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  • How to convert DVD/video to iPod and transfer iPod files to iPod/PC/iTunes

    This guide includes three parts:
    Part 1: How to convert DVD to iPod Touch/Nano/Classic with
    Cucusoft DVD to iPod Converter.

    Part 2: How to convert popular video to iPod Touch/Nano/Classic with Cucusoft iPod Movie/Video Converter.
    Part 3: How to transfer iPod files to iPod/Computer/iTunes with AVCWare iPod to iPod/Computer/iTunes Transfer.

    Part 1: How to convert DVD to iPod Touch/Nano/Classic.
    Step 0: Install and run Cucusoft DVD to iPod Converter
    Step 1: Place the DVD into your DVD drive
    Step 2: Click the “open DVD” button to load DVD

    Step 3: Select "Direct mode" or "Batch Mode"
    "Direct Mode" means that you can directly click the DVD Menu to select the DVD movie you want to rip. This mode is very easy for ripping a movie DVD’s.

    "Batch Mode" means that you can select the DVD titles/chapters and audio track they want to rip via checkbox list. This mode is very easy for batch ripping Music DVD’s, MTV DVD’s and Episodic DVD’s.

    Notes: In "Batch Mode", you not only can select the DVD titles/chapters and audio track, but also can adjust conversion time. So It is easy for you to convert any segment of DVD.
    Step 4: Select output format from the "Profile" drop-down list.

    Notes: Click the "…" button at the right of the “profile” drop-down list to set the important parameters: Video Bitrate, Audio Bitrate, Frame Rate and Video Size. For a high image/sound quality you can increase the value of Video/Audio Bitirate and for a compressed file you can decrease the value.
    Step5: Click the “Convert ”button to start the conversion. You can have a cup of coffee or have a walk. In a quite short time it will finish.

    Part 2: How to convert popular video to iPod Touch/Nano/Classic.

    Step 0: Install and run Cucusoft iPod Movie/Video Converter.
    Step 1: Click the “Open file” button to add the video files you want to convert.

    Step 2: Select output format from the "Profile" drop-down list.

    Notes: Click the “…” button at the right of the “profile” drop-down list to set the important parameters: Video Bitrate, Audio Bitrate, Frame Rate and Video Size. For a high image/sound quality you can increase the value of Video/Audio Bitirate and for a compressed file you can decrease the value.
    Step 3:Click the “Convert” button to start the conversion .In a short while the conversion will be finished.

    Part 3: How to transfer iPod files to iPod/Computer/iTunes.
    Download AVCWare iPod to iPod/Computer/iTunes Transfer.

    1: Add files to iPod without iTunes.

    AVCWare iPod to iPod/Computer/iTunes Transfer helps you to add audio and video files from your PC to your iPod/iPhone, such as music and movie.Tip: Please make sure that your iTunes is closed when you use AVCWare iPod to iPod/Computer/iTunes Transfer.
    First: Run the software, and connect your iPod/iPhone to your computer via USB cable. After done, the iPod/iPhone icon and its library and playlists will appear in the Device list.
    Second:Open the library/playlist that you want to add files into.
    Third:Click the Add files button, and choose the Add Files to List option that the button shows, and then locate the required files to your iPod/iPhone. Tip: If you want to add a folder containing all files you want, please click the Add files drop-down button, and choose the Add Folder to List option, and then locate the folder to your iPod/iPhone.

    When the software is started, it will modify the automatic synchronization of music/video to manual synchronization between iPod and iTunes.
    2: Backup checked files to local AVCWare iPod to iPod/Computer/iTunes Transfer helps you to export files from your iPod/iPhone to local, such as music, movies, TV shows, and podcasts, and more.First: Run the software, and connect your iPod/iPhone to your computer via USB cable. After done, the iPod/iPhone icon and its library and playlists will appear in the Device list. Second:Open the library/playlist that you want to export files, and then check the file(s) you want to export in the file list. Third: Click the Backup to local button to start exporting files.

    Tip: When the software is started, it will modify the automatic synchronization of music/video to manual synchronization between iPod and iTunes.
    3: Add checked files to iTunes library AVCWare iPod to iPod/Computer/iTunes Transfer helps you to export files from your iPod/iPhone to your iTunes library, such as music, movies, TV shows, and podcasts, and more.Tip: Please make sure that your iTunes is closed when you use AVCWare iPod to iPod/Computer/iTunes Transfer.First: Run the software, and connect your iPod/iPhone to your computer via USB cable. After done, the iPod/iPhone icon and its library and playlists will appear in the Device list. Second: Open the library/playlist that you want to export files, and then check the file(s) you want to export in the file list. Third: Click the Add to iTunes button to start exporting files.
    Tip: When AVCWare iPod to iPod/Computer/iTunes Transfer is started, it will modify the automatic synchronization of music/video to manual synchronization between iPod and iTunes.

    Other useful tools:
    best dvd converter
    mod software
    PSP Movie Converter

  • Roche Prepares to Make Devices for Drug Using Halozyme Therapeutics Technology

    halozyme-therapeutics
    Denise Gellene wrote:

    San Diego-based Halozyme Therapeutics (NASDAQ: HALO) received some good news today. Its partner Roche announced plans to invest $182 million in two European factories that will produce a device designed to deliver a drug formulated with Halozyme’s enzyme technology.

