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  • Video: Shell makes a Nissan 370Z for the Invisible Man to showcase lubricants

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    Shell Helix commercial – Click above to view the videos after the jump

    Shell’s commissioned ad agency JWT to create a spot showing off the wondrous properties of Shell’s Helix lubricants. JWT then commissioned Asylum Models and Effects to create a transparent Nissan 370Z out of Perspex. While we’re surprised that – Shell being Shell – they didn’t use a Ferrari, after watching the commercial’s companion making-of video, we think we get it. And hey, we’re not going to sneeze at a working, transparent car no matter what it is. Follow the jump for both videos.

    [Source: Paul Tan]

    Continue reading Video: Shell makes a Nissan 370Z for the Invisible Man to showcase lubricants

    Video: Shell makes a Nissan 370Z for the Invisible Man to showcase lubricants originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 19:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 4.21.10

    Review: 2010 Nissan Versa lives life large

    It might not be the sexiest four-wheeled appliance, but what the Versa lacks in charm it makes up for with space and practicality.

    Spy Shots: Audi R8 ClubSport heads to the ‘Ring

    A hotter version of the Audi R8 is in the works and our spies snag the first shots of this lightened, track-friendly coupe as it heads out to run the ‘Ring.

    Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 4.21.10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Meridian Player Pioneer for Android

    The Meridian Player is an advanced media manager with features gesture controls and can recognize a large number of music and video formats. Users can search their media by lyric, subtitle, gesture, ID3 edit, rating, extra info, and more. The latest version (0.15) supports lossless playback including flac, ape, alac, wav, wave pack, and mpc.

    Meridian currently comes in two versions, Conservative and Pioneer. The Conservative version is more stable and will be updated less frequently. Pioneer (QR code above) will offer the latest version with the most features and it is updated quite regularly.

    The app is free for anyone to use but a professional version is available which offers enhanced features like search and download album art and additional widgets. If you find the free version useful, you can buy the Pro version by tapping upgrade in Meridian’s menu.

    Related Posts

  • Sedition Is The Highest Form Of Dissent

    What is it with left wingers and their sick compulsion to denigrate everything that is good about their countries? I’d hate to think it’s something as banal as snooty status jockeying to distance themselves from the lesser patriotic proles, but that’s probably it.

    Hey, Clegg, while you’re feeling bad for the Nazis maybe you could spare a moment to feel bad for the London subway bombers? There’s a good chap.

    Filed under: Globalization, Goodbye America

  • Billions of Red Worms Get Green Jobs on Coffee Farms

    Rogers Family Company uses worms to clean up coffee industry and restore habitatsBillions of California red wriggly worms are hard at work cleaning up the coffee industry.  Yes, worms.  Coffee industry leader Rogers Family Company has been using the worms to combat water contamination caused by mounds of rotting coffee pulp.  Using the only tool at their disposal –  their “prodigious digestive talents” — the worms convert waste pulp into organic fertilizer.

    The fertilizer in turn helps replenish nutrients in depleted soil, which in turn helps to restore ecosystems that support organic coffee farms that double as nature habitats.  As an extra green bonus, the worms can also produce biogas — just like biogas from cow manure, only without the hooves and such-all.

    (more…)

  • Dell brings the Android 2.1, OLED thunder with, well, the Thunder!

    Dell Thunder Android 2.1 phone

    Seems like only yesterday that we were asking "What else could we see in an Android phone?" We also were asking "Seriously? This is the best Dell can do?" Looks like we’re getting our answer, in the Dell Thunder (cousin to the Windows Phone 7 Dell Lightning), snagged in a fairly major leak from Engadget. See if these specs pique your interest any:

    • Android 2.1
    • 4.1-inch WVGA OLED screen.
    • Flash 10.1.
    • Integrated Hulu app.
    • 8MP camera.
    • Exchange Activesync
    • Swype keyboard.
    • 7.2Mbps HSDPA (download speed)/5.76Mbps HSUPA (upload speed)

    While HSPA specs mean GSM radios — and that means either AT&T or T-Mobile — remember that Swype currently has a deal to be on T-Mo handsets. That doesn’t mean there’s not room for more (and we’d certainly love to see Swype branch out as much as possible).

