thus commenced the conflict with the natural world that rages to this very day.

    And that’s the crux of her argument – that modern industrial agriculture is wanton destruction. Grain-based, vegetarian agriculture is even worse, because it attempts to eliminate a crucial player in the normal life cycle of the planet. Animals, which provide manure, calcium, and other nutrients for the soil, have to be part of the equation. Whenever a culture turns to a grain-based agricultural system, these same problems arise. Annual grain crops killed the American prairie and, for the vegans out there, they kill the millions of animals, bugs, and birds that rely on specific ecosystems to survive. The vegan’s soy burger has nary an animal part, but the machines that worked the soybean fields were greased with the blood of a thousand organisms. The vegetarian’s wheat crops feed millions, but robs the land of nutrients and destroys the top soil necessary for life.

    Primal readers won’t be surprised by what they read. They may be horrified at the extent of the environmental damage caused by industrial agriculture, but they won’t be surprised (given agriculture’s poor track record with our health). Keith lays out an effective case against grains (and for a Primal-ish, low-carb, high-fat diet, believe it or not) on nutritive, moral, and economical grounds that’s tough to refute. The nutritional information will come as second nature, but the sources are sound and the references are powerful.

    There’s more, far more, but I’d rather not spoil the entire thing. Just read it and rest assured that it’s worth your time. The book is a must-read, and a great ally for anyone interested in promoting a healthy, sustainable, omnivorous future. Read this book and distribute it to your vegan friends.

    Primal approved!

    Check out excerpts on Google Books, read the first chapter here, or purchase the book here or here.

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  • CHART OF THE DAY: U.S. Weekly Jobless Claims The Lowest Since September 2008

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    The Department of Labor reported today that initial jobless claims for the week ending November 21st fell 35,000 on a seasonally-adjusted basis from the previous week.

    They rose 68,080 on an not-seasonally-adjusted basis, but this basically means that jobless claims rose less than normal for this time of year. Seasonal adjustments are widely used to spot overall unemployment trends since the employment market is indeed seasonal.

    As shown below, at 466,000, this most recent seasonally-adjusted claims number represents the best data point we’ve had since the week of September 13, 2008.

    Regardless of the potential for static in the weekly numbers, or errors due to seasonal adjustments, it’s now pretty clear that the overall rate of new jobless claims has indeed slowed substantially.

    u.s. jobless claims, COTD


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  • Rohbock leads U.S. women’s bobsled team in World Cup

    Shauna Rohbock of the Utah National Guard finished just eight-hundredths of a second
    out of the medals in the women’s bobsled competition at the Olympic Sports Complex
    in Lake Placid, N.Y., today…

  • Former Guard members lead U.S. team at World Cup bobsled event

    It was déjà vu at the Lake Placid, N.Y. bobsled track Nov. 22 as the U.S. team
    again claimed the top podium positions…

  • (Shazam)RED Makes the App Store a Slightly Kinder Place

    The (RED) movement allows companies to give a little back while also selling their products, by branding versions of their goods with the (RED) logo, name, and color. In exchange, a portion of the price of said products is donated to the fight against HIV and AIDS in Africa. Apple is on board with the program, with (RED) iPods, and now one of its iPhone developers, Shazam, has thrown its weight behind the cause, too.

    Shazam is the first mobile app to endorse the program. (Shazam)RED is available on the App Store now for $4.99, which is the same price that Shazam Encore retails for.

    The only difference between the two is that when you purchase (Shazam)RED, 20 percent of the purchase price of the app, or a little less than $1, will be “contributed to the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,” with (RED) funds specifically going towards the fight against HIV and AIDS. Also, in addition to the features included in Shazam Encore, you get access to (RED) news and content via an icon on the bottom menu bar that loads (BLOG) RED in a built-in browser.

