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  • Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies seeks papers for 2010

    The Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies seeks submissions for its 2010 Noma-Reischauer Prizes in Japanese Studies, given to the undergraduate and graduate students with the best essays on Japan-related topics. The submission deadline is June 21 by 5 p.m., and $3,000 will be awarded for the best graduate student essay and $2,000 for the best undergraduate student essay.

    Papers written this academic year are eligible, including course and seminar papers, A.B. or M.A. theses, or essays written specifically for the competition. Doctoral dissertations are excluded from consideration. For application guidelines and further information, visit the Reischauer Institute Web site or call 617.495.3220.

  • Live Blogging from PrimalCon 2010

    PrimalCon day1

    Hello, everyone! This is the editor of Mark’s Daily Apple, Aaron Fox. Mark has his hands full today, so I’ll be reporting from the field. Check back throughout the day for text, photo and (maybe, fingers crossed) video updates.

    7: 53 am: There’s a buzz in the air as the inaugural PrimalCon kicks off in beautiful Oxnard, California. Attendees are trickling in. Grok On! shirts have been sighted.

    Stay tuned for updates!

    Get Free Health Tips, Recipes and Workouts Delivered to Your Inbox

    Related posts:

    1. Announcement: PrimalCon 2010 and The Primal Blueprint Cookbook Offer
    2. Barefoot Ted Speaking at PrimalCon 2010
    3. PrimalCon 2010 Announcement: Sit, Stand and Walk Like Grok

  • Be Part of the Solution: Travel lighter

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    After running our households, transportation is the second biggest way we humans degrade the environment. If we were traveling in droves, on say trains, it wouldn’t be so bad. But our penchant to scoot  around solo or in small groups in gas-fueled vehicles has left an impressive scar on the globe.

    Vintage car (Photo: Stephen Mcsweeney/Dreamstime)

    Vintage car (Photo: Stephen Mcsweeney/Dreamstime)

    Starting with the paved roads that carve up wildlife habitat, and ending with those recently popular luxury SUVs that spurn air quality with their single and low double digit gas mileage, automobiles have created a huge carbon footprint.

    The good news is that soon, very soon, cars will once again run on electricity. Their tailpipe emissions will be clean, and once their charging stations are powered by clean energy, we’ll be mopping up the mess made by our current fleet, which contributes millions of metric tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere every year.

    To put that on an individual basis: If you drive a car getting 20 mpg around 12,000 miles a year, you’ll churn out some 12,253 pounds of CO2 in a year, according to the EPA’s calculator.

    As a rule of thumb, every gallon of gas burned emits 20 pounds of carbon dioxide.

    The contribution of cars and trucks to climate change may be better understood in the aggregate. Given that one-third of the U.S. carbon emissions are transportation related, if American cars and light trucks (excluding tractor trailers) were a nation, they’d be the world’s fifth-largest carbon emitter, according to the Environmental Defense Fund. (This factoid is two years old; things could be changing with the developing world getting motorized.)

    Now if we can just move ahead with those electric cars…convince developing nations to skip echoing our long love affair with big fancy wheels and go directly to more thoughtful vehicles…and get our passenger rail system back in action…and stop sprawl before it ruins us… the world will be in a better position to curb this runaway carbon problem.

    Here are a few things to consider if you’d like to lower your personal transportation eco-debt:

    1 – Start small. In fact, don’t even start. Experts advise that we should simply drive less. That can mean grouping errands, car pooling to school – wait, walking to school! – and finagling a way to do some of our work form home. Not everyone can commute part-time, but those who can and aspire to, should ask about it. As employers take stock of their own footprint, they are realizing that helping their employees lighten their carbon load can be part of the bigger company equation. These are the quickest ways to reduce your gas consumption, and they represent a dollar for dollar savings, unlike buying a car. But we’ll get to that.

    2. Carpool – Sharing a ride to work is the quickest way to cut in half, or more, the miles you commute. Try eRideShare.com,which notes it has been in business since 1999. Its listing service is updated daily, so those seeking a ride can get current info on someone offering a ride, and vice-versa. The lists are sorted by city, and riders note the details of their ride needs, so you can check out departure points, etc., before making a contact.

    The downside to carpooling: you might have to make a stop that’s not at your exact destination and your car partner might wear a funny cologne. The upside: less wear on the car, gas savings, pollution savings and a lower personal carbon footprint. And ride sharing’s not just for commuters. Taking a cross-country trip? You might find someone going the same way. Slice that gas bill in half.

    Other carpool services include:

    • Carpool Connect — An unadorned site, but filled with message boards of riders and drivers. Just drill down to the city and zip code you need to find a commuting mate.
    • Carpool World — A smaller service, but it offers the moral support of tracking the saved carbon emissions of users, by geographic area.
    • GoLoco — This service also can help you find a driving pal. But the service is not free. Drivers and riders register and GoLoco helps protect the driver by setting up the fee structure, and taking a 10 percent cut.

