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  • Privatizing alcohol

    Detriment to a healthy society

    I would have to disagree with your editorial supporting the privatization of liquor sales [“Privatize liquor sales,” Opinion, Jan. 19].

    Alcohol is a powerful influencing factor in all sorts of social pathologies: crimes — including violent crimes and sexual assaults — divorce and other bad human behavior. Anything that tends to increase alcohol consumption will automatically result in an increase in these social problems.

    What we should be doing is asking ourselves: What can be done to reduce — as much as possible — the consumption of alcohol? This would result in a healthier society overall.

    — Dan Hochberg, Seattle

    Saves taxpayer money

    I couldn’t agree more with your editorial on privatizing liquor sales in Washington state. Doing so would save untold millions.

    No more state employees with their salaries, health care and pensions to pay for. No more buildings to lease, own or maintain. Let’s let the private sector pay these expenses.

    The state would actually net more income on the liquor taxes alone without having personnel, payroll, building locations and other normal overhead to pay for.

    — Wayne Jensen, Kirkland

  • Microsoft Finally Gets Around to Fixing 17-Year Old Windows Bug [Microsoft]

    Talk about procrastination (or rather, ignorance of a fundamental flaw in your OS for nearly two decades): a Google engineer recently discovered a vulnerability in Microsoft’s 32-bit Windows kernel that had been around since 1993.

    It’s kind of funny that this thing has been around long enough to get a driver’s license, but less so considering that it’s exposed every Windows OS since then to hacker takeovers. The afflicted subsystem was the Windows Virtual DOS Machine, and the potential for damage was pretty serious, according to yesterday’s Microsoft advisory:

    What might an attacker use this vulnerability to do?
    An attacker who successfully exploited this vulnerability could run arbitrary code in kernel mode. An attacker could then install programs; view, change, or delete data; or create new accounts with full user rights.

    Bad news! Don’t worry, they’ll patch it. But do worry, for all the other teenage bugs out there that no one’s caught yet. [ComputerWorld]






  • Star Jones Fired From “The Insider”

    Star Jones is out on The Insider.

    The former View moderator has been ousted from her position as a panelist on the syndicated celebrity newsmagazine after sparring with a show producer over creative differences, according to a new tabloid report. Production insiders say Jones found herself in the middle of a verbal spat with a superior that nearly turned physical and led to the outspoken chatterbox being led out of the studio by security.

    “At first, Star got along with the producers just fine. But as she got more comfortable, she started complaining about the topics they wanted to discuss. She said they were too trashy and ‘Star doesn’t do trash!’” a production snitch blabs in the Feb. 1 edition of The National Enquirer.

    Star is also accused of sending an e-mail to show host Lara Spencer blasting fellow panelist and ex-Reno 911 actress Niecy Nash:

    “Star said she couldn’t understand why Niecy was a regular on the show, while she, Star, was not.”

    Niecy never got a chance to respond. All Hell broke loose just before The Insider’s holiday break, The Enquirer claims. Star, now 47, and an unnamed female producer faced off after the former legal complained that her “intellectual insight” was not being respected and campaigned for more thought-provoking subjects to discuss than the “reality show wannabes” and “bimbos” that provide popular fodder for Insider panelists.

    “Star had made it clear that she didn’t like what was scheduled for the show that day….The argument got heated, and then it turned into a shouting match….Star exploded!” a spywitness recalls. “She started yelling insults. Finally, the producer called security to escort her off the set….”

    A rep for Star Jones had no comment. Sidebar: Chris Jacobs is an idiot. Fire him!


  • The democracy papers

    Model for news will still exist — with necessary changes

    Robert McChesney and John Nichols undermine their own argument for governmental subsidies for struggling newspapers [“Subsidies necessary to keep a free press for a free nation,” Opinion, Jan. 17] when they say “there is no known way a free and self-governing society can survive without credible independent journalism.” Because this is true, because news is essential, there will always be a viable economic model for the news industry — if news organizations are willing to make the necessary changes.

    McChesney and Nichols claim that government subsidies are compatible with journalistic diversity, and support their view with a survey claiming that the subsidized media of Northern Europe are the freest in the world.

    This claim is challenged by American author and gay activist Bruce Bawer, who — after living in Europe for several years — wrote in “While Europe Slept” that “journalistic diversity in Europe is largely illusory and blatantly ideological in its slant and in the selection of events and details. By American standards the [media’s] cumulative ideological range was quite narrow — from one end of the left to the other.”

