Blog

  • Front Burner: Atlanta gets its first Pinkberry; new gourmet food market talk

    Tomorropinkberryw’s News Today is reporting that Atlanta’s first franchisee of Pinkberry frozen yogurt was handing out samples this past weekend in front of its still-under-construction retail space at  3937 Cobb Parkway.

    I’ve heard the owner is David Beall — the younger brother of Sam Beall, who runs the ultra-exclusive inn/working farm Blackberry Farm in Tennessee. Both Bealls are heirs to the Ruby Tuesday restaurant chain fortune.

    Pinkberry is the California chain widely credited with starting the new age of FroYo.

    In other news:

    • Bill Addison is reporting over on Atlanta Magazine’s Covered Dish blog that Linton and Gina Hopkins of Restaurant Eugene have plans to open a gourmet food market in 2011. The working name? Drovers. No, it’s not a skin condition…
    • Decatur Metro (hey, dude, you a dad yet?) says that Farm Burger will open its doors on Wednesday and unleash its grass-fed goodness on Decatur. A friend of mine went to a preview dinner and says the burger brought her paroxysms of …
  • Kate Gosselin Begging Friends For Votes On “Dancing With The Stars”

    After a disastrous foxtrot that will likely be the final nail in a coffin filled with chuckle-worthy and robotic performances on the 10th season of ABC’s Dancing With The Stars, Monster Mom Kate Gosselin has embarked on a grassroots email campaign to keep her in the ballroom.

    Life & Style Weekly’s Scene Queens got their hot hands on an email Kate sent to all her friends with a desperate plea for their votes.

    The Gossip Gals write: “In it, she pleads for friends to forward the email to at least ten people and asks for everyone to call in not once, not twice, but TEN times! ‘I am much less confident this week and am actually BEGGING you this week to vote to the max for Tony I via TEXTING, EMAIL, and PHONE.’”

    And it does appear that Kate can use all the help she can get: The reality TV mom was slammed by the show’s judges after her most recent showing, with Bruno even suggesting she looked “catatonic” during a performance to “Don’t You Forget About Me.” Clips from rehearsals revealed it was another tense week of practice between the Twist of Kate star and her professional partner, Tony Dovolani, with the two breaking into an argument once again as Kate complained that a visit from her children left her too exhausted to dance.

    There’s nothing like blaming your eight kids for your two left feet! Although Kate feels her footwork has improved greatly, she admits that the constant criticism she receives from the judges has become a bit discouraging.

    “I had fun, and they didn’t seem to notice. It’s starting to creep in a little bit. Tonight, I was trying to hold back horrible emotions … probably not on live TV should I be standing there crying in front of the judges … It’s getting a little difficult. I’m depressed, sort of.”


  • Facebook Shuts Down Facebook Lite

    Facebook is not only launching products this week but also killing them. The company said this morning that it will no longer support Facebook Lite, a stripped-down version of its site meant to load faster and be more accessible in places without broadband. As of today, lite.facebook.com redirects to Facebook.

    Lite was a short-lived product, having only gone live last September. The most probable explanation for the shutdown is that Facebook has since incorporated technology from Lite into its main product. It also requires continued effort to maintain two web versions — not to mention multiple mobile versions — as the larger product evolves. The company said in a wall post that it “learned a lot from the test of a slimmed-down site.” We’ve asked the folks at Facebook for additional comment and will update if they provide it. Lite had something like 70,000 fans on Facebook (or people who “like” it, in the new parlance).

    One reason not to like Lite? It showed limited advertising and was disconnected from features like Facebook pages and applications. Ad Age called it “a black hole for brands.” Not a good idea to irritate the people who pay the bills.

    Lite screenshot via TechCrunch.

  • Reagan & GE: Holography caps a ‘Progress Report’

    As part of GE’s sponsorship of the Ronald Reagan Centennial Celebration — which is a two-year-long commemoration of President Reagan’s 100th birthday on February 6, 2011 — we’ll be taking an ongoing look at Reagan’s GE years through the lens of the employees he met and the technologies they made.

    In postwar America, GE found its ideal goodwill ambassador in Ronald Reagan. The former president projected optimism and reassurance, the perfect spokesman for a company introducing the public to new technologies. Reagan helped sell GE’s “Progress Is Our Most Important Product” slogan to millions of Americans looking for not only a better and more comfortable way of life, but a brighter future. During Reagan’s early years with GE, the progress could be seen in revolutionary home appliances such as the world’s first toaster oven and the automatic portable dishwasher, or in the latest TV sets that Ronald and Nancy Reagan described in our last story. Some of GE’s most innovative discoveries in the 1950’s also came in the area of plastics — and when combined with optical research born from those early entertainment systems — together they paved the way for GE’s latest breakthroughs in holographic storage.


