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  • Rand Is Right

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Sound Politics
    May 24, 2010

    When Rand Paul says it is unconstitutional for the federal government to prohibit private businesses from discriminating based on race, he’s right, arguably (which I will get to in a moment).

    But when he says it is not, in this day and age, necessary for government to prevent segregation of private businesses, he’s undeniably right.

    There is no conceivable reality where we’d see such significant racial, sexual, ethnic, religious, or “gender identity” discrimination in this country that would result in rampant segregation or loss of significant opportunities for minorities. It just isn’t rational. Overwhelmingly, the people of this country are aghast at such discriminatory practices, which means businesses overwhelmignly won’t do it, both because businesses are (usually) run by those same people, and because their customers are also those same people.

    To say we need government for this purpose is, quite simply, denying this obvious and unassailable reality of life in America in 2010.

    As to the constitutional question, we can disagree about the legitimacy of it. We cannot disagree, however, that Paul’s view is well-founded in the text and history of the Constitution. My personal view — having been born well after the Civil Rights Act was passed — is that perhaps, at the time, the constitutional right to freedom of association, and the right of states to make their own laws on such matters, were worth bending due to the centuries of government-sponsored institutional discrimination that had left a whole race of people significantly disadvantaged throughout nearly all facets of society.

    I can’t make that judgment one way or another, but I can see the arguments on both sides. Living in 2010 and not in 1964, I lean toward liberty rather than government control, but I can’t judge the 1964 mindset.

    But again, we no longer live in such a time where — government or not — any group of people is significantly disadvantaged due to their race, religion, ethnicity, gender, or “gender identity.” That simply doesn’t exist anymore. That’s not to say discrimination doesn’t happen: of course it does. But no group is significantly disadvantaged because of what little discrimination remains in our society.

    Rand Is Right 100210banner1

    Some people might say “that’s easy for you to say, a middle class protestant white male.” Shrug. I am a conservative Christian in an industry largely controlled by atheists, agnostics, and liberals. I live on the West Coast, which many project to be majority Hispanic within my lifetime, and certainly within the lifetime of my first- and second-generation descendants. If this were about ME ME ME, I’d probably be putting all the protections for ME in place that I could.

    I simply believe in liberty, and that any restrictions on liberty must be backed up by a damned good reason; and that furthermore, when we add or continue restrictions without a damned good reason, we set precedents that endanger other liberties. We see this in the Civil Rights Act itself: we gave up the right to discriminate based on certain categories, and this has justified taking away our right to discriminate based on other things, like — in Washington — “expressions” of “gender identity.” The violations of our liberty in Social Security and Medicare and growing wheat have led to justifying Obama’s health insurance mandate. And so on.

    I won’t insult anyone’s intelligence by trying to prove that the views I am expressing are not racist. Only a moron — like Cokie Roberts, on This Week today — could possibly think these views are racist. George Will, however, is not a moron, but he’s still wrong: on the same program he expressed the view that we reasonably gave up one right (the right to discriminate in some personal affairs) for another (the right to not be discriminated against).

    Setting aside that this doesn’t make much sense on the face of it (taking away my actual right to give someone else a “right” that isn’t an actual right isn’t a reasonable tradeoff), if we think this is reasonable, then it can be used to justify almost any government theft of our rights. Imagine if in 1964 we outlawed “hate speech,” and then Rand Paul in 2010 said we should allow people to say hateful things. Surely we’d have just as many people today complaining about Paul, saying how racist it is for him to suggest such a thing, and how our right to say hateful things was replaced with a right to not have hateful things said about us.

    Then again, to many liberals, hate speech laws are a good thing. This boggles my mind, but so do many things that many of them believe.

    Again, I can’t say whether we were right or wrong in 1964. But certainly it’s wrong now, simply because it is a patently unnecessary restriction on liberty. That said, there’s no point in trying to repeal this particular blue law. It’s not going away any time soon — though we can hope — and for most people, it doesn’t cause us any problems (except for the lucky few who are wrongly prosecuted for false claims of discrimination). That’s why many blue laws stay on the books: most people don’t care enough to try to get rid of them.

