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  • Nexamp Raises $6.5M for Clean Energy Consulting

    Wade Roush wrote:

    Nexamp, a North Andover, MA, company that helps clients design, finance, build, and analyze clean energy projects, has raised $6.5 million in equity-based financing, a regulatory filing revealed today. The four-year-old company, formerly known as NexGen Energy Solutions, originally focused on solar panel installation projects, but has grown to offer other services such as feasibility studies, design and engineering, permitting, and construction. The investors in the funding round weren’t named,  and Nexamp vice president Jonathan Abe, reached by phone, said the company can’t comment on the funding until an official announcement is released next week. However, Nexamp’s directors include Michael Ware, managing director at venture firm Good Energies, which has offices in Washington, D.C.; David Martirano, a general partner at Point Judith Capital in Providence, RI; and Henri-Claude Bailly of Somerville, MA-based RCG Ventures.







  • Chinese cities are greener than American cities

    CHINA recently became the world’s largest emitter of carbon dioxide. A little over one-fifth of all the CO2 released into the atmosphere each year is produced in China (America is responsible for about 18% of global emissions, and Europe 14%). And yet, there’s this:

    China’s major cities’ household carbon emissions are dramatically lower than in the US. Glaeser and Kahn (2010) report that in the cleanest cities of San Diego and San Francisco, a standardised household emits around 26 tons of CO2 per year – albeit with a much higher standard income of $62,500. Shanghai’s standardised household, meanwhile, produces 1.8 tons of carbon and Beijing’s standardised household produces 4.0 tons. Even in China’s brownest city, Daqing, a standardised household emits only one-fifth of the carbon produced by one in America’s greenest cities.

    That’s from an interesting Vox piece by Matthew Kahn and Siqi Zheng, discussing new research they’ve produced on the emissions profiles of Chinese cities. It’s a nice read; the authors focus on how Chinese emissions patterns differ from those in developed nations and how Chinese regional policies are likely to influence the path of emissions growth.

    But a key takeaway is the tricky position in which China finds itself. Its residents contribute far less to global warming than typical Americans or Europeans, but because there are 1.3 billion of them, they’ve already become the largest producer of greenhouse gases. As the authors note, if Chinese citizens emitted carbon at developed nation rates, global emissions would be 50% higher. And obviously, one of the main goals of the Chinese leadership is to achieve something like a developed nation standard of living for its residents.

    China should just approach America with a deal: it will agree limit its per capita emissions to one half the current American level if America will agree to halve its per capita emissions. Seems fair, does it not?

  • Ryan Palmer Wins 2010 Sony Open In Hawaii


    Congratulations to Ryan Palmer on winning the 2010 Sony Open in Hawaii. Ryan won his third career PGA Tour title Sunday January 17, 2010 on the 72nd and final hole of the tournament outlasting Robert Allenby in an exciting back-and-forth day-long duel on the Seth Raynor designed Waialae Country Club. Ryan’s dreams became a reality on the final green when his approach chip struck the pin and settled inches away from the cup, leaving a tap in birdie to secure his 1-shot victory. Sunday’s exciting conclusion marks another great beginning to the PGA TOUR season the Sony Open in Hawaii has been delivering for the past 12 years.

    Here are some clips from Ryan’s win courtesy of OttawaGolfBlog.com/Golf Channel:

    Don’t miss the action at the 2011 Sony Open in Hawaii, the first PGA TOUR event planned to be shot in 3D.

  • 21 Years After Spill, Exxon Valdez Oil Is *Still* Stuck in Alaska’s Beaches | 80beats

    OilPoolFromValdezSpill.jpegMore than two decades have passed since the Exxon Valdez spilled 38,000 tons of crude oil into Alaska’s Prince William Sound, but despite cleanup efforts and time, thousands of gallons of oil remain stuck in the region’s beaches. A new Nature Geoscience study offers an explanation for why the oil has been so slow to disperse: it’s the composition of the beaches themselves.

