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  • Teaching Sorting Skills in First Grade

    Introduction:

     VA SOL 1.20 requires that the student sort and classify concrete objects according to one or more attributes, including size, color, shape, and thickness. This mathematical concept is stimulated by the student’s exploration of their environment and most children begin to develop concepts related to sorting and patterns before they enter school. Recognition of similarities and differences as well as comparisons are essential components of children’s mathematical development.  The focus of instruction at the primary level and the role of the teacher is to help students understand the classification process in which two or more attributes connect or differentiate sets.

    The resources below are best used with students in the early elementary years, primarily first grade.

     

    Text Annotations

     booklizsorts.gif

    Liz Sorts It Out by Tracey West.

    A book from a kid’s favorite, The Magic School Bus Series. In this book It’s Arnold’s turn to take care of Liz, the classes pet lizard for the weekend. Arnold decides to take Liz to a rock show however Arnold has so many rocks in his collection he can not decide which rocks to bring. Liz comes up with ideas and suggestions on how Arnold may sort his rocks in an effort to decide which to bring. This a good book to read aloud to the class and it is nice because it deals with sorting of objects other then buttons which appears to be the favorite sorting object of most of the books on this topic.

     9780516454580.jpg

    Sorting by Henry Arthur Pluckrose.

    This book features colorful, vibrant photographs and clear concise text that is interactive with the reader. This book would be a great resource for a unit on sorting or to use as a review for a lesson on patterns. I would read this book aloud and show students each page. I would then reread the book although the second time I would ask students how they would sort the various items on each page.

     grandmasbuttonbox.jpg

    Grandma’s Button Box by Linda Williams Aber. This book was such a fun lovely story for first grade students learning about sorting. The book tells the story of a young girl, Kelly who accidently drops her grandmother’s box of buttons over, scattering the buttons across the floor. Kelly and her cousins work furiously sorting the buttons, first by shape, then size, and finally by color in an effort to return the button box to the original condition their grandmother had it in. Ultimately the story reveals that the grandmother never had the buttons organized and she is quite grateful for the organization her grandkids bestowed upon the buttons. This is a great book to read prior to having students sort their own items by shape, size, and color, which is one of the games I used in my instructional resource set.

     sort_it_out.jpg

    Sort It Out! By Barbara Mariconda.

    A cute story about a pack rat who comes home with a cart full of stuff (a locket, a book, an umbrella, a pinecone, and many more random items) and is forced to sort it all out and put it away by his mother. The book describes the process Packy the rat used to sort all the items, including grouping things with like characteristics such as where they’re found, their color, shape, etc. The illustrations are really fun because they are brightly colored, large, and very clear and children of all ages will enjoy looking at each page.

     41xz9nmgfyl_sl500_aa300_.jpg

    All Mixed Up! A Mixed-Up Matching Book by Julia Gukova. This book was serve a review prior to a lesson on sorting because a big component of sorting is matching. In order to sort by attribute students need to how to match up items and realize which items don’t match within a set. This book is wildly fun and is interactive for the reader therefore I think it might be best utilized as a book students read to themselves or within a small group as opposed to the teacher using this book for whole group instruction. In the book, readers have a mission to help Phineas the photographer organize his pictures that became “mixed-up” by a mischievous witch. The pictures feature different body parts (head, body, legs) of Phinea’s animal friends and the goal of the book is to match everyone up with their correct parts however, I think students will enjoy making up crazy creatures using different body parts from other animals (a warthogs head on an alligators body with zebra legs perhaps?)  The book is only pictures following a brief introduction which makes it perfect for a first grade reading corner type of book in which the students explore various books.

    Web Annotations:

    Candy Sorting Game

    This interactive game allows students to sort candy based on its shape. This game ties is nicely with lesson plans that incorporate the sorting of Halloween candy or other candies (jelly beans, M &Ms, or gummy bears). It is fun for students to play and gives audible directions which is nice and effective for first graders.

    Online Attribute Blocks Game

    Allows students to practice sorting attribute blocks by color, shape, and size. A checking features gives the student feedback about the answer before the student can move on to a new question.

    SORT Game

    A fun interactive game that gives clear concise directions to students. The directions include sorting items into the appropriate columns depending on specific characteristics (happy/sad, red/blue, big/small, etc.). Features big font and fun sound effects, which makes it fun for young students!

    Size Sorting Game

    A fun online game that has players choose which items are bigger and which are smaller while taking the player on a journey through an animal filled barnyard!

