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  • Wildflower Pilgrimage in the Smokies Aims to Promote Conservation

    Each spring, hundreds of pilgrims from across the country and around the world, descend upon the Great Smoky Mountains National Park to experience and celebrate the remarkable views in what is known as the Spring Wildflower Pilgrimage.

    In 1951, the year of the first annual pilgrimage, visitors atop Clingmans Dome, the highest point in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, could have seen rich green hillsides and a view that stretched for a 100 miles.

    Today’s pilgrims can see wooden skeletons jutting out of a landscape that can only be viewed up to about 20 miles.

    The Great Smoky Mountains are changing, and not for the better.

    That’s because they are under attack by a myriad of forces chipping away at the national treasure’s ethereal beauty.

    “The Smokies are one of the most biologically diverse areas in the world and are being negatively impacted by invasive, exotic plants and animals, global warming, pollution and acid rain, just to name a few,” explained Gene Wofford, a University of Tennessee, Knoxville, professor in the department of ecology and evolutionary biology and one of the pilgrimage’s leaders.

    Hemlock trees are being destroyed by the hemlock woolly adelgids. Beech trees are being lost to beech bark disease. Dogwood anthracnose is decimating the dogwoods. Pine bark beetles are eating away the mountain pine. And the balsam woolly adelgid is slowly, but surely, killing Fraser firs. More than destroying the view, these predators are rendering birds, insects and other animals homeless.

    Air pollution damages trees’ fighting chance for survival by weakening them and making them vulnerable to attack. It is also to blame for limiting the scenic views of the mountains.

    Scientists trace the air pollution to small particles produced mostly by the burning of coal. Because the particles reflect and scatter light, visitors see a whitish haze rather than views of distant mountains. The National Park Service is involved in a number of projects aimed at improving air quality. Through these efforts, the park service has been able to identify types and sources of air pollution impacting the Smokies and use this information to help inform legislators and promote initiatives to improve air quality.

    However, increasing demand for electricity in the East and Midwest continues to threaten air quality. Coal-burning power plants are major polluters, and a rise in electricity demand has sparked proposals for more of these plants. Park scientists say the primary way to improve the views of the Smokies is for people to conserve energy.

    And organizers of the pilgrimage hope that, along with fond memories and beautiful pictures, participants take with them the lesson that their daily decisions, such as turning on the lights or leaving the car running, directly affect the health of the Smokies.

    “People who come to the Spring Wildflower Pilgrimage see the impacts and learn about the causes,” said Ed Clebsch, a professor in UT Knoxville’s department of ecology and evolutionary biology and one of the pilgrimage’s leaders. “When they go home, will what they saw here today affect what they do tomorrow? I don’t know but I sure hope so.”

    Since the pilgrimage’s inception, UT has been instrumental in organizing the event which is a five-day celebration with 115 leaders and more than 150 programs, featuring natural history walks, motorcades, photographic tours, art classes and indoor seminars. In fact, all the leaders have ties to UT.

    In addition to educating the public about the threats to the Smokies, the university is also helping battle one of its predators, the hemlock woolly beetle. Technicians at UT’s Agricultural Campus are incubating tiny beetles that live to eat the hemlock woolly beetle. Park scientists are hopeful this tactic can save the park’s hemlock trees.

    Registration for this year’s pilgrimage, which will be April 21 through 25, is now open at http://www.springwildflowerpilgrimage.org.

    Along with outdoor programs and tours, the W.L. Mills Conference Center — the event’s registration site in Gatlinburg– will feature art exhibitions, merchants and related activities. Tickets are $75 per person for two or more days. Single-day tickets are available for $40. Student tickets are $10 and must be verified with a student ID.

    The Wildflower Pilgrimage is a joint venture of the UT Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, the Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, the City of Gatlinburg Department of Tourism, the Friends of the Smoky Mountains National Park, the Gatlinburg Garden Club, the Great Smoky Mountains Association, the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the Tennessee Valley Authority and the Southern Appalachian Botanical Society.

    For more information, call (865) 436-7318, Ext. 222, Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. or visit http://www.springwildflowerpilgrimage.org. Lodging information is also available on the site.