    3.  Car sharing — Moving deeper into the alternative transportation scene, there’s car sharing. The idea here is that you belong to a service and can access a car on a pay-and-go as needed basis. Zipcar is a pioneer in this new field, and is turning up in central cities and attached to LEED apartment buildings. For people who don’t want the burden of owning a car (or a second car), with all its attendant parking, licensing and insurance fees, car sharing can make a big financial impact, not to mention it keeps people, well, grounded the rest of the time.

    Certain areas have their own services such as:

    4.  Use public transportation. If you live in New York or Chicago, this is probably a part of daily life already. But those in Houston, Dallas and Los Angeles may have to get familiar with still-expanding systems.

    Houston's Metro

    Houston's Metro

    Light rail has been the mantra for years in cities building their transit networks, because it is fast and efficient. But many transit authorities also are experimenting with vanpools, which can collect smaller groups of riders and deposit them in major business districts, and expanding their bus services.

    Buses are getting better, less polluting and quieter, especially those running on hybrid engines or batteries.

    The American Public Transportation Association estimated this month that riders can save about $9,200 in annual transportation costs by taking a bus to work. (The survey figured costs using $2.83 a gallon gasoline and factoring average costs for parking and other fees associated with solo car travel.)

    5. Ride a bike. This is one great option for people in denser cities, with the legs and the ability. In suburbs where groceries can be two miles from the house and the tots need cereal right away, well, there are barriers to incorporating a bike. But when it is workable, it’s an appealing option with a long list of bonuses, from the health benefits to the low cost of maintenance and the incredible, immediate near net-zero carbon imprint.

    6. Green your vacation travel. Take the train, or a bus. And once you get where you’re going…take  a train or a bus.

    Amtrak, despite its step-child position in the U.S. transportation mix, has stayed on track for the past few decades and experienced a ridership boom before the recent economic downturn. While high speed rail revs up in several U.S. locales, Amtrak is an option for today, connecting major cities across the U.S. with an extensive and busy network in the Northeast and along the Great Lakes.

    Greyhound also still makes city-to-city hops an inexpensive way to go.

    Need to rent a car? Get a hybrid. Enterprise Rent-a-Car has made green vehicles a priority and boasts that its fuel-efficient fleet is most flush with hybrids. Enterprise also offers a short-term car sharing service for businesses called WeCar.

    Other rental companies also offer hybrids and high-mileage cars.

    7. Get a Hybrid or EV. When and if you’re ready to buy a new car, get a hybrid. Or at least get a high mileage gasoline or diesel engine vehicle. And don’t be seized with guilt that you don’t have one already. There’s a legitimate green aspect to driving an old car (no new car was manufactured on your behalf) though your tailpipe emissions are probably pretty thick compared to newer models .

    Electric cars may be worth looking at within the year. It could work. Nissan’s new Leaf promises a range of 100 miles per charge, which can cover many people for the day. And cities are gearing up to help. San Francisco has a growing network of charging stations that will enable people to re-charge in the city. Several other metro areas, such as Tuscon and Nashville, are picking up the pace creating a charging network in partnership with the Leaf and its charging station provider, Ecotality.

    There’s also the Project Get Ready network operated in part by the Rocky Mountain Institute to help nurture city plans for electric car infrastructure. If your city is on board, you can expect to see charging stations in public places to ease the transition to electric vehicles.

    Meantime the menu of high mileage cars is exploding. Here are just a few that have caught our eye at recent auto shows and green fairs:

    • From Ford: The Fusion Hybrid, winner of Car of the Year at the 2010 North American International Auto Show, gets 36 mpg on the highway, 41 mpg in the city, and offers more room in the back seat and trunk than almost anything getting comparable mileage. A true family sedan hybrid. Looking for something small and sporty? The Fiesta, revamped and now being sold in the U.S. and not just the rest of the world, is all-fun. It gets good gas mileage, but it runs on gasoline only.
    • From GM: Of course, there’s the ballyhooed Volt, a plug-in electric due in late, late 2010 or 2011. But frankly, the Cruze, might present a better immediate mix of both fuel and wallet economy. Expected to get 40 mpg on the highway, it has been abroad (are we sensing a trend here?) and is coming to the U.S. in late 2010.
      The Chevy Cruze, a new high mileage entrant from GM.

      The Chevy Cruze, a new high mileage entrant from GM.

    • From VW: The Jetta TDI (30 city, 42 highway) is a diesel, but much cleaner than before. It’s one cute ride, with amazing room inside. How do the German’s do that? A bonus: You can run biodiesel in these cars.
    • For two-sters who don’t need to toss a tot in the rear seat, there’s the Smart fortwo. It gets gas mileage in the 40s, is easy to park and you may get a parking rate break in big city garages. We’re holding back some of our adoration until the hybrid version.

