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  • Watch online TV from your desktop with Miro

    Miro-grab.gifMillions of Internet users have tuned into YouTube and used it to watch a music video, sporting highlight or a
    humorous clip of some sort. Most clips that people search for
    are fairly easy to find, but if you are looking for something more
    unusual or rare, sites like YouTube aren’t always able to deliver. As many of us
    benefit from faster, more reliable broadband connections, a good RSS
    player may be a worthy alternative as some provide a greater choice of videos which can be downloaded directly to your computer.     

    Miro 3.0.1
    is an online television service that enables you to view and download
    an array of video clips. You can view online or save downloaded
    clips to your hard drive for viewing at a later date. Clips that are downloaded are managed
    automatically with the oldest clips being deleted to make way for newer
    ones. Mac OS X and Linux versions are available from the GetMiro WebSite.

    Miro 3.0.1 link.

  • Foreclosures Surge To Highest Level Ever In March, As Banks Finally Quit Pretending

    foreclosure

    7 million households are behind on their mortgages. Now that the worst of the financial crisis appears to be over, banks are finally stepping up the foreclosure process again.

    IRVINE, Calif. – April 15, 2010 — RealtyTrac® (realtytrac.com), the leading online marketplace for foreclosure properties, today released its U.S. Foreclosure Market Report™ for Q1 2010, which shows that foreclosure filings — default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions — were reported on 932,234 properties in the first quarter, a 7 percent increase from the previous quarter and a 16 percent increase from the first quarter of 2009. One in every 138 U.S. housing units received a foreclosure filing during the quarter.

    Foreclosure filings were reported on 367,056 properties in March, an increase of nearly 19 percent from the previous month, an increase of nearly 8 percent from March 2009 and the highest monthly total since RealtyTrac began issuing its report in January 2005.

    “Foreclosure activity in the first quarter of 2010 followed a very similar pattern to what we saw in the first quarter of 2009: a shallow trough in January and February followed by a substantial spike in March,” said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. “One difference, however, is that the increases were more tilted toward the final stage of foreclosure, with REOs increasing 9 percent on a quarterly basis in the first quarter of 2010 compared to a 13 percent quarterly decrease in REOs in the first quarter of 2009.

    “This subtle shift in the numbers pushed REOs to the highest quarterly total we’ve ever seen in our report and may be further evidence that lenders are starting to make a dent in the backlog of distressed inventory that has built up over the last year as foreclosure prevention programs and processing delays slowed down the normal foreclosure timeline.”

    Foreclosure Activity by Type
    During the quarter a total of 304,799 properties received default notices (Notices of Default and Lis Pendens), an increase of 1 percent from the previous quarter but down 1 percent from the first quarter of 2009. Default notices were down nearly 11 percent from a peak of more than 342,000 in the third quarter of 2009.

    Foreclosure auctions were scheduled for the first time on a total of 369,491 properties during the quarter, the highest quarterly total for scheduled auctions in the history of the report. Scheduled auctions increased 12 percent from the previous quarter and were up 21 percent from the first quarter of 2009.

    Bank repossessions (REOs) also hit a record high for the report in the first quarter, with a total of 257,944 properties repossessed by the lender during the quarter — an increase of 9 percent from the previous quarter and an increase of 35 percent from the first quarter of 2009.

    Nevada, Arizona, Florida post top state foreclosure rates in first quarter
    As it has for the past 13 quarters, Nevada continued to document the nation’s highest state foreclosure rate in the first quarter of 2010. One in every 33 Nevada housing units received a foreclosure filing during the quarter, more than four times the national average and an increase of nearly 15 percent from the previous quarter. Still, Nevada’s total of 34,557 properties receiving a foreclosure filing in the first quarter was down 16 percent from the first quarter of 2009.

    Arizona foreclosure activity in the first quarter increased on a quarterly and annual basis, helping the state to post the nation’s second highest state foreclosure rate for the third consecutive quarter. One in every 49 Arizona properties received a foreclosure filing during the quarter — nearly three times the national average.

