Blog

  • ALTe’s New Factory Helps Give Michigan a Future Beyond Batteries

    ALTe Logo
    Howard Lovy wrote:

    ALTe, an Auburn Hills, MI-based developer of electric propulsion systems, knows that if the future of the automobile is truly hybrid and electric, then a great deal more than just the battery is going to have to change. And while state government tax incentive policy, and news media reports, have emphasized automotive batteries, just as important is the powertrain, which is automotive-speak for the whole shebang that generates power and moves the wheels.

    Armed with an $8.4 million tax credit over seven years, approved in February by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, ALTe cut the ribbon on a new 185,000-square-foot development and manufacturing facility in Auburn Hills on April 12. At full production, the facility will produce up to 90,000 electric powertrains each year and create more than 300 jobs, the company says.

    Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm, in announcing the tax credits, said that the new ALTe plant helps boost “our ongoing efforts to diversify the state’s economy, and shows that businesses are continuing to choose Michigan because of our highly-skilled workers and competitive business climate.”

    It’s unclear why Granholm chose to portray ALTe as an example of diversification, unless she considers any new automotive technology a significant departure from Michigan’s old single-industry economy.

    After the ribbon cutting, ALTe, whose name is a shortened combination of the words “alternative energy,” demonstrated its new Range Extended Electric Powertrain (REEP) prototype vehicle.

    It is appropriate, by the way, that this company first unveiled its new technology at a National Truck Equipment Association show in March. ALTe did not choose a special cleantech venue for its coming-out party, but wanted to establish itself right away as a workhorse ready to serve the mainstream automotive supply chain.

    Such integration into existing processes is incredibly important as the automotive industry changes here in Michigan. Last year, in a different context, I spoke to David Cole, head of the influential Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, MI, who told me that while Michigan is doing the right thing by focusing on battery manufacturing for the next generation of electric and hybrid automobiles, the state should also be careful what it wishes for.

    “If we get electrification of the powertrain—if that goes big—the impact on the transmission business, the general powertrain business here could be hit very, very hard,” Cole said. “We could lose some very important manufacturing and we would at least want the replacement manufacturing being here rather than someplace else.”

    ALTe’s new Auburn Hills plant is a step toward building that replacement capacity in Michigan.












  • A natural disaster … but a man-made catastrophe, by Richard North

    Article Tags: Met Office, Richard North, Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre

    Image AttachmentThe decisions that led to the costly shambles of Europe’s airspace being closed for so long go back years.

    Examining the protocol followed, the agencies involved and the resources at their disposal, it seems it wasn’t volcanic ash that brought the air industry to its knees but decades of neglect, underfunding, poor planning and layers of bureaucracy behind the Government and Europe-wide response.

    This, despite the fact that the ink had barely dried on an international contingency plan drawn up by the ICAO in September 2009.

    The disaster may have been natural, but the mishandling was wholly man-made. So what went wrong, and why?

    As the ash began creeping from Iceland to the UK the first people in the hot seat were not the air traffic controllers but eight scientists in the Met Office’s London Volcano Ash Advisory Centre (LVAAC).

    These specialists, called in only on an emergency basis, provide the aviation industry with forecasts on the spread of the ash and warn pilots of where it is unsafe to fly.

    Source: dailymail.co.uk

    Read in full with comments »   


  • President Obama Breaks His Word to Armenians, Won’t Use the “G-Word”

    by Julian Ku

    This is not really a big deal, but it is still annoying when President Obama (or any president) flagrantly breaks his campaign promises with respect to foreign policy matters that are completely within their executive discretion.  Today, in his commemoration of the Armenians who died in the 1916 expulsion from Turkey, President Obama carefully avoided the use of the word “genocide” to describe those killings. This is probably the right thing to do since, as a legal matter and as a diplomatic matter, especially given the legal standard that the ICJ has erected to determine intent. On the other hand, the President made a crystal clear promise to recognize the Armenian killings as a “genocide” that he has flagrantly broken. From his campaign website.

    As a U.S. Senator, I have stood with the Armenian American community in calling for Turkey’s acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide. Two years ago, I criticized the Secretary of State for the firing of U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, John Evans, after he properly used the term “genocide” to describe Turkey’s slaughter of thousands of Armenians starting in 1915. I shared with Secretary Rice my firmly held conviction that the Armenian Genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence. The facts are undeniable. An official policy that calls on diplomats to distort the historical facts is an untenable policy. As a senator, I strongly support passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106 and S.Res.106), and as President I will recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    In fact, he has been lobbying hard to prevent the House from using the “G-word” and is clearly never intending to use it himself. Look, I get that this is a really hard diplomatic issue and that the prudent thing to do is to avoid the “G-word”.  But could candidates please refrain from making promises of this sort that they have no intention of keeping?

  • Nota de esclarecimento aos proprietários do Toyota Corolla, nova geração, fabricado a partir de abril de 2008

    Toyota Corolla
    A Toyota do Brasil acredita que o veículo Corolla Nova produzido no Brasil não apresenta qualquer risco ou defeito que possa vir a causar aceleração involuntária.
    Entretanto, constatou que o mau posicionamento ou instalação incorreta do acessório genuíno, tapete do motorista, bem como o uso de tapete não genuíno incompatível com o projeto do veículo, pode afetar o retorno do pedal do acelerador.

