Blog

  • Cleantech Earnings Roundup

    First Solar, the thin-film PV company, first-quarter profit rose 4.7 percent to $172.3 million from $164.6 million. First Solar expects  sales this year will be between  $2.7 billion to $2.9 billion. Because of tightening government subsidies in Europe,  to grow sales First Solar is acquiring project developers in the U.S. This week the company paid $285 million for San Francisco utility-scale solar power developer NextLight Renewable Power [Bloomberg Businessweek].

    Danish wind turbine maker Vestas reported a first quarter loss of €83 million ($109.9 million) from a €56 million profit posted in the previous profits.  In a statement the company said “The decline in revenue and earnings reflects the much lower level of activity and Vestas’ decision not to adjust its capacity further because of short-term market developments.” The company says the slowdown is short-term and remains bullish for the long-term.  It says production capacity by the end of the year will stand at 10,000 megawatts. Vestas recently scored a huge contract to supply 1,500 megawatts worth of turbines to Portuguese clean energy company EDP Renovaveis [BusinessGreen.com].

  • Skyfire 2.0 beta comes to Android, complete with new features

    Skyfire 2.0

    The browser war is heating up on all fronts, and Skyfire is at the front of the game with Skyfire 2.0 beta for Android.  Offering improvements over Skyfire 1.0, version 2.0 introduces the “SkyBar,” a tool that allows users to play Flash videos (thanks to a video conversion on Skyfire’s side) without trouble.  In the spirit of sharing, the user can upload videos, links, and websites to the social media outlet that they prefer.

    With the launch of their Android browser and the potential for a release on iPhone, Skyfire is making the rounds across all of the major platforms.  Hey, we all like choice, and if the screenshots are any indication, Skyfire 2.0 for Android offers some substantial improvements over the stock browser.  To download, head over to bit.ly/skyfireandroid, and be sure to hit the comments section with your feedback!

    Images via Engadget

    Skyfire Launches the First Flash Video Enabled Mobile Browser for Android
    The first ‘mobile browser for the Social Media generation’ eliminates broken links from your Facebook stream, tracks Twitter buzz, and makes sharing easy

    Mountain View, CA – April 29, 2010– Skyfire, maker of the award-winning web-browser for mobile devices, today launches Skyfire 2.0 for Android, making the mobile internet experience faster, Flash-enabled and fun, with media recommendations and social features. Skyfire is one of the fastest growing mobile browsers in the world, ranking in the top 10 all-time apps in the Nokia Ovi Store and Windows Marketplace.

    Skyfire 2.0 for Android is built upon many of the popular features of Skyfire’s 1.0 browser, and uses cloud computing to give a “booster engine” to mobile phones so they can handle rich media like video.  And now, Skyfire 2.0 for Android takes mobile browsing to a new level with the addition of the SkyBarTM, a new toolbar that lets users enjoy millions of videos previously unviewable on mobile, and also discover the latest buzz on any topic they browse.

    What is the SkyBarTM???The SkyBar brings the best of the internet to a mobile user’s fingertips, without any additional searching. By activating the SkyBar with a single touch, users are given access to Flash videos on a web page that otherwise would not play, related content recommendations, and easier sharing with their social networks.

      • Video –The “Video” icon enables users to play millions of Flash videos around the web that otherwise do not play on mobile. This unlocks content trapped behind those error messages with question marks and blue Legos.  Behind the scenes, videos are translated into a format easier for the phone to play, like html5 video. 
      • Related Content – The “Explore” icon brings the most relevant content on the internet to a user’s fingertips based on what they are viewing at the time. The Explore button pulls video, buzz, news, images and other sites from the web based on what is on the current page. 
      • Sharing – The “Share” icon lets users share any article or video easily to their friends on Facebook, Twitter, or by email and SMS messaging, adding a comment, and all with a single click. 

    The first mobile browser for the social media generation:
    “Skyfire 2.0 was built for the way people use social media and the web today. People are now starting their web experience by scanning their Facebook and Twitter news feeds,” explains Jeff Glueck, CEO of Skyfire. “Our new browser allows you to open those links and view the videos that your friends have shared. To make that work, people need a browser that can handle the full internet.”
     
    The Power of Cloud Computing: ?
    Skyfire on Android uses cloud-computing technology to enable this web video; the benefits for consumers include faster and smoother video playback, and extended battery life by offloading more of the work to cloud servers.  At the same time, since Skyfire 2.0 is built on a webkit core, users get all the functionality they know on the default Android browser, such as pinch to zoom, copy and paste, find text on the page, open up to eight browser tabs, and more.
     
    Skyfire is one of the fastest growing downloadable browsers with usage increasing 500% year over year, and currently streaming over 25 million minutes of Flash video every month, more than any other mobile browser worldwide.
    Skyfire 2.0 for Android is available for download worldwide free at bit.ly/skyfireandroid
     
    About Skyfire?
    Skyfire is the creator of the Skyfire mobile browser, and has a mission to enable the “full internet” including rich media on mobile phones. The browser won the Best Mobile Application-People’s Voice at the 2009 Webby Awards and was named a Top App of 2009 by the New York Times’ Gadgetwise. Skyfire is based in Mountain View, California, in the heart of Silicon Valley.  For more information, visit www.skyfire.com, or follow Skyfire on Twitter attwitter.com/skyfire.


  • Microsoft Teaches Us All To Laugh Again

    Having a sense of humor is important to survival. It helps you cope with the down times and to appreciate the good times. Just ask those yucksters at Microsoft, who have put together a very helpful guide on how to gauge your level of humor competency.

    According to those wild and crazy Softies, someone who is competent at humor, “Has a positive and constructive sense of humor. Can laugh at him/herself and with others. Is appropriately funny and can use humor to ease tension.”

    They also provide a helpful guide (see above) where you can determine where your level of humor proficiency on a scale from “Basic” to “Expert.”