    The Roche drug is trastuzumab (Herceptin), which is used to treat women with an aggressive form of breast cancer that overproduces a protein called HER2. The drug, which had 2009 sales of about $4.8 billion, is currently administered by infusion in a hospital.

    Halozyme’s technology would allow trastuzumab to be administered by subcutaneous injection. This means patients could receive the drug in a doctor’s office or even self-administer the anti-cancer drug at home. Roche says it takes five minutes to administer an injection compared to 60 minutes for an infusion.

    The reformulated trastuzumab contains Halozyme’s recombinant PH20 (Enhanze), an enzyme that temporarily breaks down hyaluronic acid, a gel-like substance found in skin and cartilage. The companies believe PH20’s ability to clear out the space-filling gel will enhance the penetration and diffusion of trastuzumab.

    Roche (OTCQX: RHHBY), which is based in Basel, Switzerland, says in its announcement today that its factories would produce what it described as “patient-friendly” devices to supply clinical studies and commercialization.

    A late-stage clinical study that compares injections with the experimental formulation to infusions of the original drug in 552 breast cancer patients is underway. Patients in the trial are receiving medication every three weeks for one year and will be tracked for two years after the study ends. Roche has said it expects to file for approval to sell injectible trastuzumab in the EU in 2012.

    In its press release, Roche said that injectible trastuzumab would simplify patients’ lives and enable more efficient use of hospital resources. If the trial succeeds, Halyzyme’s PH20 could have a substantial impact on the treatment of cancer-and who gets paid to provide the treatment.







  • Quinn raises $3.1 million in last half of 2009

    Gov. Pat Quinn reported raising $3.1 million the last half of last year and entered the home stretch of the Democratic governor primary $1.5 million in the bank.

    More than $1 million came from one union — the Service Employees’ International Union — which has chipped in additional money since Jan. 1.

    Another notable contribution of $5,000 came from Ald. Richard Mell, 33rd. He’s the father in law of Quinn’s ousted predecessor and two-time running mate, Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

    From July through December, Quinn paid his media firm, which formerly had as a partner White House political guru David Axelrod, more than $1.2 million for TV advertising.

    Quinn’s report is one of hundreds due tonight to the Illinois State Board of Elections. The snapshots give voters an idea of where candidates are getting their money and how much they had left on Jan. 1, a month before the Feb. 2 primary election.

    Candidates also have been filing reports when they get contributions of $500 or more since Jan. 1. Those amounts are not reflected in tonight’s filings.

    Among other campaign finance report highlights:

    *Republican governor candidate Sen. Kirk Dillard of Hinsdale reported raising nearly $1.4 million over the time period — nearly half from loans — and began the year with nearly $370,000 in the bank.

    Dillard reported more than $600,000 in loans, including $250,000 each from Thomas Patrick, a board member of an insurance and brokerage firm, and controversial conservative activist Jack Roeser.

    Dillard also reported $134,000 in loans from unsuccessful 2006 GOP governor candidate Ron Gidwitz, who also pumped in at least another $131,000 in cash and a paid mailing. Donating $150,000 was Barry Maclean, president & CEO of Maclean-Fogg, and his firm.

    *Republican governor candidate Jim Ryan, who has been running a low-key campaign, had about $190,000 left as of Jan. 1 after raising $313,000.

    *Republican governor candidate Sen. Bill Brady of Bloomington reported raising $443,000 in the final six months of last year and began 2010 with $192,000 in the bank. The donations included a $101,000 loan from the candidate.

    *Retired Illinois Senate President Emil Jones Jr. loaned $100,000 to the campaign of Democratic Cook County Board President Todd Stroger.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • hello to all

    Hello everyone I have been taking insulin for about a year and I cant decide if the Levimir or the Novolog is best for me. I like the Novelog because it is fast and I have taking both at the same and I am wondering one is offsetting the other.
  • Illinois State rallies to beat Creighton 71-62

    Osiris Eldridge scored 17 points to lead five Illinois State players in double figures as the Redbirds rallied to defeat Creighton 71-62.

    Dinma Odiakosa had 13 points and 11 rebounds, his seventh double-double of the season, for Illinois State (14-5, 5-3 Missouri Valley).

    Creighton (9-10, 4-4) scored the first 11 points of the game, and led 17-5 before the Redbirds scored the next 10 points.

    The Bluejays pushed the lead back to 38-28 by halftime, but Illinois State began the second half with a 17-6 run to take their first lead at 45-44.

    Justin Clark scored 13 points and Tony Lewis and Lloyd Phillips 12 each for Illinois State. The five in double figures accounted for all but four of the Redbirds’ points.

    Kenny Lawson Jr. and Darryl Ashford led the Bluejays with 11 points each, and Justin Carter grabbed 11 rebounds.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Detroit Pistons exploring options for possible sale

    AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — The Detroit Pistons might be for sale.

    “The options are being explored,” Pistons owner Karen Davidson said Wednesday night after the first quarter of a game against the Boston Celtics.

    Her husband, Bill Davidson, died last year.

    The late owner known as “Mr. D” helped the Pistons win NBA titles in 2004, 1990 and 1989.

    He had said during an interview before his enshrinement into the Basketball Hall of Fame that a succession plan was in place to keep the team in the family and it would not be sold.