    There’s also a very custom "Stage" UI on top of Android. We’ll just have to wait and see about that. And we’re a little hesitant about the lack of a dedicated search button on the front of the phone. But we’re getting way ahead of ourselves. There will be plenty of time to drool over the Thunder. [Engadget]

  • Kaleefornya solar progress measured

    and discussed by folks with various perspectives … David Hochschild, Solaria Corp, sees improving pricing environment for accelerating solar adoption in California. …

    … “In just the last year, the average price of solar panels dropped by 40 percent, and more price reductions are expected in the year ahead. ” …

    Via New York Times: California Solar Scorecard

  • Biological treasures from Borneo









    Peter Koomen

    Click for slideshow: A newly discovered green and yellow slug has an unusually
    long taiil that it can wrap around its body when resting. Click on the image to see
    more creatures from the “Heart of Borneo.”




    Scientists are showing off some of the 123 new species they’ve found in the remote forests of Borneo, three years after the three nations that own pieces of the island agreed to safeguard 85,000 square miles (220,000 square kilometers) in the “Heart of Borneo.”

    …(read more)

  • Salt Assault Heads Down Slippery, Grainy Slope

    The big news this week is that salt is officially the latest target in the national fight to control the American diet. The Washington Post originally reported on Tuesday that the FDA is moving to seek mandatory restrictions on how much salt can be in foods. The FDA denied this strategy in a statement. But judging from what public health activists are saying, it’s likely that the Post story will prove prophetic.

    Yesterday the Institute of Medicine (IOM) released a report titled “Strategies to Reduce Sodium Intake in the United States.” Among many recommendations, the report states that the FDA should target salt’s “GRAS” (Generally Recognized As Safe) status and limit how much can be in certain foods, before lowering it as part of a “step-down” process. In other words, government-mandated blandness may not be so far off.

    There’s no doubt that the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) is pleased. CSPI has fought against salt for 30 years in an attempt to get the FDA to revoke its “GRAS” status, calling salt “the deadly white powder you already snort” and the “single most dangerous ingredient in the food supply.”

    CSPI even sued the Denny’s restaurant chain last year over the salt content of its dishes. And once the FDA no longer considers salt “generally recognized as safe,” can a stampede of trial lawyers looking to sue over canned soup and deli meat be far behind?

    Lawsuits aren’t the only thing we have to look forward to. The IOM report recommends research to determine the “appropriate” amount of salt to allow in different kinds of food. Of course, it’s hard to imagine the government creating a regulation for how much salt (or other ingredients) can be in every single thing we eat. At that point, the feds might as well publish their own “approved” recipe book. (We’re sure CSPI already has one prepared).

    There may actually be no need for such a determination. Research from UC-Davis last fall found that our bodies naturally regulate the amount of salt we take in, making government intervention ultimately pointless. And let’s not forget that attempts to tinker with salt intake were challenged by the editor of the American Journal of Hypertension this year as amounting to “an experiment on a whole population.”

    It’s one thing for the government to make dietary recommendations, such as daily intake guidelines for different nutrients. But when Big Brother crosses the line between suggestions and demands, that’s another thing entirely.

    If the FDA sets limits on salt, what's next? We’re waiting for FDA “strike teams” to bust sushi bars for providing too much soy sauce.

  • In Case You Had Any Doubts About Where Apple’s Revenue Comes From [Apple]

    Apple’s iPhone business, which didn’t exist three years ago, now represents a whopping 40% of the company’s revenue, and has been the company’s biggest revenue generator for three quarters in a row. More »







  • Mini gets naughty with new billboard in Germany

    Filed under: , , , , , ,

    The naughty Mini – Click above to watch video after the jump

    Volvo may be trying to convince the world that the new S60 has a naughty streak, but it’s nothing compared to Mini’s kinky side. The company is running an ad campaign in Hamburg, Germany under the slogan “A good Mini takes you to heaven. A bad Mini takes you everywhere,” and has put up a massive billboard, complete with an S&M whip dangling over the rear of a Cooper.

    That would already be enough to stir puritanical parent groups here in the States into a tizzy, but it gets better. Mini put out a secret five-digit number and code word. Anyone on the street can text the phrase to the number, and the Cooper gets disciplined via the automated whip. Yes, it even makes very whip-like sounds and honks its horn in agony/ecstasy. Hit the jump to see for yourself, just don’t forget the safe word.

