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  • Egger’s Head: School lunches

    by Grist

    Robert Egger has a lot going on in his head. Just ask him.

    As a nonprofit entrepreneur, a serial searcher for ordinary people
    doing extraordinary things, a deeply deep thoughts kind of guy, Egger
    gives us something to ponder every week.

    In this installment, he scratches his noggin over the school lunch crisis, which has become a hot topic of conversation and debate lately. We’ve got it covered from soup to nuts, as they say. You can catch up here on the tasty Grist discussion about school lunches.

    Related Links:

    Why even the childless should care about school lunch

    A teacher openly crusades for better school food—and gets seared

    Underground school lunch blogger hits ‘Good Morning America’






  • EDFix Call 10: Greening Fleets: What’s the Vision?

    We've just finished a call sequence (which we're calling a "module") on The Commons, with special attention on the notion of a Sustainability Commons.

    Now we're turning our attention to a specific, high-impact domain for greening business: truck fleets and logistics in general. Emissions from corporate owned and operated vehicles account for about 6% of total U.S. carbon emissions.

    Our co-host for this module is EDF's Jason Mathers, who over several calls will guide us through what's been done already to green corporate fleets, hybrid truck designs, ambitious future visions for logistics and trucks, mode switching (truck vs. rail vs. ship), black carbon's effects and remedies, and a few other topics. (Watch Jason tool around in some of the new, cleaner trucks coming on the market.)

    We'll start this coming Monday, April 12 at 9am PT by mapping the landscape of green initiatives and the state of emission reduction efforts in corporate fleets and goods movement to set up future discussions on how to improve these efforts. Please join us, and forward this invitation to others who might be interested.

    One further thought about our approach here: we're going to be diving deep into transportation and logistics, but we expect to hit insights that apply to many different domains. We'll be bringing domain experts in as our guests, but we'd also like to appeal to other sustainability practitioners in very different fields. Sometimes it takes wandering far afield from your own turf to feel the spark of a great solution. We want to bring oxygen to those sparks.

    Please join us for this conversation April 12, 2010 at 9am PT (noon ET). Here's the dial-in info:

    • Phone number: +1 (213) 289-0500
    • Code: 267-6815.

    Get Updates about EDFix Conference Calls

    If you'd like to get announcements about upcoming EDFix conference calls and the results with podcast releases, please sign-up here:

  • Carrie Underwood Wedding Planned For This Summer In Nashville

    Mark your calendars, Country Fans: E! News says “Before He Cheats” singer Carrie Underwood will marry Canadian hockey star Mike Fisher in Nashville this summer. The couple, who have been dating for more than a year, announced their engagement in December.


  • Original iPhones, 3G Can’t Fully Upgrade to iPhone OS 4 [Iphone Os 4]

    To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven. Remember these words as you accept that your first-gen iPhone, iPhone 3G, and iPod Touches will not get the full Touch OS4 upgrade. More »







  • Geoengineering at PRI’s World Science Forum | The Intersection

    There’s an intriguing geoengineering discussion going on here: PRI has brought in the economist Scott Barrett of Columbia, who thinks the economics of geoengineering are just going to be irresistable to most countries, especially when compared with the economics of carbon emissions cuts. That’s a scary thought, although not exactly a surprising one. You can read Barrett’s academic paper on the topic here, and head over here to join in the dialogue it has occasioned. Meanwhile, we’re finishing up the next Point of Inquiry, and I promise my intro isn’t as soapbox long this time. (Hey, I’m learning.) Eli Kintisch was a great guest, so tune in tomorrow….


  • If ‘Piracy’ Is Killing Filmmaking, Why Do Nigeria, China And India Have Thriving Movie Businesses?