    “The Pistons won’t be for sale,” Davidson told The Associated Press in 2008.

    Forbes valued the Pistons at $479 million last month.

    Karen Davidson told reporters the team could be sold by itself or as part of a package with Palace Sports and Entertainment, which includes The Palace of Auburn Hills, DTE Energy Music Theatre and Meadow Brook
    Music Festival.

    The Red Wings chose not to renew their lease, which expires June 30, at Joe Louis Arena in downtown Detroit.

    “As we have said, we are working with the City of Detroit to develop a new lease for Joe Louis Arena,” Ilitch Holdings Inc. spokeswoman Karen Cullen said Wednesday. “We are not going to discuss our negotiations or respond to speculation on this topic.”

    Davidson said she has not talked to the Mike Ilitch family, which owns the Red Wings, about having the NHL team play future home games at The Palace, adding she was sure there have been talks between the organizations.

    She joked with reporters at halftime that there is an ice rink under the court, referring to the surface the Detroit Vipers played on when they were in the International Hockey League.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • DePaul stuns Marquette, ends 24-game league skid

    depmarq.jpgA DePaul nightmare of nearly two years is over.

    Mike Stovall hit a long jumper with 0.7 seconds left to play that thrust the Demons to a stunning 51-50 win over Marquette, ending a 24-game Big East losing streak and giving the program its first conference win since March 6, 2008.

    Down six at the half and just two with three minutes to play, the Demons rallied to have a chance on the very last possession.

    Marquette’s Lazar Hayward missed the front end of a 1-and-1 with 20 seconds left, which led to a 3-pointer for Stovall to cut the Eagles lead to 50-49 with 9.7 seconds left.

    Marquette’s David Cubillan then missed the front end of a 1-and-1 as well, setting up Stovall’s heroics.

    Will Walker led the Demons with 17 points.

    Photo: Marquette’s Lazar Hayward and David Cubillan pressure Devin Hill. (Jonathan Daniel / Getty Images)

    By Brian Hamilton

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Oregon man thrashes local children in treehouse-building contest

    Roy Wilkinson must have the coolest house on the block.

    Everyone loves a treehouse – they seem to inspire a universal feeling of childlike wonder, and done right they really tickle the old ‘living in harmony with nature’ glands too. We’ve covered some beauties over the years here at Gizmag, but this one has to be the grand-daddy of them all. The work of architect Robert Harvey Oshatz, the Wilkinson Residence makes use of a steeply sloped block to put the house’s main level right up in the tree canopy. Stunning from every angle, it uses curves and waves to echo the owner’s love of the natural landscape with a slightly musical theme…

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  • Genomics Laid the Foundation for Big Global Health Advances To Come This Decade

    Ken Stuart wrote:

    In science, success is often measured in small advances in understanding. But in the past decade, technology has led to large leaps of new knowledge that has been well utilized in the battle against global infectious disease.

    And, this decade holds even greater promise.

    Genomics is an excellent example. We’ve seen the genomics revolution begin in force, providing researchers with vast amounts of data that presented new possibilities. In October 2002, there was a landmark achievement in the world of infectious disease research: Nature published the complete genome sequence of Plasmodium falciparum, the main cause of human malaria. That was accompanied by the complete sequence of Plasmodium yoelii, the agent in rodent malaria. These simultaneously provide the malaria community with a foundation of knowledge for both a lethal human pathogen and its model animal pathogen. The sequencing and annotation of the malaria parasite genome was led by Malcolm Gardner, a malaria researcher who is now at the Seattle Biomedical Research Institute (SBRI).

    Importantly, the knowledge gained by knowing the 5,000+ genes that make up P. falciparum has been exploited by malaria researchers around the world to develop new strategies to fight an age-old disease. During 2010, SBRI will move into human clinical trials with a promising malaria vaccine that would not have been possible without genomics. SBRI scientists have found that by removing specific essential genes from the malaria parasite genome the malaria infection is stopped while it is in the liver, before it migrates into the blood and causes disease. Most notably, this resulted in complete immune protection from subsequent infection in the mouse model system. Two genes have been removed from the human malaria parasite, P. falciparum to create the live genetically attenuated parasite vaccine that will be tested.

    In addition to the genomics revolution, we’ve witnessed exponential growth in high-throughput analyses that assess the activities and functions of genes that were identified in genome projects. There’s also been advances in the field of informatics that provided the ability to store, integrate and evaluate the abundant data. This is accelerating the ability to translate these findings into applications.

    This explosion of data over the past decade has led to new understanding and the realization that much more can be accomplished, especially if researchers worldwide collaborate …Next Page »







  • The fourmidable MINI Countryman – four doors and 4WD

    The fourmidable MINI Countryman – four doors and 4WD

    MINI is to add the MINI Countryman to the family. A genuine Crossover, the MINI Countryman bridges the gap between the classic concept of the MINI and a modern Sports Activity Vehicle. The Countryman will be the fourth MINI in the range, first MINI with four doors and a wide-opening rear lid, and it also comes with optional MINI ALL4 all-wheel drive. Fourmidable indeed!..

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  • Mergers, acquisitions rarely deal city best hand

    After two slow years, the merger revival of 2010 kicked off in style this week with Kraft Foods Inc.’s $19 billion-plus deal to acquire candy-maker Cadbury PLC.