    As it happens: Ronald Reagan, then a spokesperson for GE, is seen here in 1957 observing a chemist working at GE’s foundry laboratory in Erie, Pennsylvania.

    With the discovery of Lexan polycarbonate resin, a “transparent plastic of unsurpassed impact resistance,” GE was setting the groundwork for a myriad of applications and uses, including space helmets for NASA and the manufacture of compact discs, cell phones and pagers. That expertise in materials research fueled discoveries that enabled GE scientists to use the full volume of a DVD-type disc, rather than just the surface, as is now the case. The result is holographic technology that will soon allow consumers to store 100 traditional DVDs on a single disc — and will help support a new era of sophisticated 3-D TV.

    “We’re talking about producing hardware that gives viewers a cinema experience superior to movie theatres at reasonable costs,” says Peter Lorraine, manager of the Applied Optics Lab at GE Global Research. “In the Reagan era of early television, you could only get a postcard box with flickering green and black images. Now we’re going for unparalleled color and capacity.”

    A letter from a young General Electric Theater viewer is the launching point for the “Progress Report” below from Reagan's years at GE.

    He should know! In the video above, General Electric Progress Reporter Don Herbert gives a tour of GE technologies. In case you didn’t know it, Don is none other than TV’s “Mr. Wizard” from the hit science show that ran from 1951 to 1965.

    Peter says the need for additional digital storage is crucial in a world where huge amounts of data are being lost every day, costing companies billions of dollars. “There is a spectacular amount of data that cannot be maintained,” he says. “Consumer video is like an onion, peeling away a new layer all the time.” For example, holographic data storage would allow television networks producing live sports to retain more of the digital video — and it provides significantly faster access to archived information when compared to traditional computer hard drives.

    Peter says consumers can expect to find an entire TV series available on one high definition disc. And holographic storage technology will be able to support 3-D television that will make the home viewing experience comparable to seeing Avatar on the big screen.

    Learn more in these GE Reports stories:
    * “Leaps in the lab: From Reagan’s TV to digital x-rays
    * “Coast to coast with 250,000 employees: Reagan at GE
    * “The Reagan centennial: A legacy of progress
    * “GE’s holographic disc lands “Coolest Tech” award
    * “GE unveils holographic disc breakthrough

    * Read Reagan essays on our website by Thomas W. Evans, Peggy Noonan, Andrea Mitchell, Tom Brokaw, and Rudy Giuliani
    * See more of Reagan’s General Electric Theater spots by clicking the videos in this slideshow
    * Read GE’s Centennial announcement
    * Learn more about the centennial at www.reagancentennial.com
    * Watch a rebroadcast of Jeff Immelt’s speech at the Reagan Library

  • Two stories about integrated utility smart grid programs

    Michael Giberson

    Obviously the electric utility industry is very much in the experiment and learning phase (also known as “trial and error”) of the smart grid.  Two examples are provided by PG&E in California and Xcel in Colorado.  It is tempting to rush to judgment on the impossibility of an efficient, well-run, customer-centric smart grid project implemented by rate-regulated, vertically-integrated electric utilities.  I’ll resist that temptation for now, but in the meantime consumers ought to ensure that whatever their local regulated monopoly is doing for (to?) them on the smart grid front doesn’t impede their ability to benefit from the rapidly coming consumer-centric smart grid future.

    To that end, consider Toby Considine’s remarks in “Punch and Judy and Energy Usage“:

    The real contest is over control of the customer interface, and thereby of the customer. Today’s Google Energy and Microsoft Hohm pose no threats to the control of the customer by the utility. The utilities still can gate access to the back-end energy markets. Control of energy information prevents both intermediation and disintermediation in the energy market. Utilities also are desperate to justify their AMI investments at a time when many are calling for moratoriums and delays in deployment; AMI is part of a seamless model that includes control of the customer’s home as well as of access to information.

    […] The challenge for today is to ensure both backward compatibility with OpenADE and today’s infrastructure and forward compatibility with the unimagined future. That future will support disruptive business models as well as technologies. And that’s why the fights are so fierce over something that appears so simple.

    A lot is skipped in the “[…]” so read the whole thing if you want to know more.  An important issue for consumers is that regulated utilities and their regulators do not do “disruptive business models” very well.

  • FIRST Champion Robots (and the Students Who Built Them) [Robots]

    Last Saturday, Atlanta’s Georgia Dome was packed with students cheering on the FIRST Robotics Competition national championship. We covered the final matches via live feed, but these up-close photos truly capture the event’s electric atmosphere. More »







  • Levaquin Class Action Lawsuit Filed Over Risk of Tendon Injury

    A Texas woman has filed a class action suit over Levaquin, claiming that the popular antibiotic increases the risk of tendon ruptures and other tendon injuries. 

