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  • Malcolm McLaren: DEAD!

    Last night PIL played on Jimmy Kimmel. Today, the New York Times announced that Malcom McLaren, the man behind the Sex Pistols–and Adam & the Ants and BowWowWow–has died of mesothelioma at a hospital in Switzerland. He was 64.

    McLaren had managed the New York Dolls as that great glam band fell apart, and on his return to London, where he and his girl friend at the time Vivienne Westwood ran a clothing shop called Sex, the budding impressario put together the Sex Pistols.

    Boom! Punk rock! The world changed for millions of us. Goodbye Malcolm. And thank you.


  • Saab 92010 Sixten concept renderings is a pretty take on the rumored 9-2 ‘teardrop’ car

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    Saab 92010 Sixten concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    It’s good to see that not only has the “Save Saab “bandwagon not hung out a “Mission Accomplished” banner and gone home, they’re still working hard to give new owner Spyker ideas for what Saab should be. There’s even a Saab 9-1 group on Facebook trying to get the company to jump into the economy-sized car market. We have no idea, though, how Spyker feels about all this.

    Added to the list of contributions is this, the 92010 Sixten concept by Eduard Gray, a modern take on the original 92 designed by Sixten Sason. It’s a rather attractive three-door, four-seat compact hatchback that updates the 92’s ‘teardrop’ form. Gray argues that his creation could use a hybrid drivetrain and give Saab flavor to the buffet of little premium cars on the way. We wonder if Victor Muller will be setting it next to the sketch of the possible new 9-2 he’s been showing off before taking a few notes…

    [Source: Eduard Gray – images reproduced with permission]

    Saab 92010 Sixten concept renderings is a pretty take on the rumored 9-2 ‘teardrop’ car originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 08 Apr 2010 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • World’s Remotest Restaurant Only Reachable Via Scariest Walking Path Ever [Bad Ideas]

    This is supposedly the world’s most remote restaurant; if you make it there you get to eat lunch for free. On the one hand, what a deal! On the other, HOLY SHIT LOOK AT THIS PATH: More »







  • iPad Launch: The Official Apple Numbers

    Before Steve Jobs moved into the details of iPhone OS 4.0 today, he paused to share some of the positive news about the iPad release from last weekend. Apple sold quite a few iPads on launch day and customers have responded to the device by downloading lots of apps and e-books.

    iPad By the Numbers

    300,000 iPads were sold on the Saturday and as of today, 450,000 have been sold. For comparison the original iPhone sold 250,000 units on opening weekend in June of 2007. About 1 million units of the iPhone 3G were sold in July 2008 when that revision launched.

    The iPad launch compares very well to the original iPhone. The two devices are also close in that they had US-only launches and really mapped out a new category for Apple. The comparison to the 3G launch will only be interesting when the next revision of the iPad is launched simultaneously in several countries.

    iPad Apps

    Customers were also quick to embrace iPad specific apps and books. About 1 million iPad apps were downloaded on the first day. 3.5 million have been downloaded through today (about 7.8 apps per iPad). This number is a bit higher than I expected. Every iPad is prompted to download iBooks, so that bumps the number a bit.

    I wonder if Apple is including Universal Apps (contains both iPhone and iPad binaries) that iPhone users have downloaded but have not installed on an iPad. Technically, I am not sure there is a way for Apple to distinguish when a user downloads an app with iTunes so I suspect these numbers are artificially inflated by iBooks and Universal apps.

    iBooks

    Books have also been a big success. 250,000 books were downloaded on the first day, and 600,000 books (1.3 books per iPad) have been downloaded through today. If the bundled Winnie the Pooh book is included in those numbers, it is less impressive. Since Winnie the Pooh is not actually downloaded, I would guess that these numbers represent additional books downloaded through the store, but the other caveat would be the free samples for paid books. Those might bump the numbers slightly. With all the free books available through the Gutenberg Project I would have expected a higher number per iPad.

    I know I have downloaded 6 books myself (2 paid). It would be really interesting to see the usage patterns here. I suspect that there is a small number of people that have downloaded 5-10 books and a large number that has not downloaded any.