    A Toyota do Brasil lamenta profundamente o fato de que alguns incidentes possam tirar a tranqüilidade dos proprietários do Corolla Nova Geração e, com o objetivo de promover completo esclarecimento e orientação correta aos seus clientes quanto ao uso do tapete, tomou a iniciativa de, junto ao Departamento de Proteção e Defesa do Consumidor (DPDC), realizar uma campanha de chamamento preventiva com seus clientes proprietários do veículo Corolla Nova Geração fabricado a partir de abril de 2008.

    Essa campanha consiste em:

    1) Prestar informação clara sobre a importância da correta forma de fixação do tapete e as
    conseqüências que representa a inobservância desse procedimento;

    2) Verificação completa do sistema de fixação do tapete no assoalho do veículo e eliminação
    de eventuais não conformidades;

    Nos próximos dias, a Toyota do Brasil informará diretamente cada um dos proprietários dos veículos Corolla Nova Geração fabricado a partir de abril de 2008, sobre os procedimentos a serem adotados, assim como fará ampla divulgação das ações que envolvem essa campanha.

    A Toyota do Brasil reconhece o valor da participação ativa das entidades de Defesa do Consumidor neste processo e reforça o seu compromisso com a satisfação dos seus clientes.

    Fonte: Toyota do Brasil


  • Teaching Fifth Grade Geometry

                 In fifth grade, students begin to identify, compare, and analyze the properties of geometric shapes. The Virginia Standards of Learning include topics such as angle classification, size comparison, transformations, lines of symmetry, two and three-dimensional figures, and the overall relationship between shapes. The text and web resources listed below will help you keep the students interested and engaged while also supporting instruction.

    Text Resources

    tang.gif

    Grandfather Tang’s Story
    written by Ann Tompert
 and illustrated by Robert Andrew Parker

    Grandfather Tang tells a story about fox fairies from Chinese folklore who use geometry and magical powers to alternately change into predator and prey in a shape changing game. As he tells the story, he makes the animal shapes with tangrams. The illustrations have an oriental brushwork appearance and include both the animal and the tangram representation of the animal so students can create the changes with their tangram sets.

    the_warlords_puzzle1.jpg

    The Warlord’s Puzzle
    written by Virginia Pilegard
 and illustrated by Nicolas Debon

    In ancient China, an artist hopes to avoid punishment for breaking a beautiful blue tile into seven piece by suggesting that the Chinese warlord hold a contest to see if anyone can put it back together. A poor fisherman’s boy quietly plays with the geometric shapes and solves the tangram puzzle. A tangram template is provided making this useful in introducing geometric concepts.

    ac067243l.jpg

    A Cloak for the Dreamer
    written by Aileen Friedman 
and illustrated by Kim Howard

    A tailor asks his three sons to make colorful cloaks from small pieces of cloth sewn together. The older sons use square and triangular pieces and make fine cloaks. But the youngest son chooses circles and his cloak will not keep out the wind. The father uses geometry to solve the problem cleverly. This story fits with a unit on tessellations or a unit on shapes within shapes.

    sircumference.jpg

    Sir Cumference and the Great Knight of Angleland: A Math Adventure
    written by Cindy Neuschwander and illustrated by Wayne Geehan

    Radius, the son of Sir Cumference and Lady Di of Ameter, ventures on a heroic quest to earn his knighthood. He first proves his ability to make a “knightly right angle,” as Sir D’Grees has trained him, and then doubles the right angle to make a straight angle. So he is sent off with the family medallion, in the shape of a circle (cardboard medallion included), to rescue the missing King Lell. Falling bridges, a cryptic riddle, a crocodile-infested moat, and a winding labyrinth all must be mastered before finding the king and his twin dragons, known as “Pair of Lells.” Sir Cumference has something to offer a wide range of readers. Some will be too young to understand the math and the word puns but will enjoy the story of a knight rescuing a king. Others will puzzle over the math and how to use the protractor (medallion) to solve the riddle. This group will be helped by the somewhat primitively painted pictures, which give clues to these angled decisions and enhance the story of a brave knight on his quest.

    pythag.jpg
    What’s Your Angle Pythagoras?
    written by Julie Ellis and illustrated by Phyllis Hornung

    Pythagoras always seems to be in trouble, but it’s only because he’s so curious. You never know where you’ll find him. He could be up in a tree with the birds, spying on workmen, or messing about with maps. He is deep into his latest adventure, and trouble, when he discovers a pattern that gets him on everyone’s good side.

    Web Resources

    PBS Kids has educational online games for all of their television programs including Sagwa the Siamese Cat! Sagwa Tangrams will be fun for the students and help them practice their shape relationships! There are five easy as well as five hard puzzles to choose from!

    Cyber Chase is another great PBS Kids program dedicated to making learning fun. Their website is full of great online games and the math topics that correlate with each. In Point Out the View, each member of the Cybersquad is looking at a bunch of blocks from a different place in the room. The player must show what each person sees from their point of view. Because what you see depends on your point of view, different people looking at the same objects can see them differently!

    MATHO is similar to an interactive BINGO game. Your gameboard is a MATHO board with shapes and angles on it. A problem appears below the gameboard in yellow. Solve the problem and look for the answer on your gameboard. If you find your answer, select it and hit Enter. If you do not find your answer, click on Enter and you will be given a new problem. When you answer correctly, a marker will color your square. You have Matho when you get 5 colored squares in a row. The game is timed, so choose quickly!

    Banana Hunt!  Given a specific angle and a full circle, drag the monkey to that exact angle. If you select the correct angle given, then the monkey will find all of his bananas! For every degree off, the monkey will lose a banana. How many bananas can you find in ten searches? Angles are not labeled so this is practice for those who know their angles well!