    According to study leader Michel C. Boufadel, natural forces have created beaches in Prince William Sound with two distinct layers, and water moves 1,000 times slower through the bottom layer than the top. Once the oil entered the lower level, conditions were right to keep it there, he said. Tidal forces worked to compact the finer-grained gravel even more, creating a nearly oxygen-free environment with low nutrient levels that slowed the ability of the oil to biodegrade [AP].

    Boufadel began his study to explain why the oil from Valdez spill, which happened in March 1989, was lingering longer than most scientists expected. Most clean-up operations in the area ended in 1992 because the remaining oil was expected to disperse within a few years. A later study discovered that the oil was disappearing at a rate of just 4% each year, and that an estimated 20,000 gallons remained in the beaches [BBC News]. The researchers dug pits several feet deep all around Eleanor Island to investigate, and found that the two-tiered beaches has allowed plenty of crude to sink down and get stuck. In their field studies, Dr. Boufadel said, when they would dig into deeper sediments, “the whole place would smell of oil” [The New York Times]. If environmental agencies want to finish the cleanup, Boufadel suggests that chemicals could be injected into the lower sediment layer to speed up the oil’s biodegradation.

    This study of a 21-year-old oil shipping disaster coincides with a current scare in the same locale; an Exxon ship briefly lost power in Alaskan waters Sunday, but two tugs towed it to safety. This tanker has quickly become a poster child for pending federal legislation to beef up protection for Prince William Sound oil shipments [Anchorage Daily News].

    Related Content:
    80beats: 20 Years After Valdez Spill, Eagles Are Healthy; 7 Other Species Still Hurting
    80beats: “Nanosponge” Could Soak Up Oil Spills
    Discoblog: Whither the Valdez? ExxonMobil Cuts Cash for Global Warming Deniers
    DISCOVER: Whatever Happened To… The Exxon Valdez?

    Image: NOAA


  • Babette Whipple, former MGH psychology researcher, dies at 91

    Babette (Babbie) Samelson Whipple, former psychology researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), died on Dec. 18, 2009, after a short illness. The 60-year resident of Belmont, Mass., born July 22, 1918, in Memphis, Tenn., died at the age of 91.

    At 17 she entered Wellesley College. She continued her studies at Radcliffe, earning an M.A. in philosophy before switching to psychology because she was attracted to the broader potential impact that her work in this relatively new discipline could have. She was awarded her doctorate, Phi Beta Kappa, in 1945 and began working as a therapist at the innovative Habit Clinic (now Thom Clinic) in Boston.

    She married Fred L. Whipple, a Harvard professor of astronomy, in 1946. As she raised their two daughters and continued part time with her psychology research career at the Child Psychiatry Department at MGH, her duties expanded to include social support for the families of the faculty and graduate students at the newly formed Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, of which Fred had been named director.

    In her basement you can still find a large box with the 50 teacups and saucers she used for the wives’ afternoon teas that she regularly held at her home in Belmont. During the heady years of Sputnik and the race to space, Babbie accompanied Fred on travels all over the globe to visit the satellite observing stations he had been instrumental in setting up and to join international scientific meetings.

    A memorial service is planned for April 10. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Babette and Fred Whipple Fund for Graduate Student Travel, c/o Amanda Preston, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, 60 Garden St., MS-45, Cambridge, MA 02138.

  • ARTICLE: Motorola MOTOROI coming to US in March

    We learned a few days ago that the Motorola MOTOROI was en-route to Korea for the country’s first (Motorola) Android release, but it turns out that the rest of the world will be getting some MOTOROI love as well.  Speaking at the Korean launch of the MOTOROI, Motorola Korea chief Rick Wolochatiuk explained that the new handset “will be launched in other markets around the world,” with the United States targeted for a March release.  The MOTOROI offers a 3.7-inch WVGA display, 8.0-megapixel camera with 720p video capture and a Xenon flash, HDMI-out, multitouch (which I doubt will make it to the US version), and more.  

