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  • Walmart Receipt Checker Helps Customer, Justifies Existence

    Wes writes that he has discovered a previously unknown use for retail receipt checkers. They can help you to determine when a store is ripping you off, rather than the other way around.

    He explains:

    Yesterday, at Walmart I was complaining to my girlfriend about
    annoying receipt checkers as a Walmart employee at the door went
    through my cart and verified that every item appeared on my receipt.
    I’m not sure if the employee heard me or not, but she interrupted my
    conversation to point out a discrepancy.
    “Where’s your other garden hose?” she asked.
    “Huh? I only bought one.”
    “Well you were charged $13.13 for ’50 ft garden hose’ twice. You can
    take your receipt to customer support and the will refund one of the
    charges.”

    After thanking her I received my refund and left the store with a new
    attitude toward Walmart receipt checkers.

    Thank you, anonymous Walmart receipt checker, for looking out for a consumer! You should be cloned and stationed at every Walmart in the country.

  • 2011 Dodge Charger Spied on Interstate!

    2011 Dodge Charger

    God praise the cell phone camera. These little buggers don’t let anyone get away with anything anymore. They also have the ability to get photo’s online in a matter of seconds. They’re amazing pieces of technology actually. For example, take these pics of the much anticipated 2011 Dodge Charger that was caught rolling down the interstate. Granted the car was pretty covered up, but there are some details that we can make out.

    2011 Dodge Charger

    The grill for instance is a bit more rounded and the headlights look to be LED units. The roof line, although completely uncovered looks to be similar to that of the old car. Taking a look at the rear of the car shows wheels and tire sizes to remain pretty constant to whats already on the current model. R/Ts and SRT’s will most likely retain the 20 inch wheel with a 255/45/20 series tire. Power, depending on the trim level should come in one of 3 forms. Either the new 280 HP Pentastar V6, the 5.7-liter 368 HP V8 or, and this is just a guess, the new 6.4-liter that is said to produce between 450 HP – 500 HP. This would obviously be the big gun that would go in the new Charger SRT, if they make one, which I think they will. Hopefully the boys at Chrysler will incorporate enough changes in the new model to satisfy the old and new enthusiasts alike.


  • Rumor: AT&T blocking off June employee vacations for iPhone release?

    AT&T store

    Following a trend that we’ve seen for the past few years, sources have told BGR that AT&T has blocked off employee vacation time for the month of June.  Historically, AT&T only does this prior to the iPhone launches, so it’s highly probable that we’ll be seeing the fourth generation iPhone when June rolls around.

    For those eagerly waiting for the new device (be it “HD,” “4G,” or “3GSS”), you shouldn’t have to wait much longer.  Who’s excited?

    Via BGR


  • If computer technology had developed like health care technology

    If computer technology had developed like health care technologies home computers would cost millions. Everyone would have one, but the nation’s computing insurance company would be facing disaster.


  • Icelandic Volcanoes–Disrupting Weather & History Since 1783 | 80beats

    Prominent_plumeIf past is prelude, then the volcanic eruption in Iceland whose plume of ash has grounded almost 300 flights across Europe may not only affect air travel in the coming days, it may also have a lingering impact on Europe’s weather. Experts are looking back to the aftereffects of a previous eruption–when the Laki volcano in Southern Iceland exploded more than 200 years ago. That explosion had catastrophic consequences for weather, agriculture and transport across the northern hemisphere – and helped trigger the French revolution [The Guardian].

    The Laki volcanic fissure erupted over a eight month period between June 1783 and February 1784. Within Iceland, the lava and poisonous clouds of gas ushered in a time known as the “Mist Hardships”: farmland was ruined, livestock died in vast numbers, and the resultant famine killed almost a quarter of the population.

    The eruption’s impact wasn’t confined to Iceland alone. Dust and sulfur particles thrown up by the explosion were carried as a haze across Northern Europe, clouding the skies in Norway, the Netherlands, the British Isles, France, Germany, Italy, and Spain. In conjunction with another volcanic eruption and an unusually strong El Nino weather pattern, the Laki eruption is thought to have contributed to extreme weather across Europe for the next several years.

    Describing the summer of 1783 in his classic Natural History of Selborne, British naturalist Gilbert White wrote it was  “an amazing and portentous one … the peculiar haze, or smokey fog, that prevailed for many weeks in this island, and in every part of Europe, and even beyond its limits, was a most extraordinary appearance, unlike anything known within the memory of man” [The Guardian]. Gilbert wrote that the haze blanked out the sun at midday, that it was “particularly lurid and blood-colored at rising and setting,” and that the heat was so intense that “butcher’s meat could hardly be eaten on the same day after it was killed.” This bizarre summer was followed by an usually harsh winter, historians say. Environmental historians have also pointed to the disruption caused to the economies of northern Europe, where food poverty was a major factor in the build-up to the French revolution of 1789 [The Guardian].

    Experts observing this week’s volcanic eruption at Eyjafjallajökull (pronounced AY-ya-fyat-la-yo-kult) say that while the scale of crisis may not be the same, continued eruptions at the spot could cool temperatures in Northern Europe. Richard Wunderman, a volcanologist with the Smithsonian Institution’s Global Volcanism Program said the volcanic plume contains a lot of sulfur “that can become an aerosol up there that hangs around a long time reflecting sunlight” [The New York Times], creating a regional “volcano weather” effect.