    Protractor Measures!  Slide and rotate the protractor by degrees to match it to the given angle. Use the protractor to measure the angle and enter the degree measurement to move on to the next problem. This is a very realistic activity.

    Additional Resources

     This site offers online timed quizzes for every topic in fifth grade geometry (check out the other grades and subjects too!). These quizzes are relevant, kid-friendly, and record a score for teacher use once completed. If a wrong answer is chosen, an explanation of the correct answer is provided! The students may also stop at any time by choosing “submit and finish.”

    This site offers amazing interactive lessons! Working With Angles(16) and Slides and Flips(17) are most relevant to fifth grade geometry. The lessons start off with real-world examples and continue with narrated visual diagrams. Although it moves at a brisk pace, the student has the option of pausing or going back. During the lesson students are engaged with labeling, sorting, and shifting insturments. Students will have a lot of fun using a virtual protractor to measure angles. If one of my students were to miss a vital lesson, this would be my go-to place to give him/her a good foundation of knowledge.

    Teach the students a few songs to help them remember their geometry terms! For only $2.99 you can order the CD of all 14 songs!

     

     

  • Bolivia ‘people’s conference’ calls for system change, not climate change

    by Tina Gerhardt

    Photo: The City Project via FlickrCOCHABAMBA, Bolivia—A fundamental critique of capitalism
    as the source of climate change pervaded the People’s
    World Conference on Climate Change
    , from the opening
    speech of Bolivian President Evo Morales
    on Tuesday to the final
    declaration agreed upon Thursday.

    On the first day, as 15,000 people from 125 countries
    gathered for the summit, Morales laid out his view bluntly: “Either capitalism
    lives or Mother Earth lives.”

    “The main cause of climate change is capitalism,”
    he continued. “As people who inhabit Mother Earth, we have the right to
    say that the cause is capitalism, to protest limitless growth. … More than
    800 million people live on less than $2 per day. Until we change the capitalist
    system, our measures to address climate change are limited.”

    Bolivia’s lead climate negotiator, Angelica Navarro, echoed
    Morales’ points: “You cannot create a climate market to solve climate change.
    You have to address the structural causes. These causes are not only to be
    measured in terms of greenhouse gases. They are trade, finances, and economy.”

    The conference ended on Thursday—Earth Day—in
    Cochabamba’s downtown stadium, with world leaders and delegates presenting a
    final declaration that broadly outlined a path forward for addressing both the
    impacts of climate change and the economic and political structures that have
    brought it about.  That statement
    will now be taken to the U.N. ahead of the next big international climate
    conference, COP16, to be held in Cancun, Mexico, at the end of the year. 

    The Bolivian government laid the groundwork for the
    declaration with a set
    of four demands
    : climate reparations from developed countries to developing
    countries; an International Climate Justice Tribunal; a Universal Declaration
    for the Rights of Mother Earth; and development and transfer of clean
    technologies.  The final statement
    called for creating a multilateral organization to fight climate change and
    protect climate migrants; ensuring that knowledge related to technology
    transfer not be privatized; and acknowledging and protecting the rights of
    indigenous peoples.

    The conference sought to avoid the backroom deals and lack
    of transparency that plagued the U.N. talks in Copenhagen in December. “That is
    not democracy. That is not the U.N.,” Navarro said of the Copenhagen
    process. “For months, we were discussing our proposals with other
    countries. They did not listen. What we want in Bolivia is a true and
    participatory democracy. If the governments do not come up with a plan for
    climate change, the people have to lead with a plan.”

    The “people’s conference” invited civil society
    into the process, creating a bottoms-up rather than a top-down approach.
    Seventeen working groups met over the course of the three days, and dozens of
    panels and countless informal strategy sessions were held too.  The working groups had varying degrees
    of success.  Some reached
    agreements that supporters can organize around and push for at future U.N.
    climate meetings.

    The forest working group rejected the U.N. REDD program
    (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation), arguing that by
    using market mechanisms to offset carbon emissions, it allows companies to
    speculate and get around actual carbon reductions.

    The working group on climate refugees drafted a statement
    that was included in the final declaration, calling for protections for the
    hundreds of millions of people expected to be displaced by rising sea levels,
    droughts, floods, and dwindling water supplies. In his opening address on
    Tuesday, Morales had called for borders to be opened to climate refugees.

    The conference also provided a boost to the climate-justice
    movement, giving advocates an opportunity to network, organize, and share
    stories about local and regional environmental and indigenous struggles.

    But there was also dissent at the conference. Various
    organizations and an unofficial 18th working group focused on the discrepancy
    between Morales’ rhetoric on behalf of Mother Earth and his policy of resource
    extraction, emphasizing the environmental degradation brought about by mining
    and oil and gas drilling. Revenues from natural gas help to keep Bolivia, the
    poorest country in South America, afloat. Eduardo Gudynas has referred to this
    policy as the “new
    extractivism
    ” of Latin America. 

    Oscar Olivera, who was active in organizing the “water
    wars
    ” against privatization in Bolivia 10 years ago, argued that there
    are currently two kinds of movements: those on the inside of the government and
    those on the outside. He said, “Social movements in Bolivia are fragmented not
    because of ideological reasons but because of cooptation by the government. One
    of the characteristics of this government is that there is not room left for
    autonomous spaces, for grassroots organizing. Until 2004, the people of society
    in Bolivia were very strong and organizing horizontally. The issue of land
    distribution is not solved. Despite the rhetoric, oil and gas have not been
    nationalized.”