    For Chicago’s business community, it was a hopeful sign: A signature company buying out a foreign rival.

    Over the past two decades, however, deal-making has worked against the city more often than for it, and this year could turn out no different.

    Chicago and the rest of Illinois may be on track to lose a fertilizer company, a major financial exchange, a baby-formula maker, a giant fuel-alcohol distillery and what’s left of a pornography empire — among other logical merger candidates.

    No one’s predicting a repeat of the 1990s, when the city lost First Chicago Corp., Amoco Corp. and a slew of other bedrock corporate citizens. In fact, some local companies such as CME Group Inc. and Exelon Corp. have proven eager to expand through acquisition — or at least eager to try.

    But on balance, the city lacks the dominant multinationals and fast-growing innovators that are most likely to buy rather than be bought. “Chicago is very well diversified, but there are fewer standout leaders,” noted William Hummer of Chicago’s Wayne Hummer Investments. “It’s a mixed bag.”

    Consider fertilizer.

    After three major competitors spent the past year wrestling for supremacy, 2010 opens with CF Industries Holdings Inc. flat on the mat.

    The Deerfield-based company has given up its pursuit of Terra Industries Inc. But it has yet to resolve a standing offer from rival Agrium Inc., which has extended its bid through late February and nominated two directors to CF’s board. “Nothing has changed,” a spokesman said this week.

    Watch for the stalemate to unwind over the next few months.

    Similarly, the going-public plan at the Chicago Board Options Exchange is moving forward with no sure outcome, apart from a sense that something has to happen soon.

    CBOE Chairman William Brodsky has pledged to demutualize the member-run organization and launch an initial public offering by the end of June. Analysts and insiders suspect that he’s shopping around the options mart right now, and a winning bid from crosstown rival CME or one of many prospects outside Chicago could pre-empt the offering. A spokeswoman had no comment.

    These early stirrings of merger-and-acquisition activity reflect a much-improved deal-making environment, with arrows pointing up for credit markets, earnings results and valuations. Private-equity players were scorched in the financial meltdown, so corporations have taken the lead.

    “That’s just logical,” said Paul Foster, market strategist at Theflyonthewall.com in Chicago. “I’m surprised more people didn’t step up and buy in the last six or eight months.”

    In theory, any company can be bought or sold, but some look riper than others. The newly independent Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. in suburban Glenview could attract interest from Nestle SA now that the Swiss giant and fellow infant-formula manufacturer has raised billions through the sale of an eye-care division, Foster said.

    A Mead Johnson spokesman declined to comment, apart from saying, “Our focus is on building and growing the business.”

    Along the same lines, Archer Daniels Midland Co. may attract the attention of an oil company after Valero Energy Corp. pushed into its biofuel business by snapping up distressed ethanol plants. An ADM spokesman declined to comment.

    Chicago’s many closely held companies make tougher targets, though the passage of time alone prompts periodic interest as controlling shareholders age. Playboy Enterprises Inc. flirted with a deal at the end of last year. And the Cadbury acquisition makes Tootsie Roll Industries Inc. all the more attractive to competing candy-maker Hershey Co. Spokesmen for both firms would not comment.

    Given pent-up demand, more activity is all but certain, Hummer said. “We won’t see a return to the dramatic deals of the ’90s,” he predicted. “We will see more deals.”

    [email protected]

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • RIYADH l APPROVED l Hilton Riyadh Hotel & Residence l 20F+14F l 2013

    Located on Riyadh’s Eastern Ring Road, a major corridor linking King Khalid International Airport with the downtown area, the new-build Hilton Riyadh Hotel & Residence in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia will feature two towers; a 20-storey 480-room hotel tower, and a 14-storey tower with 350 hotel apartments.

    …will be located between the 466,000 sq.m Granada Centre, one of the capital’s largest shopping and entertainment malls, and Granada Business Park.

    Source: www.ameinfo.com

    Apologies if this is a double-thread!

  • Disruption in the Wind: Talking with FloDesign’s New CEO, Lars Andersen

    FloDesign Logo
    Wade Roush wrote:

    On Tuesday, FloDesign Wind Turbine of Wilbraham, MA, announced that it has raised $35 million in Series B funding from a list of marquee venture capital firms and hired a new CEO to go along with the new money. Both moves are aimed at setting the company on the path to commercialization of its unusual wind-turbine design, which resembles a jet engine on a stick much more than a conventional windmill.

    Yesterday, I caught up by phone with Lars Andersen, who’s spent all of two weeks in FloDesign’s CEO chair. (Andersen replaces company founder Stanley Kowalski, who has become a vice president.) If the startup was searching for a wind industry veteran, it couldn’t have found one with more experience than Andersen, who’s been in the energy generation and wind business for 20 years, and has spent the last five building up the Chinese division of Vestas, the Danish wind company that manufactures nearly 30 percent of the world’s wind turbines.

    Below is a compressed version of our conversation. As you’ll see, Andersen was evasive about the details of FloDesign’s technology, but he says the approach is a “disrupting” one that could change the way the world looks at wind energy.

    Xconomy: Tell me a bit about how you connected with FloDesign, and why you decided to leave Vestas to lead a much smaller company.

    Lars Andersen: I think, first of all, that the time with Vestas has been a fantastic time. I’ve had many good opportunities, not least during the last five years, which I spent building the business of the company in China. It’s been a good an exciting journey.