    Sorting by Color!

    A website with option for students to choose from. Each option links to a different online game that requires student’s sort items by color.

     

    Additional Resources

    Sorting Ideas Webpage

    A great website for sorting ideas and “real life” manipulatives that could be used for sorting activities.

    Sorting Song

    A website that features a fun song about sorting by size, color, and shape. Would be fun for kids to listen to and recite as they work with the concept of sorting.

    Shape Sorter Online Activity

    A really neat interactive shape sorter game that the teacher can set up for students to use. Allows the user to set up specifications for sorting by a number of attributes. Also has a venn diagram for comparing and contrasting purposes.

    What doesn’t belong activity?

    A page about sorting sets and identifying what items don’t belong in a set.

  • Corolla: Procon determina recall do sedã japonês por causa do tapete

    A Toyota terá de fazer um recall do Corolla por causa do tapete que prende o acelerador.
    O modelo já havia tido sua venda proibida em Minas Gerais, mas agora o Procon decidiu que a montadora japonesa deve corrigir o problema.
    A Toyota nega que haja problemas com o modelo, mas terá de respeitar a decisão do órgão do judiciário nacional.
  • Gucci Accidentally Sues Chanel; Gets Restraining Order… Then Apologizes

    The various luxury brand companies are pretty quick with trademark lawsuits these days — often going well beyond reason. We’ve seen it time and time again — especially when they sue third parties like Google or eBay. So I guess it shouldn’t be too surprising that in their rush to sue, they don’t always check all the facts… leading to hilarious scenarios like the one brought to our attention where Gucci accidentally sued Chanel and even got a temporary restraining order against the company.

    The timeline, as far as I can tell, goes like this. Last year, Chanel and LVMH sued some websites that were selling counterfeit goods. One of those websites was called MyPurseWorld.com. In a ruling last June, a federal district court in Florida transferred that domain to Chanel, who began using the website to post the court ruling and to post info about other counterfeiting sites. Fair enough (well, I might argue that, but we’ll leave it aside for now).

    However, earlier this month, Gucci sued a bunch of sites for trademark infringement — including MyPurseWorld.com. Apparently whoever put together the lawsuit hadn’t checked out the site since last June, or discovered that Chanel now owned it and it was being used by that company to post anti-counterfeiting info. So, basically Gucci sued Chanel, claiming that its MyPurseWorld.com site was selling counterfeit Gucci products. They even had Chanel served as a defendant. On top of that, a district court in Manhattan granted a restraining order against “the website or its owner” barring web hosts or ISPs from working with them. Technically, yes, this could have meant that Chanel couldn’t work with webhosts or ISPs. Of course, Chanel protested and Gucci quickly backed down, admitting “a minor bit of confusion.”

    I’m still a bit confused why the judge would totally bar a site from working with a webhost or ISP, but we’ll leave that discussion for another day.

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  • A Few Updates

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    Well, actually you can also do zero things, but you won’t get any more news from me. Sniff. 
  • Saiba quais são os carros mais baratos vendidos no Brasil

    Carros com preços abaixo de R$30 mil, representam 51% das vendas segundo a Fenabrave.
    Destes, foram listados os 10 mais baratos encontrados no mercado com preços sugeridos.
    O campeão é o chinês M100 da Effa, logo após vem os principais líderes do mercado nacional.
    Abaixo, os 10 mais vendidos:
    1) Effa M100 – R$23.480
    2) Fiat Mille – R$24.170
    3) Chevrolet Celta – R$24.800
    4) Renault Clio – R$25.600
    5) Ford Ka – R$25.600
    6) Fiat Palio Fire – R$26.900
    7) Volkswagen Gol G4 – R$27.180
    8) Chevrolet Classic – R$28.294
    9) Fiat Siena Fire – R$28.479
    10) Renault Logan – R$28.690
  • Father Invents System to Help Autistic Son Communicate [Lifechanger]

    As a result of severe autism and learning disabilities, eleven-year-old Callum Lodge is unable to talk. In order to allow his son to communicate with the world around him, his father has developed Speaks4me, an electronic communication system. More »