    Still, most conference attendees rallied together around the
    main anti-capitalist message: to solve climate change, we must stop the push
    for unlimited growth that capitalism is based on.  This is well summed-up by a slogan that got attention in
    Copenhagen and even more traction in Bolivia: “System change, not climate change.”

    Related Links:

    Obama climate agenda in turmoil after Republican pulls out of compromise

    The good news about the very bad news (about climate change)

    More lessons from Wales for moving beyond coal






  • Peugeot Citroën e Mitsubishi iniciam a produção em sua fábrica conjunta em Kaluga, na Rússia

    Logo Peugeot Citroen
    Philippe Varin, Presidente Mundial da PSA Peugeot Citroën, e Takashi Nishioka, Presidente da Mitsubishi Motors Corporation, iniciaram oficialmente a produção de veículos da PCMA Rus, a fábrica conjunta dos dois grupos na Rússia. A fábrica, na qual a PSA Peugeot Citroën tem uma participação de 70% e a Mitsubishi Motors Corporation de 30%, está situada em Kaluga, localizada a 180 km ao sudoeste de Moscou.

    A fábrica, que teve um investimento inicial de 470 milhões de euros, fará com que a PSA Peugeot Citroën e a Mitsubishi Motors Corporation se posicionem entre os principais atores do mercado automotivo da Rússia, cujo potencial de crescimento é muito promissor.

    A partir de abril de 2010, a fábrica de Kaluga produzirá o Peugeot 308, seguido do Citroën C4 e dos utilitários esportivos (SUV) Citroën C-Crosser, Peugeot 4007 e Mitsubishi Outlander. Esses modelos destinam-se ao segmento de veículos médios do mercado automotivo russo.

    A fábrica estará totalmente operacional em 2012, quando a capacidade de produção anual será de 125.000 unidades, sendo 85.000 unidades de carros médios da Peugeot e da Citroën e 40.000 unidades de SUV’s das marcas Peugeot, Citroën e Mitsubishi.

    A PCMA Rus será uma fábrica compacta com espaços de trabalho otimizados repartidos entre dois edifícios: a oficina de pintura e a oficina de chaparia e montagem. Para reduzir os impactos ambientais, a fábrica empregará as melhores práticas ecológicas de ambos os grupos em termos de economia de energia, de redução das emissões de CO2 e de redução dos resíduos (pintura hidrossolúvel, embalagens recicláveis para o transporte).

    A fábrica empregará cerca de 3.000 funcionários que serão formados no centro de formação local construído em cooperação com o Governo da Região de Kaluga.

    O essencial sobre a fábrica de Kaluga:

    Centro de produção: Kaluga, Rússia
    Localização:180 km ao sudoeste de Moscou
    Administração: Didier Aleton, Diretor Geral / Masayuki Imada, Diretor Geral
    Adjunto
    Superfície:Cerca de 145 hectares e um parque de fornecedores de 30 hectares
    Vocação da fábrica:Fabricação de veículos (chaparia, pintura e montagem)
    Capacidade de produção:125.000 veículos por ano (em 3 turnos)
    Veículos produzidos:Carros médios para Peugeot e Citroën / SUVs médios para
    Mitsubishi, Peugeot e Citroën
    Investimento inicial:470 milhões de euros
    Início da produção:2010
    Colaboradores (contratação):Cerca de 3.000 funcionários

    Fonte: Peugeot Citroën


  • How Sharing Increases Innovation

    Robin Chase wrote:

    [Editor’s note: This post first appeared on Robin’s blog, Network Musings.]

    I believe there is a strong tie between sharing and the ability to innovate. This post will walk you through the logic.

    Innovation is built on these things:

    1. The existence of problems and the desire to solve them

    2. The ability to apply new ways of thinking to these problems

    3. The cost of the inputs needed to solve the problem (skills, data, resources, devices, networks)

    4. The ability to iterate, adapt, evolve and scale.

    1. PROBLEMS: Frankly, there is no dearth of problems and some kinds of people really like to think about how to solve them if they have the time. So problem-solving people who have at least some time on their hands try to problem-solve and people who don’t have time, can’t. (Why are there so many fewer historical examples of women doing remarkable innovative things? Well, duh…)

    2. NEW THINKING: The ability to apply NEW ways of thinking, with an emphasis on the word “new.” Problems that are kept hidden in discipline silos don’t get any new thinking applied to them. See all the great work done by Innocentive, that gets problems out of silos and opens them up to a diverse group of solvers.

    3. THE COST OF INPUTS. Here is where I want to linger for a bit. There is a whole world of inputs that could come at much lower cost—wherever there is excess capacity, an underused resource that has already been paid for and which therefore has lots more value locked up in it! If only we could get people, companies, governments to “share” more—to make sure that their unused unneeded excess capacity was made available to others to make use of.

    Exactly when are we NOT willing to share?

    • When we believe that abundance only comes from hoarding and we perceive that everything is rivalrous (see this earlier post).

    • When we have just witnessed a communal sharing debacle (Chinese cultural revolution) or when goods really are rivalrous.

    • When things really are scarce, there is just simply not enough to go around and so we hoard to protect our closest family.

    • When things are abundant, why bother?

