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  • Do Carbs Cause Heart Disease? Only in Women

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    Addicted to carbs? Don’t worry, they won’t kill you, as long as you’re a man. This completely unfair statement comes courtesy of researchers from the Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori in Milan — they’ve recently concluded that while white breads and pastas can lead to head disease in women, men aren’t at the same risk.

    Key researcher Sabina Sieri and her colleagues monitored the diets and overall health of thousands of Italian men and women over several years to come up with these findings. In all, 463 of the individuals who participated in the study experienced heart problems. Using statistical analysis, it was determined that the women who ate the most carbs were twice as likely to develop heart conditions like heart attacks or heart disease as women who didn’t eat them.

    And as for the men? Their heart disease risk was not at all influenced by their carb consumption, and researchers think that might come down to a difference in how their bodies handle carbs. Lucky jerks.

    Continue reading Do Carbs Cause Heart Disease? Only in Women

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  • Sanyo’s Xacti Sound Recorder makes copying from radio cool again

    Sanyo's Xacti Sound Recorder makes copying from radio cool again

    Sanyo‘s Xacti line-up is welcoming a new addition to the family, but this time it’s not a video camera. Announced earlier this month the new Xacti sound recorder looks about as awesome as a sound recorder can possibly look, showing that the company still sees potential in the sound recorder market…
    Continue Reading Sanyo’s Xacti Sound Recorder makes copying from radio cool again

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  • 20 sustainable airships promising a clean future of transportation and surveillance

    airbialead 02

    As a part of the aviation industry’s desperate attempts to cut costs and reduce missions, there have been designers envisioning a clean future where transportation will rely heavily on alternative sources of fuel. When cost-efficient transport is the need, airships mostly win over aircrafts and other conventional means. Designers over the world are today envisioning bright prospects that might just change urban transportation and even surveillance forever. Here is a list of 20 such striking airship designs that could well make our planet a much better place to live in:

    (more…)

  • Japanese Whalers Cry





    I must admit that I am unsympathetic to any form of whaling whatsoever.  Our destruction of the fishery in the nineteenth century was almost total and a century is little enough time to rebuild what is a wild stock with terribly slow reproduction rates.
    In the meantime we have global fishery that simply does not have any real ownership responsibility to any fishery yet is allowed to go in and simply take.  If any fishery were to pay a tax equal to the costs incurred to replenish the stocks, it would suddenly get smart.
    Certainly, Greenpeace is tackling the top end of the food chain in its efforts to impose some sort of sense.  Just as certainly, they buy into some form of environmental paradise that never existed.  Yet they are the only folks lifting a finger.
    I know that I could never get along with their ideas because they are often just as wrong headed as their targets. Yet the need for activism exists and that has my support.
    Abandoning the phony whale research might just allow Japan to join common cause with other nations to establish global husbandry and ownership protocols.  As Japan is the largest consumer, that would allow them to restore the wild catch to full health through global management.
    Japan whalers blame lower catch on Sea Shepherd harassment
    by Staff Writers
    Tokyo (AFP) April 12, 2010

    The last ship of Japan‘s Antarctic whaling fleet sailed home Monday with the lowest catch in years, a shortfall whalers blamed on high-seas clashes with the militant environmental group Sea Shepherd.

    The mother ship the Nisshin Maru sailed into Tokyo harbour, the last of the five harpoon ships to come home after they set sail in November, its hull splattered with blood-red paint thrown by the protesters.

    The fleet’s catch of 507 whales was down sharply on last year’s cull of 680 and below the target of about 850, said Japan‘s Fisheries Agency, which blamed a total of 31 days of harassment by the Sea Shepherd group.

    It was the smallest catch on record except for the 2006-07 expedition when the fleet caught only 505 whales after a fire aboard a ship hampered whaling operations.

    This season’s confrontations in icy Antarctic waters saw the sinking of a Sea Shepherd vessel and the arrest of one of its activists, a New Zealander who faces trial in Japan for assault, trespass and three other charges.

    Whalers and their opponents also blasted each other with water cannons, while activists hurled rancid butter stink bombs, and the whalers targeted the environmentalists with a sonic crowd control device.
    “I am furious,” said the whaling fleet’s leader Shigetoshi Nishiwaki.

    He charged that the activists “say they want to protect the ocean, but they don’t care about leaking oil or leaving pieces of a broken ship behind”, a reference to the group’s sunken powerboat the Ady Gil.
    Commercial whaling has been banned worldwide since 1986 but Japan justifies its annual hunts as lethal “scientific research”, while not hiding the fact that the meat is later sold in shops and restaurants.
    Tensions have risen between whaling nations, also including Iceland and Norway, and anti-whaling nations such as Australia, which has threatened to take Japan to the International Court of Justice over the issue.

    The International Whaling Commission, which meets in June in Morocco, is considering a plan to allow whaling nations to hunt the ocean giants openly if they agree to reduce their catch “significantly” over 10 years.

    However, so far Japan, Australia and other key nations have rejected the plan, while New Zealand has voiced support for the compromise.

    In Japan, meanwhile, two cases involving anti-whaling activists are now moving though the criminal justice system.

    Sea Shepherd’s Peter Bethune was indicted on April 2 for trespass, injuring a person, carrying a weapon, vandalism and obstructing commercial activities — charges that could see him jailed for up to 15 years.

    Bethune, 45, was the captain of the Sea Shepherd’s Ady Gil, a futuristic powerboat that sank after it was sliced in two in a collision with the whaling fleet’s security ship Shonan Maru II in early January.

    On February 15, Bethune scaled the the Shonan Maru II from a jet ski before dawn with the stated intent of making a citizen’s arrest of its captain Hiroyuki Komiya for the attempted murder of his six crew.

    Bethune had also planned to present the captain with a bill for the Ady Gil, a carbon-and-Kevlar trimaran which broke the round-the-world record for a powerboat in 2008 under its former name Earthrace.

    Instead he was detained, taken to Japan and formally arrested.

    Prosecutors also allege he earlier caused a chemical burn on a whaler’s face by hurling a bottle of rancid butter, or butyric acid, which smashed on the Shonan Maru II.

    In another case involving anti-whaling activists, two Japanese members of Greenpeace face theft and trespass charges which stem from their investigation of alleged embezzlement in the state-subsidised industry.

    The “Tokyo Two”, as the environmental group calls its activists Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki, face up to 10 years in prison if convicted in the trial, with a verdict expected some time in June.
    Illegal trade in whale meat points to Japan: DNA study

    Paris (AFP) April 14, 2010 – Whale meat sold secretly at a sushi restaurant in Los Angeles and another in Seoul can be linked to Japanese whaling, a trade that would breach global rules on protected species, scientists said Wednesday. Japan carries out whaling under what it says is a programme of scientific research, although it does not hide the fact that the meat is later sold in Japanese shops and restaurants. But trading this meat is not allowed with countries that have signed provisions protecting whales under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). The allegation is made in a genetic study published in Biology Letters, a peer-reviewed journal by the Royal Society, Britain‘s academy of sciences. Its authors include activists who went undercover last year to acquire whale meat at a restaurant in Los Angeles called The Hump and another, unnamed, restaurant in the South Korean capital. Caught in a massive media glare and investigation by the local authorities, The Hump has since closed down. Its owners face up to a year in prison and a 200,000-dollar fine, and its chef a fine of up to 100,000 dollars.