    But a bigger concern lurks nearby. Just a few kilometers to the east of the erupting vent is a much bigger and potentially more dangerous volcano called Katla. In the past, when Eyjafjallajökull erupted, Katla did too. So scientists are closely monitoring Katla to see if it, too, might go [Science News].

    The one bright spot in the current explosion, say scientists, is that there may be enough aerosols in the atmosphere to cause brilliant red sunsets across Europe.

    Related Content:
    80beats: Volcanic Eruption in Iceland Causes Floods, Shuts Down European Air Travel
    Bad Astronomy: Iceland Volcano Eruption Making an Ash of Itself
    DISCOVER: Disaster! The Most Destructive Volcanic Eruptions in History (photo gallery)
    DISCOVER: World Versus the Volcano, how massive eruptions leave the world cold and hungry
    80beats: Three Miles Down in the Carribean, the Deepest Volcanic Vents Ever Seen
    80beats: Volcanoes on Venus Could Be Alive and Ready To Erupt
    80beats: Congo Volcanic Eruption Threatens To Surround Native Chimps with Lava

    Image: NASA/MODIS Rapid Response Team


  • Tippr Buys Up Patents to Take on Groupon

    Could a broad set of patents around collective buying be the ammo Tippr needs to chase Groupon? That’s what CEO Martin Tobias is betting, having bought up the intellectual property generated by bubble-era Mercata from its investor Paul Allen.

    Groupon — which is in the process of raising $130 million on a $1.35 billion valuation for offering online deals redeemed at local businesses, according to TechCrunch — is a runaway hit. And a hundred or so other companies in the collective buying space are duking it out to grab a share of that market. But Tippr, which just launched in February, has a special weapon up its sleeve: intellectual property.

    Tippr comes out of Kashless, a local classifieds system founded by Tobias, the former CEO of biodiesel company Imperium Renewables. Around the same time last year that Kashless was finding that classifieds weren’t the best way to drive customers to local businesses, Tobias saw the rise of Groupon. He happened to know that Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, who’d invested something like $90 million in the failed Groupon of the late ’90s, Mercata, still owned that company’s patents.

    Mercata didn’t work for a number of reasons: Online social networking didn’t exist back then, customers were much less likely to spend money online and the company missed the IPO window before the market crash. But it did accumulate 12 patents, with two more pending, that Allen recently sold to Tobias, receiving an equity stake in Kashless/Tippr for his firm Vulcan Capital. (Kashless raised $5 million from RRE Ventures a year and a half ago.)

    Tobias wouldn’t name what law firm he’s working with, but did say he plans to enforce the patents to protect Tippr. And he maintains that he’s not a patent troll — Tippr will soon expand to cities beyond Seattle, where he said it is already the third-biggest offering behind Groupon and LivingSocial.

    “My personal belief is that patents are primarily a defensive weapon, not offensive,” Tobias told us. “The only reason I spent a lot of money to get the patents is to make a viable business. If all you’re doing is trying to extort people that’s not a viable business.” The other way Tobias plans to compete is by building Tippr as more of a white-label technology company and less of a brand. Tippr deals are already running as a dynamic ad unit for Seattle Magazine and the Seattle P-I, he said (pictured below).

    The Mercata patents seem quite broad, for instance “Attaining product inventory groupings for sales in a group-buying environment” and “Demand aggregation through online buying groups.” One feature that Tobias is particularly interested in is the concept of accelerating deals, where “as the group gets bigger the value of the voucher gets better.” I wrote last week about a Groupon competitor, HomeRun, which is doing something just like that (it calls them “Avalanche” deals). This might potentially be covered by the Mercata patent “On-line group-buying sale with increased value system and method,” Tobias said.

    If you want to check out the full Tippr patent list, it runs along the bottom of its home page.


    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

    Social Advertising Models Go Back to the Future

  • Gun-rights Activists Score Victory In Colorado In The Shadow Of Virginia Tech Massacre Anniversary

    Gun-rights activists score victory in Colorado in the shadow of Virginia Tech massacre anniversaryThe third anniversary of the Virginia Tech (VT) massacre has once again brought calls from anti-gun advocates for more stringent control to be imposed on the sale of weapons in the United States.

    On April 16, 2007, VT student Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people in the worst school shooting spree in U.S. history, and today the university planned to cancel classes to commemorate those who died.

    Campaign to Keep Guns Off Campus has also marked the anniversary by blasting the gun lobby’s push to permit the carrying of loaded handguns on college campuses.

    "The gun lobby is not interested in the safety of students, faculty and staff," said Andy Pelosi, director of the campaign.

    "They are using the tragic shooting at Virginia Tech as cover for their real agenda to push guns into every nook and cranny of society," he added.

    He also urged colleges and universities to join in the effort to oppose guns on college campuses, saying that to date, the American Association of State Colleges and Universities and more than 130 individual colleges and universities in 31 states have joined the campaign.