    “Dead tree” journalism — the journalism of the newspaper on the front porch — is indeed endangered. But tens of millions of Americans willingly pay substantial monthly fees for cellphones, cable television and Internet access — and if their only source for the local daily news is via an online newspaper, they will pay for that as well.

    — Stephen Triesch, Shoreline

    Ben Franklin omitted

    McChesney and Nichols got the founding father wrong in their guest column. The correct analysis is to recognize Benjamin Franklin for his guidance of freedom of the press and speech.

    Before his involvement with government, Franklin ran a printing business. To expand his printing business he bought a bankrupt newspaper. He had no noble cause involved in printing some kind of truth and instead he printed rumors he picked up in business meetings and at times he even made up his own stories. People liked his stories and his printing business expanded. Newspapers are in the same printing business but are writing stuff fewer and fewer people find interesting.

    Most businesses are conducting paperless business as part of going green. Newspapers want to go the other way and print more. Why? Then the ultimate question: Who gets to choose who would get a subsidy — maybe I will start a paper to get a government check.

    — Dennis Helgeson, Kent

  • Filial brasileira da Volvo encerra o ano de 2009 em festa


    Com um aumento de cerca de 96% a Volvo está em plena festa no mercado brasileiro. Segundo a montadora sueca foram comercializados no total de janeiro a dezembro do ano passado 2.150 unidades.

    A marca informou que o grande responsável por esse crescimento seria o Crossover XC60, que além de se tornar o modelo mais vendido da marca (nos doze meses ele vendeu 1.498 unidades) ele também se vangloriou por ser o primeiro carro da Volvo que conseguiu quebrar a barreira dos 1.000 carros vendidos em um ano pela marca.

    Com mais de mil unidades atrás do XC60 o hatch C30 foi o segundo carro da marca a vender bem dentro da marca. Ele fechou o ano com 453 unidades vendidas, vendas bem abaixo que seus principais concorrentes, o BMW Série 1 que vendeu 1.580 unidades e o Audi A3 que vendeu 769 unidades.

    Completando a lista dos carros mais vendidos da Volvo vem o XC90 com 79 unidades, o S40 com 57 unidades e o V50 com 35 unidades vendidas.

    Fonte: Volvo


  • Top 99 Most Desirable Women of 2010

    Who are the most desirable women of 2010? Ask Men’s annual list of the Top 99 Most Desirable Women ranks the famous females who rock our world – from stand-up comediennes to stunning models. Did Eva Mendes hold on to the No. 1 spot in 2010? Who is the highest ranked Brit this time around?

    After six weeks of voting and 6 million votes cast worldwide, the ballots have closed and the tallying is complete.

    Nr 6: Beyonce

  • Dow Ends Down Over 200 Points, As Bloody Selloff Goes Two Days In A Row

    This was ugly.

    A combination of mediocre earnings, jitters out of China and, possibly, Obama’s new populist streak, absolutely hammered stocks for the second day in a row.

    The dow ended down about 217, the second big triple-digit loss in a row.

    Big financial stocks got brutalized.

    This chart, via FT Alphaville, showing the divergence of large banks and regionals tells the whole story

    chartbanks

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Amazon Forgot to Mention That Publishers Can Skip DRM on Kindle Books [Amazon]

    Yesterday Amazon surprised us a bit with news of a Kindle app store, but there’s a change they haven’t mentioned: Publishers are now being allowed to skip adding DRM to Kindle books. Updated.

    According to Nieman Lab, several publishers noticed the change around January 15th when a “new option gave [them] the choice to “not enable digital rights management” in Amazon’s Digital Text Platform. There was no formal announcement, but this is the explanation from Amazon itself:

    You may choose, on a per title basis, to have us apply DRM (Digital Rights Management) technology which is intended to inhibit unauthorized access to or copying of digital content files for titles. Once your title is published, this setting cannot be changed.

    It’s doubtful that major publishers would be quick to take advantage of this change, but we’ll see. Kudos to Amazon for finally letting the people putting out the content decide how to present it to ebook shoppers. [Nieman Lab]

    Update: Amazon wrote in to say that they’ve “always given publishers the choice [to skip DRM], [they] just added new functionality to make it easier.” I guess it must’ve been pretty difficult to choose to skip DRM in the past since many publishers didn’t seem to be aware of the option, but let’s not dwell on it and just be happy that it’s easy now and we all know about it.