    We keep hearing from Hollywood folks that “piracy” is killing the movie business, yet there seems to be little evidence of that. The number of films being made each year continues to grow, and the box office keeps setting attendance and revenue records. But what if unauthorized copies were even more rampant? Kevin Kelly noticed that three countries that are normally considered “hotbeds” of unauthorized copies all seemed to house the largest movie industries:


    The three largest film industries in the world are India, Nigeria and China. Nigeria cranks out some 2,000 films a year (Nollywood), India produces about 1,000 a year (Bollywood) and China less than 500. Together they produce four times as many films per year as Hollywood. Yet each of these countries is a haven, even a synonym, for rampant piracy. How do post-copyright economics work? How do you keep producing more movies than Hollywood with no copyright protection for your efforts?

    This question was pertinent because the rampant piracy in the movie cultures of India, China and Nigeria seemed to signal a future for Hollywood. Here in the West we seem to be headed to YouTubeland were all movies are free. In other words we are speeding towards the copyright-free zones represented by China, India and Nigeria today. If so, do those movie industries operating smack in the middle of the cheap, ubiquitous copies flooding these countries have any lessons to teach Hollywood on how to survive?

    Not everything he finds will be considered a “good” thing — since part of the answers involve things like underground markets and organized crime laundering money — but that shouldn’t take away from some of the key points. In all three countries, he found that (of course) the “pirated” versions (usually sold as video CDs) really acted as promotion for going to see the film in a theater — one of the few places in those countries where air conditioning is available. Some might point out that this isn’t an issue in the US (any more), but if you take a step back there is a larger point: if you provide a valuable experience, people will go. In Nigeria and India, it may be air conditioning, but in the US it could be lots of other things: high quality food, comfy seating, better sound, etc. Second, he found that the industries in all three countries made money by licensing their movies to TV stations who were desperate for content — suggesting that there are almost always other channels where revenue can be obtained.

    Another point that he found was that the movie makers recognized they needed to “compete” with unauthorized copies, and priced things accordingly — so that the price wasn’t all that different than the unauthorized VCDs. Now, that did mean that some of the movies produced in these countries were quite low budget — but, again, if you combine a higher quality movie with a real reason to buy (see in the theater/additional benefits for buying) there’s no reason why big Hollywood movies can’t take advantage of the same economics. Of course, some will also point out that when the unauthorized copies are downloaded, rather than available on VCD, the “cost” of the competition then goes to zero — which is true — but none of that precludes offering additional scarce value for buyers. In these countries it may just be air conditioning, but there are plenty of scarcities that can be sold in the US as well.

    Finally, filmmakers in those countries all seem to recognize that obscurity is a bigger issue than “piracy,” — in part because they have to deal with government censors. So they realize that getting the films seen is the biggest issue, and they can monetize on the backend by offering other types of scarce value.

    Now, obviously, the situation in all three countries is not ideal. And, no, I’m not saying that the answer to Hollywood’s fears is to follow down these paths directly (though, I have no doubt that someone will accuse me of saying exactly that). But the larger point stands: even if there is rampant piracy (much worse than is found here), the movie industry does not die, and can thrive. And it does so by finding alternative streams of revenue, combined with focusing on the scarce value that can be provided, combined with embracing the promotional nature of the unauthorized films. And, of course, part of the strategy involves actually acknowledging that unauthorized copies are part of the competition, rather than just thinking of them as something illegal that must be stopped.

    No, the industries in these three countries are certainly not what Hollywood should be modeling itself on, but they do clearly show that the dire warnings from Hollywood are totally off-base.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • EIA Predicts 2.1% Fossil Fuel Emissions Increase in 2010 Due to Improving Economy

    While the recent fluctuation in the price of crude oil is being driven alternately by irrational hope followed by despair, the U.S. Energy Information Agency (the EIA, yep, it’s all bean counters there) is predicting that 2010 will bring enough economic growth that global CO2 emissions will increase by a modest 2.1% and that crude oil prices per barrel will average $81 through 2010 and $85 by the end of 2011.

    This follows a 6.6% decline in CO2 emissions from fossil fuels in 2009, but will still be lower than the annual emissions from 1999-2008 when we were spending, growing and buying things on credit as if there was no tomorrow.

