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  • Energy and Global Warming News for April 30: Carbon, nitrogen link may provide new ways to mitigate pollution; Break-through MIT battery maker betting U.S. manufacturing can rise again

    Carbon, Nitrogen Link May Provide New Ways to Mitigate Pollution Problems

    A new study exploring the growing worldwide problem of nitrogen pollution from soils to the sea shows that global ratios of nitrogen and carbon in the environment are inexorably linked, a finding that may lead to new strategies to help mitigate regional problems ranging from contaminated waterways to human health.

    The University of Colorado at Boulder study found the ratio between nitrates — a naturally occurring form of nitrogen found in soils, streams, lakes and oceans — and organic carbon is closely governed by ongoing microbial processes that occur in virtually all ecosystems. The team combed exhaustive databases containing millions of sample points from tropical, temperate, boreal and polar sites, including well-known, nitrogen-polluted areas like Chesapeake Bay, the Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Mexico.

    “We have developed a new framework to explain how and why carbon and nitrogen appear to be so tightly linked,” said CU-Boulder doctoral student Philip Taylor, lead author on the new study. “The findings are helping us to explain why nitrate can become so high in some water bodies but remain low in others.”

    A paper by Taylor and CU-Boulder ecology and evolutionary biology Professor Alan Townsend is being published in the April 22 issue of Nature. The study was funded in part by the National Science Foundation. Both Taylor and Townsend also are affiliated with CU-Boulder’s Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research.

    While the vast majority of nitrogen gas is abundant in the atmosphere, it is nonreactive and unavailable to most life, said Townsend. But in 1909 a process was developed to transform the nonreactive gas into ammonia, the active ingredient of synthetic fertilizer. Humans now manufacture more than 400 billion pounds of fertilizer each year — much of which migrates from croplands into the atmosphere, waterways and oceans — creating a suite of environmental problems ranging from coastal “dead zones” and toxic algal blooms to ozone pollution and human health issues.

    Break-through MIT Battery Maker Tries ‘Made in USA’ — Betting U.S. Manufacturing Can Rise Again

    Yet-Ming Chiang relishes his 20-mile drive to work. His hybrid car  gets more than 100 miles per gallon, recharges by plugging into a regular wall outlet, and purrs so quietly that it’s his favorite place for making important phone calls.

    But what makes Chiang’s ordinary-looking beige Toyota Prius even more special is that it’s powered by a break-through battery he invented himself and is working to turn into the kind of high-tech, green, “Made in America” product that many see as the key to the nation’s economic future.

    Safer and more long-lasting than conventional lithium-ion car batteries, the 52-year old MIT professor’s invention packs 600 cells into a case the size of an airplane carry-on bag. His technology has already transformed the batteries used in many cordless power tools.

    So why are Chiang and his company, A123 Systems, having trouble moving to full-scale commercial production and creating thousands of new American jobs with his better mousetrap?

    The answer is a story of both the current obstacles to a rebirth of U.S. manufacturing – and of the tantalizing possibilities if such a rebirth could be achieved.

    The obstacles are rooted in the sad history of manufacturing’s decline in the United States: Despite the promise of Chiang’s batteries, many in Wall Street and Silicon Valley were incredulous when he and other leaders at A123 asked for capital to build factories in America – Asia, yes, but Michigan, why would you want to?

    Even more daunting, virtually all of the world’s battery manufacturing industry is now in Asia, where plants can be built faster and supplies and equipment are much easier to get than in the United States These days, it’s hard to find Americans who even know how to build a battery factory.

    That’s why A123 had to give in and build its first plants in China – where the company could move into production quickly to show auto industry customers that it could deliver on future contracts.

    “Without question, we would rather have done it all in the U.S.,” said Chiang, who left Taiwan as a six-year-old with his family, earned degrees at MIT and has been a materials science professor there since the mid-1980s. “I’m an American citizen,” he adds. “We’re an American company. It’s an American-born technology.”

    Despite the obstacles, A123 and a handful of other advanced battery producers are building plants in Michigan and other states – thanks massive government support that has offset Wall Street’s skepticism. A123 alone is getting a whopping $250 million in aid from Obama’s stimulus program as well as tax incentives from Michigan.

    Germany, Mexico trying to push climate talks ahead

    Five months after the troubled United Nations conference in Copenhagen, Germany and Mexico are teaming up in an effort to break the deadlock in negotiations on a global climate deal.

    They will co-host a three-day meeting in Bonn starting Sunday of representatives from a selected 45 countries with hopes of building trust and clearing some of the rubble left from Copenhagen, German Environment Minister Norbert Roettgen said this week.

    “The most important thing is to get the process moving again,” he said.

    Momentum in the drive to control global warming has slowed in some countries. The United States still has not tackled its domestic energy bill, which climate negotiators believe will provide a critical signal about U.S. global intentions; and Australia — one of the world’s biggest per capita polluters — put off for as long as two years legislation setting up a carbon trading scheme.

    Roettgen said Germany and others have not entirely given up on striking a deal at the next U.N. climate summit in Cancun, Mexico, Nov. 29-Dec. 10.

