Blog

  • Evernote coming to Canon scanners


    The Evernote news just doesn’t stop, does it? Hot on the heels of Evernote integration with Lexmark printers and Fujitsu scanners comes word that Evernote will be integrating with the new P-150 scanners from Canon.

    The new Canon P-150 scanner (also called the “Scan-Tini”!) ships with a CD that contains two things: a scanner driver, and a link to install Evernote. That’s the kind of bundled software that I think actually makes sense. Both Windows and Mac are supported by the new plug-and-scan offering from Canon.


  • Sony Ericsson Xperia X2 WM6.5.3 ROM update

    The Sony Ericson Xperia X2 finally has the official WM6.5.3 update that was promised some time ago!

    It’s available from Sony (via the SEUS tool) though it may not have spread to all locales yet. If that’s the case, XDA-Developers should have you covered with the ROM Development forum here.

    As and when more is known about this update, we’ll let you know.


  • Spain judicial panel allows judge Garzon to consult for ICC

    Photo source or description

    [JURIST] The judiciary oversight committee of the Spanish General Council of the Judiciary (CGPJ) [official website, in Spanish] on Tuesday approved a request [text, PDF; in Spanish] by judge Baltasar Garzon [BBC profile; JURIST news archive] allowing him to work with the International Criminal Court (ICC) [official website]. Garzon was suspended last week [JURIST report] by the CGPJ for abusing his power by opening an investigation into war crimes allegedly committed under Francisco Franco [BBC backgrounder] during the Spanish Civil War [LOC backgrounder]. The ICC confirmed earlier this month [press release] that they had asked Garzon to work for them as a consultant for a period of seven months in order to improve their investigative methods. The CGPJ granted Garzon’s request for leave indicating there was no legal reason preventing him from working as a consultant with the ICC. Garzon still faces trial in Spain where he has been formally charged [JURIST report] with abusing his power although no trial date [AFP report] has been set. If convicted, Garzon could face a suspension of up to 20 years.

    Thousands gathered [JURIST report] in cities across Spain last month in support of Garzon, chanting slogans and displaying flags of the pre-war Republican government ousted by Franco. The Spanish Supreme Court [official website, in Spanish] charged [order, PDF; in Spanish] Garzon with abuse of power based on his 2008 ordered exhumation [JURIST report] of 19 mass graves in Spain. The purpose of the order was to assemble a definitive national registry of Civil War victims, despite a 1977 law granting amnesty for political crimes committed under Franco. Garzon appealed [JURIST report] the charges, alleging that the indictment issued by Spanish Supreme Court judge Luciano Varela was politically motivated [AFP report], compromised judicial independence, and sought to impose a specific interpretation of the 1977 law. Garzon is widely known for using universal jurisdiction extensively in the past to bring several high-profile rights cases, including those against Osama bin Laden and former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet [JURIST news archives].

  • Volcker: What You’re Seeing In Europe Is The Future Of America

    paul volcker barack obama

    Europe’s current problems should be a huge wake-up call for America, says former federal reserve chairman Paul Volcker.

    Reuters:

    “If we need any further illustration of the potential threats to our own economy from uncontrolled borrowing, we have only to look to the struggle to maintain the common European currency, to rebalance the European economy, and to sustain political cohesion of Europe,” Volcker said.

    “There are serious questions, most immediately about the sustainability of our commitment to growing entitlement programs,” said Volcker, who heads an outside panel of experts advising Obama on the economy.

    Europe shows government hand-out spending has its limits, even if it can look sustainable for a long time. The same goes for budget deficits and growing government debt. America’s not quite there yet, but Europe is a nice peek at one potential future best avoided.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Hollywood Park Race 7 Horse Racing Betting Pick Wednesday 5-19-10

    Our free pick for our forum visitors will come from Race 7 from Hollywood Park on Wednesday afternoon.

    The 7th at Hollywood Park is a 1 1/6th of a mile turf event running in Allowance $53,000 company for fillies and mares four years old and up.

    With our free pick we will play on #3 Chasin Dreams to win.

    Post time for the seventh at Hollywood Park is set for 7:07PM Eastern Time and you can watch it on TVG.