    The new study confirmed that strips of raw meat purchased at The Hump had identical DNA sequences to sei whale meat previously bought in Japan in 2007 and 2008. “Since the international moratorium on commercial (whale) hunting (in 1986), there has been no other known source of sei whales available commercially other than in Japan,” said lead author Scott Baker, a professor and associate director of the Marine Mammal Institute at Oregon State University. Thirteen whale products were also purchased on two occasions in June and September 2009 at the Seoul restaurant, said the paper. Four came from an Antarctic minke whale, four from a sei whale, three from a North Pacific minke, one from a fin whale and one was from a Risso’s dolphin. The DNA profile of the fin whale meat genetically matched meat that had been bought in Japanese markets in 2007. “Since the international moratorium, it has been assumed that there is no international trade in whale products,” Baker said in a press release. “But when products from the same whale are sold in Japan in 2007 and Korea in 2009, it suggests that international trade, though illegal, is still an issue. “Likewise, the Antarctic minke whale is not found in Korean waters, but it is hunted by Japan‘s controversial scientific whaling programme in the Antarctic. How did it show up in a restaurant in Seoul?”

    In addition to marine biologists, the study’s authors include Louie Psihoyos, director of the Oscar-nominated documentary movie “The Cove,” portraying the annual killing of dolphins in a Japanese bay. Baker said he had filed a request to the Japanese government for access to a DNA register of caught whales in order to help genetic tracking of illegally-traded whale meat. Under CITES, whales are listed on Appendix 1, which means they cannot be traded internationally for commercial purposes. Japan, Iceland and Norway maintain “reservations” on the trading of some whales under Annex 1. However, these exceptions do not allow trading with countries that do not hold CITES “reservations,” which include South Korea and the US. Japan‘s Fisheries Agency announced on Monday it had killed 507 whales in its latest annual hunt in Antarctica, compared with 680 last year and a target of 850. It blamed the fall on clashes at sea with a militant environmental group, Sea Shepherd.

  • Closing Time: Brad Penny hits the lottery in St. Louis

    If you’re looking for details on Black Wednesday, the day three closers died, let’s point you to the Andy Behrens Experience. The Brian Fuentes(notes) story is here; the Mike Gonzalez news is here; and the Jason Frasor(notes) skinny is here. For the rest of Wednesday’s fantasy breakdown, read on.

    Location, location, location, the Brad Penny(notes) story. There’s still time to get on board with this solid, affordable mixed-league starting pitcher.

    Penny had his way with the Astros Wednesday night (like everyone else, I suppose), allowing just one unearned run over seven crisp innings. It was Penny at his best – two-seam fastballs on both sides of the plate, good command of his off-speed pitches, plenty of ground balls. He’s now worked 14 innings through two starts, with dynamite results (9 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 8 K). Why is this guy owned in just 21 percent of Yahoo! leagues? We can’t blame it all on the streamers.

    I can’t guarantee you that Penny will do well next week at Arizona, but he’s spotted for a big season overall. The NL Central environment certainly looks cushy, Busch Stadium doesn’t hurt the cause, the Cardinals have plenty of pls. defenders at key positions (especially catcher Yadier Molina(notes) and shortstop Brendan Ryan(notes)), and Dave Duncan is around to smooth out any of the rough edges. What’s not to like?

    I always root for guys like Jeff Francoeur(notes) because the statheads hate him. I know we’re looking at a tiny sample, but Frenchy has a .429 average and three homers after Wednesday’s play, along with six walks and just three strikeouts. He also was quietly effective in half a season with the Mets last year (.311/.338/.498); the OBP gets everyone upset, but those other numbers are in place. He’s mixed-league worthy in my book.

    David Aardsma(notes) and Ryan Franklin(notes) were panned by a lot of roto scribes this past winter because they had the nerve to outperform their peripheral stats in 2009. Okay, it’s important to note when someone’s ERA isn’t supported by their component numbers, I completely grant you that. But when it comes to handicapping the saves chase, possession of the job and the endorsement of the manager probably means more than everything else. It’s not that hard to get three outs with no one on base (while nursing a lead of 1-3 runs), and both of these guys were solid at the gig in 2009 (Aardsma converted 38-of-42, while Franklin went 39-of-43).

    Both of these working-class closers are off to good starts in 2010; Aardsma hasn’t allowed a run en route to four saves (including one Wednesday against Oakland) and Franklin has come around after an opening-day meltdown in a work-inning (he snagged his third save Wednesday). Trust, it’s a wonderful thing.

    A couple of intriguing American League starters met up in Cleveland Wednesday night, with Colby Lewis(notes) (5.1 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 4 BB, 10 K) getting the better of Justin Masterson(notes) (6 IP, 4 R, 2 ER, 0 BB, 9 K). Masterson was on the sleeper radar after what he showed us late last year (a 12-strikeout effort out the door against Chicago) while Lewis was honing his craft in Japan. I’d probably prefer Masterson for the long haul – he’s shown better control so far and he’s got an easier home park – but both pitchers look streamable when the matchup is right. The challenges get harder next week; Masterson works at Target Field, while Lewis reacquaints himself with Fenway Park.

    Whenever a team has a closer change, you want to pay extra attention to the next save chance and how the bullpen is handled. With that in mind, consider how the Angels closed up their Wednesday victory at New York – Kevin Jepsen(notes) had a solid eighth (scoreless, one walk) and Fernando Rodney(notes) worked a perfect ninth. The first step is the most important in this gig; Rodney just bought himself a longer leash while Brian Fuentes rehabs.

    Not an Injury Blog: The Phillies put Jimmy Rollins(notes) (calf) on the 15-day disabled list Wednesday but they’re whistling an optimistic tune; they think he can return in 2-4 weeks. Shane Victorino(notes) picks up the leadoff assignment while Rollins is out, while the roto-insignificant Juan Castro(notes) steps in at shortstop. … Kelly Johnson(notes) left Wednesday’s game early with a stiff back. … Miguel Montero(notes) doesn’t have any ligament damage in his knee, so look for him to return in 4-6 weeks. … Jayson Werth(notes) (hip) was kept out of the starting lineup Wednesday but later appeared as a pinch hitter.