  • PIMCO’s El-Erian: The Current ‘Death’ Of Inflation Is Just The Calm Before The Storm

    mohamed el-erian pimco

    Despite the fact that U.S. inflation seems to be dying right now, PIMCO’s Mohamed El-Erian remains concerned about the future explosion of inflation.

    He’s worried about an even larger scale use of central bank balance sheets, similar to what was done in the U.S. and more recently in Europe.

    We may have gotten away with such activities once, but in the view of Mr. El-Erian, we’ve used our ‘spare tire’ and won’t be able to repeat these kinds of central bank resources without substantial inflationary effects, among other consequences.

    PIMCO:

    Some argued that given the output gap in industrial countries, it would be very difficult to generate inflationary pressures for the next three years. Indeed, the risks were tilted toward further disinflation. A larger group warned that while the output gap framework was applicable to the next 12 months, the period beyond that could witness the impact of increasing monetization of debt, gradually rising inflation rates and a worsening of inflationary expectations.

    This potential evolution – from disinflation to inflation – will likely proceed at different speeds in different parts of the globe. It is already well in train in emerging economies and will remain so. Over the medium term, the U.S. will be next, with Europe and, even more, Japan lagging.

    So in fact, he appears to believe that current U.S. disinflation (low, falling inflation) is only the lull before the storm. If that’s the case, then a lot of people have been tricked, as shown by the low treasury yields right now. The ten-year treasury is at just 3.21% right now, which doesn’t leave much room for inflation over the next ten years.

    Also, check out our easy guide to Quantitative Easing And Why It’s One Of The Largest Risks Right Now >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Palin critique latest twist in BP slop

    by Randy Rieland

    Photo: WikipediaAlmost five weeks into the BP oil disaster and we’re
    way down the rabbit hole. None other than Sarah “Drill, baby, drill” Palin wondered aloud on Fox News Sunday whether oil company contributions to the Obama
    campaign are to blame for the president “taking so doggone long to get in
    there, dive in there, and grasp the complexity and the potential tragedy that
    we are seeing here in the Gulf of Mexico.” (Obama has definitely enjoyed BP
    cash
    .)
    This whole Gulf mess just makes her long for—wait for it – more on-shore drilling. Like in the Arctic
    National Wildlife Reserve in Alaska
    !

    When
    no means “make me”

    Last
    Thursday, the EPA gave BP 72 hours to quit using that nasty oil dispersant
    Corexit 9500 in favor of other less
    toxic chemicals. Last weekend, BP said no can do. To which the EPA replied: um,
    well, we really need to talk

    I was kidding!

    Remember Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal’s (R) big rail against the
    big government excesses in his official Republican Party response to Obama’s
    first State of the Union address? Yeah, well, that was 18 months ago. Now,
    Jindal is irate that the same big government isn’t moving fast enough to
    stop the brown gunk hitting the Louisiana coast. 

    Ouch

    James Carville, Louisiana native and usually loyal Democratic consultant, blasted the
    “lackadaisical” response from the Obama White House.

    I think they actually believe that
    BP has some kind of a good motivation here. They’re naive! BP is trying to save
    money, save everything they can … Somebody has got to, like, shake them and
    say, ‘These people don’t wish you well! They’re going to take you down!’

    And he didn’t stop there.  

    Seemed like a good idea at the time

    Conservation groups, such as The
    Nature Conservancy and Conservation International, are taking heat for their
    partnerships with BP. In response to questions from Conservancy supporters, Nature
    Conservancy chief exec Mark Tercek posted this on his org’s website:

    Anyone serious about doing conservation in this region must engage these
    companies, so they are not just part of the problem but so they can be part of
    the effort to restore this incredible ecosystem.

    See Joe
    Stephens’ Washington Post story
    .  

    A White House divided

    Interior Secretary Ken Salazar vents
    about BP missing “deadline after deadline” with its proposed fixes; White House
    press secretary Robert Gibbs bemoans the oil giant’s “lack of
    transparency
    .” But Coast Guard Commandant Thad
    Allen says that only BP can stop the leak.
    Ultimately, said Allen, “I trust (BP CEO) Tony Hayward.” But should he? Oyl!