    Chasin Dreams gets the services on Rafael Bejarano and is trained by Bruce Jackson. Bejarano aboard this 5 year old has two pretty good outings with a closing third place finish against Allowance company at Santa Anita on two turns on turf on April 4th and posting a 91 Beyer. Three races back in was Bejarano aboard Chasin Dreams across town on the turf and was just a 1ength away from the winner and again posted a 91 Beyer. With Bejarano aboard she has produced solid efforts.

    Play #3 Chasin Dreams to win race 7 at Hollywood Park 2-1 on the Morning Line.

    Post Time at 7:07PM Eastern Time televised by TVG

    Courtesy of Tonys Picks

  • Fan lends her voice to Vitaminwater ad for latest ‘Twilight’ movie

    Here’s what you’ll need if you plan to camp out for nearly a week before the June 30 opening of The Twilight Saga: Eclipse: a tent, a sleeping bag, posters of Robert Pattinson, the cat you’ve named Jake, and a mini-fridge filled with Glaceau’s Vitaminwater. And the parental guidance you are apparently lacking. (I added that last one myself.) Frequent CW advertiser Vitaminwater, which has made some in-your-face in-show appearances on Gossip Girl, just used the network to launch a new cross-promo for the upcoming Summit Entertainment flick. It’s a commercial developed with the help of a fan named Devon, who lends her voice to the "How to stage a sidewalk vigil" for the third movie in the wildly popular book-based franchise. Something about hanging out on cold concrete for days will make you really thirsty for those antioxidants in Vitaminwater XXX, the ad says. Or maybe it’s just the hormones talking. Nice move, Glaceau, to link with one of the hottest film properties around, and take the message directly to a venue that’s a teen-girl haven. Eclipse may benefit from your media, but there’s little doubt you will benefit somehow from the vamp phenom.

    —Posted by T.L. Stanley

  • Christa Miller: When Success Laughs At Her

    Christa Miller: When Success Laughs At HerArguably, American Comedy scene’s most successful actress is Christa Miller. Born Christa Miller Lawrence in Manhattan, New York in May 28, 1964, television comedy series’ jewel can be remembered by portraying inimitable roles such as Kate O’Brien in The Drew Carey Show and Scrubs’ Jordan Sullivan. The show Scrubs was her husband’s brainchild.

    Acting and being a celebrity run in the bloodline. Her mother Bonnie Trompeter was a famous model in her era. She is also the niece of NBC sports guy Dick Ebrasol. Notably, the most recognizable figure in the family is Aunt Susan Saint James.

    Miller was introduced to the entertainment industry at such a young age. Barely eating and walking, the six-month old Christa was shown in a Wonder Bread television ad. Three years later, she posed her charms in an Ivory commercial with Francesco Scavullo.

    Her stint in the limelight was briefly cut short when she had to undergo a surgical procedure to remove benign tumors from her bones. After period of recovery, she did a couple of modeling stints. Soon after she retired, she enrolled herself in an acting school in Los Angeles and debut as US Maxim’s first cover girl.

    One of her biggest television breaks came with The Drew Carey Show which was aired from 1995 to 2002. Her appearance in Seinfeld twice has made ratings for the program shoot up.

    Her better half Bill Lawrence produced the popular TV Show Scrubs. In 2001, Miller was invited for a gust role as Dr. Cox’s ex-wife Jordan Sullivan. The intention for her role was just for bit parts. However, due to audience applaud and demands, she was seen almost regularly in the show.

    Related posts:

    1. Katey Perry Tops Maxim Hot 100 List Of 2010
    2. Katy Perry on the top
    3. Rape Charges on Lawrence Taylor

  • How’s Your Treasury Short Looking Now?

    It’s really incredible how many major names over the last few years have recommended shorting long-dated US Treasury bonds.

    Even today, Nouriel Roubini is warning of bond vigilantes coming to the US., threatening our ability to borrow money at cheap rates.