    With one in every 57 Florida properties receiving a foreclosure filing during the quarter, the state posted the nation’s third highest state foreclosure rate for the second straight quarter. Florida’s Q1 foreclosure activity increased on a quarterly and annual basis.

    California foreclosure activity decreased 6 percent from the first quarter of 2009, but the state still documented the nation’s fourth highest foreclosure rate — one in every 62 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing.

    Utah foreclosure activity increased 75 percent from the first quarter of 2009, the highest annual increase among states with top-10 foreclosure rates and giving it the nation’s fifth highest state foreclosure rate. Foreclosure filings were reported on 10,756 Utah properties, a rate of one in every 88 housing units and an increase of 21 percent from the previous quarter.

    Other states with foreclosure rates ranking among the top 10 in the first quarter were Michigan, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois and Colorado.

    Ten states account for more than 70 percent of nation’s first quarter total
    California alone accounted for 23 percent of the nation’s total foreclosure activity in the first quarter, with 216,263 properties receiving a foreclosure notice — the nation’s highest foreclosure activity total.

    Florida’s total was second highest, with 153,540 properties receiving a foreclosure filing during the quarter, and Arizona’s total was third highest, with 55,686 properties receiving a foreclosure filing during the quarter.

    Despite a nearly 5 percent decrease in foreclosure activity from the previous quarter, Illinois documented the fourth highest foreclosure activity total, with 45,780 properties receiving a foreclosure filing — still a 17 percent increase from the first quarter of 2009.

    A total of 45,732 Michigan properties received a foreclosure filing during the quarter, the fifth highest state total. Michigan foreclosure activity increased nearly 11 percent from the previous quarter and was up nearly 38 percent from the first quarter of 2009.

    Other states with foreclosure activity totals among the nation’s 10 highest were Georgia (39,911), Texas (37,354), Nevada (34,557), Ohio (33,221) and Colorado (16,023).

    Report methodology
    The RealtyTrac U.S. Foreclosure Market Report provides a count of the total number of properties with at least one foreclosure filing entered into the RealtyTrac database during the month and quarter — broken out by type of filing. Some foreclosure filings entered into the database during a month or quarter may have been recorded in previous months or quarters. Data is collected from more than 2,200 counties nationwide, and those counties account for more than 90 percent of the U.S. population. RealtyTrac’s report incorporates documents filed in all three phases of foreclosure: DefaultNotice of Default (NOD) and Lis Pendens (LIS); Auction — Notice of Trustee Sale and Notice of Foreclosure Sale (NTS and NFS); and Real Estate Owned, or REO properties (that have been foreclosed on and repurchased by a bank). For the quarterly report, if more than one foreclosure document is received for a property during the quarter, only the most recent filing is counted in the report. Both the quarterly and monthly reports check if the same type of document was filed against a property previously. If so, and if that previous filing occurred within the estimated foreclosure timeframe for the state where the property is located, the report does not count the property in the current month or quarter.

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  • Is “Chexting” The New Affair?

    9BAF5C7D-06F2-40BB-965C-9ABC640DFB1B.jpg6FD5D960-6970-4514-BA32-C1CC32E78240.jpg

    As texting has become the most popular means of communication today, it’s no wonder that so many have used this technological approach to having an affair, breaking up with a significant other, and sending sexual innuendos over the internet.