  • Getting Started with GeekTool

    Once a tool employed mainly by hardcore users, GeekTool seemed to begin exploding across OS X desktops in 2009. But despite its widening usage, many still are unfamiliar with this fantastic utility (you’ve probably seen it, and not even realized) or just don’t know how to leverage it. If you fit either of the above stereotypes, then today is your lucky day, because I’m going to point out some great examples of GeekTool, and just how to put it to good use for yourself.

    Simply put, GeekTool displays information at the desktop level (meaning it’s not clickable), right on top of your wallpaper image, in a ‘Heads-up-display’ fashion. It’s interesting (to me at least) to see how the use of a simple yet powerful tool evolves. For those of us who began playing with GeekTool long ago, it was used in a very utilitarian fashion — the output was simple lines of text displayed on the Mac’s desktop (three year old screencast here shows what I mean). And while the content that we’re seeing displayed with GeekTool hasn’t changed much, some designer-types out there have taken the display of that information to the next level. The great part is that it’s super easy to do with GeekTool — but more on that in a bit.

    Inspiration

    To get some inspiration — and a great feel for what we’re talking about — check out Flickr for photos tagged with ‘geektool’, or LifeHacker’s Featured [Mac] Desktops. I’ll be here, so take your time. Or if you’re ADHD, here are a couple quick examples:

    So some good stuff, eh? It’s pretty neat to see the way that GeekTool can be used to morph meaningful data into specific wallpaper images, or going that extra yard, to coordinate with a custom GUI theme. Clearly some people have a solid eye for design, and the time to monkey around and put in some extra awesome. Not so much for me, which is why I pointed you in the direction of some great examples. I however, threw in some extra Geeklets on my desktop to show you what you can do.

    Getting Started

    So now you’re probably primed and ready to put GeekTool to work for you. It’s not very difficult, so let’s get started. I’ll assume you’ve already installed it. Since it’s a Preference Pane, it lives in the System Preferences (found under the Apple menu or in your Applications folder).

    There are three types of information you can display using GeekTool:

    • File – Originally intended for viewing Console type log files. Point it at any text file you choose — those with text-based todo lists will love this feature.
    • Image – GeekTool’s developer identifies this as useful for viewing the images generated by monitoring tools. While Analytics and whatnot may be just what the doctor ordered, you can display any image, or image URL with this.
    • Shell – This is where the real power lies with GeekTool. Run either a Shell Command, or point at a Shell Script file to run. If your bash-fu is strong, you’ll be running wild. But fear not, there are a multitude of examples out there to lean on if you need some help with this geekier part.

    To begin using a Geeklet (as they’ve been deemed in the 3.0 version), select the File, Image, or Shell that you want to use, and drag it to your desktop. Once there, the Geeklet properties window will populate, which is where all the magic (configuration) happens.

    Drag & Drop

    The great thing about the latest version of GeekTool is that you can drag and drop your Geeklet wherever you want it on screen. In earlier versions, there was a lot of trial and error involved as you had to enter the coordinates and dimensions of a Geektlet. It was time consuming to say the least — but you can still tweak these settings in the Properties window if you need to fine tune . Once it’s where you want it, define the image or file location of the data you want displayed, or drop a shell command in there. If it’s necessary, there’s space to set a refresh time in seconds.

    Bling

    Now we come to the part that the designers like. Click the aptly named button, “Click here to set font & color…” Up pops an OS X window that should be familiar for selecting font, font color, font size, and so on. Your Geeklet updates in real time, so you can adjust your settings on the fly. Suddenly those log files don’t seem so bland anymore…well, maybe not.

    Organization

    The crazier you get with GeekTool, the more Geeklets you may find yourself creating. You can group them into categories, and turn them on and off as desired. The uses for this obviously vary from person to person based on their workflows. But I could easily see having a set of Geeklets in a group for work information, and a set for home use. A GeekTool menubar item can be turned on so you can quickly maintain these Geeklet groups without having to launch the Preference Pane.

    Shells

    The spot that gives most people trouble is coming up with the shell commands or scripts to run. I have some limited background using Unix, so have come up with a few simple commands in the past. Luckily, there are lots of people out there who are smarter than I, and are happy to share their work with others via blog posts. Yay! Here are several of the more helpful posts I’ve come across.

    GeekTool is such a free-form utility that it’s difficult to outline all of the settings and uses. It’s one of those situations where it’s great to let your imagination run wild, if only your knowledge and expertise can keep up. If you find yourself lacking the latter, post your questions below, and if I can’t help, I’m certain some of our brainiac readers will be able to chime in as well. And if you just want to show off your GeekTool-fu, we’d love for you to share some links here as well.

