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  • Vodafone 845 ultra-small Android 2.1 phone gets official

    Vodafone have come clean with their latest Android handset, the super-small Vodafone 845 first spotted in the wild a couple of weeks back.  Measuring a scant 100 x 55 x 13 mm, the 845 has a 2.8-inch touchscreen, Android 2.1 Eclair and a 3-megapixel camera.

    There’s also Vodafone 360, together with access to the Android Market, along with WiFi.  Previous rumors tipped it to have Bluetooth 2.1, triband GSM/GPRS/EDGE and dualband UMTS/HSPA, as well.

    According to Vodafone, the 845 will initially arrive in 12 different markets, including the UK, though it hasn’t yet confirmed pricing or specific availability.  Still, last we heard the Vodafone 845 should be arriving sometime this quarter.

    [via the::unwired]

  • Reid Slams Republicans, Sets Another Cloture Vote

    This morning, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) came out swinging against Senate Republicans’ obstruction of debate on Sen. Chris Dodd’s (D-Conn.) financial regulatory reform bill. In a press release, he argues:

    The American people also demand that their leaders discuss these details and improve on these ideas.  They have two simple requests: One, that their leaders look out for their economic security; and two, that their legislators legislate.  In other words, they want us to look out for their jobs and they want us to do our own.

    Right now, Senate Republicans are refusing to do either. Yesterday they stood together, en bloc, to block us from moving this bill to the floor.  They didn’t even want the Senate to talk about legislation as part of the normal legislative process.

    More than two years after the financial collapse that sparked a worldwide recession, Senate Republicans are claiming we’re moving too fast. They are claiming that only a fully negotiated and agreed-upon bill can come up for debate.  They want all the details to be worked out beforehand, behind closed doors and out of view from the public. That is unprecedented in the 220 years of the United States Senate.  As we all learned in civics class, that’s not how the legislative process works.

    The letter does not mention Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.), who surprisingly sided with the Republicans last evening in refusing to vote to start formal debate on the bill. (Reid switched his final vote to no for procedural reasons.)

    And Reid has called another cloture vote for 4:30 p.m. this evening. As of this morning, none of the likely crossover voters — such as Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) — have publicly indicated that they are willing to side with the Democrats or that their requests have been met.

  • Executive producer talks about Madden NFL 11 Game Flow

    By changing a lot of gameplay mechanics in Madden NFL 11, EA Sports promises that the game will be “simpler, quicker, deeper”. Those looking to continue playing the series will have to say goodbye to picking plays

  • Opera 10.5 Mac Released — Still the Fastest Browser on Earth?

    Opera Software today released the Mac version of Opera 10.5. It’s a release I’ve been waiting for ever since the launch of Opera 10.5 for Windows — itself an extremely impressive browser. I downloaded it this morning (confusingly, the version number is 10.52) and put it through its paces, benchmarking it against the latest versions of Firefox, Safari and Chrome, the browsers I use most frequently on my MacBook — it’s blisteringly fast.

    As usual, I used WebKit’s SunSpider benchmark test, which runs the browser through a series of JavaScript-intensive tasks and measuring how long it takes to complete them.

    The chart shows SunSpider scores in milliseconds; the lower the score, the better. As with the Windows tests, Opera was the fastest, narrowly beating Chrome. The margin between Opera and Chrome was even more slender on the Mac test, though — Opera scored 395.6ms, while Chrome scored 400.8ms. Still, Opera was slightly faster — perhaps just enough to continue to justify Opera’s claim of being the “fastest browser on Earth,” although I doubt you’d notice any difference between them in real-world usage. Safari was also pretty darn quick at around 500 ms, while Firefox lagged behind the pack at 1000ms. (Note that you can’t directly compare the scores from my Windows and Mac browser benchmarks, as they were carried out on different machines).

    JavaScript performance is important because we’re all increasingly reliant on JavaScript-intensive web apps — the better our browser is at handling them, the more productive we’ll be. Raw speed isn’t everything, of course, but Opera’s lightning-fast speed, coupled with an attractive UI, support for the latest web standards like CSS3 and HTML5 video, and a slew of useful features like multitouch trackpad gestures, “speed dial” and “turbo mode,” make it a very compelling option — it may even become my primary work browser. You can download Opera 10.5 Mac for free at opera.com.

    Let us know what you think of Opera 10.5 Mac in the comments.