  • Chery confirma fábrica e dois modelos para o Brasil

    A Chery confirmou na China que terá uma fábrica no Brasil com produção iniciada até 2013. A unidade vai ser em um local que será divulgado nos próximos três meses.
    Essa fábrica vai produzir dois novos modelos para o Brasil: O hatch S18 e o sedã A13. O S18 é conhecido na China como Riich M1, pode ter duas ou quatro portas e motor 1.0 ou 1.3. 
    Já o A13 é um sedã compacto com vidro traseiro integrado ao porta-malas, sendo que seu motor é 1.5 de 109 cv e seu tamanho é semelhante ao do Logan.
    A Chery vai lançar a partir de Maio três novos modelos no mercado nacional, sendo o Face o primeiro e depois virão os modelos Cielo – hatch e sedã – e o pequeno QQ. 
  • 2010 Warrior Games


    Team engi-NERDS 3.0 place first in volleytball at Warrior Games (standing L to R: Muneer Ali, Harsh Gangakhedkar, Khrupa Saagar, Vrushen Pathak, Vanda Ametlli; sitting L to R: Lirjon Llusho, Amogh Bhokare, Rahul Dev Verma, Aditya Gunavante and Ajay Mudunuri)

    by Derrick Bean
    COE Public Affairs Writer

    The engi-NERDS 3.0, a team of more than 30 engineering students, finished second overall at the 2010 Warrior Games, the best ranking of their young career.

    Gabriela Diaz, mechanical engineering senior, is the engi-NERDS creator and team manager. She is more than happy with her team’s efforts. “I’m really proud of our team this year,” says Diaz. “We chose events that didn’t necessarily favor us, and we still pulled out second place, which is impressive. This year the competition was a little more competitive then we had anticipated or would have liked.”

    More than 25 teams competed in the Warrior Games, a week-long student competition aimed at improving campus life. The 2009 reigning champions, team Japanthers, returned to their number one spot with 1,940 points, receiving just 195 points more than the engi-NERDS.

    In their first event, the engi-NERDS stood firmly atop the two-on-two table tennis charts after conquering the Japanthers, making it known that they would indeed be a contender.

    The engi-NERDS also placed first in both volleyball and window painting, events that the Japanthers entered as well. Engineering students painted their window based on the Willy Wonka “Nerds” candy. In the painting, several “Nerds,” or creatures shaped like the popular candy, can be seen holding a table tennis paddle, a volleyball, or some other piece of equipment representing one of the many Warrior Games events.

    The engi-NERDS placed second in ultimate frisbee and third in the mandatory essay event. Their essay, written by John Herbon (ME) and Alisha John (CHE), answered the question: “How can WSU students become more involved in campus activities, intramural sports and student events?” Herbon and John took an “engineer’s approach” to the essay by using a problem-solving process. They wrote about emphasizing the importance of campus involvement early in a student’s career. The entire essay can be read here.

    Diaz says they attracted more students this year thanks to team captain Vanda Ametlli who created a Facebook group page to get the word out. “That is exactly what we wanted to happen,” says Diaz. “We all made a lot of friends this year, and had a good time.”

    It also helped to have the support of engineering students at each event, earning the team 90 volunteer points, just 10 fewer than the Japanthers. “It really did make a difference to have a larger team and to have people cheering on the sidelines,” says Diaz..

    Diaz is thankful for everyone who participated in the Warrior Games. She says support is important for the college and the campus. “I would encourage faculty, those who were not involved and those who are learning for the first time about Warrior Games to become more involved next year,” she says. “Ultimately, we’re representing the College of Engineering and having good support puts out a good message.”

  • Stilo se acidenta em Belo Horizonte: Cubo da roda traseira quebrou

    Um Fiat Stilo capotou em uma importante avenida de Belo Horizonte – MG na última terça-feira.
    O Stilo perdeu a roda, aparentemente pela quebra do cubo de ferro fundido, capotando logo em seguida. O motorista foi socorrido pelo resgate com ferimentos. 
    Esse acidente ocorre em um momento onde a Fiat ainda alega não haver problemas com o cubo de ferro usado no Stilo.
    O Ministério Público obrigou a realização de um recall por parte da Fiat, que acabou tendo que importar o cubo de aço forjado da Itália. 
    Foto: Thiago Aires Rodrigues.
  • GM devolve empréstimo junto aos governos do Canadá e EUA

    A GM pagou US$5,8 bilhões que devia para os governos do Canadá e EUA no dia de hoje.
    Além de pagar essa dívida, a GM investiu mais US$257 milhões em duas fábricas nos EUA para a produção do Novo Malibu e do híbrido Volt.
    A GM tem conseguiu se recuperar da crise e em Março conseguiu um aumento de 36% nas vendas dentro do mercado americano.
  • Watch: Super Street Fighter IV "All Star" trailer

    Check out the list of characters that will be present in the upcoming Super Street Fighter IV. The all star trailer after the jump.
     