    And yes, we can certainly see the logic. But we’ve also seen Japan, and in the meantime, Treasuries continue to do awesome, as yields collapse.

    chart

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • FinReg Update: Cloture Vote Today, Dodd Alters Derivatives Language

    Today, at 2 p.m., the Senate will vote on Sen. Harry Reid’s (D-Nev.) motion to invoke cloture on Sen. Chris Dodd’s (D-Conn.) financial regulatory reform bill. The 60-vote-hurdle cloture motion, if it passes, would end debate on the bill and in 30 hours — after 8 p.m. on Thursday — the Senate could take a final 50-vote-hurdle vote on the measure. Right now, it seems that Reid does not have 60 votes, and therefore debate will continue and he will have to file for cloture again.

    The Senate is no longer taking any new amendments to the Dodd bill, but is allowing secondary amendments tacked on to other amendments. At the literal third-to-last minute yesterday, Dodd amended Sen. Blanche Lincoln’s (D-Ark.) controversial derivatives language, which would have forced banks to spin off their derivatives trading desks into separately financed entities. Brady Dennis at The Washington Post offers a good explanation of the derivatives compromise language and the trouble it has caused in the last 24 hours:

    Dodd offered a clever Washington solution aimed to appease both friends and foes of the provision. His amendment preserves the tough language — but it postpones any action for two years so it can be studied. And it assigns that study to a new council of regulators, headed by Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, whose members have serious reservations about such a dramatic measure and may very well kill it in the end.

    Voila. Language saved, action averted. Move on.

    Problem is, the idea didn’t sit so well with Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.), chief advocate of the derivatives ban, who was in Arkansas on Tuesday fighting for her Senate seat in a primary election. (Her bid to secure the nomination fell short, setting up a June 8 runoff election.) When contacted about Dodd’s proposal, staff members seemed unaware of it. They later sent out a statement on Lincoln’s behalf. “I remain fully committed to my provision and will fight efforts to weaken it,” she said. “I’m proud of the support my provision has received both inside and outside the Senate and will defend it should there be a debate on the Senate floor.”

    Nor did the banks cheer Dodd’s compromise. “It’s immediately going to have a chilling effect,” said one banking lobbyist, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak more freely. “Markets crave certainty. All this does is introduce a comic amount of uncertainty.”

    But if the compromise brings Republicans over to vote for the bill, it will stay. Notably, the Dodd bill punts on a number of issues — including, for instance, the Volcker Rule banning proprietary trading at federally insured banks.

    Here are the remaining amendments to the Dodd bill. Not all will receive a vote:

    • Sen. Sam Brownback’s (R-Kans.) amendment to exclude automakers from from the authority of the Consumer Financial Protection Agency.
    • Sens. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) and Mark Pryor’s (D-Ark.) amendment on small business fairness, which might exempt small businesses from CFPA rules.
    • Sen. Arlen Specter’s (D-Pa.) amendment of section 20 of the Securities and Exchange Act, allowing private civil action against people that violate certain SEC laws.
    • Sen. Patrick Leahy’s (D-Vt.) amendment to restore the application of federal antitrust laws to health insurers.
    • Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s (D-R.I.) amendment to give states stronger authority to protect consumers from usurious lenders.
    • Sens. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) and John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) amendment to limit affiliations with certain member banks.
    • Sens. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) and Richard Lugar’s (R-Ind.) amendment to require the disclosure of payments by resource extraction issuers.
    • Sen. Richard Shelby’s (R-Ala.) amendment to make the Consumer Financial Protection Agency funded by Congress, rather than the Federal Reserve.
    • Sen. David Vitter’s (R-La.) amendment exempting manufacturers and entrepreneurs from some regulations.
    And here is a quick wrap-up of yesterday’s hot Senate action on financial regulatory reform:
    • Sen. Judd Gregg’s (R-N.H.) amendment to prohibit taxpayer bailouts of fiscally irresponsible state and local governments was withdrawn.
    • Sen. Bob Corker’s (R-Tenn.) amendment on the applicability of state laws to national banks failed, 43-55.
    • Sen. Tom Carper’s (D-Del.) amendment on the applicability of state laws to national banks passed, 80-18.
    • Sen. Byron Dorgan’s (D-N.D.) secondary amendment to ban naked credit default swaps was tabled, 57-38.
  • Official Sprint HTC Hero Update to Android 2.1 is Here!