    Speed Round: David Ortiz(notes) will get a much-needed day off Thursday. He’s off to a 7-for-26 start, with 13 strikeouts and a .269 slugging percentage. … When Jonathan Sanchez(notes) has his good stuff, you wonder how anyone gets a foul-tip against him. Wednesday was one of those days as he toyed with the Pirates (8 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 3 BB, 11 K). … Old friend Ty Wigginton(notes) is getting some infield play in Baltimore while Brian Roberts(notes) rehabs. Wiggy had two hits Wednesday on the heels of a two-homer game Tuesday, and he’s carrying three positions of eligibility. … Jorge Cantu’s(notes) starting to have that 120-RBI look to him, isn’t he? … The trimmed-down Andruw Jones(notes) clubbed his third homer Wednesday, if you wanted to know. … Welcome to the season, Julio Borbon(notes) (2-for-4, stolen base). … Brett Myers(notes) deserved a better fate at St. Louis, taking the loss despite a very useful line (7 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 7 K). His curve was outstanding all night. … Say whatever you want about Albert Pujols(notes) and Hanley Ramirez(notes), but for my money the best player in the NL is Chase Utley(notes). He’s in a perfect spot, the No. 3 man in Philly’s loaded lineup, and he’s off to a strong push in 2010 (.367, four homers). Sooner or later he’ll have an MVP trophy to match Rollins and Ryan Howard(notes).Tommy Hanson(notes) restored order in San Diego, working six sharp innings (6 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 4 BB, 7 K) and keeping the ball in the park. … So much for LaTroy Hawkins’s(notes) tidy start – he made a mess in the eighth inning at Chicago (four runs) and picked up the loss. The Brewers went quietly in the ninth, as the electric Carlos Marmol(notes) struck out the side.

    ——–

    Photos courtesy US Presswire

  • Climate Modeling





    This from the Washington Post takes on the murky art of climate modeling and points out just how dismal the work has been.  This hardly surprises me.  What surprises me is the number of climate scientists who have utterly bought into these models and been effectively mesmerized.  Perhaps by focusing too long on the printouts they have lost all objectivity.
    Simple test questions are continuously dumping these models.  The truth is that they are worthless, however much effort has been put into them.
    Accept the reality that the models are at best a rough attempt that may work in somewhat ideal circumstances never to be seen in real life.  Making them better needs better methods.  Yet the data flood overwhelms such tinkering.
    The take home from all this is that the best simulation they have works best if no change in climate is assumed over the past few decades.  Anything else appears to be less likely.
    MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010
    This year, critics have harped on that fact, attacking models of climate change that have been used to illustrate what will happen if the United States and other countries do nothing to limit greenhouse gas emissions. Climate scientists have responded that their models are imperfect, but still provide invaluable glimpses of change to come. 

    They have found themselves trying to persuade the public — now surrounded by computerized predictions of the future — to believe in these. 


    If policymakers don’t heed the models, “you’re throwing away {GIGO} information. And if you throw away {GIGO} information, then you know less {more} about the future than we actually do {don’t},” said 
    Gavin Schmidt, a climate scientist at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies. 

    “You can say, ‘You know what, I don’t trust the climate models, so I’m going to walk into the middle of the road with a blindfold on,’ ” Schmidt said. “But you know what, that’s not smart.”
    Climate scientists admit that some {actually ALL} models overestimated how much the Earth would warm in the past decade. But they say this might just be natural variation in weather, not a disproof of their methods. {first rule of climate science: when the models are wrong call it “weather”, when right call it “climate”} Put in the conditions on Earth more than 20,000 years ago: they produce an Ice Age, NASA’s Schmidt said. Put in the conditions from 1991, when a volcanic eruption filled the earth’s atmosphere with a sun-shade of dust. The models produce cooling temperatures and shifts in wind patterns, Schmidt said, just like the real world did. 

    If the models are as flawed as critics say, Schmidt said, “You have to ask yourself, ‘How come they work?’ ”  emphasis and {comments} added

    Actually, the real question we should be asking is how come the models don’t work:

    1. The models DO NOT WORK when tested against observational satellite data as shown by 5 peer reviewed studies, with no peer reviewed satellite data studies to suggest that they do. ALL 22 IPCC and GISS models greatly overestimate warming due to increased CO2 during the satellite era. None of the models predicted the global cooling since 1998 shown at the header to The Hockey Schtick, and that’s why the models are “a travesty”. Even the IPCC admits they have not tested their models against observations and furthermore said tests have yet to be developedso the IPCC can’t say with any degree of confidence that their models work.


    2. James Hansen’s NASA/GISS flawed 1988 paper which was the genesis of the computer models and the basis for all the IPCC models is based upon the “adjusted” highly-massaged & corrupted thermometer record, which shows a 0.6 °C change in the 20th century. Hansen merely assumed that this rise was not an artifact of natural recovery from the Little Ice Age, which according to ice core data had the lowest temperature of the last 10,000 years, and arbitrarily decided to attribute ~97% of the 0.6 °C rise in temperature to CO2. And given the logarithmically declining greenhouse effect known from spectroscopy data, the only way Hansen could make his model match up with the temperature data was to create a huge imaginary positive feedback forcing fudge factor for CO2 in his simplistic climate model (which ignores ocean oscillations, clouds, water vapor behavior, etc.). His “sophisticated” computer model basically boils down to this equation:  °C = 5.3 ln(ending CO2/starting CO2), with 5.3 being the amazing magical mystery positive feedback number (IPCC uses ~4.7 for it’s magical number). That number, according to spectroscopy data and physical derivation should really be ~1.2. The flawed circular logic of climate models was noted on a prior post:
    The sole support for AGW is the climate models, and the sole support for the climate models with respect to CO2 is the forcing parameter. There is no actual physical rational for the forcing parameter, because it was simply contrived from the assumption that observed warming of 0.6°C was due entirely to a 100ppmv increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration. There was never any verification of this parameter either by theory or observation. There is no justification for this parameter based on the physical properties of CO2, because the molecular configuration of the CO2 molecule (zero dipole moment) precludes any significant effect from CO2 beyond a concentration of 300ppmv…
    Despite all of this, “scientist” Hansen was 99% confident his model was correct all the way back in 1988 when he published his paper. 
    3. Based on satellite data, Dr. Roy Spencer has direct evidence that most of the warming since 1973 (which was the basis of Hansen’s model derivation above) may be spurious.

    4. Gavin must be referring to his wonderful GISS model results, based upon which he wrote a paper to debunk Dr. Lindzen’s satellite observational data paper (one of the 5 mentioned above), but which was unanimously rejected twice outright by all three reviewers for the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Association. Gavin still hasn’t gotten anyone to publish his paper about his wonderful model that works, but I’m sure he can post it at his blog realclimate.org.