    While some of the usage numbers for downloads are a bit of a mixed bag, the number of iPads sold is impressive, especially for a new device category. I suspect that the iBooks downloaded will increase even further as iPhone users pick up the app in iPhone OS 4.0.

  • Northern New England AmeriCorps*VISTA Collaboration

    The Northern New England AmeriCorps*VISTA Collaboration is comprised of the Campus Compact state affiliates in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. The collaboration is based on mutual interest in supporting service and service-learning focused on anti-poverty measures across the more than seventy colleges and universities in our collective memberships. Our goals are to develop strategies that will provide access to higher education for low-income individuals, support small and faith based community organizations that serve low-income communities through volunteer recruitment and assist low income communities to access resources related to public safety, disaster relief and emergency preparedness.

    Colleges and Universities can do many things to help alleviate poverty in their communities. Campus Compact VISTAs in Maine, New Hampshire, or Vermont, work at a college or university to strengthen partnerships between community non-profits and campuses. VISTAs also develop and expand service-learning programs focused on anti-poverty measures in all areas of education and human needs including literacy, mentoring, health care, housing, and technology.

    By coordinating the integration of service and academics, VISTAs will effect sustainable change that serves community needs while fostering the development of leadership skills and civic engagement in college students.

    With twenty-four site placement options ranging from urban to rural, the Northern New England Campus Compact AmeriCorps*VISTA program offers many exciting opportunities.

    Position Description:
    Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont Campus Compact are looking for individuals to serve on a tri-state AmeriCorps*VISTA team. Positions will begin in with training in mid-August and you must be able to make a 1-year commitment.

    Benefits:

    • $1,500 cash stipend or $5,350 Education Award upon successful completion of service
    • Yearly living allowance of $10,696 – $12,204
    • Relocation allowance
    • Federal student loan deferment
    • Option to purchase life insurance
    • Child Care (eligibility determined by income)
    • Non-competitive eligibility for federal employment for the year following completion of service
    • Extensive training


    Service description:

    • Working to increase access to higher education opportunities for low income individuals
    • Recruiting, training, and sustaining volunteers
    • Developing partnerships with local community agencies that combat poverty
    • Working with college faculty and administration to support service initiatives on campus such as: Alternative Breaks, America Reads, America Counts and mentoring programs
    • Assisting with developing service-learning programs and projects


    Qualifications:

    • College Degree
    • Excellent communication skills
    • Public speaking skills
    • A positive attitude
    • Desire to work with college students
    • Volunteer experience and a demonstrated commitment to service
    • Leadership experience

    For more information, or to submit a cover letter, resume, and reference list, please contact:

    Erin Pringle
    AmeriCorps*VISTA Leader
    Campus Compact for New Hampshire
    3 Barrell Court, Suite 200
    Concord, NH 03301
    603-223-2302 ext.313

  • We’re Beyond Product Placement: Here’s “Behavior Placement” | Discoblog

    TV-television-screensOver the years of our addiction to the great idiot box, television, we’ve gradually learned to block out the pesky commercials that interrupt and interfere with our viewing pleasure with their yammering attempts to sell us things. Unfortunately, this has only led marketers to wonder how they could influence our buying decisions in more subtle ways, ushering in a new era of creepy ideas that smack of brainwashing.

    The first idea was product placement, where the stars of TV shows drank a certain brand of fizzy soda or typed on a certain brand of computer. But now that most viewers are hip to these product placements, the marketers and networks have stepped it up a notch to reclaim our attention again. NBC has introduced “behavior placement,” wherein certain behaviors are written into the show’s narrative in order to foist a more nebulous kind of marketing on us.

    For a week in April, NBC will use its shows to convince viewers to “get green,” compost, or otherwise save the planet. The benefits for advertisers are two-fold. Some companies simply want to link their brand to a feel-good and socially aware show, while other companies–like those that sell energy-efficient lightbulbs or organic household cleaning products–think advertising on these shows will directly boost sales.

    In an in-depth article, The Wall Street Journal writes of an earlier marketing push:

    In just one week on NBC, the detectives on “Law and Order” investigated a cash-for-clunkers scam, a nurse on “Mercy” organized a group bike ride, Al Gore made a guest appearance on “30 Rock,” and “The Office” turned Dwight Schrute into a cape-wearing superhero obsessed with recycling.