  • An argument against Murkowski’s radical attempt to overrule EPA scientists

    by Senator Jeff Merkley

    Today one of my Republican colleagues introduced a proposal
    to brazenly overturn sound scientific work done by our nation’s leading public
    health experts and prohibit the Environment Protection Agency from doing its
    job to protect the health and welfare of the American people. This extremely damaging proposal is a
    political stunt designed to effectively strip the EPA’s power to curb harmful
    air pollution.  

    Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s (R-Alaska) proposal takes the form of a “Resolution
    of Disapproval” under the Congressional Review Act. It is so extreme that it would legally
    overturn scientists’ very conclusion, based on decades of scientific study,
    that greenhouse-gas emissions threaten public health and the environment, and
    it would have the effect of prohibiting the EPA from making the same conclusion
    in the future. It could block any action
    by the EPA to protect our families, our communities, and our economy from
    greenhouse-gas pollution.

    This resolution represents an irresponsible attempt to take
    away the power of an independent agency whose sole purpose is to protect the
    health of our families, friends, and neighbors and the environment we live in.

    Imagine if Congress always put the interests of polluters
    ahead of the health of our families. Our
    rivers and lakes would be choked with sewage.
    Acid rain would pour down from smog-filled skies. Hundreds of thousands more of our neighbors,
    friends, and loved ones would be victims of cancer, heart disease, and
    asthma.  President Nixon—Nixon!—signed the EPA into law because even Republicans recognized that unchecked
    pollution was poisoning our people. 

    This resolution is a return to that polluter-first approach
    that even President Nixon found intolerable. 

    Decades of scientific research has proven that carbon pollution
    is harmful to human health and causes global warming. The EPA’s endangerment finding—as required
    by the Clean Air Act—found that carbon pollution endangers the health of
    millions of American families and future generations. This resolution would block the EPA’s ability
    to regulate unsafe air pollution and would continue to allow our nation’s
    considerable contribution to global warming to go unchecked. What’s worse, this resolution aims to
    politicize an independent agency and prevent it from protecting the health of
    our citizens and our communities.

    While supporters of this misguided resolution try to tout its
    supposed positive impact for our economy, it would actually harm our economy by
    helping maintain our dependence on foreign oil, hamstringing EPA’s ability to
    promote clean energy options, and negatively impacting our nation’s clean
    energy jobs industry. This resolution encourages big polluters to
    continue polluting, and discourages one of the fastest-growing industries in
    America: clean energy. Continuing on the path of spending billions
    of dollars a day to import foreign oil rather than make significant progress
    transforming our energy economy and developing American-made renewable energy
    is a deeply flawed approach. 

    Plainly
    put, this dangerous resolution has the best interest of big energy industries
    in mind, not the health and welfare of the American people or our environment,
    and not the clean energy job creation we urgently need right now. Because
    this extreme resolution only needs a simple majority to pass, we need you to
    speak out. Please consider calling your senators and urging them to put the health of our citizens before politics and vote against
    this harmful resolution.

    Related Links:

    Murkowski’s floor speech on EPA regulations was full of deceptions

    The Climate Post: Asian ice granted temporary stay of execution

    Hanging EPA regulations around Democrats’ necks






  • diabetes and diary foods

    Just curious
    Dose anyone have a problem with diary. I alwasy though diary products like milk and cheese was the cornerstone of low carb dieting. Once I was diagnosised I started eating low carb vegetarian. My numbers were good rarely above 100. I decided to add some diairy. A little cheese mostly feta for salads.
    I don’t like milk so I have been using soy or almond milk. It’s not that much cheese. A couple of morning I made a yogurt drink with splenda. Suddenly my numbers was always above a 100
    Just wondered if I am looking at the wrong thing. I cut back and everytime I eat any diary I get higher numbers.
    I have been trying to keep below 110 a much as possible.

    thanks

  • Tony George retires from Indianapolis Speedway board, leaves the building for good

    Filed under:

    Tony George, shepherd of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for two decades, has resigned from the Speedway board effective immediately. The move severed his final tie with the historic venue, after he resigned from his CEO position last summer. In a statement, the board chairman, who also happens to be his mother, said that they asked George to stay and are disappointed to see him go.