    5. Gavin also claims the models work for the past, but that isn’t true either. Applying the IPCC models to the temperature 20,000 years ago when ice core data states CO2 was 180 ppm, model predicts ~1.6°C change to the preindustrial CO2 level of ~280 ppm; actual change ~10-11°C. The model predicts from preindustrial CO2 of 280 ppm to today’s 390 ppm a temperature change of ~1.6°C; actual ~0.8°C. The model predicts from Paleozoic time with CO2 levels ~10-20 times higher than today that the temperature anomaly should be ~14°C; actual is from minus ~2 to +10°C [that’s right- CO2 was ~18 times higher than today throughout an entire ice age during this period]. 


    6. Correlation of CO2 with temperature during the 20th century is actually rather poor with R^2 = .44. A very simple alternative climate model incorporating natural ocean oscillations and “sunspot integral” (not CO2) correlates with temperature R^2 = .96. 

     7. A “no change” climate “model” predicts temperature change 7 times better than the IPCC models. So Gavin, the question the skeptics really should be asking is “
    how come a no change climate model works 7 times better than yours?”
  • Going Dairy-Free on the 30-Day Nutrition Challenge: Tips and Substitutions

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    Kerrin, 21, is the third participant in That’s Fit.ca’s 30-Day Nutrition Challenge. While Kerrin is an avid exerciser (yoga, Pilates, running, lacrosse) who watches what she eats in an effort to maximize athletic performance by balancing protein and carbohydrate intake, she’s lately been experiencing unrelenting fatigue and wonders if a food sensitivity is causing the problem.

    I asked Kerrin a few questions about what she normally likes to eat and gave her some tips and ideas on what she could eat instead during the 30-Day Nutrition Challenge. If you missed our other posts and want to follow the challenge here are some resources to get you started:

    Benefits of eliminating gluten, dairy, sugar, caffeine, alcohol and processed foods.
    What you can and cannot eat
    Getting started and getting off coffee
    Recipe ideas and resources

    Healthy Foodie: What do you normally have for breakfast?

    Kerrin: Boost or Ensure nutritional drinks

    HF – I recommend moving away from these sorts of nutritional shakes and moving towards making your own smoothies. Although these drinks have a good balance of macronutrients, they’re skipping all the finer points of whole food nutrition and generally have a lot of sugar. Get yourself a protein powder like rice or pea protein, add in some low sugar fruits and veggies and blend up your breakfast. Including a greens supplement like spirulina, chlorella or a green blend is also great as it’s loaded with B vitamins for natural energy and is a complete protein.

    HF: And what’s for lunch?

    Continue reading Going Dairy-Free on the 30-Day Nutrition Challenge: Tips and Substitutions

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  • Five Myths About China’s Economy



    This item is welcome and a reminder that China also has a long ways to go.  It is also about good news.  This China is following the path of the Oriental tigers and has another generation to complete the economic maturation process. 

     

    The issues so apparent today yet abating in their own way will be well resolved in twenty years.  It will be a stable middle class country with a thriving economy and western style social services taken for granted.

     

    The political system will sort itself out and become progressively more inclusive.  Taiwan’s progress is a great example in which founding parties have been voted in and out of office, yet looked just like China today thirty years ago.

     

    Political and social progress is accepted by the population and is been patiently pressed.  Recall the Chinese leadership is proud of their millennia of progress and believe they understand patience.  The Chinese people themselves think the same way.  They also know that they are part of their country’s greatest generation.  They have set out to become fully modernized and this will mean a reshaped political system while assiduously avoiding revolutionary nastiness.

    They have also shown the rest of the world that it is possible and are themselves helping make changes were obvious in other countries.

     

    China should coast into the top of the S curve in about twenty years.  India will need an additional decade.  The rest of the undeveloped world has fully begun the process and is on the move and will fully emerge over the next twenty years.  I expect few stragglers

     

     Five myths about China‘s economy

    By Arthur Kroeber
    Sunday, April 11, 2010


    China‘s stunning economic rise is one of the biggest stories of this generation. In just three decades since beginning to embrace market economics, China has left its desperate poverty behind to become the world’s top exporting nation. The transformation has occurred so quickly that myths and misperceptions abound about the challenges and opportunities that China poses to America and the rest of the world.

    1. China will quickly overtake the United States as the world’s most powerful economy.

    According to a November poll by the Pew Research Center, 44 percent of Americans believe that China is already the world’s top economic power, while 27 percent put the United States in that position. That perception is completely at odds with the facts. This year, China‘s economy is expected to produce about $5 trillion in goods and services. That would put it ahead of Japan as the world’s second-biggest national economy, but it would still be barely one-third the size of the $14 trillion U.S. economy and well behind the European Union, if taken as a whole.

    One reason China‘s economy is so big is simply that it has 1.3 billion people. But China‘s per capita gross domestic product is only one-seventh the U.S. level. And in household living standards, China lags even further. Each year, an average Chinese household consumes one-fourteenth the value of goods and services purchased by an average American household.

    And despite its chronic losses in manufacturing jobs, the United States is still the world leader in that arena because its manufacturers excel at high-value products such as airplanes and high-tech equipment, while China still mainly produces low-cost clothing and consumer electronics. In terms of the value of goods, the United States produces more than 20 percent of global manufacturing, or about double China‘s share.

    2. China‘s vast holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds mean it can hold Washington hostage in economic negotiations.

    China has the biggest holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds of any country — around $1 trillion. Many people think this means China is “America‘s banker” and that, like a bank, it can withdraw its line of credit by selling off its Treasuries whenever Washington does something Chinese leaders don’t like.

    But China‘s Treasury holdings are not like regular loans that a bank extends to a company. They are more like deposits: safe, liquid and carrying a very low interest rate. Like a depositor, China has little ability to tell its bank how to run its business. It can only vote with its feet, by taking its deposits elsewhere — but its deposits are so huge, there is no other “bank” in the world that can take them. The European and Japanese bond markets are not big enough to absorb that much Chinese cash, nor can China buy enough oil fields, ore mines or real estate to soak up its money. And it can’t simply invest all its dollars at home, because doing so could lead to rampant inflation. So like it or not, Washington and Beijing are stuck with each other — and neither has the power to hold the other hostage.

    3. Letting its currency grow in value is the most important thing China can do to reduce its trade surplus.

    Some American companies, unions and politicians complain that by keeping a fixed exchange rate between the yuan and the dollar, China is unfairly making its goods cheaper on the world market, thus driving its trade surplus at the expense of its trading partners. Certainly, the exchange rate is important, but it’s a mistake to think that letting the yuan rise in value would magically make China‘s trade surplus disappear. In the late 1980s, Japan allowed the yen to double in value, but its trade surplus didn’t budge. Conversely, in 2009 China kept the value of the yuan fixed against the dollar, and its trade surplus fell by a third.

    Secretary Treasury Timothy Geithner was in Beijing on Thursday and discussed the currency issue with Chinese economic officials. Most observers — including China‘s top economic policymakers — agree that the yuan should rise in value. But for that move to offer any benefits, it must be accompanied by other policy shifts. By far the most important thing China can do to reduce its trade surplus is to stimulate domestic demand (including demand for imports), something it has started to do through a massive infrastructure spending program. There’s some evidence that Chinese households are also beginning to spend more freely as wages rise and people feel optimistic about the future.