    If you’re on the lower end of that chart, Microsoft has some questions you can ask yourself to get out of your comedy rut:
    • In a seemingly serious situation, what nuggets of humor or irony can I find?
    • When faced with a potentially difficult situation, is there a way that humor could help? Could lead to a better outcome?
    • Am I funnier than I think I am? Less funny? Who will give me an honest assessment of my sense of humor?
    • Could I start my next meeting, presentation, or conversation by telling a funny story?

    Or maybe you’re just too “on” all the time… like Robin Williams during his cocaine years. In that case, here are the navel-gazing questions to ask of your inner gut-buster:
    • When have I used humor in the last year when I shouldn’t have? When it may have backfired?
    • Do I ever encourage a near party atmosphere because of my comfort with using humor?
    • Do I avoid discussing or solving the real issue by making a joke?

    They even have a list of recommended reading that includes such subversive literature as a Dilbert book and an audio recording by Dave Barry.

    We hope that this has all been of assistance in increasing your humor quotient.

    Competencies: Humor [Microsoft, via Geekosystem.com]

  • Guy “Regrets” Selling iPhone Prototype To Gizmodo

    The 21-year-old California man who found a prototype iPhone and then sold it to gadget site Gizmodo.com says he now regrets not attempting to return the phone to its rightful owner.

    Talking through his lawyer yesterday, he admitted to Wired.com that he was paid by Gizmodo for what he believed was exclusive access to review the iPhone and that the site told him “there was nothing wrong in sharing the phone with the tech press.”

    “He regrets his mistake in not doing more to return the phone,” says Bornstein’s statement. “Even though he did obtain some compensation from Gizmodo, Brian thought that it was so that they could review the phone.”

    The finder of the phone has been interviewed by police, but not yet charged. However, the cloud is not gone from over his head just yet.

    Writes Wired:

    The person who found the phone “is very definitely one of the people who is being looked at as a suspect in theft,” San Mateo County Chief Deputy District Attorney Stephen Wagstaffe told Wired.com Wednesday. “Assuming there’s ultimately a crime here. That’s what we’re still gauging, is this a crime, is it a theft?”

    The finder made no direct effort to return the iPhone himself, though reports claim that a friend of his attempted to contact AppleCare to no avail. According to the owners of the bar where it had been found, he never told anyone there that he’d found the phone. If he had, he’d have learned that the Apple engineer who’d lost it had come back to the bar on several occasions to see if it had been found yet.

    As reported earlier this week, police searched the home of the Gizmodo editor who wrote the story.

    “This thing has gotten completely, completely out of control,” said the iPhone finder’s lawyer. “He made a mistake… He should have just immediately turned that phone in.”

    iPhone Finder Regrets His ‘Mistake’ [Wired.com]

  • Subaru Outback 2.0 Boxer Diesel Limited 150CV, prueba (parte II)

    Subaru Outback 2.0 Boxer Diesel Limited 150CV

    Por fuera hemos visto que su motor y capacidad offroad están a la altura de lo esperado. Por fuera no es un coche muy vistoso, sino más bien algo cuadradote que recuerda a los Volvo de los años 80.

    Pero como os adelantaba en la parte anterior, lo bonito está en el interior, y no precisamente su motor Bóxer Diesel, que también, sino su habitabilidad interior. Es verdaderamente espacioso y cómodo, agradable, donde llenarlo de maletas y personas y hacer un viaje a la nieve, será la primera tentación que tengamos.

    Diseño exterior e interior

    Subaru Outback 2.0 Boxer Diesel Limited 150CV

    Aunque cada vez es menos común hablar de líneas poco redondeadas en los modelos de los coches, bien es cierto que aún siguen existiendo. El caso del Subaru Outback es uno de ellos, en el que la marca prefiere mejorar el interior que el exterior del coche. Eso se puede intuir nada más acceder al interior del coche, pero vayamos por partes.

    La parrilla delantera es ciertamente agresiva y ha sufrido una modificación considerable, manteniendo su atrevido logo intacto, aunque muchas personas de la calle poco apasionadas del motor no lo reconozcan. Lo que más sobresale es su altura al suelo y su gran entrada de aire para refrigerar el motor. No es propio del motor, sino que la marca lo lleva introduciendo desde hace tiempo.

    De siempre los Subaru han sido algo horteras (que nadie se ofenda). Aún recuerdo aquel Impreza WRX STi de color azul con llantas doradas estilo Clio Williams y alerón… pero eso ha cambiado y lejos de eso, ahora quieren presentarse como marca elegante y si me apuráis premium. Motivos y ganas no les faltan.

    Subaru Outback 2.0 Boxer Diesel Limited 150CV

    La parte trasera no ayuda a la estética, siendo fría y sin personalidad. El tubo de escape con salida inferior tampoco induce a pensar que se trata de un coche potente, aunque sí útil y versátil, con las barras superiores para montar una baca. Sin embargo, se ve que no es un coche antiguo cuando miramos en general a los cuadros ópticos, ya sean delanteros, traseros o intermitentes en los espejos.

    Sus 4,76 metros de longitud, 1,82 de anchura y 1,61 de altura son propios de un coche para poder meter casi lo que se quiera. Su peso de 1.646 kilos se nota en el acelerador cuando intentamos moverlo. Monta de serie unos neumáticos de 17 pulgadas (225/60), aptos para carretera y superficies deslizantes; con menos perdería cualidades.

    Subaru Outback 2.0 Boxer Diesel Limited 150CV

    Interiormente cambia todo; la sensación es muy cómoda, apetece sentarse y no levantarse de su tapicería de cuero microperforado (no disponible en el acabado Premium). Además de asiento eléctrico para conductor, los traseros permiten dos posiciones de respaldo, muy cómodo para viajes largos.

    Comenzando por el maletero de nada más y nada menos que 526 litros con palancas de fácil acceso para abatir los asientos traseros y cortina para no dificultar el acceso, en general todas las plazas disponen de espacio suficiente para ir cómodos. La postura del conductor por lo tanto, es cómoda tanto en espacio como en altura y distancia a pedales y volante. La visibilidad es mejorable.

    El cuero de la tapicería es de buena calidad, igual que los plásticos del salpicadero y elementos que componen las puertas y otros espacios, de una tonalidad beige en la parte inferior y oscura en la superior, con ligeros tonos plateados que le otorgan elegancia al conjunto. El tacto del volante es normal, no destaca, pero tampoco incomoda.