    Related GigaOM Pro content (sub. req.): What Does the Future Hold For Browsers?

  • Trident urges you to chew on two dudes’ wacky Web adventures

    Prepare to be mildly amused. Trident is launching a star-studded Web series produced by CJP Media called "The Webventures of Justin and Alden" that looks like an updated version of Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure or maybe Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle. I say mildly amused because the trailer contains no LOL moments, but there’s a chance that in their strenuous attempts to entertain you, Upright Citizens Brigade members Justin Tyler and Alden Ford may at times succeed. There’s George Washington and vampires, for example, and the moment when Tyler breaks the fourth wall is somewhat risible. (He looks like a cross between the Ferris Bueller-era Matthew Broderick and Matt LeBlanc.) "This will be the greatest Web series Web show that’s ever been on the Web computer!" Tyler says, sounding like Joey and Ferris rolled into one. There are lots of cameos, too, including Shannen Doherty, Illeana Douglas and Mark Gantt (who I thought was Christian Slater.) The effort, launched on behalf of its Layers gum, underscores Trident’s Skittles-like focus on absurdist humor hinted at in previous commercials. If Samuel Beckett were alive today, he’d no doubt be making candy ads. UPDATE: Check out the first actual episode here.

    —Posted by Todd Wasserman

  • Goldman, Bernanke Testimonies Released

    Washington is buzzing with the various testimonies and commissions ongoing today. Watch Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and other speakers at the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, the president’s deficit commission, live here. And watch Sen. Carl Levin’s (D-Mich.) Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations interrogate Goldman Sachs executives live here.

    Both the debt commission and Levin commission have released prepared remarks as well.

    In today’s prepared testimony, Ben Bernanke argues that the government needs to fix its tax code and cut entitlements, or else face fiscal doom:

    [The] federal budget appears set to remain on an unsustainable path….Unfortunately, we cannot grow our way out of this problem. No credible forecast suggests that future rates of growth of the U.S. economy will be sufficient to close these deficits without significant changes to our fiscal policies….

    The commission will have the difficult job of weighing the economic, social, and other benefits of these [entitlement] programs and comparing the implications of cuts in these areas against other means of closing the fiscal gap. Choices regarding Medicare, Social Security, and other spending programs cannot be made in a vacuum but must be combined with decisions about how much revenue the government will raise and how it will raise it. No laws are more basic than the laws of arithmetic: For fiscal sustainability, whatever level of spending is chosen, revenues must be sufficient to sustain that spending in the long run.

    And here are the Goldman testimonies. On the first panel are Daniel Sparks, former head of the mortgages department, Joshua Birnbaum, former managing director in structured products, Michael Swenson, managing director in structured products, and Fabrice Tourre, indicted in the Securities and Exchange Commission civil fraud case against Goldman Sachs and executive director in structured products. On the second panel are David Viniar, Goldman’s chief financial officer, and Craig Broderick, the chief risk officer. And on the third and final panel is Lloyd Blankfein, chief executive officer.

    Tourre argues, “I deny — categorically — the SEC’s allegation. And I will defend myself in court against this false claim,” and goes on to detail that he made full disclosures about the structure of the mortgage-backed securities deal to the client who took the losing half of the bet.

    And Blankfein’s testimony is largely conciliatory, though he says that Goldman has done nothing illegal or unethical with its mortgage products: “While we strongly disagree with the SEC’s complaint, I also recognize how such a complicated transaction may look to many people. To them, it is confirmation of how out of control they believe Wall Street has become, no matter how sophisticated the parties or what disclosures were made. We have to do a better job of striking the balance between what an informed client believes is important to his or her investing goals and what the public believes is overly complex and risky.”