    However, proponents of guns on campuses scored a significant victory just one day before the anniversary, when the Colorado Court of Appeals ruled in favor of students seeking the right to carry concealed weapons on campus.

    The appeals court reversed an earlier ruling by El Paso County District Judge David Miller who dismissed a lawsuit filed in 2008 by Students for Concealed Carry on Campus, seeking to overturn the University of Colorado’s gun ban, according to Denver Daily News.ADNFCR-1961-ID-19726946-ADNFCR

  • HTC wants you to name its next phone

    In a nod to the power of social networks, HTC wants Facebook users to vote on the name of its next device. The options? Jovi, Zeal, Wildfire, and Festi.  No details about the device are given so we don’t know if it’s going to be an Android-powered, Windows Mobile-powered, or dumbphone-powered device or even what form factor it’ll take. But even if with all that mystery, to be able to have a little say in what the name of the next HTC device is going to be is kind of cool.

    On the poll, HTC cryptically says that they’re looking for a name "that is playful and full of youth". And given that they’re hosting the survey on Facebook, we can assume it’ll deeply tie into social networking. Basically, there’s a good chance that this phone isn’t for the grown up in us. Hopefully, HTC continues this trend of customer input cause it’s pretty darn fun.

    Psst, our vote is currently in last place. Which name are you voting for? [facebook]

  • At Least One Honest Person Exists On eBay

    While most sellers on eBay are busy talking up the historic and/or kitsch value of the moldy t-shirts and sun-damaged movie posters they salvaged from their parents’ crawlspace, Consumerist reader Daniel has pointed us in the direction of one item where the seller has decided to be honest about the product, for better or worse.

    In his description for a semi-battered copy of the bestselling 1968 astrology tome, Sun Signs by Linda Goodman, the seller lays out what you’d be buying, warts and all:

    This is a wonderful book. If you enjoy talking to Flying Spaghetti Monsters before you drift off to sleep, then this book is for you.
    There is no dust sleeve included with this 549 page book made exclusively from the Scrotal fur of a Unicorn.
    This book belonged to my mother in the 1970’s.
    There is a pencil scribble on the last blank page. I’m pretty sure I did that. At 4 years old, I think I was trying to spell “bullsh1t.”
    Cut me some slack, it ended up kinda sh1tty looking, but I knew that what I was writing was true to my 4 yr. old heart.
    Anyhoo, this completely bogus piece of crap astrological book from 1968 is up for auction.
    If this hunk of sh1t sells, I will donate 1/2 of the proceeds to the charity of your choice!

    Check out the item listing for yourself [eBay]
    ebaycloseup.JPG

  • Passenger Rights Group Blasts Airline Fee Announcement

    Passenger rights group blasts airline fee announcement As airlines are trying to limit their financial losses by imposing new fees, consumer advocates are loudly criticizing these ideas as examples of these businesses trampling on travelers’ rights.

    Earlier this month, discount carrier Spirit Airlines stirred controversy by announcing that it would charge passengers for carry-on luggage stowed in overhead bins. This caused the organization called FlyersRights.org to demand that Congress ban such practices permanently.

    Its president and founder, Kate Hanni, has sought to expose airlines’ motivations behind such decisions by saying that the United States has become known as the "Land of the Fee" when it comes to air travel. She added that this is because fees are treated differently than other revenue in terms of the taxes airlines have to pay to fund the national aviation system.

    "So not only do these latest gimmicks harm passengers, they are shortchanging all of us by skirting [the airlines’] responsibility to help maintain and upgrade our nation’s aviation infrastructure," Hanni stressed.

    In a related development, European carrier Ryanair said it will begin charging passengers for in-flight bathroom use, and FlyersRights.org also urged Congress to prohibit U.S. carriers from doing this same.ADNFCR-1961-ID-19726941-ADNFCR

  • Chase To 15% Of Cardholders: Drop Dead

    15% of current Chase credit card users are going to get the axe, Chase CEO Jamie Dimon announced in a shareholder letter this week. “In light of new regulations,” that forbid sucking in customers with zero-interest introductory rates and then ratcheting up lunatic penalty rates, “we deem them too risky.” Other highlights from the letter (PDF):

    • We have substantially reduced very low introductory or promotional balance
    transfers. This change alone reduced our outstanding balances by $20 billion.

    • In the future, we no longer will be offering credit cards to approximately 15% of the customers to whom we currently offer them. This is mostly because we deem them too risky in light of new regulations restricting our ability to make adjustments over time as the client’s risk profile changes.

    • We reduced limits on credit lines, and we canceled credit cards for customers who had not done business with us over an extended period.

    This week Chase also announced first-quarter profits rose 55%. And recently, someone left a giant pile of manure inside a Chase ATM vestibule.

    [via LowCards.com via Consumer Reports Money Blog]

  • Android 2.1 update for the Sprint Hero bumped back to early May?

    Ugh. Internal memos. Even if they’re real, it seems like they’re never right. Take the Sprint Hero, for example: if this memo from March had rang true, we’d have seen the Hero bumped up to Android 2.1 last week. It didn’t. If the next memo that came out was on key, the update would be out today. So far, it’s a no show.

    And now.. now we have another memo, this time saying to keep an eye out in early May.