    Subaru Outback 2.0 Boxer Diesel Limited 150CV

    Una de las cosas que más me gusta en los coches es cuando disponen de gran cantidad de guanteras y portaobjetos y en este coche los hay. Las puertas disponen de amplios espacios, las gafas de sol tienen su propio escondite, redes tras asientos delanteros, espacio visible en plazas posteriores tras el reposabrazos central con dos compartimentos para tarjetas u objetos de pequeño volumen y otro inferior para más voluminosos para plazas delanteras y en parte media de consola central, portavasos entre asientos, además de la habitual guantera para la documentación del vehículo y otros objetos. Creo que no se me olvida ninguno, aunque no me extrañaría.

    Como véis, el diseño exterior se ve con creces superado con la habitabilidad interior y al fin y al cabo, el propietario disfrutará más del interior que del exterior. Pero aún queda lo mejor, su equipamiento que no es poco. Aunque en materia de seguridad no anda excesivamente sobrado. Mañana el desenlace.

    Fotos | Jorge Rubio



  • Hollywood Park Race 4 Horse Racing Betting Pick Friday 4-30-10

    With our horse racing selection for Friday we will pick from Race 4 from Hollywood Park. It is a 1 1/16th of a mile event for Maiden three year olds running for a $25,000 claiming tag on the synthetic surface. With our free pick we will play on #1 Cantona to win. Race 4 is scheduled for 5:34PM Eastern Time and you can watch it on TVG.

    Cantona is ridden by Brice Blanc and trained by Patrick Gallagher. This three year old gelding drops down from Maiden claiming $50,000 into this event off a 4th place finish. He faces a weak field that has backed up or made up no ground in the stretch last time out. Cantona was showing some run late in her last race and off that effort around two turns today he will get his picture taken in the winners circle against a very weak field.

    Play #1 Cantona to win race 1 at Hollywood Park 4-1 on the Morning Line.

    Post Time at 5:34PM Eastern Time televised by TVG

    Courtesy of Tonys Picks

  • Gulf oil disaster another sign oil industry may be out of its depth

    Gulf oil spill nears Louisiana coast. (Photo: ABC News)

    Gulf oil spill nears Louisiana coast. (Photo: ABC News)

    By Tom Kessler
    Green Right Now

    By some estimates, it now appears the Gulf oil spill could be months away from being capped and may surpass the scale of the infamous Exxon Valdez of the 1980s. And that has the White House today telling ABC News that there will be no new domestic offshore drilling until the investigation into the Gulf of Mexico oil spill is complete.

    But a review of government testimony and the oil industry’s safety record in deep water drilling suggests that the federal government may never get the reliable assurances that it is seeking. Indeed, the most troubling aspect of the Gulf disaster is that efforts of  top oil industry experts and the U.S. Coast Guard have had no impact on containing the spill thus far.

    The Deepwater Horizon exploration well was operated by BP Oil, the largest oil and gas producer in the U.S., and owned by Transocean Ltd., the world’s largest offshore drilling contractor. The U.S. Coast Guard estimates that 210,000 gallons a day are leaking from the wellhead deep in the gulf. The rig operating the well exploded and started burning April 20. Southern winds are pushing the oil onto the Louisiana shoreline, endangering beaches and wildlife in the region.

    John Amos, founder and president of SkyTruth, a non-profit organization that investigates environmental disasters using satellite technology, said this “could be a catastrophic spill for the U.S.”

    “What’s of greater concern to me is not just the numbers (of gallons spilled), but however big it is, it has clearly overwhelmed one of the world’s largest oil companies and the United States Coast Guard,” Amos told CNBC.

    According to Bloomberg reports, the disaster that killed 11 workers on the oil rig and resulted in this massive oil slick, was triggered when a safety device on the ocean floor failed to cut a pipe. Ron Bohuslavicky, senior well-control instructor at Well Control School in Houston, told Bloomberg that all sub-sea oil wells are equipped with steel blades known as shear rams that are supposed to slash through the pipe at the top of the well during dangerous pressure surges when all other safety devices fail.

    U.S. study found high failure rate of devices designed to stop spills

    But Bloomberg reports that a 2002 study commissioned by the U.S. Minerals Management Service, the agency that oversees the offshore oil industry, found that 50 percent of the shear rams tested failed to cut through pipe and halt the flow of oil.

    SkyTruth’s Amos was among those who testified about deep water drilling before the senate’s Energy and Natural Resources Committee last November. He warned then that there have been several instances of oil spills that were notable for their “magnitude and the potential risk they expose.”

    Among other examples, Amos cited a deep-water oil accident off the coast of Australia last August in which oil and gas flowed uncontrollably for 73 days. He said the spill gushed at up to 2,000 barrels per day, according to estimates by the Australian government’s Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism.

    Testifying at that same senate hearing on Environmental Stewardship and Offshore Energy Production, BP America’s Vice President of Gulf of Mexico Exploration David Rainey said “releases from oil and gas operations are rare.”

    “To be clear, any release of hydrocarbons from our operations into the environment is unacceptable, and we continue to invest in research and technology to drive us to our ultimate goal of zero discharge,” Rainey testified.

    Rainey touted several examples of the technologies that reduce accidental releases, including “down hole flow control valves that shut down the well automatically if damage to the surface equipment is detected,” “blowout preventer technology which includes redundant systems and controls,” and “new and improved well control techniques which maintain constant control of the fluids in the wellbore.”

    BP in 2009: “Voluntary programs” to prevent spills have been “very successful”

    Despite the industry’s safety efforts, the U.S. Minerals and Management Service has logged more than 1,400 offshore oil drilling accidents between 2001 and 2007. The MMS has identified human error as a factor in many of the incidents.

    As a result of the findings, the Associated Press reports, the MMS is developing new rules that will require rig operators to develop programs focused on preventing human error. The agency also called for audits once every three years on programs to prevent human error. But BP has opposed such “extensive prescriptive regulations.”