    A few days back we told you about the Sprint HTC Hero leak of the latest Android 2.1 software, now we are happy to announce the official update is available on HTC’s website with instructions on Sprint’s website for customers to perform the manual update themselves. We’ll have a guide up shortly, but if you haven’t updated from the old 1.5… now is the time to do so!

    Note: the update will wipe your phone and specific to Sprint version of the HTC Hero. Concerned about backing up your contacts, SMS, email, apps, etc? Try MyBackup Pro for complete backup solutions or WaveSecure for SMS and call logs, try AppManager for apps, and your Gmail account automatically backs up Contacts. It will not come as an automatic update thus you must install it yourself.

    [Via HTC]

    Algadon Free Online RPG. Fully Mobile Friendly.

  • Cerevo Cam Now Supports Ustream Life-Casting—US Release This Summer [Camcorders]

    Japanese maker CEREVO’s innovative product should’ve really gone on sale a couple of years ago when iJustine and co were at their peak, but I do appreciate a good camera with a unique twist—in this case, Ustream support. More »







  • Liveblog: Google IO Day 1 Keynote

    Live from the Google I/O Day 1 Keynote in San Francisco, CA.


  • Chesterfields (Aug, 1935)

    To knit and spin was not much fun
    When ’twas my sole
    employment
    But now I smoke these Chesterfields
    And find it real
    enjoyment
    Mild… and yet.. They Satisfy


  • Safety Tail Light Shows Direction Motorist Intends to Turn (Aug, 1931)

    Safety Tail Light Shows Direction Motorist Intends to Turn
    THE frequency of motor accidents may be lessened considerably when a new automatic tail light exhibited recently at the International Patent exhibition comes into widespread use. The turning of the steering wheel of the device, shown at the right, flashes on a light in the rear that indicates to following motorists which way the driver will turn, thus preventing confusion and delay.


  • Magic (Aug, 1930)

    Magic

    Learn at Home—by Mail Easily! Quickly!

    New! Different! Dr. Harlan Tarbell, Famous Magic Wizard, teaches you Big Tricks, Illusions, Stage Stunts, ‘Tatter” and the Principles of Magic. You learn easily and quickly at home by mail. Earn $250 to $1,000 a month. Write today for free literature and details.

    Astonish Your Friends Gain that magnetic popularity that makes you the center of any crowd. Why envy others’ skill? You can learn Magic yourself, quickly, easily—at home—by mail—during your spare time!

    WRITE!

    Mail coupon now for free Magic literature telling all about the great Tarbell Course in Magic. Get Our Low Prices and Easy Payment Plan.

    TARBELL SYSTEM, Inc., Studio C-235 1926 Sunnyside Avenue, Chicago, III.


  • Moving OCEANS INLAND (Sep, 1929)

    Moving OCEANS INLAND

    by JAMES N. MILLER
    Washington Correspondent

    The new Nicaragua Canal is to be 134 miles longer than the Panama Canal, now working to capacity. Route will cost a billion dollars and will utilize huge Lake Nicaragua. See the map below.

    Details showing how the ocean is to be moved to 400 Great Lakes seaports through the building of the St. Lawrence Deep Seaway! This article summarizes progress on three big seaway projects.

    A STAGGERING appropriation of almost two billion dollars may be made soon by our Uncle Samuel for the building of two urgently needed, gigantic canal projects. They are to connect the most strategic commercial waterways in the world. Both plans have immense international interest.

    Number one, known as the Nicaraguan canal project, proposes to construct a canal that will make a seaway clear across the little republic of Nicaragua.

    Plan number two, possibly the most vitally needed and nationally interesting, would extend the sea base of the mid continent of North America so that the 400 harbors of the Great Lakes, world famous for the enormous tonnage they handle so efficiently, would actually become seaports, available to all ocean carriers. This is the building of the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes Deep Seaway, which would make the ports of the Great Lakes doubly valuable as carriers of America’s vast inland commerce and simultaneously as world channels of trade.

    A third project, receiving favorable national approbation, is known as the Riker Spillway, of which more later.