    The Levaquin class action lawsuit was filed on April 8 in the Beaumont Division of the Eastern District of Texas by plaintiff Lisa Presley. The complaint names Johnson and Johnson and its subsidiary Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceuticals as defendants, alleging that the Levaquin side effects led to Presley suffering from Achilles tendonitis, which she says led to severe and permanent injuries.

    Presley charges the defendants with negligence, strict product liability, failure to warn, breach of warranties, fraud, and violation of consumer protection laws, among others. The Levaquin suit is seeking damages for economic losses, disability, disfigurement, pain, suffering, mental anguish, physical impairment and medical expenses on behalf of Presley and seeks class action status on behalf of other similary situated individuals.

    Levaquin (levofloxacin) is part of a class of medications known as fluoroquinolones, which was approved by the FDA in December 1996. It is prescribed to prevent infection by stopping the reproduction of bacteria. However, it has also been found to be toxic to the tendons, leading to an increased risk of tendon damage, including debilitating ruptures of the Achilles tendon.

    In July 2008, the FDA required that a “black box” tendon damage warning be added about the side effects of Levaquin and other similar antibiotics. However, consumer advocates called for stronger warnings about the Levaquin tendon rupture problems at least two years earlier, with Public Citizen filing a petition with the FDA in 2006 insisting that consumers and the medical community be provided with clearer warnings about the risk of tendon damage from the class of antibiotics.

    There are several hundred individual Levaquin tendon rupture lawsuits already filed in federal courts throughout the country, which have been consolidated and centralized in the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota as part of a multidistrict litigation (MDL). There are also more than 100 other cases pending in various state courts throughout the country. All of the lawsuits involve allegations that the drug makers failed to adequately warn about the increased risk of tendon ruptures and other tendon injuries that can occur from the side effects of Levaquin.

    In February, U.S. District Judge John Tunheim identified the first six Levaquin suits to go to trial in the federal MDL. The cases will act as “bellwether” trials, helping parties involved in the litigation gauge how juries will respond to evidence and testimony.

  • There’s Really Only One Way To Reduce Debt-To-GDP, And It’s Probably Not In The Cards For The US

    Two charts from a UBS research report on public sector debt provide some nice insight into what deficit reduction looks like.

    First of all, they note that there really aren’t that many countries that have successfully gone through periods of reducing debt-to-GDP.

    chart

    And even there, there wasn’t actually any debt reduction.

    chart

    In other words, reducing debt-to-GDP is about expanding GDP (the denominator), rather than shrinking the numerator.

    So unless you think the US is actually going to step on the GDP accelerators sometime soon (and given our maturity and demographics, that seems unlikely) don’t expect us to go the way of these countries.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Al Gore tweets and blogs “Straight Up”

    Here is something you twitterers out there can retweet, from twitter.com/algore:

    Gore tweet

    The Nobel prize-winner has posted a longer recommendation on his website:

    An Important New Book

    Joe Romm is one of the most important and influential voices fighting for an end to the climate crisis. His blog, Climate Progress, is a must read.

    Romm just published an important new book, titled Straight Up: America’s Fiercest Climate Blogger Takes on the Status Quo Media, Politicians, and Clean Energy Solutions. In the book, Romm “cuts through the misinformation and presents the truth about humanity’s most dire threat. His analysis is based on sophisticated knowledge of renewable technologies, climate impacts, and government policy, written in a style everyone can understand.”

    If you are interested in the fight to solve the climate crisis, I recommend you read this book.

    Gore is an uber-busy uber-communicator, so this means a lot to me personally.  His recommendation helped dropped Straight Up below 1,000 on Amazon this morning, which is the first time that’s happened for any of my books.

    Related Post:

  • Energy and Global Warming News for April 20th: Interior moving to curb coal mining pollution, require mountaintop restoration; New life for old tires; A ‘Hamburger Helper’ for diesel fuel

    Interior Moving to Curb Coal Mining Pollution, Require Mountaintop Restoration

    The Interior Department is writing new regulations for mountaintop-removal coal mining that would expand protection for waterways and require the restoration of dynamited areas.

    Christopher Holmes, spokesman for Interior’s Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, said the agency is rewriting its “stream protection rule” to boost environmental safeguards.  The proposal being drafted, Holmes said, would:

    *  Establish a clear standard for restoring dynamited mountaintops. The 1977 Surface Mining Reclamation and Control Act requires that mountaintops be restored to their “approximate original contour,” but defining the term has been left to individual states.

    *  Yank the right of state regulators to grant exceptions to the contour-restoration requirement. Federal authorities currently allow states to set their own standards for granting exemptions, and state standards vary widely.

    *  Set a federal definition for “material damage” to watersheds beyond permitting areas. The surface-mining law prohibits mountaintop-removal mines and other above-ground coal operations from damaging watersheds outside areas covered by mining permits, but the requirement has been difficult to enforce because “material damage” has never been defined.