      The Think

      The Think

    • Another urban micro-car to think about is the Think. This one, in fact, is a zero emissions all-electric, fast-charging EV, which gives it a leg up on the competition.  This Scandinavian marvel is coming soon to a U.S. city via an Indiana factory. It will be a little while before the factory gears up, but expect to see this bitty car skittering around American cities soon. (This it the only car on the list we haven’t personally examined, not that we wouldn’t like to visit Europe….)
    • From Honda: The Insight has some serious clarity on pricing, with a starting sticker in the $20,000 range. Problem is, the sticker with features was a lot higher when we saw it, putting it closer to its main competition (see below).  Still, with a combined mpg of 40 in the city and 43 on the highway… And we there’s the trusty Civic Hybrid with its robust gas mileage (45 mpg on the highway) and kinda, sorta reasonable price.
    • Toyota’s Prius. Nah, we didn’t forget Toyota. The Prius (54 mpg city/48 highway) still rocks. But they’ve gotta fix that run-away problem.

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

    More Earth Day coverage:

  • China senior official stresses importance of impartial judiciary

    [JURIST] A top Chinese official on Thursday appealed to the nation’s judges, urging them to be impartial when issuing rulings. Speaking in front of a national meeting of high court presidents in the Shaanxi Province, Central Committee of the Communist Party of China official Zhou Yongkang stressed the importance of fair and honest justice in order to build a country ruled by law. President of the Supreme People’s Court (SPC) Wang Shengjun agreed with Zhou’s sentiments, contending that reform of the judiciary will contribute to social justice.
    The Chinese government has recently focused attention on ridding corruption in official channels. Last week, a Chinese Intermediate People’s Court in Chongqing sentenced a former deputy police chief and high-ranking judicial official to death for accepting bribes, protecting criminal gangs, rape, and being unable to justify his large amount of personal assets. In March, the Hebei Province People’s High Court upheld a life sentence for former SPC vice president Huang Songyou, who had been convicted of bribery and embezzlement. Earlier that month, Wang called for increased efforts to fight corruption in the country’s court system. In January, the SPC announced new anti-corruption rules in an effort to increase public confidence in the rule of law. In October, two Chongqing courts sentenced six individuals to death for their connections with organized crime gangs.

  • Ford Start Minicar Concept Makes Beijing Debut

    One of the biggest disappointments for me at the New York Auto Show was the utter lack of clever concept cars. There was a time when all the automakers were putting forth outrageous, impossible concepts, just because. But everybody has had to tighten their belts a few notches due to the global recession, and the concept cars have, quite frankly, gotten boring.

    Leave it to Ford to debut an exciting concept… in China. Unveiled at the Beijing Auto Show, Ford introduced a new concept car called the “Start,” the only aspect of this concept ever destined for production is the three-cylinder EcoBoost engine. But it is still rather pretty.

    (more…)

  • Sumner Redstone donates $1 million to Harvard University

    Boston, MA (April 23, 2010) — Harvard University today announced that Sumner M. Redstone has contributed $1 million to be used by Harvard College and Harvard Law School. This contribution by Mr. Redstone, a graduate of both schools, will establish scholarships for 20 Redstone Scholars to attend Harvard College for the 2010–2011 academic year. Additionally, Mr. Redstone’s gift will furnish funding for 10 postgraduate public service fellowships at Harvard Law School.

    The Sumner M. Redstone Undergraduate Scholarship Fund will provide financial assistance to deserving men and women at Harvard College. The fund will support undergraduates from a broad range of socioeconomic backgrounds who demonstrate a commitment to public service reflecting the civic ideals of President John F. Kennedy.

    “I am deeply grateful to Mr. Redstone for this generous gift. It will help ensure that Harvard College is accessible to students who hold service to the public good as a fundamental value,” said Michael D. Smith, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and John H. Finley Jr. Professor of Engineering and Applied Sciences. “These immediate-use scholarships support the College’s strong commitment to creating a diverse and outstanding undergraduate class each year.”

    At Harvard Law School, the Redstone Fellowships will support 10 students who wish to pursue postgraduate public service.

    Martha Minow, dean of the Faculty and Jeremiah Smith Jr. Professor of Law, said, “In the 50 years since John F. Kennedy inspired a generation with his call to service, Sumner Redstone has steadfastly answered that call throughout the course of his extraordinary career and as a visionary leader in our society. Now, with these fellowships, he shares his inspiration by supporting the newest generation of lawyers who wish to make a difference in the lives of their fellow human beings. I am enormously grateful for his vision and leadership. The 10 recipients of his generosity will magnify his contribution many times over, by helping untold numbers of people. As President Kennedy’s brother Robert said, each time a person acts to improve the lot of others, ‘he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.’”

    Mr. Redstone said, “As a graduate of both Harvard College and Harvard Law School, I have experienced firsthand the culture of excellence and public service that is a fundamental tradition of these great schools. Harvard’s longstanding commitment to leadership through enlightenment and engagement provides an outstanding foundation for the next generation of leaders for the U.S. and around the world.

    “As the 50th anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s presidency nears, we reflect on how his influence sparked an era of optimism, activism and national service. I have established these scholarships to help celebrate President Kennedy’s spirit by fostering a focus on education and a renewed commitment to public service. I am honored to have the opportunity to recognize and encourage these admirable young men and women.”