  • Garminfone now official, heading to T-Mobile later this Spring

     

    The Garminfone has taken a long journey to hit a US carrier and now, finally, it’s getting official. T-Mobile just announced that the Garminfone will be available later this Spring, and this "Garminfone" is a dead ringer for the Garmin-Asus nuvifone A50 we saw back at MWC. It only rocks Android 1.6 with a 600MHz processor, 3.5-inch display, 3-megapixel camera and your usual slew of connectivity options. So yeah, this Garminfone is happening. The question remains whether anyone would want a mid-level device that prioritizes GPS before everything else. For some reason, we’re thinking no. [Garmin via engadget]

  • Okamiden heading West, new trailer released

    DS in the west owners can look forward to Chibiterasu spreading some stylish cuteness on their handhelds next year. Capcom has confirmed the DS title Okamiden for a North American and European launch no later than 2011.

  • The Make-Believe World of Antonio Villaraigosa

    UPDATE: Read Austin Beutner’s letter to DWP workers at OurLA.org.

    It wouldn’t be make believe if anyone in their right mind still believed in Antonio.

    He couldn’t even get more than one round of applause from his hand-picked audience of contributors at his State of the City speech, and that was for the one thing that has gone right under his watch, the reduction in violent crime.
    antonioflags.jpg
    The budget plan he outlined Tuesday night is nothing but a work of fiction by a mayor so desperate to save himself he is willing to destroy his city — a compilation of wishful thinking on revenue projections and fantasies of income from fire sales of assets.

    It is loaded with one-time savings and revenues that even if they materialize will only help get through the coming year’s $484 million deficit while leaving the 2011-12 deficit of $775 million and the following year’s $1 billion deficit untouched.

    He must be stopped before he harms us all.

    Some people learn from their mistakes, not Antonio. He got us into this mess doing exactly what he is proposing to do again: Chasing numbers downhill and using smoke and mirrors to avoid reality.

    He’s probably the only man in America who still believes the Obama economic miracle will lift the city’s ship back to normal. There isn’t going to be any economic miracle. Normal isn’t coming back. Fundamental economic changes are occurring.

    We can no longer use City Hall as a jobs and social welfare program, as a bottomless pit of wealth for sweetheart contracts with unions, contractors and consultants and to subsidize developers whose projects make the quality of our lives and our neighborhoods worse.

    Surely, De Facto Mayor Austin Beutner understands this as well as anybody. He made his fortune buying up distressed companies on the cheap, scaling costs to revenue, focusing on the core business and then selling them for spectacular profits.

    As the mayor’s top gun, he has been given direct authority over every city agency that impacts revenue and. in a move that is extra-legal, has crossed the line and handed direct control of the Department of Water and Power as its general manager.

    What does that say about the pretense of separation of powers, of citizen commission’s providing oversight on politicians and bureaucrats when as the mayor’s man Beutner is part of the authority that appoints the DWP Board and as general manager he reports to the board he appoints?

    Is there a secret memo somewhere in the dungeons of City Hall that says martial law was declared as part of the fiscal emergency and the rule of law suspended?

    The City Council must stop this abuse of power by rejecting Beutner’s appointment or at the least force him to resign as deputy mayor for appearances sake, if nothing else.

    The same is true of the mayor’s budget. The Council is as much responsible for this crisis as he is and now has one last chance to put an end to these phony money games that are rapidly moving LA down the road to oblivion and bankruptcy and made our city the laughing stock of the world.

    “I understand your utility is going bankrupt and your city with it,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Beutner at an exclusive Getty Center event Monday night during a visit presumably to scout around for some bargains in public assets to pick up for 10 cents on the Euro.

    David Zahniser in the LA Times all but ignores the budget in his story on the mayor’s speech by focusing on the dizzying pendulum swings in direction and message that Antonio, Controller Wendy Greuel and the Council have engaged in for the last year, from early retirements to 4,000 layoffs to today’s “not to worry, we fixed everything” sound bite.

    “When the information is that confusing and that contradictory, the
    public doesn’t know what to believe — except to distrust anything
    they’re told,” said Westside community leader Mike Eveloff,  president of the Tract 7260 Homeowners Assn.

    The mayor’s handlers regard all this as nothing but a public relations exercise in need of a “more consistent message.”

    Antonio himself clearly agrees, deflecting all responsibility for the crisis he created by falsely claiming he’s gotten city spending under control during his reign of profligate hiring, wage increases and giveaways of the public’s money.

    All that’s wrong is the fault of Wall Street and the global recession and some mysterious force that obscured Southern California’s eternal sunshine.

    “Over the last several weeks, we have allowed darkness to cloud our
    optimism. I think that you could even say that we have
    allowed the strain of the challenges we face to undermine civic unity.”