    In an interview with TMCnet.com, Shazam CEO Andrew Fisher highlighted the success of the (RED) program, and the potential reach of (Shazam)RED given the iPhone’s massive user base. With over 10 million people owning either an iPhone or an iPod touch worldwide, the potential boon for projects like (RED) is astronomical. And the relationship is mutually beneficial, since developers get access to the marketing value inherent in the (RED) brand.

    In case you aren’t familiar with the new features of Shazam Encore, which is the paid version of the wildly popular music identification app Shazam, it allows you to find recommendations for your music tags, search for songs, albums, and artists, and see charts of the most-tagged music. You can also sync your tags with the web-based Shazam interface and share them via Facebook and Twitter. Finally, you can use car mode to identify playing on the radio while you’re driving.

    If you were planning on paying for Shazam Encore anyway, there’s no real reason not to opt for (Shazam)RED (iTunes link) instead, unless you’re worried about future updates. I’m sure that Shazam will update this product for at least as long as they do Encore, though, because I can’t imagine much additional effort or expense would be required, if any, to do so.


  • 2010 National Conference on Volunteering and Service

    Request for Proposals

    Be a part of the 2010 National Conference on Volunteering and Service.
    Please join us by sharing innovative ideas to stimulate participant learning through the use of new skills, practical tools, creative solutions, best practices and cutting-edge technology. We are looking for skilled presenters to offer a wide range of thought-provoking sessions for our specific conference audiences in one or more of the following topic and skill areas:
    • Business
    • College and University
    • Cultural Institutions and Arts Programs
    • Economic Recovery
    • Education
    • Effective Volunteer Management
    • Environment
    • Disaster
    • Faith and Neighborhood Groups
    • Health
    • Leadership for Social Change
    • Nonprofit Capacity Building
    • People with Disabilities
    • Philanthropy
    • Program Impact
    • Social Innovation
    • Technology and Social Media
    • Veteran
    • Youth
  • Warren Buffett’s Secrets To Success

     

    Alice Schroeder, former Wall Street analyst and author, The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life

    • Warren Buffett’s secrets to success:
    • Pattern recognition: The man has 50 years of experience.  He’s seen it all.
    • Focus and intensity: 18 hours a day for decades
    • Geography: He’s not located in the middle of the herd (NYC/Boston/CA)
    • Time horizon: He’s not playing in the quarterly rat race; he can let markets play out
    • Conservative enough that errors don’t kill him: Don’t lose money is rule #1
    • Read excerpts of The Snowball here >

    Produced By: Kamelia Angelova & William Wei

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Rates great but agents working twice as hard for half the business; Where is the economy going?

    pipeline-press

    rob-chrisman-daily

    Earlier this week, the country’s first marijuana cafe opened up, which not only sells medical marijuana, but also has a restaurant where customers can eat. In a related story, the recession is over!

    Whoever wants a 4.50% 30-yr fixed rate conforming loan with a point back to cover closing costs, raise your hand! Well, we’re just about there. Fannie 4% securities are shuffling around 99 or 100, and when you throw some servicing-released premiums on the price, you’re easily above par. And who wouldn’t want to own this servicing? Even I am thinking about refinancing, and I don’t even own a place! Seriously, heck, I have a 7-yr ARM that closed in 2003 at 4.75% (so it starts adjusting next year) that I am thinking about refinancing. Given the 30% LTV maybe I can even find an investor!

    So if rates are so great, why are applications dropping and agents continuing to work twice as hard for half as much business?For last week, the MBAA’s weekly application index dropped 4.5% with applications to buy a home up 9.6% and refi’s down 9.5%. (“The MBA revised the indices for the prior week.) Does this data support what many in the business already are feeling: That most people who can refinance already have, that the economy would have to go further into the tank for mortgage rates to drop much more, and we’d better get used to a purchase market in the coming months and next year?