    The marketers say they don’t want to come across as being too pushy or preachy, so getting characters in a show to plug for certain behaviors is a safer bet. NBC Universal Chief Executive Jeff Zucker told The Wall Street Journal:

    “People don’t want to be hit over the head with it…. Putting it in programming is what makes it resonate with viewers.”

    Since fall 2007, NBC executives have asked producers of almost every prime-time and daytime show to incorporate a green storyline at least once a year. Show producers, like Tim Kring of “Heroes,” told The Journal that behavior placement was easier than incorporating a specific brand. This past fall, he said, members of a carnival in the show loaded a pickup truck with recyclables as one of the characters talked about giving back to the Earth.

    “Someone has to pay for our big, expensive television shows,” Mr. Kring says.

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    Image: iStockphoto


  • iPhone 4.0 Software: Multitasking, Billions Of Ads, No Porn Store

    Apple honcho Steve Jobs today unveiled the latest version of the company’s iPhone operating system software, which adds long-awaited multitasking functions, so that you can finally listen to Pandora and check email at the same time. The new OS will also include the iPad’s iBooks app and an email app that will let you manage multiple accounts from a single inbox. What’s missing? Java and Flash are still no-shows. And don’t expect a porn store anytime soon. “There’s a porn store for Android,” Jobs said in response to a question about opening the App Store to unsanctioned products.”You can download it, your kids can download it. That’s a place we don’t want to go, so we’re not going to.”

    Jobs also announced iAd, a platform to help the company grab a piece (likely a very large one) of the massive market for mobile ads (over a billion served each day, according to McSteve). “We do not have plans to be a worldwide ad agency. We don’t know a lot about advertising, but we’re learning,” he said. (Worldwide ad agencies take note: Apple is a very quick learner.)

    The new OS will be out this summer for iPhone and iPod touch users, and in the fall for those lucky iPad early adopters. Oh, and speaking of early adopters, if you’ve got an older (as in circa 2008) iPhone or iPod touch, forget about multitasking. “The hardware just can’t do it,” said Steve. Upgrades, anyone?

    Live iPhone OS 4.0 event coverage [gdgt]

  • Somebody on SharesPost wants to buy $4.5 million worth of Facebook stock at $4…

    Somebody on SharesPost wants to buy $4.5 million worth of Facebook stock at $45/share (a $20 billion valuation). There’s a seller looking for $50/share.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Apple previews seven features in iPhone OS 4

    Noah and I just finished our live coverage of the Apple event in Cupertino (to check it out, click here).  In the presentation, Jobs outlined seven new “tentpole” features that will be included in iPhone OS 4:

    1. Multitasking

    First of all, the iPhone 3G won’t support multitasking.  According to Jobs, the hardware just “can’t handle it.”  Beyond that, the 3GS, newer iPod touch units, and the iPad will see the new features.  If you’re in an application and you want to multitask, you can bring up a dock at the bottom of the screen with the running programs (and switch from there).

    Scott Forstall showed off the new capabilities by demonstrating with Pandora, Skype, and TomTom.  What’s more, task completion will be enabled, so you’ll be able to exit out of that picture sharing program while it’s uploading.  In my opinion, it’s the most important feature that was demonstrated today.

    2. Folder

    Instead of having numerous apps scattered across your iPhone, OS 4 will offer the ability to place them in “Folders.”  By moving an app on another app, it automatically creates a folder and names it (though the name can be changed).  A nice organizational feature, if I do say so myself.

    3. Enhanced Mail

    One of my common complaints about the iPhone is being addressed in iPhone OS 4.  Mail improvements include the ability to configure more than one Exchange account, a unified inbox for all of your addresses, the ability to open an attachment with an app from the App Store, and the ability to view e-mails by thread.


    4. iBooks

    Quite possibly one of my favorite features on the iPad – iBooks – is finally coming to the iPhone.  Nothing new here, but it’ll be nice to have when I’m traveling.


    5. Enterprise

    Better data protection, mobile device management, and most importantly, support for multiple Exchange accounts.  Finally.