    The recipients of the scholarships announced today will be chosen based on criteria that include a commitment to public service that reflects President Kennedy’s civic ideals.

    Mr. Redstone has recently awarded more than $100 million in charitable grants to fund initiatives in the U.S. and abroad. His contributions have funded research and patient care advancements in cancer, burn recovery and mental health at several major non-profit healthcare organizations, and have provided support for groups that care for impoverished children in Southeast Asia.

    Sumner M. Redstone

    Mr. Redstone has served as the Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors of Viacom Inc. (NYSE: VIA and VIA.B) since Jan. 1, 2006. He also serves as Executive Chairman of the Board of CBS Corporation. He was Chief Executive Officer of the former Viacom Inc. from 1996 to 2005 and Chairman of the Board of the former Viacom Inc. since 1986. He has also been Chairman of the Board of National Amusements, Inc., Viacom’s controlling stockholder, since 1986, its Chief Executive Officer since 1967 and also served as its President from 1967 through 1999. Mr. Redstone served as the first Chairman of the Board of the National Association of Theatre Owners and is currently a member of its Executive Committee. He has been a frequent lecturer at universities, including Harvard Law School, Boston University Law School and Brandeis University. Mr. Redstone graduated from Harvard University in 1944 and received an LL.B. from Harvard Law School in 1947. Upon graduation, he served as law secretary with the U.S. Court of Appeals and then as a special assistant to the U.S. Attorney General. Mr. Redstone served in the Military Intelligence Division during World War II. While a student at Harvard, he was selected to join a special intelligence group whose mission was to break Japan’s high-level military and diplomatic codes. Mr. Redstone received, among other honors, two commendations from the Military Intelligence Division in recognition of his service, contribution, and devotion to duty, and the Army Commendation Award.

  • US military appeals court overturns Marine’s conviction for Iraqi civilian killing

    [JURIST] A military appeals court on Thursday reversed the conviction of US Marine Sgt. Lawrence Hutchins III for the 2006 killing of an Iraqi civilian, citing lack of a fair trial. In an 8-1 decision, the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that the departure of one of Hutchins’s primary attorneys shortly before the court-martial began resulted in an unfair trial. The ruling makes it possible that Hutchins may be restored to his prior rank, which was reduced to private following his conviction. The Navy JAG Corps may appeal the decision within 30 days.
    Hutchins was serving an 11-year sentence, reduced from 15 years, for his role in the April 2006 kidnapping and murder of Iraqi civilian Hashim Ibrahim Awad in Hamdania. He was convicted in 2007 of murder, conspiracy to commit murder, making a false official statement, and larceny. Six Marines pled guilty to charges related to their roles in the incident, which involved Awad being removed from his residence and killed, then arranged with a shovel and firearm to appear as if he were planting an improvised explosive device.

  • Dell Brightens The Day With Flash

    Found under: Dell, Android, Flash, Google, Smartphones, Thunder, Lightning, Smoke,

    Dell are on a roll where leaking hot mobile smartphone handsets are concerned if you havent been following up on the pure awesomeness that us Dell then let me re-cap. First there was the Smoke a mid class Android smartphone that could pass for a high end phone any day then there is the Thunder that is another Android smartphone dancing in Dell labs while awaiting its turn to hit the market last but not least we talked about Dell Lightning this beauty is all Windows Phone 7 and it is

    Read More

    Read more in mobile format

  • GE powers ‘Green Hornet’ fighter in biofuel flight

    Contributor Mike Epstein is the leader of Alternative Fuels for GE Aviation.

    Pond scum, grass clippings and old T-shirts may not seem to be terribly appetizing topics, but they are providing food for thought as alternative energy sources that can power today’s United States military aircraft and support broader military strategy aimed at fuel independence. GE F414 engines are at the front line, having powered the Boeing F/A-18 “Green Hornet” on its initial biofuel-powered flight yesterday — the first Naval fighter to be powered by a biofuel blend. The Navy noted that the F414 engine performed as expected during the 45-minute flight — and indicated “the aircraft did not know the difference between the bioblend and its traditional fuel source.”


    Mixed drink: The Navy chose Earth Day to showcase the supersonic flight of the F/A-18 Super Hornet strike fighter jet, which was powered by a 50/50 biofuel blend. The flight, pictured above, drew hundreds of onlookers that included Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus, who has made research, development, and increased use of alternative fuels a priority for the Department of the Navy. (U.S. Navy photo by Kelly Schindler/Released)

    In addition to environmental stewardship, biofuel blends of petroleum and non-petroleum sources can offer significant advantages. Designed to be “drop in” replacements, their physical and chemical properties are similar, if not identical, to conventional fuels they replace. As a result, customers do not necessarily need to spend time or money making costly aircraft modifications. Applied to today’s aircraft, the ‘Green Hornet’ initiative can increase capability by reducing reliance on fossil fuels from foreign sources and reducing volatility associated with long fuel supply transport lines.