    Unity? He barely got a majority a year ago against Walter Moore and eight others with little money or name recognition despite his own fame and bottomless pit of dirty political money.

    Maybe he means how he achieved the impossible and united the citizenry and public employee unions in opposition to his policies and politics and even gotten the business community to suffer a crisis of confidence in his leadership to the point that only the promises made to them by unelected mayor Beutner has kept them in line.

    Antonio is right about a couple of things:e thing: This isn’t why he was elected to office and it is going to be “a tough time for everyone” — even him.

  • “Courtney Love Is Dead” — Rocker Adopts New Stage Name Courtney Michelle

    “Courtney Love is dead….”

    Well, not really. The veteran rocker isn’t actually dead, but she’s decided to kill off her stage name — at least, the “Love” part — in an effort to shake off her damaged reputation, the byproduct of years of destructive living.

    From now on the Hole star will only answer to the name “Courtney Michelle” — a derivative of her real name, which is Courtney Michelle Harrison.

    “Courtney Love is dead,” the Grunge Goddess told Britain’s NME Magazine this week. “We’ve all decided we don’t like her anymore. We love her when she goes onstage, but I don’t need her in the rest of my life. Courtney Love is a way to oppress me,” she added.

    We’re not sure her record label got the memo. Last week, they announced a new Hole summer tour — led by “Courtney Love.”


  • GM’s Whitacre will pay for Washington flight out of his own pocket

    As soon as we heard the General Motors’ CEO Edward Whitacre Jr. will be heading down to Washington this week, we started wondering whether he would take a plane or drive the Chevrolet Volt. Turns out, Whitacre will fly and will pay for his flight from Kansas City to Washington this afternoon out of his own pocket.

    Whitacre is in Kansas City this morning at GM’s Fairfax Assembly plant where he is announcing new investments in the plants in Kansas City and the Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly plant (more details on that later).

    Whitacre will then fly to Washington to meet with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the Michigan congressional delegation. GM will also release a statement today that it has repaid U.S. and Canadian taxpayers for $5.8 billion in outstanding government loans plus $700 million in interest to the U.S. Treasury and an unspecified amount of interest to the Canadian government.

    In late 2008, members of Congress embarrassed GM and Chrysler’s CEO for flying top executives to D.C. to ask for bailout money. GM dumped its corporate jets while in bankruptcy but Whitacre sometimes flies on private jets under an agreement negotiated with his former employer, AT&T.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Detroit News


  • Sarkozy to introduce legislation banning full veils in public

    [JURIST] A spokesperson for French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Wednesday that the president is in favor of a complete public ban on the burqa and other full face veils and will be submitting a bill to parliament in May. According to spokesperson Luc Chatel, Sarkozy wants the ban to be carried out in a way that doesn’t stigmatize individuals for their religious beliefs and practices, but he feels that the veils are oppressive and harm female dignity. In addition to the bill, parliament will also be discussing a separate resolution on May 11, which will discuss ways of limiting the use of full veils. The issue has sparked debate with feminists supporting the ban because it prevents women from being forced into wearing the veils, and others questioning the proposed ban’s constitutionality. France houses the largest Muslim population in the European Union with Muslims comprising about 10 percent of the total French population.
    Last month, the French Council of State advised the French government against a complete ban on full Islamic veils because it risks violating the French Constitution and the European Convention on Human Rights. France already has a partial ban that prevents public officials from wearing veils while operating in their official capacity and also prohibits veils in public schools. Critics of the ban say the law would alienate France’s Muslim minority and violate the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), of which France is a signatory. Last month, lawmakers in Quebec introduced a bill that would ban women from wearing full face veils from public services, which garnered support from members of the Muslim Canadian Congress who argue that the law would not violate human rights and would promote the ideals of a free and democratic society. Also last month, a Belgian parliamentary committee voted unanimously to completely ban the wearing of full veils in public. If approved, Belgium will be the first European nation to impose a nationwide restriction on traditional face-covering veils.

  • Energy Management Apps for the iPad

    Earth2Tech has a look at some applications that let iPad users visualise energy usage within their homes – More Energy Management Apps for the iPad.

    Visible Energy’s iPad app is a tweak of its iPhone app, which is connected to the Energy UFO product that the company launched at our Green:Net conference in 2009 (Green:Net 2010 will take place on April 29). The Energy UFO product includes smart outlets that can be controlled wirelessly over a home network and the application (as well as the web site) displays energy usage and provides remote control and programming capabilities. Visible Energy says the iPad version will be available “shortly” (the iPhone app can also be used over the iPad).