    [Source: Paul Tan]

    Continue reading Mini gets naughty with new billboard in Germany

    Mini gets naughty with new billboard in Germany originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 18:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Volvo C30 Polestar Performance Concept to be unveiled this weekend

    Volvo C30 Polestar Performance Concept

    Later this week, Volvo Cars and Polestar will go into their 15th consecutive motorsport season in the Swedish Touring Car Championship. But before the two exit the pit for the weekend, they will present an ultimate Volvo for the street.

    “Main objective with the Volvo C30 Polestar Performance Concept Prototype is to explore what happens when racing engineers and designers get free hands to build a street car without any limitations set by a specific racing regulation,” Volvo said in a statement.

    Click here to get prices on the 2011 Volvo C30.

    The Volvo C30 Polestar Performance Concept is aimed to show what happens when engineers build further on the already strong driving characteristic of the standard C30 and  illustrate the link between the racing cars and the Polestar Performance products.

    Power for the Volvo C30 Polestar Performance Concept comes from a 2.5L turbo engine with a large intercooler, KKK 26 turbo, modified pistons, conrods and inlet camshaft. That allows for a total of 405-hp and a peak torque of 376 lb-ft.

    Check out the spec sheet after the jump for more details.

    Volvo C30 Polestar Performance Concept:

    Polestar C30 Performance Prototype Technical Specification

    Engine:
    Volvo T5: 2.5L Turbo with larger intercooler and KKK 26 turbo
    Modified pistons, conrods and inlet camshaft

    Power Output:
    405 hp. Torque: 510 Nm

    Drivetrain:
    Quaife mechanical differential brake front and rear
    Haldex AWD

    Chassis:
    Öhlins shock absorbers and springs
    More responsive steering rack with 2,25 ratio

    Brakes:
    Front: Brembo 380mm discs with six piston calipers
    Rear: Brembo 330mm discs with four piston calipers

    Rims and Tires:
    BBS FI 19×8,75″
    Pirelli P Zero 235/35 ZR 19

    Interior:
    Racing seats with Ternsjö leather and four point harness

    Exterior:
    Aerodynamics derived from the STCC race car

    – By: Omar Rana


  • How To Get People To Watch TV Ads: Don’t Stop The Program While You Show Them

    TV broadcasters have long struggled with how to deal with DVRs and how they allow users to skip over commercials. Perhaps the favored approach has been to come up with technological responses to try and prevent people from fast-forwarding; fewer companies have figured out that advertising is content, and needs to be treated as such. Viewers need to be given a reason to watch ads, whether it’s simply entertainment or because the content offers some other value. Another idea that’s being tested:
    not stopping the show during ad breaks. On one show on CNN, when the ads start, the studio cameras keep rolling, showing “behind-the-scenes” footage in a small box in the corner. The belief is that if there’s still some bit of “program content” going, it will be enough to keep people from flipping channels or skipping ahead, even if it is just paper shuffling and makeup being touched up. It’s an interesting proposition, but once viewers realize they’re not missing anything of value, won’t they switch away or fast-forward? And if the program content actually is valuable, won’t people just not pay attention to the ads? The problem here seems to be that this is just an effort to recreate a captive audience. But without offering anything of value to the viewer — whether it’s the ads themselves or this “program content” — they’re not going to stick around and suck up the ads.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Steve Jobs Personally Monitors Who Has Apple Prototypes? [Unconfirmed]

    As the next iPhone slipped out, Apple will probably begin restricting access to prototypes and unreleased products. What’s curious though, is that apparently Steve Jobs has personally been monitoring who’s walking around with unreleased devices all this time. More »







  • Gates on giving, getting, sharing

    William Henry “Bill” Gates III dropped out of Harvard College in 1975 in the fall of his junior year. Barely 20, he went on to build the computer giant Microsoft, an entrepreneurial feat that earned him billions and helped to usher in the Internet age.

    Gates came back to Harvard today (April 21), this time for less than an hour at Sanders Theatre, where hundreds of students were packed in like lines of software code. It was the last stop on a three-day, five-campus tour.

    “When I dropped out,” Gates said to a few whoops and cheers, “I told my dad I’d be back.”

    It was his first visit to Harvard as a full-time philanthropist, and Gates came armed with a burning question: “Are the brightest minds working on the most important problems?”

