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  • Here’s The List Of ‘Countries’ Verizon Covers

    Verizon may be exaggerating when it says it offers coverage in more than 220 countries, but at least it isn’t just making the number up.

    The company posts a list of the countries it covers — by my count that’s 233 “countries.” The problem is, not all the municipalities Verizon counts are their own countries, unless you’re one of those people who refuses to believe Puerto Rico belongs to the United States.

    Thomas writes:

    Verizon recognizes places such as Antarctica, a sovereign piece of land as a country.

    They also see US Virgin Islands and UK Virgin Islands as countries though they have no representation in the UN and are controlled by the US and UK respectability

    They break down China (PRC) into Hong Kong, Macau, Tawain and Mainland into four while that is recognized as one country by the UN and US.

    Guam, Somila Islands, Puerto Rico are recognized as 3 countries by there all under control of the US.

    Fiji & French Polynesian Islands are all under control of France but are recognized as countries by Verizon.

    Verizon could correct its misleading advertising by lowering the number or saying it covers more than 220 countries and territories. If the company changes its ways it will have to admit it hears us now.

    (Thanks, Thomas and GitEmSteveDave!)

  • Buyout a go-go: Huawei, Lenovo, no comment from CEO

     

    Yeah, we know that CEO Jon Rubinstein giving an official "No Comment" isn’t normally worth a post, but given how many buyout rumors have been swirling around, at this point any statement is news. So in the interest of full disclosure, he told zeit.de "We cannot comment on rumors. […] We focus our efforts on building smartphones that put our customers like." So there you go.

    In other Rubinstein news, it sounds like he’s heading to France on April 27th for that SFR Palm Pre premiere party, so we’re feeling pretty good about an immediate launch. The fact that Vodafone and O2 Germany are getting plussed on the 28th doesn’t hurt, either.

    Rumor time: Doug Kass of The Street claims (in a subscription-required article) that a ‘Gnome’ told him that Lenovo has walked away from a deal with Palm. Meanwhile, Reuters is reporting that Palm went looking to Chinese firms Huawei and ZTE for a possible purchase:

    Huawei was approached through its investment bank sometime in mid-February for "preliminary discussions", the source told Reuters on Tuesday, speaking on condition of anonymity because the process has not been made public

    Round and round we go. Anybody getting dizzy yet?

     Thanks to everybody (and we mean everybody) who sent this all in!

  • Smear it On: Add Cream Cheese to Your Sandwiches

    2008_03_03-Sprouts.jpgIt’s not just for bagels, you know.

    We have almost given up mayonnaise, cheddar, and muenster in favor of a thick layer of cream cheese on many of our sandwiches (and not just our favorite sprouts sandwich pictured above). Wanna know why?

    Read Full Post


  • Everything – A Super Fast Portable File Search

    [Windows Only] “Everything” is a small and portable freeware program that lets you find files in Windows with blazing speed. About two years ago, one of my readers sent me a nice comment about it, and I’ve been using it every since.

    Here’s what the main window of Everything looks like after a search:

    everything-search-results

    As you can see in the snapshot here, Everything supports the normal Windows file context menus when you right-click on a file. This is one of my favorite features. That means that you can launch a file, open a folder, copy, move or rename a file without having to leave Everything’s search window.

    There are plenty of other features in Everything, such as;

    • Small installation file
    • Clean and simple user interface
    • Quick file indexing
    • Quick searching
    • Minimal resource usage
    • Share files with others easily
    • Real-time updating

    … and much more.

    One of the many features that I have rarely used, is Everything’s ability to broadcast it’s search results across a network or the internet using FTP, ETP or HTTP. That means you can set it up so that anyone on your network can search the computer that Everything is running on. Here’s what the results look like in a web browser.

    everything-browser-results

    You can even download the files to another PC using the web browser.

    Another of my favorite features in Everything is the fact that it’s portable. When I move it from one PC to another, I only take a single file named “everything.exe”. Once that single file is running, it creates it’s own settings file and it’s own database file in the same folder that it’s running in.