  • Supreme Court rules Vioxx fraud suit may proceed

    [JURIST] The US Supreme Court on Tuesday allowed a suit to proceed against drug maker Merck & Co. over the safety record of its painkiller Vioxx. The court ruled unanimously in Merck & Co. v. Reynolds that the statute of limitations in a securities fraud lawsuit begins to run once the plaintiff actually discovered or a reasonably diligent plaintiff would have discovered the violation – whichever comes first. Investors brought the class action suit against Merck in 2003, alleging that it had deliberately concealed information about Vioxx. The case was dismissed by a federal judge in April 2007 after he determined that investors were on “inquiry notice” of the alleged fraud in September 2001 when the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released a warning letter about the painkiller. The US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit reinstated the case in September 2008, finding that the district judge had “acted prematurely in finding as a matter of law that were on inquiry notice of the alleged fraud.” In affirming the decision below, Justice Stephen Breyer wrote:
    Construing this limitations statute for the first time, we hold that a cause of action accrues (1) when the plaintiff did in fact discover, or (2) when a reasonably diligent plaintiff would have discovered, “the facts constituting the violation” – whichever comes first. We also hold that the “facts constituting the violation” include the fact of scienter, “a mental state embracing intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud,”Justice John Paul Stevens filed a concurring opinion. Justice Antonin Scalia filed a separate concurring opinion, joined by Justice Clarence Thomas.Under 28 USC § 1658(b), a plaintiff has two years to file a claim alleging violation of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The first fraud complaint against the company was filed in November of 2003. Merck pulled Vioxx from the market in September 2004 after a study showed that it could double the risk of heart attack or stroke if taken for more than 18 months.

  • AdMob numbers show Android overtaking iPhone requests in the U.S.

    U.S. Smartphone OS usage - AdMob

    AdMob, which serves up many (for 18,000 sites and apps, it says) of those little ads you see in Android applications, has released its March findings. The bullet points:

    • Of smartphones in the United States, Android overtook iPhone usage, 46 percent to 39 percent. (In the UK there’s much greater disparity, with the iPhone leading 70 percent ot 13 percent.)
    • The HTC Dream (G1) and Magic (myTouch) made up 96 percent of traffic in September 2009. Seven months later, 11 Android phones make up 96 perecent of AdMob’s traffic.
    • In March, traffic was divided between Android 1.5 (38 percent) Android 2.0/2.1 (35 percent) and Android 1.6 (26 percent).
    • Motorola scored 44 percent of AdMob’s traffic with the Droid and Cliq. HTC had 43 percent of requests; Samsung had 9 percent.
    • AdMob requests from Android phones grew at a compounded rate of 32 percent a month, from 72 million requests in March 2009 to 2 billion in March 2010.

    Handset by handset, the Motorola Droid continues to rock with 32 percent of AdMob’s traffic. The Google Nexus One had 2 percent as of March. Not greatly surprising, given the reasons we’ve stated over and over.

    While the Droid, G1 and Moto Cliq lead in the U.S., the HTC Hero, Dream (G1) and Magic (myTouch) lead in Europe.

    Do note that AdMob is (still) in the process of being purchased by Google. And these numbers are representative of the ads AdMob serves, and not necessarily of actual smartphone usage. So it’s a good ballpark figure, but not necessarily gospel. You can read the entire report for yourself here. (pdf)

  • Found on the Moon: A Soviet Laser Reflector That Was Lost for 40 Years | 80beats

    SovietRoverFour decades ago, the Soviet Union put a reflector on the moon able to bounce laser signals back to the Earth. There was just one problem: They lost it.

    But now the marooned reflector has been found, thanks to the determined hunting of University of California, San Diego researchers. NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, in orbit around the moon, photographed the landing area where the USSR’s Luna 17 mission dropped off the missing reflector, Lunokhod 1, in 1970. The photos turned up a faint reflective dot, and the team thought that was it.

    With an idea now where to point their own laser, the researchers received a stronger signal back from Lunokhod 1 than they ever had in years of studying its sister craft, Lunokhod 2. “The best signal we’ve seen from Lunokhod 2 in several years of effort is 750 return photons, but we got about 2,000 photons from Lunokhod 1 on our first try,” said Murphy. “It’s got a lot to say after almost 40 years of silence” [UPI].

    After landing near the Mare Imbrium, Lunokhod 1 stayed in touch with Soviet ground controllers for no less than 11 months, prowling the moon even as the US astronauts of Apollo 14 and 15 were driving about elsewhere in their manned moon buggies. However the robot crawler eventually ceased communications, and the project was officially terminated on October 4, 1971 [The Register]. The Soviet scientists lost the location of the reflector, and because it doesn’t reflect enough light from the sun for us to see it from Earth, they never found it again. Firing the laser to look for a signal only works if you know the reflector’s general location, and thus wasn’t possible until the LRO spotted Lunokhod 1 this year.

    The American team had used Lunokhod 2 along with three reflectors left behind by Apollo missions to keeps tabs on our natural satellite and track its position and orbit as it ever-so-slowly moves away from us. And the researchers say that the re-discovered Russian reflector is particularly useful for studying the moon’s liquid core and testing ideas about gravity [Scientific American].