    The iPad could ultimately be disruptive in the home energy market, because if consumers embrace it as a popular “fourth screen” in the home, it could both displace the need for separate energy gadgets, and could also give a boost the home energy management market. The home energy market is a nascent ecosystem that’s made up of: utilities that are trying get their customers to consume less energy, startups building smart energy software and energy dashboards that will manage energy data in the home and help customers consume less, large manufacturers dabbling in connected appliances, and investors looking for ways to make money.

    If you’re never heard of the market, it’s because from a consumer perspective it really doesn’t exist yet. According to Texas-based consultants KEMA, 68 percent of Americans haven’t heard of the smart grid, and exuberance in the home energy market “should be tempered to account for the challenge of engaging large numbers of residential customers.”

    The early stage is one reason why the iPad could be disruptive. Visible Energy CEO Marco Graziano, told me earlier this month:

    I never thought specialized displays were a good idea for monitoring energy consumption. They don’t have any sex appeal and are too expensive anyway as freebies for utilities to give away. We found that interactivity is really a plus when it gets to visualizing energy consumption and to engaging people in energy awareness. In this respect the iPad is a breakthrough.

    Visible Energy is the second home energy management iPad app coming to market — Control4 launched a free iPad app during the hullabaloo of the iPad launch weekend. At the time, Glen Mella, the President and COO of Control4 told me in an interview: “We’re excited to embrace the iPad as another way to bring home automation and home energy management to the mainstream.”


  • Adobe Drops Future Support For iPhone Development in Flash

    Apple vs FlashI’m sure by now that you’ve all heard the arguments both for and against the new Terms of Service that accompany iPhone v4.0 SDK, so I won’t get into those arguments here.

    However, I will let you know of the announcement today that Adobe have now dropped future support for iPhones as a development target for Flash CS5. While users will still be able to set the iPhone as a target in CS5, Adobe will invest nothing more into the feature. It is also likely that Apple will be removing the 100+ Flash CS5 developed applications from the App Store.

    It is interesting — though unsurprising — that Adobe have done this.

    It’s unsurprising because applications developed for the iPhone using Flash will have a strong chance of being rejected during the App Store screening process. Few developers would want to invest time and money on such a high-risk project, so there is no real business incentive for Adobe to offer the feature anymore.

    It is interesting because it may signal a trend fpr developers to move toward open platforms. Mike Chambers, the Principal Product Manager for developer relations for the Flash Platform at Adobe, stated today on his blog:
    “Personally, I am going to shift all of my mobile focus from iPhone to Android based devices (I am particularly interested in the Android based tablets coming out this year) and not focus on the iPhone stuff as much anymore.”

    The real juice, though, came when he added:
    “This includes both Flash based, and Objective-C based iPhone development. While I actually enjoy working in Objective-C, I don’t have any current plans to update and / or maintain my existing native iPhone applications.”

    This move isn’t because of a preference for developing in Flash (which is welcomed on the Android platform), but rather because Chambers is taking a stand against Apple’s “closed, locked down platform”.

    Clearly there would be a bit of bias from an employee of the company that was on the receiving end of the hurt stick, but Chambers is not the first major player to leave the iPhone space because of Apple’s draconian rules: in November last year, Joe Hewitt — the man behind the immensely popular Facebook app for iPhone — left the team developing the application because of Apple’s policies.

    Is this a taste of things to come? Who else in the future will defect to the open side?

    [image courtesy of Before It’s News]


  • Public Urination Commercials: One Way to Stop Vehicle Idling [VIDEO]

    This is one way to get attention for a very serious but often ignored issue (i.e. vehicle idling) — create a commercial equating it to public urination.

    Vehicle idling is responsible for countless emissions of greenhouse gases and other pollutants. It is also completely useless much of the time, people just don’t think or are too lazy to turn off the engine.

    It can be a hard issue to address, though. Even if a community decides to outlaw unnecessary idling, it can be tough to enforce. I lived in Charlottesville, Virginia a couple years ago when the city banned completely unnecessary idling of public vehicles. Nonetheless, nearly every time I rode the bus, it would sit idling illegally numerous times.