    One thing you may notice is that Everything does take a few seconds to scan your drive and while it’s doing that, the search results window is completely blank. Before you get used to this fact, you might be tempted to start typing a search query into the search field. Don’t bother, because nothing will happen until it’s done scanning your drives.

    The search results are immediate and update with every character you type into the search field. It does support wild card, boolean and regex searches if you need that type of searching power.

    Download Everything Search

    http://www.voidtools.com

    Techie Buzz Verdict:

    I use Everything quite often and it’s a must-have utility for all of my PCs. It does almost everything I need but it is missing one thing that other indexed search programs have; it can’t search inside of files for matching results. I rarely need that feature, and I have no problem recommending Everything for everyone.

    techiebuzzrecommendedsoftware1

    Techie Buzz Rating: 4.5/5 (Excellent)


    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.

    Everything – A Super Fast Portable File Search originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Clif Sipe on Tuesday 13th April 2010 09:30:00 AM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

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  • myTouch Slide, Something Old and Something New

    Let’s start off with the old. Keeping the trend started by the G1, the myTouch Slide will be available in a variety of colors. The standard black and white but this time around merlot has been replaced in favor of red.  If you’re a fan of the optical trackpad, it will make an appearance on the device along with a few capacitive buttons and a new “G” button.

    And that brings us to the something new. Apparently T-Mobile has added the “G” button which has its own Android app. T-Mobile trademarked this G button back in March. The folks over at AndroidGuys have uncovered a picture of the trademark; nobody knows what this app will do. Hopefully it does something really cool unlike most carrier specific apps. Will this button an app be included in future Android offerings from T-Mobile? Only time will tell, more information on this “Genius Button” will hopefully leak out soon, I’m interested in knowing what it does.

    [via cellphone signal]

  • China getting another one of those Dell Mini Android phones ?

     

    We’re not sure if we still care about mediocre Dell Android phones that are headed to China but it looks like Dell is popping off with another ‘Ophone’ (aka China’s Android) powered device. This time it’s the Dell Mini 3Ti, a dual-mode TD-SCDMA and GSM phone that has HSDPA support and a 2 megapixel camera along with another front facing camera. The design is inoffensive and nicely packed in a tight little package. Sadly, that tiny screen makes it tough to get excited for. So enjoy your mediocre Dell Android phones China, if Dell wants to make a dent in the US, they’ll definitely have to step it up a notch. And no, the Dell Aero doesn’t count. [engadget]

  • “Curb Your Enthusiasm” Gets X-Rated Makeover For Porn Parody

    Curb Your Enthusiasm is getting the X-rated once-over. Larry David’s R-rated HBO comedy is the latest small screen fixture to be smutted up for an adult film makeover by the porn purveyors at Hustler Video. Hustler just wrapped production on a porn parody based on the hit series, featuring adult film stars as the members of the cast.


    Trailer Safe For Work; Not Safe While Eating…..

    As if that weren’t nauseating enough, get a load of the tagline we’re working with: “Watch the awkward situatiations unfold for Larry in Hustler Video’s ‘This Ain’t Curb Your Enthusiasm XXX.’ But don’t worry! We’ve included lots of hot T&A too.”

    This Ain’t Curb Your Enthusiasm XXX hits DVD April 20.

    (Sidebar: Someone really should start awarding the folks who put together these trailers. Gleaning three minutes of PG-13 rated snippets from a hardcore porn flick can’t be an easy task….)

  • Is Too Big to Fail Fixable?

    Economist Paul Krugman wrote a piece Monday afternoon in which he appears to argue that it’s impossible to fix the too big to fail problem, so we should just learn how to live with it. He says breaking up the banks won’t help and the government swearing it won’t bail any out firms doesn’t work. On the surface, he’s completely right. Neither of these tactics necessarily accomplishes a safer financial system. However, these options aren’t entirely useless if refined. Krugman’s alternative, which would cater to the systemically risky firms, is also useful to consider.