  • Nina Paley: My Decision To Turn Down Netflix Due To DRM

    Sita Sings the Blues has a few Endorsed DVD distributors. In addition to QuestionCopyright.org and myself, there’s FilmKaravan, a distribution collective that handles “downstream” deals with VistaIndia and IndiePix. Their distributions are on amazon.com (I get a much smaller percentage from those than from my DVDs, but they reach a much wider market) and Netflix.

    In addition to physical DVD rentals, Netflix offers subscribers instant electronic delivery: streaming movies over the Internet to Mac, PC, Wii, PS3 and Xbox players. Many subscribers conveniently find new titles through this service. It’s just the sort of distribution channel that benefits a small film like Sita. They also pay producers, and don’t demand exclusivity. It’s a good deal all around, except for one problem: DRM.

    DRM, or Digital Restrictions Management, is technology “to control use of digital media by preventing access, copying or conversion to other formats by end users.” At best DRM reduces the functionality of computers; at worst it invades privacy and adds surveillance and malware. DRM End User License Agreements (EULAs) force users to surrender rights well beyond what copyright restricts.

    In the last few years DRM has grown increasingly pervasive, with little-to-no press coverage. Consumers passively accept it, as proven by Apple’s new “everything-DRM” device, the iPad.

    Creators, too, are accepting DRM as a fact of media distribution; offered no alternatives, they lose their ability to even imagine alternatives. DRM, like rights monopolies, is said to be made for creators. But like copyright, DRM is designed to benefit Big Media conglomerates, not artists.

    If this type of invasion of privacy were coming from any other source, it would not be tolerated. That it is the media and technology companies leading the way, does not make it benign. (link)

    A few weeks ago a content aggregator called Victory Multimedia contacted FilmKaravan:

    Netflix has shown interest in carrying your title “Sita Sings the Blues” for Electronic Delivery.  For a 12 month license period they are offering $4,620.00.  You would received $2310.00 no later than 60 days after the Netflix title release date and the balance of $2310.00 will be paid 6 months after the initial payment.

    First I asked (FilmKaravan to ask the aggregator to ask Netflix) if Netflix could make a DRM exception for Sita. Unfortunately no such option currently exists in Netflix’s electronic delivery system. Possibly no other filmmakers have even asked for such an option. iTunes used to offer only DRM music, but eventually enough people – including savvy “content providers”? –  demanded DRM-free channels that they now offer DRM-free music for sale along with Defective options (all iTunes movies carry DRM). Filmmakers lag far behind musicians in understanding the Internet, so it may be a while before Netflix, Amazon, iTunes, and other online distributors allow our “content” in their channels without adding malware and spyware to our films.

    I still wanted Sita to be in Netflix’s on-demand system. I want as many people to see Sita as possible; surely many viewers now rely on such a convenient delivery system to explore new films. Anyone who became a fan of Sita this way might still find the film’s web site, and learn how to download a free copy for themselves. Although Sita’s site states:

    You are not free to copy-restrict (”copyright”) or attach Digital Restrictions Management (DRM) to Sita Sings the Blues or its derivative works.

    I could still grant special permission to Netflix to add DRM to Sita. I asked if I could add a card to the front of the movie stating simply:

    Download and share this film from:

    sitasingstheblues.com

    The aggregator responded that this was not possible, due to a Netflix “no bumpers” policy.

    Looking back, I was conflicted because it was hard for me to see the DRM on Netflix’s streaming service as problematic. It’s not as though Netflix is telling anyone they’re “buying” the movies they stream; they’re just “renting” them. “Rental” already implies restrictions and limited use terms. They’re just trying to make the Internet work like the physical world, imposing artificial scarcities to resemble the natural scarcities of physical DVD rentals. We can accept natural scarcities; why not accept artificial ones?

    I was so conflicted, I asked my “Facebook friends” for advice. Responses were pretty split. Only a few knew what DRM was, but understood I could be compromising my principles by endorsing its use. Was that compromise significant? Was it time to “rise above my principles”?