    In addition to helping the Navy meet its goal of deriving half its energy needs from alternative sources by 2020, the F404/F414 program is proceeding with an eye on green on several other fronts. New technologies could help reduce specific fuel consumption (SFC) for the Navy’s F/A-18E/F Super Hornet fleet by 3 percent and save two million gallons annually – the equivalent of driving your car around the world about 1,200 times if it got 20 miles to the gallon.

    GE is also developing a noise reduction kit for the F414 using a chevron exhaust nozzle. These nozzles have serrated edges where each “lobe” penetrates into or out of the primary flow and generates a secondary flow, significantly reducing jet noise. Testing has shown a 2-3- decibel reduction, which is equivalent to turning off one of the F/A-18’s two engines.

    I’m glad to be a part of this exciting transformation … and I may think twice before discarding all of my old concert T-shirts!


    Power plants: Prior to flight testing, GE ran more than 500 hours of component tests and close to 20 hours of F414 engine testing to validate that the engine would operate successfully using the biofuel blend, which used a fuel derived from the camelina plant — a U.S.-grown, renewable, non-food source. In 2008, Virgin Atlantic flew its GE CF6-powered Boeing 747 from London to Amsterdam, becoming the first airline in the world to fly on biofuel. (U.S. Navy photo)

    * Read today’s announcement about the test flight
    * Learn more about GE’s fuel work with the Navy
    * Learn more about GE’s F414 engine
    * Read about the science in the test flight in Discover magazine and National Geographic
    * Watch the test flight, shot at the Naval Air Station in Patuxent River, Md.
    * Read the Navy’s story about the test flight
    * Learn more about Virgin Atlantic’s biofuel flight
    * Lean more about GE Aviation’s work with biofuels

  • Author Michael Eric Dyson to Be Keynote Speaker at Multi-Cultural Graduation Celebration

    KNOXVILLE — Author, professor, minister and commentator Michael Eric Dyson will be deliver the keynote address at the Multi-Cultural Graduation Celebration on Saturday, April 24, at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

    Doors open at 4 p.m. at the University Center Auditorium. The event begins at 4:30 p.m. The event is free and open to UT students and the Knoxville community.

    Dyson has authored more than 15 books, including “Come Hell or High Water: Hurricane Katrina and the Color of Disaster,” “April 4, 1968: Martin Luther King’s Death and How it Changed America,” and most the most recent, “Can You Hear Me Now?: The Inspiration, Wisdom, and Insight of Michael Eric Dyson.” His writings are known for combining cultural criticism and biography, focusing on race, religion, popular culture and contemporary issues in the African- American community.

    He is a professor of sociology at Georgetown University where he teaches courses in theology, English and African-American studies. Last year he started his own radio show on WEAA-FM in Baltimore. “The Michael Eric Dyson Show” premiered April 6, 2009, with inaugural guest Oprah Winfrey.

    There will be a book signing reception at the Black Cultural Center, located at 1800 Melrose Ave., immediately following the event. For additional information, including disability accommodations, contact the Black Cultural Programming Committee at 865-974-6861 or visit the website.

    The Multi-Cultural Graduation Celebration is hosted by the Black Cultural Programming Committee and the Office of Minority Student Affairs. The event aims to unite, honor and bring together UT Knoxville students to celebrate the milestone of graduation.

    C O N T A C T :

    Rebekah Winkler (865-974-8304, [email protected])

    Demetrius Richmond (865-974-6861, [email protected])

  • Twitter, Chumby and a Cuckoo Bird Walk Into a Clock… [Clocks]

    The Twitwee Clock is one ungodly amalgam: part Cuckoo Clock, part Chumby, part Twitter updater. And it’s customizable; you can make that little bird sing based on Twitter keywords of your choosing. Advice: don’t set it to “Justin Bieber.” More »







  • GeigerCars gives Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport a total of 588-hp

    GeigerCars 2010 Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport

    Pumping out 430-hp, the Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport runs a 0-60 mph time in less than 4 seconds – and that may be very impressive to most out there but tuner GeigerCars thinks it can do better. Meet the 2010 GeigerCars Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport.

    Power has been increased from 430-hp to a total of 588-hp with a maximum torque of 544 lb-ft. While GeigerCars doesn’t confirm exact 0-60 mph numbers (says its less than 4 seconds), it says that top speed has been increased to a whopping 209 mph.

    Living in Europe, the 2010 Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport will cost you 66,900 Euros ($89,140 USD), but GeigerCars performance upgrades will run you back an additional 16,450 Euros ($21,918 USD) and 2,800 Euros ($3,730 USD) for a modified transmission ratio.

    Click through for the press release.

    GeigerCars 2010 Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport:

    GeigerCars.de GmbH – Corvette Grand Sport

    The name “Grand Sport” is entrenched in the racing history of the Chevrolet Corvette. Now, for the 2010 model year, there is a new edition that evokes memories of the racecars of the seventies – and Geigercars.de has already given these rockets an additional performance upgrade.