    Related Content:
    DISCOVER: The Bloc on the Block, old Soviet space gear for sale
    DISCOVER: The Moon Makes a Splash
    Bad Astronomy: NASA Spies on USSR Hardware
    Bad Astronomy: Apollo Landing Sites Imaged by LRO!
    Bad Astronomy: LRO First Light Images of the Moon!

    Image: NASA


  • Acidente Bizarro na última volta da Nascar Nationwide

    Algumas pessoas dizem o seguinte a respeito do futebol: “É uma caixinha de surpresas”. Concordo, mas não somente no futebol as surpresas podem acontecer, e impressionar. No automobilismo também isso acontece muito mais do que se imagina.

    Por exemplo, o que aconteceu nesse último domingo na Nascar Nationwide Series, impressionou todos na última volta da corrida, que aconteceu no circuito de Talladega. A grande confusão começou com um pequeno toque em Jamie McMurray. O que acontece em seguida é uma sequência de batidas, algo parecido com um “efeito dominó”.

    O mais azarado desse momento foi o piloto Dennis Setzer, que teve seu carro colidindo com a grade e se transformou em uma bola de fogo. A vitória da prova ficou com Brad Keselowski, que não foi atingido pelo caos que estava atrás de si e recebeu o primeiro lugar.

    Via | Motorpasion


  • The Goldman Hearing Begins

    The statements from the Senators make it clear that they are not holding this hearing in order to find out what happened; that’s the SEC’s job.  They’re holding this hearing in order to be televised yelling at investment bankers.  Claire McCaskill’s rant was particularly irrelevant to the actual question at hand, but all of them are mostly trying to express outrage, not make any coherent assessment of the strengths of the SEC’s case.

    And what is the strength?  It boils down to the question of what a material fact is.  If you define a material fact as something that would have changed the actual performance of the security, then probably Goldman didn’t fail in its duty. The garbage ACA picked on its own was allegedly no better than the garbage that Paulson chose.  I’m not aware of any investors who were skilled enough to pick high-performing securities based on subprime mortgages. 

    And certainly, ACA’s claimed motives seem more than a bit dim.  They didn’t know that Paulson was a housing bear?  Or they thought he’d found the one set of securities he believed was going to outperform?  Really?  You know, I have a used car I could offload if you’ll get the ACA guys down here to take a look at it . . .

    But one can argue that a material fact should be defined as anything that might have made the investor think twice.  Just as it is still murder to shoot someone who has just jumped out of a ten story window, it is still not right to conceal details from customers, even if you know that they’re still bent on a destructive course.  I find this argument pretty convincing.

    That doesn’t mean that a court will.  There’s quite a bit of case law surrounding what constitutes a material fact, and the judge is going to work off of that, not my neat philosophy-experiment intuitions.  A lot of very smart people who know a lot about securities law seem to think that the SEC is pushing its luck on the law, if not the merits.





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  • New for power plant operators:

    Safe plant extension in the original plan

    The database-driven software system Engineering Base Instrumentation for process control technology offers a high degree of safety for power plant suppliers and operators. At the Hanover Fair, Aucotec AG now for the first time presents a special variant of its tool. It enables plant manufacturers to safely hand over the original planning data together with the finished plant for later extensions by the operator.

    Thus the Hanover-based company meets the increasing demand of the companies concerned: these want to enable integrating engineering features not only into their own system environments but most of all into those of the end users. The particular openness of the platform Engineering Base (EB) makes this flexible integration into the supply chain possible. The protection of the original data is ensured.

    The new method quasi freezes the data of a completely projected plant at the time of delivery yet enables any kind of supplementation. Operators do no longer have to work with rigid, unintelligent PDF files and can skip time-consuming coordination with the plant construction company or its subcontractors. Instead they dispose of the comfort of a complete E-CAE tool without however endangering the original data. Aucotec has developed this solution together with one of the largest control system suppliers worldwide for power plants.

  • 10.4 analogue capacitive touchscreen

    Whoever is looking for a solid touch screen has come to the right place. For we have a new gem available: the analogue projected capacitive touch screen. It corresponds to our CTS (Charge Transfer Sensing) technology.