    Could the MOTOROI be the mythical “Motorola’s unique form factor smartphone” that is slated to hit AT&T in the “first half of 2010?”  The GSM side could certainly use a Motorola DROID counterpart.

    Via Engadget


  • GQ Magazine 25 Most Stylish Men Of 2010

    Johnny Depp leads GQ Magazine’s annual list of the 25 Most Stylish Men in the World. Robert Pattinson, David Beckham, and Jay-Z also earned honorable mentions from GQ editors in this year’s poll.


  • John Dillinger’s Ford Model A Auctioned at 39th Annual Barett-Jackson

    The 1930 Ford Model A used by the infamous gangster John Dillinger to escape the police and later driven by Johnny Depp in the Public Enemies blockbuster movie about the outlaw’s life, is being sold during the 39th Annual Barrett-Jackson Collector Car Auction in Scottsdale.

    If you’re a 1930s gangster enthusiast with a gangster’s wallet and you want the car, you’ll have to hurry, as the auction started yesterday.

    One of Dillinger’s greatest escapes happened in Wisconsin in 1934, and this Fo… (read more)

  • Meijer debuts new store format in Chicago market; Niles location to feature less square feet, greater emphasis on grocery

    Company Also Announces Plans To Build A Similar Store In Orland Park

    Innovation has been the key to Meijer’s success during the past 75 years, and it continues its focus on innovation with the opening of the company’s first smaller format, grocery-focused store in the Chicago suburb of Niles.

    The new Meijer in Niles, which opens after a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 6:30 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 19, is about half the size of most Meijer supercenters at 102,000 square feet.

    The store is grocery and pharmacy focused, while still providing some general merchandise offerings.

    The store is located at 9000 W. Golf Road, just east of I-294, and was built inside a formerly vacant retail facility. The Niles Meijer will be the 12th Meijer store in suburban Chicago.

    The population of Niles, Illinois includes a diverse mix of cultures including Asian, Hispanic and Eastern European and the new Niles Meijer will feature many grocery items geared toward the diverse community that surrounds it.

    “For several years, we have worked hard throughout the Midwest to offer specific grocery items that are relevant to the unique customer base in the communities we service,” said Meijer President Mark Murray.

    “The Niles community is represented by a variety of cultures, and we are thrilled to be able to serve such a diverse community.”

    Meijer is also announcing plans to expand this new concept in the Chicago area by building a second grocery-focused store in Orland Park, Illinois. The Orland Park Meijer will be located off 157th Street in the Village of Orland Park.

    Construction of the planned store will begin in the coming weeks and includes a full renovation of a currently vacant retail site. The opening of the Orland Park Meijer is currently planned for later this year and will create up to 150 new jobs inside the store.

    About Meijer

    Meijer is a Grand Rapids, Michigan, based retailer that operates 191 stores throughout Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky.

    As the inventor of the “one-stop shopping” concept, Meijer stores have evolved through the years to include expanded fresh produce and meat departments, as well as pharmacies, comprehensive electronics departments, garden centers and apparel offerings.

    Additional information on Meijer and the ability to shop for more can be found at meijer.com.


  • New York Times to Charge for Online Content — Finally

    After suffering years of doomsday headlines about plummeting advertising revenue and personnel cuts, the New York Times is reportedly near a decision to charge for access to its website. Currently, all content on NYTimes.com is free to read and watch. But the paper’s guardians are looking to boost online revenue by making readers pay — even if it means a fall-off in overall traffic and advertising. Gabriel Sherman has the report at New York Magazine’s Daily Intel blog:

    New York Times Chairman Arthur Sulzberger Jr. appears close to
    announcing that the paper will begin charging for access to its
    website, according to people familiar with internal deliberations.
    After a year of sometimes fraught debate inside the paper, the choice
    for some time has been between a Wall Street Journal-type pay wall and the metered system adopted by the Financial Times, in which readers can sample a certain number of free articles before being asked to subscribe. The Times seems to have settled on the metered system.