    6. Game Center

    If you like to play games on your iPhone, then the Game Center is going to interest you.  From what I can gather, it’s going to be a social gaming network of sorts, complete with achievements, leaderboards, and more.


    7. iAd
    Leave it to Apple to make mobile advertising interesting.  Claiming that apps are “where the opportunity to deliver advertising is,” iAd is intended to help developers create rich, app-like advertisements.  In the demo, the advertisement literally looked like an app within an app.  Very cool, and I’m sure it will make waves in the advertising industry.

    All in all, a good event.  What say you?  Pleased with the improvements in iPhone OS 4, or were you expecting more today?  Sound off in the comments section!

    (Images via Engadget)


  • TV producer and wife seen arguing before she went missing, Mexican authorities say

     

    A Hollywood producer and his wife were seen arguing in a “violent” manner the day before he says she went missing from their  Cancun resort, Mexican authorities say.

    Monica Beresford-Redman, 41, was found dead Thursday in a sewer on the grounds of the Moon Palace resort where the family had been vacationing.  State prosecutors said the body showed signs of possible strangulation, but they were waiting on the results of an autopsy to determine the cause of death.

    Police are questioning her husband, Bruce Beresford-Redman, a TV producer whose credits include “Survivor” and “Pimp My Ride.”  Authorities say he had scratch marks on his neck.

    Bruce Beresford-Redman went to authorities on Tuesday to report his wife missing. He told police he had last seen her when she went out shopping at 10 a.m. Monday.

    He has not been arrested in connection to the death. The Associated Press and Mexican media reported earlier that he had been arrested Thursday morning.

    — Cecilia Sanchez in  Mexico City and Kate Linthicum in Los Angeles

  • Sagem Puma Android Phone

    Found under: Sagem, Puma, Android, Google, Sports,

    If that boring looking Eco friendly Sagem Puma phone was not enough they are at it again with a new Puma phone based on Android maybe this time they have a winner on their hands instead of that thing they call a phone. This Sagem Puma phone will be skinned to the bone so at the end of the day dont expect the Google experience with this thing it is currently looking doubtful.No hard specs on the Sagem Puma Android phone yet all we know at this moment is that the first handset will b

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  • Apple Announces Multitasking for iPhone? Close Enough.

    So before the purists go off the deep end, fuming about the iPhone OS 4.0 announcement today, let’s just concede one point – it isn’t truly multitasking. Apple announced “Multitasking” with seven key points, one of them being “Fast App Switching”, and this is what they meant for much of multitasking.

    But here’s the thing. For some of the most exciting multitasking-oriented things we’ve wanted to do with our iPhones, the new OS will indeed offer true multitasking – and for that we’re fairly excited, to say the least.

    Sponsor

    Multitasking, for the most part, is handled by a double click on the home button, which pulls up a screen showing icons of all the apps currently hanging out in the background. Some, like Skype or Pandora, will actually be running, while others will simply be in a frozen state.

    The multitasking feature will be available for iPhone 3GS and iPod Touch 2nd Generation starting this summer and Apple is guaranteeing that it will not only keep your device moving quickly but will work to conserve battery life. In this effort, the company has released 7 APIs to handle the “multitasking”.

    Instead of allowing the application to continue running a full instance in the background, potentially clogging up the system and draining power, the OS will handle background operations for several specific processes.

    iphone40-multitaskingAPIs.JPG

    [Image courtesy of GDGT.]

    For other applications not using these specific background services, switching out of the app will simply freeze it in its current state for the user to return to later. Otherwise, Apple certainly nailed it as far as the types of services we were hoping to run in the background.

    You want music to keep streaming through Pandora while you catch up with reading on Read It Later? You got it. How about keeping track of your bike ride across town with Map My Ride and being able to look up directions on the way? Sure! Keep Skype running in the background and get phone calls and chat notifications? Indeed. The iPhone will even complete tasks, such as uploading photos and videos, in the background – a feature sounds rather like “true” multitasking to us.

    We admit, “true” multitasking or not, this fulfills many of our wishes and we’re quite excited.

    The only thing we’ll have to hope for now is that the apps we want to multitask implement these new APIs. By doing multitasking this way, Apple has tried to assure that it can control the quality of the experience, but we’ll have to hope for companies to follow along and release updated versions.