    (more…)

  • Report: Google Courting ITA

    Wade Roush wrote:

    ITA Software, the Cambridge, MA-based maker of airline fare search software, is in talks with Google about a potential acquisition, Bloomberg reported this morning. ITA, whose investors include General Catalyst Partners, Battery Ventures, Spectrum Equity, PAR Investment Partners, and Sequoia Capital, is seeking as much as $1 billion, according to the Bloomberg report, which cited unnamed sources. ITA’s software could help Google compete with Microsoft in the travel search arena, but if Google were to acquire the 500-employee company, it would also make the search giant into a major provider of behind-the-scenes airline reservations systems. Xconomy profiled ITA in December 2008.

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  • Locteron Improves HCV Therapy

    Interim Phase II study results showed than when paired with ribavirin, Locteron demonstrated potency against Hepatitis C similar to pegylated interferon. In addition, Locteron demonstrated 57 percent fewer adverse effects at a more favorable dosing schedule of once every other week.

    Biolex Announces Presentation at EASL of Interim Results From EMPOWER Phase 2b Study of Locteron® in Chronic Hepatitis C

    Locteron Dosed Once Every Two Weeks Demonstrated a Comparable Reduction in Viral Load Compared to Once-Weekly Standard of Care With 57% Less Flu-Like Adverse Events

    PITTSBORO, NC–(Marketwire – April 16, 2010) – Biolex Therapeutics, Inc. announced that interim results from EMPOWER, a prospectively designed analysis of results from two Phase 2b trials of Locteron®, were presented yesterday in a late-breaker session at the 45th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) in Vienna, Austria. Locteron, controlled-release interferon alpha 2b, is designed to improve patient care by providing a more convenient once-every-two week dosing schedule and by reducing the flu-like symptoms associated with pegylated interferons, the current standard of care. In the EMPOWER study, the 480 µg dose of Locteron demonstrated viral kinetics and response rates that were comparable to the PEG-Intron® control while also achieving a 57% reduction in flu-like adverse events.

    Continue reading this entire article:
    http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/Biolex-Announces-Presentation-EASL-Interim-Results-From-EMPOWER-Phase-2b-Study-Locteron-1148840.htm

  • Earnings, energy, Goldman – Vialoux

    U.S. equity index futures are mixed this morning. S&P 500 futures are down 1 point in pre-opening trade despite a series of favourable first quarter earnings reports released overnight.

    The earnings focus this morning is on Apple. The stock gained 6% after reporting blow out first quarter earnings. Scotia Capital raised its rating on the stock from Market Perform to Outperform.

    Companies reporting higher than expected first quarter earnings reports included Boeing, AT&T, McDonald’s, Altria, United Technologies, St. Jude Medical and EMC Corp.

    Not all reports exceeded consensus estimates. Yahoo and Wells Fargo are trading lower after missing expectations.

    The first major North American energy company reported first quarter earnings this morning. Encana significantly exceeded consensus earnings and cash flow estimates. Its stock gained 1% in pre-opening trade. Strength in Encana could spill into other energy stocks this morning.

    Goldman Sachs gained 2% following news that the SEC had contradicting evidence prior to launch of its civil law suit against Goldman. 

    Don Vialoux, chartered market technician, is the author of a free
    daily report on equity markets, sectors, commodities, equities and
    Exchange-Traded Funds. For more visit Don Vialoux's Web site

  • New in the App Catalog for 20 April 2010

    App CatalogIt’s the morning, and by now you ought know what that means. It means apps! And apps we do have, with sixty odd fresh new and updated apps hitting the App Catalog since we last looked at it, you guessed it, yesterday morning. That’s how we roll, morning style. So what’s in this batch? Nothing particularly mind-blowing, but there’s still plenty of useful and fun stuff to be had. There are apps made for a reason, and for the vast majority of developers, it’s not a “because I can” app, it’s a “I think there’s a market for this app” app. That market, as it would turn out, might be you. To verify your market status, please hit the link to jump past the break.

    read more

  • ICE numbers belie Obama promise on immigration enforcement

    ICEAgents_feat.jpgBy Marcelo Ballvé, New America Media

    The Obama administration had long promised to shift the focus of
    immigration enforcement from workers to employers.

    In real terms, that means less of the high-profile raids like those at
    electronics and meatpacking plants in Postville, Iowa and Laurel, Miss.
    that characterized the last years of the Bush administration. Those led
    to the arrests of hundreds of immigrant workers, but only a trickle of
    employer prosecutions.