    George oversaw massive changes in the raceway and the series’ it hosts: the IndyCar split and reunion, NASCAR’s arrival and Formula One’s arrival and departure, and a large number of track renovations and changes. When he left the CEO job, the given reason was to spend more time with his family and his Vision racing team in the IZOD IndyCar Series. We have a feeling he won’t be gone from the public eye for too long. Hat tip to Michael

    [Source: GP Update | Image: Darrell Ingham/Getty]

    Tony George retires from Indianapolis Speedway board, leaves the building for good originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 21 Jan 2010 15:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • A Center for Responsive Politics Statement on Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission

    The following is a statement from Center for Responsive Politics’ Executive Director Sheila Krumholz on the Supreme Court’s ruling today on Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission:

    Today’s Supreme Court decision on Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission overturns a decades-long ban on unlimited independent expenditures by corporations and labor unions — a move that could bring enormous changes in the way American elections are run and financed. Although the law has consistently prohibited such expenditures, this decision belies the tenuous nature of precedent: Things change.

    But some things remain the same — such as the need for transparency. In today’s opinion, the Supreme Court upheld the need for disclosure, writing:

    “With the advent of the Internet, prompt disclosure of expenditures can provide shareholders and citizens with the information needed to hold corporations and elected officials accountable …[C]itizens can see whether elected officials are ‘in the pocket’ of so-called moneyed interests …and disclosure permits citizens and shareholders to react to the speech of corporate entities in a proper way. This transparency enables the electorate to make informed decisions and give proper weight to different speakers and messages.”

    In sum, with new paths for money to enter into the political bloodstream, transparency is now more essential than ever. And transparency is what the Center for Responsive Politics delivers.

    Whether coming from political action committees, individuals or corporate or labor treasuries, billions of dollars already power political campaigns at the federal level — more than $5 billion in the 2008 elections alone, according to CRP’s analysis. Now the spigot has been opened even further for corporations, trade groups and unions to use as much money as their hefty bank accounts can muster to aid or attack a federal candidate. Such action could potentially come in the eleventh hour of a campaign when the target may not be capable of an effective response, for want of time, funds or both.

    Of course, just because the path is clear for them to spend this money doesn’t necessarily mean they will. But if their willingness to contribute unlimited “soft money” before its prohibition in 2002 is any indication, they have both the wherewithal and the readiness to use their financial largess to wield control over politics and elections. And whether hard money or soft, overall, most campaign cash represents corporate interests.

    All sides in this debate will undoubtedly buckle down to take advantage of this rarified moment in history — making plans to utilize this new vehicle in their campaign strategies, or holding up the specter of wealthy goliaths flipping elections by the sheer weight of their treasure. Public financing advocates present the new world order in election law as a wholly untenable outcome, one that points to public financing as the only logical guarantee of fair elections.

    Here at the Center for Responsive Politics, we are not political strategists or campaign finance reform activists. We are neither planning to use the new loophole nor find ways around it — but we will follow it. Closely.

    It’s times like these when OpenSecrets.org and CRP’s nonpartisan, straight-shooting data and analysis matters most.

    More than ever, the public will need reliable research to reveal who’s funding politics, what interests they represent, how much they’re spending and who’s receiving it. Only then can constituents see whether they are pitted against interests contrary to their own, and who — and how much — those interests represent.

    This information empowers citizens take action, through political engagement and at the ballot box, to hold our government accountable. Citizens need reliable information to participate effectively in a democracy, and democracy needs that citizen engagement to function as it should. It’s a delicate balancing act, with the free flow of information to the public at its core.

  • VIDEO: Rescuers recover body of Haiti archbishop killed in quake

    archbishop

    A Mexican rescuer wipes tears as he stands guard with team members beside body of Archbishop Joseph Serge Miot recovered from the ruins of Port-au-Prince cathedral on 19 Jan 2010/Wolfgang Rattay

    A Mexican rescue team has recovered the lifeless body of the Roman Catholic Archbishop Joseph Serge Miot of Port-au-Prince from the rubble of his residence a week after the massive earthquake that devastated Haiti. Here’s the Reuters video report:

    We ran several pictures of the city’s ruined cathedral here.

    Follow FaithWorld on Twitter at RTRFaithWorld

  • Which Hair Loss Treatment Really Work?

    No matter how thick or healthy your hair is, there will probably come a day when you’re standing in front of your mirror and realizing that it is not as thick as it used to be. This is something that happens to most people and it is important to realize that hair loss treatment is a very real possibility, and that your hair can indeed recover!