    (more…)

  • Live notes from Apple’s iPhone OS 4.0 event

    iPhone OS 4.0

    Apple is set to show off the next major version of the platform this morning, and the event is just about to get underway. We will be bringing you live notes of all the action here, along with a running commentary on all the new things Apple is bringing to the table with iPhone OS 4.0.


    Continue reading Live notes from Apple’s iPhone OS 4.0 event

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    Live notes from Apple’s iPhone OS 4.0 event originally appeared on Gear Live on Thu, April 08, 2010 – 10:00:33


  • The MAOA guide to misusing genetics | Not Exactly Rocket Science

    MAOAI’ve got a feature in the latest issue of New Scientist. It’s sort of a four-step guide to interpreting studies looking at genes and behaviour, using one particular gene as a case study. The piece is out today, but it harkens back to lines of thinking that began over a century ago.

    Italy, 1876. The criminologist and physician Cesare Lombroso has just published L’uomo delinquente (The Criminal Man), a work that will define European understanding of criminal behaviour for several decades. Lombroso believed that some people were born criminals, whose penchant for crime was set from birth and who had diminished responsibility for their own misdeeds.

    Skip forward 133 years, and Lombroso’s theories seem antiquated, even distasteful. Our modern understanding of biology has put paid to simplistic ideas about the origins of criminality and violence. Discoveries from the growing field of ‘behavioural genetics’ show us how nature and nurture conspire to influence our actions. But because of these same discoveries, the idea of the born criminal has resurfaced in modern Italy under a different guise, a century after Lombroso’s death.

    Last year, Italian courts cut the sentence of a convicted murderer by one year, on the basis that his genetic make-up supposedly predisposed him to violence. The man, Abdelmalek Bayout, carried a version of a gene called monoamine oxidase A, or MAOA, which has been linked to aggression and violence. The gene has a history of controversy. It has been linked to gang membership and psychological disorders, and it has been used to define an entire ethnic group as warriors.

    The story of MAOA is the perfect case study for how gradual revelations about the tango between genes and environment can be translated into unconvincing applications and overplayed interpretations. There is no better example of the dangerous state of modern behavioural genetics, no better poster child for how to miscommunicate, misinterpret and misuse genetic discoveries.

    The feature takes the form of four lessons, each covering a different area of research or controversy around MAOA:

    1. A catchy name is bound to be misleading
    2. Nature and nurture are inextricably linked
    3. Beware of reinforcing stereotypes
    4. Genes do not dictate behaviour

    Go read the article to find out more.

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  • Walgreens Takes Pity On You When You Get Mugged For Your Wallet And Prescriptions

    Tabitha and her husband were part of a horrible chain of events. She was ill, and her husband was mugged on the way home from the pharmacy with her prescriptions. With his credit cards, cash, and his wife’s medicine all gone, her husband went back to the pharmacy…and received true above and beyond service.

    A while back I was very sick, and sent my husband to Walgreens to get my prescriptions. As he was getting out of the car back at our apartment he was mugged. They got everything. His phone, my prescriptions, our credit cards, and all our cash. (Not to mention my husband ID.) We called the police and filed a report, and then I called Walgreens to see if maybe since my medicine was stolen, if they could fill it again. They told me to send my husband up there with the police report and they would “See what they could do.” I sent him back, expecting the worst, and he came back with all of my prescriptions, and my Diet Coke, all free of charge.

  • A Gearhead’s Guide To Yard Care

    Lesson 1: how to roto-till your back yard with a rock crawler. This guy welded blades to an old set of wheels, then set up his transfer case to run front in high range and rear in low. Apparently, this setup tills not just dirt, but concrete as well.

    Until I see someone build a turbine powered lawn mower, this guy gets the lawn and garden innovation of the year award.


  • More Teens Arraigned in Phoebe Prince Case

    Three more teenagers have been arraigned in connection with the death of 15-year-old Phoebe Prince. None of the teens appeared in court today. They were represented by council who entered not guilty pleas on their behalf.

    As a condition of release they must stay away from the Prince family.

    Ashley Longe, 16, of South Hadley is charged with violation of civil rights as a youthful offender.