    “We want to pave the way to a good result in Cancun,” he said adding that “nobody wants another big disappointment.”

    The Copenhagen conference with representatives from some 190 countries last December was originally intended to produce a new global treaty to cut greenhouse gases and set up mechanisms to deal with the worst effects of global warming. Yet, the two-week meeting came up with far less than hoped, setting back the schedule for action possibly by years.

    China Nuclear Sets Up Fourth-Generation Plant Venture

    China National Nuclear Corp. set up a venture with local partners in Fujian province to build fourth-generation reactors as the world’s biggest polluting- country turned to clean energy to drive its economy.

    China National Nuclear holds a controlling stake in the venture formed on April 28 with Fujian Investment and Development Corp. and the government of Sanming city, where the atomic plant will be located, the Beijing-based company said on its website.

    The world’s fastest-growing major economy is developing nuclear energy to help cut reliance on more polluting coal and oil and to meet surging electricity demand. China is emerging as a potential exporter of atomic technology, increasing competition for companies including Areva SA.

    China National Nuclear and its partners aim to start building the plant “soon,” according to the statement.

    The fourth-generation nuclear technology developed under the China Experimental Fast Reactor program has “noticeable advantages” in increasing the efficiency of uranium use and reducing nuclear waste, China National Nuclear Vice General Manager Yu Jianfeng said in the statement.

  • 2011 GM Order Guide: Changes for Chevrolet Camaro, Corvette, HHR, Malibu; Cadillac STS

    We took a look through GM’s 2011 online order guide, which highlights scores of minor equipment changes across the General’s brands. Most of them are boring—do you really care that order codes for certain metallic paints have changed?—so we picked out the interesting and important changes for 2011 vehicles.

    Chevrolet Camaro

    GM has already announced some of the Camaro’s main changes, notably a fake power increase for V-6 models and the addition of an optional head-up display. Buyers also are now be able to specify factory-installed hood and hockey-stick stripes in black, white, or gray (pictured above) as part of a mid-2010 running change. Bad news for Transformers fans: picking Rally Yellow paint now costs extra.

    Chevrolet Corvette

    The Z06 Carbon Limited Edition, at right, is new for 2011 and slots between the regular Z06 and ZR1. Among other things, it includes the Z06 Ultimate Performance Package and Z06 Carbon-Fiber Package, which are also available separately on the middle Vette. The new model year also brings improved synchronizers for all manual-transmission Vettes, new five-spoke wheel designs for base Corvettes, and a retuned exhaust for the Z06.

    Chevrolet HHR

    As we reported last year when GM shut down its High-Performance Vehicle Operations group, the turbocharged HHR SS is dead for 2011, leaving just naturally aspirated engines in its wake. (Chevy’s SS lineup is now limited to just the V-8 Camaro.) HHR buyers also lose the ability to order chrome exterior trim or to delete the rear seat.

    Chevrolet Malibu

    Six-speed automatic transmissions become standard across the board for the Malibu; a four-speed auto had previously been included with the base LS four-cylinder model.

    Cadillac STS

    For 2011, the STS V-8 dies, leaving just the V-6 model with either rear- or all-wheel-drive. (It’s really no big loss since the aging 4.6-liter Northstar eight made only 18 hp more than the 3.6-liter V-6.) Adaptive cruise control, four-wheel active steering, real-time adaptive damping, and magnetic ride control were all only offered with a V-8 and thus vanish from the STS order form.

    Related posts:

    1. Chevrolet Confirms Camaro Convertible, Orlando, Shows Next-Gen Aveo and Malibu
    2. 2008 Chevrolet HHR / HHR SS – Review
    3. 2009 Chevrolet HHR / HHR SS – Review
  • Hyundai loses $1.8M lawsuit because of seats that recline too far

    Filed under: , ,

    Sarah Goodner was killed in Texas in 2007 when her 2005 Hyundai Tucson rolled over and she was thrown out the back window. The culprit for that odd circumstance – even though she had her seat belt fastened – was her seat, which was reclined so far back that she was able to slide out of it.

    Stuart Goodner, Sarah’s father, sued Hyundai claiming that the Tucson was unsafe because the seat could be reclined too much. A jury agreed, kind of, awarding Goodner a $1.8 million judgment against Hyundai, but also deciding that Hyundai was only 45% responsible for Sarah’s death. Stuart said, “We want people to know how dangerous it is to drive with the seat reclined, [and] we’re calling the auto industry out to correct this design defect so that no other family has to bury one of their children.”