    Hair loss treatment might sound like a field for a quack or a scam artist, but there are actually many things you can do to prevent hair loss and many professionals that can help you out. Many doctors can ease your worries about your health concerns, and if your hair loss turns out to be a symptom of something more serious, they can get you started on the road to recovery.

    One main reason that hair loss occurs is stress. Think about what your life has been like lately. Have you been frustrated at work or with your family? Stress can take an enormous toll on your body in general, and your hair is one of the places you might notice it first. If your hair becomes thinner, or drier and more fragile, this could be a good sign that there is something affecting you mentally. If you take steps to start controlling your stress, you will notice the results immediately.

    As far as stress goes, if this is the only thing that is affecting your hair loss, then eradicating or mitigating the stress will reverse the process. Try taking some time to relax. You may want to set aside some time to watch a movie, or exercise. Yoga as a hair loss treatment might sound a little strange, but it can really help!

    Another thing to take a look at is what kind of medicine have you been taking. In women, a new birth control can lead to hair loss. Birth control medication will make the hormones fluctuate, and as hair is greatly affected by testosterone and estrogen, it can have some dramatic influences on your hair. Usually, once this medication is stopped or altered, the hair returns, as thick as it was before.

    You can think of your hair as an early warning system in some ways. If there is something wrong with your body, your hair is usually one of the first places that it will show signs. As stated above, hair loss can be a symptom for other issues. Lupus is one example of a disease that can cause hair loss.

    In any case, a trip to the doctor to have hair loss looked at is never a bad ideal A doctor can take a look and give you a much better idea of the cause of hair loss, and then he or she can prescribe a treatment. Whether the hair loss treatment has to do with hormones or yoga, it’s a much better idea than deciding to go with a home remedy or miracle cure, which can have unexpected side effects or be totally ineffective. In any case, a trip to the doctor is the best response when it comes to a hair loss treatment.

    For more information on hair loss visit Hair Loss Treatment site Visit HairLossHotline.com for information of Stop Hair Loss
  • Google Q4 Strong But Not The Blowout Wall Street Wanted (GOOG)

    Larry Page White Coat

    Overall, solidly ahead of expectations.  Not a blowout.  EPS comfortably ahead of estimates, revenue just ahead. Stock getting clobbered–Wall Street’s dreams were ahead of reality. (Releass here.)

    Company very healthy.  Free cash flow was once again astounding: $2.5 billion for the quarter, for an annualized run-rate of $10 billion a year. 

    Excluding $25 billion of cash (!), the company is trading at about 16X run-rate cash flow.  Not cheap by any means, but reasonable.

    The biggest issue for the company now is China: After clumsily giving the Chinese government a black-or-white ultimatum, Google may actually have to withdraw from the biggest future opportunity in the world.  Needless to say, this would be a big negative.

    Key Stats:

    • Net Revenue $4.95 Billion versus $4.9 consensus (modest upside)
    • Non-GAAP EPS $6.79 versus $6.45 consensus (nice upside)
    • Non-GAAP Operating Income $2.76 billion versus consensus of $2.68 Billion (nice upside)
    • Paid clicks up 13% (fine)
    • Cost per click up 5% (fine).  Lots of room for this to increase if the economy really recovers.

    Conference call starts at 4:30 PM ET.  Listen here >   Google’s actually also doing a world-first, streaming the call on YouTube:

    Here are the slides:

     

    CONFERENCE CALL NOTES:

    Eric: blah blah great quarter blah blah blah.

    Decision to start ramping investment in Q3 smart (yes)

    Enterprise business “very strong.”  (Really?  Details, please)

    Faint praise for Droid, Nexus One.

    Patrick: Read the press release.

    Jonathan: “YouTube is monetizing well.”   (Need details here).

    Will be making all products “more social”.  (Haven’t been good at this so far).  Recommendations from your friends, etc.

    [Have to drop off.  Jay Yarow covering call and leading live discussion here >  Thanks for joining!


     

    PREVIEW

    The Bottom Line: Google’s stock has been hit in the past week on the company’s ultimatum to China (in which the company clumsily backed itself into a corner).  The core business, however, appears to be recovering strongly, and the market is  counting on strong results. 

    Specifically, the market expects the company to beat consensus estimates of $4.9 billion in revenue and $6.45 in EPS.

    Most investors are expecting sequential revenue growth in the 10%-11% range.  Anything below that will probably hammer the stock.  