    Sharon Chanon Velazquez, 16, and Flannery Mullins, 16, both of South Hadley face charges of stalking and violation of civil rights as a youthful offender.

    Three other teens were arraigned on Tuesday.

    Sean Mulveyhill, 17, of South Hadley is charged with statutory rape, violation of civil rights, criminal harassment and disturbing a school assembly.

    Kayla Narey, 17, of South Hadley is charged with violation of civil rights, criminal harassment and disturbing a school assembly.

    Austin Renaud, 18, of Springfield is charged with statutory rape.

    No school officials are facing criminal charges though District Attorney Elizabeth Scheibel has referred to the actions, or lack of actions, on the part of staff and administrators as troubling.

    In total, six teens are facing charges related to what Scheibel described as the relentless torment of Prince over several months. Prince committed suicide in January.

    The District Attorney’s office initially announced further charges “in addition” to those pressed against the six named teenagers. Scheibel announced numerous delinquency complaints against “three juveniles, all females, from South Hadley” but offered no further explanation, constrained by legal and ethical confidentiality rules protecting juveniles. It has since become clear that the “three juveniles, all females” referred to by Scheibel are the same teenagers facing public charges.

    The investigation is ongoing.

  • Folders are a welcomed addition to the iPhone


    It took forever to get here – nearly as long as multitasking — but soon you’ll be able to neatly organize all your apps into folders right on the iPhone. There’s no need to launch iTunes, either. Just drag and drop apps on top of each other to automatically consolidate them into one folder.

    This marks a shift for Apple. Previously app management had to be done via iTunes. But folders can be generated on the fly and even renamed if the auto-name does suit your fancy.

    Just think, soon, you’ll be able to keep all your kids apps separate from your work apps. Games can be kept away from productivity apps. It’s a wonder that it took so long for Apple to announce this feature. It might be the second most important new iPhone feature announced today, with multitasking being the first.


  • Former Guantanamo detainee sues US government for torture

    [JURIST] Former Guantanamo Bay detainee Adel Hassan Hamad filed suit in the US District Court for the Western District of Washington Wednesday against the US government and more than a dozen government officials. Hamad, a Sudanese aid worker captured in Pakistan in 2002, claims he was tortured during his time at Guantanamo Bay. A lawyer for Hamad claimed in 2007 that he was not guilty of any crimes and that the government had obstructed lawyers’ attempts to clear his name. It is unclear how much compensation Hamad is seeking.
    Hamad was among a group of former detainees who announced in Sudan in 2008 that they planned to sue the US government in US courts. The US government released Hamad in 2007. Earlier that year, Hamad’s lawyers filed an affidavit signed by an unnamed Army officer accusing the government of bias in its treatment of detainees.

  • iPhone 4.0’s Game Center: Matchmaking, Leaderboards and Achievements [Iphone Os 4]

    Apple’s taking aim at the Xbox integration coming to Windows Phone 7 with its new Game Center. This new service will allow online play on your iPhone, complete with leaderboards and achievements. More »







  • Paul Krugman on ‘Building a Green Economy’

    by Joseph Romm

    Nobelist Paul Krugman has a long piece in the upcoming Sunday New York Times Magazine, basically climate economics 101.

    It is nearly 8000 words, so while you should read the whole thing,
    I’ll post some of the highlights below. I’ll also throw some links to
    the scientific and economic literature that the NYT, in its infinite wisdom/stupidity, refuses to include.

    The essay isn’t primarily about the science, but this is what Krugman has to say on that, starting with the opening paragraph:

    If you listen to climate scientists—and despite the relentless campaign to discredit their work, you should—it is long past time to do something about emissions of carbon
    dioxide and other greenhouse gases. If we continue with business as
    usual, they say, we are facing a rise in global temperatures that will
    be little short of apocalyptic. And to avoid that apocalypse, we have
    to wean our economy from the use of fossil fuels, coal above all …

    This is an article on climate economics, not climate science. But
    before we get to the economics, it’s worth establishing three things
    about the state of the scientific debate. The first is that the planet
    is indeed warming. Weather fluctuates, and as a consequence it’s easy
    enough to point to an unusually warm year in the recent past, note that
    it’s cooler now and claim, “See, the planet is getting cooler, not
    warmer!” But if you look at the evidence the right way ­—taking
    averages over periods long enough to smooth out the fluctuations—the
    upward trend is unmistakable: each successive decade since the 1970s
    has been warmer than the one before.