    The United States’ present keen interest ill the proposed Nicaraguan Canal arises from the surprising fact that the far-famed Panama Canal has not lived up to its much advertised expectations. During the last six years its commerce has doubled, and is now close to its capacity tonnage of 50,- 000,000 tons per year, so that there is every indication that the canal will shortly be unable to take care of its traffic requirements, All of which means, of course, that our government must act immediately to remedy the alarming situation.

    We are accustomed to think of the Panama Canal in terms of great size. But its distance from coast to coast is 134 miles shy of that which would prevail in the case of the Nicaraguan Canal. Moreover, the estimated cost (not yet accepted as official) for the new canal, is close to a billion dollars, as compared with $386,000,000 for the Panama Canal.

    This great expenditure, however, would be well worth while, advocates of the Nicaraguan project believe. They say it would save a day’s sailing time from New York to San Francisco and about two days from New Orleans to the Golden Gate— in other words, that the canal would afford great economic advantages as a shorter route between the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of the United States, and also between the Gulf and Pacific ports. Furthermore, it would offer splendid prospects for development of a more profitable trade with Central America. The canal, in fact, would permit a shortened schedule for nearly 80 per cent of the shipping which now goes through the Panama Canal.

    From the strictly military point of view it has been pointed out by both Army and Navy experts that such a new waterway (see map) could be effectively defended and would give our naval and merchant fleets the insurance of two means of passage from ocean to ocean.

    Curiously enough, the idea for the Nicaraguan Canal turns back the pages of American history 40 years, long before the Panama Canal came into being. It was in 1889 that Congress granted a charter to the Maritime Canal Company for the furtherance of such a project, though it fell through at that time due to pressure on the part of certain South American interests. The first really practical step for the canal’s realization was paved back in 1914 during President Wilson’s regime when there was signed at Washington a special treaty between Nicaragua and the United States. This country paid $3,000,000 for “the exclusive proprietary rights for the construction and operation of an interoceanic canal by a Nicaraguan route . . . whenever the construction of such canal shall be deemed by the United States as conducive to the interests of the two governments.” The World War cut short American development plans.

    Concerning today’s situation—it is true that thus far Congress hasn’t appropriated much money for a thorough investigation of the proposal. The sum of $150,000, granted for the purpose of a survey last March under ex-President Coolidge, is a mere drop in the bucket. Nevertheless many government engineering experts confidently expect that President Hoover with his broad knowledge of national needs will soon see to it that the canal gets a start on a worth-while scale.

    National interest in a shipway of sufficient depth to permit ocean shipping from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean has been widespread for 9 years. Midwestern industrialists and the 40,000,000 inhabitants of the world’s bread basket are clamoring for its completion.

    In 1920 an international board of engineers was appointed by Canada and the United States to make a survey of the St. Lawrence from Montreal to Lake Ontario in order to discover how best to make the waterway navigable for ocean and lake vessels. In 1921 the experts made a favorable report and in 1924 the two governments appointed another board of engineers to review the earlier board’s report. In 1926 the new board’s report showed the engineering factors to be very acceptable to both governments.

    Also in 1924 the two governments appointed advisory committees to further investigate the economic phases. President Coolidge’s committee was the St. Lawrence Commission of the United States with the then Secretary of Commerce, Herbert Hoover, as chairman and Charles P. Craig as executive secretary.

    Since then there has been a wide interchange of letters between this country and Canada. The next step, which seems to loom in the near future, is the appointment of an international commissioner or commissioners to phrase a treaty between the two nations.

    The five Great Lakes are international waters which form the boundary between the United States and Canada from Minnesota to New York. Considered from the standpoints of their area and commerce they constitute the most important fresh water group in the world. They are directly concerned with the prosperity of over 40,000,000 Americans and afford access to regions notable for the magnitude of their natural and industrial resources.

    THEY permit the grain of the western prairies and the Canadian provinces to reach eastern mills and ports of export at substantial savings compared with all-rail routes. They have brought into economic juxtaposition the ores of Minnesota and Wisconsin, and the steel mills of the Lake Michigan, Lake Erie and Pittsburgh districts. And they have enabled the Northwest to secure, at very great savings, the fuel required for the maintenance of its commerce, industry and domestic life.