     

    Related Links:

    In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    Show how much you—and BP—care with a commemorative oil spill T-shirt

    Matthews tells Obama to kill BP’s disaster capitalism






  • MAP OF THE DAY: Here’s Where Brazil Just Got Hit By A 6.5 Magnitude Earthquake

    Brazil just got rocked by a 6.5 magnitude earthquake in the northwest portion of the country. In contrast, the highly destructive Chilean earthquake of February had a magnitude of 8.8.

    The earthquake hit the state of Acre, which is 1687 miles from the country’s capital of Brasilia.

    Acre produced only 0.2% of the Brazilian economy in 2005, so from an economic standpoint, this shouldn’t be a significant negative.

    From USGS.gov:

    Brazil Earthquake

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Tech Tidbits: Gist Vs. Smartsheet in Google Apps, Display Week Demos, and the Carried Interest Debate

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    It’s a good start to what promises to be a busy week in Seattle-area tech news. To get caught up, here’s a quick look at what’s been going on around town.

    Display Week, the Society for Information Display conference, is going on in Seattle this week. No, the iPad has not put this show out of business yet, thankfully. Some highlights of futuristic display technologies: Microsoft will demo a prototype interactive display called “magic window,” and E Ink, the Boston-area company that makes displays for the Amazon Kindle and other e-book readers, will present early versions of its display technology that are flexible and colorful (instead of black and white). Check out this Seattle Times preview for more info.

    —Last week, Seattle-area startups Gist and Smartsheet announced they are having a “Google-off.” Gist recently got its product into the Google Apps Marketplace; it helps business people stay up to date about their contacts through e-mail, social media, and Web news. Smartsheet has been selling its work-management application through Google ever since the Apps Marketplace opened in March. Now the two startups have a friendly wager going over their respective month-over-month customer growth rates. At stake: beers, premium services, and money to charity. It’ll be interesting to see if Concur and Skytap, two other local companies in the Google marketplace, get in on the action.

    —Gerry Langeler, a managing director at OVP Venture Partners (he’s based in Portland, OR), wrote an op-ed for the New York Times DealBook blog last week. He opposes the recent House bill to raise “carried interest” taxes on limited partnerships, arguing that the current lower tax rate is fair as compared to investments in homes, and that more tax will mean less talent in the investor pool.

    He writes: “The real risk is on the younger generation of private equity professionals. If they find other pursuits more financially appealing (hedge funds, anyone?), the losses to company formation and job growth won’t show up right away. But show up they will, 5 to 10 years from now when the best and the brightest would have been hitting their stride. And the entrepreneurs will then have trouble finding savvy investors, and that will be a real, material loss of jobs and industrial competitiveness in this country.”

    I’m told Langeler will be interviewed about this topic on CNBC today at 11:20 am PT.












  • 2011 Audi A8 to offer factory-installed hotspot for wireless internet

    2011 Audi A8Audi announced today that the 2011 A8 flagship sedan will be the first car in the world to offer an optional factory-installed WLAN hotspot for wireless Internet access.

    This means that passengers will be capable to access the Internet through the car’s integrated WLAN module and via UMTS and use up to eight devices such as laptops, Apple iPads or netbooks. How does it work? It is quite simple, as the driver only needs to insert a a data-capable SIM card into the Bluetooth online car phone. Alternatively, the internet connection can be established via Bluetooth by using a compatible mobile phone with a SIM Access Profile.

    2011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A8

    Source: Car news, Car reviews, Spy shots

  • Five Companies Picked To Slug it Out for Ann Arbor SPARK Incubator Space

    SPARK-smaller
    Howard Lovy wrote:

    Five companies ranging in focus from fueling to family planning will have a chance to compete for $50,000 in business acceleration services and a one-year incubator lease at SPARK East in Ypsilanti, MI, on June 4. Business incubator Ann Arbor SPARK, which first announced the competition at the end of April, listed the finalists today. Each of the following companies will have three minutes to make their case before a panel of “noted funding and business experts.”