    This capacitive touch screen can be described as elegant, slim and smooth, as well as robust. It is very suitable for a great number of applications, from navigation systems, touch phones, public applications (kiosks), domotics, white goods, to applications for the medical sector, …
    As regards hygiene it also offers a solution: on account of the touch screen not having any edges, the screen surface can be cleaned easily and dirt cannot stick to it. This is important for medical and kitchen applications, among others.

    In addition, the touch screen is described as the most versatile that can be found in the industry: “a growing, promising trend towards touch screen technology, from mobile handsets to white goods”. All kinds of drawings can be made on the screen. It is suitable for use with gloves and it is easy in design. Also, it is supplied in a wide variety of screen sizes and types, currently till 10.4″, and it ensures an accurate touch screen performance for ‘small screen portable’ devices like handsets, smartphones and portable media players, as well as for bigger screens for games, POS terminals and white goods.

    For designers, this analogue projected capacitive touch screen is also future-proof: it provides them with the possibility to change things afterwards with regard to design: the hardware should not be modified, new control possibilities solely occur by changing the software. The forms can vary enormously and have much less limitations than other touch screens; curved surfaces are possible, for example. The capacitive technology also allows to work with various overlays and supports multi-touch detection.

  • World first: Diamond Laser

    With the world’s first combination of a CO2 laser engraving system and diamond engraving the eurolaser XS-300 diamondPLUS offers unprecedented possibilities for various materials:

    – plastic
    – metal
    – wood
    – and many, many more

    Further benefits at a glance:

    – high quality Synrad laser source
    – laser class 1 protective housing
    – high engraving speed
    – autofocus function
    – ergonomic color touch screen
    – compact desktop system

    This combination opens up a world of unlimited possibilities for flexible material processing for you. On top of the excellent properties of the CO2 laser for engraving, marking, stripping and cutting, the diamond engraver offers e.g. first class engraving results on metal objects.

    With very low investment and operating costs this is also a technology which quickly pays for itself. Naturally, alongside the innovative technology and the high lifetime, also our worldwide service and many years of experience are included.

  • RIV300: hydropneumatic tool for speed rivets

    The hydropneumatic tool RIV300 has been projected for placing speed rivets in cartridge and it’s ideal to obtain quick and repeating riveting.
    This tool ensures a significant reduction in assembly times and a good flexibility in processes, because it can easily be included in automatic assembly lines.
    RIV300 is equipped with proper spare parts according to the type and diameter of the rivet to be placed.
    The fittings selection has to be done as follows:
    • head according to rivet diameter;
    • mandrel according to rivet diameter, and head;
    • spring according to mandrel.
    Rivets in cartridge are mostly used in automotive, electronics, electro mechanics, furnishing and illuminating engineering.
    We underline that all Rivit tools, RIV300 included, are according to Machinery Directive 06/42/EC and following modifications.

    Technical data

    Air pressure (min/max): 5 – 7bar
    Air volume required (5,1bar): 2,6lt
    Stroke: 30mm
    Pull force (5,1bar): 3890N
    Cycle time:~ 1 sec.
    Weight (pistol only): 1,08Kg

  • IAS18 : Alert Station for the protection of drinking water resources

    HOCER IS (HOCER Group), the European Leader in the field of online detection of micropollutions (pesticides, hydrocarbons..) presents the IAS18, an integrative solution to detect micropollutions in the water.

    This unit (18 m²) integrates several analyzer is order to cover all type of pollution in the water from the pH to hydrocarbons and pesticides (µg/L)

    This solution is communly used in France to protect captures of drinking water plants and to protect rivers against pollutions (Alert Networks)

  • Video: BMW Concept Gran Coupé unveiled live in Beijing to strange music

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    BMW Gran Coupé concept reveal – click above to watch the video

    At last week’s Beijing Motor Show, BMW unveiled its new four-door Gran Coupé concept. To be more precise, they revealed the car in the Chinese city, but not at the show itself. At the time, we scoured the BMW stand and the only new vehicle we found there was the 535Li extended-wheelbase, with no sign of the new concept.

    It turns out that BMW held a private reception the night before the media day at the show, and there the concept stayed. In a ‘better late than never’ move, one of the attendees has posted a video of the reveal, and we’re sharing that with you now. Designer Adrian van Hooydonk and Chairman Dr. Norbert Reithofer opened the doors on the Gran Coupé in an extended (albeit not particularly awe inspiring) manner, but the concept still looks pretty great regardless, and it also looks very nearly production-ready. Hopefully we’ll get a chance to check out the Gran Coupé live somewhere soon, but in the meantime, check out the video after the jump.