    Background: At $575, the stock is priced at about 22X 2010 earnings, which is below historical levels of about 30-times, but still pretty rich for a company this huge. 

    Key Consensus Estimates:

    • Net Revenue $4.9 Billion
    • Non-GAAP EPS $6.45
    • Non-GAAP Operating Income $2.68 Billion  

    Here’s a quick outlook from JP Morgan’s Imran Khan:

     

    • *  We see net revenue of $5.11B. This implies Q/Q revenue growth of 16.6%. We see the US market growing 10% Q/Q.

    • *  We expect aggregate paid click growth of 12% Q/Q or 16% Y/Y. This is a slight acceleration from the 3Q growth rate of 14% Y/Y and roughly in line with 2Q’s 15% growth and 1Q’s 17% Y/Y growth.

    • *  We see EBITDA margins declining. We are modeling an EBITDA margin of 61.9%, down 130 bps sequentially but up 190 bps Y/Y. During the call, we will be looking for color on our expectations for an increased cost structure in 2010 due to acquisitions, increases in headcount, and product and infrastructure investments.

    • *  We are modeling a pro forma EPS of $6.85. This implies 34% Y/Y growth which is an acceleration from 20% growth in 3Q. We think this is reasonable given our expectations for 21% Y/Y net revenue growth and Y/Y costs increases of less than $300M. We are modeling CapEx of $400M, compared to $368M in 4Q’08 and $186M last quarter.

    • *  Commentary to watch for. We will be listening for insight into ad budget trends, CPC levels, strategic investment and infrastructure needs, an update on the China operations, and insight into the mobile device strategy.

    Here is a snapshot from Citi analyst Mark Mahaney:

    Google Earnings Cheat Sheet

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Report: 2011 BMW M3 will get an optional Competition Package

    Sources have confirmed that the 2011 BMW M3 will come with an optional Competition Package (ZCP) and it’s probably the closest thing you’ll get to getting your M3 to look like the M3 GT2 pictured above.

    Details are still being kept a secret, but speculators say that there will be some performance enhancements, 19-inch (style 359 M) wheels and a suspension drop of 10mm.

    In the past, the Competition Package has offered larger wheels, bigger brakes, Alcantara touches on the inside and performance upgrades.

    Stay tuned for more details.

    2011 BMW M3 GTS:

    2011 BMW M3 GTS 2011 BMW M3 GTS 2011 BMW M3 GTS 2011 BMW M3 GTS

    – By: Kap Shah

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  • Mark Greenberg leads 5th District Republicans in fundraising

    The Litchfield County businessman says he raised $152,000 in the 4th quarter of 2009. He also lent his campaign $150,000 and says he ended the quarter with $256,000 on hand.

    Those numbers top the sums raised by two GOP opponents, Justin Bernier and Sam Caligiuri.

    “People are helping by donating to my campaign and they are helping me to develop important grassroots support by discussing my candidacy with their neighbors and friends,” Greenberg said in a statement. “I will continue to discuss with the citizens of the District the challenges facing our state and nation and my plan to bring basic business principles to the debate in Washington. These fund raising totals, in addition to showing strong support for my candidacy, mean that I will be able to continue to get my message out.”

    Meanwhile, a new poll commissioned by the Bernier campaign shows beating Caligiuri, 36 percent to 15 percent, though nearly half of those polled — 49 percent — are undecided.

    When asked for comment, the Caligiuri camp said it was its policy not to comment on polls done on behalf of other candidates.

  • Pennsylvania man denied permission to install solar panels

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    Robert Caffro found a solar solution for his home, then acquired a problem that’s cast a cloud on his plan.

    The front of Bob Caffro's house

    The front of Bob Caffro's house; solar panels would be on the rear roof.

    Caffro’s homeowners association in his neighborhood in Chester County west of Philadelphia denied his request to install the low-profile rooftop solar panels that he’d arranged to buy at Home Depot.

    The governing group sent him a letter on Jan. 5 citing this clause in the neighborhood’s rules:

    “Any addition, enclosure, garage, appurtenant building, fence, wall, planting or other improvement or modification erected, placed or maintained within a Unit shall be harmonious in design with the single family residential dwelling within the Unit.”

    Which left Caffro, 45, scratching his head over the meaning of the word “harmonious.”

    He thought the black rooftop solar panels he had selected were harmonious with the traditional homes in the Brook Crossing subdivision where he bought his four-bedroom home about five years ago. The 34-panel array by BP Solar was to be affixed to the back-facing slope of the roof of his two-story home, rising less than four inches above the shingles, and following the same grade of the roof, he said. It would be architecturally unobtrusive.