    In light of the recent scandals gracing headlines from celebrities like Tiger Woods and Jesse James’ “Chexting on their wives” to Reggie Bush “Brexting” Kim Kardashian, the folks at Predicto.com – the largest paid mobile community – offer the top 10 reasons people text instead of talk:

    1. Speed – Sending a text message gets to a recipient much quicker than a conversation
    2. Emotion – Texting is a great way to mask any emotions, whether good or bad
    3. Convenience – Texting can be practiced while doing numerous tasks
    4. Universal – Texts can be sent from anywhere and at anytime
    5. Memory – Texts can be saved and re-read in order to regain memory of a previous conversation
    6. Efficiency – Text messages are more cost efficient than phone calls
    7. Controversy – Texting is a great way to prevent controversy. You don’t need to respond if you don’t feel like arguing
    8. Silence – Texting is a silent act of communication, so unless you forward your texts, it stays between the sender and the recipient
    9. Deletion – If you change your mind about saying something, you have the ability to delete the message before its sent
    10. Evidence – Especially when it comes to cheating, you have the ability to delete all evidence that anything ever happened over text

    Related posts:

    1. Here Comes the Blackberry Smartwatch
    2. Your Mantelligence Briefing for December 3rd
    3. Women Remember First Pair of Shoes More Than First Kiss

  • Robert Pattinson “Water For Elephants” Movie Open Casting Call

    Attention Robert Pattinson Fans: Here’s your chance to star alongside the screen heartthrob in his next movie. The Twilight actor is set to co-star with Oscar winner Reese Witherspoon in the upcoming period piece Water for Elephants, (based on the historical novel by Sara Gruen) and the film’s producers have launched an open casting call to hunt for extras.

    The casting call will be held this Saturday April 17 in the City of Angels. Here’s what the filmmakers are looking for: “Caucasian men with very 1930s looking period faces,” “African American men with short 1930s period haircuts,” and “Caucasian women with shoulder length hair or shorter, size 6 or smaller.”

    The Craigslist posting also specifies that applicants have “no piercings, tattoos, no breast implants, no artificial nails, no highlighted or colored hair.”

    Water For Elephants kicks off filming in Los Angeles later this year for a projected 2011 release.

  • UPS’s Preannounced Volume Gains Are Key (UPS, FDX)

    UPS Driver

    UPS (UPS) jumped the gun and pre-announced higher than expected earnings for Q1, even though their full Q1 report will be released on April 27th.

    UPS is seeing a ‘significant acceleration’ in its international package and supply chain business. 

    It now expects to earn $0.71 per share on an adjusted basis in Q1 2010, compared to $0.52 in the year ago quarter and the $0.58 recently expected by consensus for Q1 2010.

    Their international export volumes grew more than 9%, and non-U.S. domestic volumes shot up 24%. U.S. domestic daily volumes just started to grow again for the first time in over two years, rising very slightly.

    Things are expected by UPS to get better for the rest of the year.

    Kurt Kuehn, UPS’s chief financial officer, commented, “We expected the first quarter to be the most challenging of 2010 as the economic recovery gathered steam through the year. As it turned out, revenue was stronger than we expected due to international volume gains, increased yields in the U.S. and growth in Forwarding and Logistics. Also, the operating leverage in our streamlined network provided higher margins than anticipated.”

    It’ll be worthwhile to watch both UPS and Fedex (FDX) at the very least today, though the news is relevant to many other transportation names, plus retail.

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  • You Thought Chinese GDP Was Impressive? They Don’t Have Anything On Singapore

    Singapore

    11% Chinese GDP growth? Snooze.

    Now this is growth.

    Bloomberg:

    Singapore’s economy grew at its fastest rate in at least 35 years in the first three months of 2010, bouncing back from a contraction the previous quarter as manufacturing activity more than doubled.

    Gross domestic product grew at an annualized, seasonally adjusted 32.1 percent in the first quarter, the biggest leap since quarterly results began in 1975, the Trade and Industry Ministry said Wednesday.

    Now that’s more like it.

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  • FINALLY: Decision On Cape Cod Wind Project Due This Month

    Cape Wind from Nantucket

    By JAY LINDSAY, Associated Press Writer

    BOSTON (AP) — The Obama administration decides this month after a nine-year review whether the nation’s first wind farm should be built off Cape Cod. If it says no, the industry faces another question with no easy answer: “What’s next?”

    Not one of the country’s half-dozen or so offshore wind proposals has entered the arduous review the Cape Wind project is just finishing. Cape Wind’s developers say the earliest they could begin harnessing the breezes of Nantucket Sound is 2012.