    Defining who the best people are is not easy, though many of them are at Harvard and other great universities, Gates said. And defining the biggest problems is not easy either, he said, though they certainly include abject poverty, unequal opportunity, overpopulation, farm efficiency, and finding sources of low-cost, nonpolluting energy.

    Anyone can name “eight or 10 problems,” said Gates, but are “the top innovators” addressing them?

    A few breakthroughs and some modest efforts on the part of the world’s gifted can add up to great gains, he said. But maybe our minds are elsewhere.

    Gates told the story of a recent two-day visit with friends. The conversation kept coming back to two things: college basketball and investments — what was new in stocks, derivatives, mergers, and other financial instruments.

    Gates had to wonder: “Couldn’t we be having that same conversation about what makes a great teacher?”

    The Seattle-born billionaire loves a good book, movie, basketball game — or investment — as much as anyone, he said. But there is a social cost.

    “A lot of our best minds are going to sports or entertainment or finance,” said Gates, and the genius of science is often turned toward remedies for baldness in a world desperate for cheap vaccines.

    There are exceptions and signs of hope, he said, mentioning the work at Harvard of George Whitesides (nanoscale science) and Paul Farmer (medical care), “an exemplar,” said Gates, “who’s drawn a lot of people into global health.”

    And 324 members of the Class of 2010 at Harvard — 18 percent of seniors — have applied for jobs with Teach for America.

    In his own college days, said Gates, few people were aware of, for instance, food and health problems on a global scale. Nor were they aware that their careers could be steered toward doing good.

    “I fell into computers at the age of 13,” he said of his career path, and loved the idea that computers “scared other people. That attracted me.”

    As it turned out, that kind of work has social merit, said Gates, offering the world new ways to get information through personal computers and the Web.

    But there is still an imbalance between what people do and what the world needs, he said. Gates suggested to a questioner later, “The allocation of IQ to Wall Street is higher than it should be.”

    With a businessman’s incisive brevity (his talk lasted 24 minutes), Gates focused on two major problems: global health and American education. He discussed how much can be achieved in those areas by bringing the brightest minds to bear on them.

    Global health has improved in the last five decades, and some progress can be attributed to rising wealth, said Gates. In 1960, about 20 million children under age 5 died from preventable diseases. Last year, fewer than 9 million did.

    The biggest reason for declining death rates came from one of medicine’s strongest weapons, vaccines, though they remain “a tiny part of the investment we make in medicine,” said Gates. (The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has pledged more than $10 billion to develop and deliver new vaccines in the next decade.)

    About half a million people die each year from flu-like rotaviruses. There are vaccines but “no large market,” said Gates. “It wasn’t getting out, it wasn’t getting done.”

    Once a country’s health picture improves, parents tend to have fewer children. Add in improvements such as female literacy, farm productivity, and other “catalytic” steps, and escaping “the poverty trap” is possible, said Gates. He cited the efficacy of early, inexpensive aid interventions in South Korea, Mexico, and Brazil.

    As for American education, Gates said it has slipped from the gains of 1945-1975, and now 30 percent of entering high school freshmen do not graduate — a figure that is 50 percent for minorities.

    “We really need to improve this,” said Gates. “The other rich countries are doing a lot better,” and they spend less.

    But there is room for hope, he said, pointing to research being done at Harvard and elsewhere on what makes the strongest teachers, and how to pass along their best practices.

    In education, online learning will help improve the situation, with links to videos on key concepts, along with ways to develop online advising, forums, and testing. “That’s a very doable thing,” said Gates. “Technology is going to have a role there.”
    And innovative education does not have to cost a lot, he said, referring to his sometimes controversial support of charter and nontraditional solutions.

    “Every time I get discouraged,” he told one questioner later, “I go to a KIPP school and say: This can be done.” KIPP stands for the Knowledge is Power Program, a network of college-preparatory U.S. public schools that Gates said now number 82 — and that send 95 percent of their graduates to four-year colleges.

    A lot of other problems cry out for innovation and modest investments, he said, including energy and good governance. But underlying such matters is a single “meta-question,” Gates emphasized. “How do we get the brightest people onto the biggest problems?”

    The audience members at Sanders had a few questions of their own.

    Which is better, asked one man: Take a high-paying job and give to a good cause, or take a job in the nonprofit sector?