    *  Require companies applying for mining permits to collect more information on the environmental health of watersheds where they intend to work and to monitor conditions during and after mining. Mines that inflict environmental damages beyond what is permitted would be required to change their operations or close.

    *  Clarify that seasonal streams and temporary streams are covered by the regulations, even when the streambed is dry.

    New Life for Old Tires

    Of the nearly 300 million tires discarded in the United States each year, more than half end up either as landfill or are burned for fuel in cement kilns and in other industries.

    Lehigh Technologies of Tucker, GA, has developed a process for rejuvenating discarded rubber that could open up new recycling opportunities. If the company’s technology catches on, it could carve out a billion-dollar market for high-performance recycled rubber.

    Used rubber is hard to recycle because it is vulcanized–hardened and rendered chemically inert–by the addition of sulfur and other compounds to the material’s long molecular chains. Small chunks of used tires can be partially melted and used as filler in asphalt, but devulcanizing rubber involves expensive chemical and thermal processes.

    Lehigh Technologies instead shatters rubber into a fine powder using a process that involves freezing old rubber and smashing it to pieces. This starts with tires that have been torn into half-inch chunks using conventional shredding equipment. Lehigh mixes these rubber pieces with liquid nitrogen, cryogenically cooling the rubber to -100°C. The rubber is then fed into a high speed “turbomill” that shatters it into particles no more than 180 microns in size.

    Creating such fine powder transforms the rubber from a highly inert filler material to one that can bond with other materials. “We deliver a huge increase in surface area relative to size, and that allows for a much more intimate mixing with other materials,” says Lehigh Technologies CEO Alan Barton.

    In 2006, Lehigh Technologies opened its first commercial facility, which has a capacity to produce 100 million pounds of rubber powder and to process four million tires per year. Sales of the company’s products increased by 40 percent last year, but the facility is still operating at less than half capacity. Barton says that his firm has sold recycled rubber to a number of leading tire manufacturers. He estimates that 30 million tires now on the road in the United States are made in part with his company’s recycled rubber, although only about 3 to 7 percent of all the rubber in these tires is their recycled material.

    White-hot energy

    Storing energy is one of the biggest obstacles to the widespread adoption of alternative sources of power. Batteries can be bulky and slow to charge. Hydrogen, which can be made electrolytically from water and used to power fuel cells, is difficult to handle. But there may be an alternative: magnesium. As school chemistry lessons show, metallic magnesium is highly reactive and stores a lot of energy. Even a small amount of magnesium ribbon burns in a flame with a satisfying white heat. Researchers are now devising ways to extract energy from magnesium in a more controlled fashion.

    Engineers at MagPower in White Rock, British Columbia, for example, have developed a metal-air cell that uses water and ambient air to react with a magnesium fuel supply, in the form of a metal anode, to generate electricity. Doron Aurbach at Bar-Ilan University, Israel, has created a magnesium-based version of the lithium-ion rechargeable cell, a type of battery known for its long life and stability. It would be ideal for storing electricity from renewable sources, says Dr Aurbach. And Andrew Kindler at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena is developing a way for cars to generate hydrogen on board by reacting magnesium fuel with steam. The reaction produces a pure form of hydrogen suitable for fuel cells, leaving behind only magnesium oxide, a relatively benign material, as a by-product.

    But there is, of course, a catch. Although magnesium is abundant, its production is neither cheap nor clean, says Takashi Yabe of the Tokyo Institute of Technology. Various industrial methods are used to extract magnesium, ranging from an electrolytic process to a high temperature method called the Pidgeon process, but the energy cost is high. Producing a single kilogram of magnesium requires 10kg of coal, says Dr Yabe.

    To change this, he is developing a process using only renewable energy. Dr Yabe’s solution is to use concentrated solar energy to power a laser, which is used to heat and ultimately burn magnesium oxide extracted from seawater—where, he says, there is enough magnesium to meet the world’s energy needs for the next 300,000 years. A solar-pumped laser is necessary, he says, because concentrated solar energy alone would not be enough to generate the 3,700˚C temperatures required. Dr Yabe calls his approach the Magnesium Injection Cycle.

    A ‘Hamburger Helper’ for Diesel Fuel

    In the never ending search for substitutes for oil in cars and trucks, a Nevada company has found an unusual partial replacement: natural gas.

    Natural gas, of course, is already used in thousands of buses, in compressed form. But building a compression station for fueling, and converting the buses, is expensive. The Nevada company, Advanced Refining Concepts, of Reno, has developed a fuel that runs through conventional fuel pumps, truck fuel tanks and diesel engines.

    That is crucial, said Peter W. Gunnerman, who co-founded the company with his father, Rudolf. “You can have the best fuel in the world, but the second you tell mechanics you have to change this or change that, it just doesn’t get done,’’ he said.

    His company produces something called GDiesel, which starts with ordinary ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel and with natural gas, which is primarily methane.