    Discuss


  • Controlling feral cat populations

    Trap, neuter, release approach leaves cats hungry, dead

    Editor, The Times:

    The Seattle Times seemed supportive of the trap, neuter, release approach [“When cats stop multiplying like rabbits,” NWMonday].

    My disagreement with trap, neuter, release approach regards the word “release.” The cats so easily trapped are hungry, abandoned pets. Releasing these cats after neutering them does nothing to save them from starvation. A house-bred cat on the streets will probably die of starvation before reproducing kittens.

    Feral cats are rarely trapped. It is the feral cats that are the target of trap, neuter, release programs.

    I hope The Times is open to questioning such a program. Why the enthusiasm in containing a kitten population? Where is a similar campaign to control the number of squirrel kits, young raccoons or puppies born under a bush from abandoned pet dogs? I suggest The Times channel its good-heartedness into adopting trapped cats.

    — Patrick Arnold, Seattle

  • Langston University-Tulsa to host national conference for educators

    Langston University-Tulsa will host its first national conference for educators April 12-14. Professors from across the country will gather to discuss the importance of adopting a more student-centered pedagogy…

    …LU-Tulsa, along with the OU-Tulsa Community Engagement Center and faculty from Purdue University, will host the three-day National Conference on Learner-Centered Teaching at the LU-Tulsa campus…Other sponsors include the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, the National Agricultural Library, and Oklahoma Campus Compact

    >>Read the full article at The LU Gazette

  • 2011 Chevrolet Camaro V6 gets 312-hp, Mustang’s 305-hp reign short-lived

    While FoMoCo engineers were celebrating their 1-hp gain over the 304-hp 2010 Chevrolet Camaro with the 2011 305-hp Ford Mustang, General Motors engineers were hard at work on the 2011 Chevrolet Camaro.

    The base 2011 Chevrolet Camaro is powered by a 3.6L V6 that now produces a total of 312-hp (an increase of 8-hp) with a maximum torque of 278 lb-ft.

    Click here to get prices on the 2010 Chevrolet Camaro.

    “The 304 horsepower in the 2010 Camaro was actually a conservative rating on our end,” said Tom Sutter, GM V-6 chief engineer. “But we knew already that this award-winning engine produced at least the amount of power we stated, but now we’ve gone the extra step in certifying the engine for this application and have verified an additional 8 horsepower.”

    GM also announced that the Synergy Special Edition will now be made available on all trim levels for a limited run during the 2011 model year. The 2011 Camaro will also be the second Chevrolet, besides the Corvette, to offer the popular Head-Up Display.

    Click here to read our review on the 2010 Chevrolet Camaro LT V6.

    Hit the jump for the press release for more details.

    Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro LT V6:

    Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro V6 LT Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro V6 LT Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro V6 LT Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro V6 LT

    Press Release:

    Chevrolet supports Camaro’s consumer momentum with exciting updates for 2011

    312 horsepower for V6, expanded availability of Synergy color and heads-up display new for 2011

    The 2010 model year proved to be a very successful and exciting year for the segment-leading Chevrolet Camaro. For the 2011 model year, Chevrolet looks to expand the car’s popularity among consumers with the introduction of additional features.

    Horsepower increase for V6 engine

    The 2011 Camaro V-6 engine completed SAE certification testing and is now officially rated at 312 horsepower at 6500 rpm and 278 lb-ft of torque at 5100 rpm. This rating is eight horsepower higher than the previous year and also marks an increase in torque from the 2010 rating of 273 lb-ft.

    The 3.6-liter V-6 with variable valve timing (VVT) and direct injection employs four independent cam phasers to change the timing of valve operation as operating conditions such as rpm and engine load vary. The result is linear delivery of torque, with near-peak levels over a broad rpm range, and high specific output (maximum horsepower per liter of displacement) supporting overall engine response and drivability. When combined, direct-injection and VVT enable an unmatched combination of power, efficiency and low-emissions in gasoline V-6 engines.