    • Urobiologics, based in Livonia, MI, has a product called the UroGender Test Kit aimed at couples that would like to know the gender of their children early in a pregnancy. The company claims a 95 percent success rate in detecting a fetus’s gender, based on the mother’s urine sample, between five weeks and 15 weeks after conception.
    • Mobile Sign Language Systems, a University of Michigan startup, is developing smart phone software that translates spoken English into real-time sign language.
    • Eco-Fueling is developing a way for diesel engines to run on a mix of renewable ethanol and diesel, aimed at the six million diesel trucks currently on the road that use no renewable fuel.
    • Own, based at the TechArb incubator in Ann Arbor, MI, will present its combined Web and hardware point of sale (POS) system for coffeehouses. Own says its product replaces cash registers or software POS systems.
    • Aeradigm will present an air conditioning appliance for data centers that it says fits in the same racks with servers, cooling adjacent equipment and reducing overall energy load by harvesting waste heat for power.







  • Why Larry Summers may not make it until 2011

    David Warsh dismisses reports that Larry Summers may stick around longer than many in Washington expect:

    Defense is one possibility. Who wants to be seen as a lame duck while there are eight months to go on the clock – including the mid-term-elections? Offense is equally likely. No doubt the president would like to keep his chief economic adviser for another eighteen months.  Perhaps the administration is lobbying Harvard.

    Summers’ other opportunities weigh in the balance: a successful marriage to Harvard English professor Elisa New (between them they have six children, all from previous marriages); the prerogatives that come with being one of Harvard’s fewer than twenty university professors, including the freedom to teach precisely what and where he wishes (or not at all); membership on the executive committee of an economics department that is one of the three or four best in the nation; and, of course, the famous day-a-week of consulting time that Harvard professors are permitted to spend in the moneyed world.

  • Will seniors nix spending cuts to fix deficit?

    My pal Bruce Bartlett says U.S. demographics support his position that America will need massive tax increases rather than massive entitlement cuts to get its fiscal house in order:

    In short, what we see is that over the next ten years the percentage of the population that benefits from Social Security and Medicare is going to rise significantly and that this group of the population votes in higher percentages than those that pay for these programs. And those that will, over their lifetimes, bear the heaviest burden of paying for entitlement programs–the young–vote at the lowest rate of any age group.

    Me: He might well be correct. Then again, most of the reform plans I have seen pretty much leave the current system in place for those who are, says over 50 or 55. I also don’t understand why a broad-based tax increase would be any more palatable to people than getting their expected benefits cuts. Not to mention that getting spending under control is a better way to restore solvency than tax hikes.

  • With Bandwidth Demand Booming, a New Kind of Optical Network Is Born

    Allied Fiber said today it’s begun construction of a nationwide wholesale fiber network that will span 11,548 miles. The New York-based company will build out the network in six phases, linking undersea cable landing points, data centers, colocation interconnection facilities, rural networks and wireless towers in order to feed the increasing demand for broadband capacity resulting from everything from the ever-growing number of cellular towers to cloud computing (we’ll talk about the bandwidth needs for cloud computing at our Structure 2010 conference next month).

    A New Model to Meet Broadband Demand

    But Allied’s effort isn’t just aimed at boosting overall capacity — it’s aimed at changing the underlying business model of providing long-haul telecommunications networks. Hunter Newby, CEO of Allied Fiber, wants to connect the U.S. with an open fiber network comprised of the three disparate systems that essentially make up the backbone of the Internet, and is targeting data centers, high-bandwidth sites, rural ISPs, wireless companies and long-haul networks providers as customers. But it remains to be seen if Allied’s model will compete, not just with offerings from backbone providers such as Level 3 Communications, but also with colocation companies and the tower industry.

    Newby, who was the chief strategy officer at colocation provider Telex, is pretty impassioned about his plan to bring wholesale fiber to places where existing backhaul providers may not go. It’s a plan similar to Google’s experimental fiber network for consumer broadband, but enacted on a much larger scale, and for businesses. Newby believes that in underserved areas where Allied Fiber will have a presence, the cost of bandwidth will be driven down significantly because Allied will be willing to sell access to the long haul network, at competitive rates, to anyone who wants them — something the incumbents aren’t inclined to do.

    Competition Drives Costs Down

    The construction of Allied’s network is a big deal for small ISPs, which can find themselves having to pay more than $100 a megabyte for bandwidth, and may mean they don’t have to implement bandwidth caps as a means to keep their own costs down. It’s also a big deal for cellular carriers like Sprint and T-Mobile, as it will give them access to less expensive backhaul without having to pay the likes of AT&T or Verizon.