    Second, climate models predicted this well in advance, even getting
    the magnitude of the temperature rise roughly right. While it’s
    relatively easy to cook up an analysis that matches known data, it is
    much harder to create a model that accurately forecasts the future. So
    the fact that climate modelers more than 20 years ago successfully
    predicted the subsequent global warming gives them enormous credibility.

    Yet that’s not the conclusion you might draw from the many media
    reports that have focused on matters like hacked email and climate
    scientists’ talking about a “trick” to “hide” an anomalous decline in
    one data series or expressing their wish to see papers by climate
    skeptics kept out of research reviews. The truth, however, is that the
    supposed scandals evaporate on closer examination, revealing only that
    climate researchers are human beings, too. Yes, scientists try to make
    their results stand out, but no data were suppressed. Yes, scientists
    dislike it when work that they think deliberately obfuscates the issues
    gets published. What else is new? Nothing suggests that there should
    not continue to be strong support for climate research.

    And this brings me to my third point: models based on this
    research indicate that if we continue adding greenhouse gases to the
    atmosphere as we have, we will eventually face drastic changes in the
    climate. Let’s be clear. We’re not talking about a few more hot days in
    the summer and a bit less snow in the winter; we’re talking about
    massively disruptive events, like the transformation of the
    Southwestern United States into a permanent dust bowl over the next few
    decades.

    Now, despite the high credibility of climate modelers, there is
    still tremendous uncertainty in their long-term forecasts. But as we
    will see shortly, uncertainty makes the case for action stronger, not
    weaker. So climate change demands action …

    At this point, the projections of climate change, assuming we
    continue business as usual, cluster around an estimate that average
    temperatures will be about 9 degrees Fahrenheit higher in 2100 than
    they were in 2000. That’s a lot—equivalent to the difference in
    average temperatures between New York and central Mississippi. Such a
    huge change would have to be highly disruptive. And the troubles would
    not stop there: temperatures would continue to rise.

    Furthermore, changes in average temperature will by no means be the
    whole story. Precipitation patterns will change, with some regions
    getting much wetter and others much drier. Many modelers also predict
    more intense storms. Sea levels would rise, with the impact intensified
    by those storms: coastal flooding, already a major source of natural
    disasters, would become much more frequent and severe. And there might
    be drastic changes in the climate of some regions as ocean currents
    shift. It’s always worth bearing in mind that London is at the same
    latitude as Labrador; without the Gulf Stream, Western Europe would be
    barely habitable.

    But there are at least two reasons to take sanguine assessments of
    the consequences of climate change with a grain of salt. One is that,
    as I have just pointed out, it’s not just a matter of having warmer
    weather—many of the costs of climate change are likely to result from
    droughts, flooding, and severe storms. The other is that while modern
    economies may be highly adaptable, the same may not be true of
    ecosystems. The last time the earth experienced warming at anything
    like the pace we now expect was during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal
    Maximum, about 55 million years ago, when temperatures rose by about 11
    degrees Fahrenheit over the course of around 20,000 years (which is a
    much slower rate than the current pace of warming). That increase was
    associated with mass extinctions, which, to put it mildly, probably
    would not be good for living standards …

    For what the science says we risk if we stay anywhere near our current path of unrestricted emissions, see:

    Nature Geoscience study: Oceans are acidifying 10 times faster today than 55 million
    years ago when a mass extinction of marine species occurred

    M.I.T.  doubles its 2095 warming projection to 10 degrees F – with 866 ppm and Arctic   warming of 20 degrees F
    Our
    hellish future: Definitive NOAA-led report on U.S. climate impacts
    warns of scorching 9 to 11 degrees F warming over most of inland U.S. by 2090
    with Kansas above 90 degrees F some 120 days a year—and that isn’t the worst
    case, it’s business as usual!