    [Source: YouTube]

    Continue reading Video: BMW Concept Gran Coupé unveiled live in Beijing to strange music

    Video: BMW Concept Gran Coupé unveiled live in Beijing to strange music originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 09:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Jesus and climate change: The journey of evangelical leader Rich Cizik

    by Paul Rogat Loeb

    Rich Cizik

    Photo: National Association of Evangelicals

    As vice president for governmental affairs at
    the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE), Rich Cizik represented 4,500
    congregations serving 30 million members. Considering himself a “Reagan
    conservative” and a strong initial supporter of George W. Bush, Cizik had
    been with the organization since 1980, serving as its key advocate before
    Congress, the Office of the President, and the Supreme Court on issues like opposition
    to abortion and gay marriage. During the Clinton era, he had begun to expand
    the organization’s agenda by tackling such issues as human trafficking and
    global poverty, working with groups across the political aisle. Later he
    convinced the organization to take a stand against torture.

    But he thought little about climate change until 2002, when he attended a
    conference on the subject and heard a leading British climate scientist, Sir
    James Houghton, who was also a prominent evangelical. “You could only call
    the process a conversion,” Cizik said. “I reluctantly went to the
    conference, saying, ‘I’ll go, but don’t
    expect me to be signing on to any statements.’ Then, for three days in Oxford,
    England, Houghton walked us through the science and our biblical responsibility.
    He talked about droughts, shrinking ice caps, increasing hurricane intensity,
    temperatures tracked for millennia through ice-core data. He made clear that
    you could believe in the science and remain a faithful biblical Christian. All
    I can say is that my heart was changed. For years I’d thought, ‘Well, one side
    says this, the other side says that. There’s no reason to get involved.’ But
    the science has become too compelling. I could no longer sit on the sidelines.
    I didn’t want to be like the evangelicals who avoided getting involved during
    the civil rights movement and in the process discredited the gospel and
    themselves.”

    One day during the conference, Houghton took Cizik on a walk in the gardens
    of Blenheim Palace, Winston Churchill’s ancestral home. It was a lovely day,
    sunny and bright. Houghton said, “Richard, if God has convinced you of the
    reality of the science and the Scriptures on the subject, then you must speak out.”

    “Let me think about it,” Cizik responded. He knew he’d meet
    resistance from his colleagues and board. But Houghton convinced him that the
    world couldn’t solve the issue without serious American participation, and that
    the Republican Party was the major political force blocking action in the
    United States (in contrast to Europe, where conservative parties had helped
    take the lead on the issue). “As evangelicals, we’re 40 percent of the
    Republican base, so if we could convince the evangelical community to speak
    out, it could make the key difference,” Cizik said. American evangelicals,
    Houghton told him, might literally hold the fate of the planet in their hands.

    After leaving the conference, Cizik began reading and learning. Flying over
    the Sahara, he got a sense of the “tens of thousands of acres that are
    lost to climate-related desertification each year,” which in turn leads to
    major refugee migrations and potential wars over water. He coordinated a
    retreat with key evangelical leaders, like Rick Warren, and major scientists,
    like Houghton and Harvard’s E.O. Wilson. Then he took a similar group to Alaska
    to witness the melting glaciers and permafrost, the disruption of native
    communities, the spruce trees dying because the bark beetles now survived the
    warmer winters. They visited Shishmaref, a native village that is being forced to
    relocate because the permafrost has crumbled beneath it and the sea ice that
    once served as a storm buffer is gone. “Our first night there, we saw a
    lunar eclipse, shooting stars, and the Northern Lights.” It reminded him
    of the phrase in the psalm, “Creation pours forth its praise to its
    creator … The heavens give witness to
    God’s glory.”

    His Alaska group, said Cizik, “included those who believe life on earth
    was created by God, and those who believe it evolved over three and a half
    billion years. What became obvious to both groups is that this earth is sacred
    and that we ought to protect it. God isn’t going to ask you how he created the
    earth. He already knows. He’s going to ask, ‘What did you do with what I
    created?’ If we’re leaving a footprint that destroys the earth, we’ve failed to
    be good stewards.”