    “Both models work,” said Gates, who outlined one scenario: Work, but study one problem or country, and devote extra resources to that. “Then when you get lots of time,” he said, “you can get even more involved.”
    Some of the queries were — don’t we all want to ask? — self-serving. One questioner asked Gates to meet him on vacation in 2012. Too busy, said the billionaire. Another touted a friend’s nontraditional malaria cure. “It’s definitely a long shot,” said Gates, though long shots sometimes work out.

    Another man, a would-be applicant to the Harvard Kennedy School, got even more personal. “So my question is: Can you pay for me?” he asked Gates. “I’m one of the best students in Kazakhstan.”

    The billionaire dropout was ready. “I applaud your boldness,” he said.

  • Go green this Earth Day: Quit smoking

    by Erich Pica

    Photo: lanier67 via FlickrWith the arrival of this year’s 40th anniversary of Earth Day, it is encouraging to see more and more people, young and old, buying into a meaningful environmental ethic in their personal lives despite daunting environmental challenges. By carrying reusable grocery bags, taking public transit and recycling, to name just a few examples, we are all becoming increasingly aware of the need to be environmentally responsible. If you’re a smoker, there’s another very important step that would be a “twofer” win for your health and for the natural world: Quit for good!

    Surprisingly, many of us don’t know that quitting smoking is another way to help combat climate change, and to significantly reduce the incredible amount of waste and litter due to carelessly discarded cigarettes butts in streets, waterways, and public areas like parks and beaches. While tobacco is the No. 1 cause of preventable death in the U.S., responsible for more than 400,000 deaths each year, it is less known that cigarettes also play a major role as toxic, hazardous waste in our already-overburdened environment. Astonishingly, the remnants of cigarette smoking represent the most prevalent form of litter collected across the world.

    According to data from the Ocean Conservancy, in 2009 more than 3 million cigarettes or butts were picked up internationally from beaches and inland waterways as part of the annual International Coastal Cleanup, including more than 1 million from U.S. beaches alone, making it by far the most littered item.  We applaud the commitment by those national, state, and local environmental groups taking the lead in cleanup efforts.

    We know that tobacco kills people, but do we ever wonder about the fragile ecosystems that are also affected by the toxins in these tobacco products? Tobacco growing leads to soil degradation; the wood used in the curing of tobacco can contribute to deforestation; and pesticides used to produce tobacco crops can harm the environment.

    On the climate front, which most people believe to be the biggest environmental threat facing the planet, cigarette production and consumption contribute to global warming. For example, deforestation in order to grow tobacco and provide wood for curing it means fewer trees available to absorb carbon dioxide.

    Smokers may be tossing their butts without even realizing their impact on the environment. It’s possible that smokers think that because tobacco is organic, its waste is harmless. However, that’s not the case. Both the plastic filters and the remnants of the tobacco are poisonous to children and other living organisms. They contain nicotine, heavy metals and other toxic compounds.

    Tobacco industry research reveals that consumers might have misconceptions that cigarette filters are readily biodegradable or inconsequential as waste because of their small size. But biodegradation can take years, and even under ideal conditions filtered butts simply break up into small particles of toxic waste.

    Smokers can help the environment by taking the simple yet effective step of not littering in the first place. Cigarette butt waste cleanup is very costly. An economic cigarette butt litter audit in San Francisco, which found the annual cleanup cost to be more than $7 million annually, led its City Council in 2009 to impose a 20-cent-per-pack “litter fee” on cigarettes sold in the city.

    The sure-fire way to combat this growing problem is for more Americans to quit smoking, and for those of us who don’t smoke to support them. Quitting is a great way to live a longer, healthier life, just like having cleaner air in our homes, neighborhoods, work places, towns and cities. It is a tough addiction to break, but, with help and a plan, one can succeed. We hope that this 40th anniversary of Earth Day helps to remind smokers about cigarettes’ impact on the environment, and serves as a motivator to quit in order to leave a legacy of a more beautiful, healthy planet for future generations.

    Erich Pica is president of Friends of the Earth, U.S., the U.S. voice of the world’s largest grassroots environmental network, working to protect our planet and its people.

    Cheryl Healton is president and CEO of American Legacy Foundation, which is dedicated to building a world where young people reject tobacco and everyone can quit.