    How long does it take the MBAA to compile multifamily statistics? I guess eleven months, since Monday’s headline read, “MBA Reports Multifamily Lending 40 Percent Lower in 2008 Than 2007; Market Remained Broad and Diverse”. Their report stated that “2,877 different multifamily lenders provided a total of more than $88 billion in new financing for apartment buildings with five or more units, which is a 40% decline from 2007 levels, and the top five were PNC Real Estate, Wachovia, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A, Capmark Financial Group Inc, and Deutsche Bank Commercial Real Estate. The report also mentioned that 26% of lenders who made multifamily loans in 2008 made just one, and two-thirds made five or fewer!

    more news on FOMC Statement, HAMP and FNMA, bond market, and joke of the day ,,,  <<< CLICK HERE

    (There will be no commentary on Friday – I’ll be in Best Buy looking for bargains.)

    Rob

  • REPORT: Toyota may pull people out of CA, relocate to KY and MI [UPDATE]

    Filed under: ,

    While the majority of Toyota‘s jobs are still in Japan, the auto juggernaut has also accumulated a 34,000-employee empire here in the U.S. as well. Those jobs are scattered among ten manufacturing facilities and three main office complexes in Michigan, Kentucky and at the company’s North American headquarters in Torrence, California. But the downtrodden auto industry and Toyota’s recent losses have prompted the Japanese automaker to find ways to cut costs, and the company’s California headquarters may lose some workers as a result.

    The Detroit News is reporting that Toyota is relocating product planning, accounting, travel and data services jobs from California to its engineering and manufacturing headquarters in Kentucky and its technical center in Michigan. Toyota is neither confirming or denying the report, but the company did say it isn’t going to exit California like Nissan did earlier in the decade, adding “Emphasis has been placed on finding new efficiencies, shared services and enhanced collaboration to address the changing economic conditions and prepare Toyota for the future automotive market environment.” Toyota currently employs 10,700 workers in California, a number that will drop if this report proves true.

    UPDATE: Toyota has released a statement that it isn’t planning any “significant geographic relocation of personnel” at this time. Hit the jump to view the short release.

    [Source: The Detroit News]

    Continue reading REPORT: Toyota may pull people out of CA, relocate to KY and MI [UPDATE]

    REPORT: Toyota may pull people out of CA, relocate to KY and MI [UPDATE] originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 25 Nov 2009 11:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Default Windows Mobile keyboard finally updated

    mskeyboard

    We have seen a lot of changed to the Windows Mobile UI since Windows Mobile 6.5.1, but the small stylus-centric keyboard has always remained. 

    It seems no longer, with the latest build of Windows Mobile, WM 6.5.3, revealing a new keyboard skin directly from Microsoft.  So far it is not known if the keyboard will come with additional intelligence, such as keypress prediction which improves accurate typing, even the new, larger, finger-friendly keys is a massive improvement.

    Read more at XDA-Dev here.

    Via Pocketnow.com.

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  • Some HD2 Questions

    Because there have been so many reviews around the HD2, we’ve decided to do things a little differently… :)

    I’ve been trudging through the pile of questions people wanted and so here are some answers (there’ll be a bunch more soon, though I’ll post them so they don’t appear on the front page, but you can find them on the Leo section here, or on the RSS feeds/Twitter feeds).

    i’m interested in the screen material and how flexible the device is if you try and bend it. Also general durability of the micro USB connector. screen visibility when in direct sunlight would be interesting too. could also be good if you got one of those capacitive styli and used it for a few days to see how practical it is.

    Screen is glass, and judging by some of the videos on YouTube it’s pretty scratch resistant. It’s very very responsive (sometimes a little too responsive) and the lack of precision isn’t obvious. The device is very solid, bending it doesn’t really do anything at all. The microUSB connecter seems fairly robust, and I’m using it less than I used the connector on my Diamond due to the 3.5mm headphone jack. In direct sunlight it’s by no means the best device, but it’s not too bad. Will try and get some pictures when it stops raining in Bristol. Haven’t managed to get my hands on a capacitive stylus, though I don’t think it’s entirely necessary. It seems pretty slick as is, and I’ve not been left wanting.