    The nation’s onshore wind industry is the world’s largest, but higher upfront costs, tougher technological challenges and environmental concerns have held back the development of offshore wind farms.

    Offshore wind is especially important in areas like the Northeast, which lack major land-based winds but are mandated by state rules to use more renewables. Developers promise jobs and a plentiful energy source that emits no greenhouse gas emissions. They say there is enough wind offshore to power the entire country — twice over.

    “There’s a vast ocean that can be tapped right now,” says Jeremy Firestone, an ocean policy professor at the University of Delaware. “But, you know, we’ve got to do it.”

    Denmark installed the world’s first offshore wind turbine 20 years ago. As the U.S. lags behind Europe, and now China, offshore wind technology and manufacturing jobs get entrenched elsewhere, Firestone says.

    General Electric recently announced a $450 million expansion of its European offshore wind turbine business. China plans to begin operating its first commercial offshore wind farm off Shanghai by May 1 and has several other projects planned.

    The Department of Energy envisions 54 gigawatts in U.S. offshore wind by 2030, or about 4 percent of the country’s electric generating capacity. The U.S. already produces 35 gigawatts of power from onshore wind. One gigawatt of wind powers about 300,000 homes.

    The Cape Wind project, proposed in 2001, aims to provide up to three-quarters of the Cape’s power. But opposition has been relentless.

    Critics say it would threaten animal life and mar historic vistas, including the view from the Kennedy family compound in Hyannisport. The late Sen. Edward Kennedy called the project a special interest giveaway and was pressing his opposition until weeks before his death last August.

    Two Wampanoag Indian tribes also object to the project, saying it would destroy sacred rituals near Nantucket Sound and destroy long-submerged tribal burial grounds.

    This month, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar will make the final call. President Obama has pushed renewables and his recent decision to expand offshore drilling indicates a willingness to tap ocean-based energy sources. But Obama, who was close to Sen. Kennedy, has never spoken publicly about Cape Wind.

    Offshore wind has had strong political backing in Northeast states, such as Massachusetts, Delaware and Rhode Island, where governors have pushed utilities to buy the power. In New Jersey, former Gov. John Corzine also set ambitious offshore wind goals.

    Steven Kopits, an analyst with Douglas-Westwood energy consultants, says if Salazar kills the industry’s most promising proposal in Cape Wind, crucial political support could wither. “It would gut the industry,” he says.

    Peter Mandelstam, president of offshore wind developer NRG Bluewater, a division of utility NRG Energy Inc., says U.S. projects have solid backing from state governments and a successful European model to give investors confidence.

    “The industry is much more than Cape Wind now,” Mandelstam says. “It is a series of strong projects, each of which have their own path to success.”

    Major U.S. proposals include a project in Texas state waters, off Galveston, which could see faster permitting because it doesn’t need to go through federal review. But most are concentrated above Maryland in the East Coast’s northern half, including Bluewater projects in Delaware and New Jersey.

    Each state in the Northeast requires utilities to get a rising percentage of power from renewables over the next several years, such as the 15 percent requirement in Massachusetts by 2020. Many are relying on offshore wind to help them do it.

    Today’s turbines can’t be built beyond 50 meters depth, which is no problem at various East and Gulf Coast sites, though it shuts out the West Coast and its steeply descending sea floors.

    The Northeast’s heavy coastal population also makes offshore wind a good option because costs increase the further electricity travels over transmission lines.

    Last year, the federal government released new rules for permitting offshore projects. They’re intended to help companies avoid the twisting route Cape Wind has taken. But officials estimate it will still take 7½ years to get a federal permit. Developers face a web of local considerations along the way, too, including maritime traffic and ecological effects.

    “The path is too long,” Mandelstam says.

    The high upfront costs of building and maintaining massive turbines at sea help make it significantly more expensive than onshore wind. For instance, the Department of Energy says building an offshore plant where wind power density ranges between 400 and 500 watts per square meter costs about $120 per megawatt hour, compared to about $80 for a land-based wind plant.