    SAE certification is a voluntary power and torque certification procedure developed by the SAE Engine Test Code committee. This procedure (J2723) ensures fair, accurate ratings for horsepower and torque by allowing manufacturers to certify their engines through third-party witness testing. Chevrolet was the vehicle brand to begin using the procedure.

    Synergy color to be made available across the lineup

    Earlier this year, Chevrolet introduced the Camaro Synergy Special Edition which is based off the concept displayed at the 2009 SEMA show in Las Vegas. The Synergy Special Edition is limited to a 1LT model, but the Synergy Green exterior color will be made available on all trim levels for a limited run during the 2011 model year.

    “When we looked at the overwhelmingly positive reaction we received from SEMA attendees and consumers on Synergy Green, making the color available across the board was pretty much a no-brainer,” said John Fitzpatrick, Camaro Marketing Manager.

    Customers will be able to order this color for a manufacturer suggested retail price of $325.

    Head-Up Display

    Already available on the Chevrolet Corvette,the 2011 Camaro will become the second Chevrolet vehicle to offer the popular Head-Up Display.

    Camaro’s Head-Up Display will include:

    * Vehicle speed
    * Tachometer
    * Compass
    * Outside air temperature
    * Manual Paddle Shift Gear Indicator (if equipped)
    * OnStar Turn-by-Turn
    * Audio functions
    * Phone information
    * Selected gear
    * Turn signal indicators
    * High-beam indicator signal
    * Vehicle messages

    “Head-Up Display has been a very frequent customer request” said Cheryl Pilcher, Camaro Product Manager. “People familiar with the HUD system simply love it. It truly enables drivers to keep their eyes on the road.”

    Production of the 2011 Chevrolet Camaro begins on June 7, 2010.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: GM (via Camaro5)


  • An Introduction To The Coming European Debt Wars

    (This guest post previously appeared at NewDeal2.0)

    Government debt in Greece is just the first in a series of European debt bombs that are set to explode. The mortgage debts in post-Soviet economies and Iceland are more explosive. Although these countries are not in the Eurozone, most of their debts are denominated in euros. Some 87% of Latvia’s debts are in euros or other foreign currencies, and are owed mainly to Swedish banks, while Hungary and Romania owe euro-debts mainly to Austrian banks. So their government borrowing by non-euro members has been to support exchange rates to pay these private-sector debts to foreign banks, not to finance a domestic budget deficit as in Greece.

    All these debts are unpayably high because most of these countries are running deepening trade deficits and are sinking into depression. Now that real estate prices are plunging, trade deficits are no longer financed by an inflow of foreign-currency mortgage lending and property buyouts. There is no visible means of support to stabilize currencies (e.g., healthy economies). For the past year, these countries have supported their exchange rates by borrowing from the EU and IMF. The terms of this borrowing are politically unsustainable: sharp public sector budget cuts, higher tax rates on already over-taxed labor, and austerity plans that shrink economies and drive more labor to emigrate.

    Bankers in Sweden and Austria, Germany and Britain are about to discover that extending credit to nations that can’t (or won’t) pay may be their problem, not that of their debtors. No one wants to accept the fact that debts that can’t be paid, won’t be. Someone must bear the cost as debts go into default or are written down, to be paid in sharply depreciated currencies, but many legal experts find debt agreements calling for repayment in euros unenforceable. Every sovereign nation has the right to legislate its own debt terms, and the coming currency re-alignments and debt write-downs will be much more than mere “haircuts.”

    There is no point in devaluing, unless “to excess” – that is, by enough to actually change trade and production patterns. That is why Franklin Roosevelt devalued the US dollar by 75% against gold in 1933, raising its official price from $20 to $35 an ounce. And to avoid raising the U.S. debt burden proportionally, he annulled the “gold clause” indexing payment of bank loans to the price of gold. This is where the political fight will occur today – over the payment of debt in currencies that are devalued.

    Another byproduct of the Great Depression in the United States and Canada was to free mortgage debtors from personal liability, making it possible to recover from bankruptcy. Foreclosing banks can take possession of collateral real estate, but do not have any further claim on the mortgagees. This practice — grounded in common law — shows how North America has freed itself from the legacy of feudal-style creditor power and the debtors’ prisons that made earlier European debt laws so harsh.