    Forty-five degrees was determined to be the maximum amount of recline before driving became unsafe. And the issue isn’t new: The NTSB and NHTSA debated the issue in 1988 and couldn’t come to an agreement. Of course we can’t make light of this – a young woman has died. But we do wonder why it’s Hyundai’s responsibility to make sure you don’t drive your car in an unsafe manner. We suspect we haven’t heard the last of this…

    [Source: Go San Angelo]

    Hyundai loses $1.8M lawsuit because of seats that recline too far originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 30 Apr 2010 10:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Porn for the Blind (Who Probably Aren’t Reading This)

    blind porn 1

    Special needs individuals get horny, too.  Porn is probably something most of the population takes for granted.  Without vision, porn is nothing more than an audio track.  Probably a guessing game as to what is going on.  Porn for the Blind takes that issue head on, by narrating exactly what is going on on-screen.  It warrants mentioning that the narration is done by amateur volunteers and is WILDLY unsexy.  You can hear an example here (extremely NSFW, unless your work is cool with really loud, clumsy descriptions of porn web sites).  Clearly this must be “Plan B” for the blind.

    So where else do the blind turn for sweet release?  Braille, of course.  Which I’m assuming is probably the equivalent of erotic fiction.  But what about the imagery?  Canadian artist Lisa Murphy has addressed this with her new 3-D book, “Tactile Mind”.  The pages contain seventeen images constructed of raised cardboard that can be easily felt to get the gist of the image.  Oddly, that’s where the familiarity stops.  The tactile figures are oddly-shaped and the face of every character is obscured by masks.  The reasoning behind this is unclear, at least on my end.

    blind porn 2

    Unfortunately for the blind, these books are handmade, and consequently, really expensive ($225 CDN = $222 US).  You can purchase individual diagrams for $25 apiece, but it’s this author’s opinion that would get really old really quick.

    So….um….I guess if you know any blind people, you should probably…um…read this to them.  Good luck, guys!

    Related posts:

    1. Bing Makes Finding Porn Just A Little Easier
    2. China Pays Rewards for Finding Porn
    3. YouTube Carpet Bombed with Porn Videos

  • Hyundai ix35 vem para o Brasil


    A nova geração do Tucson, o Hyundai ix35, está chegando no mercado nacional a partir de maio, segundo declaração da montadora no Brasil. O carro já está disponível para encomendas e possui cinco versões diferentes, e seus preços variam entre R$ 85.000 a R$ 105.000.

    Todas as versões do ix35 possuem motor 2.0 a gasolina com 170 cv e tração 4×2. Também possui câmbio manual de 6 marchas e airbag duplo frontal, ar condicionado, encosto de cabeça ativo e comando via satélite na direção. O câmbio automático de 6 marchas é um opcional que pode ser solicitado.

    Com seu preço de venda, o ix35 se torna mais um carro na linha comercializada pela Hyundai em nosso país, estando acima da Tucson, e abaixo do Santa Fé, que possui um modelo reestilizado recentemente.

    Via | Carro Online


  • Ad for a designer axe

    From TorStar “Designer Axes. Really.” Nice video report.

    Filed under: Business, Canada, united states, Video

  • MS Courier, HP Slate Canceled?

    While the big news this week was undoubtedly the HP purchase of Palm, two other news items may impact the mobile technology scene down the road. They may be related to the HP/ Palm merger, too. Microsoft has been teasing us with concept videos of the innovative Courier product, a dual-screen touch “journal” that is connected to the web and based on a new OS optimized for the device. Word came this week that Microsoft has canceled the Courier project, which is strange as it was never acknowledged by Redmond as really exisiting. Then today HP has reportedly canceled the Slate product, a Windows 7 tablet that was shown by Steve Ballmer at the CES this year.

    The cancelation of the Courier “concept” project, confirmed by Microsoft, is a shame. This device showed the potential of being the most innovative thing to come out of Redmond in years. While the usage scenario depicted in leaked videos was narrow, I do believe with a little attention the Courier could have evolved into a game-changing mobile device. It’s too bad that will never happen, although I’m sure Microsoft will make use of the technology the project exposed in other products. One can hope, anyway.

    The news that HP is canceling the HP Slate is surprising, and it may not be accurate. The Slate is a real product, demonstrated by both Microsoft and HP on several occasions, and HP has stated the product would be released. It’s not a concept or a pilot program, the Slate is a real product that was scheduled for release. There is some speculation that HP’s purchase of Palm has led to this product cancelation, as HP has implied they will be putting the webOS on a range of products including tablets. This may very well be, but I hope HP does it right if so.

    I’ve made it clear that to produce a good tablet, companies must pay attention to details other than the form factor. It is essential that a touch tablet be based on an OS that is built for such usage from the ground up, and webOS certainly meets that requirement. I do believe HP can make a killer tablet based on webOS, but not with a simple conversion of the HP Slate from Windows 7 to webOS. The Slate is a clunky, thick and heavy tablet, which will not work with consumers. I hope HP produces a thin, light tablet that is optimized for webOS through and through. That would be a killer product.

    Related research on GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

  • BMW X4 is under consideration after X6 success

    BMW X6

    Whether or not you liked the X6, BMW says that sales of the car have had such a significant success that they are considering a smaller version of it – the X4. BMW said it has sold 80,000 units of the X6 since launch so it only makes sense to do a smaller, more affordable model.

    A source told AutoCar that the company is considering a smaller car in the same mould as the X6, likely to take the X4 name. However, the model has yet to be given the green light by executives.