    As Newby explains, rural providers or cellular providers needing rural coverage will be able to buy transport at wholesale rates from a colocation provider in the middle of field somewhere along a railroad right of way (Allied has a deal with some railways companies for access to their ducts). Such an approach could provide access for a single provider near the colocation facility or other regional providers could build off the Allied network. It would also open up the opportunity to locate data centers in rural areas, perhaps near renewable energy projects.

    “The incumbents have control and have made it quite clear they’re not willing to make any significant capital investments in rural areas and are selling off rural assets,” Newby told me. “But you need to change the economics, and if these buyers can buy at even $15 per megabyte…the number of gigs and terabytes will eclipse the current rate because right now it’s so expensive.”

    Building a High-Fiber Network

    The first phase of the Allied network will cost $140 million, will connect New York, Chicago and Ashburn, Va. and will be completed by the end of this year. Newby said the second phase (from Atlanta to Miami) will cost $180 million, and the third phase connecting Chicago to Seattle could cost as much as $350 million. However, he added that potential customers are willing to go in with him on the cost of the connection to Seattle because big bandwidth providers like NTT Corp. need a shorter route to get their traffic to Asia. The final three projects aren’t budgeted yet, nor is there a definitive time frame.

    The first phase will provide a combined 648 dark fibers, 19 colocation facilities and 300 tower sites. From the press release:

    Allied is deploying a 432-count, long haul cable coupled with the 216-count, short-haul cable that will be a composite of Single-Mode and Non-Zero Dispersion Shifted fibers. Allied Fiber has implemented a new, multi-duct design for intermediate access to the long-haul fiber duct through a parallel short-haul fiber duct all along the route. This enables all points between the major cities, including wireless towers and rural networks, to gain access to the dark fiber. In addition, the Allied Fiber neutral colocation facilities, located approximately every 60 miles along the route, accommodate and encourage a multi-tenant interconnection environment integrated with fiber that does not yet exist in the United States on this scale.

    If Allied Fiber can build an open fiber network that spans the country and includes colocation and towers, it could provide a way for municipal fiber networks and rural ISPs to get online and connect to backhaul for less, while bypassing their potential competitors (for example, a muni fiber network might compete against AT&T but may also have to buy access back to the Internet backbone from AT&T because it’s the only provider in the area). We’ve long argued that open networks are the way to go when it comes to big infrastructure, something with which Newby agrees. “I believe in the power of open networks,” he said, “but instead of talking about it or writing, about I want to do it.”

    He went on to say that: “I encourage other people to copy our model and philosophy of neutrality. It drives growth and it’s what drives the innovation and bridges the islands of broadband we have in this country.”

    Related GigaOM Pro Content (sub req’d): Who Will Profit From Broadband Innovation?



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • Report: 1.2 Million Set to Lose Unemployment Benefits in June

    Having unveiled their plan to extend unemployment benefits through the end of the year (not to be mistaken for a plan to create new benefits), Democrats will no doubt be racing to pass the measure before June 1, which marks the current deadline to file for the next tier of jobless benefits. Budget hawks, however, are already balking at the price tag, leaving the fate of the current package in question, particularly in the Senate.

    Today, the National Employment Law Project, an advocacy group, noted the consequences of congressional inaction, estimating that 1.2 million jobless Americans would exhaust their benefits in June alone if the deadline isn’t extended.

    “Here we are, five days out from the Memorial Day recess, and Congress has yet to act on one of the most crucial pieces of legislation affecting the unemployed in 2010,” Christine Owens, NELP’s executive director, said in a statement Monday.

    Under current law, unemployed folks have access to 26 weeks of state-sponsored insurance benefits before four separate tiers of emergency federal benefits kick in. Confusing the arrangement, recipients must exhaust their current benefits before filing for the next tier. Yet that option disappears at the end of May, when the filing deadline for all tiers arrives.

    Complicating the timeline, Congress is scheduled to leave town at the end of this week for their Memorial Day recess, which puts them out of action until at least June 7. NELP estimates that 300,000 jobless folks will exhaust their UI benefits by June 12, the Friday after Congress returns.

    Owens, for her part, thinks lawmakers should prioritize the UI extension legislation over their scheduled vacation.