    Breaking Up Firms

    Krugman argues that lots of smaller firms failing isn’t necessarily any better than if one big one fails. That’s quite right: the economy would be approximately as much trouble if 100 financial insitutions with $20 billion balance sheets simultaneously failed as it would be if one with a $2 trillion balance sheet failed. He specifically notes the problem of bank runs here.

    Yet, size does matter on some level. In particular, the second part of the so-called Volcker rule suggests that financial firms should have liability concentration limits. In other words, each institution would be limited to the amount of exposure it would have to certain types of products, firms and/or industries. While this doesn’t directly call for smaller banks that would likely be the result. If lots of smaller banks develop diverse liabilities, then any one product, firm or sector won’t bring it down. No single economic shock should cause a financial firm to incur losses so great that its capital base can’t withstand them. (Of course, higher capital levels will also help here.)

    Ending Bailouts

    He’s also right to say that the government can’t simply say, “Okay, that’s it: no more bailouts. Sorry guys!” We saw how poorly that strategy worked with Lehman. It triggered a financial crisis.

    But just ending bailouts by deeming it so is different from developing a new regulatory framework which would anticipate and defuse scenarios where a bailout might be sought. Through various mechanisms like a non-bank resolution authority, failure plans, etc. the possibility of unavoidable of bailouts become more distant. Of course, Krugman is right to believe that it’s impossible to say that the government will never have to bail out a firm no matter what. Unfortunately, the future is too unpredictable to make so strong a stance. But that doesn’t mean a system shouldn’t be developed which attempts to accomplish that end.

    Krugman’s Solution

    Here’s what he suggests:

    What is true is that there are bailouts and then there are bailouts. What has to be protected in a crisis are bank deposits and things like bank deposits — basically, bank-created money. Money market accounts and “repo” — very short-term loans in which businesses often park their funds — have to be protected to avoid 1930-31-type collapses. On the other hand, bank shareholders and long-term bondholders can be made to pay a price without collapsing the system.

    Here, he appears to be arguing that financial institutions should be more utility-like, with some aspects of their business being protected. Whether he intends to be doing so or not, that sort of goes along with the argument that a non-bank resolution authority would have to insure certain kinds of transactions to avoid a crisis through resolving firms. It would have to worry about these “costs” just like the FDIC has to worry about the “cost” of backing up a bank’s deposits. But if such a system is created, then it must apply to all financial institutions, not just the big ones. Otherwise, smaller ones will be left with a competitive disadvantage not having the same insurance benefit.





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  • Fine-tuning your contract

    Adapted from “What About the Fine Print?” by Michael Wheeler (professor, Harvard Business School), first published in the Negotiation newsletter.

    When negotiators sign on the dotted line, they sometimes worry about the wrong concerns. “Did I overpay?” wonders the buyer as he inks the sales agreement. Across the table, the seller is thinking, “I bet if I’d pushed a little harder, I would have gotten more.”

    Yet it’s the words that surround the numbers that often are more important—and harder to get right. Take a simple real-estate deal. Isn’t it better to sell your condo for $400,000 than for $375,000? Not if the higher-priced deal is contingent on the purchaser’s sale of her current place. Likewise, the lowest price isn’t necessarily the best for the buyer if it doesn’t include exit provisions for a bad title or termites.

    Sophisticated negotiators understand that a successful deal often hinges on hammering out the right contract language. In fact, choosing the wording is a negotiation in itself, one with its own unique pitfalls.

    How do you measure success when you’re trading words, not numbers? The key is to remember that words are means to your goals, not ends. Take the noncompete clauses that employers often seek to prevent top talent from fleeing to the competition. Because most recruits don’t want to be handcuffed, hard bargaining can result. But securing noncompete language isn’t worthwhile if it’s unlikely to be enforced—and courts often disfavor such provisions.

    College administrators learn this time and time again. For instance, in the summer of 2006, football coach Bobby Petrino signed a 10-year, $25 million contract extension with the University of Louisville—but took a better job six months later. Within days of his departure, Louisville found a successor by raiding the University of Tulsa; just before jumping ship, Tulsa’s coach, Steve Kragthorpe, had extended his contract through 2011.