    Science:
    CO2 levels haven’t been this high for 15 million years, when it was 5
    to 10 degrees F warmer and seas were 75 to 120 feet higher—“We have shown
    that this dramatic rise in sea level is associated with an increase in
    CO2 levels of about 100 ppm.”

    An   introduction to global warming impacts:  Hell and High Water

    He has a discussion of the low cost of action:

    Just as there is a rough consensus among climate
    modelers about the likely trajectory of temperatures if we do not act
    to cut the emissions of greenhouse gases, there is a rough consensus
    among economic modelers about the costs of action. That general opinion
    may be summed up as follows: Restricting emissions would slow economic
    growth—but not by much. The Congressional Budget Office,
    relying on a survey of models, has concluded that Waxman-Markey “would
    reduce the projected average annual rate of growth of gross domestic
    product between 2010 and 2050 by 0.03 to 0.09 percentage points.”
    That is, it would trim average annual growth to 2.31 percent, at worst,
    from 2.4 percent. Over all, the Budget Office concludes, strong
    climate-change policy would leave the American economy between 1.1
    percent and 3.4 percent smaller in 2050 than it would be otherwise. And
    what about the world economy? In general, modelers tend to find that
    climate-change policies would lower global output by a somewhat smaller
    percentage than the comparable figures for the United States. The main
    reason is that emerging economies like China currently use energy
    fairly inefficiently, partly as a result of national policies that have
    kept the prices of fossil fuels very low, and could thus achieve large
    energy savings at a modest cost. One recent review of the available
    estimates put the costs of a very strong climate policy—substantially
    more aggressive than contemplated in current legislative proposals—at
    between 1 and 3 percent of gross world product.

    Such figures typically come from a model that combines all sorts of
    engineering and marketplace estimates. These will include, for
    instance, engineers’ best calculations of how much it costs to generate
    electricity in various ways, from coal, gas and nuclear and solar power
    at given resource prices. Then estimates will be made, based on
    historical experience, of how much consumers would cut back their
    electricity consumption if its price rises. The same process is
    followed for other kinds of energy, like motor fuel. And the model
    assumes that everyone makes the best choice given the economic
    environment—that power generators choose the least expensive means of
    producing electricity, while consumers conserve energy as long as the
    money saved by buying less electricity exceeds the cost of using less
    power in the form either of other spending or loss of convenience.
    After all this analysis, it’s possible to predict how producers and
    consumers of energy will react to policies that put a price on
    emissions and how much those reactions will end up costing the economy
    as a whole.

    There are, of course, a number of ways this kind of modeling could
    be wrong. Many of the underlying estimates are necessarily somewhat
    speculative; nobody really knows, for instance, what solar power will
    cost once it finally becomes a large-scale proposition. There is also
    reason to doubt the assumption that people actually make the right
    choices: many studies have found that consumers fail to take measures
    to conserve energy, like improving insulation, even when they could
    save money by doing so.

    But while it’s unlikely that these models get everything right, it’s
    a good bet that they overstate rather than understate the economic
    costs of climate-change action. That is what the experience from the
    cap-and-trade program for acid rain suggests: costs came in well below
    initial predictions. And in general, what the models do not and cannot
    take into account is creativity; surely, faced with an economy in which
    there are big monetary payoffs for reducing greenhouse-gas emissions,
    the private sector will come up with ways to limit emissions that are
    not yet in any model.