    In its refinery, Advanced Refining Concepts bubbles the gas through the diesel fuel. In the presence of a proprietary catalyst, the methane and the diesel fuel react chemically, with the diesel fuel pulling apart the methane and absorbing its component atoms, hydrogen and carbon.

    As the molecules of diesel fuel absorb the natural gas, they get bigger. Mr. Gunnerman said that the liquid grows by more than 10 percent.

    Diesel fuel is sold by volume (gallons refers to size, not energy content) so anything that expands the product becomes a sort of Hamburger Helper, an inexpensive filler. Natural gas is considerably cheaper than diesel.

    As the fuel’s density declines, the amount of energy declines very slightly. But that seems fine with the company’s customers, said Mr. Gunnerman. They report going more miles on a tank and needing fewer oil changes. Users include a construction company and truck fleet operators.

    None of the benefits have been confirmed by a lab, but sales are growing, through a distributor that serves northern Nevada and northern California.

    Mr. Gunnerman’s company has produced the fuel at a single processing unit. The unit could make 10,000 gallons a day but has been limited to 4,000 because there is not much natural gas available at the spot where it is installed, in Sparks, he said. In October, the company broke ground at an industrial park nine miles east of Reno, where it is installing 10 such units. Start-up is scheduled to begin next month.

    A Clear-Eyed Look at China’s Climate Target

    In the lead-up to Copenhagen, and again in its submission to the UNFCCC in January, China announced a target to lower its carbon intensity, the amount of carbon dioxide emitted per unit of GDP, by 40-45% by 2020 compared to a 2005 baseline. Now, while U.S. legislators deliberate the details of a much-needed climate and energy bill, Chinese leaders have already entered into in-depth discussions on their national plans, policies, investments and enforcement mechanisms for achieving this target.

    Just last week, a senior Chinese climate statesman, He Jiankun, made news when he and other energy experts recommended that China should set a target for reducing its carbon intensity by 18% in the upcoming Twelfth Five-Year Plan (2011-2015).   By including this carbon intensity target  into the next  Five-Year Plan, it will become legally binding once approved by the National People’s Congress early next year.  Progress in achieving the target will also become an indicator in the job performance rating of every provincial governor and major enterprise owner.

    In order to provide more context to the recent policy proposals in China, this blog post takes a closer look at the details of China’s carbon intensity target and answers some of the crucial questions about how it can achieve its target.

    Colo. passes legislation to switch power plants to natural gas

    Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter (D) plans to sign into law today a piece of legislation that imposes stricter air pollution rules on power plants while helping the state’s coal-fired power plants switch to natural gas.

    The legislation, opposed by the coal industry but backed by utilities and the natural gas industry, was passed by both houses of the Colorado General Assembly within 17 days of its introduction.

    Mike Beasley, a lobbyist for utility Xcel Energy Inc., said it was “one of those rare perfect storms” where industry and environmental groups agree on a policy outcome.

    “Gas folks wanted to increase the use of gas,” Beasley said. “Environmentalists wanted a cleaner, better utility fuel. And utilities wanted a cleaner fuel but wanted to do it in a cost-effective manner.”

    Under the legislation, Xcel Energy must provide the state Public Utilities Commission with a plan for three aging power plants in the state’s Front Range. The utility will need to reduce emissions of nitrogen oxides by up to 80 percent, using cleaner-burning fuel such as natural gas to accomplish the reduction.

    In exchange, Xcel will be allowed to use long-term contracts to address the volatility of natural gas prices. Supporters said the bill is necessary to get a head start on tougher federal air pollution regulations, but critics described the bill as a handout for natural gas at the expense of coal.

    “If we were up against imminent catastrophe,” asked state Sen. Shawn Mitchell (R), “why were we only hearing that warning now over halfway through the session, from the backers of a sweetheart deal for Xcel and the gas companies?”

  • Obama hitting Illinois next week

    WASHINGTON–President Obama will return to Illinois for a brief visit next week, on an April 27-28 swing to include Missouri and Iowa. The Obama stop will be in a rural, not urban part of the state, perhaps the Quincy area.

    Here’s the White House guidance:

    “During the visit, President Obama will meet with workers, farmers, small business owners, and local leaders to share ideas for continuing to grow the economy and to put Americans back to work. President Obama will spend time in these areas to hear about the challenges rural Americans face and to listen to their ideas for working together to turn the economy around.”

  • Peugeot 308 GTi, foto espía

    Parece ser que los rumores se estan confirmado poco a poco y prueba de ello es esta foto espía que ha sido publicada hace cuestión de unos minutos. Esta imagen corresponde al supuesto Peugeot 308 GTi.

    Algunos medios ya apuntaron hace unos meses que Peugeot estaba trabajando en esta versión pero hasta este momento no teniamos ninguna información que lo pudiera afirmar. Supuestamente, el 308 GTi sería presentado en el próximo Salón de París este próximo mes de Octubre.