    Also how effective is the LED flash in the dark?

    The LED flash is rather bright in “normal” mode and in “bright mode” it’s blinding. It’s great for finding my way up stairs in the dark, or avoiding the obstacle course that is my floor when I try and get anywhere.

    I already have the Leo software on my HD so know what its like, so the only thing i really want to know is at what point does the HD2 start to fail to play movies smoothly. What sort of bit rate and file types will cause stuttering. Id like someone to try an HD .mkv file and see what happens.

    MKV isn’t natively supported, and I’ve yet to find one small enough that it won’t destroy the 2GB microSD card whilst I wait for my 16GB one to arrive. It’s fine one 800×480 1MB/s MP4s, and could probably go higher though I can’t see the point. Films look utterly gorgeous, and with CorePlayer I’m playing 700mb DVD rips with no stuttering at all.

    On which apps you can pinch to zoom in and if you find an ability to make more apps pinch-zoom-enabled (e.g. something in the registry).

    I must admit I haven’t looked in too much detail at the pinch-zooming, though it’s now on my todo list. The only place lacking the magnifier (that actually needs it) is the Tasks UI, why it couldn’t be a part of Manila I don’t know.

    I´m especially interested in the usability of the new capacitive touchscreen:
    What are the advantages, what are the disadvantages in all-day-use. Is it difficult to get used to it coming from a resistive touchscreen and being accustomed to using your fingernails?
    Then, having the huge screen in mind, is it possible to use the device one-handed (guess that might be hard).

    One handed is okay, though reaching the start button if you’re left handed is a bit of a stretch (the hardware button is much easier to hit). You do get used to the size though, and my Diamond now feels really small with my Prophet seeming “normal sized”. The screen is both fantastic and annoying. It’s very very sensitive, and you quickly get used to not being able to use your fingernails, but in some situations it’s a little to sensitive. If you have your thumb resting near the edge of the screen it quite often interferes, though generally, the sensitivity is just right.

    Keep the questions coming in if you have them, and I’ll answer them as soon as I can!

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  • Coca-Cola Zero Emissions Nissan X-Trail FCV Leasing in California

    Coke Zero Nissan X-Trail FCVThe Coke zero emissions Nissan X-Trail FCV was announced as a lease vehicle for the world’s largest carbonated beverage company at their Sacramento, California plant. This happens to be the first time that Nissan has leases a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle in the U. S. although they’ve already done so in Japan.

    Nissan has also shown their X-Trail FCV at the California Fuel Cell Partnership (CaFCP) in Sacramento and at various car shows and events throughout the U. S. at ride n drives plus other events. I was fortunate to drive one a few years back.

    Coca-Cola, which already uses various green cars in their fleet including improved internal combustion engines, EVs and hybrids will be using the Nissan X-Trail SUV to promote their Coca-Cola Zero product. According to Nissan Vice President Eric Noziere, “Any 5th grade math student can tell you that 0+0+0=0, yet in this case zero (carbs) plus zero (calories) plus zero (emissions) adds up to a great partnership and a great way to promote both the Nissan and Coca-Cola Zero brands.”

    Sacramento already has two operational hydrogen fueling stations in the area including one at the CaFCP. There is also an additional H2 fueling station that is being planned for operation at the Sacramento airport.

    Now, being the day before Thanksgiving it’s time for me to be a little silly. I was brainstorming some ideas on how to promote both the Nissan FCV and Coke with catchy slogans. So, I decided that I will now substitute some of the Nissan words in the old and new Coca-Cola slogans to see how they fit. Let’s star with:

    1. I’d like to buy the world an FCV and keep it company
    2. Have an X-Trail and a smile
    3. Nissan – it’s the real thing
    4. Things go better with X-Trail
    5. Nissan X-Trail FCV – the pause that refreshes

    Of course I’m sure that you can come up with a few of your own co-branded catchy slogans for the partnership between Nissan and Coca-Cola and if you do, please keep them to yourself. Yes, please.