    This is the right choice. It’s also the only choice.

    I can understand that the Times wouldn’t want to adopt the Wall Street Journal model, which makes top stories free and puts deeper analysis behind a paywall. After all, that isn’t terribly different from the TimesSelect strategy it tried and abandoned last decade. TimesSelect made most news stories free, but built a wall around the stable of op-ed columnists — Friedman, Dowd, Krugman, etc — and longer stories. The paper later tore down the paywall in the hopes that a spike in traffic would boost advertising revenue. Traffic did spike, and ad revenue did jump, but not nearly enough. The paper lost $35 million in the third quarter of last year.

    The Financial Times model lets registered users read 10 articles a month. Past that, you have to pay for access. It’s a harsh model for readers seeking free news, but it’s been very successful for the FT.* I can see the NYT implementing a combination of FT’s “meter” model that also keeps some main stories free. In other words, the first iteration of the NYT’s strategy would be a soft blending of WSJ and FT models. Free lead stories would keep casual readers coming back, maintaining a solid baseline of online traffic. Meanwhile, the meter system would suck in dedicated Times readers, and their monthly subscription dollars.

    There’s a deeper story here. It’s nothing less than the slow death of advertising revenue. For the first time ever, the NYT is making more money from circulation than advertising. Next year, the FT expects content revenue — “cover price rises, online charging and corporate clients” — will eclipse ads. Worrying about traffic numbers and ad figures is important, but it’s becoming secondary. A newspaper like the New York Times — with a monstrous staff reporting stories, writing pieces, taking pictures, and designing original multimedia and graphics — cannot stand on a foundation of freeloading readership. The survival of the news business requires readers to (re-)learn that the news is a business that produces a product — that has a price.

    So of course in the short-term, the New York Times will lose traffic. That’s the trade-off. If your
    website is all free, you hope to raise readership and risk losing money. If you create a paywall, you hope to raise money and risk losing readership. The Times finds itself on a crumbling cliff these days and the only option is to jump and hope you hit land that isn’t crumbling as quickly. I wish them all the luck in the world.

    _______

    *There’s an ongoing debate about whether the FT and WSJ thrive with a paywall because (a) they offer financial information you can’t find in generalist publications like the Times and (b) accordingly, many of their clients are corporations who buy large subscriptions for their companies and are less sensitive than an individual web browser to minor changes in subscription fees.




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  • Ben-Gurion University’s wall-climbing robots scale defenses, haunt nightmares, stain faux-finishes (video)

    Ben-Gurion University's wall-climbing robots will scale your defenses, haunt your nightmares, stain your faux finish

    We’ve seen plenty of prototype mechanisms for autonomous dealies that can scale the straightest of walls, but never have we seen so many gathered together into what can only be called a festival of disconcerting feats of robotic ingenuity. One uses magnets, one has little claws, and one uses integrated hot glue guns that would leave you with no doubt that something sticky had been exploring your walls. They were all developed by a team of engineers working with Amir Shapiro at Ben-Gurion University in Israel, where he studies biomimetrics: technology that tries to do what animals do. Applications for all this? The Israeli military is apparently quite interested, a force that we will be working extra hard to stay within the good graces of from now on.

    Continue reading Ben-Gurion University’s wall-climbing robots scale defenses, haunt nightmares, stain faux-finishes (video)

    Ben-Gurion University’s wall-climbing robots scale defenses, haunt nightmares, stain faux-finishes (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 10:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Talkin’ Palm – Week ending 16 Jan 10

    The excitement is starting to build on the Verizon front regarding the availability of the Pre Plus and Pixi Plus on January 25.  Above is the full page ad that appeared in Friday’s Wall Street Journal, which we think may offer a hint about what sort of ad campaign Verizon and Palm are planning.