    “Unemployed Americans are pulling their hair out — and they are looking to Congress for help,” she said. “Even if it means staying in Washington as the Congressional recess approaches, the unemployment bill must move forward. Taking a break without extending the unemployment program will break faith with the millions of jobless workers Congress is leaving behind.”

    Stay tuned.

  • Salón del Automóvil Ecológico de Madrid 2010: Subaru

    salon_madrid_2010_0413.jpg

    En un stand que podía pasar algo desapercibido estaba la marca japonesa presentando dos novedades ecológicas en el Salón del Automóvil Ecológico de Madrid. Ambas están ya a la venta en el mercado español pero utilizan dos tipos de energía totalmente diferentes, si bien se ajustaban perfectamente a la temática de la feria.

    El primero es una nueva variante del Outback convertida para que pueda utilizar gasolina o GLP indistintamente. Está basada en el motor 2.5i y la transformación, que cuesta 2.000 euros, es obra de la empresa cántabra Ferrosite, S.L., que representa a la italiana BRC Gas Equipment. Los beneficios de usar este combustible alternativo son varios: llenar el depósito de GLP cuesta unos 20 euros más barato que hacerlo con gasolina, reduce en un 60% las emisiones de NOx, permite rebajar el impuesto de matriculación y acceder a centros de ciudades con restricciones de contaminación.

    salon_madrid_2010_0414.jpg

    El otro modelo es el Plug-in Stella, la versión totalmente eléctrica del urbano que ya tiene un año de experiencia en el mercado japonés. Su motor eléctrico proporciona 47 kW (unos 64 CV de potencia) y está alimentado por unas baterías de iones de litio que totalmente cargadas le dan una autonomía de 90 kilómetros.

    Para recargarlas, además del sistema de frenada regenerativa, es posible enchufar este Stella a tomas de corriente tanto de 100 como de 220 voltios, disponibles en los hogares. Tarda unas ocho horas con las primeras y cinco con las otras. No obstante, si se conecta a un punto de recarga rápida, alcanza el 80% en un cuarto de hora.

    Gracias a que las baterías están situadas bajo el suelo del coche e integradas en su estructura, no perjudican el espacio del habitáculo y están totalmente protegidas. Subaru todavía no ha comunicado precios del Plug-in Stella pero está incluido en el Plan MOVELE del Gobierno español. Os dejamos con las fotos:

    Fotos | HighMotor



  • Eric Massa Is Even Crazier Than You Thought

    Glenn Beck-like, I put my head in my hands over the sheer lunacy expressed by the much-disgraced former New York Democratic congressman:

    • Earlier in the year, long before the allegations had been made public, Massa had called me with a potentially huge story: Four retired generals — three four-stars and one three-star — had informed him, he said, that General David Petraeus, the head of U.S. Central Command, had met twice in secret with former vice president Dick Cheney. In those meetings, the generals said, Cheney had attempted to recruit Petraeus to run for president as a Republican in 2012.

    • The generals had told him, and Massa had agreed, that if someone didn’t act immediately to reveal this plot, American constitutional democracy itself was at risk. Massa and I had had several conversation on the topic, each more urgent than the last. He had gone to the Pentagon, he told me, demanding answers. He knew the powerful forces that he was dealing with, he told me. They’d stop at nothing to prevent the truth from coming out, he said, including destroying him. “I told the official, ‘If I have to get up at a committee hearing and go public with this, it will cause the mother of all shitstorms and your life will be hell. So I need a meeting. Now.’”

    • Massa eventually came to the Esquire offices in New York to tell us the Petraeus story. He spoke with the bluster and hyperbole I had seen in him at stump speeches, but he had credibility on this matter — twenty-four years of active service in the Navy, a seat on the House Armed Services Committee, and an increasing voice in the media as a Democrat who would speak with authority about military issues. Still, when he called the possibility that Petraeus could beat Obama in an election a “coup” and “treason,” the characterization seemed odd. “If what I’ve been told is true — and I believe it is,” he told myself and two colleagues, “General David Petraeus, a commander with soldiers deployed in two theaters of war, has had multiple meetings with Dick Cheney, the former vice-president of the United States, to discuss Petraeus’s candidacy for the Republican nomination for the presidency. And in fact, that’s more than a constitutional crisis. That’s treason.”