    “We believe industry’s current safety and environmental statistics demonstrate that the voluntary programs implemented … have been and continue to be very successful,” BP vice president Richard Morrison wrote in a September letter opposing the proposed rules.

    Meanwhile, Deepwater Horizon operator Transocean continues to proclaim on its web site that “our operations will be conducted in an incident-free workplace, all the time, everywhere.”

  • Ultimate Nasal Dilator

    The Ultimate Nasal Dilator©, the most effective, most flexible, cost effective breathing aid available on the market today, just got better.

    Ultimate Nasal Dilator now comes with NEW Comfort Fit Tips. These Comfort Fit Tips provide an unmatched level of comfort not found in any nasal dilator..

    Find out why so many people are finding it easier to breath using the Ultimate Nasal Dilator. Click here to find out more about Ultimate Nasal Dilator. Not sure it works for you? go to our website www.nasalaid.com and take the our nasal dilator test.

    View Ultimate Nasal Dilator Details

  • Good math news for Round Two ARRA applicants

    I thought the last batch of Round One ARRA award announcements might be the last. It looks as if that suspicion has been confirmed. According to Telecompetitor (and to Ann Higgins for passing it on), that was the last batch of Round One awards.

    Also according to Telecompetitor…

    The nine new grants bring the total value of awards made by the NTIA in Round 1 to $1.2 billion. Considering that the NTIA was charged with awarding a total of $4.7 billion in two funding rounds, that leaves more than half for the second round.

    So that’s good news for anyone who’s in the hopper for Round Two funding. First – there’s more money to be spent. Second, fewer folks have submitted applications.

    According to my own tally, this is how Minnesota did:

    • Total loans: 31,939,636
    • Total grants: 87,438,857 ** however that includes 47,778,669 in funds that go to multi-state projects; so 39,660,188 is going more directly to Minnesota

  • Vodafone, Not Google, Begins Selling UK Contract Nexus Ones


    Google Nexus One mobile

    So much for Google’s grand bid to reinvent the mobile sales channel.

    Mountain View on Friday morning emailed people who had expressed an interest, to say its Nexus One is now available to buy in the UK – over on Vodafone.co.uk, in its high street Vodafone (NYSE: VOD) stores or through its sales phone line.

    We had expected customers could take out a mobile carrier contract whilst buying the handset from Google’s own google.com/phone. But, just as happened with Verizon in the States last week, that website now directs customers to the carrier’s website.

    In the U.S., customers can still buy a new T-Mobile USA contract with the phone from Google’s site. And, on both sides of the pond, Google (NSDQ: GOOG) will still sell you the phone only for $529 – but UK retail for that is still priced in dollars, so Google clearly hasn’t got its distribution chain in order elsewhere yet.

    The Vodafone/Verizon drop-outs are a blow to Google but a boon to consumers because the deal is cheap. On a standard £35-a-month, 24-month contract, the Nexus One comes free.

    Google says Nexus One will soon be available in France via Voda’s SFR JV, and then in Germany, Italy, Holland and Spain.


  • The worst week ever, brought to you by the fossil-fuel industry

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    It’s a week to remember—or better yet, forget.  Who could have
    imagined such a confluence of terrible, horrible, no-good, very-bad events,
    rounding up what has to be the most disheartening “Earth Month” ever? 

    In what may soon be the worst oil spill in U.S. history, crude is gushing into the Gulf of
    Mexico and bleeding into Louisiana
    wetlands
    . The situation is so dire
    that our best environmental option is to set
    it ablaze
    . Eleven workers died when
    the rig blew up. Economic disaster may
    follow ecological and human disaster, with the fishing, shrimping, and tourism industries likely to take a body blow. Remember when President
    Obama called for a major
    expansion of offshore drilling
    four weeks ago and said “oil rigs today generally don’t cause spills”? How comforting.

    Two coal miners
    were crushed to death
    in Kentucky while working for a company
    with
    a long history
    of endangering its workers.
    This story should have shocked the nation, but coming in the wake of 29
    miner deaths earlier this month and in the shadow of the oil spill, it got
    barely of blip of attention.

    The Chinese
    coal freighter that crashed into the Great Barrier Reef
    a few
    weeks ago remains stuck and Australian authorities say the best option may
    be to sink it
    .

    Even the week’s good news—the Obama administration’s
    approval of Cape Wind
    , which would be the nation’s first
    offshore wind farm
    —feels pretty bad.
    While offshore oil drilling proceeds merrily along with bipartisan
    support, it’s taken nine years of torturous wrangling to get this far with
    Cape Wind. Environmentalists continue to
    spar over it, and still more litigation and stalling will follow before a
    single turbine goes online along a U.S. coastline. “I’m worried about all those
    wind turbines blowing up & leaving a wind-slick on the coast of Cape Cod,” quipped one
    climate reporter.

    That’s just this week. Looking
    back at the whole month of April, we had Massey’s Big Branch mine disaster,
    another coal miner death in
    West Virginia, an oil refinery explosion in Washington state that killed
    five workers, an 18,000-gallon oil spill
    from a Chevron pipeline
    into the Louisiana Delta, and, as mentioned above, a big oil spill at the world’s largest continuous coral reef.

    The connection running
    through every one of these disasters, of course, is dirty energy—oil and
    coal. Only a fool would refuse to see the need to end our addiction.

    Speaking of which, the U.S. Senate looks
    likely to turn its back on the problem for the year. Plans to introduce a climate
    and energy bill this week—albeit one that’s disturbingly friendly to the
    fossil-fuel industry—are on the skids because
    of a spat
    between Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Harry Reid (D-Nev.).

    Leave it to a business
    professor to find a “silver lining” in the week’s terrible news:  “I think it may create some temporarily
    spikes in employment if the companies hire some local labor to clean up the
    spill,” Rajesh Narayanan, professor of finance at Louisiana State University’s business
    school, told The New York Times.

    The craziest part is
    that our leaders continue pledging their tender loving care not to the natural world
    but to the GDP. 