    Click here to get prices on the 2011 BMW X6.

    “We haven’t made any firm decision,” said a source, “however, the X6’s success shows there is a continued demand for sporty off-roaders.”

    The BMW X4, if approved, will be built on the X3 platform.

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: AutoCar


  • A Dose of Reality: They’re Robbing You Blind

    Do you get it yet? Or are you too numb and defeated to react to anything except the latest ball score or smutty sitcom?

    You are being robbed blind in broad daylight by people who would steal the last morsel off your table without a qualm, people you elected to serve you who are so venal they have no qualms or are so weak and stupid they convince themselves you are willingly sharing a feast.

    Watch CBS2 David Goldstein’s shocking report showing six-figure DWP workers going to strip clubs, drinking on the job, driving giant trucks while drinking beers wrapped in paper towels. Do you think those are isolated scenes of the few miscreants or a window into widespread abuses by a workforce that has total immunity from discipline as long as they don’t cross their union?

    See the mayor’s “boys will be boys” smirk as he promises to investigate as if it’s a teenage son and his buddies getting in trouble for stealing booze from the liquor cabinet and making fools of themselves.

    Is it any wonder that Austin Beutner — Jobs Czar, First Deputy Mayor and Interim DWP General Manager — is turning the DWP Headquarters into a fortress to keep the public from seeing how little is really going on inside a rogue agency that claims it’s losing money even as it jacks up rates, gives out big pay raises and has been hiring nearly 100 extra workers a month for the last two years?

    That’s right when everybody else is losing their jobs and getting no raises or pay cuts, the DWP is hiring madly, giving 6 percent raises followed by five years of raises of up to 4 percent and wanting 20 to 30 percent rate hikes. Does anybody know what the 1,400 extra bodies at the DWP are doing for the public benefit?

    What passes for Beutner’s and the mayor’s economic development and green energy policies is becoming clearer by the day — China gets the jobs and our green and we get the bills.

    They are trampling on DWP bidding procedures in a mad rush to buy solar panels made in China and cutting deals with an “upstart Chinese electric car company — best known for making cellphone batteries” — to buy their vehicles with city money, reduce port fees and provide $1 million in subsidies to create 150 jobs in LA and thousands in China.

    “Villaraigosa is basically bribing a Chinese car company to come to Los
    Angeles — and he’s using your money to do it…It illustrates that L.A. is such a
    hostile place for businesses that the only way they’ll move employees
    here is if City Hall gives them taxpayers’ money,” Walter Moore writes.

    “Do you understand, now, why Villaraigosa wants so desperately to raise
    your DWP rates?  It has nothing to do with ‘green power’ — unless by
    ‘green’ you mean ‘money,’ and by ‘power’ you mean ‘political power.’

    Day after day, City Council members, as they have for a year, go through every department eliminating services that make life better for the people of the city and create healthier neighborhoods even as they look for ways to squeeze more money out of you every which  way they can.

    All this is done in the name of cost-cutting when in reality it is service cutting, and revenue generating.

    A quarter of the city’s working population is unemployed or under-employed and nearly everyone’s income and wealth have decreased but the budget for next year with its $484 million deficit, papered down to $80 million, takes an optimistic view that recovery is just around the corner.

    Their fantasy is your nightmare. But keep pretending it’s all just a terrible dream and the morning will be bright and filled with optimism when you wake up.

    It is business as usual at City Hall. Nothing has changed or will change until you open your eyes and see the truth of what is happening.

    This isn’t a make-believe movie, it’s real and it’s your life and your city.

  • EU Commission issues consultation on Energy Strategy 2011 -2020

    The overall goal of European energy policy is to ensure that consumers and enterprises obtain safe, secure, sustainable and low-carbon energy at affordable and competitive prices. The challenges of global energy security and energy geopolitics, slow progress in combating climate change at the global level, the urge to recover on growth and jobs in the EU and the need to invest in tomorrow’s energy networks call for a new Energy Strategy to further deliver on those objectives. Completing the internal energy market, achieving energy savings and promoting low-carbon innovation are the main vectors to reach the objectives of competitiveness, sustainability and security of supply. An open global business climate and a more coherent and effective approach to the EU external energy relations will also help us to reach EU objectives. The new EU Directorate General Energy  has prepared a stock taking document with issues for consideration for further action. Submissions to this consultation are to be sent to [email protected] by 2 July 2010. More info at the DG Energy website

     

  • HP Kills Windows 7 Slate

    Looks like HP’s desire to make a webOS Tablet is deadly-serious. According to a source who has briefed TechCrunch, HP has killed the project and won’t be releasing their Windows 7-based Slate.

    It’s important to note that any webOS-based tablet is likely going to be a long ways off – hardware takes much longer to develop than most people realize and given both Palm and HP’s dedication to tightly integrating hardware and software, you can be sure that they’re not just going to slap webOS in its current incarnation on a slate device just to get it out the door.