    Facebook, being a walled garden whose “business model is spying,” is problematic itself; obviously I use it anyway, although I don’t expect it to be around in a few years unless it opens up. Two of my moral guidestars don’t use it out of principle, and I emailed them for advice. Richard Stallman wrote,

    I faced the same sort of question today: whether to approve release of my biography with DRM for the iBad. I said no, because the fight against DRM is my cause, and the iBad is the most extreme attack against computer users’ freedom today.

    It is self-defeating to try to promote a cause by supporting a direct attack against it.  Lesser forms of participation in things that you hope to eliminate can be overlooked, but Netflix is something we must specifically fight.  The example you would set by giving in would undermine everything….

    We launched an action against Netflix.  We tell people, “Don’t be customers of Netflix.”

    So I learned Netflix DRM was “real” DRM, rental or not. DefectiveByDesign.org asks people who rent physical DVDs from Netflix, to protest their DRM-laden electronic delivery service.

    It was John Gilmore’s email that hit me where I live:

    Don’t post your film via a DRM service.

    Insist that Netflix is free to release it without DRM, but they cannot release it with DRM.

    Creators keep knuckling under to these media middlemen who push DRM onto end users for their own lock-in reasons.  Like Apple. Like CDbaby.

    It will take pushback from creators to change this.  Be the change that you want to see….

    I’ve been the “change I want to see” in regards to copyright monopolies. People told me I’d lose everything by copylefting Sita, including all hope of professional distribution. But in fact, some professional distributors became willing to distribute Sita without claiming monopolies over it, and we’re all fine.

    I’d still love Sita to be offered through Netflix’s online channels; if they ever offer DRM-free video-on-demand, I hope they remember Sita Sings the Blues.

    For now, people will just have to obtain Sita by visiting the vast Internet outside of Netflix. Most of the Internet still isn’t enclosed by Netflix, or Amazon, or iTunes. Most of the Internet is still Free; I’m doing what little I can to keep it that way. I’m sad to lose the potential viewers who may have found Sita through Netflix’s electronic delivery. But maybe some of those Netflix subscribers will discover the rest of the Internet because of my tiny act of resisting DRM.

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  • Chineses copiam Porsche Cayenne

    porsche cayenne

    Que o mercado chinês vem crescendo dia após dia, ninguém pode negar, além disso, ultimamente os chineses vêm fazendo sua própria personalidade.

    Mas o que chamou a atenção na China essa semana não foi à personalidade própria do design chinês, mas sim uma cópia idêntica ao Porsche Cayenne na sua penúltima geração, lá denominado de “B35”.

    O modelo também se parece bastante com o Hyundai Santa Fé na sua parte lateral. Na dianteira o modelo também é quase idêntico ao Porsche Cayenne.

    O B35 será apresentado oficialmente no Salão de Pequim, no próximo dia 25. Mas paparazzi chineses já fizeram o serviço pra gente, antecipando o novo modelo chinês.

    Fonte: Auto Esporte


  • The coming of the Confederate X132 Hellcat

    Clockwise from top left: P120 Fighter, F131 Hellcat, C3 motor, and B120 Wraith

    We have developed a fondness for delightfully eccentric companies here at Gizmag, and the Confederate Motor Company is about as avant-garde as it’s possible to be. The company is just about to release its fourth motorcycle, and indications suggest a landmark vibration-canceling technology is on the cards for its new big V-twin. No images have been released of the complete bike, but it is expected to be as visually challenging as its predecessors (pictured). The X132 Hellcat will use a new motor (also pictured) developed in collaboration with S&S Cycle and you can see quite clearly that there’s some considerable space been devoted to the “revolutionary” engine mounting system. ..
    Continue Reading The coming of the Confederate X132 Hellcat

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  • Germans Are Reluctant To Give Greeks A Financial Weapon

    Will it backfire?

    Wednesday, April 21st saw Reuters publish not one, not two, but six articles on the Greek debt mess.

    Basically, they discussed what could be an amusing procedural hiccup for the planned Greek bailout. Papandreou’s “gun on the table” strategy could jam, ironically because of a German political dilemma.

    The German Chancellor Angela Merkel faces some pretty stiff opposition to bailing out what many Germans consider to be a rogue spending state. (Surprise!)

    Both the (left leaning) opposition party and the Bavarian sister of the (right leaning) governing party have expressed the desire to drum up some opposition. The Bavarians for ideological and financial reasons and the opposition for political opportunism, as they face an upcoming election race in the state your editor was born in.