    “Think of the language
    our politicians use,” author and global organizer Bill McKibben said in a
    recent conversation. “‘The economy is ailing.’ ‘It’s hit a rough patch.’ Or ‘It’s
    healing.’ Or ‘showing signs of healing.’ I mean, we talk about it like you
    would your great aunt. But with the planet, it’s ‘natural cycles’ and ‘pay no
    attention.’ ‘The Arctic melted: must be a natural cycle someplace.’”

    We’re still acting as
    if the economy is the thing that’s real, the thing with physical weight and
    force. We’re acting as if the natural world is the abstraction, the intellectual
    concept that we can adjust to better suit our needs. That confusion will be the
    root of more disasters.

     

    Related Links:

    Wake up, Obama. The Gulf spill is our big chance

    Obama puts offshore drilling on hold as Gulf of Mexico oil slick reaches U.S. coast

    The Climate Post: Mighty winds a-blowin’






  • How to Save Gorillas: Turn People on to Snail Farming | Discoblog

    Gorilla conservationists in Nigeria have a new ally–snails. The critically endangered Cross River gorilla is under constant threat from poachers in this poor nation, as poachers kill the animals for their bushmeat or sell them illegally to traffickers in the exotic pet trade. With just 300 Cross River gorillas left, the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) hopes to offer locals an alternate source of both food and revenue so they’ll leave the poor apes alone. Enter the snail. For this conservation project, the WCS picked eight former gorilla poachers and got them to start farming African giant snails, a local delicacy. The WCS helped the poachers construct snail pens and stocked each pen with 230 giant snails, writes Scientific American. As the snails breed quickly, farmers can expect a harvest of 3,000 snails per year. Scientific American adds:
    According to WCS, this should end up being a fairly profitable enterprise for local farmers. Annual costs are estimated at just $87 per farmer, with profits around $413 per year. The meat of one gorilla, says the WCS, would net a poacher around $70.
    Related Content:
    80beats: Bushmeat Debate: How Can We Save Gorillas Without Starving People?
    80beats: New Threat to Primates Worldwide: Being “Eaten Into Extinction”
    DISCOVER: Extinction–It’s What’s …


  • Wanted: New Cloud Startups for Structure 2010′s LaunchPad

    Structure, GigaOM’s flagship conference, returns on June 23rd and 24th for two days of deep insight into the cloud computing industry. Taking place at the Mission Bay Conference Center in San Francisco, it promises to be our best Structure conference yet.

    A new feature this year is the Startup LaunchPad. Held at the end of the first day, this is where our selection of the 10 best startups or major product launches take the stage. From the chips that power the compute clouds to the broadband that transports the computation and the software that ties it all together, cloud computing is creating a fundamental shift in how we think about and buy computing services, and if your startup is going to be one of the major disruptors, we want to hear from you.

    Here are some reasons why you should submit your startup for the LaunchPad:

    • You will get to pitch your product and service — preference is given to those launching at Structure 2010.
    • You will be presenting in front of venture capitalists, journalists and your potential future customers.
    • Your presentation will be streamed live — we had more than 5,000 unique viewers for Structure 09.
    • You will be given three passes to the conference, where you’ll get to rub shoulders with Paul Maritz of VMware, Erich Clementi of IBM, Marc Benioff of Salesforce.com and many, many more — take a look at the full schedule.

    So do it — enter your startup for consideration in the Structure 2010 LaunchPad today. Full details and the entry form can be found here.

    Not part of a startup? Then you should attend in order to find out what cloud computing has to offer. Click here to get $100 off your ticket. But hurry — this event will sell out!

    Structure 2010 also represents a great way to directly address one of the most influential tech audiences anywhere. Call Mike Sly at (415) 235-0358 to find out how your company can exhibit.

  • Lance Armstrong Baby No. 5 News

    Lance Armstrong and girlfriend Anna Hansen are expecting their second child together — and the tot’s already got his/her own Twitter page!

    What a sign of the times, huh?

    The cyclist revealed the baby news on the celeb-driven microblogging site on Friday, with a post under the username @Cincoarmstrong. “I got 2 arms, 2 legs, a nickname, and [I’m] 2 inches long. See y’all in October,” the inaugural Tweet read.

    “Getting’s today about someone I’m following, a certain @Cincoarmstrong. What to say? Yet another blessing in our lives. I cannot wait!” the 38-year-old Tour de France champ and testicular cancer survivor wrote on his own Twitter page.

    The baby will join older brother Maxwell Edward, 11 months, and Armstrong’s three children with ex-wife wife Kristen – twins Isabelle and Grace, 8, and Luke, 11.


  • Opera Browser Buying Webmailer FastMail.fm For Cross-Platform Email


    FastMail.fm

    Fresh from making a short-lived surge to the top of iTunes Store’s app chart, browser maker Opera is now buying Australian webmail service FastMail.fm to bolster its own email effort across multiple devices.

    The Opera desktop web browser, which claims 50 million users, has offered a built-in email client for 10 years now. But mobile has fast become Opera’s bigger business, with 55 million users.

    FastMail.fm offers its service to desktop web users but also to mobile users via WAP. It ranges from free up to $39.95 a year.

    Oslo-based Opera says the acquisition will “deliver cross-platform messaging to a wide range of devices, including computers, mobile phones, TVs and gaming consoles”.

    Chief strategy officer Rolf Assev: “This will enhance the value Opera provides to consumers, while assisting our operator partners in reducing customer churn.” Opera Mini, the mobile client, compresses web pages for phones by routing them through Opera’s own web servers and striping out certain elements.

    No acquisition terms were revealed.


  • Obama puts offshore drilling on hold as Gulf of Mexico oil slick reaches U.S. coast

    by Agence France-Presse

    The White House said new domestic offshore oil drilling was on hold until the disaster had been fully investigated.

    VENICE, Louisiana—Oil from a giant Gulf of Mexico slick
    washed onto Louisiana shores Friday, threatening an environmental calamity as
    President Barack Obama called for a “thorough review” of the
    disaster.

    With up to
    200,000 gallons of oil a day spewing into the Gulf of Mexico from a ruptured
    well, the accident stemming from a sunken offshore rig may soon rival the Exxon
    Valdez disaster as the worst oil spill in U.S. history.