    We’re optimistic, though. We strongly suspect that Palm has always intended to get webOS on a tablet device – they just needed to make a beachhead in the smartphone space first. When they first unveiled webOS back in January, Palm insisted that this platform would be around for "ten years" and they knew how to grow it. Palm has made the same statement many times since then. For all we know, Palm already has a plan for exactly what they think webOS on a tablet should look like – they just lacked the resources to make good on that vision. With HP in the picture, that’s not really a problem anymore.

    Source: TechCrunch. Thanks to everybody who sent this in!

  • Billionaire to Enter Florida Senate Race

    ST PETERSBURG, FL- Fox News has confirmed that billionaire real estate developer Jeff Greene will run in the Florida Democratic U.S. Senate race against four-term Congressman Kendrick Meek. Greene’s entrance adds a new layer in an already chaotic 2010 contest–one day after Charlie Crist announced his independent bid for Senate .Greene insiders say he will spend” whatever it takes” of his massive personal fortune to win the Democratic nomination.

    Greene is a colorful figure. He made his fortune in the now collapsed mortgage-based finance industry. His best man at his wedding was infamous boxing legend Mike Tyson, and when his friend, Hollywood Madame, Heidi Fleiss got out of prison, Greene put her up in his guest house for a year. Greene is no stranger to elected politics. He ran unsuccessfully for Congress in California, but as a Republican.

    Click here to see Jeff Greene’s announcement on Youtube.

  • Video: 2011 Ford Mustang GT 5.0L V8 promotional video (updated high-res gallery)

    2011 Ford Mustang GT

    Here is something a little exciting to kick off the last day in your work week. We’ve also updated the high-res image gallery so make sure you check it out after the jump.

    Click here to get prices on the 2011 Ford Mustang GT.

    Refresher: The 2011 Ford Mustang GT is powered by a 5.0L 4-valve Twin Independent Variable Camshaft Timing (Ti-VCT) V8 engine producion 412-hp with a peak torque of 390 lb-ft. Transmission choices include a 6-speed automatic and a 6-speed manual. The 6-speed automatic helps deliver anan estimated fuel-economy of 17/25 mpg (city/highway).

    2011 Ford Mustang GT:

    2011 Ford Mustang GT:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Khadr, Through a Lawyer, Questions His Ex-Interrogator

    GUANTANAMO BAY — After a lengthy exchange in which Kobie Flowers, an attorney for Omar Khadr, sought to establish that preparatory material used by FBI Special Agent Robert Fuller, who interrogated Khadr six times at Bagram Air Field in October 2002, included material derived from abusive treatment — something Fuller resisted, but not firmly — Flowers introduced a twist. “I’m going to ask a question from Mr. Khadr,” Flowers said, in reference to his absent client, who he said passed him questions to ask Fuller. “Did you hear of any torture or mistreatment going on at Bagram?”

    Fuller asked if Flowers wanted to give him “fact or rumor.” Answer as you like, Flowers replied. “I’m not aware of any factual information, but there were rumors as to some techniques,” Flowers said, like “yelling at detainees. Music played. Like I said, I don’t have factual knowledge of that.” He was, Flowers helped him remember, aware of at least one military interrogator who was court-martialed for detainee mistreatment, and possibly a second.

    Flowers continued, passing on a second question from Khadr: “Did you hear of any detainee deaths?”

    “I did hear about one,” Fuller answered. (Two detainees are known to have died in U.S. custody in Bagram in 2002: Dilawar and Habibullah. Both were killed by U.S. forces in the detention facility in December 2002, after Fuller interrogated Khadr that October. It isn’t clear to me whether Fuller is referring to one of them, or referring to a contemporaneous other death he knew about.)

    The prosecution challenged the relevance of Flowers’/Khadr’s questions, but Flowers replied that they spoke to whether an environment existed at Bagram conducive to uncoerced statements. Fuller added that as per FBI protocol at the time — something documented in a recent Justice Department inspector general report into FBI activities at military and CIA detention centers — he did not Mirandize Khadr, though he conceded that usually providing Miranda rights ensures the court-certified voluntariness of a statement.

  • Amazon Stabs Penguin in the Throat With Ebook Pricing for Real Books [Amazon]

    Amazon? Not playing around with publishers when it comes to ebook deals. Penguin’s contract ran out on April 1, so Amazon can’t sell their ebooks. So Amazon’s cut the price of Penguin’s actual hardcovers to $9.99 ebook pricing. More »







  • Goldwater Scholarship Winners Announced

    Two third-year students who share the goal of earning an MD and PhD have been awarded Goldwater scholarships.

    Zachary Kloos, who is majoring in biochemistry and economics, and Caitlin Powell, who is studying biomedical engineering, received the awards, which are named for former U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater. The scholarships recognize outstanding potential and commitment to excellence in science, engineering and mathematics.

    powell.jpg

    Caitlin Powell and Eben Alsberg,
    professor of biomedical engineering

    Powell, from Cranberry Township, Pa., was 6 when she told her parents she wanted to find a cure for cancer. At 12, she decided she wanted to become a biomedical engineer.

    She plans to earn her PhD in biomedical engineering and to research and develop new drug delivery and tissue engineering therapies to treat cancer. She intends to combine laboratory research and medical practice to aid in the fight against the disease.