  • Ex-Enron Trader Built Giant Caverns To Hoard Natural Gas

    John Arnold

    Natural gas prices remain depressed due to the fact that there is simply too much supply and no where to store it.

    While natural gas futures indicate that prices will rise in 2010, it’s hard to take advantage of this directly via the futures market if you can’t store your gas in the meantime.

    This has made John Arnold, an ex-Enron billionaire natural gas trader, look amazingly prescient these days.

    Apparently he’s already built his own underground gas storage caves. Thus he can buy gas today, store it, and then sell it in the future once natural gas prices are higher as the market indicates they will be. He could even likely lock-in profits for this arbitrage by shorting long-dated gas futures to hedge the whole trade. Or he could just charge others to store gas. Either way, our guess is that he’s sitting pretty right now.

    CNN: Most significant, Arnold has become an energy market middleman by investing in valuable natural-gas storage facilities. A huge glut in supply, plus a dropoff in demand from mild seasons and reduced industrial need, has resulted in rock-bottom gas prices. So players are rushing to store gas in hopes of selling it when prices are higher.

    In 2006 Arnold formed NGS Energy, which has carved a series of battleship-size storage caverns inside underground salt domes. “This is the opposite of a speculative play — it’s a bet on the future needs of the marketplace,” says Laura Luce, a former Enron colleague of Arnold’s who runs the venture.

    Natural gas’s storage and transportability as a fossil fuel, she says, also make it a key cog in the renewable-energy economy: “When there’s no wind or sun, you fill in with the cleanest energy available, and that’s gas. That’s why gas storage is going to be a great business.”

    Of course, Luce is the one who makes the public pronouncement. Arnold, by contrast, is hardly in danger of becoming the sort of gas evangelist who appears in TV commercials, like his energy-trading colleague and fellow Texan T. Boone Pickens does for wind and natural gas. In trademark fashion, Arnold is staying behind the scenes and working on how to profit from the next disaster.

    Read more here to get background on Mr. Arnold.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • EA announces new Mercenaries game from EALA

    Pandemic may have closed down but the Mercenaries franchise will still be going strong. Staying true to their earlier statements that Pandemic’s key f…

  • Recipients of ARRA funds grapple with onerous reporting requirements

    Research institutions that went into overdrive to get a piece of the government’s unprecedented, $787 billion stimulus package are now grappling with onerous reporting requirements they must comply with or risk losing the funds. “There are about 99 different data elements that you have to report on each quarter for every award,” explains Lynne Chronister, assistant vice provost for research and director of sponsored programs at the University of Washington (UW) in Seattle. The task is a particularly tall order for UW, which had received 331 awards, totaling more than $140 million by the time the first quarterly reports were due on October 10. Further complicating matters, a flurry of final-hour clarifications handed down by administrators of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) caught many universities off guard. “They changed the rules on us right before the reporting, so we had to scramble to make a few alterations,” says Chronister.

    Consider, for example, the change ARRA made to the reporting required on project impact. “[This information] was supposed to be no longer than 4,000 characters, and we’d gotten that all together from the faculty by September 24. But then they decided they didn’t have the bandwidth for that and reduced it to no more than 2,000 characters, so we had to have our faculty go back and rewrite,” she says. Despite such complications, UW was supremely prepared for the reporting challenge, having built an infrastructure of committees and teams to manage what the school correctly anticipated would be a windfall in ARRA-funded projects. One of the teams, for example, fashioned a reporting tool or datamart which automatically pulls data from four different information systems operating on campus: human resources, finance, purchasing, and sponsored projects. “The reporting team worked very closely with the team developing our [IT] system. They practically lived together for three months to make sure we had everything in our reporting tool that was required,” says Chronister. “We also have a team of seven people that we are calling ‘team ARRA.’ They field questions from campus, and make sure all the fields are filled in and everything is complete.” A detailed article on ARRA compliance requirements and strategies for meeting them appears in the November issue of Technology Transfer Tactics. For subscription information, CLICK HERE.