    To further develop these great waterways on a large scale would be a masterly stroke of modern-day engineering genius. Moreover, the deepening of the St. Lawrence would also involve the development of the huge hydro-electric power from the great rapids which now obstruct navigation on the river. This is the largest profitable hydro-electric power development on the North American continent and the dams necessary for further increase of power would create a series of pools in place of the present rapids, which, with the supplement of locks and short canals, would constitute the shipway.

    That the interior states, as well as the others, believe they would be affected by the project, is shown by the fact that 23 states have associated together by acts of heir legislatures under the name of the Great Lakes Tidewater Association. Representing close to two fifths of the nation’s entire population, the organization is working heroically to accomplish its purpose.

    Actual construction will be apportioned between the two countries as follows: as tentatively proposed by Canada and assented to in principle by the United States, the proposed works lying within international waters shall be constructed by the United States, whether lying on the American or Canadian side of the line, and all works within Canadian waters shall be built by Canada. In other words, the United States will bear the expense of deepening the connecting channels between Lake Superior and Lake Erie and construct the proposed works in that portion of the St. Lawrence River from Lake Ontario to the point where it ceases to form the international boundary. Whereas Canada, at its own expense, will complete the new Welland Ship Canal (probably by 1930) and will build the proposed works in that section of the St. Lawrence lying between the international boundary line and the sea.

    As to cost, the United States will have to pay in the neighborhood of $123,000,000 while Canada will spend about $200,000,-000. It is expected that the seaway would be open to navigation in seven to eight years from the time that active work had been started.

    NOW as to the third project, the Riker Spillway.

    Down in the lowest depths of the historic Senate Office Building in Washington, D. C, a gigantic engineering model of the Riker Mississippi Spillway stretching some 75 feet long and about 12 feet wide, serves as a working plan of a waterway expert, Carroll L. Riker, whose age has passed the 80 year milestone.

    His model represents a plan designed, after almost a quarter of a century of intensive study, to make a docile infant of the turbulent Mississippi, controlling its treacherous floods, making its vast power far more available to the nation, affording well nigh perfect drainage, irrigation and better climatic and health conditions throughout the valley.

    Riker, a kindly, patriarchal man who has spent the best years of his life studying dam construction, explains that as far back as the years immediately preceding the World War, he had succeeded in interesting certain of Uncle Sam’s waterway experts in plans for the curbing of the Mississippi and its tributaries. But the war upset these plans to such an extent that not until recent years did government authorities again lend an ear of uninterrupted interest.

    Back in 1928, Congress, forced to action by the disastrous floods that had been exacting such a terrific toll of life and property, appropriated $325,000,000 for control of the Mississippi’s flood waters. But the scheme thus far hasn’t shaped up as hoped for by Congress, particularly since a recent break in the work resulted in virtually desperate efforts to prevent breaks in levees at other points. So Riker, backed up by Senator Lynn J. Frazier of North Dakota, among other prominent persons, is agitating the building of the huge spillway.

    Now the term, spillway, as the name implies, means a scientific “spilling”, or taking care of flood waters, so that they can do no damage. And in a word, the Riker plan proposes to accomplish this by virtue of the engineering process of quickly disposing of excess waters by deftly sluicing them to one side, though in as straight a line as possible, and then to the point of delivery.

    Under the Riker plan, a strip of land from Cairo, 111., to a point 150 miles west of the mouth of the Mississippi, three miles wide, would be confined on each side by an embankment, or levee of great size and width, divided laterally into two halves by a third levee. By such division, one levee could be used for navigation while another could be employed for agricultural purposes. Or it even could be kept dry for years, if emergency occasion so demanded. The land on which the strip is located could be purchased readily by the Federal government from the states which it traversed at a reasonable price.

    This wide spillway, running almost in a straight line to the Gulf, proponents of the plan say, would forever do away with the menace of floods. For it would tap the Mississippi near Red River Landing and receive all its excess waters there, and act similarly where it crosses the river above Vicksburg, recrosses it below Memphis, and at a point just below Cairo.