    The amusing thing about all this springs from the fact that Angela doesn’t want to commit to a bailout until after the election:

    “If Germany pledged aid immediately after the election, that would leave 10 days to secure parliament’s approval before a key trigger event for markets tracking Greece’s efforts to manage its debt – the May 19 refinancing of an 8.5 billion euro bond.”

    “They’re really playing it close. What they need is the money a few days before the bond comes due” on May 19, said Christian Keller, a strategist at Barclay’s Capital.”

    Supposedly there is a serious risk that the German political process could be drawn out enough to make the Germans turn up late to the bailout party. Not to worry, the French and the IMF will save the day. With “177 billion Euros in debt coming due over the next 5 years”, it’s going to be a blast, to say the least.

    But what of the Greeks themselves? The crisis is about them after all.

    They are apparently too busy protesting to pay their taxes:

    “Hundreds of dockworkers blocked passenger vessels at Greece’s largest port, Piraeus, on Wednesday to protest the austerity measures.”

    Maybe there were German taxpaying tourists on the boats, who wanted to see for themselves where their money would be going. They may just get to see what they are looking for on a grand scale:

    “About half a million Greek civil servants are planning another 24-hour strike on Thursday.”

    Wow, half a million civil servants! And those are just the ones protesting!

    Run for the hills – the lender is coming

    The most concerning news of the week was when the IMF reported that everything was A-OK and the world would grow by over 4% this year. When the IMF says that, it’s time to run for the hills. Having ruined many developing nations with their loans, the IMF now has its fingers in the Greek pie as well.

    2 bubbles remain

    The Australian housing bubble seems to be getting a lot of press lately. The World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) has thrown a real left ball* with its article on the matter:

    “Household debt in Australia is now a higher percentage of GDP than in the US. If Australia has so far dodged the worst effects of the global crisis, this is because its private sector has not yet-in stark contrast to the rest of the world-deleveraged, that is, reduced its ratio of debt to assets. Such a development could be triggered by a significant fall in house prices, the first signs of which might be now emerging. Despite the housing bubble, the number of mortgages entered into by owner-occupiers (as opposed to investors) fell for a fifth consecutive month in February and was 22 percent down from the June 2009 peak.”

    * cross between “coming out of left field” and “throwing a curve ball”

    Wednesday’s Daily Reckoning pointed out that even the heroic International Monetary Fund has decided to have its two cents on Australian property:

    “In its Global Financial Stability Report published last night Australia time, the IMF wrote that, “The dramatic rise in residential property prices in recent years, especially in Australia, Ireland, the Netherlands, Spain and the United Kingdom has heightened concerns of an asset price bubble and thus the likelihood of a sharp price correction.”

    A more reliable evaluation comes from Jeremy Grantham, who has done a detailed study of bubbles and concluded that two remain: The UK and Australian housing bubbles. Check out an interview of him here – but be warned the interviewer is awful. Grantham also has some harsh words for central bankers, which makes the interview doubly worth watching.

    Gen Y is coming to their property buying senses and may be the first to stop buying into the sucker’s game of relying on capital gains and ignoring cash flows. But it may not be by choice. The Age reports:

    “More young Australians see themselves as lifelong renters as the dream of home ownership fades, a new survey has found.

    “The prospect of onerous debt has soured the hopes of more than half of generation Y members surveyed in a poll of new home buyers and perspective purchasers this month.”

    Regardless of whether it’s a rational response to unaffordable housing, or just the end of a bubble, homeowners could soon be hit hard if Gen Y doesn’t start buying. Especially overleveraged and invested “home” owners. Funnily enough, gen Y might find themselves with relatively affordable housing when it’s all over. Hopefully the bubble mentality will have disappeared for good.

    But poor Steven Keen will already have done his walk to “Kossie-oscar“. Perhaps we will see an Australian version of this musical soon.

    What’s on the horizon?

    To make sure the media focused its attention on financial reform and not the apocalyptic volcanic dust cloud, the Democratic majority of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) decided to sue Goldman Sachs last Friday. It did so in time to gain some attention for the passage of the Dudd, sorry Dodd Bill, a financial reform piece of legislation authored (sort of) by the retiring Senator from Connecticut, Christopher Dodd. The SEC move caused an impressive sell off in the market and a lot of anxiety about the future exposure of banks and brokerages to similar lawsuits.