    Instead, as John Morton, assistant secretary of Homeland Security under
    President Obama, promised in a rare public speech earlier this year at
    the Migration Policy Institute in Washington, D.C., his agency would “focus on the employer” and pursue “aggressive criminal and civil
    enforcement against (employers) who knowingly violate the law.”

    “But it hasn’t been done,” said Crystal Williams, executive director of
    the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA).

    Although Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) worksite arrests
    appear to be trending down, worksite raids continue. I-9 or Employment
    Eligibility Verification audits designed to spot unauthorized workforces
    have leapt in number. Meanwhile, ICE’s own statistics — which the
    agency shared with New America Media — show that the agency’s efforts to
    investigate employers have yet to yield an increase in prosecutions.

    In fact, the opposite happened — ICE brought less charges against
    employers in 2009 than it had the previous year.

    In the 2008 fiscal year, still under President Bush, ICE brought
    criminal charges against 135 business managers, supervisors and owners
    as part of immigration investigations.

    In the next fiscal year — which ended in September 2009 after President
    Obama’s first eight months in office — ICE brought criminal charges
    against 114 employers, a 16 percent decrease.

    Clearly, “white-collar” cases against employers who profit from the
    broken immigration system are harder to prove than run-of-the-mill
    immigration arrests.

    But the number of employer cases appears as a “miniscule proportion”
    when set alongside the total prosecutions initiated by ICE, said
    Williams of AILA.

    Taken together, the total number of ICE cases referred to the federal
    courts ballooned to 20,411 in fiscal year 2009 — a 12 percent increase
    over the prior year — according to data from the Transactional Records
    Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University.

    These prosecutions take in everything from counterfeit toothpaste to
    drug trafficking, but the bulk of the cases were relatively minor
    immigration charges. Just over half (10,346), according to TRAC, were
    for entry or re-entry of undocumented immigrants.

    The large number of lower-level immigration prosecutions has immigrant
    advocates worried that the agency’s focus is still on quantity rather
    than quality.

    Of course, new priorities take a while to trickle through a
    law-enforcement agency as large as ICE. The agency has more than 7,000
    agents and is the federal government’s second-largest investigative
    force after the FBI.

    “They are trying to do what they say they’re trying to do,” said Donald
    M. Kerwin, Jr., vice president for programs at the Migration Policy
    Institute. “Give them a couple of years to turn the ship around.”

    It may be well be that this fiscal year, which began Oct. 1, 2009, proves
    a turning point for worksite enforcement.

    In December 2009 ICE prosecuted 6 percent fewer total cases than in the
    same month the prior year, a drop driven mainly by a decline in charges
    for illegal entry, a charge for which those convicted are rarely sent to
    prison, according to TRAC.

    Kerwin of the Migration Policy Institute sees this decline in
    prosecutions as a possible sign the agency is re-ordering its priorities
    to focus on serious and flagrant violators of immigration laws such as
    exploitative employers.

    And so far this fiscal year, ICE has initiated 1,687 investigations
    against employers, more than the entire previous year combined, said
    Harold Ort, ICE spokesman in Newark.

    These cases include an ongoing investigation in the Baltimore area that
    last month led to raids on two Maryland restaurants, as well as several
    homes and businesses.

    The sweep was meant “to ensure that employers are held accountable for
    maintaining a legal workforce,” William Winter, ICE special agent in
    charge of Baltimore, said in a press release issued after the raid.

    Yet no employers were charged in connection with the Maryland raids. The
    only arrests were non-criminal administrative detentions of 29
    immigrants in the country unlawfully.

    The absence of immediate charges against business owners or managers is
    not unusual. The lag-time between raids and charges against employers
    can be years.

    But when raids are not quickly followed by high-level charges or
    indictments, it reinforces the perception that it’s still employees and
    not their bosses who are bearing the brunt of enforcement. They are the
    ones being scooped up by ICE and fired en masse.

    “This is not an acceptable way to treat members of our community,” said
    Gustavo Torres, executive director of the CASA de Maryland immigrant
    rights group, after the Baltimore-area raids.

    ICE has no choice but to enforce the law when encountering undocumented
    immigrants in the course of employer-targeted investigations, said
    agency spokesman Ort.

    Ort also defended the audits of I-9 forms as a powerful tool in
    detecting unscrupulous employers, immigration-related fraud, and
    fineable employment offenses.

    “We consider … employee records as important as tax or income records,”
    he said.