    4. China‘s hunger for resources is sucking the world dry and making major contributions to global warming.

    It’s true that China is now the biggest producer of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming. And it’s true that China uses more energy to produce a dollar of its GDP than most other countries, including the United States. But on a per-person basis, China‘s use of resources is still modest compared with that of rich countries. For instance, despite its rapid increase in car use, China consumes about 8 million barrels of oil a day. The United States consumes about 20 million barrels a day. Put another way, China, with nearly a quarter of the world’s population, accounts for less than one-tenth of the world’s oil consumption. The United States, with only 5 percent of world population, accounts for nearly a quarter of global oil consumption. Whose appetite is really the bigger problem?

    Moreover, unlike the United States, China has recognized that it cannot let its fossil-fuel appetite grow forever and is working hard to improve efficiency. Chinese fuel-economy standards for new cars are higher than America‘s, for instance, and on average, coal-fired power plants are more efficient in China than in the United States.

    5. China‘s economy has grown mainly through the cruel exploitation of cheap labor.

    Every time a developing economy starts growing fast, richer countries accuse it of “cheating” by keeping its wages and exchange rate artificially low. But this isn’t cheating; it’s a natural stage of development that comes to an end in every country, as it will in China. China has grown in much the same way as other economies we now view as mature and responsible success stories — including Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. Those nations invested heavily in infrastructure and education, and quickly moved their workers from low-productivity jobs in rural areas to more productive jobs in cities. When rural labor was abundant, wages were low, but they rose rapidly after those surplus workers joined the urban labor force.

    China is hitting that spot now: The number of young people of workforce entry age (15 to 24) is projected to fall by one-third over the next 12 years. With young workers more scarce, wages have nowhere to go but up. This is already happening: Last month, Guangdong province (China‘s main export hub) raised its minimum wage by 20 percent.

    China still has plenty of workers moving from the countryside to the cities, but the age of ultra-cheap Chinese labor will soon be gone.


    Arthur Kroeber is the managing director of GaveKal-Dragonomics, an economic research firm in Beijing.

    From the archives: For recent Outlook coverage of China, see Steven Mufson and John Pomfret’s “The New Red Scare” (Feb. 28) and Yasheng Huang’s “Why Google should stay in China” (March 28).
  • How To Train Your Dragon

    how_to_train_your_dragonCea mai buna animatie pe care am vazut-o in ultimul an.

    Actiunea se “invarte” in jurul lui Hiccup (personajul principal), fiul sefului de trib, dintr-un sat izolat de vikingi.
    Intr-un loc in care 9 luni este iarna iar principala ocupatie este pescuitul, natura razboinica a vikingilor se rasfrange asupra unui singur inamic : dragonii !

    Respectul in acest sat se castiga intr-un singur mod : prin uciderea unui dragon ! Singura problema este ca Hiccup nu are “conformatia/fizionomia” necesara … “atingerii” unui dragon. Visul lui este sa-l faca mandrul pe tatal sau, unul dintre cei mai cunoscuti ucigasi de dragoni.
    Baiat slabut,linistit,inteligent Hiccup lucreaza intr-o fierarie, un loc in care se gandeste la metode ingenioase de ucis dragoni. Cu ajutorul unei astfel de metode reuseste sa “doboare” unul dintre cei mai periculosi dragoni, numai ca , spre surprinderea lui visul lui de o viata, uciderea unui dragon, nu mai pare asa de important, odata pus fata in fata cu “problema”.

    Intr-un mod cel putin interesant, veti vedea cum, putin cate putin, prietenia dintre dragon si Hiccup prinde contur si veti invata ca intotdeauna cel mai bine este sa fii tu insuti.
    Comedie, suspans, actiune . Veti gasi cate ceva din fiecare in aceasta animatie.

    Trimite si prietenilor:





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  • Photographer Makes One-Third Of His Living Expenses Off Only 94 Fans

    Jim Hein writes a very well known Fine Art photographer is using the CwF+RtB model. He breaks things down into actual dollars and cents. He has figured out how many “True Fans” he needs to make a living.”

    Photographer Ctein’s “Contributor Program” gives his fans the opportunity to collect his prints and allow him to focus on creating. He shared the latest results:


    Make no mistake, I didn’t get anywhere close to 1000 True Fans (didn’t expect to), I got 94. But those Contributors provided me with approximately $15,500 gross revenues, $12,500 net. That’s about one third of what I need to live on, not a life-altering level of support but certainly a life-enhancing one that provides me with considerably more time to work on my art — the point of this.

    Even though the tiers start at only $9.50 a month, his average sale was around $165 — demonstrating that he has given his customers a real reason to buy. Additionally, Ctein recognizes that his subscribers are his most passionate fans, so he takes this as an opportunity to further solidify his connection to them:


    Last winter I offered them about a dozen extra dye transfer prints from the first TOP print sale at an extraordinarily low price, and super-cheap copies of my photo restoration book before the new edition came out. They also got advance notice of this year’s print sale.

    Offering exclusives is one of the ten scarcities that we’ve discussed before, so it’s great to see it in practice. The other lesson that Ctein learned from his experiment is that, yes, it does take work. He now has to devote about 3 days a month dealing with the administration of his subscriber program. That said, spending 3 days a month on something that provides 1/3 of your living expenses seems like a worthwhile investment. And this is only in the first few months of launching his program — if he’s able to improve the performance, he could do much better. So yes, it’s exciting to see photographers embracing the CwF+RtB concepts and making them work.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • 2010 Porsche Cayenne GTS

    Performance Oriented Cayenne
    Arv Voss, Canadian Auto Press

    The Porsche GTS first joined the second generation Cayenne family last year with many distinguishing characteristics, such as the Cayenne Turbo nose, a lower stance and Porsche’s first offering of a six-speed manual gearbox with a V8 engine (with a six-speed Tiptronic S transmission optionally available).  A sport kit is incorporated into the GTS inventory, featuring special 21-inch alloy wheels, and Alcantara seating surface inserts are available for the same price as leather seating.  There’s also a different rear wing available.  This year, there are two new trim levels for the Cayenne GTS: the Porsche Cayenne S Transsyberia and Cayenne GTS Porsche Design Edition3.

    2010 Porsche Cayenne GTS

    2010 Porsche Cayenne GTS

    When Porsche first announced their intent to build an SUV to complement the sports car lineup, there were those who felt that perhaps the German automaker was about to forsake tradition altogether.  That wasn’t the case however, as the sports car stable has continued to grow and improve, and the Cayenne, in its various forms, sold more than two hundred thousand units in its first five years, becoming Porsche’s best selling vehicle.  One must consider after all, that it’s the Porsche of SUVs.