    If you’re looking to go Pre or Pixi on Verizon, the big story at the end of the week was the new pricing for Verizon’s Data Plan.  Our own Derek did a post on what the tweak means for Pre and Pixi lovers.

    So what else happened in the world of Palm?

    read more

  • Shell, Petronas Ink Mammoth Deal For 1.8 Million Barrel-Per-Day Iraqi Oil Field

    AP Iraq Oil Deal

    Oil giant Shell and Malaysia’s Petronas oil company finalized a deal on Sunday to develop Iraq’s Majnoon oil field, the BBC reports.

    Currently, the field produces just 46,000 barrels per day, but Shell and Petronas are pledging to increase that output to 1.8 millions barrels per day.

    The terms of the deal give Royal Dutch Shell a 60% share, with Petronas owning the remaining 40%.

    The joint-venture, which includes a 20-year service contract, will give the firms a fee of $1.39 per barrel of oil.

    Iraq’s total daily output is roughly 2.4 million barrels, but it aims to triple that figure over the next few years.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Top five things to look forward to before spring springs

    It’s a dead time of year in MMA, one with no major fights from the weekend behind us and no major fights in the weekend in front of us. Still, that doesn’t mean we don’t have plenty to get excited about in the remainder of winter.

    5. The UFC in Australia: Seeing how MMA is received in a new part of the world is always an interesting proposition. Will Aussies embrace our sport? Beyond that, the headliner of Cain Velasquez vs. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira will be a barnburner, and Michael Bisping vs. Wanderlei Silva will show how comfortable Silva is at middleweight. We’ll find out the answers to all these questions on Feb. 21.

    4. Matt Serra vs. Frank Trigg at UFC 109: Yes, they’re both over 35 and coming off of losses, and the fight won’t mean much in the welterweight championship picture. But they’ve also been trash-talking since the moment their fight was announced, and they’ll make this fight fun part of the geriatric fight card.

    3. The UFC debut of Phil Davis: When Davis was wrestling at Penn St., he was always one of the most exciting to watch, even at 197 lbs., a weight class that quite often produces boring matches. Since winning a national championship and graduating, Davis has gone 4-0 in MMA and only one of those fights went made its way out of the first round. He is on the undercard of UFC 109.

    2. The U.S. debut of Marius Zaromskis: You want headkicks? Zaromskis has headkicks. He’ll bring his headkicking ability to Strikeforce on Jan. 30, facing Nick Diaz for the vacant welterweight belt. 

    1. The return of Miguel Torres: Before losing to Brian Bowles in August of 2009, Torres had only one loss in his career, and that loss had been avenged. Now, we get to see Torres in a position he hasn’t been in for quite a while: the challenger. He starts his climb back to a shot at the belt on Mar. 6 at WEC 47. 

    What are you excited about in the coming months? (Note: I didn’t include anything from the UFC on Versus card because it is on Mar. 21, and the first day of spring in Mar. 20.)

  • Now Pfizer & Teva Are (Reportedly) Bidding Against Each Other

    Pill BottleWe’ve been writing for a while now about the narrowing gap between generics companies and big pharma.

    The latest sign comes from the German business paper Handelsblatt, which reports that Pfizer and Teva are the key final bidders for Ratiopharm, the German generics shop. (Here’s Reuters’s English report on the Handelsblatt story.)

    Both would-be buyers are emblematic of the shifting landscape. Pfizer, the world’s biggest pharma company, is facing the expiration of the patent on Lipitor, the biggest selling drug of all time. The company has been moving away from the blockbuster-drug model and towards a more diversified business that includes a growing generics unit. Teva, the world’s biggest generics company, gets about 30% of its revenues from branded drugs, and has a market cap of more than $50 billion (higher than Eli Lilly’s) and ambitious growth plans.