    Daily Reckoning regular Eric Fry reported on Tuesday that, when “you shine a light on a cluster of cockroaches, they scatter and hide. But when you shine a light on a cluster of investment banking con men, they simply stare back and reply, “The SEC’s charges are completely unfounded in law and fact and we will vigorously contest them and defend the firm and its reputation.”

    Dan explained what happened here. Not that it’s much of a revelation.

    “The product was new and complex,” explained Robert Khuzami, a director from the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, “but the deception and conflicts were old and simple.”

    The implications for several other investment banks, which happen to have very similar cases against them in progress already, could be huge. Why Goldman Sachs gets all the press isn’t entirely clear. Especially considering that their case deals largely in CDSs, not CDOs, which means there has to be a counter party betting the opposite way and clients would have known this. The fraudulent aspect still stands though.

    Who is really getting bailed out?

    Something that has been lost on the press and their readers is the nature of a bailout. When a company, or a country, requires a bailout, they aren’t getting the money for themselves. That money goes to the creditors. Otherwise they wouldn’t need a bailout.

    Kris Sayce in our sister publication, Money Morning, pointed out where the UK taxpayer’s money went in the Royal Bank of Scotland bailout:

    “It turns out that of the billions of dollars the UK taxpayer gave to Royal Bank of Scotland, USD$841 million of it went to Goldman Sachs to pay for the losses incurred by the bank from its investment in the collateralised debt obligation (CDO) structured by… the “fabulous” Fabrice Tourre.”

    Can you guess who AIG’s single largest creditor was? Yep, Goldman Sachs. So AIG gets bailed too. And the Treasury Secretary just happened to be a former Goldman Sachs CEO…

    When you bail out a company (or country), you pay their creditors. The attention should be on them.

    Are you wondering who Greece’s creditors are yet? We know Goldman is involved in Greek CDSs again, which they used to help hide Greece’s debt levels.

    Yu’an us to Revalue?

    The focus of Dan’s Tuesday article wasn’t volcanic ash or fraud. It was the process of turning Australian dirt into Chinese steel. Obviously, the engineering side isn’t terribly relevant to the Daily Reckoning. Besides, in a free market that takes care of itself once you have demand for steel. So that is what the Chinese government went about doing – creating demand. Communist planning, capitalist execution. But how is it working out for them?

    Quite well so far… Just like with subprime up until 2007. So Dan reckons it’s just a question of timing:

    “The basic economic question at stake is how long can you keep producing things in excess of demand for a political objective?”

    Funnily enough, American congressmen don’t want to wait and find out. They want the unfair subsidy of currency manipulation to end now. “I want, I want!”

    Everyone is telling them that the Chinese don’t respond well to pressure. Maybe President Obama should make a statement outlining how cleverly China has managed to build up such huge dollar reserves. Then the Chinese could happily make a return gesture and use the reserves to bid up the Yuan.

    But reverse psychology doesn’t come with much political glory when it’s successful. And political glory is the Holy Grail for a politician. (Surprise!) Playing golf apparently comes a close second.

    We wish Barack Obama would do nothing but play golf and leave the people to their tax day tea parties. But when it comes to elections, image is everything and actions mean little. Some politicians are so good at creating an image of themselves in people’s minds, they can even act directly contrary to their supposed values without destroying their image.

    A few are so good at this that they manage to be remembered for their image, despite having enacted laws that directly contradict what they supposedly believed in. Ronald Regan and Herbert Hoover are two of these. Supposedly both free market, low debt enthusiasts, they did the opposite in office. But they are still remembered for their rhetoric, not their policies.

    Shopping for Banking Regulations in Basel

    The Basel Committee has got the Big Four bank’s knickers in a twist. Actually, it’s more their capital that’s being twisted. Because Aussie banks hold large amounts of mortgages without securitising them, they cannot be sold quickly, creating liquidity issues. This makes them different from those successful banks in the UK and US. (Another eight US banks failed last weekend.)

    So having been shown up by the financial crisis, the Basel Committee is having another go. Dan discussed it here.

    But why not tie banks to the mortgages they make? That would stop them from making stupid ones… Oh, that’s right, the banks pay the campaign bills.

    Back to the Boomers

    According to Tim from Canada, the Baby Boomers blamed for many countries abysmal fiscal finances were in fact victims, not villains:

    “With the greatest respect, the baby boomer generation did not start this collapse into the abyss.

    “Again, with the greatest of respect, the Roosevelt generation perfected what was created during the era of the creation of the Federal Reserve.