    In terms of its visual appeal, the 2010 GTS has changed little from last year’s model except for visual enhancements for the two new models.  At a glance, it still looks much like the Cayenne Turbo due to the front-end styling, but it actually features a lower, sportier stance, while maintaining most, but not all of the Cayenne’s off-road capability.  The GTS is distinguishable by its standard black monochrome finish on door handles and window trim, 10-spoke, 21-inch diameter Cayenne Sport wheels, body-colour side skirts, and red brake calipers.  The GTS positions itself between the Cayenne S and the Cayenne Turbo in the Cayenne pecking order.  While the GTS shares the same basic architecture as other Cayenne models, it actually has a different mission statement — it rewards the driving enthusiast with enhanced levels of sporty on-road performance, even though it sacrifices some of its sibling’s off-road prowess, due to its lower ride height, which is 20 mm lower than the Cayenne S via the standard air suspension system.  Add the larger wheels and tires and you’ve got improved agility with enhanced stability.

    Power for the Cayenne GTS continues to come from an enhanced version of Porsche’s 4.8-litre V8 engine with VarioCam Plus variable-valve timing system and electronic direct fuel injection.  Engine improvements resulted in a five-percent, or 20-horsepower, increase.  The engine develops 405 horsepower at 6,500 rpm while generating 369 pound-feet of torque at 3,500 rpm.  This, along with a lowered final drive ratio (reduced 15-percent regardless of transmission choice), enables the GTS to scoot from 0-100 km/h in a tick over 6 seconds, with a top track speed of 253 km/h (157 mph) – electronically limited.  The Tiptronic version is actually four tenths of a second quicker than its Cayenne S sibling, accelerating to 100 km/h in 6.5 seconds.  Not bad for a normally aspirated engine.

    The engine’s power characteristics are further optimized by a specially tuned sport exhaust system, which adds a throaty, pleasing tone from its twin dual exhaust pipes.  The manual gearbox enables the GTS to deliver a fuel economy rating of 21.4 L/100km city and 13.8 highway, while the Tiptronic S transmission improves fuel economy further, rated at 18.1 L/100km city and 13.1 highway.

    The interior of the GTS is uniquely tailored to provide support to the driver, and passengers benefit from specially designed sport seats, which offer deep side bolsters with Alcantara centers keeping occupants in place during spirited driving maneuvers, helping them fully appreciate the capabilities of the vehicle.  Both front seats are electrically adjustable 12-ways, with extended memory settings.  The folding, split-back rear seat is also unique to the Cayenne GTS, featuring raised bolsters and Alcantara inserts at the outer seating positions, also ensuring stable and comfortable seating for those occupants.  Despite the deep contours of the rear seat, it is still capable of holding three adults comfortably and safely.  Adding to the ambience of the cabin is aluminum interior trim and stainless-steel door entry guards with the Cayenne GTS logo.

    The GTS provides the same levels of safety and occupant protection features as all other Cayennes, which includes advanced airbags; a rollover sensor; seatbelt tensioners; side curtain airbags; Porsche Stability Management; and optional Porsche Dynamic Chassis Control.  Convenience and entertainment options available include a DVD navigation system, Bose digital audio, and a roof transport system.

    My test Porsche Cayenne GTS wore an exterior finish of GTS Red (what else, at $4,200) with a Stone Grey leather interior featuring Alcantara inserts. The base sticker for this model is set at $88,000, while a full inventory of options can elevate the final tally to $122,675, including destination but not including any Exclusive package upgrades.  The extra costs incurred included the GTS Red paint, Black leather with Alcantara inserts, Bi-Xenon headlights with washers, Porsche Communications Management with Navigation Module, heated front seats, Light Comfort Package with memory XM Satellite Radio, audio interface, floor mats, trailer hitch (without hitch ball), moonroof, ski bag, Bose surround sound, Bluetooth Phone interface, etc.

    The 2010 model year also brings a few model enhancements as for the first time Cayenne customers may request trim stitching and leather in different colours, which previously had been exclusive to the sports car lines.  Through the “Porsche Exclusive” program, Cayenne customers can now get two new options: Bi-Xenon headlights finished in black and 21-inch Cayenne SportPlus wheels painted black.  The 21-inch SportPlus wheels are standard on the Cayenne Turbo S and Cayenne GTS Porsche Design Edition 3 (painted Lava Grey Metallic on this model), and the 21-inch Cayenne Sport wheels are standard on the 2010 Cayenne GTS.

    Porsche’s Communication Management system (PCM) now uses a touchscreen rather than a separate keyboard, and the optional navigation is now based on a 40-gigabyte hard drive.  In addition, PCM offers optional Bluetooth connectivity for handsfree cellphone use, and optional wired connectivity for external music and audio sources such as MP3 players, iPods and USB memory sticks.

    This latest entry into the Cayenne clan is first and foremost, a Porsche.  And a Porsche is a Porsche, in SUV configuration or not.  I have to admit, that being a Porsche purist at heart (a ’57 Speedster is part of my garage lineup), I strongly questioned the validity or necessity of creating an SUV to become a part of the Porsche family.  I’ve since softened on the issue and realize the importance of the Cayenne offerings — they’ve actually stabilized the future of the marque by pumping revenue into the coffers, allowing Porsche the assurance of being able to continue doing what they do best — building superlative sports cars.  Their Cayenne SUVs fill a particular niche, or perhaps I should say niches due to the varied levels of performance and capability available throughout the lineup.

    The GTS continues as a valued and worthy member of the Cayenne stable.  It accelerates with gusto, as one would expect from any Porsche (SUV or otherwise), it stops quickly, sticks to the road like glue and it provides comfortable, safe transportation that is exhilarating to pilot on or off road, or on a track.  It is not inexpensive when fully loaded — however, by carefully selecting options, one may bring it into a more affordable range of Luxury Sport Utility Vehicles, with the emphasis placed upon Sport.  The only negative issue that I noted was having a foot-operated parking brake in a manual transmission vehicle, making starting on an incline interesting, but not in a good way.  A hand-operated system is much preferred.

    The GTS incorporates a host of standard amenities and features (far too numerous to list here) that would make for a perfectly desirable SUV in the luxury sport category.









  • Scripture classes and ethics in schools

    Parents are right to be concerned over the future of scripture classes being taught in NSW public schools. The NSW Government is conducting a trial of non-Christian, non-religious ethics classes as an alternative to scripture classes.

    Ethics is the study of how we behave, how we develop our personal morality, the basis of judgements we make on right and wrong, and our understanding of justice and virtue in the context of how we live. Ethics is fundamental to every major religion and every sacred scripture.

    I majored in philosophy in University including honours in Ethics. I have taught ethics to undergraduate students at Wesley Institute, taught graduate students at Emmanuel School of Religion in Tennessee as Adjunct Professor for the past 22 years, and lived the ethics I have taught.