    With the LS3 V8 under the bonnet, and the corresponding 430 hp and 575 Nm in torque, the Grand Sport is certainly not short of legs when it leaves the factory. But why be satisfied with production line performance, when tuning specialist Geigercars.de can give you something more? Thanks to the Munich pros, a supercharger with a fat 2.3 litres capacity sits on top of the eight-cylinder engine, which itself exhibits a volume of 6.2 litres. The result is a growth in the power of the Corvette to an immense 588 hp at 6,490 rpm, and torque of 738 Nm at 4,030 rpm. This ultimate sports car negotiates the sprint to 100 km/h in less than four seconds from contact, and it’s not until reaching 337 km/h that the Geigercars.de rocket is forced to relent to wind resistance.

    The Grand Sport impresses both aesthetically and technically, with wider front and rear fenders with additional vents, to accommodate the larger brakes of the sister model Z06 with its 355 mm, six-cylinder discs at the front axle, and 340 mm, four-cylinder discs at the rear. The front diffuser and larger rear spoiler are also borrowed from the engineers of the Corvette Z06. Sway bars, shock absorbers and springs have also been overhauled in addition to the six-speed transmission, while a dry sump oil system and differential cooler are also on board. The battery of the Grand Sport has been relocated to the rear. Optimum road contact is guaranteed by the 18 and 19 inch light alloy rims, with 275/35 and imposing 325/30 tyres.

    Special factory-installed emblems on the front fenders, and not least the special graphics applied by Geigercars.de to the fenders, bonnet and boot lid, draw even the untrained eye to the character of this very special elite athlete – and underline that certain something about the entire project perfectly.

    Technical specifications – Geigercars.de Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport

    Engine: 6.2 litre V8
    Output: 588 hp at 6,490 rpm
    Torque: 738 N m at 4,030 rpm
    Top speed: 337 km/h
    Supercharger with 2.3 litre capacity and 0.6 bar charging pressure
    Transmission: Six-speed manual transmission (5th and 6th gears modified)
    Light alloy wheels – 18 inch front / 19 inch rear
    Tyres: 275/35 ZR18 front / 325/30 ZR19 rear
    Base model: EUR 66,900
    Performance upgrade: EUR 16,450
    Modified transmission ratio: EUR 2,800


  • Athenahealth’s Ed Park and Media Lab’s John Moore Join Lineup for Monday’s “Healthcare in Transition” Xconomy Forum; Few Tickets Remain

    NewMediaMedicineMooreMoss
    Robert Buderi wrote:

    The question of how we pay for healthcare has been under the microscope in recent months, but what can we do to radically improve the care itself? Examining how information technology can help with that challenge is the whole point of Xconomy’s Healthcare in Transition forum, which will be held on Monday afternoon at the MIT Media Lab. And we’ve just added two new speakers—and one very cool demo—to the lineup.

    There are just a few seats remaining—you can register and see the entire program here. As you’ll see, we have an incredible roster of speakers, kicked off with a keynote talk by Media Lab director Frank Moss and—just added yesterday—a demo by John Moore, a physician who heads the lab’s New Media Medicine initiative (pictured above with Moss for a profile late last year above, as well as one offering a bird’s eye view of the New Media Medicine lab, below). One of the big points of that effort is to use information technologies—including new computer interfaces and social media—to find new ways of treating illness and, ideally, keeping people healthy in the first place.

    We added another speaker yesterday as well—Ed Park, CTO of Athenahealth. Park, whose brother Todd is the chief technology officer of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, will join an incredible panel moderated by Wired executive editor Thomas Goetz (who authored a book on personalized medicine called The Decision Tree). That panel includes Paul Bleicher, chief medical officer of Humedica and founder of Phase Forward; Daniel Palestrant, founder and CEO of Sermo; American Well CEO Roy Schoenberg; and Joe Kvedar, founder and director of the Center for Connected Health in Boston.

    MediaLabNewMediaMedicineoverview

    We have rounded out the day with health IT case studies from two public companies, Microsoft (and its Healthcare Innovation Lab) and EMC, and two startups, Newton, MA-based Life Image and Keas, a Bay Area company funded in part by Boston’s Atlas Venture. The program will close with short “bursts” from four pioneering companies out to transform medicine in unique ways—which should provide plenty of fodder for conversation during the networking reception to follow.

    Again, we have very few seats left for a very exciting and information afternoon. Register here. We hope to see you there.





    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • Automatic App Updating Coming in Android 2.2

    One Android feature that our readers have been asking for is the ability to update all applications and games to the latest release.   It’s not uncommon for the average user to see 15 or more notifications a day indicating new versions of downloaded apps.  As phones get bigger and allow for more applications, the headache will only get worse.  It appears Google understands this and has taken steps to address the situation.  Rather than a full blown “update all” option, the Market found in Android 2.2 appears it will give users the option to automatically update apps in the background.

    Would you use this feature? Are the total opt-in type?  Do you only trust specific developers?

    Source: 4chan via Phandroid

    Might We Suggest…

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  • Loaded With Concessions, Climate Bill Wins Backing of Oil Companies

    Kate Sheppard has some big news on the Senate climate bill, expected to drop Monday, following a conference call with Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), one of three senators working on the bill.