    I connected with FloDesign through a series of interviews. I was approached, first of all, by a headhunter, and went through a series of due-diligence studies of my own, and interviews with the investors and the company and the founders and the team that is there today. And I got very excited about the technology and also the team they have there that has done all the research and the innovation.

    From a high-level perspective, this is a very good opportunity in the wind industry. There has been a lot of innovation in the industry, but it has been very stepwise innovation, with gradual improvements here and there. Here is a totally different and disrupting technology that could make a breakthrough in the industry and in the way we look at wind energy today. That’s really what got me interested—being part of that development and that journey.

    X: What excites you so much about the technology? For example, does it offer a realistic way around the Betz Limit [a physical cap on the efficiency of open-fan wind turbines]?

    LA: Well, I hope you understand that there are a lot of things about the technology that I can’t talk about. And I’ve only spent two weeks on the job, so …Next Page »







  • Good moves on Mars









    NASA / JPL / Univ. of Ariz.

    An enhanced-color image from NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter shows streaks
    in the central pit of an impact crater. The streaks are created by wind erosion.




    If you’re a fan of NASA’s Mars missions, a few things have started heading in the right direction – including a renewed flow of eye-pleasing pictures from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, a new program that gives you a say in picking the orbiter’s future targets, and new signs of progress in the months-long effort to free the Spirit rover from a sand trap.

    …(read more)

  • FINANCIAL TIMES BLOG: Irene Rosenfeld’s reckless defiance of Warren Buffett

    January 21, 2010 1:54am

    Fishpond
    SPONSOR

    Back to Irene Rosenfeld, who despite her degree in psychology, appears to have upset an awful lot of people with Kraft’s £11.6bn takeover of Cadbury.

    Having made herself unpopular in the UK by acquiring the maker of Cadbury’s Dairy Milk and the Curly Wurly, she has alienated Warren Buffett, her biggest shareholder, who regards it as “a bad deal”.

    When pressed in a CNBC interview about his views on her, he damned her with faint praise:

    “I think Irene has done a good job in operations. I like Irene. I mean, she’s been straightforward with me. We just disagree. She thinks it’s a good deal. I think it’s a bad deal. I think she’s a decent person. She could be a trustee under my will. I just don’t want her making this particular deal.”

    Ms Rosenfeld has put herself far out on a limb – Mr Buffett’s objections extend not only to the price she paid but her sale of “a very fine pizza business” to Nestle to raise money.

    His calculation of the lack of value for Kraft in the deal is worth reading in full because it gives a good idea of how a true value investor thinks.

    “Now they mentioned paying 13 times Ebitda for Cadbury, but they’re paying more than that. For one thing, Ebitda is not the same as earnings. Depreciation is a very real expense. But on top of that, they’ve got a billion-three they’re going to spend of various rearrangements of Cadbury. They’ve got 390 million dollars of deal expenses. They are using their own stock, 260 million shares or something like that, that their own directors say is significantly undervalued. And when they calculate that 13, they’re calculating Kraft at market price, not at what their own directors think the stock is worth. So, the actual multiple, if you look at the value of the Kraft stock, is more like 16 or 17 and they sold earnings at nine times. So, it’s hard to get rich doing that. And I’ve got a lot of doubts about the deal.”

    Ouch.

    As Mr Buffett says, he is not getting a chance to vote on the deal as a Kraft shareholder, but I cannot think this is the last Ms Rosenfeld will hear of it.

    Determination is a good quality, but ignoring the world’s most venerable shareholder is not what I would call wise career tactics.

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  • Lenovo S10-3T Netbook Available for Pre-Order at Amazon

    41QwUzaUrtL. SS400  300x285 Lenovo S10 3T Netbook Available for Pre Order at AmazonThe Lenovo S10-3T 10.1 Inch Netbook we reported about just two weeks ago already has popped up at Amazon and is available for pre-order for $499.99. For those not familiar with the IdeaPad S10-3T, it is a netbook that also can work as a tablet with its swivel screen that moves 180 degrees. It also has a NaturalTouch Panel taking netbooks to the next level. So you see, there are other choices of tablet alternatives – not just the illusive Apple iSlate, iPad, iWoodplank etc….AMazon 300x151 Lenovo S10 3T Netbook Available for Pre Order at Amazon


  • Organic Consumers Association Newsletter #209

    Millions Against Monsanto

    Hello Viewers,

    #209, January 21, 2010

    Health, Justice and Sustainability News
    from the Organic Consumers Association

    Edited by Alexis Baden-Mayer and Ronnie Cummins

    In this issue:

    Connect with us:

    Subscribe | Unsubscribe | Read Past Issues | OCA Homepage | Donate

    Take Action

    Stop Monsanto’s Genetically Modified Alfalfa!

    Don’t believe Monsanto’s greenwashing. Genetically modified organisms (GMOs), aren’t meant to feed the world or survive the evermore frequent droughts and floods brought on by global warming – they’re designed to sell Monsanto’s patented Roundup resistant or Bt seeds and pesticides now spliced into millions of acres of corn, cotton, soy, canola, sugar beets and alfalfa.