    Strong southeast
    winds blew the first oily strands of the slick directly onto the coastal
    wetlands of South Pass near the mouth of the Mississippi river late Thursday,
    Billy Nungesser, president of Plaquemines Parish, where oil washed ashore, told
    AFP.

    Hundreds of
    miles of coastline were under imminent threat in Louisiana, Mississippi,
    Alabama, and Florida, a region that amounts to more than 40 percent of
    America’s ecologically fragile wetlands.

    A massive
    deployment of Coast Guard and private crews scrambled to contain the oil,
    fighting choppy seas that made the task more difficult.

    Obama said some
    1,900 federal response personnel are in the area with 300 boats and aircraft to
    combat a slick measuring at least 600 square miles. “We’ve laid 217,000
    feet of protected boom and there are more on the way,”

    Obama said in Washington.

    The president
    said he asked Interior Secretary Ken Salazar “to conduct a thorough review
    of this incident and report back to me on 30 days” on precautions required
    to prevent a recurrence of such a disaster.

    Obama said the
    government had dispatched teams to the Gulf Coast “to inspect all
    deep-water rigs and platforms to address safety concerns.”

    British energy
    giant BP meanwhile said it is “taking full responsibility” for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and will pay for
    “legitimate claims” stemming from the disaster.

    Company
    spokeswoman Sheila William told AFP the energy firm was ready to assume costs
    related to the cleanup and to reimburse damages suffered from what could become
    one of the worst oil spills in history. BP is “taking full responsibility
    for the spill and we will clean it up and where people can present legitimate
    claims for damages we will honor them,” she said.

    BP, which leased
    the wrecked rig, no closer to capping the ruptured well.

    The region is a prime spawning ground for fish, shrimp, and crab,
    home to oyster beds and a major stop for migratory birds.

    “For birds,
    the timing could not be worse; they are breeding, nesting, and especially
    vulnerable in many of the places where the oil could come ashore,” said Melanie Driscoll of the Audubon Society.

    The Coast Guard
    was coordinating vessels including skimmers, tug boats, and robotic submarines,
    which are investigating the underwater damage.

    The White House
    has gone into emergency response mode to better coordinate resources and try to
    avoid the kind of disaster that Hurricane Katrina brought to the region in
    2005.

    U.S. officials called the event a disaster of
    “national significance,” as Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) meanwhile declared a
    state of emergency and called for urgent help to prevent “catastrophic
    loss” of vital spawning grounds and fishing communities from pollution on
    a massive scale. Jindal also sought the mobilization of 6,000 National Guard
    troops to respond to the crisis. Florida Gov.
    Charlie Crist (R) also declared a state of emergency on Friday.

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates ordered two Air Force C-130 aircraft to the area to start dropping chemicals in a bid to contain the spill, the Pentagon said.  The U.S. Navy meanwhile sent in 66,000 feet of inflatable oil boom, seven skimming systems, and about 50 contractors to Gulfport, Miss., said spokesperson Lieutenant Myers Vasquez.

    Top commanders and Gates were continue to confer with the White House and the Department of Homeland Security on how the military can assist the effort to contain the spill.

    Despite frantic
    efforts to stave off an environmental calamity, many of those dependent on the
    region’s vital fisheries and nature reserves had already given up hope due to
    strong onshore squalls forecast for several days to come.

    Brent Roy, who
    charters fishing boats off the coast, said rough seas through Saturday would
    make it nigh on impossible for rescue teams to contain the spill offshore.

    “As it gets
    into the wildlife management area it is going to kill us,” he told AFP
    after returning to the small coastal hub of Venice from the Pass a Loutre
    nature reserve.

    At least two
    lawsuits were filed on behalf of fishers and shrimpers, in what is expected to
    be a flood of litigation from the disaster.

    Oil continues to
    gush unabated from near the Deepwater Horizon platform, which sank on April 22,
    two days after a huge explosion that killed 11 workers. Officials revealed late
    Wednesday that 200,000 gallons per day—about five times as much oil as previously
    estimated—was now pouring from the leaks.

    Crews conducted
    a controlled “trial” burn Wednesday of one of the thickest parts of
    the slick, but such operations were suspended indefinitely as the heavier winds
    blew in.

    BP, which leased
    the rig from Houston-based contractor Transocean, has been operating 10 robotic
    submarines in a so-far-unsuccessful bid to cap the ruptured well on the seabed
    some 5,000 feet below the surface.

    At the
    Gulf well’s current estimated rate of leakage, it would take 54 days for the
    amount of spilled toxic crude to surpass the 11 million gallons of oil that
    poured from the grounded Exxon Valdez tanker in Alaska in 1989.

     

    Related Links:

    Wake up, Obama. The Gulf spill is our big chance

    Oil rig disaster could soon be worse than Exxon Valdez

    Big Oil continues to see big profits, pollution while Americans get robbed at the pump






  • Sponsor post: Sponsor post: The Mobile Meets Entertainment Summit — Get $100 Off Your Ticket

    The Mobile Meets Entertainment Summit is a one-day conference focused on the emerging market opportunities for mobile content producers, aggregators and application developers. Mobile entertainment content is beginning to influence the development of social networks and media sites, as well how content is consumed and shared. The conference will bring together leaders from the entertainment, media and mobile spaces to share insights into the convergence and growth opportunities of this dynamic industry.

    The MME Summit will feature a combination of power panels featuring executives from top entertainment companies, service providers, mobile device manufacturers and developers in the market today. We hope you can join us for the day and contribute to the conversation.

    Register here and get $100 off by simply entering the following discount code: MME2010GIG

    • MME 2010
    • May 12, 2010
    • St. Regis Hotel, San Francisco

  • ‘Free’ and ‘open’ Web video may be impossible after Microsoft backs H.264 only

    By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews

    The good news should be, everyone with a major stake in the outcome of the Web video standards debate has now publicly expressed support for something called “open” or “openness.” But that’s where the similarities, and even the niceness, end. Yesterday, Apple CEO Steve Jobs personally weighed in on the subject by making it an “us against them” battle, with Adobe and Flash the villains.