    If we look at these reasons for not sharing excess capacity (and thus facilitating a whole lot more innovation), I see lots of room for improvement. We have to stop our …Next Page »

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • Awesome Foundation, Spreading Awesomeness Across the Universe, Expands to West Coast

    The Awesome Foundation
    Wade Roush wrote:

    For Boston-area Web developers, the place to be last Friday night was the Barron Building at 614 Massachusetts Avenue in Central Square. Home to Conduit Labs, Oneforty, Shareaholic, and several other Web startups, it’s become the newest pin in Boston’s entrepreneurship map. On Friday, it was the scene of a rollicking joint housewarming party for Conduit and Oneforty.

    The party doubled as the award gathering for the winner of the March 2010 grant from the Awesome Foundation for the Arts and Sciences, the Cambridge-born “microtrust” that hands out $1,000 grants to projects that “promote awesomeness.” The March awardee was Charles Fracchia, an undergraduate studying biology at Imperial College in London who’s spending a year in Boston doing an internship at Ginkgo Bioworks. Fracchia’s project is to create special cultures of microorganisms engineered to excrete “conditional inks” that change color at different temperatures.

    But in addition to the bio-ink award, the Awesome Foundation had some more big news last week—the opening of a San Francisco chapter of the organization. It’s the third chapter outside Boston for the organization, which was created just last summer by Berkman Center researcher Tim Hwang and Betahouse founder Jon Pierce.

    Here in Boston, the Awesome Foundation counts people like former Microsoft Startup Labs manager Reed Sturtevant as “trustees,” who contribute $100 per month toward the informal grants. The money occasionally goes to technology projects, but just as often are awarded to people with ideas for nifty or unusual stunts or temporary installations. Previous awardees have included Hansy Better Barraza, a Rhode Island School of Design architecture professor who planned to build a giant hammock on Boston Common, and Lauren McCarthy, whose wearable devices train people to have more effective social interactions.

    Jon PierceChapters in Providence, RI, New York, and now San Francisco operate autonomously, according to Pierce, but with the same charge: “funding awesomeness.” I interviewed Pierce about the organization’s rapid growth last week, and have written up our talk below.

    Xconomy: What attracts people to start new chapters of the Awesome Foundation?

    Jon Pierce: I think it’s the fact that it celebrates awesomeness over more traditional values. Awesomeness is a quality that is very impactful. It’s sort of that sense of wonder that you experience when you first hear about it. It’s “Wow, I didn’t think that was possible.” As a foundation, that’s novel, and the fact that it’s purely individually funded, with no real organizational structure, is also appealing to people.

    The fact that we’re funding people on the basis of a really short, couple-hundred-word proposal, and we don’t have a strict vetting process or layers of bureaucracy that you have to go through at a traditional grant-making organization, enables us to get some more interesting ideas, because we aren’t necessarily concerned with whether [applicants] have corporate or academic credentials. We don’t even require that the projects be “successful” in a traditional way. We do fund projects that we hope will be …Next Page »












  • Rhapsody’s Streaming Music iPhone App Now Works Offline, Too [IPhone Apps]

    All-you-can-eat music services are an intoxicating prospect, but the limitations can be dealbreakers—specifically, that fact that a lot of them don’t let you take your music with you, or limit the devices in or on which you can play it back. It’s not just annoying; it drives home the fact that you don’t actually own your music. So! Onward to the news nugget: As of the incoming version 2.0, Rhapsody’s iPhone app lets you slurp and save playlists from their servers, onto your device: More »







  • 2011 Ford Fiesta Sedan and Hatchback U.S. Spec – First Drive Review


    The U.S.-market Fiesta is as good as its European counterpart. Hallelujah!

    For years, we in the U.S. have had to watch with jealousy as the Europeans drove Ford vehicles that were faster, fancier, better than what was available here. We constantly begged for the products, but the hands of Ford’s American product planners were tied by cost concerns and misaligned product cycles. No more. The automaker announced its ONE Ford plan a couple of years ago, the thrust of which was to design and market vehicles for worldwide consumption, and the first fruit of that plan, the 2011 Ford Fiesta, has ripened.

    Keep Reading: 2011 Ford Fiesta Sedan and Hatchback U.S. Spec – First Drive Review

    Related posts:

    1. 2010 Ford Fiesta Sedan and Hatchback Will be Made in Mexico
    2. 2011 Ford Fiesta – Short Take Road Test
    3. 2009 Nissan Versa Sedan and Hatchback – Review
  • HTC HD Mini: Location based searching

    This is a demonstration of a new feature of HTC Sense on the HD Mini.

    Location based services are quite a big thing now, and HTC have built location based searches in to HTC Sense.

    It uses Google as a back end, so has most things you’d hope for.

    The only thing I feel this could do with, is the ability to get directions to somewhere via Google Maps on device, rather than having to use the web based maps.

    Thanks to appelflap for making me aware of this!


  • On Shelves This Week: April 25 – May 1, 2010

    We’ve got a much better line-up of video game releases this week of April 25, 2010 till the first day of May. Thank goodness the drough of last week’s picks did not carry over to this week.

  • Happy Belated Earth Day

    Having a name like “Lazy Man” means that I lose a lot of potential media attention. Many of the bigger websites will think twice before linking to a website feature me. I’ve often thought that I should re-brand myself. However, every now and again, the Lazy Man name works to my advantage. One such time spanned the last few days. While I was deeply engaged in a combination of family issues and the NFL draft – two of my highest priorities – I missed the opportunity or an Earth Day post. On the bright side, I think there’s great value in reminding people about Earth Day after the actual day has passed. It’s not like there is only one day to think about the environmentally responsible.