    The word comes from two separate sources. First up: The titular guys over at Android Guys got a customer service rep on the line about the update, who said:

    Agent (Jolly K): “I am sorry for misinformation. The updates says that Android 2.1 HTC Hero is being launched in the first week ok [sic] May”

    Right around the same time, Phandroid got their hands on a camera snap (seemingly taken in a shower, or a steam room of some sort) of a memo indicating the same thing, though it says “early May” rather than “the first week”.

    So what’s the hold up? From what I’ve been told by industry amigos, Sprint is notorious for their update certification process. If they get even a whiff of a bug, they delay the roll out until it can be fixed and re-tested. Some last minute bug probably popped up and threw a stick in the gears. Waiting for the latest and greatest can be torture, but at least you know your handset won’t mysteriously blow up post-update, right?


  • Top 10 foods for optimal eye health

    kiwi-eyes.jpg

    Eating the right foods is essential for maintaining healthy eyes. Antioxidants have been credited with preventing illness and anti-aging protection from degenerative disease.

    Foods rich in carotenoids, the antioxidant pigment that gives color to produce, have been shown to reduce the risk of macular degeneration, the leading cause of severe vision loss in people over age 60.1 As a rule, fruits and vegetables with the most color have more antioxidants.

    Studies show that a higher dietary intake of lutein and zeaxanthin, carotenoids that often appear together, is related to a reduced risk of cataracts and age-related eye conditions.2

    According to the American Optometric Association, these antioxidants are of great benefit to eye health and can also improve vision in those already afflicted with these disorders. Lutein and zeaxanthin protect the retina from the harmful effects of the free radicals in UV light and greatly reduce the risk for cataracts and macular degeneration.³

    According to Sarah Francis, assistant professor and nutrition specialist at Iowa State University, “Carotenoids are like sun block for the cells in your body.”  protect the retina from the harmful effects of the free radicals in UV light and greatly reduce the risk for cataracts and macular degeneration.

    Eat these foods often to promote and protect healthy eyes

    1. Dark green leafy vegetables such as, kale, spinach, collard, turnip and mustard greens are the best source of lutein and zeaxanthin. Leafy greens are also a rich source of vitamin C, which may prevent glaucoma.4
    2. Carrots and yams are rich in eye healthy antioxidants and very high in beta-carotene, the pigment in bright orange fruits and vegetables and a precursor for vitamin A.  Vitamin A is critical to normal vision and plays a major role in preventing night blindness and maintaining a healthy cornea.
    3. Broccoli is a member of the cruciferous family related to kale, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, cabbage and collard greens.  Broccoli contains high levels of lutein, zeaxanthin and vitamin C.
    4. Citrus fruits, strawberries and orange juice are rich in vitamin C as are tomatoes and red bell peppers, which also contain lutein and lycopene and also credited with supporting eye health.
    5. Many fruits are rich in lutein and zeaxanthin apricots, peaches, mangoes, papayas, oranges, tangerines and melons, especially cantaloupe are among those with the most content.
    6. Herbs and spices, such as curry and dill, parsley and watercress contain significant concentrations of lutein.  Unlike vitamins and minerals, the bioavailability of lutein is increased with cooking.5
    7. Flax seeds and flax oil are rich in omega 3 fatty acids thought to reverse the effects of dry eye syndrome (DES)6
    8. Garlic, sunflower seeds, Brazil nuts, black walnuts, oatmeal and brown rice contain selenium, a key mineral that helps to absorb antioxidants in the prevention of eye disease.
    9. Garbanzo beans, kidney beans, oatmeal and whole wheat bread contain zinc, an important mineral that works with antioxidants to play a role in promoting overall eye health.
    10. Wheat germ, soy and safflower oil are rich in vitamin E, as are pistachios, peanuts and particularly almonds. Associated with the prevention of cataracts high levels of vitamin E are found in green leafy vegetables and fortified cereal.

    Marie Oser is a best-selling author, writer/producer and host of VegTV, Follow Marie on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vegtv

    More from ecomii:


    Sources:

    1. Handelman GJ, Dratz EA, Reay CC, van Kuijk JG: Carotenoids in the human macula and whole retina. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1988, 29:850-5.
    2. Brown L, Rimm EB, Seddon JM, Giovannucci EL, Chasan-Taber L, Spiegelman D, Willett, WC, Hankinson, SE. A prospective study of carotenoid intake and risk of cataract extraction in US men. Am J Clin Nutr 1999 Oct; 70(4):517-24 1999.
    3. Ribaya-Mercado, Judy D., Blumberg, Jeffrey B. Lutein and Zeaxanthin and Their Potential Roles in Disease Prevention J Am Coll Nutr 2004 23: 567S-587
    4. Pasquale, Louis R. MD; Kang, Jae Hee ScD. Lifestyle, Nutrition and Glaucoma
      J. Glaucoma; 2009 18(6):423-428
    5. Idit Amar,, Abraham Aserin, and, Nissim Garti. Solubilization Patterns of Lutein and Lutein Esters in Food Grade Nonionic Microemulsions. J Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2003 51 (16), 4775-4781
    6. Miljanovic B, Trivedi K, Dana M, et al: Relation between dietary n-3 and n-6 fatty acids and clinically diagnosed dry eye syndrome in women. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2005;82:887-893.
  • SEC hits Goldman Sachs with fraud

    I blogged on this very topic back in late December, and now the SEC is cracking down hard. As one  financial industry insider quoted in the second link says, “This is big.”

    From the second link:

    Goldman Sachs Group Inc was charged with fraud on Friday by U.S. securities regulators in the structuring and marketing of a debt product tied to subprime mortgages.

    The Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit alleges that Paulson & Co, a major hedge fund run by the billionaire John Paulson, worked with Goldman in creating the collateralized debt obligation, and stood to benefit as its value fell, costing investors more than $1 billion.

    Fabrice Tourre, a Goldman vice president who the SEC said was principally responsible for creating the product, was also charged with fraud.

    Paulson has not been charged. “Goldman made the representations here to the investors, Paulson did not,” SEC enforcement chief Robert Khuzami said on a conference call.

    Goldman said in a press release that the SEC’s charges are completely unfounded in law and fact and it will vigorously contest them.

    The lawsuit, filed in Manhattan federal court, marks a dramatic expansion of regulatory efforts to hold people and companies responsible for activity that contributed to the nation’s financial crises. It also comes as lawmakers in Washington debate sweeping reform of financial industry regulation.

  • SEC Charges Goldman Sachs Over Subprime-Tied Product

    Today, the Securities and Exchange Commission charged Goldman Sachs and one of its vice presidents with selling clients a financial instrument that another client had purposefully designed to fail and had shorted, betting on its collapse:

    The SEC alleges that Goldman Sachs structured and marketed a synthetic collateralized debt obligation (CDO) that hinged on the performance of subprime residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS). Goldman Sachs failed to disclose to investors vital information about the CDO, in particular the role that a major hedge fund played in the portfolio selection process and the fact that the hedge fund had taken a short position against the CDO.

    To simplify how the gambit worked: The hedge fund Paulson & Co. (no relation to former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson) handpicked mortgage-backed securities that were doomed to stop performing, being backed with subprime mortgages, and Goldman packaged them into a kind of bond. Paulson bet against the bond, with Goldman acting as the broker; at the same time, Goldman sold the bond to other clients without disclosing that Paulson had engineered the bond to fail.

    The SEC filing notes that those other clients lost $1 billion. Goldman had no direct stake in the success or failure of the CDO. It made money either way. Felix Salmon explains:

    The scandal here is not that Goldman was short the subprime market at the same time as marketing the Abacus deal. The scandal is that Goldman sold the contents of Abacus as being handpicked by managers at ACA when in fact it was handpicked by Paulson; and that it told Abacus that Paulson had a long position in the deal when in fact he was entirely short.

    Goldman Sachs has lost more than $10 billion in market capitalization today, in the wake of these revelations. Good. It can go long markets and it can go short markets. But it can’t lie to its clients. That’s well beyond the pale.

    One of the reasons the markets must be so spooked about Goldman? This sort of deal seems to have been ubiquitous during the run-up to the housing crash. This is just one SEC filing. My guess is that more will be forthcoming.

  • Energy and Global Warming News for April 16: Global temperatures hit ‘hottest March on record; Rebound in stock prices prompts green-tech IPOs

    Global temperatures hit ‘hottest March on record

    Global temperatures fueled by El Nino seasonal warming last month chalked up the hottest March on record, US weather monitors reported.

    “Warmer-than-normal conditions dominated the globe, especially in northern Africa, South Asia and Canada,” the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said in a statement on Thursday.

    Combined global land and ocean average surface temperature for March 2010 was the warmest on record at 13.5 degrees Celsius (56.3 degrees Fahrenheit), which is 0.77 degrees Celsius above the 20th century average of 12.7 C, it said.

    Average ocean temperatures were the hottest for any March since record-keeping began in 1880, while the global land surface was the fourth warmest for any March on record, NOAA said, citing analysis from the National Climate Data Center.

    Rebound in stock prices prompts green-tech IPOs

    Green businesses have responded to a turnaround in stock prices over the past year by planning initial public offerings worth more than three times the amount raised in 2009.

    Among them are California-based electric carmaker Tesla Motors Inc., Massachusetts-based renewable energy producer Ameresco Inc. and Spanish photovoltaics manufacturer T-Solar Global SA, which have all filed to go public.

    Nineteen green businesses plan to raise $9.6 billion through IPOs this year, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Twelve of them are solar and wind companies.

    “There’s renewed appetite for green IPOs,” said Luigi Ferraris, chief financial officer of Enel SpA. The Italian utility hopes to sell a minority stake in Enel Green Power this year for $5.4 billion, which would be Europe’s largest offering since 2007.

    Analysts say the surge in IPOs has resulted from higher stock prices. The MSCI World Index, which tracks equities in developed countries, has risen by 80 percent since March 2009.

    “Investment bankers are out there soliciting business,” said Nigel Meir, a fund manager at London-based Ludgate Environmental Fund. “The green sector has a lot of forward propulsion”

    Competition on batteries could overwhelm Daimler-Renault partnership

    Though the two car companies have formed a joint venture to develop electric cars, Renault SA and Daimler AG will compete to produce the battery packs that will be used in their electric Smart and Twingo models.

    The companies traded 3.1 percent stakes last week, but they left battery development out of the deal, creating a potential source of conflict down the road. Both companies have described the technology as critical to the development of future vehicles.

    “Daimler has been a company that has traditionally been reluctant to give up its own technology path,” said Anil Valsan, London-based director of automotive research at Frost & Sullivan Inc. “While Daimler’s battery may have a technical edge, Renault-Nissan’s solution may end up being more cost competitive.”

    Daimler is “not obliged” to use Renault’s batteries for its cars, Renault CEO Carlos Ghosn said at the announcement of the alliance last week, but the company is “obviously going to do everything in order for our battery to be considered as the best.”

    The two companies plan to spend several billion dollars on battery development over the next two years. Considering the cost of the technology, it would be surprising if the companies decide to use separate batteries for the two vehicles, said Mike Tyndall, a London-based analyst at Nomura Securities Co.

    “They may reach a point where it’s clear that one technology will be better than the other,” Tyndall said. “It’s all a question of how willing they are to work together”

    German solar firms get warm welcome in California market

    German companies eager to profit from their expertise have been flocking to California in recent years. With government incentives driving the growth of renewable energy sources at a breakneck speed in the US, California has emerged as one of the nation’s most active markets for solar energy.

    The companies range from contractors who install solar panels on homes to energy suppliers, who feed electricity from renewable sources into the nation’s power grid. Some enterprises form partnerships with local companies while others launch North American subsidiaries. But all say there is no shortage of demand.

    Growth potential yet to peak

    California’s economy is the eighth largest worldwide, and its goal is to use 33 percent renewable energy by 2020. Angela Merkel said during her current visit that the state is a source for German cooperation in both industry and scientific research.

    “We can dramatically develop our relationships here,” she told the dpa press agency.

    German companies have been doing just that, largely because California’s solar energy market is known for rapid growth thanks to progressive government policies.

    Johannes Buchholz, managing director of the German-American Chamber of Commerce in San Francisco, said those companies developed much of their expertise because of Germany’s feed-in tariff, which pays for renewable energy supplied to the electricity grid.

    “California is starting to move in that direction. It’s not anywhere close to the German model yet, but the steps are going in that direction. The potential is still absolutely great. California is this sleeping giant that is starting to awake to mostly solar energy,” Buchholz told Deutsche Welle.

    Google climate change chief wants price on carbon

    Google wants a price on carbon and wants it now — both for lofty reasons like combating global warming, but also because it could be good for business.

    As the Senate inches closer to climate legislation that could give the Internet giant what it wants, I checked in with Dan Reicher, the director of climate change and energy initiatives at Google, to see what surfing the web had to do with reining in greenhouse gases.

    Turns out, the answer is technology. Reicher — a former Department of Energy assistant secretary who now directs Google’s investments in clean energy — believes that exposing the hidden costs of dirty fuels will set off a rush of investment in new energy innovations. He says carbon pricing is an “essential signal we have to get to.” Right now, “money is sitting there to make significant investments,” he says, but the cash flow is sidelined because the incentives aren’t there.

    Once they have to pay the true price of carbon combustion, the calculus for companies would change, making it fiscally prudent for them to conserve and make cleaner energy. All of a sudden it would make sense to invest in figuring out how to consume less power, or in new technologies that cut emissions at the source. And that would mean a huge new market for innovations that would help them do that.

    The same would go for individuals — under carbon pricing, households save if they reduce their electricity loads, and we’d expect a spike in demand for cheap energy efficiency technology as folks seek to reduce their monthly bills. Reicher gives us a compelling vision full of smart grids that know when your fridge needs to defrost and when your car’s battery can turn you a profit by selling spare juice.

    House committee clears bill to boost energy grid security

    The House Energy and Commerce Committee unanimously approved a bill Thursday that seeks to address security vulnerabilities in the nation’s energy grid.

    The legislation, which now heads to the House floor, would charge the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) with the responsibility of identifying and addressing weaknesses in the country’s energy delivery system.

    The Grid Reliability and Infrastructure Defense (GRID) Act arrives at the behest of lawmakers and experts who fear hackers and other cyber-terrorists could easily de-stabilize the country’s energy systems remotely, causing untold harm to both the federal government and the private sphere.

    Closing those prospective security holes is crucial for Democrats, especially, if they hope soon to forge ahead with their plans to establish a Web-based “Smart Grid” that allows Americans to gauge their energy use.

    “Right now, our electrical grid is vulnerable to threats from terrorists and hostile countries. Our adversaries have motive, intent, and the capacity to exploit these weaknesses,” said Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), the chairman of the Energy and Environment Subcommittee and the bill’s co-sponsor, following Thursday’s 47-0 vote.

    “Every one of our nation’s critical systems – water, healthcare, telecommunications, transportation, law enforcement, and financial services – depends on the grid,” Markey said in a statement stressing the legislation’s importance.

    Low-carbon growth could be key to alleviating poverty — U.N. study

    The United Nations has called on China to “blaze a unique trail” for itself in low-carbon development by linking clean energy opportunities to improving the standards of living of millions of citizens.