    Late yesterday, the head of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 9 project, Dean Hachamovitch, followed suit, representing the company whose decisions about what standards to support — or not support — have historically steered the course of Web development, for better or worse. Assuming a far more civil tone than Jobs, but with a message no less significant, Hachamovitch solidified Microsoft’s stance on high-definition Web video standards by announcing that IE9 would support H.264 for HTML 5 built-in video…and only H.264.

    “H.264 is an industry standard, with broad and strong hardware support,” Hachamovitch wrote. “Because of this standardization, you can easily take what you record on a typical consumer video camera, put it on the Web, and have it play in a Web browser on any operating system or device with H.264 support (e.g., a PC with Windows 7). Recently, we publicly showed IE9 playing H.264-encoded video from YouTube…For all these reasons, we’re focusing our HTML 5 video support on H.264.”

    The original reason for the creation of the <VIDEO> tag in HTML 5 was to enable browsers to implement built-in codecs that would play back “free video.” Soon, stakeholders in HTML 5 realized there may not be such a thing: While patent holders such as MPEG LA do extend royalty-free licenses to folks who view Web video, that’s because those royalties are considered paid by those who produce the video using encoder tools and codecs. And while open source developers have been actively creating encoding tools such as x264 that don’t incur royalties, the question of whether their underlying technologies may still be claimed by patent holders somewhere in the world, is thought to be a brutal battle just waiting to play itself out.

    Hachamovitch referred to this very point yesterday, in praising MPEG LA for its management of a licensing program that does not charge developers “additional royalty” for the use of the technology in H.264. Skillfully avoiding the use of the term “open,” he acknowledged that a critical difference exists between availability and ownership, and advised that perhaps the best course to follow is one where the owners are most reasonable and the availability is highest.

    But then he could not help but crash head-first into the issue of Adobe Flash. In his message yesterday morning, Steve Jobs thrashed Flash (which he also has a grudge against for also being a middleware platform) for being proprietary, insecure, and dictatorial — all of which he then went on to characterize Apple as not being. The fervor over Jobs’ message, coupled with the fact that Flash is the most prominent video format on today’s Web, made the issue unavoidable for Hachamovitch.

    “Today, video on the Web is predominantly Flash-based,” the IE9 team leader wrote. “While video may be available in other formats, the ease of accessing video using just a browser on a particular Web site without using Flash is a challenge for typical consumers. Flash does have some issues, particularly around reliability, security, and performance. We work closely with engineers at Adobe, sharing information about the issues we know of in ongoing technical discussions. Despite these issues, Flash remains an important part of delivering a good consumer experience on today’s Web.”

    And that’s where the message ended, leaving it for readers to infer from it that IE9 will continue to make it easy for Adobe to plug itself directly into the browser. Supporters of the original principles of HTML 5 had come out against the use of video plug-ins — the problem that the <VIDEO> tag was created to solve — but have recently acknowledged that if browsers seek to remain “open,” then they must remain accepting of the Web’s most prevalent video format — and the plug-in vehicle that comes with it, security risks and all.

    Yesterday afternoon, in a video interview with The Wall Street Journal, Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen answered Steve Jobs’ attack by saying that it is iPhone that is the proprietary platform, and Flash that is the open one, as evidenced by the huge wealth of quality Flash video on the Web. Narayen’s implication was that, simply because Adobe owns the methodologies behind Flash, doesn’t make Flash any less open or more proprietary than H.264 — the format which Jobs says Apple supports.

    Though it was Apple that stirred the pot yesterday, in recent months, it has been Google that turned up the heat from “simmer” to “boiling.” Its role in the Web video issue has been to catalyze debate and keep everyone else guessing, as its own stance on the subject has been all over the map.

    The one thing we do know for certain is that Google supports the <VIDEO> tag in HTML 5. But last year, Google threw a monkey wrench into the adoption process by setting itself squarely against the use of Theora, the open source video codec that was Mozilla’s preference, as the one HTML 5 codec. Google engineers literally predicted that if Theora were adopted, the resulting traffic from the sheer bulk of poorly encoded video would stall the entire Web.

    Within weeks of breaking that iceberg and setting it adrift, Google purchased On2 Technologies, the company actually responsible for creating the underlying principles of VP3, on which Theora was based. That led to speculation that Google would produce VP8, the current version of that codec, under an open source license — something that Betanews was told Google may not have the authority to do even though it now owns the company behind VP8.

    Google could, however, issue a royalty-free license for VP8, perhaps with little or no dispute. That would make VP8 appear to be the HTML 5 codec of choice for its Chrome Web browser, which is growing in popularity.

    But then, having yet to exhaust its supply of monkey wrenches, Google began testing building Flash directly into Chrome, helping to cement the position of its YouTube division as the world’s principal supplier of Flash video for the foreseeable future. Just yesterday, Adobe followed up by announcing direct support for Flash Player 10.1 in smartphones with Android, Google’s open-source small device operating system, starting in June. Which makes things murky enough had Google, not three weeks earlier, announced it was openly funding the continued development of a version of Theora — the very codec its engineers threatened would cripple the Web, and which now stands in opposition to VP8 — as an ARM component that could be built into the firmware of smartphones everywhere, including both Android and iPhone, bypassing whatever it is that their browsers may choose to build in or plug in.

    The headline for that April 9 announcement was, “Interesting times for Video on the Web.” You think?

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



    Add to digg
    Add to Google
    Add to Slashdot
    Add to Twitter
    Add to del.icio.us
    Add to Facebook
    Add to Technorati



  • Apple Shutting Lala: Subscription iTunes Soon?


    iTunes icon

    Five months after buying the web-based music service, Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) is now shutting Lala, in what is likely preparation for a web- or subscription-centric upgrade to its own iTunes Store.

    The site has stopped accepting new sign-ups and will shut to existing users on May 31, says a message on Lala.