    Cape Wind officials won’t disclose the project’s price, but Kopits estimates it’s at least $2 billion.

    Offshore developers need substantial subsidies, such as tax and production credits, and developers in Europe benefit from far more government help.

    The expense puts the power at a premium that not everyone is willing to pay. This month, Rhode Island regulators rejected a deal between a local utility and developer Deepwater Wind, citing a high price per kilowatt hour. Only one other project, Bluewater’s project in Delaware, has a power purchase deal, considered crucial to investors.

    With natural gas prices dropping considerably from five years ago, offshore wind prices look even more pricey by comparison.

    Advocates say focusing on today’s prices is shortsighted, arguing that free offshore wind is a good long-term bet compared to fossil fuels, with their unstable and inevitably increasing prices.

    “Costs will go down,” says Walt Musial, an engineer at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. “We may have some slow starts … and we may have some pushback, but eventually I think we’re going to see offshore wind grow.”

    See Also: Wine-Sipping Hypocrites Preach Gospel Of Renewable Energy–As Long As It Doesn’t Wreck The View

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  • After Yesterday’s Jubilation, Everything Is Going Down Today

    As goes the euro, so goes the market.

    After yesterday’s wild, party-like atmosphere in the stock market, which saw the S&P crack 1200 and get within spitting distance of the pre-Lehman highs, everything is selling off today. Well, the do lar, the yen, and lumber are up, but really, that’s it.

    chart

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  • Reports Of Larry King Affair With Sister-In-Law Shannon Engemann “Ludicrous”

    Larry King and his seventh wife Shawn Southwick have filed for divorce after it was claimed that the TV personality slept with Southwick’s younger sister.

    Well — this sounds juicy.

    According to The National Enquirer, Southwick was livid to learn last year that the 76-year-old King had been bedding her younger sister, Shannon Engemann, for months. Engemann, however, denies that any such romance ever occured between she and her famous brother-in-law.

    “This is so ludicrous. She’s singling me out, but Larry has been nothing but generous to our entire family, including me,” Shannon told TMZ. “I’m tired of taking the wrap for things. I did not have an affair with Larry.”

    She said Southwick threatened her over the phone, saying: “If you dare sue the Enquirer, I will pull out every last receipt that proves you had an affair with Larry.”

  • On Tax Day, the IRS Is Preparing to Look Closely — at You

    Internal Revenue Service

    The Internal Revenue Service building in Washington (Flickr: functoruser)

    Today is the deadline to file federal income taxes, and individuals and businesses are scrambling to get their books in order. The recession continued to batter individuals and families in 2009, with income falling and unemployment rising. But corporate profits started to rebound — nowhere more spectacularly than in the financial sector. Given those fundamentals, one might imagine that the Internal Revenue Service would focus more on corporations than individuals or small businesses.

    Image by: Matt Mahurin

    Image by: Matt Mahurin

    But a new report from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a nonpartisan research group affiliated with Syracuse University, shows that throughout the downturn, the agency has gone after fewer and fewer big businesses and more and more mom-and-pop outfits — the traditional engine of job growth.

    Five years ago, the IRS instituted a “perverse quota system,” according to TRAC, pressuring auditors to complete more audits, rather than to recover more tax losses or to go further in depth. As a result, auditors turned away from more complicated and larger companies, despite clear evidence that they can defraud the federal government for much more vast amounts than their smaller counterparts. In 2009, the IRS performed audits on only around 25 percent of the biggest corporations — representing the lowest audit-rate in 20 years. Since 2005, the IRS has audited 22 percent fewer big businesses and allocated 33 percent fewer hours to looking at big-company books. Time spent on small businesses and the number of small businesses examined, on the other hand, have increased.

    “The decision to audit the smaller companies does not help the government collect more taxes,” the TRAC study says. “This is because the data indicate that the larger the business, the larger the dollar amounts of tax underreporting and back taxes on average that they may owe.” Indeed, the IRS itself estimates that of the $50 billion collected in back taxes via audits last year, around 60 percent comes from the audits of big businesses.