    Instead of battling over language that’s difficult or costly to enforce, look for other ways to achieve the same goal. To retain employees, for example, organizations can try one of two options: incentive clauses that vest benefits only after a certain number of years of service or “clawback” clauses that require repayment of signing bonuses in the event of early departure. A prospective employee facing such a proposal must weigh the present value of a future easy exit. The more attractive the job, the less important constraints may become.

    Whenever you negotiate, be sure to calculate the tradeoff between tangible economic benefits and possible limits on your options—and ensure that compromises on one front are compensated by gains on another.

  • Beware your lawyer’s biases

    Adapted from “Is Your Lawyer Overconfident, Too?” First published in the Negotiation newsletter.

    Parties in litigation are often overly optimistic about their chances of winning in court. This tendency reduces the bargaining range for settlement because one or both parties perceive their walkaway alternative (namely, letting the courts decide) to be more attractive than it actually is. According to conventional wisdom, lawyers can help their clients overcome this overoptimism bias by providing an objective assessment of a case’s merits and encourage acceptance of a deal.

    Professor Oren Bar-Gill of New York University School of Law challenges this view with an evolutionary model of the settlement process between lawyers. He points out that optimistic lawyers can more credibly threaten costly litigation than pessimistic lawyers (because they actually believe the threat), thereby more successfully extracting favorable settlements on behalf of their clients.

    Yet excessively optimistic lawyers will fail to settle, resulting in litigation that will, over time, expose their overoptimism (because they will lose more often than expected). In Bar-Gill’s model, optimal lawyers are “cautiously optimistic”—not excessively so or unrealistic about the odds of winning in court. Over time, all lawyers will become cautiously optimistic—or be weeded from the marketplace of attorneys.

    Bar-Gill suggests that lawyers may succumb to the same overoptimism bias as their clients. The lesson: Don’t assume your lawyer is providing a completely objective assessment of the case. He may be wearing rose-colored glasses, too.

  • A second look at snap decisions

    Adapted from “It’s Not Intuitive: Strategies for Negotiating More Rationally,” by Max H. Bazerman and Deepak Malhotra (professors, Harvard Business School), first published in the Negotiation newsletter.

    When deciding whether to start a new business, entrepreneurs should critically and comprehensively analyze negotiations over land, construction, hiring, and so on. Yet in a study by Arnold Cooper of Purdue University, Carolyn Woo of Notre Dame University, and William Dunkelberg of Temple University, more than 80% of entrepreneurs estimated their personal chances of success to be 70% or higher; one-third of them described their success as certain. In fact, the five-year survival rate for new businesses is only about 33%.

    Negotiators typically are unaware of their own biases in negotiations, such as the overconfidence displayed by these entrepreneurs. At the same time, they are capable of accurately pinpointing the biases that influence others. Why? Because we make decisions using two different lenses: the insider lens and the outsider lens, according to psychologists Daniel Kahneman of Princeton University and Daniel Lovallo of the Australian Graduate School of Management. A negotiator typically uses an insider lens for making judgments when deeply immersed in a particular context or situation; the insider relies on intuitive thinking. By contrast, the typical negotiator adopts an outsider lens when removed or detached from a particular situation; the outsider uses more rational thinking. The insider focuses only on the current situation, while the outsider is better at integrating information across multiple episodes—in particular, other people’s successes and failures.

    Obviously, for our most important negotiations, the outsider lens is preferable. Unfortunately, however, the outsider lens is rarely the default option when we are facing major negotiations or are embroiled in conflict. A negotiator might well be aware that it takes six to 12 weeks to move from an initial sales call to a legally binding agreement. Yet, when a new prospect comes along, she may nonetheless believe that she can close the deal within three weeks. Furthermore, negotiators are likely to continue to be overly confident about their odds of success despite being proven wrong in the past. In other words, most of us fail to learn from experience.