    Since launching in 2003, iTunes Store, to the labels, has been a welcome bulwark against what would have otherwise been even more chronic decline. It now contributes over a quarter of U.S. music sales. But, in a North American music market that’s now shrinking faster than anywhere in the world, digital income has now basically flatlined, growing just 1.1 percent in 2009, says the industry’s IFPI.

    Web-based streamers and new subscription models, offering unlimited music access, offer the industry promise of another shot in the arm. Spun-off Rhapsody now looks in shape to arrest the decline that’s brought it to 675,000 subscribers, Spotify’s excellent client has 320,000 premium subscribers out of seven million users but still has not launched in the U.S.

    Against both the web and subscription rise, iTunes’ a la carte reliance looks archaic and one-dimensional, tooled for a market that’s plateaued.

    But Apple has already moved closer to a web-based iTunes by displaying iTunes Store listings on a series of iTunes Preview pages. Reports, at the time of the acquisition, that Apple fancied Lala’s “payment and fulfillment systems”, suggest it’s also interested in subscriptions. It’s not clear whether it will launch a web-based service, a subscription offering or a combination of both, though a few industry sources I’ve spoken with speculate it will launch an underwhelming “locker”-type service, to house already-bought tracks in the cloud, before going all-out on subscriptions proper.

    iTunes’ flatlining has created an opportunity for new services to race to a legal music gold rush, in a space partly created by a growing number of anti-piracy moves by international governments. The labels can’t wait. “The subscription models that we are promoting will create much more value over time than the per-play or per-purchase models,” Warner Music Group (NYSE: WMG) CEO Edgar Bronfman Jr said in February. “The number of potential subscribers dwarves the number of people purchasing music on iTunes.”

    Maybe so. But, depending on what Apple does with Lala, rivals should be very concerned. Rhapsody and Spotify may be looming, Mog.com may have an attractively-priced service and Rdio.com is on the horizon. But none has iTunes Store’s existing heft and leverage…

    The store has over 125 million user accounts with credit card numbers – convincing just some of its music lovers to subscription will be very easy, and flipping them from occasional, one-off payments to recurring debits of, say, $9.99 a month, could create yet another massive new income stream for Apple, which has already introduced recurring subscriptions to its mobile apps. Whatever it does will likely have more impact than Lala, which has never launched outside the U.S..

    “There is a short window of opportunity for Rhapsody and others to lock in some of that growth for themselves before Spotify launches Stateside or Apple launches its own version, thus changing the competitive environment,” wrote Forrester analyst Sonal Ghandi this week.


  • Why Some Media Companies Are Quietly Cheering The Apple-Adobe Tiff


    Apple CEO Steve Jobs discusses iPhone 4.0 in Cupertino

    The Apple-Adobe (NSDQ: ADBE) tussle is heating up to bizarre proportions, with Steve Jobs yesterday issuing a public defense for Apple’s anti-Flash stance. Call it a blog-heard-round-the-world, due to how quickly Jobs’ comments spread. Appropriately, much of the focus has been placed on Jobs’ technical arguments.

    But there’s another big story behind this Flash fiasco that has successfully remained off the radar. It’s the answer to this question: How do the media companies—you know, those people who use Flash to put their premium content online everywhere from Wired.com to hulu.com—feel about having their primary delivery tool cut off at the knees?

    Answer: Media companies hope to complain all the way to the bank.

    First, a bit of disclosure. I’m the one who went on record explaining that the lack of Flash is one of the reasons I am not buying an iPad. So I’m clearly not a fan of the anti-Flash rhetoric for selfish reasons: I want my Flash content wherever I am. But I’ve spent the last few weeks discussing the Apple-Adobe problem with major magazine publishers, newspaper publishers and TV networks. Their responses are at first obvious, and then surprisingly shrewd.

    • They’re miffed that Apple is dictating their development decisions. After some very tough years dealing with decreasing ad revenues and a painfully fragmented audience, media companies don’t really have the money to suddenly become HTML5 developers. Even if HTML5 were ready for primetime—and they all agree it’s not—they have spent the last three years standardizing on Flash because it works. There is an ample supply of Flash developers, and Flash, like Visa, is everywhere they want to be.

    • But they’re going to do it anyway. As one major magazine publisher who has spent the last month realigning development priorities told me with a shrug, “we have no choice.” Contained in that response is the insidious genius of Apple (NSDQ: AAPL). By creating its own proprietary world, it can get away with unfairly calling Adobe a purveyor or proprietary solutions. Because Apple has a very attractive customer that no media company wants to live without.

    • And once they get over the anger, they see a silver lining. Yes, it’s a pain, yes it will cost some money and cause some headaches because it won’t work very well for a while, but the consolation prize they all come around to is this: Apple is handing them a way to justify charging for content. And they like this very, very much. In fact, one publisher came dangerously close to scrapping Flash development altogether (before his internal tech experts talked him out of it) because he realized that in the end, Apple is handing them something the Web never has: a controlled, curated content environment where people pay for content, albeit in the form of software calls apps.

    Ever since the Web—now personified in the minds of media companies as Google (NSDQ: GOOG)—reduced all content to a free search result, newspaper publishers, magazine publishers and TV programmers have watched consumer willingness to pay shrink and have stood by as advertisers who used to pay top dollar for handsome placement shrink back from the gritty, isolated online context that Web properties provide. Even when the controlled environment of the Kindle debuted, its lack of color and interactivity meant that there was no hope of wooing many paid customers or interested advertisers. But the iPhone app environment—and certainly its sexier younger sibling the iPad—promises to give publishers and programmers a way to both charge for content and satisfy advertisers.

    But not if consumers can get the same content for free on the same device. In other words, if we can all watch hulu.com or read an exciting version of Wired.com on our iPad browser using Flash, then we won’t buy the apps and advertisers won’t fall in love with reaching us again.
    So despite their grumbles and temporary hysteria, media companies are criticizing Jobs and Apple less and less these days, hoping that this will buy them time to woo customers with splashy paid experiences that will then reset the expectation that good content is worth paying for. Even on an Android device.

    James McQuivey is an analyst at Forrester Research, where he serves Consumer Product Strategy professionals. James blogs here.

    Related