    She currently works with Oju Jeon, a postdoctoral researcher, in the lab of Biomedical Engineering Professor Eben Alsberg. They are developing a hydrogel that can be formed with ultraviolet light for use as a scaffolding to guide cellular repair of tissue and to deliver chemicals and drugs to cells at controlled rates for disease therapeutics and regenerative medicine. Prior to working in Alsberg’s lab, Powell worked at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, tracking the expression of muscle tissue proteins in the fetal heart at different stages of development.

    “The skills that I have learned in the lab and the principles used in biomaterials, tissue engineering, and drug delivery will help me when I go on to graduate/medical school and ultimately, when I do my own research years down the road,” Powell said. “I’m very lucky to have the opportunity to conduct so much research at such a young age and early stage in my career. ”

    Powell is a member of the Alpha Eta Mu Beta Biomedical Engineering Honors Society, Gamma Sigma Alpha Greek Scholastic Honors Society, Mortar Board National Honors Society and membership chair of Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honors Society; and a recipient of several research fellowships and scholarships.

    She’s currently musical director of Solstice Women’s A Cappella, the university’s by-audition women’s a cappella group; a director at Delta Gamma fraternity; vice president for finance of the Panhellenic Council; and a member of the Case Footlighters, which puts on student-run musicals.

    She will use the scholarship to help pay for next year’s tuition. “I have a lot a big dreams,” Powell said, “and receiving this award makes me feel like I am making the first steps down the path to making those goals a reality.”

    kloosphoto.jpg

    Zach Kloos in the lab

    Kloos, from Columbus, plans to earn a PhD in immunology, conduct infectious disease research in developing countries and become a policy advisor to the World Health Organization.

    Working in a lab at Ohio State University as a high school student, Kloos investigated drug delivery systems to treat complications from spinal cord injury. In the lab of Peter Zimmerman, at CWRU’s Center for Global Health and Diseases, he’s helped develop an assay that allows for simultaneous detection of infection by the four human malaria parasites, as well as a filarial worm that causes lymphatic filariasis, commonly called elephantiasis. Kloos has verified the sensitivity and specificity of this assay by analyzing blood samples from 2,700 residents of Papua New Guinea.

    The assay will allow for more accurate surveillance of malarial and filarial infection in affected populations. Next, Kloos will examine the extent of genetic variation in the filarial worm, Wuchereria bancrofti (Wb). “Understanding the genetic factors that differentiate Wb strains could greatly improve the efficacy of programs aimed at controlling and preventing Wb infection,” he said.

    In pursuit of his second major, Kloos has served as a research assistant to Silvia Prina, assistant professor of economics. He spent last summer helping Prina design and implement a microsavings program targeted to poor women in Nepal. During his stay, Kloos saw the need for investment in early childhood education. Upon returning to the U.S., he and a group of his friends canvassed for donations and initiated an aluminum can collection program on campus, raising more than $4,000 to build a kindergarten in a Nepali village. While visiting Nepal, he was also deeply affected by reports of a local cholera outbreak that killed more than 200 people, reinforcing his desire to become involved in infectious disease research.

    He will use the scholarship to pay for tuition and views the award as a “call to action or beginning,” not a reward for work done. Outside of classes and research, Kloos is a member of the Case Western Reserve Squash Club.

    For more information contact Kevin Mayhood, 216.368.4442.

  • BP had other problems in years leading to Gulf spill

    deepwater_horizon_fire.jpgBy Abrahm Lustgarten, ProPublica

    BP, the global oil giant responsible for the fast-spreading spill
    soon to make landfall in the Gulf of Mexico, is no stranger to major
    accidents.

    In fact the company has found itself at the center of several of the
    nation’s worst oil and gas-related disasters in the last five years.

    In March 2005 a massive explosion ripped through a tower at BP’s
    refinery in Texas City, Texas, killing 15 workers and injuring 170
    others. Investigators later determined that the company had ignored its
    own protocols on operating the tower, which was filled with gasoline,
    and that a warning system had been disabled.

    The company pleaded guilty to federal felony charges and was fined more
    than $50 million by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

    Almost a year after the refinery explosion, technicians discovered that
    some 4,800 barrels of oil had spread into the Alaskan snow through a
    tiny hole in the company’s pipeline in Prudhoe Bay. BP had been
    warned
    to check the pipeline in
    2002, but hadn’t, according to a report in Fortune. When it did inspect
    it, four years later, it found that a six-mile length of pipeline was
    corroded. The company temporarily shut down its operations in Prudhoe
    Bay, causing one of the largest disruptions in U.S. oil supply in recent
    history.

    BP faced $12 million in fines for a misdemeanor violation of the federal
    Water Pollution Control Act. A congressional committee determined BP
    had ignored opportunities to prevent the spill and that “draconian”
    cost-saving measures had led to shortcuts in its operation.

    Other problems followed. There were more spills in Alaska. And BP was
    charged with manipulating the market price of propane. In that case, it
    settled with the U.S. Department of Justice and agreed to pay more than
    $300 million in fines.