    Related Links:

    Let’s set the record straight

    Labor and environmentalists have been teaming up since the first Earth Day

    Ask Umbra’s pearls of wisdom on Earth Day parties






  • Let’s rename Earth Day – Affection for our planet is misdirected and unrequited. We need to focus on saving ourselves.

    earth-day.jpgIn 2008, I wrote a piece for Salon about renaming ‘Earth’ Day. It was supposed to be mostly humorous. Or mostly serious. Anyway, the subject of renaming Earth Day seems more relevant than ever because this is the 40th anniversary.

    In a 2009 interview last year, our Nobel-prize winning Energy Secretary, Steven Chu, said:

    I would say that from here on in, every day has to be Earth Day.

    Well, duh! Heck, we have a whole day just for the trees — and we haven’t finished them offyet. So if every day is Earth Day, than April 22 definitely needs a new name. So I’m updating the column, with yet another idea at the end, at least for climate science advocates:

    I don’t worry about the earth. I’m pretty certain the earth will survive the worst we can do to it. I’m very certain the earth doesn’t worry about us. I’m not alone. People got more riled up when scientists removed Pluto from the list of planets than they do when scientists warn that our greenhouse gas emissions are poised to turn the earth into a barely habitable planet.

    Arguably, concern over the earth is elitist, something people can afford to spend their time on when every other need is met. But elitism is out these days. We need a new way to make people care about the nasty things we’re doing with our cars and power plants. At the very least, we need a new name.

    How about Nature Day or Environment Day? Personally, I am not an environmentalist. I don’t think I’m ever going to see the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. I wouldn’t drill for oil there. But that’s not out of concern for the caribou but for my daughter and the planet’s next several billion people, who will need to see oil use cut sharply to avoid the worst of climate change.

    I used to worry about the polar bear. But then some naturalists told me that once human-caused global warming has completely eliminated their feeding habitat — the polar ice, probably by 2020, possibly sooner — polar bears will just go about the business of coming inland and attacking humans and eating our food and maybe even us. That seems only fair, no?

    I am a cat lover, but you can’t really worry about them. Cats are survivors. Remember the movie “Alien”? For better or worse, cats have hitched their future to humans, and while we seem poised to wipe out half the species on the planet, cats will do just fine.

    Apparently there are some plankton that thrive on an acidic environment, so it doesn’t look like we’re going to wipe out all life in the ocean, just most of it. Sure, losing Pacific salmon is going to be a bummer, but I eat Pacific salmon several times a week, so I don’t see how I’m in a position to march on the nation’s capital to protest their extinction. I won’t eat farm-raised salmon, though, since my doctor says I get enough antibiotics from the tap water.

    If thousands of inedible species can’t adapt to our monomaniacal quest to return every last bit of fossil carbon back into the atmosphere, why should we care? Other species will do just fine, like kudzu, cactus, cockroaches, rats, scorpions, the bark beetle, Anopheles mosquitoes and the malaria parasites they harbor. Who are we to pick favorites?

    I didn’t hear any complaining after the dinosaurs and many other species were wiped out when an asteroid hit the earth and made room for mammals and, eventually, us. If God hadn’t wanted us to dominate all living creatures on the earth, he wouldn’t have sent that asteroid in the first place, and he wouldn’t have turned the dead plants and animals into fossil carbon that could power our Industrial Revolution, destroy the climate, and ultimately kill more plants and animals.

    All of these phrases create the misleading perception that the cause so many of us are fighting for — sharp cuts in greenhouse gases — is based on the desire to preserve something inhuman or abstract or far away. But I have to say that all the environmentalists I know — and I tend to hang out with the climate crowd — care about stopping global warming because of its impact on humans, even if they aren’t so good at articulating that perspective. I’m with them.

    The reason that many environmentalists fight to save the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge or the polar bears is not because they are sure that losing those things would cause the universe to become unhinged, but because they realize that humanity isn’t smart enough to know which things are linchpins for the entire ecosystem and which are not. What is the straw that breaks the camel’s back? The 100th species we wipe out? The 1,000th? For many, the safest and wisest thing to do is to try to avoid the risks entirely.

    This is where I part company with many environmentalists. With 6.5 billion people going to 9 billion, much of the environment is unsavable. But if we warm significantly more than 3.5°F from pre-industrial levels — and especially if we warm more than 7°F, as would be all but inevitable if we keep on our current emissions path for much longer — then the environment and climate that made modern human civilization possible will be ruined, probably for hundreds of years (see NOAA stunner: Climate change “largely irreversible for 1000 years,” with permanent Dust Bowls in Southwest and around the globe). And that means misery for many if not most of the next 10 to 20 billion people to walk the planet.