    On some Earth Days, the topics to write about come easy to me. This time it didn’t come easy. I came close to mentioning the little things we do to help the environment such as recycle about 75% of trash (the other 25% is simply extremely difficult or impossible to recycle in my area). However, I decided it was best to leave it to the experts and give you a couple of sites and articles to read:

    • While I try to be a good human, I’m not The Good Human… so humbly ask that you read The Good Human – Seriously, it’s worth reading every day… and twice on Sundays.
    • One of the better articles I read this week was a great analysis about shutting off a computer to conserve power

    If you didn’t like any of those articles, I remind you to check out previous articles I’ve written:

    Related posts:

    1. Four Lazy Ways to Save the Environment It’s Earth Day and I’d be remiss if I didn’t…
    2. We Are Only Dancing on This Earth for a Short While [This particular article is a little lacking on personal finance….
    3. April Round-Up Here are some of the top Lazy Man and Money…
    4. Thank You and Happy New Year! I’ve been keeping it a little secret, but I’ve had…
    5. Save Money and the Environment For the past couple of months, I’ve been writing ways…
  • Rosemary for Barbecuing: It’s an Herb with Many Health Benefits

    Filed under: , ,

    By far my favourite herb to use in cooking is rosemary. It’s in almost everything I make – I just love the taste and that amazing savoury aroma. When I was staying in California, on the hottest days of the year you could smell the wild rosemary all … Read more

     

    Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

  • Hawking: Beware the Alien Menace! | Cosmic Variance

    Okay, that’s a bit alarmist. But Stephen Hawking has generated a bit of buzz by pointing out that contact with an advanced alien civilization might not turn out well for us backward humans. In fact, we should just try to keep quiet and avoid being noticed.

    “If aliens visit us, the outcome would be much as when Columbus landed in America, which didn’t turn out well for the Native Americans,” he said.

    Prof Hawking thinks that, rather than actively trying to communicate with extra-terrestrials, humans should do everything possible to avoid contact.

    He explained: “We only have to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn’t want to meet.”

    To which I can only say: yeah. Sounds about right. If aliens were sufficiently enlightened to be utterly peace-loving and generous, it would be great to have back-and-forth contact with them. But it’s also possible that they would simply wipe us out — not necessarily in a Mars Attacks! kind of invasion, but almost without noticing (as we have done to countless species here on Earth already). So how do you judge the risk? (Dan Drezner gives the interplanetary-security perspective.)

    It’s like the LHC doomsday scenarios, but for real — the sensible prior on “murderous aliens” is much higher than on “microscopic black hole eats the Earth.” Happily, a face-to-face chat seems unlikely anyway. Nothing wrong with listening in, on the unlikely chance that the aliens are broadcasting their communications randomly throughout the galaxy. Besides, a little advance warning wouldn’t hurt.


  • Should I go into debt to buy a house at this time in our economy?

    Dear Bob,

    I have a question. Would you go into debt to buy a house at this time in our economy? I’m in a tough spot. We took my father out of a nursing home last October due to neglect. Ever since, we have been traveling between two houses to take care of him, but it is getting to be a real strain on our family members who care for him day in and day out. My husband and I are debt-free, renting a house, and my father is renting the house we grew up in as kids (my brother owns it. It is not paid off).  

    If we move to a bigger house with my father, we would be relying on his fixed income (pension and social security) to make the payments plus my husband’s modest salary. Neither house we are in at the time is big enough for all of us.

    If the county goes into hyperinflation, I don’t think we would be a able to get to my dad’s, who is 12 minutes (4 miles) from our house. I feel the need to get us under one roof for the rough times that are surely ahead. My dad is 89 with Parkinson’s and I am scared I won’t be able to get diapers and medicine and take care of him if there is a crash. He feels very secure when I am with him.

    Will people who just have assumed a mortgage have their house repossessed during a crisis or will too many people be in the same boat? I’ve tried to look this question up online and they basically say to rent right now. Maybe we should just get in a bigger rental verses buying?

    We rent on a farm in Illinois and have chicken’s, goats, eggs, and big garden. My dad’s home is in a subdivision. If we move, we would buy a small farm, probably in Kentucky. 

    Sincerely,
    Jill Novak

    Dear Jill,

    You are in a tough spot, and I feel for you and your predicament. My first suggestion would be that you explore the possibility of adding on to the house you currently live in so that you can make a room for your father. In addition to giving you more room, if it’s done correctly it will increase the value of the house. If that is not possible, then next I would suggest you seek another house to rent. Since you live on a farm with some livestock and a garden you are in good position should the currency collapse that we are expecting occur. I would hate to see you give that up.

    I would also hate to see you take on debt if you can avoid it in any way. Please explore all options before making that decision. Purchasing a home and taking on debt will limit the amount of funds you have at your disposal to prepare for the coming collapse buy buying storage food and gold and silver.

    Best wishes,
    Bob

  • Yellow Dogs And Democrat Handouts

    (Part two of a two-part series. The first part was Democrats And The Politics Of Envy.)

    Ask a yellow dog Democrat why he’s a Democrat and he’ll usually say it’s because the Democrat Party is the party of the working man. He believes it so strongly that he’d vote for the Democrat over anyone else, even if the Democrat on the ticket was an old yellow dog.

    It doesn’t matter that Democrat policies have been devastating to the poor and middle class workers in this country for almost 100 years. The poor and middle class still turn out in droves to vote for them. Democrat politicians have successfully positioned themselves as the party of the poor, and they’ve created an enmity between the poor and the rich.

    Democrats leaders perpetuate this enmity with popular slogans like “living wage,” “fair share,” “working poor,” “greedy rich,” “rich Republicans” and “evil profits.” Their rank and file have bought it hook, line and sinker.