    Many intelligent people stake their reputations, large sums of money, and years of their lives on negotiations based largely on intuition and overconfidence. The strong urge to view the world—and ourselves—in a positive light can powerfully affect our decision making in negotiation. How can you make sure the outsider view is represented at your most important negotiations? First, during preparation for a key negotiation, consider hiring a true outsider, whether an expert within your firm, a consultant with unique expertise, or a trusted friend. When your deal is complex or emotionally charged, others will identify factors that you have ignored, weigh negative information more appropriately, and maintain an objective view in ways that you cannot.

    If you are not willing or able to bring in an outsider, become an outsider yourself by assessing the situation as if you were not immersed in it. This strategy might require you to recall when someone else was faced with a similar situation or to collect data on what you should rationally expect. In addition, ask yourself this simple question: If someone I cared about asked me for my opinion in a negotiation such as this, what advice would I give?

  • From rugs to runners

    I like the clean simplicity of Clara’s hack – a long runner from Ikea rugs (which reminds me that I need one for my entryway) and little patchwork accents completes the look.

    The rugs in question is the Signe, which goes for only $2.99 each. Three of these would set you back less than a meal in town, and they lasts longer. Ok, now to the hack. The ends, right before the knots, were first soaked in Fabric Mod Podge. When dried, Clara ran them twice through the overcast machine. “The first,” she says, “to serge the edge and to cut just enough to get all three rugs to fit in the space. The second time, without the cutter, was to catch any stray threads.”

    See Clara’s instructions for her rugs to runner.


  • Arguments that make themelves

    DON BLANKENSHIP, the sorry excuse for a CEO of Massey Energy whose brushing aside of repeated safety warnings at a West Virginia mine led to a disastrous explosion which killed at least 29 miners, continues to function as a living, breathing exemplar of the need for sound regulation of dangerous industries:

    As someone who has overseen the mining of more coal than anyone else in the history of central Appalachia, I know that the safety and health of coal miners is my most important job. I don’t need Washington politicians to tell me that, and neither do you. But I also know — I also know Washington and state politicians have no idea how to improve miner safety. The very idea that they care more about coal miner safety than we do is as silly as global warming.

    Quite so.

  • Apple’s Time Mystery Solved

    When Apple first revealed the iPhone back in 2007 many hardcore fans with a keen eye noticed that the images of the then-new smartphone device displayed a somewhat unusual timestamp. All official images released by Apple showed the time on the iPhone as 9:42, and they still do. However, more recently the iPad’s press images have all displayed a similar trend, showing the time on the new tablet as 9:41. Following the iPhone’s original unveiling fans have been scratching their heads attempting to solve the dated mystery, until now.

    A recent blog post from Secret Lab developer Jon Manning has finally shed some light on the time mystery, but try not to get to excited as the reasoning behind Apple’s mysterious love for 9:42 is a rather dull and typically functional one.

    According to Manning’s blog post, while taking a recent visit to his local Apple store he bumped into Senior Vice President of iPhone software, Scott Forstall. During his trip to the busy store Manning decided to ask Forstall about the time conundrum and settle the debate once and for all. Forstall replied, explaining that when a keynote is taking place the product reveal always happens around 40 minutes into the presentation.

    So a simple explanation, as others did previously speculate, now clarifies the puzzle. When the product is first shown at a keynote, the time will roughly match the time the product is announced.

    Mystery solved.

  • Low-Priced Cleveland Foreclosed Homes Still Abound

    Lower-priced Cleveland foreclosed homes still abound, according to Ohio real estate analysts. The Ohio cities of Cleveland and Cincinnati have tied for 7th place on a list of top U.S. cities with the supply of homes still exceeding demand.

    Low-Priced Cleveland Foreclosed Homes Still Abound

    Although lower-priced foreclosures currently do not dominate home sales in Cleveland, home prices are still relatively low, making Cleveland among cities where bargains can still be found.

    Based on an online real estate firm, the average home sales price in March was $93,138. It dropped to $90,454 in the first weeks of April.

    Forbes magazine listed both Cleveland and Cincinnati in its top-ten list of cities with the highest number of unsold houses and longest stays of houses for sale on the market. Forbes cited double-digit unemployment rates as among the major reasons for weak activities in the housing markets of these cities.