    A 2009 study showed that, over the last 13 years, Roundup Ready crops have increased herbicide use by 383 million pounds! In addition, once GM alfalfa and other Monsanto crops are planted in the open environment, they contaminate non-GMO and organic varieties as well as plant relatives. So if you are operating an organic dairy, feeding your cattle organic alfalfa, a nearby farm growing GMO alfalfa will almost inevitably contaminate your alfalfa fields, causing you to lose your organic certification.

    During the Bush administration, the movement to stop GMOs was making progress. Reflecting public concern over GMOs, in 2007, a Federal court ruled that the Bush USDA’s approval of Roundup Ready alfalfa violated the law because it failed to analyze risks such as the contamination of conventional and organic alfalfa and the development of &quot super-weeds.&quot The court banned the planting of GM alfalfa until USDA completed a rigorous analysis of these impacts. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals twice affirmed the national ban on Roundup Ready alfalfa planting, but Monsanto is appealing. They’re taking producers of organic alfalfa seed all the way to the Supreme Court!

    Barack Obama, despite promising us &quot change we can believe in,&quot is unfortunately turning out to be just as pro-GMO as the preceding Bush and Clinton administrations, packing the USDA and other government bureaucracies with Monsanto men and biotech cheerleaders such as former Iowa Governor, Tom Vilsack, named &quot Biotech Governor of the Year&quot in 2001, now serving as USDA Secretary. Vilsack, notorious for flying around in a Monsanto company jet during one of his previous election campaigns, is now busy trying to get the court-ordered ban on Roundup Ready alfalfa lifted by issuing a new draft environmental impact statement (EIS) that denies or downplays the obvious environmental (genetic pollution and creation of herbicide-resistant superweeds) and human health hazards of GM alfalfa.

    Alfalfa is the fourth most widely grown crop in the U.S. and a key source of dairy forage and hay. The first perennial crop to be genetically engineered, GM alfalfa can regenerate itself from its root-stock. It is open-pollinated by bees, which can cross-pollinate at distances of several miles, spreading Monsanto’s patented, foreign DNA to non-GMO and organic crops. Widespread GMO-contamination of organic alfalfa is inevitable if the Obama Administration successfully distorts science and ignores public opinion and allows Monsanto’s GM Roundup Ready alfalfa to be planted across the U.S.

    Consumers who ingest GM alfalfa are likely risking their health since even the Obama Environmental Impact Statement admitted that, &quot acute toxicity in mice was observed.&quot

    According to the EIS, consumers who ingest foods with residues of Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide may experience &quot general and non-specific signs of toxicity from subchronic and chronic exposure to glyphosate includ[ing] changes in liver weight, blood chemistry (may suggest mild liver toxicity), liver pathology, and weight of the pituitary gland.&quot

    The EIS warns that, &quot Based on upper estimates of exposure … infants consuming fruit and all age groups consuming vegetables may be at risk of adverse effects associated with acute exposure to glyphosate [the active ingredient in Roundup herbicide] residues.&quot

    Consuming milk and meat from animals fed crops that are genetically engineered is also risky. Mounting evidence shows damage to animals and humans from unlabeled and untested Frankenfoods. Even in Europe, where farmer and consumer rejection has kept GMO corn and soybean acreage to a bare minimum, (massive quantities of GMO tainted animal feed is imported from the U.S.) a survey of milk products sold in stores in Italy, results from the screening of 60 samples of 12 different milk brands demonstrated the presence of GM maize sequences in 15 (25%) and of GM soybean sequences in 7 samples (11.7%).

    Most consumers, especially organic consumers, are determined to avoid Roundup Ready alfalfa, and meat and dairy products derived from animals ingesting Roundup Ready alfalfa, but according to the EIS, we don’t have that right because, &quot At the present time, there is no policy regarding the unintended presence of GE (genetically engineered) material in organic products or food, consistent with the fact that the NOP (National Organic Program) is a process-based program for certifying a farm or production system as organic, and not a product-based program that tests or certifies individual products as organic.&quot

    We must stop the Obama administration from taking away our right to grow and consume organic and GMO-free food. The &quot change we believe in&quot is a healthy and sustainable future based upon organic food and farming and a green economy.

    Senator Puts a Hold on Obama’s Pro-Pesticide Nominee Siddiqui

    President Obama is trying to get the Senate to confirm Islam Siddiqui as the US Trade Representative for Agriculture.

    Islam Siddiqui is one of Obama’s &quot Monsanto men.&quot A contributor and fundraiser for Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, Siddiqui currently serves as the Vice President of CropLife, a powerful lobbying arm for the pesticide and biotech industry, representing, among others, the six multinational corporations that control 75% of the world’s seeds and chemicals: Monsanto, Syngenta, Bayer, BASF, Dow and DuPont.

    There is still time to block Siddiqui’s Senate confirmation. Sen. Jim Bunning (R-KY), for partisan political reasons of his own, that have nothing to do with protecting us from GMOs, has put a hold on Siddiqui’s confirmation – giving us time to voice our opposition to Monsanto’s takeover of U.S. Food and farm policy.

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    Action Updates

    Thousands of OCA Members Tell Department of Justice to Break Monsanto’s Monopoly

    After years of complaints from the Organic Consumers Association and our allies, the Justice Department is investigating how big biotech and food corporations, including Monsanto, are monopolizing and controlling our seeds, food and farming. On November 13, 2009, the Obama Administration opened a public comment period that closed on December 31, 2009, seeking comments and information about how corporate control of the food system affects average Americans.