    Do I need to write a punchline? This is bark-at-the-moon stuff. Feel free to speculate in comments about how I’m part of the cover-up for the impending tickle-driven coup d’etat.

    Thanks to Noah Shachtman’s Twitter feed.

  • VIDEO: Angry Homeowners Rally Outside BofA Exec’s House

    Embittered homeowners and activists packed the yard of a Bank of America executive on a recent weekend, and they brought their bullhorn.

    Members of the National People’s Action community group and the SEIU came to the porch steps to tell their stories of foreclosure and bureaucratic indifference, and advocate for financial reform.

    In this video, a woman tells how she got a phonecall about a foreclosure on her house 30 minutes after she found out her son died in a car crash. The caller didn’t care about that, but did want her to know that it was a debt collection call and it could be recorded for training purposes.

    The video, which grabs you in the chest, is worth a gander. Whether you agree or not with their point of view or tactics, it’s a slice of what’s going on right now.

    NPA and SEIU at the home of BofA’s Gregory Baer [YouTube]
    MORE:
    What’s really behind SEIU’s Bank of America protests? [Fortune]
    Hundreds Protest Outside Bankers’ Houses In DC [Huffington Post]

  • Zappos Admits Pricing Mistake Cost It $1.6 Million; But Is Upfront About Taking The Hit Itself

    For many years we’ve seen stories of companies making pricing mistakes at e-commerce stores. The news of those mistakes tends to spread very quickly, with lots of people piling on to order something for way less than it cost. Inevitably, the company realizes the mistake, and usually contacts everyone who ordered to let them know the order won’t be fulfilled because it was a mistake. I actually have no problem with this, though some people think it’s horribly evil. Either way, what seems to almost always happen is that the negative publicity that follows leads the company to change its mind and honor the original price. Sometimes, it actually takes a lawsuit to make that happen.

    However, this weekend, it looks like Zappos had a pretty massive pricing glitch on its sister site 6pm.com. It lasted a few hours. But what’s different this time is that once Zappos fixed things, it immediately decided that it would still honor the wrong prices, even though the mistakes would end up costing the company (now owned by Amazon) $1.6 million. Now, between Amazon and Zappos, the two companies have a ton of money, and continue making a lot of money every day. But, no matter what, a $1.6 million pricing error is still a big deal. Big enough that you would think that the company could potentially withstand any sort of PR hit to trying to not honor those prices (perhaps offering up some sort of gift certificate or benefit to those impacted, instead). However, for a company that bases its entire reputation on bending over backwards to make customers happy, it appears they quickly decided that it was best for their overall reputation to just eat the $1.6 million, and keep (or even boost) that customer service reputation.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • TV viewers now refusing to watch SD content?

    There’s a handy option in the DirecTV menu guide for “HDTV Channels.” On the rare occasion when I’m actually sitting in front of the TV looking to “channel surf” (more like “menu surf” nowadays), it’s only “HDTV channels” I’m concerned with. Nearly halfway through 2010, it has come to the point where, unless I absolutely have no other choice, I simply won’t watch a network unless the program is in HD. Has it come really come to that? That, unless a show is in HD, you’ll simply skip it?

    Pretty sure I first heard of this last week on the radio, I think on Ron and Fez, that for the first time ever TV networks are starting to see their ratings decline specifically because they’re not in HD. That is, people now refuse to watch TV unless it’s in HD! How wild is that? I mean, assuming it’s true…

    It probably means a few things. One, biggish networks that aren’t in HD yet should now be shaking in their boots. For whatever stupid reason, DirecTV hasn’t picked up the HD feed of Fox Soccer Channel. That doesn’t mean much to most people, but when given the choice between watching a Premier League game in SD on my HDTV or watching the same game with a tiny online stream (which is probably illegal but who cares?) on my computer, freeing me to play simultaneously play some
    http://www.crunchgear.com/tag/steam/”>Steam
    games in windowed mode, then I’m absolutely going to go with the stream. I will go out of my way to watch an HD feed of a game, subjecting myself to TV’s controls for 90 minutes, but in 2010 SD sports broadcasts really ought to be outlawed. I’d almost rather listen to an audio play-by-play than watch an SD image on my HDTV.