    At each step along the way, the company’s executives were contrite.

    “This was a preventable incident… It should be seen as a process
    failure, a cultural failure and a management failure,” John Mogford,
    then BP’s senior group vice president for safety and operations, said in
    an April 2006 speech about the lessons learned in Texas City. “It’s not
    an easy story to tell. BP doesn’t come out of it well.”

    In a 2006 interview with this reporter after the Prudhoe Bay spill, published
    in Fortune
    , BP’s chief executive
    of American operations, Robert Malone, said “there is no doubt in my
    mind, what happened may not have broken the law, but it broke our
    values.”

    Malone insisted at the time that there was no pattern of mismanagement
    that increased environmental risk.

    “I cannot draw a systemic problem in BP America,” he said. “What I’ve
    seen is refineries and facilities and plants that are operating to the
    highest level of safety and integrity standards.”

    Nonetheless Malone, who spent three decades at BP and was promoted to
    the CEO of BP America shortly after the Texas refinery blast, promised
    to increase scrutiny over BP’s operations and invest in environmental
    and safety measures.

    He told Congress that it was imperative BP management learn from its
    mistakes.

    “The public’s faith has been tested recently,” he said. “We have fallen
    short of the high standards we hold for ourselves and the expectations
    that others have for us.”

    Time will tell whether the accident that killed 11 workers and sent the
    Transocean Deepwater Horizon drilling rig — a $500 million platform as
    wide as a football field — floating to the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico
    was simply an accident or something else.

    Malone, who retired last year, declined to comment for this article. A
    spokesman for BP was not available for comment.

    Families of workers who died in the accident have already filed lawsuits
    accusing BP of negligence. Congress, as well as the Minerals Management Service, the federal agency that regulates drilling in the
    Gulf, were already separately investigating allegations that BP has
    failed to keep proper documents about how to perform an emergency
    shutdown
    of the Atlantis,
    another Gulf oil platform and one of the largest in the world.

    There are also indications that BP and Transocean, the owner of the
    Deepwater Horizon rig that burned and sank, could have used backup
    safety gear
    — a remote acoustic
    switch that would stanch the flow of oil from a leaking well 5,000 feet
    underwater — to prevent the massive spill now floating like a
    slow-motion train wreck towards the Mississippi and Louisiana coastline.
    The switch isn’t required under U.S. law, but is well-known in the
    industry and mandated in other parts of the world where BP operates.

    In the year before the accident, BP once again aggressively cut costs. A
    reorganization stripped 5,000 jobs from its payroll, saving BP more
    than $4 billion in operating costs, according to a report sent to
    ProPublica by Fadel Gheit, an investment analyst for Oppenheimer.

    On April 27, as the U.S. Coast Guard worked with BP engineers to guide
    remote control submarines nearly a mile underwater in a futile effort to
    close a shut-off valve, BP told investors that its quarterly earnings
    were up more than 100 percent over the last year, beating expectations
    by a large margin. After underperforming its competition throughout the
    last decade, Gheit wrote, BP was the only major oil company to perform
    better than the S&P 500 last year.

    (Photo of fire on Transocean’s Deepwater Horizon drilling rig from the U.S. Coast Guard.)

  • White House Halts New Offshore Drilling as Spill Nears Shore

    A few weeks back, President Obama made waves by announcing his support for an expansion of offshore oil drilling — a strategy that Democrats on Capitol Hill had fought hard to defeat in recent years.

    Today, as the oil from an enormous spill in the Gulf of Mexico creeps toward the shores of the southern U.S., the administration is having its doubts about the new policy. David Axelrod, senior adviser to Obama, told “Good Morning America” today that there’s a moratorium on the expansion until the recent spill can be controlled and investigated.

    “No additional drilling has been authorized and none will until we find out what happened here,” he said.

    For the White House, the timing of the spill couldn’t have been worse. If Obama had stuck with his guns in opposing new drilling, he’d be seen as a prophet in the wake of this week’s Gulf disaster. Instead, by trying to make concessions to Republicans — most of whom won’t support a climate bill in any event — he’s simply alienated his conservation-minded supporters on the left. Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune makes the case.

    “This disaster changes everything,”  Brune said today in a statement. “We have hit rock-bottom in our fossil fuel addiction. This tragedy should be a wake up call. It’s time to take offshore drilling off the table for good.”

    There’s also a good economic reason that offshore drilling isn’t the best way to secure the country’s energy independence. The Energy Department has determined “that access to the Pacific, Atlantic, and eastern Gulf regions would not have a significant impact on domestic crude oil and natural gas production or prices before 2030.”

    And that was under the Bush White House.

  • Skyfire Mobile Browser

    Experience the world’s hottest mobile browser with Skyfire 2.0 (BETA) for Android. Check out the all new SkyBar™ which features: Flash Video, Explore Content, and Social Sharing of Content.