  • BSU students partner with U.S. Navy to commercialize technologies

    Entrepreneurship students at Ball State University in Muncie, IN, will help develop commercial applications for U.S. military projects through Military 2 Market (M2M), a partnership among BSU’s Entrepreneurship Center, the Department of Defense, and the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane Division (NSWC Crane), which operates a research-centered facility near Indianapolis. Students will be given access to government patents and IP and challenged to find commercial opportunities for the technologies, explains Michael Goldsby, Stoops distinguished professor of entrepreneurship and executive director of the Entrepreneurship Center in BSU’s Miller College of Business. “This partnership provides students the opportunity to work with some of the best scientists and engineers in the world,” Goldsby says. “Students will develop business ideas around existing applications that are currently being patented. Bridging military technology with entrepreneurship education creates a unique learning experience for our students.”

    Next spring, junior entrepreneurship students will write commercialization studies for potential businesses based on the military applications they study. In their senior year, the students will be expected to integrate the technologies into business plans for presentations at national competitions and during E-Day (Evaluation Day) as part of the New Venture Creation course. A key feature of E-Day is a final pass-fail review that requires seniors to put their degrees on the line when their business plans are analyzed by a group of top business leaders just days before graduation. Navy TTOs, laboratory scientists, and entrepreneurship faculty will coach students who participate in the M2M program.

    Source: Inside Indiana Business


  • Hebrew U researchers develop environmentally friendly method to prevent biofilm

    Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have developed an environmentally friendly method to prevent biofilm that uses heterocyclic compounds to disrupt cell-to-cell communication, interfering with biofilm formation. Unlike the use of antibiotics, which often induce formation of resistant strains, the compounds do not need to kill the microorganisms that cause the biofilms. “Just a few weeks ago, a study published by researchers from the University of Colorado showed that showerheads may be dangerous for our health due to contamination with biofilms — or aggregates of bacteria or fungi,” says Yaacov Michlin, CEO of Yissum Research Development Company, the university’s TTO. “This invention is exactly the solution for such problems as well as many other problems related to home and industrial use that affect us daily.”

    Biofilm-related problems cost industry tens of billions of dollars annually by corroding pipes, reducing heat transfer or hydraulic pressure in industrial cooling systems, plugging water injection jets, and clogging water filter and pipes. The compounds developed by Doron Steinberg, a professor in the Faculty of Dental Medicine, and Morris Srebnik, a professor in the Institute of Drug Research, and colleagues will be used to coat pipes, filters, membranes, air conditioning ducts, and other surfaces in contact with water that are prone to biofilm formation. The coating is environmentally friendly and effective against both fungal and bacterial biofilms. The technology can be used for industrial water treatment, prevention of biofilm formation on filtration membranes, paints and coatings, irrigation pipelines, and swimming pools — applications where it’s expected to lower costs of desalination and water recycling processes by reducing energy consumption due to corroded or clogged pipes. The technology also can be used in simple household cleaners.

    Source: Earth Times


  • New tool slashes time and expense from medical device commercialization process

    A new Software-as-a-Service tool that in less than 20 minutes provides crucial information needed for determining the FDA classification and regulatory pathway for medical device technology has just been released by e-Zassi, and is being offered with an introductory discount in partnership with 2Market Information Inc., the parent company of Tech Transfer E-News.

    Within minutes, the US FDA Regulatory Calculator provides users with a potential FDA predicate, regulation product code, and the classification and regulatory pathway associated with a medical technology. With this new tool, you’ll save hours in initial research and eliminate the need for outside experts early in the process. Understanding the classification and regulatory pathway of new medical device technologies is critical to early business planning, market assessment, and understanding of FDA requirements. Typically, this takes in-house staff or outside consultants many research hours, can delay product development, and eats up additional time and money. The new tool puts regulatory pathway information at your fingertips early in the device development process, minimizing the potential for miscalculations with due diligence and helping to guide your commercialization and clinical trial strategy. For complete details, and to receive a $125 discount (E-News readers pay only $375), CLICK HERE.