    Organic Consumers Association members sent 8,954 letters to the Department of Justice last month about how control of the food system by companies like Monsanto affects us and our children. We’ve compiled a sample of the letters in a Daily Kos diary. The letters are articulate and passionate, many written by farmers and consumers who have first-hand experience of the health problems, pollution, and economic harm brought on by the biotech bullies and agribusiness monopolies.

    Pro-Monsanto Rajiv Shah Confirmed as USAID Director

    Despite the efforts of 17,096 Organic Consumers Association members who sent letters to their Senators in opposition, the Senate confirmed Rajiv Shah to lead US foreign assistance as director of USAID.

    On January 7, 2010, Shah was sworn in by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton who gave a speech outlining USAID’s &quot enormous agenda,&quot including food security and global health. Sec. Clinton said this agenda will be accomplished, in part, by expanding partnerships with corporations, non-profit organizations, and foundations. Clinton specifically highlighted Shah’s ongoing collaboration with the Gates Foundation &quot to transform the global system of vaccine financing.&quot She also subtly referenced Bill Gates by saying that Shah had provided a list of people willing to go to bat for him in the Senate confirmation process that included &quot giants … in the foundation world.&quot Gates, billionaire tycoon founder of the Microsoft empire, is a friend and ally of Monsanto, and an avid supporter of genetically engineered crops and foods.

    In his inaugural speech, Shah thanked Secretary Vilsack, who had supervised him in the few months he worked as USDA Under Secretary for Research, and said that he would &quot remain deeply committed to the work we began to strengthen science and improve nutrition, wellness and food security in our nation and around the globe.&quot

    Echoing Clinton, Shah said USAID needs &quot to better coordinate our work … with public, private and multilateral partners. … And we need to develop new capabilities to pursue innovation, science and technology…&quot

    Public-private partnerships and the pursuit of science and technology are a reference to Shah’s work at the Gates Foundation, which involved partnering with Monsanto to open markets in Africa for genetically modified crops.

    In an interview with NPR, Shah made this explicit, saying, &quot We are also going to do things a little bit differently: bring in outside expertise and become more of a coordinating platform so that we can work with private sector innovators, like the Gates Foundation… So, that people standing in line for immunizations in a health clinic outside of a city in Mali can actually get immunizations for their kids. Or, so that women farmers trying to make – grow enough food for their family and their community can do that in places like Kenya or Senegal or Rwanda.&quot

    In a speech the day before Shah’s swearing-in ceremony, Clinton spoke enthusiastically about biotech crops:

    &quot We are expanding our direct funding of new research, for example, into biofortified sweet potatoes that prevent Vitamin A deficiency in children, and African maize that can be grown in drought conditions. We’re exploring venture funds, credit guarantees, and other tools to encourage private companies to develop and market products and services that improve the lives of the poor.&quot

    Monsanto In The News

    More news, videos, alerts and information can be found here

    Organic Empowerment 2010: Taking Action Locally

    Strategic Local Campaign of the Week: #5 – Reduce, Reuse, Recycle and Compost

    The problem of &quot waste&quot in the U.S. is both a local and a federal issue, with the Environmental Protection Agency providing the scientific veneer, among others, for the nation’s profit-at-any-cost, multibillion dollar sewage sludge, garbage, and chemical fertilizer industries. Several decades ago, after public pressure forced corporations and municipalities to stop dumping toxic sewage sludge into the oceans and waterways (it was killing all the fish and marine life and polluting beaches), the EPA decided it was time to rename this hazardous waste &quot organic fertilizer&quot (or &quot biosolids&quot ) and to begin to spread municipal sewage sludge on millions of acres of non-organic farmland and rangeland. Emboldened by their success, EPA and the sludge industry then tried to tell us in 1998 that it would be OK to spread sewage sludge on organic farms as well. Fortunately OCA and the organic community beat them back as part of a massive nationwide grassroots campaign called Save Organic Standards (SOS).

    A steady stream of greenwashing and false solutions that encourage waste production instead of waste reduction are coming at us from corporate marketing departments and the federal government. OCA believes that positive action to encourage waste reduction, reuse, recycling and composting (real organic composting, not renaming sewage sludge or industrial waste as compost) is most likely to arise at the local level. Several cities have taken positive actions in the direction of zero waste, but the devil is in the details.

    Take household and industrial sewage sludge for example. For decades sewage sludge (the end product of the nation’s thousands of Wastewater Treatment Plants) was dumped in the oceans and rivers, now it is spread on non-organic farms and rangelands, while current industry plans include burning it and turning it into an energy source but the fundamental problem isn’t what to do with billions of pounds of toxic sewage sludge produced every year (obviously we must isolate and contain it as hazardous waste), but rather how can we stop producing it in the first place. Household sewage, contaminated as it is with chemical cosmetics, toxic household cleaners and any number of pharmaceutical drugs poured into toilets and kitchen sinks, isn’t pristine but, to paraphrase Bob Hope, it’s not the shit, it’s what we’ve done to it. After the toilet is flushed or the drain is emptied, household waste is funneled into a vast underground sewage system, where it joins a toxic stew of industrial and hospital wastes and rainwater runoff from our streets and highways. Allowing corporations to flood the environment and the waste stream with 100,000 synthetic, mostly toxic chemicals, (most of which end up in sewage sludge), less than 1% of which have ever been proved to be safe for the environment and public health, is a form of insanity. Besides contaminating the water and soil, this irrational so-called &quot sewage treatment&quot process wastes enormous amounts of potable water.