    The question is, who will bear the loss? Keeping debts denominated in euros would bankrupt much local business and real estate. Conversely, re-denominating these debts in local depreciated currency will wipe out the capital of many euro-based banks. But these banks are foreigners, after all — and in the end, governments must represent their own home electorates. Foreign banks do not vote.

    Foreign dollar holders have lost 29/30th of the gold value of their holdings since the United States stopped settling its balance-of-payments deficits in gold in 1971. They now receive less than a thirtieth of this, as the price has risen to $1,100 an ounce. If the world can take that, why shouldn’t it take the coming European debt write-downs in stride?

    There is growing recognition that the post-Soviet economies were structured from the start to benefit foreign interests, not local economies. For example, Latvian labor is taxed at over 50% (labor, employer, and social tax) — so high as to make it noncompetitive, while property taxes are less than 1%, providing an incentive toward rampant speculation. This skewed tax philosophy made the “Baltic Tigers” and central Europe prime loan markets for Swedish and Austrian banks, but their labor could not find well-paying work at home. Nothing like this (or their abysmal workplace protection laws) is found in the Western European, North American or Asian economies.

    It seems unreasonable and unrealistic to expect that large sectors of the New European population can be made subject to salary garnishment throughout their lives, reducing them to a lifetime of debt peonage. Future relations between Old and New Europe will depend on the Eurozone’s willingness to re-design the post-Soviet economies on more solvent lines — with more productive credit and a less rentier-biased tax system that promotes employment rather than asset-price inflation that drives labor to emigrate. In addition to currency realignments to deal with unaffordable debt, the indicated line of solution for these countries is a major shift of taxes off labor onto land, making them more like Western Europe. There is no just alternative. Otherwise, the age-old conflict-of-interest between creditors and debtors threatens to split Europe into opposing political camps, with Iceland the dress rehearsal.

    Until this debt problem is resolved – and the only way to resolve it is to negotiate a debt write-off — European expansion (the absorption of New Europe into Old Europe) seems over. But the transition to this future solution will not be easy. Financial interests still wield dominant power over the EU, and will resist the inevitable. Gordon Brown already has shown his colors in his threats against Iceland to illegally and improperly use the IMF as a collection agent for debts that Iceland doesn’t legally owe, and to blackball Icelandic membership in the EU.

    Confronted with Mr. Brown’s bullying — and that of Britain’s Dutch poodles — 97% of Icelandic voters opposed the debt settlement that Britain and the Netherlands sought to force down the throat of Allthing members last month. This high a vote has not been seen in the world since the old Stalinist era.

    It is only a foretaste. The choice that Europe ends up making will likely drive millions into the streets. Political and economic alliances will shift, currencies will crumble and governments will fall. The European Union and indeed, the international financial system will change in ways yet to be seen. This will be especially the case if nations adopt the Argentina model and refuse to make payment until steep discounts are made.

    Paying in euros — for real estate and personal income streams in negative equity, where the debts exceed the current value of income flows available to pay mortgages or for that matter, personal debts — is impossible for nations that hope to maintain a modicum of civil society. “Austerity plans” IMF and EU style is an antiseptic, technocratic jargon for life-shortening and killing impact of gutting income, social services, spending on health on hospitals, education and other basic needs, and selling off public infrastructure for buyers to turn nations into “tollbooth economies” where everyone is obliged to pay access prices for roads, education, medical care and other costs of living and doing business that have long been subsidized by progressive taxation in North America and Western Europe.

    The battle lines are being drawn regarding how private and public debts are to be repaid. For nations that balk at repayment in euros, the creditor nations have their “muscle” waiting in the wings: the credit rating agencies. At the first sign a nation is balking in paying in hard currency, or even at the first hint of it questioning a foreign debt as improper, the agencies will move in to reduce a nation’s credit rating. This will increase the cost of borrowing and threaten to paralyze the economy by starving it for credit.

    The most recent shot was fired n April 6 when Moody’s downgraded Iceland’s debt from stable to negative: “Moody’s acknowledged that Iceland might still achieve a better deal in renewed negotiations, but said the current uncertainty was hurting the country’s short-term economic and financial prospects.”

    The fight is on. It should be an interesting decade.