    His neighbors to the rear of the house would see “essentially a black roof” that would blend in, he said. Caffro also reasoned that such a home improvement would add value to his house, a positive for the neighborhood, and the earth. It would have powered his entire house, virtually eliminating his reliance on fossil fuels and greatly diminishing monthly electricity bills.

    “Who stops someone from doing something that’s good for the planet, lowers your costs for energy and helps you survive?” he asks.

    In this case, the “who” appears to be two members of the HOA: President Thomas Madonna, and the vice president, Marc Marucci. Both are named on the denial letter to Caffro, which is signed by Marucci, who did not return an email asking for more information on the denial issued to Caffro. Madonna also did not respond.

    Solar panels that would be similar to Caffro's, on a nearby house. (Photo: Bob Caffro)

    Solar panels that would be similar to Caffro's, on a nearby house. Caffro's would be framed in black. (Photo: Bob Caffro)

    Whatever Marucci and Madonna were thinking, they are not the only ones who view solar panels with trepidation. Across the U.S., there have been countless neighborhood skirmishes over solar panels, sometimes leaving embittered homeowners with no choice but to move away from their carefully controlled housing developments to places where they can exercise their on-site energy plans. Perhaps more often, homeowners likely just gave up on the idea.

    But discouraging homeowners from becoming solar consumers is less in fashion than it might have been at another time. With federal and state incentives aimed at helping property owners make the leap to renewable energy projects, states are passing additional laws to shore up homeowners’ rights — and homeowners’ associations are finding that they don’t always have the authority to intercede.

    The state of Arizona has a law dating to the 1970s that protects homeowners’ private property rights, allowing them “solar access” that supersedes any conflicting language in their deed restrictions. The law survived a legal challenge in Maricopa County in 2000, when a Superior Court judge ruled against an association trying to force homeowners to take down their rooftop panels.

    A recent Arizona law clarified matters, stating that homeowners’ groups cannot deny a resident’s right to add solar energy devices, but can adopt “reasonable rules” about their placement. While the law returns some authority to the neighborhood associations, it also confirms the rights of homeowners, stating that the rules around solar devices should not  “prevent the installation of devices” or impair their performance.

    California went through a similar process, with legislation in 2005 expanding upon the coverage of a 1978 “solar access” law.

    In fact, more than half of states have laws pertaining to residential solar installations, according to the Database of State Incentives for Renewables and Efficiency (DSIRE). Many of them are “access” laws that directly help protect a homeowner’s right to install solar power generation equipment. Many others, however, deal with mainly with easements for solar and wind installations. These easement laws also aid “access” by making it legal for governmental entities to create buffer zones and set up other provisions for wind and solar installations. These laws pave the way so that industrial, commercial or residential buildings can position  solar arrays to get adequate sunlight (or place wind turbines to catch the wind) and local authorities can permit such projects.

    But many easement laws are silent on the dilemma of homeowners whose HOAs have issued ambiguous wording or outright restrictions against solar or wind projects.

    So far, Pennsylvania currently has neither a solar easement nor access law, though neighboring Rhode Island and New Jersey have easement legislation.

    Pennsylvania State Rep. Tom Houghton (D-Chester) proposed legislation earlier this month to remove obstacles for homeowners who want to install renewable energy. “As we continue to wage a battle between over-reliance on fossil fuel and rising energy costs, we must provide support to homeowners and consumers who wish to utilize alternative energy sources,” he said in a news release.

    Caffro, a former safety director for a transportation company who was left with disabilities after being hit by a car a few years ago, lives partly on disability assistance. He said he checked the homeowner’s covenants when he moved in five years ago, and did not find any mention of solar panels. He assumed that meant they would be allowed.

    The letter from Caffro’s homeowner’s association does not elaborate on any potential harm from the solar panels, but notes that the two officers of the HOA, after consulting an attorney, determined that  “… solar panel arrays are not harmonious in design with the design of your unit or that of others in the community.”

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • Thinking Phone Calls in $1.2M

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Cambridge, MA-based Thinking Phone Networks, a developer of hosted customer communication and relationship management platforms, has raised $1.17 million of a $1.67 million round of equity mixed with options and warrants, an SEC filing shows. President and CEO Steven Kokinos told Mass High Tech that the funding comes from Capstone Partners, a Boston investment bank, and that it will go to expanding the company’s sales department.