    “The system is perverse and counterproductive,” argues Susan Long, the co-director of TRAC and a professor of managerial statistics at Syracuse. “The number of revenue agents actually peaked in 1988, and Congress has whittled back [the IRS’s] appropriations and thus the amount of hours that they had for agents to look into corporate profits. But we actually looked at a period where Congress was providing more resources to the IRS [between 2005 and 2009], and they still continued to cut back on these kinds of audits.”

    More troubling, TRAC reports that the IRS is going after fewer financial firms — despite increasing fraud in the run-up to the recession and quickly rebounding corporate profits since then. In 2008, the IRS audited just 15 percent of large financial companies, the low point in a five-year decline. That year, for instance, Goldman Sachs earned $2.3 billion in profit and paid an effective corporate income tax rate of just one percent. Long says that TRAC requested data regarding 2009 audits and taxation for the financial sector, but the IRS “refused to produce” the data. (TRAC asks for IRS information via Freedom of Information Act requests.) “Overall, audits of large corporations are going down, and the financial sector is such a large portion of that corporate sector,” Long says. “Plus, a very, very complicated one. It is hard to imagine any fundamental change in trends.”

    The IRS disputes some of TRAC’s findings, telling reporters that it audits every company with assets over $20 billion and has changed the rules this year to help agents flag troublesome business filings. (The IRS did not respond to TWI’s repeated requests for comment.) But TRAC contends that the agency’s refutation of its data in several cases does not make sense. For instance, the IRS claims to audit 118 percent of one income-bracket of companies, but has not yet explained why the number is above the logical limit of 100 percent.

    And in another sign that individuals, rather than big corporations, will be subject to IRS scrutiny, the agency recently promised to expand audits for new homeowners using the Obama administration’s tax credits – an $8000 credit for first-time buyers and $6500 credit for repeat buyers, available for purchases between January 1, 2009, and April 30, 2010. More than 1.5 million people have claimed the credit, and the IRS has promised to audit those claimants heavily.

  • Skip the Microwave: Lunches That Don’t Need Reheating

    The lack of an office microwave (or the questionable state of one) is no reason to give up on a satisfying homemade lunch. There are plenty of ways to use leftovers and fresh ingredients to make a tasty lunch that doesn’t need any reheating. Here are 10.

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  • Twitter Chirp: Twitter Search Is Bigger than Yahoo and Bing Combined

    Depending on how you look at it, Twitter couldn’t have picked a better or a worse time to anger its developers. With less than a week until its first developer conference, Chirp, it launched its own official BlackBerry app and acquired the makers of the most popular iPhone app, Tweetie. Effectively, Twitter would be compe… (read more)

  • Reducing costs and increasing reliability with Parker frameless torque motors

    Parker is introducing a new range of high torque / low speed frameless torque motors that will help customers to reduce the complexity of their machines, improve their reliability and reduce their costs as well.
    The new TK series of torque motors leverages Parker’s unequaled experience and know-how in the design, manufacture and
    integration of frameless servomotors
    Efficient and effective gearless design.
    Especially designed to remove unreliable and weary transmission elements such as gearboxes, worm gears or belts and pulley, Parker TK series offers tremendous advantages over traditional technologies.
    Delivered as kits consisting of separate stator and rotor elements with large inner diameters, TK motors are intended to be directly integrated into the mechanical structure of the machine. The load is directly connected to the motor’s moving part, leading to simplified mechanical designs, reduced footprints and lighter weights.
    As there are no more mechanical parts subject to wear, the lifetime of the whole system is increased, and maintenance costs are reduced. The absence of gears between the load and the motor also suppresses backlashes and looseness inherent to
    mechanical transmissions. Finally, this results in higher stiffness and superior accuracy.
    Removing mechanical transmission components between the motor and the machine load yields also additional electricity consumption savings, which can amount to significant amounts in the case of continuous production processes.
    Particularly suitable for use in harsh environments, Parker TK series offer high temperature resistance, up to 150°C, as well as per fect immunity to lubricants.
    Relying on a highly skilled support team, Parker TK motors benefit from a large set of customization possibilities, as well as advanced engineering services such as tailored mechanical design and sub-systems integration.