    In 2009, more than 22,000 homes in the Cleveland area were notified of delinquency and repossession, a relatively high number but it marked a 19-percent drop from foreclosure postings in 2008.

    The number of Cleveland foreclosed homes dropped, but foreclosure properties still abound because the pace of home sales in the metro area has not been as strong as in other metro areas.

    In contrast, the number of foreclosed homes for sale in Ohio increased in February month-over-month by 1.6 percent. Almost 11,300 homes were put into various phases of the foreclosure process in February, with 3,333 units already in the real estate owned listings of banks.

    In January, foreclosure activity in Ohio slowed compared to December last year, but there were still more than 11,000 homes which entered foreclosure filings. As statewide foreclosure stepped up, the ranking of Ohio jumped up from 14th in January to 12th in February. The 12th place was also the ranking of Ohio in 2009, indicating that any housing market improvement in January was erased by further foreclosure activity in February.

    Nevertheless, according to a certain group of housing market analysts, certain cities in Ohio, such as Cleveland, Cincinnati and Columbus, will recover faster than most other cities. These analysts said that the slight surge in home prices in Cleveland will further improve in the coming months.

    They also said that banks in the area have decided to cut down their housing inventories significantly, reducing their prices for Cleveland foreclosed homes in order to rejuvenate the market and step up sales of properties in their books.

    Find more foreclosure listings in Cleveland, OH:

  • The London Fundraising Group’s First Meeting – Speaker Confirmed

    Great news everyone, the London fundraising group’s first meeting has confirmed the speaker. John Cropper, Global Programme Coordinator will be speaking on Oxfam’s campaign for global gender equality.

     

    Global gender equality is becoming increasingly important, with inadequacies in health care causing over 529,000 women die of pregnancy related complications every year not to mention the 8 million (same population as Greater London) to 20 million a year that suffer serious injury or disability from the same causes. The problems unfortunately stretch further than health care, in South Asia alone at least 50 million women are ‘missing’ due to violence and discrimination. Oxfam is working with women and men all over the world to try to aim for a world with more gender equity.

     

    If you are interested in this issue, like cheese or wine, want to meet people with a similar passion about what Oxfam does, or just want to find out more about Oxfam, it’s internal politics, and how it brings security and dignity to some of the most treacherous parts of the world, do pop along to the London group’s first meeting.

     

    For more information get in touch with Ali Jinnah on [email protected]

  • Recall da Toyota: Ações judiciais estão concentradas na Califórnia


    Dando continuidade no andamento das ações judiciais impostas pelo governo norte-americano contra a Toyota e o seu recall, a NHTSA pode considerar uma segunda multa para a montadora, por causa do atraso que a companhia teve para realizar o recall dos carros com problemas no acelerador.

    Também foi enviado uma carta para a Toyota, informando que se não fossem por limites legais, que a multa imposta seria de mais de $13 bilhões, por isso a cogitação de uma segunda multa menor.

    Durante esse processo, todas as ações judiciais relacionadas ao problema do acelerador dos veículos Toyota serão centralizadas no distrito da Califórnia, onde também está localizada a sede da montadora nos EUA.

    Via | Inside Line


  • Cogeco Cable subscriber guidance ‘very conservative’

    Cogeco Cable Inc. may be able to spend an estimated $700-million to $800-million and still being able to keep its investment grade rating, but don’t expect an acquisition anytime soon. Management stated it is not currently considering the purchase of any specific asset and does not expect to see many M&A opportunities.

    Phillip Huang at UBS noted that Cogeco looked for approximately two years before announcing the acquisition of Portuguese telecommunications operator Cabovisao in 2006, when M&A activity was much more active. The analyst does not foresee any deals in the near term.

    In terms of the company’s fundamental business, he continues to see improvement. Cogeco’s suburban footprint in Ontario and Quebec makes it less exposed to IPTV (Internet Protocol television) competition and wireless substitution relative to its more urban-focused peers, Mr. Huang noted.