    These ethics are based on the Christian scriptures. The NSW Government is proposing teaching children right from wrong, how to behave, and justice and virtue without any reference to the Christian ethics. What will be the basis of this behaviour without any given norms as found in scripture? Which of the Ten Commandments do parents not want their children to follow?

    And who will be the teachers of these ethical standards? In scripture classes children are taught the Christian standards by accredited Christian teachers. Parents know this even if their own ethical standards have been less than what they were taught.

    The new curriculum is not based on scripture, does not refer to religious teaching of good and bad, right and wrong, and will be given by unknown people in what they are calling a “values-free” environment.

    This is not a trial based on ethical standards. It is a secular humanist attempt to replace Christian values taught in scripture classes. We should be positive and affirm the place of scripture classes in schools to enable children to grow with Christian ethics, and that they should get an understanding of the Bible, the basis of so much of our shared language, literature, history, legal precepts, societal foundations and personal behaviour.

    Please sign the Petition and forward it to me and I will present it to the Parliament. The Government, in an election year, will listen to the strong voice of the people.

    Rev the Hon. Dr Gordon Moyes AC MLC

  • Dacia Duster price for European launch

    Dacia Duster official pics

    The low-cost Dacia Duster pricing has been released as the SUV debuts around Europe this month. With plenty of interest in the Duster, we’re wondering if it won’t manage to make its presence felt in the competitive SUV segment. The Dacia Duster entry level model starts at 11,900 euros and comes with a 16V 1.6-litre engine with 105 hp, or a 1.5 dCi engine with 85 or 110 hp.

    The Duster is available in three different packages: Ambiance, Lauréate and Prestige. Both two-wheel and four-wheel drive is available with the all-wheel drive option costing exactly 2,000 euros more. The price jump between one package and the next is about 1,000 euros. For example, the entry level 16V 1.6 model costing 11,900 euros, costs 13,900 euros in all-wheel drive version. The Duster 1.5 dCi with 85 hp is available only with two-wheel drive with prices starting from 14,100 euros.

    The 1.5 dCi with 110 hp start at 14,900 euros for the Ambiance package with 2WD and 16,900 euros for the 4WD version. The top of the range Duster features the dCi engine with 105 hp and all-wheel drive in the Prestige package. It costs 18,900 euros. After the jump is the full list of Dacia Duster pricing in Europe.

    Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics

    Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics

    Dacia Duster 1.6 16V: 11,900 euros
    Dacia Duster 1.6 16V Ambiance: 12,900 euros
    Dacia Duster 1.6 16V Lauréate: 13,900 euros
    Dacia Duster 1.6 16V Prestige: 14,900 euros

    Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics

    Dacia Duster 1.6 16V 4WD: 13,900
    Dacia Duster 1.6 16V 4WD Ambiance: 14,900
    Dacia Duster 1.6 16V 4WD Lauréate: 15,900
    Dacia Duster 1.6 16V 4WD Prestige: 16,900

    Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics

    Dacia Duster 1.5 dCi, 85 hp, Ambiance: 14,100
    Dacia Duster 1.5 dCi, 85 hp, Lauréate: 15,100
    Dacia Duster 1.5 dCi, 85 hp, Prestige: 16,100

    Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics

    Dacia Duster 1.5 dCi 105 hp,Ambiance: 14,900
    Dacia Duster 1.5 dCi 105 hp, Lauréate: 15,900
    Dacia Duster 1.5 dCi 105 hp, Prestige: 16,900

    Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics

    Dacia Duster 1.5 dCi 105 hp, 4WD Ambiance: 16.900 euro
    Dacia Duster 1.5 dCi 105 hp, 4WD Lauréate: 17.900 euro
    Dacia Duster 1.5 dCi 105 hp, 4WD Prestige: 18.900 euro

    Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics
    Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics Dacia Duster official pics


  • Droid Incredible’s Specifications Confirmed by Verizon Wireless

    The Droid Incredible, formerly known as the HTC Incredible, has certainly seen a roller-coaster last few months, hasn’t it? From leaked images, to confirmations via Twitter, the device has been painted in one light or another all over the Internet for quite awhile. And, amongst all the rumors, we’ve patiently waited for official screenshots, and, ultimately, the specs sheet. We can finally say that we’ve got the last piece of the puzzle, folks: the official specifications as told by Verizon Wireless proper.

    What should you expect come this April 29th? A 3.7-inch 480×800 WVGA OLED capacitive touchscreen, an 8MP camera on the back, Android 2.1 under the hood, HTC’s Sense User Interface, 8GB of internal memory, and that prodigal 1GHz Snapdragon processor running the show. You’ll also get a talk time reported at up to 312 minutes, and a standby time up to 146 hours. Pretty impressive numbers, especially for an Android device, and we can’t wait to see how accurate those numbers are.

    We don’t have long to wait before we all get our hands on this bad boy (if you’re going to get one, that is), and we’ve got to admit that having an official launch date makes us feel all warm and fuzzy inside. Or, maybe it’s that 8GB of internal memory, along with that 8MP camera. We’re counting down the days — won’t you join us?

    [via Verizon Wireless]

  • Dutch entrepreneur creates a box to harvest water in the desert

    groasis waterboxx

    Eco Factor: Device harvests clean water from thin air.

    Dutch entrepreneur Pieter Hoff has created a one-of-its-kind device that harvests water from thin air, which is then used to grow plants. The device, dubbed Groasis Waterboxx, can produce freshwater even in the driest places on earth. Inspired from bird poop, the device is modeled after the way excrement protects seeds that birds have digested, providing humidity and shelter from the elements so that they can grow.

    (more…)

  • Britain’s ‘Coed Darcy’ shows the value of sparkling new towns

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    Sim Darcy: An illustration of the Welsh urban villageCourtesy The Prince’s Foundation for the Built Environment Coed Darcy is an
    oddly named urban village that’s going to be built from the ground up over the
    next 20 years in southern Wales. It’ll have an impressive 4,000 compact homes,
    plus commercial space and 1,300 acres of parks and greenery. It’s also got a
    high-profile engineer—the Prince of
    Wales
    , whose Foundation for the Built Environment is building it on a brownfield formerly occupied by a BP oil refinery.

    The idea is to unite
    the best of British village traditions with 21st century sustainability
    principles. The BBC has a well-produced video with glitzy simulations of the completed
    village and an interview with Prince Charles about his commitment to “a return
    of human values to architecture.” Sadly, it’s not embeddable, but it’s available
    on Youtube
    .              

    Most of us will never
    live in new towns built from the ground up. And they certainly have a spotty
    track record (see the latest
    trouble
    for Abu Dhabi’s Masdar City). But these sorts of projects—from the
    sleepy, pastel-hued Seaside,
    Florida
    , to the futuristic, $35 billion Songdo,
    Korea
    —can show us what’s possible, and they’re fun to think about. There’s something
    useful in the way these things appeal to people’s pioneer spirits, or at least
    their inner SimCity nuts.