    At a certain point, cities and towns must come to the realization that using clean water to flush away household waste engineering rooftops, roadways and streets to funnel rainwater into our sewage systems (instead of capturing it or percolating it back into the soil) and allowing industry and hospitals to discharge toxic chemicals into our wastewater stream just doesn’t make sense. Composting (non-water) toilets, rooftop water catchments and cisterns, and zero discharge of synthetic chemicals potentially or actually proven to hazardous to human health and the environment (the &quot precautionary principle&quot ) are not fringe ideas, but rather the wave of the future. That is if there is a future.

    Human and animal manure, (separated from and free from chemical and pharmaceutical residues), throughout the centuries, and in the present time can and should be safely composted and utilized as a fertilizer on fields, farms, and forests. Although current organic standards prohibit the use of compost derived from human manure (properly composted animal manure is allowed) on food crops, feeding the soil with properly composted &quot humanure&quot (or producing methane gas for energy use through bio-digesters) will no doubt become the norm in the future as fossil fuel and water supplies dwindle and chemical fertilizer costs become prohibitive.

    Tune in to future issues of Organic Bytes for OCA’s ideas on how we can and must reform our garbage, sludge, and chemical fertilizer industries and put an end to the rampant consumerism that is literally poisoning the planet with garbage and toxic chemicals.

    Next week:

    #6 – Reduce Energy Use and Build a Renewable Energy Infrastructure
    #7 – Tell the Toxic Industrial Food Producers to Take a Hike
    #8 – Implement the Precautionary Principle
    #9 – Eliminate Corporate Personhood to Protect Democracy
    #10 – Make Peace At Home

    LOCAL NY NEWS OF THE WEEK

    NY – Get Involved Locally

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    Message from our Sponsors

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  • Baker Projects secure new contract at Chemical Works in Wakefield

    Baker Projects have been selected as the Consultants to provide all CDM Coordination and Health and Safety Management at a new build chemical works in Wakefield

  • Josh Silverman: How Video Changes Everything

    Whether it’s a clip of “Tajik Jimmy” putting Bollywood soundtracks to shame, catching a friend’s wedding eight time zones away or working “side by side” with coworkers in another country, it’s all video. And it’s changing the way we communicate with one another.

    Video technology has become so ubiquitous that we rarely pause to think of the potential implications, both hopeful and sinister. I’ll focus on the sweeter side of its progress.

    Take Skype. You could view video calls as a natural upgrade to wideband visuals from narrowband voice conversations. But we believe there’s more to it than just a richer conversation. Voice calls, after all, tend to be transactional: You tell me this; I’ll tell you that. Bye! It can be a difficult way to communicate and we often get little out of it beyond efficient information exchange.

    By the way, I’m not dissing voice for the sake of it. I happen to agree with whomever said that radio is television for the mind. But in terms of having a conversation, voice and video are two rather different species.

    With video, people are suddenly present without having to be in the same room as one another. The encounter, by extension, is no longer merely transactional. When my friend in Ann Arbor, Mich., turned 40, I joined the party from London over video. The distance between us evaporated — a benefit voice calls cannot deliver. A similar thing happens by way of the permanent live video wall that joins up our offices in Tallinn and Prague: An Estonian engineer’s desk is right next to that of her team member in the Czech Republic.

    Video changes the whole nature of “being there” to something between audio and physical presence. (3D holographic video that other companies and researchers are working on makes the experience even more immersive, if not yet affordable.) In other words, a live video conversation is not just a voice call with pictures. It’s not just a milestone in the evolution of the Internet. It’s an entirely different way of communicating.

    For hundreds of thousands of years, people have shared meaning through language. Its form has evolved from oral to visual and, for the past few thousand years, written. Yet until the 20th century, true conversations were tied to a shared place or shifted by time (letters). Even then, only being together with someone allowed for rich, full interaction to bloom. Live video conversations are changing all that, combining the oral, visual and written traditions into virtual presence.

    Ironically, all this progress means that we can finally return to the basics — stuff that’s worked for eons (but hasn’t transcended place or time). Or, as the Institute for the Future puts it, we’re seeing the “emergence of a new digitally-mediated oral society.” At the very least, real-time video is getting us closer to where the communication medium itself becomes almost invisible, letting people themselves be the platform.

    It’s easy to slip into hyperbole. So take it with a pinch of salt when I talk about entering a place of virtual presence that mimics tangible reality, saves time and deletes distance through live video links. Take it with a pinch of salt, too, when IFTF says this new oral society creates a new public sphere. Let’s not forget that it’s still early days. But video already allows Skype users to transcend place and time, whether on the desktop or on a Skype-enabled TV, and some 4 percent of all international calling minutes are now video calling minutes, on Skype. If nothing else, we’ll see a global human video mesh that anyone can tap into, irrespective of location or device. And even that would be pretty cool.

    Video is not only an entirely different way of communicating, but a really important one.

    Josh Silverman is CEO of Skype.