    The good news for environmentalists: Three of the country’s big five oil companies have agreed to support the bill, as has the Edison Electric Institute, the leading utility industry group. While EEI did eventually support the House climate bill that passed last June, the oil industry was largely in opposition, so this news could help bring oil-state senators like Mary Landrieu (D-La.) on board, particularly since Kerry thinks the American Petroleum Institute will stop running ads bashing the legislation.

    The bad news for green advocates: This new support comes at a steep price, with heavy concessions to oil, agriculture, industry and dirty energy. Kate has the rundown:

    • The bill would remove the Environmental Protection Agency’s authority to regulate carbon dioxide under the Clean Air Act, and the states’ authority to set tougher emissions standards than the federal government.
    • There will be no fee—or “gas tax”—on transportation fuels. Instead, oil companies would also be required to obtain pollution permits but will not trade them on the market like other polluters. How this would work is not yet clear.
    • Agriculture would be entirely exempt from the cap on carbon emissions.
    • Manufacturers would not be included under a cap on greenhouse gases until 2016.
    • The bill would provide government-backed loan guarantees for the construction of 12 new nuclear power plants.
    • It will contain at least $10 billion to develop technologies to capture and store emissions from coal-fired power plants.
    • There will be new financial incentives for natural gas.
    • The bill would place an upper and lower limit on the price of pollution permits, known as a hard price collar. Businesses like this idea because it ensures a stable price on carbon. Environmental advocates don’t like the idea because if the ceiling is set too low, industry will have no financial incentive to move to cleaner forms of energy.
    • The energy bill passed by the Energy and Natural Resources Committee last year will be adopted in full. This measure has sparked concerns among environmentalists for its handouts to nuclear and fossil fuel interests.

    Most of this isn’t terribly surprising, although environmentalists had been hoping — without much optimism — that the preemption of EPA and state regulatory authority wouldn’t be included in the final bill. As Kate notes, enviros also hate the Bingaman-Murkowski energy bill that will now be incorporated in full.

    Is this enough for some liberal groups to withhold their support? Probably — although the mainstream of the environmental movement is likely to bite the bullet and throw its weight behind the country’s best chance to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

  • No Free Google Maps Turn-by-Turn GPS Navigation For The iPhone

    There has been a rumor around the web that Google will be adding free navigation to the iPhone. Google has denied such claims but left the door open slightly by stating that it may come to multiple mobile platforms in the near future. Also, other Maps features could make their way onto the iPhone.

    

    Navigation was first introduced on the Droid, it was a feature of Android 2.0. After complaints from many non-2.0 users, it was made available to every device that has 1.6(maybe this was already in the works). This free navigation service gives Android a leg up on many other platforms that charge for such services, often they are not as good as Google Maps Navigation. A feature of Maps that most of us may not be aware of, routes are cached after the directions are found so even if you lose your data connection while on the go, you will still have accurate navigation information to rely on.

    A Google spokesperson said:

    “We did not say we would bring it to iPhone, we said to date we’ve had it on Android and that in the future it may come to other platforms but did not confirm this will be coming to iPhone at all,”

    [via pcworld]

  • Ships Race to Contain the Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill | 80beats

    DeepwaterHorizonThe oil rig fire in the Gulf of Mexico is finally out, as the Deepwater Horizon sank into the sea yesterday and hope for finding 11 missing workers began to fade. The damage assessment for the oil spill, however, has just begun.

    Oil from an undersea pocket that was ruptured by the rig, which was leased by the energy company BP, has begun to spread outward. The spill measures 10 miles (16 kilometers) by 10 miles, about four times the area of Manhattan, and is comprised of a “light sheen with a few patches of thicker crude,” U.S. Coast Guard Lieutenant Commander Cheri Ben-Iesau said today [BusinessWeek]. Whether or not the 700,000 gallons of diesel on board Deepwater Horizon is part of the spill remains unknown. Transocean, the company that owns the rig, admitted that it failed to “to stem the flow of hydrocarbons” before the rig sank.

    The biggest concern this morning is that the spill could be headed for the coast of Louisiana, less than 50 miles away, which would maximize the environmental damage. Ed Overton, an LSU environmental sciences professor, said he expects some of the light crude oil to evaporate while much of it turns into a pasty mess called a “chocolate mousse” that ultimately breaks apart into “tar balls,” small chunks of oily residue that can wash ashore. “It’s going to be a god-awful mess for a while,” he said. “I’m not crying doomsday or saying the sky is falling, but that is the potential” [AP]. Once oil hits land it’s far more difficult to clean up; even 21 years after the Exxon Valdez accident, its oil can still be found in Alaska beaches.

    100422-G-8093-002-Deepwater HorizonNow the task is to stem the tide. Fearing a potential environmental disaster, BP announced Thursday that it was dispatching a flotilla of more than 30 vessels capable of skimming more than 170,000 barrels of oil a day to protect sea lanes and wildlife in the area of the sunken platform [The New York Times]. According to the AP, BP had put down 6,000 feet of containment boom by last night, with 500,000 more feet en route. The company is also preparing to dig a secondary well to try to plug the ruptured oil deposit with concrete and mud.