    The more Cizik learned, the more it challenged him to “treat caring for
    God’s creation as a moral principle,” and to continue enlisting others. In
    2004, Cizik convinced the NAE to release a paper called “For the Health of
    the Nation,” which urged its members to live in conformity with
    sustainable principles, talked of “creation care,” and stated,
    “Because clean air, pure water and adequate resources are crucial to
    public health and civic order, government has an obligation to protect its
    citizens from the effects of environmental degradation.” Two years later,
    he helped organize the Evangelical Climate Initiative,
    a major statement from 86 key evangelical leaders, including major megachurch
    pastors like Warren, the presidents of 39 Christian colleges, and the national
    commander of the Salvation Army. The statement described climate change as an
    urgent moral issue for Christians and called for the government to act on it.

    Cizik also joined James Ball of the Evangelical Environmental Network in
    carrying a placard to a pro-life rally that said, “Stop Mercury Poisoning
    of the Unborn,” and handing out fliers
    explaining that most of the birth-defect-producing
    mercury comes from coal-burning power plants. “If you care about the
    sanctity of human life,” he said, “then care about whether people
    live desperate lives and care about the mercury from power plants.”

    As Cizik expected, not everyone was happy with his taking environmental
    stands. “I had people on my board who said, ‘Don’t touch the issue. If you
    do, we’ll make your life very difficult.’” Twenty-two evangelical leaders
    signed a letter urging the NAE not to take a position on global climate change.
    James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, and major conservative activists
    like Heritage Foundation founder Paul Weyrich and the Family Research Council’s
    Gary Bauer called for Cizik’s firing.

    Some of this Cizik attributed to “simple ignorance of the science”
    and some to “bad theology—people who believe the earth is going to be
    destroyed anyway, so why bother.” But he also wondered how much came from
    people “afraid they’ll lose their power, influence, capacity to raise
    money, what they perceive to be their priorities. They’re afraid they’ll offend
    political allies.”

    But Cizik and the others persisted. “As a biblical Christian,” he
    said, “I agree with St. Francis that every square inch on Earth belongs to
    Christ. If we don’t pay attention to global climate change, it’s pretty obvious
    that tens and or even hundreds of millions of people are going to die. If you
    have a major sea-level rise, then Bangladesh
    becomes uninhabitable. Where do you put its 100 million people? Do you put them
    in India? In China? They’d have no place to go. Britain’s Christian Aid talks
    of climate change impacting one billion people by mid-century, with drought,
    floods, disease, and malnutrition. I’ve
    asked African-American leaders whether, as a
    white man, I can call climate change ‘the civil rights issue of the 21st
    century.’ Unanimously they say, ‘You not
    only can, but you must.’”

    Cizik believed he could still preach the gospel while also talking about
    these kinds of issues. “You need both. To go to bed at night and say that over
    a billion people live on a dollar a day and can’t go to bed themselves with a
    full stomach, can you live as a Christian happily in your suburban home,
    driving your SUV? Of course you can’t. Not as a real Christian. And if you
    happen to be a liberal, conservative, or
    centrist, I don’t care. The gospel has priority over politics.”

    Although Cizik and his allies never quite convinced the NAE to take an
    official stand on climate change, and he
    eventually got forced out
    after telling radio interviewer Terry
    Gross that he was beginning to rethink his opposition to gay civil unions, the
    organization reaffirmed the moral importance of “creation care,” a
    core perspective that encouraged further dialogue. And Cizik has gone on to
    start an organization, The New Evangelicals,
    devoted to issues like poverty and environmental engagement. He called his
    fellow evangelicals “a slow-moving earthquake. They don’t quite understand
    themselves how they’re changing, but they are.”

    “The issue shook my theology to its core,” Cizik told me. “It
    changed me as much as my being born again 30
    years before. This threatens the whole planet, so it raises a basic issue of who
    we are as people. Climate change isn’t just a scientific question. It’s a
    moral, a religious, a cosmological question. It involves everything we are and
    what we have a right to do.”

    This
    piece is adapted from the wholly updated new edition of Soul of a Citizen: Living with Conviction in
    Challenging Times
    by Paul Rogat Loeb. Copyright
    © 2010 by the author and reprinted by permission of St. Martin’s Griffin.

    Related Links:

    Have Jesus’ disciples been overeating?

    PETA on one side, FOX on the other … now that’s a conundrum

    Top 25 reasons to give a damn about climate change






  • Analysts weigh in on RIM’s new software after capital markets day at WES

    BlackBerry is cool again.