    As a federal agency in charge of the politically sensitive task of
    immigration enforcement, ICE must endure criticism from both sides of
    the immigration debate.

    On the one hand, immigrant advocates castigate the agency as a callous
    enforcer that terrorizes immigrant communities through raids such as
    last week’s sweep of Arizona shuttle van installations or I-9 audits
    (which advocates call “paper raids”).

    On the other hand, activists and elected officials with more
    uncompromising law-and-order views on immigration prod the agency to be
    more aggressive and make as many arrests as possible.

    On March 18 — just a week after the raids in nearby Maryland — ICE
    assistant secretary John Morton testified on Capitol Hill before the
    House Appropriations Homeland Security Subcommittee about his agency’s
    budget request of $5.5 billion for the 2011 fiscal year.

    Morton received a tongue-lashing from a Kentucky legislator.

    Rep. Hal Rogers, a Republican, pointed out that while I-9 audits of
    businesses had increased by 187 percent to more than 1,100 in fiscal
    year 2009, at the same time there had been a drop in worksite arrests of
    undocumented immigrants.

    “When I look at the shift in ICE’s focus over the last year, I’m deeply
    concerned,” said Rogers, according to a transcript of the hearing. “It
    appears as though immigration enforcement is being shelved and the
    administration is attempting to enact some sort of selective amnesty
    under the cover of prioritization.”

    For Frank Sharry, executive director of immigrant advocacy group
    America’s Voice, only comprehensive immigration reform that modernizes
    the system as a whole will free up immigration enforcement to balance
    priorities and focus on illegal hiring and unfair labor practices.

    In the current climate, federal immigration authorities certainly do
    feel pressure to deliver politically expedient statistics.

    This pressure was put on public view by the Washington Post’s March 27
    publication of internal memos in which a top ICE official discussed
    deportation quotas. In a written statement, Assistant Secretary Morton
    said most of the memo obtained by the newspaper did not reflect ICE
    policy, and added, “We definitively do not set quotas.”

    Still, Morton himself was not above promising improved numbers as he was
    grilled on the 2010 drop in worksite enforcement arrests during the
    March 18 appropriations hearing.

    “I am very focused on getting that up,” Morton replied.

  • Fiat SpA reports a $28 million loss in first quarter of 2010

    Fiat SpA, which now manages and runs Chrysler Group LLC, reported a $28 million loss in the first quarter of 2010 and warned that the year will be a tough one for the auto business in a continued tough economic climate and the end of Europe’s cash for clunker incentive program this year.

    Fiat said that the loss is an improvement on its $549 million loss reported during the same period in 2009. First-quarter revenues of $17.3 billion were up 14.7 percent.

    Fiat’s automobile division outperformed the company as a whole and generated revenues of $9.1 billion, up 22 percent.

    Fiat SpA Sergio Marchionne is in Italy today where he is joined by management as they present their 2010-2014 business and product plan. Stay tuned for more info on that.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Detroit News


  • Smart Fuel Cell Car Only Mildly Innovative

    By reading the Smart Fuel Cell (SFC) press release one would think that its hydrogen fuel cell range extender for a battery electric vehicle plus combined heat and power (CHP) technology is earth shattering news. But, it’s only mildly newsworthy and I’ll tell you why.

    SFC has joined forces with EFOY Pro fuel cells to create a full hybrid car that uses a fuel cell as a range extender and to supply heat to start the batteries when the vehicle is in cooler climates.

    According to Dr. Peter Podesser, CEO of SFC, “This concept represents a quantum leap for battery vehicles. In winter, powering vehicles by batteries alone has not been a convincing solution for many users: the performance of a cold battery is insufficient, while at the same time power demand is dramatically increased by heating requirements. We offer a worthwhile solution to this problem by intelligently combining battery and fuel cell in a hybrid system. In addition, we enable fully automatic recharging independent of the power grid, thus freeing the customer from the ever present fear of not finding a power outlet when needed.”

    Is this a breakthrough? Most hydrogen fuel cell cars today are also hybrid electric vehicles as well. In 2006, the Peugeot ePure was unveiled that is a hydrogen hybrid vehicle that uses its fuel cell to charge the batteries which supply energy to the electric motor. In today’s world we could call this a battery electric car with a fuel cell range extender.

    In February 2010 I had talked about Proton Power Systems and Smith Electric Vehicles developing an “electric car with fuel cell range extender”. It seems like since the public sentiment has swung towards battery electric cars for the moment that manufacturers are emphasizing the battery part and de-emphasizing the hydrogen fuel cell part.