    I should stress that Fox Soccer Channel does, in fact, have an HD feed, it’s just that DirecTV hasn’t picked it up yet. Boo!

    This could also mean that smaller TV networks are doomed. If people are now skipping SD content altogether, how can Some Niche Channel survive? It’s not exactly cheap to record and air HD content, so the little guy may be squeezed out.

    Or maybe this isn’t true at all? I’m pretty sure only something like 50 percent of TVs in America are HDTVs, so these people aren’t going to miss something (HD broadcasts) that they never would benefit from anyway.

    I’ll throw it to you guys now: do you still watch SD content on your HDTVs? Again, I pretty much don’t, but I realize my opinion may not exactly line up with a “normal” person’s.


  • Sony Doesn’t Want Another Wiimote Situation [Blockquote]

    The Wii has a handful of great games, and an even smaller handful of great games that truly exploit the Wiimote’s capabilities. The rest? Complete waggleriffic crap. Here, SCEA’s Rob Dyer gives some tough love to would-be PS Move developers. More »







  • How Lean Startups Are Changing the VC Industry

    “An increasing trend is big funds like ours banding with angels and writing small checks just to try and get a foot in the door.” Geoff Yang, Redpoint Ventures, on how lean startups are changing the dynamics of the VC industry. (Bloomberg)



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • Doctor Pays For Blood Samples At Son’s Birthday Party, Is Struck Off The Medical Register

    An MMR doctor has recently been struck off the medical board for what has been called “multiple separate instances of serious professional misconduct”.  Among these instances of misconduct on the part of the then Britain-based doctor included the paying of £5 to children for blood samples at his son’s birthday party.



    Andrew Wakefield, the doctor in question, released a study in 1998 that suggested a link between MMR vaccinations (a vaccination for measles, the mumps, and rubella) and autism.  At the time this had caused a large drop in vaccinations, and likewise a large rise in measles cases.  Later, Wakefield’s results were discredited.  However, a recent case against Wakefield did  not attack the doctor’s results, but rather his research methods.  Furthermore, it has also been rumored that Wakefield concealed the fact that he was paid to advise solicitors on behalf of parents concerned over their children and the MMRs.

    All in all, Wakefield was found guilty of more than 30 charges related to professional misconduct.  According to a  representative of the panel in charge of the sanctioning, “The panel concluded that it is the only sanction that is appropriate to protect patients and is in the wider public interest, including the maintenance of public trust and confidence in the profession, and is proportionate to the serious and wide-ranging findings made against him.”

    Related posts:

    1. Dr. Wakefield Found Guilty Because of Professional Misconduct Over Research
    2. Spanking leads to more aggresive children
    3. Effects of Low Quality Child Care Lasts Into Adolescence

  • First Drive: 2011 Bentley Mulsanne is modern luxury with a strong sense of history

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    2011 Bentley Mulsanne – click above for high-res image gallery

    Contrary to what you might expect, successfully keeping tradition alive in the automotive world isn’t just about periodically mining one’s stylistic back catalog or simply refusing to change altogether. To convincingly abide by the spirit of one’s history without running the risk of extinction, or worse – self-parody – requires stealthy innovation, and to do so is a decidedly tricky undertaking.

    Just ask Bentley. The British automaker has a long history of artfully highlighting its considerable heritage, from the exploits of the fabulous Bentley Boys to the timeless craftsmanship employed in its interiors. And despite the upright look of its new flagship, the 2011 Mulsanne, much thought and effort has been exerted into making what is actually a very modern proposition seem… traditional. Accomplishing this in an authentic and timeless manner is particularly important for an automaker like Bentley. Given the rather lengthy model lifecycles that small-volume manufacturers are often forced to adopt, it’s crucial to nail the entire package the first time. Follow the jump to see if they’ve managed the feat.

    Photos by Chris Paukert / Copyright (C)2009 Weblogs, Inc.

    Continue reading First Drive: 2011 Bentley Mulsanne is modern luxury with a strong sense of history

    First Drive: 2011 Bentley Mulsanne is modern luxury with a strong sense of history originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 24 May 2010 11:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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