  • Green carbon-based heating from U of Warwick could be commercially available within three years

    Research conducted at the University of Warwick, U.K., could accelerate the commercial development of technology that uses waste carbon for “green” domestic heating products and automobile air conditioning systems. Adsorption technology, which uses heat from a gas flame or engine waste to power a closed system that contains only active carbon and refrigerant, has long been considered a more efficient way to drive heat pumps or air conditioning. The process alternately heats or cools the carbon, either extracting heat from the outside air and forcing it into radiators or hot water tanks or extracting the heat from inside a car to cool the air. Until now, the big problem with the technology has been its size. An automobile air conditioner requires roughly 300 liters of volume to operate, and domestic heat pumps must be even larger. University of Warwick researchers miniaturized the technology, creating adsorption-based equipment that is up to 20 times smaller than previously possible. Bob Critoph, professor of engineering and lead researcher on the project, says the technology will create heat pumps that will reduce domestic fuel bills and CO2 emissions by more than 30%, compared to the best condensing boiler. In auto air conditioning systems, the technology is expected to reduce both fuel consumption and CO2 emissions by nearly 5%. The researchers have entered a technical partnership with Centro Richerche Fiat (Fiat Central Research) to develop the technology. A spinoff company, Sorption Energy Ltd, also is being established by Warwick Ventures, the university’s TTO, and H2O Venture Partners. Critoph expects to have an automobile air conditioning system that uses the technology ready for market in less than three years, with a gas heat pump to follow.

    Source: GreenWise

  • Apple Seeks to Shut Down Psystar for Good With Permanent Injunction

    It’s been a long, drawn out legal battle, but Apple is clearly winning by almost all accounts, and it just filed for a motion that could end Psystar’s party permanently. On Monday, the company filed a claim for a permanent judgment against Psystar that would stop the clone maker from selling any products at all, under the U.S. Copyright Act and the DCMA (Digital Millennium Copyright Act).

    In other words, if you desperately want that Open(7), you’d better place an order ASAP, because you might never get a chance again once the decision comes down. The complaint, is based on the premise that Psystar is now “trafficking in circumvention devices,” which is causing “unquantifiable” harm to Apple’s image.

    The new motion specifically targets Psystar’s recently released software product, Rebel EFI, which bypasses the built-in prevention measures that limit the installation of OS X 10.6 to Apple-built hardware only. Using Rebel EFI, customers can supposedly install OS X on any Intel-based system, although the compatibility of individual components will vary widely.

    Up till now, Apple has succeeded in dealing serious blows to Psystar, including winning a summary judgment, but it hasn’t managed to get a ruling that would shut down the company’s operation for good. The clone maker can continue doing business even if it keeps having to pay damages, since it can declare bankruptcy and reform as long as it can raise enough operating capital to stay afloat…hence the attempt by Apple to put an end to the expensive cycle.

    Apple SVP of Worldwide Product Marketing Phil Schiller puts it succinctly in an affidavit for the latest claim:

    So long as Psystar continues these practices, the harm to Apple and its brand will continue.  I believe Apple should not be required to file a new lawsuit to stop Psystar from infringing Apple’s intellectual property each time Apple releases a new version of Mac OS X. Requiring Apple to file multiple lawsuits to stop the same infringing conduct would be unfair, expensive, and a waste of the Court’s and the parties’ resources.

    Apple also recently tried to shut down Atom support in OS X, which would seriously derail the efforts of at-home netbook hacking, so it looks like Cupertino is just generally trying to shut down any and all efforts to wrestle control of the operating system from its iron grip.

    The next hearing is scheduled for December 14, and the official trial will start in January 2010. Psystar doesn’t look to be in good shape as it is, but if Apple manages to get this permanent injunction, all hope is lost for the hackintosh purveyor.