    Price: Free

    AndroidTapp.com Android App Review:

    Pros & Cons:

    Pros

    • Finally play Flash Videos on mobile web browsers!
    • Choose to load full desktop webpages or mobile optimized versions
    • Multiple window browsing (up to 8, easy toggle)
    • Pinch to zoom (on Android 2.0 and above)
    • Clear session history easily upon exit to maintain anonymous browsing

    Cons

    • Claimed super boost in web browsing speed was not there
    • Some Flash video sites show “Install Adobe Flash” versus sniffing out the Flash vid
    • Voice Search gone

    Features:

    Skyfire Mobile Browser Android App brings full web browsing to mobile phones on many platforms and now on Android. The key feature it offers over any other currently is the ability to view Flash Videos (something missing from fully capable mobile web browsers for some time now). Now you can play sports highlights from ESPN, news clips from the New York Times, high quality Vimeo vids, and music videos from Vevo (although I still found quarks in playing back some of these Flash video websites… says “Install Adobe Flash”).

    Incorporated is the SkyBar along the browsers footer which entails: Video, Explore, and Share. Video sniffs out Flash video on a webpage and pops up a window when/if it finds a Flash video it can play. Explore searches trending topics based on the topics you’ve recently searched or created. Filtered are Videos, Trends, Tweets and Images. Share pops up easy sharing via other email and social apps installed on your Android phone.

    A cool feature allows you to toggle browser HTTP Header types you send to a webpage; sometimes you may want to full desktop version and not be forced to view the mobile-only version. Or you may choose to view the mobile-only version for faster page load and less scrolling… either way it offers that choice by tapping the Android-slash-monitor icon in browser header.

    Like other awesome browsers for Android it supports Pinch to zoom (on Android 2.0 and above), Copy and Paste, Find on Page, multiple window browsing, Bookmarks, Downloads, even a Report Broken Video feature.

    Gripe Alert: Like Opera Mini for Android is supports cloud browsing, meaning webpages and assets like images are compressed on Skyfire’s servers thus sending you a smaller, faster to load page offering a boost in browsing speed; however it was not experienced in our evaluation. It was similar if not slower than the default Android browser. :(

    Video Review: Skyfire Mobile Browser

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbePzC574L4

    Skyfire Mobile Browser Home Page
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Viewing AndroidTapp.com
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Tabbed Multiple Windows
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Full ESPN Webpage with Flash Video
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Flash Video Preload
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Playing Flash Video
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Explore
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Share
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Toggle Browser Header Type
    Skyfire Mobile Browser History
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Bookmarks
    Skyfire Mobile Browser Page Options

    Usefulness:

    The app is very useful for its core capability of mobile web browsing and puts the icing on the cake with all the goodies like full web browsing, playable Flash videos, content exploring and social sharing features.

    Frequently Used:

    If used as your default web browsing it could potentially be used multiple times daily.

    Android Advice™: How to Set Skyfire as my default Browser?

    Easy way: when first installed, any action that requires a web browser such as web link or Google search will prompt a window asking which browser you would like to use. Check below “Set as default” then choose Skyfire.

    More involved way: say you chose the default browser when presented with the popup and want to change it later. Go to Settings from home screen » Manage Applications » Browser » tap Clear defaults » visit a URL or search to get the popup to return and follow the easy way above.

    Android Advice™: I’m asked which web browser to use every time I search or click on a link, how to I remove that?

    When more than one application type such as a web browser is install on Android, it gives choice on which you would like as default. See above how to set default browser.

    Interface & Ease of Use:

    Operating the user interface is slightly clunky but an adjustment will have you mastering it.

    AndroidTapp.com Rating

    AndroidTapp.com Rating!AndroidTapp.com Rating!AndroidTapp.com Rating!AndroidTapp.com Rating!AndroidTapp.com Rating! (4.5 out of 5)

    Should you Download Skyfire Mobile Browser? Yes! Must Have Android App!

    Algadon Free Online RPG. Fully Mobile Friendly.

  • France justice ministry rejects Noriega request to be treated as POW

    [JURIST] The French Justice Ministry on Thursday denied a request from former Panamanian military leader Manuel Noriega to be treated as a prisoner of war (POW). Noriega currently awaits trial in France on money laundering charges. Justice Ministry spokesperson Guillaume Didier said that Noriega will not be treated as a POW because the charges are based on breaches of common law not related to military service. Being treated as a POW would entitle Noriega to special treatment under the Geneva Convention, but Guillaume says conditions of French prisons are consistent with the requirements of the Geneva Conventions regardless. Noriega was already sentenced in absentia to 10 years in jail by a French court in 1999, but under French law is entitled to a new trial.
    Earlier this week, Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli said that his government will seek the Noriega’s extradition to face charges of human rights violations in Panama. Also this week, a French judge ruled that Noriega must remain in custody until his trial. Noriega arrived in France Tuesday morning after being extradited from the US, where he had served a 17-year sentence on drug charges. He had fought extradition from the US since 2007. Last month, the US Supreme Court declined to reconsider Noriega’s petition to stop the extradition process. The US State Department had indicated that it was satisfied that France will treat Noriega as a POW if Noriega was extradited to that country.