    Festivities at Research In Motion
    Ltd.'s annual Wireless Enterprise Symposium trade show in Orlando,
    Florida get officially underway today with co-chief executive Mike
    Lazaridis' keynote address, however, the BlackBerry-maker offered up
    plenty of new details about its strategy during its capital markets day
    with analysts on Monday.

    On Monday, RIM took the wraps off two
    new BlackBerry devies — a CDMA version of the business-focused Bold
    device and a 3G version of its Pearl flip phone — debuted its new
    operating system software (BlackBerry 6), a new Web browser and a new
    version of its mobile voice system technology, which enables users to
    combine their BlackBerry and business landlines and will allow users to
    make phone calls over a WiFi connection. 

    Earlier this month,
    BlackBerry rival Apple Inc. unveiled a new version of its iPhone OS at
    an event in San Francisco, which added new features including the
    ability to run multiple applications at the same time and a new in-app
    advertising technology, signalling the computer giant was planning to
    launch a new version of its popular touchscreen smart phone later this
    summer.

    As RIM continues its push to expand beyond its core
    base of business users, an easier-to-use software interface and
    superior Web browser are seen as integral pieces of the company's
    battle plan if it hopes to keep pace with the iPhone and devices
    running Google Inc.'s Android software.

    According to RBC
    Dominion Securities' Mike Abramsky, the new OS and browser has a more
    consumer-oriented interace that "may rival iPhone Android but appears
    uniquely BlackBerry."

    BlackBerry 6 may offer "RIM the
    opportunity to narrow competitive gaps and sustain leadership," he
    wrote in a note to clients on Tuesday.

    RIM says it plans to
    launch BlackBerry six in the third quarter of 2010 and analysts expect
    the software to be loaded onto new BlackBerry touchscreen and QWERTY
    devices. 

    Although analysts were generally encouraged by RIM's new software and
    browser — both of which were perceived to be lagging significantly behind
    Apple's iPhone — there still remains some concern about how RIM plans
    to roll out the new BlackBerry OS, which is seen as a complex
    technology.

    "Furthermore, we do not believe competition is
    standing idle & new innovations (video conferencing, etc) as well
    as the strong carrier promotions which RIM has enjoyed for many years
    are becoming shared by other OEMs (Android, iPhone) and we see carrier
    promotion commotion resulting in RIMM likely to spend more of its own
    money on promotion & subsidy efforts," Citigroup analyst Jim Suva
    wrote in a note to clients Tuesday.

    While RIM remains the
    market leader for so-called enterprise devices (read: business users)
    in North America, Mr. Suva says that many companies are beginning to
    life the ban on non-BlackBerry devices on corporate networks, which is
    bad news for the BlackBerry maker. 

    "While we recognize RIM’s low global market share we see its
    core North America and enterprise market under attack and the consumer
    space innovation has increasingly become more intense and we believe
    this sets up for margin pressure as the future unfolds," he said.

    On
    the application front, RIM reiterated its strategy of not trying to
    compete with Apple on volume — Apple's App Store has nearly 200,000
    applications — but rather by working with developers to create "super
    applications" that weave their way into the BlackBerry's ecosystem. In
    the past, RIM has used apps from companies like Facebook and LinkedIn
    — whose applications are integrated into BlackBerry's email contacts
    and calendar applications — to illustrate this strategy, according to
    Deepak Chopra from Genuity Capital Markets.

    RIM expects much of its future growth to come from international markets outside North America, Mr. Chopra said. 

    "Driven by the massive expansion of smartphones globally, RIM indicated
    that International expansion was the biggest driver of its growth, with
    BlackBerry Messenger being a key theme," he wrote in a note to clients on Tuesday.

    "North America is more
    competitive, however, RIM believes that it can maintain its market
    share in the competitive context of the market."

    RIM's WES conference continues until Thursday. 

    – Matt Hartley 

     

  • Samsung Galaxy S reportedly may ship in UK in early June

    Samsung Galaxy S

    Those of you waiting to get your hands on the world’s first smartphone with a Super AMOLED may only have to wait another month or so. UK retailer Expansys says it expects the Samsung Galaxy S right around the end of May, which can’t come too soon for a goodly number of you. If you’re looking to bring it to the U.S, it’s gonna cost you about $850, which is quite a chunk of change. (In the meantime, you can make do with our hardware and software hands-ons from CTIA.) It’s coming, folks. [EuroDroid via Unwired View]