    The only byproducts of a hydrogen fuel cell are a little bit of steam and heat. Some of the heat comes out of the tailpipe with the steam and in some vehicles some of the heat is rerouted to help the fuel cell start in cold weather. In some FCVs some of the steam is also used to add moisture to the fuel cell.

    In SFC’s fuel cell hybrid vehicle, some of the heat from the fuel cell is used to warm the battery pack. This so-called CHP technology may at most be called a minor innovation. Don’t get me wrong. Any new hydrogen car is welcomed. But, when you overhype a technology is just takes away from others that are truly innovative and ground-breaking.

  • Electrical Design Engineer

    Ireland, Acre Resources

    Our client is an innovative technology business that generates renewable energy from tidal streams. They require a Senior Electrical Engineer to work with their electrical power conversion systems, and on the development of the grid connection methods.

    Based in Ireland, this company has received multiple awards and global recognition for its innovative and market-leading technology. This is a key position within the company and the successful applicant will focus on the design of cabling, power transmission and distribution.

    Main duties include:

    • Developing power conditioning & transmissions systems appropriate for the subsea environment
    • Preparing component specifications and liaising with suppliers on procurement
    • Liaising with Local Utility Operators to formalise connection agreement and specialist suppliers of submarine cables and electrical equipment
    • Developing condition monitoring systems (sensors, data acquisition)

    Along with exceptional analytical and electrical problem solving skills you will have a minimum of 5 years electrical engineering experience with significant time served in power conversion and/or transmission/distribution.

    In addition you will have:

    • A proactive and positive approach to engineering challenges
    • Strong interpersonal and communication skills
    • Good client-facing skills, comfortable dealing with multiple stakeholders
    • Ability to work in conjunction with Mechanical & Marine Engineers
    • A practical and pragmatic approach to work with an emphasis on simplicity of design and operation

    Candidates who have engineering experience from the renewable energy industry, with knowledge of grid compliant power conditioning and who have experience of power transmission in a marine environment will be given preference; however these are not mandatory for this position.

    This role represents a fantastic opportunity to work on cutting-edge electromagnetic engineering projects in one of the most innovative areas of renewable energy. The company aims to deploy farms of tidal turbines which will silently and invisibly generate electricity on a global scale; you could be part of this exciting vision.

    Due to the high response we receive to adverts we are only able to respond to applicants closely matching the criteria.

  • News Corp. Buys Social Gamer Irata Labs


    Irata Labs

    News Corp. (NYSE: NWS) has acquired Irata Labs, a developer of social games across Twitter and Facebook. The deal’s terms weren’t disclosed. The San Francisco company is not expected to be folded into MySpace or game network IGN Entertainment, according to the LAT, which cites unidentified sources. But Irata will be tapped to work with various News Corp. holdings when needed, suggesting that digital head Jon Miller has separate plans for growing Irata as a standalone. At the moment, the company says it’s developing a location-based platform for social gaming.

    Irata’s has two main products that it developed. Its most popular one is Spymaster, which debuted last year and is played mostly on Twitter—one of the few games that have emerged on the microblogging site—and on Facebook. The other is iList Micro, which lets users turn Twitter into a classifieds section, allowing them to look for things to buy according to ZIP code or product type.

    The company consists of just three people—CEO Chris Abad, software architect Ben Myles and creative director D. Keith Robinson. About two years ago, the company received $1.5 million in initial backing for iList from Dmitry Shapiro, founder of the Veoh Networks (which declared bankruptcy and was then sold to Qlipso earlier this month), Assistly CEO Alex Bard and Draper Fisher Jurvetson,

    Related


  • More smart grid insight

    Michael Giberson

    According to Accenture, 46 percent of consumers surveyed said they didn’t want smart grid-based energy management systems if it leads to higher electricity bills.  My guess is that the other 54 percent of consumers didn’t understand the question.  The summary distributed by Accenture contains several other bits of should-be-obvious information – consumers are concerned about data privacy, consumers want to be compensated if utilities can remotely turn off appliances, consumers want to be able to locally reverse remote utility cut-off instructions – but even as many of the results seem obvious, it still adds up to some more-than-obvious insight into what consumers want. The FT Energy Source blog also comments on the report.

    At the Searching for Insight blog, Gary Hunt offers a consumer’s perspective on smart grid developments informed by years working in energy and information technology businesses.  See his: