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  • Eco-Awards Dinner

    The Australian Religious Response to Climate Change is holding an inaugural Eco-Awards Dinner on 5th June 2010, World Environment Day, to formally recognise and promote environmental achievements within faith communities.

    The ARRCC is a multi-faith network of people from various parts of Australia, established in November 2008, with the purpose to help galvanise religious responses to climate change. Its principal activities are raising awareness about climate change in faith communities and empowering practical action. Energised by spirituality, the ARRCC network has a sense of responsibility to care for the Earth and to serve the vulnerable. This focus includes both being agents of change in faith communities and bringing faith-based perspectives to the broader climate movement.

    Your support for this Eco-Awards Dinner will contribute to the recognition of achievements and the encouragement of others to take up the challenge of climate change. The dinner will be formal in nature and include attendees of many Australian faiths including Buddhist, Hindu, Muslim, Jewish and Christian. This event is an opportunity for faiths to celebrate diversity of our contributions on these pressing issues that affect every person on Earth. For more information about the Eco-Awards Dinner, visit www.arrcc.org.au

  • Do We Need an International Court for Nuclear Proliferation? Nope.

    by Julian Ku

    During the recent “nuclear summit” in Washington, Dutch prime minister Peter Balkenende proposed the creation of a new international tribunal to enforce and punish violations of nuclear non-proliferation agreements.  Putting aside the fact that this is a blatant effort to put another international court in his hometown (the Hague), I agree with Prof. Göran Sluiter that this is a dumb idea. It is a great example of how creating an international tribunal or an international institution is often a substitute for doing something useful or important on an important policy question.  As Sluiter points out, we already have plenty of international courts.

    Balkenende explicitly mentioned the reinforcement of the international rule of law as a basis for the creation of the new tribunal. In itself, this is an admirable goal. However, nations can already be held accountable in the International Court of Justice (ICJ), which has arbitrated international conflicts for almost a century and has long been a trusted advisor to the United Nations.

  • Holder Cites Limitations Of Military Trials

     

    Eric Holder

     

    Pilloried for his use of the federal court system as a counterterrorism tool, which critics say has serious limitations, Attorney General Eric Holder on Thursday night laid out for the first time what he sees as the limitations of the military commissions system in fighting terrorism.

    “No matter what one thinks of the bigger questions surrounding the debate about courts and commissions, it is important to understand their practical differences and how they must affect the choice of forum,” Holder said in prepared remarks. “Our civilian courts cover a much broader set of offenses available than the military commissions, which can only prosecute some violations of the laws of war.”

    Specifically, Holder said, military commissions can only prosecute alleged terrorists who are affiliated with al Qaeda or the Taliban.

    “That means members of other terrorist groups, such as Hamas, Hizbollah or the FARC [in Colombia] may not be tried in military commissions,” he said.

    In addition, Holder said, “lone wolf terrorists” inspired by al Qaeda but not actually affiliated with the group are not subject to military commissions.

    Holder cited the cases of Hosam Smadi, the 19-year-old arrested last year for trying to blow up a Dallas skyscraper, and Michael Finton, the Illinois man arrested for attempting to bomb a federal building in Springfield, Ill.

    “With the proliferation of cheap and highly disruptive, portable bomb technology, these people are to be worried about,” one senior Justice Department official said. “But they would not fall under law of war detention authority or military commissions prosecution authority. They thought perhaps that they were conspiring with part of … al Qaeda. In fact, it was not so. We had undercover agents.”

    U.S. citizens like Anwar Awlaki, the radical Muslim cleric tied to the Fort Hood shootings and the alleged Christmas Day bomber, cannot be tried in military commissions either, Holder said Thursday night.

    “Military commissions may not be used against U.S. citizens … no matter what kind of horrendous acts they commit,” he said.

    Asked whether Congress could pass further legislation to address any shortcomings of the military commissions, the senior Justice Department official said “you can change the options that are available” but that’s “not always that easy to do.”

    “We ought not be so glib or assured to think that creating an entirely new legal framework for detention is easy or cost-free,” the official told Fox News in an interview last month. “You will have a period of uncertainty and a breaking-in period, and that may endure for quite a while.”

    On Thursday, Holder also repeated statements he has made in the past, including the notion that, unlike in federal courts, military commissions cannot employ lesser charges to induce cooperation and disrupt terrorist plots “while evidence to prove terrorism charges is still being collected.”

    Still, Holder did not mention any limitations of military commissions for prosecuting the likes of alleged Christmas Day bomber Umar F. Abdulmutallab and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-described architect of the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.

    Republicans have strongly criticized the Justice Department for its decision to “Mirandize” Abdulmutallab only hours after being arrested and to prosecute Mohammed and his alleged co-conspirators in federal court, a decision the administration is now reconsidering.

    “Your actions have shaken my confidence in your leadership at the Department of Justice,” Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., ranking member on the Senate Judiciary Committee, told Holder during a hearing on Wednesday. “The course you’ve chosen on national security is steering us into a head-on collision with reality. The American people are not interested in terrorists being brought from Guantanamo to their own communities. … Pretending that terrorists can safely be treated as common criminals will not make it so.”

    According Republicans, limitations of the federal court system include the “lawyering up” of terror suspects, which they say can inhibit the collection of intelligence, and less stringent protections of classified information in open court.

    Nevertheless, despite any limitations posed by military commissions, Holder said such military trials have a vital role to play “in the proper circumstances.”

    “Those who denigrate these commissions must remember that, while federal courts can handle most terrorism prosecutions, in some cases, military commissions are not only appropriate, but also necessary to convict and neutralize terrorists,” he said. “There is, quite simply, no inherent contradiction between using military commissions in select cases while still prosecuting terrorists in civilian courts.”

    Holder has already referred six cases to the military commissions, and he said he “expects” to refer even more.

    Since taking office, the Obama administration has worked with Congress to revise and improve the rules governing military commissions, according to Holder.

    On Thursday, Holder insisted that despite what others may claim, he knows the United States is at war, and he is “determined to win.”

    “I know we can, and I am certain we will,” he said in part of a keynote address at the annual awards dinner for the Washington-based Constitution Project. “But victory and security will not come easily. And they won’t come at all if we approach this work by adhering to a rigid ideology or narrow methodology.”

  • Think The Market Is Behaving Like A Ridiculous Bubble? Here’s Some Solace

    bubble green tbi

    Yes, it certainly seems like this market, with its day-in and day-out gains is bubblicious.

    But if you’re looking for signs that investors haven’t completely abandoned rationality, BTIG’s Mike O’Rourke offers the following:

    Currently, a great deal of market focus is on technical and sentiment indicators hitting extreme levels, i.e. RSI, low Vix, low Put/Call, New Highs, etc. Some solace can be taken in the fact that AAII’s 62% Bullish reading while optimistic is still not in “Sell” territory, but as we noted a few days ago we expected it to get there in coming months.  Another fact in which investors may also find some comfort is that despite the S&P 500’s 8.6% gain year to date and a 16+% rally off the February 5th low, in the 71 trading days year to date, the S&P 500 has not registered a single up 2% day.  In fact, there were only 2 sessions where the index added more than 1.5%, and one of those was the first trading day of the year.  For context, of the 252 trading days in 2009, 27 posted gains greater than 2% and 28 sessions posted losses of greater than 2%.  In both cases, 11% of sessions accounted for larger moves.  In 2008, 12% of sessions registered gains in excess of 2%, and 16% of sessions registered losses greater than 2%.

     Got that? No 2% up days, and only 2 1.5% up days? Now you feel better, right?

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Vin Diesel’s F-Bomb 1973 Camaro for sale

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    Fast and the Furious F-Bomb 1973 Camaro Replica – Click above for high-res image gallery

    We won’t ask you whether or not you want the real-life F-Bomb 1973 Camaro because, let’s face it, deep down inside, we all want a 1,500 horsepower, twin-turbo V8 beast to play with. But would you lay down your hard-earned pay check on a facsimile of the car built for the latest Fast and the Furious? If so, here’s your chance. One of the movie cars built just for filming and piloted by Vin Diesel himself is up for grabs.

    The car is being sold by the Volo Auto Museum for a measly $39,998. We’re assured that the Camaro is fully functional, and is capable of being driven on the street if your heart so desires. It’s worth noting that the replica gets its power from a fairly healthy 350 V8 bolted to an automatic gearbox instead of the glorious mill Hot Rod Magazine chose for the genuine article. Originally set up for wheelie scenes and camera work, the faux F-Bomb still boasts all of the hardware for those duties.

    Could you build your own F-Bomb replica for less than $40k? Maybe, but it wouldn’t have a film history behind it.

    [Source: Volo Auto Museum]

    Vin Diesel’s F-Bomb 1973 Camaro for sale originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 15 Apr 2010 19:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • What I Learned at Twitter’s First Chirp Conference

    Twitter’s Chirp conference this week was ultimately an overdue kickoff of the company’s developer community. With more than 100,000 applications created on its platform to date, it’s frankly amazing that Twitter hadn’t formalized its road map and addressed competition with developers before. Here are the excuses: Twitter is small and young. Twitter has had trouble enough scaling to meet demand and stay online. Twitter never anticipated the ways people would use and extend it. All fair. Though with $160 million in the bank you’d think the company could have been a little quicker and savvier.

    Twitter CEO Evan Williams speaks at the company's Chirp conference

    But I think another factor is that Twitter has been a center of attention for most of its life, with everyone from celebrities to governments to social mediaites to developers demanding its time. “They have to be diplomatic so they defaulted to silence in their diplomacy instead of listening,” said Laura Fitton, who in running the Twitter tool directory Oneforty has become a de facto spokesperson and liaison for the Twitter developer community.

    That Twitter has been out of touch was obvious on the first day of Chirp, which was billed as a developer conference but content-wise was all about business and media. Fitton called the Twitter executive keynotes “spinmeistery.” “Where was the code?” asked Orian Marx, developer of Fusebox, an app he called “a TweetDeck killer.” “Those morning speeches were a little too long for me,” said Danielle Morrill, the director of marketing for Twilio, who’s working on a “Tweet-to-call” application herself. Worse, the event itself was held in a theater, with the audience in darkness — not exactly a collaborative atmosphere.

    Twitter investor Chris Sacca did an admirable job in the last session of the day (video embedded below), asking tough questions of a gaggle of Twitter executives onstage and voicing developer concerns about competition and support. Though the Twitter execs may have been a bit too punchy and silly, they did finally get to the point. “The thing I learn time after time is that if people don’t have visibility the natural reaction is to think it’s nefarious,” said CEO Evan Williams. “While there is some natural tension [between a platform and its developers], I think we can communicate a lot better.”


    Watch live video from Twitter Chirp Conference on Justin.tv

    Five days before Chirp, Twitter announced it had acquired the maker of Tweetie, an iPhone client that will bring it into direct competition with other client developers. That made people who build businesses on the Twitter platform nervous, unsettled and angry. “Having the Tweetie acquisition then may have not been the greatest headline-producing strategy,” said Twitter VP of Product Jason Goldman. “But from a communication transparency perspective it was awesome — we can talk to you much more directly.” So in a sense, Twitter was forced into honest and upfront communication by its own actions.

    The company promises that it will do better in the future; for instance, platform head Ryan Sarver promised quarterly platform updates, to be available on video. Sarver, by the way, was the breakout hit of the conference, offering frank and practical information about the things developers were there to hear about. (Fittingly, he was Foursquare’s “mayor” of the Chirp Hack Day when I checked in this morning.) And already, the second, hands-on day of the conference was held in a much friendlier open space at Fort Mason. Even if the awful acoustics made attending sessions difficult, the beanbag chairs were a much better setting for actual conversations. Plus, there was a tweeting taco truck!

    In the future, expect Twitter’s blanket justification for its actions to be that it’s trying to build a bigger pie for everyone. “The best thing we can do for you guys in our minds is to grow the user base. That’s going to create an order of magnitude more opportunities than exist today,” Williams said in his keynote. Sure, it’s an excuse, but it’s not just talk; the company will be giving developers half of its revenue when they participate in its grand new ad product, Sponsored Tweets.

    So now that it’s all said and done, here are my practical lessons from Chirp.

    Where Twitter will compete with developers:

    New tools Twitter will offer developers:

    Sarver said developer tools will include places, annotations and actions from user streams. The company has also made its developer resources much better and opened up some of the technologies it’s used to scale. Sarver said Twitter won’t try to treat some developers preferentially, but it will necessarily try to learn which ones it can trust and give better indications of where it’s going to everyone. Expect to see a more structured agenda for communicating Twitter’s road map coming soon.

    Will investors continue to put money into Twitter ecosystem startups?

    Twitter invited super angel investor Ron Conway to open its second day, and he rallied those present with the promise that he’s still bullish on companies in the Twitter space. “In five years there will be a billion [Twitter] users, and five public companies in this sector, and one of you here will be CEO of one of them,” he said. Of course that optimistic attitude isn’t going to extend to every investor. “I’ll be honest with you: I’m not buying all the feel-good, make-love-not-war stuff,” said Mike Hirshland of Polaris Ventures, an investor in companies like Thing Labs and Automattic, on Chirp’s VC panel.

    What Twitter-based opportunities remain?

    Some of the ideas thrown out by Twitter executives and potential investors at Chirp include:

    • Building on top of Twitter’s cheap international SMS deals (Williams)

    • Helping publishers integrate with the @Anywhere platform (Twitter COO Dick Costolo)

    • Giving users good reasons to share their locations (Sarver)

    • Analyzing all the data thrown off by Twitter’s users, encouraging users to share more personal information like on Blippy and Swipely (David Pakman of Venrock)

    • High-touch business applications, agency businesses, analytics and something like Groupon for Twitter (Peter Fenton of Benchmark)

    My big takeaway: Before this week, Twitter was its ecosystem’s keeper; now, it’s really a company. While it may not be a great time to be a well-funded Twitter client maker like Seesmic, the companies that are getting off the ground post-Chirp have the promise of surer footing and better guidance. Smaller startups and development shops have reason to hope that Twitter will buy them as it staffs up in a hurry in order to tackle the market, as it’s doing now. The company has made four acquisitions to date and it’s clear more are coming soon.

    But to some extent, this will all just be talk until a startup that’s not named Twitter creates a big Twitter-based business.

  • The Face of a Killer [Image Cache]

    The CDC 6600 was the fastest computer in the world in 1964, just like every supercomputer designed by Seymour Cray when it’s born. But I think this is the only one that stares at you. [Time via Coudal via ] More »







  • Holocaust Survivors & Liberators Honored

    65 years after liberating six million Jews from Nazi concentration camps, 120 World War II veterans were honored in Washington on Thursday, perhaps the last time many of them will be able to gather together. With the average age of the World War II vets lying somewhere around 86 years old, no one knows how many Liberators will be here for the 70th anniversary.

    CENTCOM Commander General David Petraeus led the ceremony at the U.S. Capitol and told the veterans in attendance that today’s servicemen and women stand on the shoulders of their generation. “The liberators with us here today should know that their actions continue to inspire those who wear our nation’s uniform,” Petraeus said. “Their units remain proud of their noble actions. Their courage and compassion feature prominently in the histories of the storied divisions whose colors are represented here today, and those qualities are etched in the hearts of all who hear of their valiant deeds.

    “A generation of Americans fought in World War II and hundreds of thousands of them died, staring evil in the face, in the effort to defeat the Nazis and bring the Third Reich to an end,” Petraeus went on to say. “We, and indeed all of humanity, owe them an eternal debt of gratitude for accomplishing their mission in Europe and for giving Holocaust survivors the greatest gifts of all – their lives and their freedom.”

    As a former commander of the 101st Airborne Division, Petraeus is keenly aware of the key role that unit played in the war against the Nazis. During World War II, members of the 101st division liberated Landsberg, a subcamp of Dachau.

    “I know that some of you have arrived at a point in your lives when individuals inevitably begin to wonder what kind of footsteps they’ve left in the sands of time,” Petraeus said, addressing the Liberators. “Well, all of us here today and all those watching around the world want to assure you that you have written an extraordinary chapter in the history of mankind, that you have left huge footsteps and a clearly marked path of accomplishment, sacrifice, service, and compassion.

    Today’s ceremony is part of a weeklong series of events. In a private ceremony at the National Holocaust Memorial Museum on Wednesday, Petraeus presented each Liberator with a coin, in the shape of the patch for the U.S. Central Command. On the back of the coin was the four-star flag of a U.S. Army General and the inscription “For Excellence.”

    After Wednesdays’ tour, Petraeus spent the time taking photos and listening to the personal stories of many Liberators including Thomas Humphries of the 42nd Infantry Division. Humphries has a message for anyone who denies the Holocaust, “Don’t say it didn’t happen. I was there. I saw the bodies.”

    Bill Creech of the 2nd Infantry Division summed his feelings about the weeklong event by saying “I’m honored to be in his (Petraeus’) presence.”

    Fox News was there to see these WWII veterans honored this week. Tune into America’s News Headquarters this Sunday at 12:50PM ET to see the piece we put together.

  • Thursday Night Podcast Tonight 7PM Pacific, 10PM Eastern!

    Podcast you say??

    Join Scott Brown and co-host Matthew Patience tonight at 7PM Pacific, 10PM Eastern, 0200 UTC round 2 of the Thursday Night AndroidGuys Podcast! If you listened in last week, you’ll remember that we gave away a TON of stuff from ZAGG and AndroidSwag! This week, we’ve got even more! Here’s a quick teaser on what we’re doing tonight:

    • Tonights show will be sponsored by AndroidSwag! They just launched their online store and they’ve got some killer stuff to hand out live on the air to our listeners!
    • We’ll be talking about Google getting serious about games on Android, Mobile Netflix, Droid (HTC) Incredible, and more!
    • We’ll have Punit Soni, Lead Product Manager for Mobile Apps at Google live with us to talk about Google Buzz!
    • Announcing the winners of the Slacker Radio Plus contest! (Don’t forget your last minute entry and make sure we know how to get a hold of you if you win!)

    So be in the chat room to listen to us live at 7PM Pacific, 10PM Eastern tonight! You may also want to subscribe to my Twitter account, www.twitter.com/scottyabrown as it very well may give you a leg up on winning some gear tonight. It worked last week!

    Might We Suggest…


  • Mind the Ash! A reporter stuck in London

    After more than a half a decade based in the Middle East , this was supposed to be my smooth transition back to stateside living. I guess I should have thought to check my volcano forecast before getting on the plane in Tel Aviv.

    No one on the plane seemed to suspect a thing was wrong. On approach to Heathrow the TV monitors were all askew. The airline blankets were kicked about like a teenager’s bedroom and the flight attendants had bright shiny smiles on their faces as I was asked to store my laptop for landing.

    Just as we were getting ready to get off one plane and I was getting ready to switch to another, the announcement went out that all of us needed to fill out immigration cards in London , get off the plane and get our bags. There was a cloud from a volcano in Iceland and the airspace over Great Britain would be closed. A couple of shrieks went out among the passengers. I just wondered how long this delay would last. This is my first volcanic cloud. Rockets, grenades, tear gas, I’m a conniseur, but a volcanic cloud? I’ve got no prior experience for that and no idea what to expect for how long this is going to take.

    The line was long through passport control but then again, after six years coming and going through Israel, I’ve seen worse. Re-claiming baggage was hectic because the bags were all coming off on the wrong belts. My luggage was easier to locate cause each bag was big enough to haul a small pony. After all, I’m not just headed on vacation, I’m moving. So, I got the baggage cart and took an elevator to the top floor to the British Airways help counter. Forget discussing plans for a new flight, BA’s assistance was only geared towards getting people into hotels. The scheduled flights were all still listed on the departures board with the word ‘cancelled’ flashing after each flight. Meanwhile, British Airways employees worked their way up and down the line handing out water and snacks.

    Then the discussion began about whether British officials were being too cautious at our expense. But the majority consensus seemed to accept that they delays were preferable to taking a risk that could cause a tragedy.

    However, it became apparent, after a while, that this line was not the path to my salvation. I contacted Fox headquarters in NY to see if anyone wanted me to jump on the air and talk about this, wheeled my towering baggage cart out of the line and got a cab. I hadn’t picked up any British pounds so I had some hassles with the cab (I figured I could get away with credit card.) But the bright spot to this whole thing is that I had an unplanned reunion with my colleague Amy Kellogg and some of the rest of the Fox crew doing lives by the airport.  I jumped on the air for a quick live shot and Bill Hemmer busted my chops because I haven’t shaved in a while.

    That wraps up the adventure to this point. The official word is that British airspace will open up sometime around 6pm on Friday. I don’t think many people here have much experience with volcanic clouds either. I get the feeling that time frame could slide. I’ve been stuck in worse places than this and the pubs are open. I’ll try to be strong.

  • “Low-Carbon” Meat? Not On Our Budgets

    A survey conducted by the UK-funded Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board (AHDB) finds that few consumers are willing to pay extra for meat that boasts a lower carbon footprint. Some foodie activists erroneously argue that livestock-related greenhouse emissions play a major role in contributing to global warming, despite all the evidence that such doomsday predictions are bogus. And still, the demand for more “earth-friendly” red meat just isn’t there: The AHDB survey of 2,000 people revealed that only one in eight of us is willing to pay extra for feel-good meat.

    Half of consumers are “very concerned” about global warming and many wanted to “do their bit.” But they clearly aren’t putting their money where their mouth is.

    “The impact of meat consumption on global warming is off the radar for most consumers and other considerations get in the way,” says AHDB interim chief executive Richard Lowe. “Most say they are willing to do their bit, but not really when it comes to making a personal or financial sacrifice.”

    Such sacrifice is all for naught anyway. We pointed to the glaring errors in a 2006 United Nations report that claimed 18 percent of global greenhouse gases are related to animal agriculture. In 2008, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency calculated that the entire agriculture sector accounted for only 6 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, while sources directly related to livestock production represented barely 2.5 percent of the total.

  • Blue Oval adds fuel economy coach to MyFord Touch [w/video]

    Filed under: , ,


    Ford Eco Route – Click above for high-res image gallery

    MyFord Touch promises to better connect drivers to their phones and MP3 players as well as the functions that are traditionally controlled by buttons and knobs. The screen will be displayed on a 4.2-inch LCD located directly in front of the driver next to the speedometer, with a five-way switch on either side of the steering wheel that enables the driver to access information without turning his or her head or taking a hand off the steering wheel.

    MyFord (and MyLincoln) Touch already sounds impressive, but Ford apparently isn’t done wowing with its functionality. The Blue Oval announced today that its new touch interface will also help drivers save fuel by arming them with real-time feedback on fuel efficiency performance, helping coach drivers on how to conserve fuel. Jim Buczkowski, Ford director of Global Electrical and Electronics Systems Engineering, says in the company’s press release that MyFord Touch “provides an unprecedented level of information and interaction so drivers can make the choice to be more fuel efficient.”

    Ford’s newest interactive infotainment creation will accomplish this feat by providing additional fuel economy information, similar to the SmartGauge leaf display utilized in the Ford Fusion Hybrid. SmartGauge rewards efficient driving with an increasing amount of leaves and flowers, and drivers can also track their fuel economy with a graphical bar chart next to the fuel gauge display that shows mile-per-gallon averages for the past five, 10 and 30 minutes.

    Ford also plans to utilize its excellent navigation system to help drivers become more efficient. MyFord Touch pairs up with the map-based navigation to provide drivers an Eco-Route that instantly utilizes both historical and real-time traffic data to map you to the most efficient route possible. Ford says that while the Eco-Route isn’t necessarily the fastest route, it can help drivers consume up to 15 percent less fuel on any given trip.

    MyFord Touch arrives this summer with the launch of the 2011 Ford Edge and Lincoln MKX. Hit the jump to watch a video and read over Ford’s MyFord Touch press release, which also lists 10 useful tips for conserving fuel.

    Gallery: Ford Eco Route

    [Source: Ford]

    Continue reading Blue Oval adds fuel economy coach to MyFord Touch [w/video]

    Blue Oval adds fuel economy coach to MyFord Touch [w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 15 Apr 2010 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Senate bipartisan climate and clean energy jobs bill set for launch April 26

    Looks like a Senate climate bill will not be unveiled the week of Earth Day after all. The new goal for Senate Foreign Relations Chairman John Kerry, D-Mass., and Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Joe Lieberman, I/D-Conn., to publicly release a potential deal is April 26, sources said.

    National Journal has the story:

    Graham explained why the bill would not be released on Earth Day, April 22. “One, we’re not ready,” he said. Second, he said, the message “had been driven by global warming policy” but is now domestic energy policy, job creation and cleaner air. “We don’t want to mix messages here. I’m all for protecting the Earth but this is about energy independence,” he said.

    Also important to their message and their effort to secure 60 votes is having some business leaders on board by the time they release a draft proposal. Kerry is giving industry officials a phone briefing this evening, a source said. A group of industry and business officials gathered earlier this week to assess the situation and many expressed continued reservations, sources said.

    The Edison Electric Institute, the main trade association for the electric utility industry, wants more work done on how a bill would allocate cap-and-trade emission credits to their industry and whether it would pre-empt EPA and states from issuing their own greenhouse gas limits. EEI also wants a proposed $30 per ton “price collar” limiting the cost to businesses under a cap-and-trade program to come down.

    Everybody wants something.

    But it remains quite important to keep the ceiling of the price collar as high as possible — and rising at a rate of, say, 5% plus inflation a year.  If there is horse trading, then any reduction in the starting price for the ceiling should be matched by an increase in the starting price for the floor.  See “How the Senate can fix cost containment in the climate bill with ‘price collar plus’.”

    Speaking of everybody wanting something, E&E News PM (subs. req’d) reports:

    Ten moderate Senate Democrats today outlined a series of pro-industry ideas that they must see in a climate and energy bill if the measure has any chance of winning their vote.

    Sens. Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan led the coalition pushing for provisions to help domestic manufacturers, including free allowances for energy-intensive industries vulnerable to international trade, a border adjustment mechanism aimed at developing countries without strong environmental policies and federal pre-emption over state climate laws.

    “We are convinced that successful legislation must include a multi-pronged strategy to maintain and strengthen our industrial base and the millions of manufacturing jobs critical for our economic recovery,” the Democratic senators said in their letter to the climate bill’s three lead authors, Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.). “This plan must promote manufacturing competitiveness, create and maintain American jobs, and recognize that a strong manufacturing base is a prerequisite for both a domestic clean energy economy and long-term economic recovery and growth.”

    Senators who signed onto the letter represent Rust Belt, Midwestern and mid-Atlantic states with heavy amounts of industry, including Evan Bayh of Indiana, Robert Byrd of West Virginia, Robert Casey and Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, Kay Hagan of North Carolina, Carl Levin of Michigan, Claire McCaskill of Missouri and Mark Warner of Virginia.

    Several provisions included in the legislation have long been considered critical parts of a climate bill, and Brown said today he has already gotten positive signals from Kerry, Graham and Lieberman that the ideas will be part of the legislation that is expected to be released later this month.

    “If they accept all of this, or the great majority of it, it’ll be a huge, huge step to getting this bill passed,” Brown said. “I want to vote for it. But I want to vote for it as a jobs bill.”

    Senate aides confirmed today that the Kerry-led trio plan to release their bill on April 26, a few days after their original plan, which was centered around the 40th anniversary of Earth Day next Thursday. Kerry, Graham and Lieberman have had another packed week of meetings. Kerry joked today on his Twitter account that he had missed a Boston Red Sox game because of the climate negotiations.

    He also offered a peek into some of his recent meetings.

    “Only in Washington can you talk with James Cameron and David Axelrod in the same afternoon,” he wrote, referring to the director of the Academy Award-nominated film “Avatar” and President Obama’s top political adviser.

    The nine senators did not offer legislative language in their letter, though Brown said that would come as the negotiations continue. For now, they have ticked through a number of areas that industry has warned must be addressed to keep energy prices from going too high in the wake of new greenhouse gas limits.

    They include “a firm price collar, sufficient offsets, a regionally equitable distribution of allowances, reasonable emissions targets and timetables, and a pathway for the development, demonstration, and deployment of carbon capture and sequestration technologies.”

    If you want to understand why bills like Cantwell-Collins, which ignore regional equity and don’t focus squarely on dealing with energy intensive industries in the Midwest, simply don’t attract even a fraction of the 60 senators needed, read the letter here.

    Graham has also issued the following statement today:

    Senator Graham does not support a gas tax.  And the bill he is working on does not include a gas tax.

    He is working with the energy industry to protect consumers from a cap-and-trade system which would do great damage to our economy and national security by driving our refiners overseas.

    In this effort, he has some simple but important goals.  They include:

    * Create legislation that will significantly reduce our dependency on foreign sources of oil.  Today we are more dependent on foreign oil than we were before 9/11.  It is a national imperative that we must break this unhealthy addiction.  By importing ever increasing amounts of foreign oil, we are placing our economy and national security at risk.

    * Preempt the EPA from issuing regulations on greenhouse gas emissions which will do great harm to our economy.

    * Create millions of new, 21st Century jobs by ensuring environmental policy is good economic policy.

    * Limit carbon pollution.

    There seems little chance of getting anywhere near the number of Senate votes needed for a bill that doesn’t preempt the EPA (same for the House).  As I wrote of the House climate bill, I agree with NRDC that it would be valuable for EPA to keep this authority under climate legislation, but is not one of the top five things I would change about the climate bill if I could.  Certainly, if the EPA does keep the authority, it won’t try to use that authority to shut existing coal plants down faster than the bill itself would.

  • Good Stewardship in a Bad Economy

    Seedling009 Last Thursday, the Foundation Center celebrated the publication of After the Grant: The Nonprofit’s Guide to Good Stewardship, the newest title in its proposal writing book series, with an event at its New York library featuring Altman Foundation
    president Jane O’Connell and nonprofit consultant Marilyn Hoyt. Book
    editor Judi Margolin kicked off the event by talking about how the book
    came to life.

    Over the years, the Foundation Center has published
    a broad range of sector-related guides and nonprofit management books,
    but nothing about how nonprofits can build relationships with funders after receiving a grant — which, according to Margolin, “is just the beginning.” After the Grant fills that gap with an in-depth look at what it takes to build and maintain lasting relationships with key funders.

    While many of the development pros in the room had secured their
    fair share of grants over the years, a quick show of hands revealed
    that last year was a tough one for almost everyone. And, according to a
    recent Foundation Center research advisory and a separate survey by the Nonprofit Finance Fund, foundation giving isn’t likely to rebound in 2010.

    Speaking directly to that point, O’Connell said that “We may never
    get back to where we were” — and that means everyone, foundations and
    nonprofits alike, needs to re-evaluate what they are doing and how they
    do it.

    According to O’Connell, the economic downturn has caused many
    foundations that don’t want “to waste a good crisis” to re-evaluate
    their giving. As a result, foundations are:

    • proceeding with caution and considering alternative forms of investment (including mission- and program-related);
    • looking more closely at outcomes;
    • looking more closely at who is sitting on their grantees’ boards
      (and paying special attention to who is watching the organization’s
      money);
    • looking more closely at their grantees’ financials to see whether
      they have adequate reserves and/or are overly reliant on government
      grants;
    • not particularly enthusiastic about mergers because in many cases “they haven’t panned out as we thought they would.”

    Bottom line: Nonprofits need to treat their funders “just like they
    were venture capitalists,” said Hoyt. Foundations want to have good
    relationships with their grantees. Not only do they want to hear about
    the good things a grantee was able to do with their grant, they
    also want to hear about the things that didn’t go as planned — and, in
    many cases, may be willing to offer additional help, if it makes sense.
    “Our success is their success and our failure is their failure,” said
    Hoyt, quoting a Wisconsin funder.

    When reaching out to program officers, added Hoyt, think about the
    fact that they’ve already gone to bat for your organization. Be nice to
    them. Don’t be a pest.

    Here are some things you can do:

    • Hire a photographer to take pictures at your events. After every
      event, e-mail your program officer and ask whether he/she would like
      digital copies for their newsletter or annual report.
    • Set up Google Alerts. Each time your program officer or funder turns up in the news for a job well done, send them a brief congratulatory note.
    • Most importantly, have a conversation with your program officer and ask how often he/she would like to hear from you.

    What other things can or are nonprofits doing — both before and
    after the grant — to cultivate solid, productive relationships with
    their funders? Use the comments section below to share your good
    stewardship tips.

    This post by Regina Mahone was originally featured on the Foundation Center’s PhilanTopic blog.

  • Adobe CEO: “Flash Coming to Android Second Half of Year”

    Here we go again. The on-again-off-again rumors of whether Flash is coming to Android took a turn for the good today. Adobe’s CEO Shantanu Narayen was on FOX Business speaking about Creative Suite 5 (CS5) when the subject switched to mobile.

    We have a number of excited partners who are working aggressively with us to bring Flash to their devices, whether they be smartphones as well as handsets, and so companies like Google or RIM or Palm are going to be releasing versions of Flash on smartphones and tablets in the second half of the year.

    This has been a long time coming for many of our readers.  Some of you have been more vocal than others in you desire to have the full Flash player on your phone.  Others don’t care so much.  Hopefully, in over the next few months you’ll all be happy with your options.

    There is one thing to keep in mind for those of you with older Android phones.  Most of the handsets released so far, save for the Nexus One and Droid, don’t have the prerequisite ARM v7 (Cortex) needed for Flash 10.1.  So, depending on how bad you want Flash, you might be buying a new phone.

    Might We Suggest…

    • Flash on Android: Good News, Bad News
      Recently, one of the hottest topics surrounding Android (and other platforms), is if and when Flash will be arriving.  We’ve seen demos and heard rumblings for well over a year, but where are are now?…


  • PlayStation Store US Update – 04/15/10

    Ok PlayStation fans, it’s time once again for your weekly dose of PlayStation Store goodness. This week’s update celebrates Spring Fever racing week with a WipEout HD price drop, it will also see the return of the

  • Omega-3 Deficiency May Result In Temporary Male Infertility

    Omega-3 deficiency may result in temporary male infertilityAccording to a recent University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign study, consuming foods high in omega-3 fatty acids may help treat temporary male infertility.

    In the study, a group of investigators led Manabu Nakamura, an associate professor of food science and human nutrition at the university, used a mouse model to examine the role that omega-3 docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) plays in male fertility.

    After depriving the subjects of DHA by shutting off a gene responsible for the creation of the enzyme, the researchers found that mice produced fewer sperm.

    "We looked at sperm count, shape, and motility and tested the breeding success rate, and the mice lacking DHA simply were not able to breed," said Manuel Roqueta-Rivera, a doctoral student who also worked on the study.

    However, once the mice were fed a diet high in omega-3 fatty acids, their fertility was quickly restored.

    Dietary sources of omega-3 fatty acids include vegetable oil, canola oil, flaxseed and English walnuts. They are also available in certain fatty fish, such as salmon, tuna and sardines.
    ADNFCR-1961-ID-19724780-ADNFCR

  • Finding Aliens With a Continent-Spanning Observatory [Aliens]

    LOFAR, a network of 44 stations of antennae spread across Europe, is only half complete, yet it’s already giving researchers unparalleled images of distant black holes. Soon it’ll be used by SETI to search for aliens on rarely-explored superlow frequencies. More »







  • Woman Shot during Purse Robbery in Silver Lake LAPD Releases Composite Sketch of Susp

    04.15.10 02:29 PM
    Los Angeles: Los Angeles Police Department Northeast detectives have provided a composite drawing of a man who shot and wounded a woman during a purse snatch incident in the Silver Lake area on April 11.

    Detectives say the woman and a group of her companions were walking to their car in the 2300 block of Glendale Boulevard around 9:30 p.m. when a man approached them and asked for the time.  As the individuals looked down at their watches, the man violently attempted to snatch the woman’s purse.  The companions intervened and struggled to fight off of the suspect.  In the course of the struggle, the suspect shot the woman in the arm and ran with her purse.  Paramedics rushed the woman to a local hospital with non life-threatening injuries.

    The suspect was described as a thin-build, male Hispanic between 20 to 35 years of age.  He stood 5 foot 8 inches and was last seen wearing a dark-blue, hooded sweatshirt.

    A composite sketch of the suspect is available on official website of THE LOS ANGELES POLICE DEPARTMENT.

    Anyone with information regarding this crime is urged to call Northeast Division robbery detectives at 213-847-4270.  During non-business hours or on weekends, calls may be directed to 1-877-LAPD-24-7.  Anyone wishing to remain anonymous may call Crimestoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (800-222-8477).  Tipsters may also contact Crimestoppers by texting to phone number 274637 (C-R-I-M-E-S on most keypads) using a cell phone.  All text messages should begin with the letters “LAPD.”  Tipsters can also go to LAPDOnline.org, click on “web tips” and follow the prompts.

    LAPD News and Information …