    Prof. Michael Hudson is Chief Economic Advisor to the Reform Task Force Latvia (RTFL). His website is michael-hudson.com.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Revkin wants to talk ‘energy quest’ not ‘climate crisis’

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    Andy Revkin’s Dot Earth blog on the New York Times site has moved from the science section to the opinion
    section, to reflect Revkin’s shift from a veteran staff reporter to a freelancer. He kicks things off at his new digs by
    explaining why he prefers to think about a collective “energy quest” rather than
    a “climate crisis.”

    “This doesn’t mean I
    reject the idea that we face a climate crisis. I just don’t think that phrase
    is a productive way to frame this challenge, particularly as defined over the
    last few years in the
    heated policy debate
    ,” he writes.

    Climate change might be
    the reason for the trek, he seems to be arguing, but we complete that journey
    by watching the ground at our feet and the path ahead (by developing and implementing smart energy solutions), not by fixating on the
    starting point.

    We’re not even
    close to investing what we should be, he points out. U.S. R&D funding for energy is a pittance
    compared to other areas. Here’s a sobering graph Revkin borrows from Kei
    Koizumi, formerly of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy:

    American Association for the Advancement of Science via Dot Earth

     

    That doesn’t even count
    military spending, shown here:

    American Association for the Advancement of Science via Dot Earth

    Related Links:

    Northwest mountain towns become home efficiency lab

    Nuclear arms reduction is better than nuclear warfare

    Paul Krugman on ‘Building a Green Economy’






  • Customer Stunned When Routine Transaction Goes Smoothly

    Reader Danielle has written in absolutely shocked that a basic return/exchange went smoothly. We think this says a lot about the state of things.

    Danielle writes:

    I am usually quite skeptical about ordering clothing online; I’m always worried about sizes and fit being wrong… I recently bought my boyfriend a pair of jeans on Amazon.com and of course, they were the wrong size. I thought that returning them would be a pain, but the Amazon.com process was simple; the receipt in the box the jeans came in included a link to return information. I printed out a scannable code, re-packaged the jeans and a UPS person was at my door to pick it up at 10AM the next day. Simple and easy.

    However, I was worried once again when a mysterious $80.00 “Amazon Prime” purchase showed up on my Credit Card… turns out I had at one point signed up for a trial of a 2-day delivery service (“Amazon Prime”), and didn’t know that if I did not cancel my membership before the trial was over, they would automatically enroll me in the program and charge my card. I was so frustrated that I hadn’t seen that in the fine print, and upset that I had no notification of signing up. I e-mailed Amazon.com and explained my frustration and what was going on. They e-mailed me back within FIVE minutes, apologized for not being clear in how Amazon Prime works, and explained that a full refund would be issued to me within 2-3 business days. I was totally surprised with how well they treated me.

    An actual PERSON e-mailed me, it was not automated, and they made sure that I was completely taken care of, even though it was my mistake. I will definitely be telling everyone to purchase from Amazon.com because of their exemplary customer service. Bravo, Amazon.com!

    Mission accomplished, Danielle.

  • Nokia N97 gets firmware update

    Nokia N97 gets a minor firmware update v 21.0.102 having a size of 4.3 MB. The update is built to make the response time a lot faster. The memory remains the same as 53.2 MB. Though, Nokia N97 comes with UDP support but I recommend you to back up your phone memory before performing a firmware update as precautionary measure.
    Following are a list of Firmware v21 improvements
    • Default auto-rotate is now set to ON
    • Mass memory content updated
    • OviSuite and OviPlayer installation files preloaded
    • Prleloaded Maps updated to higher version
    • Ovi Maps application updated to latest version (3.03)

    Please note that if your phone has the latest update support, then you need not update.
    Also, note that your firmware update does not depend upon the region. It only depends on the device number and make sure that your service provider has approved the latest firmware update. To check whether the Firmware is available for your device, you need to perform the following steps:-
    1) Type *#0000#
    2) Select Check for updates
    3) If it is available, then start installing the firmware.

    Via: CellBharat


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    Nokia N97 gets firmware update originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Arnaw Kumar on Thursday 8th April 2010 03:43:34 PM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

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