    En lo que respecta a la motorización, es demasiado pronto para hacer cualquier congetura pero se especula que podría usar un motor 1.6 THP de 200 CV.

    Related posts:

    1. Fotos espía del Peugeot 308 RC-Z
    2. Fotos espía del Peugeot RC-Z
    3. Fotos espía del Peugeot 308 RC Z
  • CNBC Celebrates 4/20 With All Day Marijuana-Thon

    CNBC 420

    CNBC is celebrating 4/20 with an all day conversation about Marijuana.

    Everyone from Larry Kudlow to Erin Burnett has mentioned the herb live today, but no one is mentioning the links to today’s global celebration of the drug.

    Tonight the network is re-showing its Marijuana and Money, which highlights the size of the business in America.

    CNBC 420

    CNBC is still running its green banner online and on air highlighting the network’s green credentials.

    What sort of green are we talking about?

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • A Wasp Finds the Seat of the Cockroach Soul | The Loom

    Ampulex%20emerging.jpgIf blogs could have mascots, the Loom’s would be the Emerald Cockroach Wasp (Ampulex compressa). Back in 2006, I first wrote about the grisly sophistication of this insect, which turns cockroaches into zombie hosts to be devoured by their offspring. Since then I’ve blogged from time to time about new research on this parasite’s parasite. Last year I sang the praises of the Emerald Cockroach Wasp on the NPR show Radiolab, and, to my surprise, brought some peace of mind to a very scared kid.

    Scientists still don’t understand the wasp very well, though, and so I decided last night to see if anyone had discovered something new about it recently. It turns out Ram Gal and Frederic Libersat, two scientists at Ben Gurion University in Israel, just published a paper in which they reveal one of the secrets to zombification. In effect, they identified the seat of the cockroach soul.

    Before I describe the new results, let me just refresh your memory about what the Emerald Cockroach Wasp actually does.

    Like many parasites, the Emerald Cockroach Wasp manipulates its host’s behavior for its own benefit. As I explain in Parasite Rex, parasites make their hosts do lots of different things (get them into the body of their next host, act as a bodyguard, or build them a shelter to name a few examples). The Emerald Cockroach Wasp needs a live, tame cockroach to feed its babies.

    When the female wasp is ready to lay her eggs, she seeks out a cockroach. Landing on the prospective host, she delivers two precise stings.

    Ampulex%20stinging.jpg

    The first she delivers to the roach’s mid-section, causing its front legs buckle. The brief paralysis caused by the first sting gives the wasp the luxury of time to deliver a more precise sting to the head. The wasp slips her stinger through the roach’s exoskeleton and directly into its brain.

    She injects another venom that robs the cockroach of the ability to start walking on its own. The wasp takes hold of one of the roach’s antennae and leads it, like a dog on a leash, to its doom: the wasp’s burrow. The roach creeps obediently inside and sits there quietly as the wasp lays her egg on its underside. The wasp leaves the burrow, sealing the opening behind her.

    The egg hatches, and the larva chews a hole in the side of the roach. In it goes. The larva grows inside the roach, devouring the organs of its host, for about eight days. It is then ready to form a pupa inside the roach. After four more weeks, the wasp grows to an adult. It breaks out of its pupa, and out of the roach as well. Only then does the zombie cockroach die.

    The zombifying sting has long fascinated scientists. It does not paralyze the roach. It does not put it to sleep. If the zombie roach is frightened, it jumps in the air like a normal roach, but then it fails to run away. What does the wasp understand about the nervous system that we do not?

    cockroach head220The cockroach brain is not really really a brain–a single solid lump of neurons like the one in our head. It’s actually a group of linked clusters of neurons, called the cerebral ganglia. Some studies have suggested that one of those clusters, called the sub-esophageal ganglia (SEG), boosts the signals required for an insect to start walking. So Gal and Libersat decided to see how wasps would behave if the roaches they stung were missing the SEG.

    Normally, the wasps only spends about 15 seconds inserting its stinger into the cockroach’s head. But when Gal and Liberset destroyed the SEG in roaches, the wasps were flummoxed. They spent over three minutes poking and prodding inside the cockroach’s head. By contrast, when the scientists cut the nerve running from the SEG to the roach’s body (marked here as NC), the wasps didn’t spend any extra time delivering the sting. It thus appears that the wasps zero in on the SEG to zombify their host.

    Gal and Libersat took a closer look at the SEG of zombified cockroaches. Using an electrode, they meausred the activity of the SEG. They discovered that the neurons in the SEG became quiet. They spontaneoulsy fired half as often as the neurons in the SEG of normal cockroaches. And a puff of air on the antennae of the zombified roaches–which usually triggers a roar of activity in the SEG so that the insect can escape–produced only half the normal activity in the neurons.