    The scale of disaster remains to be seen. Energy experts at first estimated a worst-case scenario of more than 300,000 gallons of oil leaking into the sea per day. However, the size of the oil pocket remains unknown. If it’s a small one, the containment would be far easier. And in a bit of hopeful news, the Coast Guard said it found no new leakage yesterday.

    If you’re a fan of DISCOVER, check us out on Facebook.

    Related Content:
    80beats: Obama Proposes Oil & Gas Drilling in Vast Swaths of U.S. Waters
    80beats: 21 Years After Spill, Exxon Valdez Oil Is *Still* Stuck in Alaska’s Beaches
    80beats: 20 Years After Valdez Spill, Eagles Are Healthy; 7 Other Species Still Hurting
    80beats: “Nanosponge” Could Soak Up Oil Spills

    Images: United States Coast Guard


  • Microsoft Shows Off Windows 7’s Touch Abilities With Touch Pack for Windows 7

    Windows-7-Touch-Pack In case you are not aware, Windows 7 has inbuilt support for multi-touch. Of course, you will need to have a touch sensitive monitor for this to work. Although adoption of touchscreen monitors has been slow, manufacturers are slowly warming up to the idea. Major manufacturers like Dell, Asus, Fujitsu, HP and Lenovo have already jumped on the bandwagon. In spite of this, awareness about Windows 7’s touch abilities is still fairly low. Perhaps to remedy this, Microsoft has released Touch Pack for Windows 7.

    Microsoft Touch Pack for Windows 7 is a collection of utilities and games, which makes use of Windows 7’s multi-touch capabilities. The applications included in the Touch Pack are:

    • Microsoft Blackboard: An intricate game of physics in which you solve a puzzle by creating a fanciful machine on a blackboard.
    • Microsoft Garden Pond: A tranquil game that takes place in serene Japanese water gardens.
    • Microsoft Rebound: A game in which you use your fingertips to control Tesla spheres with an electrical field between them to catapult a metal game ball into your opponent’s goal.
    • Microsoft Surface Globe: A program that you can use to explore the earth as a flat 2-D map or as an immersive 3-D experience.
    • Microsoft Surface Collage: A program that you can use to explore and interact with your photos and arrange them as a desktop background.
    • Microsoft Surface Lagoon: A screen saver and interactive water simulation, complete with a meditative rock arrangement and playful, shy fish.

    You can download the Touch Pack for Windows 7 from here.

    Microsoft Shows Off Windows 7’s Touch Abilities With Touch Pack for Windows 7 originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Pallab De on Friday 23rd April 2010 10:30:55 AM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

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  • Report says health care will cover more, cost more

    By Matt Holdridge

    Via the DailyCaller:

    President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul law is getting a mixed verdict in the first comprehensive look by neutral experts: More Americans will be covered, but costs are also going up.

    Economic experts at the Health and Human Services Department concluded in a report issued Thursday that the health care remake will achieve Obama’s aim of expanding health insurance — adding 34 million to the coverage rolls.

    But the analysis also found that the law falls short of the president’s twin goal of controlling runaway costs, raising projected spending by about 1 percent over 10 years. That increase could get bigger, since Medicare cuts in the law may be unrealistic and unsustainable, the report warned.

    It’s a worrisome assessment for Democrats.

    In particular, concerns about Medicare could become a major political liability in the midterm elections. The report projected that Medicare cuts could drive about 15 percent of hospitals and other institutional providers into the red, “possibly jeopardizing access” to care for seniors.

    This comes as no surprise to those who follow free market economics. However, as we’ve seen time and time again, government involvement will only beget more government involvement which causes further distortions in the market.

    The healthcare roller coaster we’re on is far from over. 

  • Your Mantelligence Briefing for April 23rd

    Springbreak

    Looking for the manliest links on the web? You found ‘em! Enjoy.

    Top 10 party schools [Playboy]

    Eliot Spitzer’s former girlfriend [Playboy]

    8 smoking hot poker TV Hostesses [PokerJunkie]

    All about Earth Day (actually more about hot chicks) [Gunaxin]

    10 worst cities for a bachelor party [EgoTVOnline]

    One night stand advice [Coed Magazine]

    Workout Tips [MadeMan]

    Sweet MotorBike [CoolMaterial]

    A big wreck on the oval [AllLeftTurns]

    Top twitter accounts to follow  [AskMen]

    NFL draft is back  [BleacherReport]

    Some hot girl pics [Double Viking]

    How to navigate those crowded bars when you’re thirsty [Art of Manliness]

    Unintentional Porn [Holy Taco]

    What’s up with Tiger [Tastybooze]

    Helping you find some at the beach [TSB Mag]

    Top guy movies [BroBible]

    Related posts:

    1. Your Mantelligence Briefing for February 11th
    2. Your Mantelligence Briefing for April 1st
    3. Your Weekly Mantelligence Briefing for July 23rd