    The Prince’s focus on
    the built environment also complements the many-pronged
    Welsh clean energy project
    .

    (Hat tip to Kaid Benfield at
    Switchboard)

     

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  • The Library Of Congress Will Archive All Public Twitter Messages Ever

    Twitter is the de-facto microblogging service nowadays. It is extensively used by social media activists for its ease of use and the simple model it is built on.

    One specialty of Twitter is the 140 character limit which ensures a content rich message. Well, if you have ever sent a public message on Twitter, it will now feature in the Library Of Congress.

    Every public tweet sent on Twitter ever since it was born in March 2006 will now be archived by the Library Of Congress. This decision was announced at an official blog post and through a tweet at the official Twitter account @librarycongress.

    Twitter is yet to announce this development through its own official blog. Though, it is expected to be made at Chirp, the ongoing Twitter Developer Conference.

    In case you thought what would the Library Of Congress do with archiving tweets, it clarifies by saying,

    The Library has been collecting materials from the web since it began harvesting congressional and presidential campaign websites in 2000. Today we hold more than 167 terabytes of web-based information, including legal blogs, websites of candidates for national office, and websites of Members of Congress.

    The Library has done an excellent job archiving hard-copy content over years. This move to archive digital content will surely earn it a name amongst the tech-savvy, information hungry youth.


    Announcement: Missing Mobile News in the Main RSS Feed? We have decided to remove the mobile content from the main feed, please subscribe to our dedicated Mobile News RSS Feed at http://feeds.techie-buzz.com/techiemobile. Thank you for your understanding.

    The Library Of Congress Will Archive All Public Twitter Messages Ever originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Chinmoy Kanjilal on Thursday 15th April 2010 03:00:50 AM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

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  • A bee wrangler shows you how to mind your own beeswax

    by Ashley Braun

    From activists to politicians, everybody loves to talk about the promise of green jobs. But in reality, who the heck actually has a green job, and how do you get one? In our new column, “I Have a Green Job,” Grist will be regularly profiling one of the lucky employed who has landed a job in the new green economy, or a green job in the old economy.

    Know someone with a green job and a good story? Tell us about them!

    Michael Thompson has the sticky—but deeply satisfying—job of wrangling bees on Chicago’s west side.Krysia HaagMeet Michael Thompson, 62, professional bee wrangler and co-founder of Chicago Honey Co-op, a Chicago-based agricultural cooperative that’s dedicated to chemical-free beekeeping, growing community, and entrepreneurial dreams of garlic.

    Q. How does the Chicago Honey Co-op work?

    A. You can buy a hive and put it there and
    learn beekeeping, or we can take care of the hive for you. The only rule we have really is that you can’t use any chemicals in your hives. We have a pretty strict rule about that. We also have a community farm there.

    Q. What were you hoping to accomplish with the co-op?

    A. Producing
    delicious, healthy food—that was our first goal.
    The other goal that we set
    out for ourselves was to have a business that could support itself. And the other thing we
    wanted to do was job training in an area of Chicago where people really need
    jobs. 

    Q. What long and winding road led you to where you are today—as director of the Chicago Honey Co-op?

    A. I’d say it started in southern Kansas when I was a child.
    I had an early need to find out how to grow things, so I asked these matriarchs.
    They were in their 70s or 80s at the time. They taught me how to grow food, and
    by the time I was 10, I was growing tomatoes and dragging them around in wagons
    to the neighbors and selling them at 10 cents a pound.

    By the time I was 12, I had badgered my parents for a bee
    hive because I’d read about it in an encyclopedia, and they bought me a beehive
    as a present for my birthday.

    Q. Are your friends jealous of your job?

    A. Yeah, often. A friend, Diane, just kept saying, “You’re so lucky. You have such
    great luck in your life.” And so I had to admit that I do have a lot of luck,
    but I’d like to blame it on those people who taught me when I was a child that
    it was all right to grow plants and food when you’re seven years old.

    Q. Do you see yourself doing this kind of work for the rest
    of your life?

    A. I do. I made a commitment to myself to grow food on a
    larger scale for the rest of my life. One of the dreams I have is to produce
    more garlic. I see there are niches that can be filled, and that’s the trick to
    entrepreneurship. Find that niche, and
    not only can you make a little money—I don’t know if it will support you
    forever—but it will help support you and it will make you happy.

    Q. What about your bee farm sets you apart from conventional
    beekeeping? What pushed you in that direction?

    A. I was a bee inspector for the state of Illinois when I
    was 21. If you find a bee yard with this disease called American foulbrood, you
    have kill the bees. After about eight months I ran into a nearly abandoned
    apiary, and I had to do that. I had to use a spray aerosol can of
    cyanide. I smelled that, and I quit the next day.

    So when we decided to start [the Chicago Honey
    Co-op], there was no question among the three of us beekeepers about chemicals.
    At the time it was very radical, even eight years ago, to not use chemicals in
    your hives. But we knew it was harming the bees and the environment. Also, we believe in being part of a
    community. We don’t just do it because we want to get to market, and we don’t
    just do it because we know we can produce delicious food. We want to pass it on
    to others.

    Q. Could you talk a little bit about the education and the
    job training that the Chicago Honey Co-op offers?

    A. The job training started first with a grant from the
    Illinois Department of Corrections—not usually a grant-giving organization.
    And they somehow were convinced by the three of us beekeepers that this was a
    good idea: a small business doing job training with people who had just gotten
    out of prison and couldn’t find jobs because of that.

    Q. What part of your job makes you the most hopeful about
    creating a more sustainable world?

    A. The best part of the job these days is the young people
    who have become interested in what we do, to have them show up and explain to
    me what the world’s about. That kind of cultural exchange that happens among
    different generations—there is nothing like it. It is so rich, so important.
    That’s how I started out and now I’m in that place to be the mentor.

    Q. What do you think a green job is and why do you think your
    job is one of them?

    A. I wish somebody would come up
    with a different term. I like names of things that say what they are and this
    one is definitely a stretch and always has been for me. I guess a green job contributes to the health
    of the earth and to the people and the animals on that earth. We decided to
    actually produce something tangible and delicious, but something you could hold
    in your hand that wasn’t just an idea or a service.

    And why do I consider this job [a green one]? Because we
    build soil every day. We’ve also been helping with what people are eating in
    the neighborhood and what we’re eating at home. And we’re teaching.

    Related Links:

    Chicago considers getting serious about coal pollution

    Focus the nation on jobs and the clean energy race

    Sustainable urban farming ideas that think inside the box






  • Platinum Roulette 5.1 reviewed

    Get the fun of the Vegas strip in the palm of your hand with your Windows Phone. Platinum Roulette brings Roulette, one of the most popular casino games, to the windows mobile. Place your bets, spin the wheel and count your winnings or lose everything. Check out the full review of this game at BestWindowsMobileApps.com.