    In its new “China Human Development Report,” released yesterday, researchers with the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) warn that if China does not curb the impacts of climate change and environmental degradation, it could reverse 30 years of achievements.

    With nearly 350 million rural Chinese expected to migrate to urban areas over the next two decades, officials said now is the time for China’s leadership to smash the traditional wisdom that has dictated that economic advancement necessarily comes with pollution.

    “China is at a critical juncture when the business as usual growth model is not sufficient to the country’s emerging challenges and pressures,” Khalid Malik, U.N. resident coordinator and UNDP resident representative in China, said in a statement. He called the shift to low-carbon development “imperative” as China balances its growth against the threat of climate change.

    The annual development report this year focuses entirely on climate change and sustainable development in China. Done in partnership with Renmin University of China, it argues that the country needs to accelerate the phase-out of old and polluting equipment, industries and products. In its place, the authors said, China should ramp up its renewable energy development — but should also give priority to training, building institutions and pouring research and development funding into creating more jobs in low-carbon fields.

    It points out that China’s living standards have improved dramatically over the past decades. Yet those changes, the authors note, “have not come without serious costs,” including environmental degradation, fast depletion of natural resources and zooming emissions. China in 2007 surpassed the United States to become the world’s largest emitter of climate change-causing greenhouse gases.

    “Today it is widely recognized that China needs to take advantage of the international low carbon development boom in order to accelerate its shift to a more efficient pattern of economic growth,” the authors wrote. “China should transition from its heavy dependence on energy and resource consumption to improving energy efficiency while also enhancing the country’s high-value-added and high-tech industries.”

    The report calls for “setting the stage for the introductions of a cap and trade system in the medium and long term,” based on a national carbon intensity target, and an enhanced system for monitoring and enforcement. It also recommends “establishing a credible and robust system” for greenhouse gas accounting and data as a basis for policymaking as well as enforcement. The authors argue that beefed up fiscal policies will be critical to attracting technical and management talent to spur innovation.

    “To achieve such a fundamental transformation, the country must also revolutionize its mindset,” the authors note, urging China’s leadership, academia and think tanks to “continually question and challenge themselves” about how the country is meeting development needs.

    China already is investing heavily in clean energy, having sunk $34.6 billion last year into green energy markets, according to a recent Pew Environment Group report. It also has a hefty body of national policies — from a renewable energy standard to a plan to reduce carbon intensity 40 to 45 percent in the coming decade.

    Deborah Seligsohn, China program director of the World Resources Institute’s Climate, Energy and Pollution Program in Beijing, said at a recent forum that China is well on its way to achieving that carbon intensity goal. While many have criticized the carbon intensity target as merely “business as usual” — a phrase that implies China will have to change little in order to achieve it — Seligsohn argued that “what is business as usual has changed dramatically over the last five years.”

    That’s the period that has seen China close down inefficient plants and establish its 1,000 Enterprise Program, under which the government works with the top 1,000 top energy-consuming businesses to tailor emission reductions. Seligsohn noted, though, that while both moves have been successful, the government now has to think about establishing broader regulations that apply to a larger number of industries and work through local energy conservation centers.

    “As you do that, the challenges are greater,” she said. But, she added, she sees “no diminution in Chinese interest in having this ambition.”

    Julian Wong, a senior policy analyst at the Center for American Progress think tank, called the report “refreshing” for focusing less on gross domestic product and more on standard of living as an indicator of economic development.

    “When people discuss China’s development, it’s in terms of GDP. GDP is a very crude indicator, and almost too crude to measure human welfare. Ultimately, what we care about is the standard of living of the country’s citizens rather than how much churn of dollars there is in an economy,” Wong said.

    “When you start speaking of development in more human terms, then I think the benefits of going low-carbon and climate change action become a lot more compelling, because then you’re talking about what are the co-benefits of climate change action,” like reducing air pollution, he said.

    A Clean Energy Competitiveness Strategy For America

    Accelerating U.S. clean technology innovation, manufacturing, and market creation has become not just an environmental necessity but an economic imperative. A recent Pew study showed that the global clean energy industry has experienced rapid investment growth over the last five years. New clean tech investments in 2009 reached $162 billion, which is expected to grow 25 percent to $200 billion in 2010. With the global clean energy economy emerging as one of the largest economic opportunities of the 21st century, government policy and public investment will be critical determinants of which countries come out on top in the race to attract private sector investment in clean energy technologies.

    The United States is currently behind other nations in this race, and lacks an effective national strategy to compete. Climate legislation proposed in Congress to date, with its low price on carbon, ineffective renewable electricity standard, and collection of efficiency regulations, will not be enough for the United States to catch up to countries like China in building the clean energy industries of the future. To regain leadership in the global clean technology industry, the United States must enact a comprehensive clean energy competitiveness strategy that prioritizes major public investments in clean energy innovation, manufacturing, market development, education, and infrastructure.

  • Suspect Arrested in Connection with Synagogue Shooting

    04.16.10 07:19 AM
    UPDATE
    Los Angeles: Earlier today, Beverly Hills Police Department officers arrested a suspect that Los Angeles Police Department detectives have been seeking in connection with a shooting that occurred last Oct. 29 when two men were shot as they arrived for morning prayer services at the Adat Yeshurun Valley Sephardic Synagogue in North Hollywood.