    The Great Society
    By the late 1950s, ever-resilient America had somewhat recovered from the effects of Woodrow Wilson’s policies—the Federal Reserve, the income tax and World War I—and Franklin Delano Roosevelt policies—the New Deal and World War II—and prosperity was returning.

    Then along came Lyndon Baines Johnson, the Great Society and the next great expansion of the nanny state. Previous Democrat administration policies had been devastating to the people they purported to help and, with his Great Society programs, Johnson continued the assault on the poor under the guise of giving them a hand up.

    Within three years of assuming the Presidency in 1963, Johnson had requested 200 major pieces of legislation and Congress had approved 181 of them, according to Leslie Carbone in Slaying Leviathan: The Moral Case for Tax Reform. She writes:

    “Roosevelt had peddled the drug of government give-aways primarily in the poor neighborhoods; Johnson set up shop in middle-class cul-de-sacs, and most Americans, willingly or unwillingly, wittingly or unwittingly, are forced to shoot up. Johnson’s sweeping proposals sought to address almost every issue of concern to Americans: civil rights, poverty, education, health, housing, pollution, the arts, cities, occupational safety, consumer protection, and mass transit, to name only the most prominent.”

    As she quotes Johnson aide Joseph Califano from the book Lyndon Johnson and the Great Society, “LBJ adopted programs the way a child eats rich chocolate-chip cookies.”

    And what have these programs wrought? Mark Owen, adjunct professor of economics at Northwood University, wrote a column for LewRockwell.com on Feb. 7, 2007 entitled The Welfare State: Shredding Society. In it he said:

    “Births out of wedlock were consistently at or below 5% between 1940 and 1960. By 1970, the rate had risen to over 10% and has continued to rise to 33% of all births today… Divorce rates increased from 9 to 23 per 1,000 married couples annually from 1960 to 1980, while leveling off at 20 per 1,000 through 1998. How much of this leveling off in divorce rates is the result of relationships in groups with higher divorce tendencies never evolving past cohabitation is difficult to ascertain. Over half of children born today in the US will live in a single parent household, while in some areas the rate is much higher. It is hard to ignore the statistical relationship between crime and family dissolution.

    “While crime and family destabilization may be two of the more obvious results of the welfare state, there are many others. The stigma for single mother births has virtually disappeared. Intergenerational dependency on government programs with the related lack of skills for self-sufficiency, much like a farm animal unable to live without the farmer for food and shelter, has created people without hope or ambition.”

    The welfare state has created a cycle of dependency that perpetuates itself. Now there are third and fourth generations of single women living off welfare and raising children in single parent homes.

    Typically these women live in urban areas and their children are held hostage to failing inner city schools systems. And Democrat policies are to blame for these failing schools.

    In 1965 Johnson signed the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. It provided for aid to poor children in slums and rural areas, created a five-year program for school libraries to buy textbooks and other instructional materials and provided for educational research, among other things. Essentially, the Federal government took over the education of the children, according to Carbone.

    Carbone writes: “Representative Charles Goodell warned that the bill’s ‘clear intent is to radically change our historic structure of education by a dramatic shift of power to the federal level.’”

    The National Education Association (NEA) teacher’s union, a supporter of Democrat candidates and causes, opposes any and all efforts to inject competition or reform into the failing schools. Therefore Democrats oppose them as well. Combined with local teacher unions, the NEA also fights efforts to change the tenure system which protects the jobs of bad teachers to the detriment of the children.

    LBJ’s War on Poverty programs have been dismal failures. According to Carbone in Slaying Leviathan, $800 million was appropriated for the Economic Opportunity Bill of 1964. That bill created the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) and 10 other programs. The next year Congress appropriated $1.5 billion for OEO. Between 1965 and 1972 Congress spent $15 billion on the War on Poverty.

    “Launching the War Poverty, Johnson declared, ‘[T]he days of the dole are numbered.’ Within two generations, more than $10 trillion have been spent on this war, more in current dollars than was spent to win World War II,” Carbone writes.

    And through all that, Democrats are still looking for ways to spend money to fund programs to fight the War on Poverty.

    Obama And Echoes Of FDR
    Like Herbert Hoover, George W. Bush was a Republican without a conservative soul. And just like Hoover, his policies to battle the recession were all wrong. First was the stimulus bill of 2008, a $150 billion—1 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP)—kick in the economy through tax rebate checks that the government hoped would prevent or shorten the recession.

    Next came the $700 billion Emergency Economic Stabilization Act and Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). “I’ve abandoned free-market principles to save the free market,” Bush said at the time.

    Then Obama went one better than Bush. Just two months after taking office he pushed through Congress a $787 billion American Recover and Reinvestment Act of 2009. So within the space of one year more than $1.5 million new dollars had been injected into the economy, further eroding the value of the dollars the poor and middle class hold.

    What’s more, as Michael Barone writes for The Washington Examiner, “One-third of the 2009 stimulus money went to state and local governments–an obvious payoff to the public employee unions which gave hundreds of millions of dollars to Democrats and got hundreds of billions of dollars in return, to insulate public employee unions from the effects of the recession which has affected everyone else.”

    There’s another provision in the bill that provides a sop to unions. The money for “shovel ready” construction projects must be spent on firms using union labor. This raises the cost of the projects and freezes out many non-union poor or middle class construction workers.

    But Obama wasn’t finished. Despite the call from the American people to focus on jobs and the economy, Obama and his Congressional allies were single-mindedly pushing through an unconstitutional healthcare program which will cost $940 billion, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates.