    I have links to some of the key literature on this here:

    Introduction
    to climate economics: Why even strong climate action has such a low
    total cost—one tenth of a penny on the dollar

    Despite
    its many flaws, EIA analysis of climate bill finds 23 cents a day cost
    to families, massive retirement of dirty coal plants and 119 GW of new
    renewables by 2030—plus a million barrels a day oil savings

    New
    EPA analysis of Waxman-Markey: Consumer electric bills 7 percent lower in 2020
    thanks to efficiency—plus 22 GW of extra coal retirements and no new
    dirty plants

    The triumph of energy efficiency:  Waxman-Markey could save $3,900 per household and create 650,000 jobs by 2030

    And of course he discusses what scientific uncertainty means for economic modeling:

    Finally and most important is the matter of uncertainty.
    We’re uncertain about the magnitude of climate change, which is
    inevitable, because we’re talking about reaching levels of carbon
    dioxide in the atmosphere not seen in millions of years. The recent
    doubling of many modelers’ predictions for 2100 is itself an
    illustration of the scope of that uncertainty; who knows what revisions
    may occur in the years ahead. Beyond that, nobody really knows how much
    damage would result from temperature rises of the kind now considered
    likely.

    You might think that this uncertainty weakens the case for action, but it actually strengthens it. As Harvard‘s
    Martin Weitzman has argued in several influential papers, if there is a
    significant chance of utter catastrophe, that chance—rather than what
    is most likely to happen—should dominate cost-benefit calculations.
    And utter catastrophe does look like a realistic possibility, even if
    it is not the most likely outcome.

    Weitzman argues—and I agree—that this risk of catastrophe,
    rather than the details of cost-benefit calculations, makes the most
    powerful case for strong climate policy. Current projections of global
    warming in the absence of action are just too close to the kinds of
    numbers associated with doomsday scenarios. It would be irresponsible—it’s tempting to say criminally irresponsible—not to step back from
    what could all too easily turn out to be the edge of a cliff.

    For more on Weitzman, see

    Harvard
    economist: Climate cost-benefit analyses are “unusually misleading,”
    warns colleagues “we may be deluding ourselves and others”

    Krugman’s key conclusions are:

    Stern’s moral argument for loving unborn generations as
    we love ourselves may be too strong, but there’s a compelling case to
    be made that public policy should take a much longer view than private
    markets. Even more important, the policy-ramp prescriptions seem far
    too much like conducting a very risky experiment with the whole planet.
    Nordhaus’s preferred policy, for example, would stabilize the
    concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere at a level about
    twice its preindustrial average. In his model, this would have only
    modest effects on global welfare; but how confident can we be of that?
    How sure are we that this kind of change in the environment would not
    lead to catastrophe? Not sure enough, I’d say, particularly because, as
    noted above, climate modelers have sharply raised their estimates of
    future warming in just the last couple of years. So what I end up with
    is basically Martin Weitzman’s argument: it’s the nonnegligible
    probability of utter disaster that should dominate our policy analysis.
    And that argues for aggressive moves to curb emissions, soon …

    If it does, the economic analysis will be ready. We know how to
    limit greenhouse-gas emissions. We have a good sense of the costs—and
    they’re manageable. All we need now is the political will.

    Hear! Hear!

    Related Links:

    The problem with a green economy: economics hates the environment

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

    Krugman says what political media won’t: economists agree climate action is necessary, affordable






  • Video: Chevrolet tries to Spark up some interest with World’s Largest Record Player

    Filed under: , , , , , ,

    Chevrolet Spark DJ booth – click above to watch the video

    Wherever feral youths congregate, it’s pretty much a given that there’ll be a car on its side. Now Chevrolet has gone and made that a certainty by creating a Spark that’s intended to be rotated 90 degrees to rock the party. The car powers the DJ gear, though we’re curious about modifications to the oil sump to keep the engine happy when on its side.

    A special Chevrolet Spark DJ car that can pull off the Batmobile-like trick of transforming from a road-going automobile to a DJ platform with turntables on the wheels will be joining the haircut-wanting “indie” band The Mystery Jets (you’re not an indie if you’ve got Chris Thomas producing your record. Just sayin’) on some gigs starting today, April 8. The location of the Spark’s roll-over-and-play-music demonstration will be determined by public vote, though the idea of a mustard factory in Birmingham sound like a tasty locale. Press release and video posted after the jump.