    With a warrant for his arrest, Beverly Hills SWAT officers took Christopher Littlejohn into custody without incident in the vicinity of Nordhoff Street and Balboa Boulevard for an assault that took place in the city of Beverly Hills.  Littlejohn is described as a 37-year-old Black male who resides in Northridge. His bail has been set at $2 million and he is currently being held at the BHPD jail.  More details about the synagogue shooting are available below in the original press release that went out on Oct. 29, 2009:

    Gunman Shoots Two at North Hollywood Synagogue
    Motive Still under Investigation

    Los Angeles:  At 6:19 this morning, at the Adat Yeshurun Valley Sephardic Synagogue in North Hollywood, two men arriving for prayer services were shot.

    A number of 911 calls brought Los Angeles Police Department officers from the North Hollywood area and Los Angeles City firefighters to the Synagogue located at 12405 Sylvan Street, where they found the victims, two men, one 38 the other 53 years old, in an underground garage suffering from gunshot wounds to their legs.

    One of the victims had just gotten out of his car in the underground garage of the Synagogue and was near a stairwell when he was approached by a black man wearing what has been described as a dark color sweatshirt with a hood.  Investigators believe that without warning, the gunman tried to shoot the man, and his weapon malfunctioned.  As he tried to get the weapon to work, a second victim heard and saw what was happening and approached the gunman.  At that point, the suspect shot both of the victims.  He then ran on foot from the Synagogue parking garage.

    The victims were taken to area hospitals where they are being treated for their wounds, which are not life threatening.  Detectives from North Hollywood are interviewing the victims as part of their investigation.  The victims have been able to give only a brief description of the shooter, a black male in his late teens to early twenties, wearing a dark-color sweatshirt with a hood.

    More than an hour after the shooting, LAPD officers detained a man in an area near the shooting who fit the brief description of the suspect.  He is being interviewed as part of the ongoing investigation.  Detectives are also viewing security video of the Synagogue as part of the investigation.

    At this time, a motive for the shooting has not been determined.  North Hollywood detectives will be looking into the possibility of the crime being an unsuccessful armed robbery attempt, a random act of violence or a possible hate crime. A citywide tactical alert was issued to help manage police resources, and the LAPD Department Operations Center was activated at a Level One.  Area Commanding Officers were notified to increase patrols around critical Jewish sites in their areas.  Also assisting the LAPD in its investigation is the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the LA Area Joint Regional Intelligence Center.

    More information will be released as it becomes available.  Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact North Hollywood Detectives at 818-623-4045.   After-hours or on weekends, calls may be directed to a 24-hour, toll-free number at 877-LAPD-24-7 or by texting CRIMES (274637) and beginning the message with the letters LAPD.  Tipsters may also submit information on the LAPD website, http://www.lapdonline.org. All tips will remain anonymous.

           

    LAPD News and Information …

  • Former LAPD Chief Daryl F. Gates Dies at 83

    04.16.10 07:03 AM
    Los Angeles:  Daryl F. Gates died today at 83 years of age after a short battle with cancer.  The 49th Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department passed away at his Newport Beach home with his loved ones at his bedside.

    LAPD Chief of Police Charlie Beck eulogized, “Daryl Francis Gates was a one-in-a-million human being.  He inspired others to succeed and, in doing so, changed the landscape of law enforcement around the world.”    

    Born August 30, 1926, Gates grew up in Glendale and the Highland Park Area of Los Angeles.  After graduating from high school, he joined the United States Navy.  Except for his two-year tour in the Navy, Gates was a lifelong resident of Southern California.  He attended and later earned degrees from the University of Southern California.  

    Gates Joined the Los Angeles Police Department on Sept. 16, 1949 and rose through the ranks to become the 49th Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department.  Gates served as the Chief from March 1978 until his retirement in 1992.  

    Chief Gates accomplished great things in both good and difficult economic times.  And the successes of several major programs and events in the City of Los Angeles and around the world, especially the Los Angeles 1984 Summer Games, have their roots in the leadership achievements of Daryl Gates.                  

    Chief Gates is survived by his long-time companion, his brother Retired LAPD Captain Steven Gates and his two children.  A media advisory will be issued when details about a memorial service are finalized.

    LAPD News and Information …

  • California: Two Anti-Gun Bills Awaiting Action in Sacramento

    Posted: 04.16.10 03:49 AM

    Two very serious threats to the rights of Californiaâ??s law-abiding gun owners are currently pending consideration. They must be stopped at all costs.

    Source: http://www.nraila.org/Legislation/Read.aspx?ID=5727

  • Arizona: Governor nears deadline to act on Constitutional carry bill

    Posted: 04.16.10 01:37 AM

    Gov. Jan Brewer is nearing the deadline to act on a bill that would make Arizona the third state to not require a permit to carry a concealed weapon. The Legislature sent the bill to Brewer on Monday, setting a Saturday deadline for her to sign the bill, veto the legislation or allow it to become law without her signature.

    Source: http://www.nraila.org/News/Read/InTheNews.aspx?ID=13680