    To cap off the experiment, Gal and Libersat then pretended to be wasps: they injected wasp venom directly into the SEG of healthy cockroaches. The injection zombified the roaches. The insects barely moved on their own, and they hardly budged in response to a terrifying puff of air. Gal and Libersat could only zombify the cockroaches with a shot to the SEG, however. If they injected the venom into a neighboring cluster of neurons (marked here as SupEG), the roaches flitted about as if nothing had happened.

    While this study does a good job of pinpointing the place where the wasps perform their neurosurgery, it does not close the book. The SEG is actually a complicated maze of neurons. Gal and Libersat are now investigated exactly where in the SEG the wasp sends its stinger, and what precisely its venom does to those particular neurons. The Emerald Cockroach Wasp will no doubt make yet another visit to the Loom in years to come, because it has more to teach us.


  • Mid-Day Update: Here’s What You Need To Know

    lloydblankfein general tbiIndices:

    • DJIA: Up 35 points to 11,126.
    • NASDAQ: Up 14 points to 2494.
    • S&P 500: Up 8 points to 1206.


    Today’s biggest gainers on the S&P 500
    :

    • Harley-Davidson Inc (HOG): $$35.45 / +8.18%
    • Marshall & Iisley Corp (MI): $9.07 / +7.85%
    • Snap-on Inc (SNA): $48.27 / +7.75%

    Today’s biggest losers on the S&P 500:

    • Northern Trust Corp (NTRS): $54.94 / -5.88%
    • AK Steel Holding Corp (AKS): $19.63 / -5.76%
    • State Street Corp (STT): $44.91 / -4.95%

    Commodities:

    • Oil: Up 2.1% or $1.73 to $83.18 a barrel.
    • Gold: Up 0.3% or $3.80 to $1139.60 an ounce.
    • Silver: Up 0.9% or $0.17 to $17.90 an ounce.

    Futures:

    • Mostly solid gains across the board.
    • Oil up, natural gas down.
    • Softs, Grains showing strong performance, especially OJ, cocoa, and cotton.

    Now here are the stories you need to know:

    • Markets have turned on Goldman Sachs above estimate earnings the morning, with demand for risky assets rising as a result. The market has largely closed the gap made after the announcement of the SEC’s fraud charges against Goldman Sachs.
    • Europe’s volcanic ash crisis may be showing signs of a slowdown, with flights resuming in Germany and France. The threat of a second ash cloud continues to loom, though some experts see the ash portion of the eruption over, and lava its future. Oil prices have rebounded slightly on the flight resumptions. 
    • UK and Irish airlines continue to lose money on the lack of flights, with Aer Lingus the latest to announce losses, thus far at 20 million euros ($27 million).
    • The IMF has blasted out another warning this morning, this time on the sovereign debt issue, saying that developed countries have post World War II like debt levels without the war.
    • Apple reports after the close today, as analysts are projecting rising sales for the company’s iPhone model, and impressive results for the first quarter of the iPad. The company is likely to show strong earnings, but not anything massive.

    All prices are posted as of 12:00 EST.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Los Sims conducirán los futuros coches de Renault

    renault-twizy_sims3.jpg

    El uso de energías renovables llegará incluso al mundo virtual de los Sims, ya que Renault ha firmado un acuerdo a largo plazo con la compañia de juegos Electronic Arts, para que los futuros coches eléctricos de la firma francesa puedan ser usados en el juego Sims 3.

    El primer modelo que se pondrá a disposición de los simmers será el Twizy Zero Emission, un coche eléctrico urbano que Renault fabricará en Valladolid y que será uno de los primeros coches eléctricos de la marca que podrán ser reservados a través de Internet, junto con el Kangoo ZE y el Fluence ZE.

    Pero no sólo será el coche lo que los Sims obtengan de Renault, sino también los medios para recargar sus baterías y para llevar una vida más amigable con el medio ambiente (aerogeneradores y paneles solares), además de la obtención de electricidad para otros usos, haciendo el entorno del Twizy toda una estrategia para fomentar el uso del coche eléctrico y de energías renovables y más limpias.

    Renault ofrecerá el coche y los medios generadores de energía a través de un paquete llamado Electric Vehicle Pack. Este paquete y otros que llegarán a futuro, podrán ser descargados directamente desde Internet.

    Vía | Ludoqia



  • BlackBerry OS 6.0 screenshots hit the web

    Die-hard BlackBerry users will likely admit in unison that a new OS is long overdue.  With iPhone, webOS, and Android dominating the internet browsing category, BlackBerry users have been feeling a bit left behind.  If you like what you see in the picture above, then you’ll be excited to hear about RIM’s newest platform: OS 6.0.