    Touted as a bill to help the uninsured, it’s not likely to make things better. For one thing, those 32 million new patients are going to be trying to get appointments with the same number of—or fewer—doctors than we currently have. What’s more, the plan cuts Medicare payments and puts mandates on the states to cover more people under Medicaid—the program that insures the poor. This comes at a time when state budgets are in crisis.

    Plus, many doctors already refuse to take Medicare and Medicaid patients because the reimbursement is so low. With fewer doctors for fewer patients, that means rationed care. And the poor and middle class, who are unable to afford to pay out of pocket for a doctor’s care, will be the victims of rationed care.

    And then there are the tax increases in the bill. According to Bloomberg.com the bill imposes about $69 billion in penalties for individuals and businesses who don’t meet mandates to buy insurance.

    And The Hill newspaper reports that the Joint Committee on Taxation, congress’ official score keeper, says the new law will cost taxpayers earning less than $200,000 a year roughly $3.9 billion more in taxes—in 2019 alone—by limiting the medical expense deduction.

    On top of this are the taxes on pharmaceutical companies, medical manufacturers and insurance companies which will be passed on to the consumer.

    Finally, the healthcare bill will affect smaller rural communities with physician-owned hospitals. According to CNSNews.com, “The new health care overhaul law, which promised increased access and efficiency in health care, will prevent doctor-owned hospitals from adding more rooms and more beds.”

    Physician-owned hospitals have higher patient satisfaction, greater control over medical decisions for patients and doctor, better quality care and lower costs, according to Physician Hospitals of America, as quoted by CNSNews.com

    The Coming Value-Added Tax
    Obama economic advisor and former Federal Reserve Chief Paul Volcker recently suggested that it’s time for America to adopt a value-added tax (VAT). The White House immediately downplayed the idea. Then last week Obama admitted he was on board.

    “I know that there’s been a lot of talk around town lately about the value-added tax. That is something that has worked for some countries. It’s something that would be novel for the United States,” Obama told CNBC.

    After Volcker’s remarks the Senate passed a nonbinding “sense of the Senate” resolution that calls such a tax “a massive tax increase that will cripple families on fixed income and only further push back America’s economic recovery.”

    With the Tea Partiers already incensed over the administration’s policies and Congress’ actions, a VAT is not on the table before the November elections. But it’s coming. You can count on it. After all, it’s European, and Obama is hell-bent on turning American into a European socialist country.

    The VAT is a sales tax that is added onto every product at each stage of production. It is a regressive tax that inordinately affects the poor and middle class.

    In Slaying Leviathan, Carbone writes: “…the VAT has been disastrous in Europe. As a hidden tax, it is easy to raise and has continually increased. Its complicated nature expands government and makes it expensive to administer. A VAT forces businesses to bear heavy compliance costs in order to serve as tax collectors for the government.”

    Food and some necessities are often exempted from the VAT, which helps the consumer but not the business which has to administer it. Combine that with the fact that sometimes many different rates are applied, and the cost of compliance inordinately affects small businesses on which many families depend and which employ the most people, according to Carbone.

    In the end, all the VAT will do is grow government and give it more money to spend to further encroach on the lives of Americans while crushing the economy.

    Of course, growing government and creating a cycle of dependency is the goal of the Democrats. Party of the working man (or woman)? Not hardly. Not even old yellow dogs lying under the porch waiting for handouts thrive under Democrat policies.

  • ACORN CEO Encourages Socialism, Blasts Tea Party Movement

    ACORN CEO encourages socialism, blasts Tea Party movementIn a newly released video, Bertha Lewis, chief executive officer for the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), is reportedly captured praising socialism and degrading the Tea Party movement, comparing the recent conservative initiative to the eras of segregation and McCarthyism.

    The two-minute video, which appeared on the Verum Serum blog on Wednesday, focused on Lewis’ speech at the March 25 winter conference of the Young Democratic Socialists, where she encouraged the group of liberals to stand up for their beliefs, while warning them of the possibility of a turbulent future.

    "Any group that says, ‘I’m young, I’m Democratic, and I’m a socialist,’ is all right with me," she told the audience. "You know that’s no light thing to do—to actually say, I’m a socialist—because you guys know right now we are living in a time which is going to dwarf the McCarthy era…the internment during World War II…and the era of Jim Crow."

    Lewis went on to heavily criticize the Tea Party movement, calling the grassroots campaign a simple exercise of veiled bigotry.

    "This is not rhetoric or hyperbole—this is real," Lewis said. "This rise of this Tea Party so-called movement—bowel movement in my estimation—and this blatant uncovering and ripping off the mask of racism."
    ADNFCR-1961-ID-19737823-ADNFCR

  • NYTimes App Coming Soon?

    It sounds like we might be getting an official NYTimes application for Android any day now.  According to Google Mobile OS, a demo for a NYTimes app was found on the Nexus One YoutTube channel.  Unfortunately, the video cannot be found any longer.  On a positive note, an FAQ page has made its way online with some interesting questions that give insight into the app.

    Some of the features we can gather include the ability to change font size, share via twitter and facebook, and read offline with caching.  The free app will be available via the Android Market and nytimes.com/androidapp whenever it goes live.

    Might We Suggest…

    • App Review: Guardian Anywhere
      Guardian Anywhere is a mobile newspaper that allows you to catch up with the latest news from The Guardian newspaper on the go. This is done by downloading the content and then presenting it in a love…