    “The baby boomers, because of our sheer size, merely paid for the mistakes of the Roosevelt generation. Social Security and Medicare, the twin monster which will destroy America, were not created by the baby boom generation. However, the baby boom generation did get to pay to keep the Roosevelt generation in a manner they could not afford and never could. The Roosevelt generation grew old and died on the backs of the baby boom generation.

    “The baby boomer generation have made their share of mistakes, but the creation of the abyss facing your great nation was created during the generation of one of your most revered Presidents, Franklin D. Roosevelt.”

    For the theorists

    The article introducing the gold and silver fraud to our readers has generated some interest. A UK reader wrote in wit the following:

    “Dear Mr. Hubble,

    “Your comments about Andrew Maguire are interesting. In Britain we found it curious that after the hit and run accident to Mr. and Mrs. Maguire the driver had two other collisions in his anxiety to get away from the scene. The police, using a spotter helicopter, finally apprehended the driver but much to everyone’s fascination, refused to release the driver’s name, or that of his employer. The driver now seems to have disappeared without being charged???”

    There is a movement in America that believes President Obama is not constitutionally eligible to be President. The claim is that he wasn’t born in America, banning him from the position. But now the Arizona state government is onto the case:

    “The Arizona House on Monday voted for a provision that would require President Barack Obama to show his birth certificate if he hopes to be on the state’s ballot when he runs for re-election.”

    Oh … bummer.

    Have a great weekend.

    Nickolai Hubble.
    The Daily Reckoning Week in Review

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    FAW Red Flag – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Beijing-based First Auto Works has long been the provider of the official transportation for the hierarchy of the People’s Republic of China. Back in the 1950s, FAW started off building a localized version of the standard Soviet parade car, and over the past half century, they have evolved. FAW has also built licensed stretched sedans based on Audi and Lincoln vehicles.

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    Photos by Sam Abuelsamid / Copyright (C)2010 Weblogs, Inc.

    Beijing 2010: First Auto Works Red Flag limo is fit for government work originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 23 Apr 2010 20:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    A porta não some necessariamente, mas se não prestar atenção, alguns podem pensar que a porta some mesmo.

    O vídeo não passa de um sistema inovador de abertura de portas. Um sistema assim deixa muito mais simples tarefas do dia a dia.

    Quem nunca estacionou no shopping ou supermercado, e veio um engraçadinho e parou bem do lado do seu carro que você custa passar de lado e muito menos consegue abrir a posta. Pois é, se você tivesse um sistema assim, aposto que você não teria que puxar o freio de mão do carro para ele descer para você poder abrir a porta do tanto que dê para entrar.

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    Li M, Piao JH, Tian Y, Li WD, Li KJ, Yang XG.

    Institute of Nutrition and Food Safety, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 29 Nan Wei Road, Xuanwu District, Beijing 100050, People’s Republic of China.
    Abstract
    Consumption of resistant starch (RS)-enriched foods is associated with decrease in the postprandial glycaemic and insulinaemic responses, accompanied by the production of fermentation-related gases in the large bowel. The present study aimed to determine the postprandial glycaemic and insulinaemic responses to the GM RS-enriched rice and the fermentation-related production of H2 in young and healthy Chinese adults. A total of sixteen young adults (nine men and seven women) were recruited and divided into three groups. Their postprandial glycaemic and insulinaemic responses to 40 g glucose, carbohydrates of RS or wild-type (WT) rice were tested by a crossover model with a washout period of 7 d. The concentrations of blood glucose and insulin as well as breath H2 were measured before and after food intake. Although the mean concentrations of fasting blood glucose, insulin and breath H2 were similar, consumption of the RS rice significantly decreased the values of glycaemic index (GI) and insulin index (II), as compared with the intake of WT rice (48.4 (sem 21.8) v. 77.4 (sem 34.9) for GI, 34.2 (sem 18.9) v. 54.4 (sem 22.4) for II, P < 0.05), respectively. Conversely, intake of the RS rice meal significantly elevated the concentrations of breath H2, as compared with WT rice (38.9 (sem 17.6) v. 10.5 (sem 3.7) parts per million for peak levels of breath H2, P < 0.05) through a period of 16-h tests. Consumption of the GM RS-enriched rice meal decreased the postprandial glycaemic and insulinaemic responses and promoted RS fermentation-related production of H2 in the large bowel of young and healthy Chinese adults.

    Br J Nutr. 2010 Apr;103(7):1029-34. Epub 2009 Nov 24.

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