    Gallery: 2010 Chevy Spark

    [Source: Chevrolet]

    Continue reading Video: Chevrolet tries to Spark up some interest with World’s Largest Record Player

    Video: Chevrolet tries to Spark up some interest with World’s Largest Record Player originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 08 Apr 2010 12:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • ‘Survivor’ producer arrested in wife’s strangulation death [Updated]

    Monica Beresford-Redman, the wife of a top reality TV show producer and the owner of a Brazilian restaurant and nightclub in Palms, has been found dead in Cancun, and her husband reportedly has been taken into custody.

    "Survivor" producer Bruce
    Beresford-Redman
    told police that his wife
    vanished on Monday from the luxurious Moon Palace resort where they
    were staying. The Associated Press and Mexican media organizations reported that he was arrested Thursday morning.

    In an interview with KCAL News on Wednesday night, Beresford-Redman said he was aiding in the search for his wife.

    "I’m very hopeful someone will find my wife very soon. She still hasn’t
    been located and we’re looking," he told the station.

    The woman’s family filed a missing-person report with the L.A.
    County Sheriff’s Department, Det. Diane Harris told The Times.

    “They believed it had something to do with foul play,” Harris said.

    The investigation is being handled by Mexican authorities. Calls to
    the U.S. Embassy in Mexico were not immediately returned.

    Before the arrest, Carla Burgos, Beresford-Redman’s sister, told KCAL that her family could not understand why she went missing.

    "We’re really lost. It’s like a really big mystery," Burgos told the station.

    Monica Beresford-Redman is 
    the owner of Zabumba Bar & Restaurant on Venice Boulevard in Palms. The restaurant is known for serving Brazilian specialties like tri-tip steak and for hosting lively salsa, reggae and bossa nova nights. [For the record, 11:19 a.m.: A previous version of this story reported incorrectly that the restaurant was  in Venice.]

    Her husband is a veteran TV producer who has been nominated for three Emmy Awards. Besides "Survivor," he worked on "Pimp My Ride" and "The Restaurant."

    Media reports in Mexico said that Monica Beresford-Redman had been strangled.

    — Kate Linthicum

    Photo: Family handout


  • 5.3 aftershock is latest from Mexicali earthquake

    Southern California was rocked by another strong aftershock from the Mexicali earthquake.

    The 5.3 earthquake struck about 32 miles south of Mexicali at about 9:44 a.m. It was one of hundreds of aftershocks that have occurred since Sunday’s temblor.

    The quake was felt in Orange, San Diego and Los Angeles counties as well as the Inland Empire. No damage has been reported.

    Most of the aftershocks have been minor — in the 3 magnitude or less.
    But there have been a handful of aftershocks that registered more than 5.0, and
    dozens in the 4 range, according
    to the U.S. Geological Survey.

    The death toll from Sunday’s quake stands at two. More
    than 230 people were injured. The quake, centered about 30 miles south
    of the border, caused 45 buildings in Baja California to collapse or
    partly collapse, authorities said.

    — Shelby Grad



  • Apple reinvents multitasking for the iPhone

    By Tim Conneally, Betanews

    Multitasking, the feature that has been the absolute top of every iPhone user’s want list –which, by proxy became a major marketing point for both Android and webOS — has made its way to iPhone OS 4.

    “We figured out how to implement multitasking for third party apps and avoid those things [battery life and lag]. So that’s what took so long,” said Apple CEO Steve Jobs this morning.

    While it’s not actually full background processing, Apple has devised a way to reproduce the feeling. The company provided 7 APIs to developers which constitute the always-on services that apps can communicate with. These include: background audio, VoIP, Background Location, push notifications, local notifications, task completion, and fast app switching.

    With these 7 services in place, users can now run music apps like Pandora in the background, they can run location-aware apps in the background, or can run VoIP apps. With a double-click of the home button, the user can pull out of the app he’s currently in and go to a list of running tasks. If you back out of a game to check your email or answer a Skype call, the game can then pick up and resume where you left off.

    We’ll follow up with more on the iPhone OS 4 update as it arrives.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



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