    So I think the world should be more into conserving the stuff that we can’t live without. In that regard I am a conservative person. Unfortunately, Conservative Day would, I think, draw the wrong crowds.

    The problem with Earth Day is it asks us to save too much ground. We need to focus. The two parts of the planet worth fighting to preserve are the soils and the glaciers.

    Two years ago, Science magazine published research that “predicted a permanent drought by 2050 throughout the Southwest” — levels of soil aridity comparable to the 1930s Dust Bowl would stretch from Kansas and Oklahoma to California. The Hadley Center, the U.K.’s official center for climate change research, found that “areas affected by severe drought could see a five-fold increase from 8% to 40%.” On our current emissions path, most of the South and Southwest ultimately experience twice as much loss of soil moisture as was seen during the Dust Bowl.

    Also, locked away in the frozen soil of the tundra or permafrost is more carbon than the atmosphere contains today (see Tundra, Part 1). On our current path, most of the top 10 feet of the permafrost will be lost this century — so much for being “perma” — and that amplifying carbon-cycle feedback will all but ensure that today’s worst-case scenarios for global warming become the best-case scenarios (see Tundra, Part 2: The point of no return). We must save the tundra. Perhaps it should be small “e” earth Day, which is to say, Soil Day. On the other hand, most of the public enthusiasm in the 1980s for saving the rain forests fizzled, and they are almost as important as the soil, so maybe not Soil Day.

    As for glaciers, when they disappear, sea levels rise, perhaps as much as two inches a year by century’s end (see “Sea levels may rise 3 times faster than IPCC estimated, could hit 6 feet by 2100” and here). If we warm even 3°C from pre-industrial levels, we will return the planet to a time when sea levels were ultimately 100 feet higher (see Science: CO2 levels haven’t been this high for 15 million years, when it was 5° to 10°F warmer and seas were 75 to 120 feet higher — “We have shown that this dramatic rise in sea level is associated with an increase in CO2 levels of about 100 ppm.”). The first five feet of sea level rise, which seems increasingly likely to occur this century on our current emissions path, would displace more than 100 million people. That would be the equivalent of 200 Katrinas. Since my brother lost his home in Katrina, I don’t consider this to be an abstract issue.

    Equally important, the inland glaciers provide fresh water sources for more than a billion people. But on our current path, they will be gone by century’s end.

    So where is everyone going to live? Hundreds of millions will flee the new deserts, but they can’t go to the coasts; indeed, hundreds of millions of other people will be moving inland. But many of the world’s great rivers will be drying up at the same time, forcing massive conflict among yet another group of hundreds of millions of people. The word rival, after all, comes from “people who share the same river.” Sure, desalination is possible, but that’s expensive and uses a lot of energy, which means we’ll need even more carbon-free power.

    Perhaps Earth Day should be Water Day, since the worst global warming impacts are going to be about water — too much in some places, too little in other places, too acidified in the oceans for most life. But even soil and water are themselves only important because they sustain life. We could do Pro-Life Day, but that term is already taken, and again it would probably draw the wrong crowd.

    We could call it Homo sapiens Day. Technically, we are the subspecies Homo sapiens sapiens. Isn’t it great being the only species that gets to name all the species, so we can call ourselves “wise” twice! But given how we have been destroying the planet’s livability, I think at the very least we should drop one of the sapiens. And, perhaps provisionally, we should put the other one in quotes, so we are Homo “sapiens,” at least until we see whether we are smart enough to save ourselves from self-destruction.

    What the day — indeed, the whole year — should be about is not creating misery upon misery for our children and their children and their children, and on and on for generations (see “Is the global economy a Ponzi scheme?“). Ultimately, stopping climate change is not about preserving the earth or creation but about preserving ourselves. Yes, we can’t preserve ourselves if we don’t preserve a livable climate, and we can’t preserve a livable climate if we don’t preserve the earth. But the focus needs to stay on the health and well-being of billions of humans because, ultimately, humans are the ones who will experience the most prolonged suffering. And if enough people come to see it that way, we have a chance of avoiding the worst.