    Now comes what certainly are the most unique phases of the Riker project: the inventor claims that his spillway, or Overland Seaway, as some choose to call it, might within a comparatively few years be the greatest man-made navigable deep-waterway in the world, reducing by 50 per cent the water-route distance between the Gulf and Cairo, 111., as compared with the present distance by river alone, and largely supplant the latter for navigation use. The point that almost staggers the imagination in this connection is that not only will there be locks for small vessels, but that the Riker plan also calls for locks more than twice the length of those of the Panama Canal. In other words, the space between the levees would be dredged to a depth sufficient to permit the largest steamships in the world to regularly navigate the river’s entire length from Cairo down to the Gulf.

    Thus the city of Cairo would be brought to within 48 hours of the Gulf. In fact, Mr. Riker says: “My plan would practically make Cairo a seaport. It provides slack water for navigation, having a minimum depth of over 40 feet over the locks, an entirely ample width clear to the Gulf of Mexico, where there is the finest harbor entrance in the world both as to depth and approach. There is even a rattling good probability that if my scheme were carried out, the commerce of Cairo should, within 50 years’ time, become greater than that of any other port in the world.

    “The Mississippi Valley, being the geographical center of the United States, is destined to become its primary center of agriculture, industry and commerce. All this should be largely accomplished by my Hood control plan As demands have compelled many of our great industries to undertake their production near areas of consumption, such production designed for export will eventually cause their centralization where the best facilities exist for exportation and for obtaining raw material and labor.

    “The point is that the area between the confluence of the Missouri and Ohio Rivers with the Mississippi is the center towards which the natural products of the Mississippi Valley gravitate and from which its manufactured products must largely radi ate. Some of its bulky agricultural and other basic products now seek to find water-borne transportation to foreign markets by the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence, unnavigable during the winter months; by rail to the harbors of our eastern seaports, whose congested facilities preclude the economical terminal handling of such products; or by the long rail and water route through the Gulf of Mexico.”

    Still another unique, and even revolutionary phase of the Riker plan is its proposal to construct a series of gigantic monster dams. Explains Mr. Riker: “There would be about 10 reinforced concrete dams crossing the spillway; each would be provided with a continuous series of gates extending full length, and superimposed upon each dam would be a roadbed forming a bridge for railroad and vehicular travel across the spillway. Wherever required for travel there would be built additional bridge crossings made of reinforced concrete and so made as to be uninjured by floods and able to function as eveners of the depth of flood waters passing through the spillway.”

    THE inventor points out that once the Riker Spillway were completed (granted that Congress eventually gives approval to its construction), work upon the Mississippi, looking to its complete canalization, should begin; first, by the construction of the master dams across the river; one just below the spillway’s mouth near Cairo; one just below where the river is crossed near Memphis; one below the recrossing near Vicksburg; and also one below where the river is connected with the spillway near Red River Landing. These master dams, Mr. Riker further explains, should be provided with gated control of the waters passing down the river, with locks for navigation and with plants for the generation of electric power.

    As for the cost of this great project, the inventor says: “The canalization of the Mississippi would limit the greatest possible flood height in the river to an average of more than 25 feet below the tops of its present levees, for about a thousand miles of its length. There then would be recovered from overflow along the river, a very large area of most valuable land. All told it should amount to about 4,000,000 acres, soon becoming the most valuable land in the entire valley, as its increased acreage value would be at least $400. Such valuation, amounting to about $1,600,000,000 would be greater than the cost of the spillway and the estimated cost of the river’s canalization, including the purchase cost of the land bought from the various states.”


  • Comcast Says You’ll Need An Antenna If You Want Network TV In High Def

    Holden, a longtime Comcast customer, recently replaced his decade-old cable box with two shiny new ones. Comcast, unable to let a happy customer be, sent equipment that won’t allow his household to watch high-definition channels without paying for an extra cable package. Customer service’s most helpful response: Hook up an antenna, and switch inputs whenever they want to watch something on broadcast TV! Not helping, Comcast. Not helping.

    I’m a Comcast cable, phone, and internet customer in Jacksonville, FL. My family has been with Comcast since they acquired AT&T’s cable operations in the area back in 2002, and we’re still using the digital cable box that AT&T installed. Recently, it started acting up and dropping the picture every few minutes, so we called Comcast to ask for a new box. They said they’d send us two boxes at no cost, more than we expected.