    He pointed out that Cogeco’s raised subscriber guidance remains very conservative and estimates approximately 250,000 revenue-generating units (RGUs) will be added in fiscal 2010 (guidance is 200,000).

    The analyst also raised his 2010-2012 earnings per share estimates on the back of Cogeco’s good second quarter results. UBS rates the stock at Buy with a $46 price target, representing upside of roughly 25%.

    Jonathan Ratner

  • Open wide and say Awwwww | Bad Astronomy

    Every now and again a new picture from a space telescope comes down the pipe* that’s a little bit different, a little bit of a step to the left. I think this image counts:

    herschel_rosette

    Kewwwwl. That’s the Rosette Nebula as seen by the Herschel far infrared observatory. The Rosette is a huge star forming region, and one that’s been around a while. In optical images its name is obvious; it resembles a huge flower in space. The central region looks empty, and that’s because it mainly is: fierce winds from newborn stars have excavated a giant bubble in the center of the nebula. Acting like a snowplow, they have pushed the material from the middle of the gas cloud out to the edges, where it piles up.

    That’s what you’re seeing here; the inner wall of the nebula. This image is a long walk from the optical, though. It’s false color, where blue, green, and red represent the light from the nebula at 70, 160, and 250 microns. For comparison, the reddest light your eye can see is less than one micron in wavelength, so this is way far out in the IR. The reddest light in the image is coming from dust that’s only a few degrees above absolute zero!

    The bright spots you see peppering the image are cocoons of gas and dust surrounding stars in the process of birth. They’re not alone; see the finger-like tendrils all pointing off to the right? Those are regions of slightly denser dust which have resisted the winds from the central stars of the nebula (off the edge of this image to the right). Like sandbars forming behind rocks in a stream, these fingers indicate that the tips are denser, and are probably where stars are forming as well.

    What I can’t get over is how three-dimensional this image looks! It’s like the mouth to Hell from Poltergeist. Well, a little bit. If the mouth were 5000 light years away, 100 light years (a quadrillion km, or 600 trillion miles!) across, and kept at a chilly -260° C.

    That’s a big, cold, far away mouth.

    And the analogy isn’t fair, anyway. In the movie, that mouth was where you went after you die, but in reality, this cavernous cloud is where life gets started. Maybe our own Sun was born in a nebula like this; some research indicates it may have been. So while this picture may look a little bit frightening, to me it’s comforting. Even sweet.

    After all, who can resist a nursery full of babies?

    Image Credit: ESA/PACS & SPIRE Consortium/HOBYS Key Programme Consortia




    *Some people say “pike” which is understandable (pike as in road) but I think “pipe” is funnier and apropos, so that’s what I’m sticking with.


  • UT’s Baker Center to Host Ecuadorean Professor César Montúfar

    KNOXVILLE — The Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy, in partnership with the Latin American studies, Global Studies and political science programs, will host César Montúfar, professor of global social studies at the Universidad Andina Simón Bolívar in Quito, Ecuador, on Thursday.

    Free and open to the public, the event will begin at 7 p.m. in the Toyota Auditorium at the Baker Center, 1640 Cumberland Ave., at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

    Montúfar, a member of the National Assembly of Ecuador, will discuss the dominance of left-wing populist governments in the Andes like those of Hugo Chávez, Rafael Correa and Evo Morales. The lecture will focus on the left wing populists’ social ideology, constitutional model, economic model and perspective of creating a new internal order with links to countries such as Russia, China and Iran.

    Montúfar has published extensively on the politics of the Andean region, especially with regard to Ecuador, Colombia, Bolivia and Venezuela. He also has studied topics including border conflicts among Andean neighbors, governance, neoliberal policies and constitutional assemblies.

    The Baker Center, which opened at UT in 2003, develops programs and promotes research to further the public’s knowledge of our system of governance, and to highlight the critical importance of public service, a hallmark of Sen. Baker’s career.

    For more about the Baker Center, see http://www.bakercenter.utk.edu.

    C O N T A C T :

    Amy Blakely (865-974-5034, [email protected])