    We have fiddled like Nero for far too long to save the whole earth or all of its species. Now we need a World War II scale effort just to cut our losses and save what matters most. So let’s call it Triage Day. And if worse comes to worst — yes, if worse comes to worst — at least future generations won’t have to change the name again.

    As a penultimate thought, I suspect that many environmentalists and climate science advocates will have their own, private name: “I told you so” Day. Not as a universal as “Triage Day,” I admit, but it has a Cassandra-like catchiness, no?

    Finally, perhaps we should call it “science day.”  We don’t have a day dedicated to celebrating science, and don’t we deserve one whole day free from the non-stop disinformation of the anti-science crowd?

    As always, I’m open to better ideas….

    Affection for our planet is misdirected and unrequited. We need to focus on saving ourselves.
  • Qualcomm Outlook Cloudy Despite Raising 2010 Forecast


    Qualcomm Logo

    Qualcomm’s stock fell $3.43, or 8 percent, in after-hours trading today, following the release of its second-quarter financial results that provided a mixed outlook for the year. 

    Qualcomm (NSDQ: QCOM) was able to raise its 2010 forecast because of a strong Q2 performance that beat analysts’ expectations, but then, warned that the third quarter would be hurt as the competition pushes chip set prices lower. Separately, the San Diego-based company said it was bullish on strong 3G handset sales.

    Second-quarter revenues totaled $2.66 billion, up from $2.46 in the prior year; profits equaled $774 million, compared to the prior year’s loss when it had to pay a large settlement to Broadcom. Qualcomm reported earnings per share of 46 cents. When adjusted for special items, Qualcomm reported 59 cents a share in earnings, which beat Wall Street estimates of 56.5 cents, according to Reuters.

    Since Qualcomm makes chips for devices, it’s often used as a test to see how the overall industry is performing. The company raised its guidance for the year based on the strong second quarter, but said its third fiscal quarter could be hurt by the competition, which is pushing prices lower. The company expects fiscal 2010 revenues to fall between $10.4 billion and $11 billion, and for the average price of all its CDMA handsets in the market to cost between $182 and $188. The midpoint of of $185 is slightly lower than their original estimate of $187, and is much lower than previous quarters when devices had a mid-point around $200.

    One of the company’s subsidiaries, FLO TV, continued to be a drain on its bottomline. Expenses for the “QSI” division increased 133 percent year-over-year, primarily due to an increase in selling and marketing expenses related to FLO TV. FLO is building a mobile broadcast TV network, and just recently has been marketing it directly to consumers rather than relying on carrier partners, like AT&T (NYSE: T) and Verizon Wireless. As part of the push to educate consumers about mobile TV, it bought three commercial slots during the Super Bowl to promote the service. Expenses related to flow and the whole QSI division totaled $134 million during the quarter, which contributed a 5 cent diluted loss on GAAP results.

    Release (PDF) | Earnings Call.


  • Volvo teases C30 Polestar Performance Concept

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    Volvo C30 Polestar Performance Concept Prototype – Click above for high-res image

    Volvo and Polestar are set to officially unveil the C30 Polestar Performance Concept Prototype this weekend. Designed to be an exercise in what would happen if a race team was allowed to do what they do best without the burden of a regulatory body looming over them, the wicked hatch is about as far from what’s available at your local Volvo dealer as you can get.

    The base C30 gets its power from a 2.5-liter, 227-horsepower turbocharged five-cylinder, and the Polestar version bumps that same mill up to a heavenly 405 ponies thanks to a larger turbo, massive intercooler and custom internals. The pistons, connecting rods and camshaft are all unique units build just for the project.

    The Haldex all-wheel drive system stays in place, though mechanical differentials, front and rear, have been fitted to add a little control to the chaos. Polestar also dropped in a quick-ratio steering rack and an Ohlins suspension. Brake work gets handled by epic Brembo six-piston calipers up front and four-piston units out back.

    Obviously Volvo doesn’t have any plans to bring a Polestar C30 to production, though it is cool to see a road-going version of a Swedish touring car come to life. Hit the jump for the press release.

    [Source: Volvo]

    Continue reading Volvo teases C30 Polestar Performance Concept

    Volvo teases C30 Polestar Performance Concept originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 18:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Modern Warfare 2 receives Guinness World Records for record breaking sales

    Guinness World Records, the global authority on all record-breaking things, has officially recognized Modern Warfare 2 “as the most successful entertainment launch of all time.”