    The top-left picture shows the new icons and design changes, while the middle picture shows the new WebKit browser.  With tab switching (see top-right picture), new favorites, and multitouch capabilities.  According to BGR (who has seen the OS in action), multitouch is system-wide, along with kinetic scrolling and “rubberbanding” (when you scroll up too far and the menu snaps back into place).  The home screen offers pages for organizing applications (see the little band above the icons with “all” highlighted), and the message inbox has been revamped. 

    All in all, it sounds like a great update.  BGR’s source is gunning for a June/July launch of OS 6.0, so there’s a chance that it could be announced at WES 2010 next week.  BlackBerry users, are these the updates you’ve been waiting for?  Discuss!

    Via BGR


  • World court rules Uruguay may continue operating pulp mill on Argentina border

    [JURIST] The International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague ruled Tuesday that Uruguay may continue operating a pulp mill on the River Uruguay despite breaching its treaty obligations to Argentina. The ICJ found that Uruguay did not breach its substantive obligation to Argentina to protect the environment under the 1975 Statute of the River Uruguay by planning to construct two pulp mills. The court did find that Uruguay had breached its procedural duties laid out in the statute by not cooperating with Argentina and the Administrative Commission of the River Uruguay (CARU) during the development phase and prior to the construction of the Orion (Botnia) pulp mill, but concluded that shutting down the plant or ordering damages would not be an appropriate remedy. The ruling was criticized by environmental activists but welcomed by diplomats from both Argentina and Uruguay who hoped it would help repair relations between the two countries.
    The hearings for the treaty dispute began in September. Argentina claimed that pollutants from the plant were causing extreme harm to the river and surrounding environment and that Uruguay failed to obtain Argentina’s approval before starting the project. In 2007, the ICJ refused to order Argentina to prevent demonstrators protesting the plant from blocking traffic on roads and bridges into the country from Uruguay. In 2006, the ICJ denied Argentina’s request that Uruguay be ordered to stop construction on the plants.

  • Metal Hip Replacement Problems Being Reviewed in Europe

    The United Kingdom’s medical agency will begin reviewing potential problems with metal-on-metal hip implants, due to growing concerns that they may cause non-cancerous tumors, swelling and other hip damage.  

    The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) is expected to announce an official review of metal hip implants this week.

    European health officials say that it appears that metal particles may shed into the body as a result of wear and tear on the implants, potentially causing the growth of non-cancerous tumors in the surrounding tissue, particularly in young women. Metal hip replacement problems also appear to cause damage to sinew and tissue in the areas where they are shed, reviewers say.

    There are about 40,000 people in the U.K. who have received metal-on-metal hip replacement implants. The MRHA is expected to announce that any considered at risk will be given a blood test looking for high levels of metal compounds in their blood; a sign that their metal-on-metal hip implant may be shedding debris. If the high levels are found, it is possible they will have their implant replaced.

    Health care professionals have increasingly been warning about metal-on-metal hip implant complications. The particles can damage soft tissue, cause inflammatory reactions and lead to bone loss. They are also concerned that many of them do not seem to settle correctly into the ball-and-cup arrangement, leading to pain and discomfort for implant recipients.

    Last month, reports linked a particularly high failure rate to the DePuy ASR metal hip replacement system, which is now set to be phased off of the market. In the U.S., the FDA has received about 300 complaints of DePuy ASR hip problems since the beginning of 2008. Most of those involved situations where patients required additional surgery to replace the DePuy ASR hip implant.

    Attorneys in the U.S. are now reviewing the potential for DePuy ASR metal hip replacement lawsuits for people who have suffered complications due to defective DePuy ASR implants.

    Last year, U.K. researchers studied 660 patients who had received metal hip implants from DePuy Orthopaedics and found that 3.4 percent suffered from adverse reactions to metal debris. Surgeons are warning that one to three percent of all metal on metal hip implant recipients may experience hip implant problems, and possibly need to have the devices replaced, due to metallic debris. In 2008, the MRHA determined that some metal-on-metal hip implants could lead to genetic damage.

    All of the major orthopedic medical device companies manufacture their own version of “metal on metal” hip implants, and several have said that the metallic debris problem does not pose a significant risk. However, in a recent editorial in the Journal of Arthroplasty, doctors were warned to avoid the use of metal hip implants, and said they should only be used “with great caution.”

  • Before Sue Sylvester, “Popular” Star Tammy Lynn Michaels Also Spoofed Madonna’s “Vogue”

    Before McKinley High cheerleading coach Sue Sylvester “gave good face” to Madonna’s “Vogue,” it was Popular star Tammy Lynn Michaels who was putting on a parody of The Material Girl’s 1990 anthem.

    Ahead of tonight’s eagerly-anticipated The Power of Madonna episode on Glee, Zap2It.com has unearthed this classic moment of Melissa Etheridge’s former partner striking a pose in a cone bra as “It” Girl Nicole Julian on the WB’s cult comedy Popular. Ironically, Popular was produced by Glee creator Ryan Murphy.