    What we received were two of the “DTA” boxes, the ones that convert a digital signal to an analog one for older televisions. We called back at they said we need one of those on every television in our house, even digital televisions, because they’re switching over to an encrypted signal in our area in June. That didn’t fix the original problem – they need to send someone out to “fix” the 12 year old digital box, but we installed them anyways. It made our picture quality worse and we lost all our QAM channels, meaning we couldn’t get any of our local stations in HD anymore.

    I called Comcast today and was told that if I wanted to keep receiving local channels in HD, I would need to upgrade to a basic HD package and pay for HD receivers for each digital TV in the house. I told the rep that I was satisfied with that because without upgrading, we’ll be getting less channels for the same amount of money. I asked if there was any way we could still receive our local channels in HD without paying them more money, and I was told to “pick up an antenna and an AV switch.”

    I never thought I’d hear a cable company advising me to buy an antenna! Comcast offered to waive the cost of the HD receivers for a year, but we don’t want free HD cable channels. We just want the local stations we’ve been getting in HD since we bought our HDTVs without having to unplug the cable and hook up the antenna every time we want to watch them.

    Comcast is effectively taking away some of our channels and expecting us to pay the same amount of money. We wouldn’t have known about this if we didn’t call because they haven’t notified us of the switch, so I imagine this is going to happen to other Comcast customers too.

  • Production facilities integrate smart grid capabilities

    Mitsubishi seeks to integrate solar, wind, and other renewable power sources into its production facilities through smart grid technology that will manage the reliability and stability of the energy supply.  Some of the production facilities will deploy solar photovoltaic systems in conjunction with rechargeable batteries to enable power usage when the sun is down.  …

    …   “project to build facilities within the company’s production sites in Japan for experiments designed to establish advanced smart grid technologies. The project will contribute to the company’s efforts to support the adoption of sustainable power supplies worldwide.

    Mitsubishi Electric will build experimental facilities at the company’s three Japanese domestic production sites located in Amagasaki, Wakayama and Ofuna. ”  …

    Via Mitsubishi Electric: Smart Grid Technology Investments (PDF).

      

    Smart grid technology is tested at Mitsubishi facilities

  • Filme do Homem de Ferro 2 destrói dois Rolls Royce construídos à mão


    Antes de contar a notícia, já adianto que vai ter um pouco de spoiler do filme Homem de Ferro 2. Se não assistiu o filme ainda, considerem-se avisados.

    Quem chegou a assistir o filme do Homem de Ferro 2, viu que tem uma história engraçada e tudo mais, é um filme que recomendo a todos a assistirem. Tem uma parte interessante do filme onde o vilão destrói dois Rolls Royce Phantom pretos dentro de um autódromo.

    O filme é cheio de efeitos especiais, então não seria surpresa imaginar que a chicotada elétrica que o cara dá no automóvel o parta em dois facilmente. O que é realmente “chocante” é que isso não foi um efeito especial. Para piorar, foram usados dois carros desses nas filmagens, que foram destruídos. Cada um vale US$438.000 + dano emocional, fora o fato que o carro é construído a mão, sem intervenção de máquinas.

    Imagino o que um cara, que passou noites em claro trabalhando nesses carros, pensaria ao ver suas obras primas serem destruídas como folhas de papel rabiscadas, sendo vistas por milhões de pessoas? Será que algumas das frases que passam em sua cabeça começariam com a palavra “Filho…”?

    Via | Top Speed


  • UPDATED: By the Numbers: Facebook vs. Zynga

    Facebook and Zynga, two of the largest social web companies, have been at odds recently. Zynga is one of the biggest buyers of advertising on Facebook, and without Facebook, Zynga would struggle to grow.

    In other words, the two can’t live without each other. But cooler heads have prevailed and they’ve now settled their differences and inked a 5-year truce. We’ve put together a graphic that lays out the details of their codependency.

    Update: Please note that this corrects an earlier version in which the use of Facebook Credits for games was described as “exclusive;” it was not.

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

    Will Zynga’s Growth Make It a Facebook Frienemy?

    Infographic by Column Five Media



    Alcatel-Lucent NextGen Communications Spotlight — Learn More »