  • Incremental Magnetic Encoder Series IE3-1024

    The incremental encoders Series IE3 from FAULHABER are now available in higher resolution. Constructed using revolutionary single chip magnetic encoder technology, the encoders are now available with resolutions of 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, and 1024 pulses per channel per rotation. Other resolutions are available on request. The standard index channel provides the necessary signal output for even the most challenging positioning applications. The encoders are available with an optional line driver which includes differential signal outputs.

    These compact and robust encoders are available for modular combination with FAULHABER CR and CXR series graphite commutated motors or as an integrated component in the FAULHABER BX4 high power brushless motors with 4-Pole technology. Speed and position control are provided using FAULHABER’s versatile SC2804 speed controllers or MCDC / BL 3006 motion controllers.

  • Folks Are Freaking Out About Greece Again, And The Euro Is Puking

    Here it is… everything was going swimmingly for Europe up until a few hours ago.

    And then suddenly everyone started freaking out about Greece again. Accord in to CNBC the country has just can celled a debt roadshow and well, look what happened right after 2:00 AM.

    chart

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  • Alicia Keys “American Idol” Mentor April 20

    On next week’s American Idol, Grammy-winning songbird/accused mistress Alicia Keys will be in the house to train this year’s finalists in the fine art of hubby-humping and homewrecking.

    I kid, I kid…..

    Next Tuesday night, the remaining eight Idols will perform inspirational songs under the mentorship of A. Keys.

  • Morgan Stanley: A Eurozone Collapse Is Now Far More Likely, Here Are The Canaries To Watch Out For

    Angry German

    The latest Global Monetary Analyst raises the notion of stronger Eurozone nations ditching the euro in order to form a stronger, smaller currency union.

    Morgan Stanley’s Joachim Fels believes that the eurozone/IMF financial backstop for Greece, plus the European Central Bank’s recent backing-down on collateral rules for Greece have substantially, and ironically, increased the long-term risk of a eurozone break-up.

    Joachim Fels at Morgan Stanley:

    … which gives rise to moral hazard: The bail-out and the ECB’s softer collateral stance set a bad precedent for other euro area member states and make it more likely that the euro area degenerates into a zone of fiscal profligacy, currency weakness and higher inflationary pressures over time. If so, countries with a high preference for price stability, such as Germany, might conclude that they would be better off with a harder but smaller currency union. And because the Maastricht Treaty does not provide for the possibility of expelling euro area members, the only way how Germany could achieve this would be by leaving the euro to introduce a stronger currency.

    Obviously, we have not reached the end-game yet. However, with the recent developments, such a break-up scenario has clearly become more likely, for two reasons. First, the lesson for other euro area members from the Greek bail-out package that no matter how badly you violate the SGP guidelines, financial help will be forthcoming, if push comes to shove. This introduces a serious moral hazard problem into the European equation. Fiscal slippage in other countries has now become more rather than less likely.

    Moreover, the central bank’s credibility has been massively eroded.

    Second, the ECB’s climb-down on its collateral rules regarding lower-rated bonds, which ensures that Greek government bonds will still be eligible as collateral in ECB tenders beyond 2010, adds to this moral hazard problem and confirms that the ECB is not immune to political considerations and pressures.

    Most importantly, what to watch for that might signal the beginning of the end of the currency union as we know it:

    What are the signposts that would indicate our break-up scenario is in fact unfolding?

    First, watch fiscal developments in other euro area countries closely: Our suspicion is that the aid package for Greece lessens other governments’ resolve to tighten fiscal policy, especially in an environment of ongoing economic stagnation or recession.

    Second, watch ECB policy closely: If the ECB turns out to be slow in raising interest rates once inflation pressures return, this would be a sign of a politicisation of monetary policy.

    Third, watch the political debate in Germany: Support for Greece has been extremely unpopular and fears that the euro will turn into a soft currency abound. If the aid package for Greece, which so far is a backstop credit line, becomes activated, eurosceptic forces would receive a significant further boost. And, needless to say, if other countries also needed financial support, this would further strengthen euro opposition.

    Morgan Stanley is at strains to say that they don’t necessarily support a break-up of the union nor are they blind to the fact that a Greece crisis (without Eurozone/IMF support0 could lead to a crisis for Europe today. They just seem to be saying that the the most recent Greece-backstop solution only increases the long-term risks of the entire system simply ending, even though it papered over near-term problems. You’ll have to hunt down the full piece for details.

    (Via Morgan Stanley, Global Monetary Analyst, Joachim Fels, 14 April 2010)

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  • Vulkanausbruch beeinflusst Kontaktlinsen



    Wer hätte das gedacht. Während ins Island der Vulkan gigantische Aschewolken ausspuckt, denken wir uns hier in der Schweiz “Geht mich ja nichts an”! Weit gefehlt, während der Vulkan Asche spukt, werden bereits die ersten Flüge von und nach Englang eingestellt und die Flughäfen bereits ab Donnerstag 13.00 gesperrt. Das hat natürlich auf die Kontaktlinsen auch eine Folge und zwar eine signifikante.

    Einer der grössten Hersteller für Tageslinsen und 2 Wochenlinsen Acuvue Johnson & Johnson hat seinen Hauptsitz für Europa in England. Sämtliche Kontaktlisen werden jeden Tag vom Flughafen London Heatrow aus nach ganz Europa verschickt. Unter anderem auch in die Schweiz. Dies hat nun zur Folge, dass es in ganz Europa eventuell zu Lieferengpässen mit Acuvue Kontaktlinsen kommen kann. Zumindest ist damit zu rechnen, dass es zu gewaltigenVerzögerungen kommen kann. Wie lange die Streichung der Flüge wegen Ascheregens noch dauern wird, wissen die Wissenschaftler noch nicht, aber das wird sicher mindestens  3-5 Tage gehen oder noch länger.

    Vulkanausbruch in Island

    Vulkanausbruch in Island

    Das Flugchaos wird durch die aufgewirbelte Asche verursacht. Der Ascheregen kann die Triebwerke der Flugzeuge beeinträchtigen und so das Flugzeug zum Absturz bringen. Diese Gefahr ist eindeutig zu gross. Darum bleiben die Flugzeuge am Boden. Sämtliche nördlichen Flugrouten sind von diesen Sicherheitsmassnahmen betroffen, genauso wie England, Dänemark, Schweden, Norwegen, Finnland und Russland.

    Falls ihr Linsenvorrat sich dem Ende neigt können sie bei uns Anfragen, ob es für Ihre Kontaktlinsen Alternativen gibt. Sie erreichen unsere Spezialisten unter 043 377 55 55 mclinsen.ch oder [email protected]. Wir helfen ihnen gerne weiter, falls es zu Engpässen kommen sollte.

  • Craving: A Really Good Meatloaf Sandwich

    2010-04-15-MeatloafSandwich.jpgTalk about the ultimate dinner-to-lunch meal! Find a good meatloaf recipe and you’ve got yourself a fantastic Sunday dinner (your mom would be proud!), plus lunch for the week. We’ve been craving meatloaf and its sandwich iteration for a while now. As far as lunches go, this might just be the endgame. Don’t you agree?

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  • Twitter Chirp: Twitter Has 106 Million Users

    Twitter is holding its first-ever developer conference these couple of days, Chirp, and the ‘information network’ came out in full force on the first day. Given the rising tensions between Twitter and its developers over the past week, it now looks like the company managed to do more than damage-control, it got most of the developers back … (read more)