    Several groups made first-round bids for Ratiopharm late last year, with offers around 2.5 billion euros, Dow Jones Newswires reported.

    Last week, DJ Newswires said Pfizer, Teva, the Swedish private equity firm EQT and Iceland’s Actavis Group were all in the running as possible second-round bidders. Handelsblatt also mentions EQT, but suggests that it’s likely to be outbid by Pfizer or Teva. Final offers could be in the range of 2.8 billion to 3 billion euros, the paper reports.

    Photo: iStockphoto


  • What Happened When I Gave Away Films On Mininova

    Mininova received a serious blow last year when it had to remove thousands of torrents from its database. But one apparent loss can quickly turn into another’s gain.

    This is a guest post by FreakBits reader Benjamin Arntzen . If you’d like your file-sharing, copyright or piracy related article to appear on FreakBits, please email it to us at [email protected].

    As someone growing up in the so-called Napster Generation, I have always had an interest in peer-to-peer and the way that the Internet has fundamentally changed many things, both in music and cinema.

    As BitTorrent matured, I was able to witness its advantages over other P2P technologies and indeed experience them. Often, today’s generation is described as having no respect for the value of content, having gotten everything for free for their whole lives.

    As someone who is part of that, my experience indicates that has not held true: the respect is still there, fueled by a fascination for content and media that is unprecedented.

    Respect no longer comes solely in the simple form of money, as music, movies, and other videos are passed along between friends and strangers. Nearly every piece of music and video created is available in some form on the Internet, free and easily accessible, and the connections between creators and consumers are getting stronger.

    Respect for content now comes in many forms; as fans constantly reupload songs and videos to video sites such as YouTube, rebelling against the publishers and copyright owners, remixing and re-releasing content in new forms, and participating in a sort of creative anarchy. BitTorrent sites are thriving as people use them to discover more and more media, fueled by trends like tagging and social networking.

    Perhaps most importantly however, most of the people involved in these activities aren’t doing it out of hate or malice. Their actions are, in nearly all cases, based on a love for the content that they possess, and a will to share it with other people and build reputation for the creators, artists and content itself. The money element is still very much involved, too. Concert tickets are still a sought-after item, and despite the availability of nearly all purchasable content at no cost, music and video sales are still alive. If the sky is falling, there are no signs that make it apparent.

    One of the major changes in this new paradigm is perhaps one of the most interesting: the middleman is dead. The music industry’s “Big Four” (Sony Music Entertainment, EMI, Universal Music Group, and Warner Music Group) and the movie industry’s equivalents aren’t going anywhere soon, but as artists begin to create and share outside of contractual obligations and restrictions, the major media companies are getting less and less powerful.

    I believe that success in media of various forms won’t necessarily be measured solely in terms of profit in the future. Creative Commons and similar projects are allowing artists to grant permissions to their fans in an easy, uncomplicated manner, and combined with BitTorrent and other web/P2P technologies, helping to remove the boundaries of distribution. Success will be measured by what consumers do with a creator’s content, and the way they support it.

    Nine Inch Nails have shown that success outside of the labels is possible, although most of their popularity stems from their label days. Perhaps more realistic examples are webcomics like xkcd and Penny Arcade and artists like Jonathan Coulton and Brad Sucks. They are shining, if rare, examples of what can happen with a dedicated fan-base.

    Self-sufficiency is the dream of most independent content creators. Various methods of achieving such a goal, with varied success, are being tried and tested at this very moment. Most people, even within the “Napster Generation” are still very much willing to pay for quality content – despite no longer being forced to. Over the last year, I’ve probably spent more than $160 on various bits of Creative Commons music, and $40 or so on label-music, bought second-hand. All of it was content I already had – but the satisfaction and nostalgia of buying music and video, whether physical or digital, remains regardless.

    The general consensus among my friends is simple: if content can be purchased at an affordable price, even if it’s available for free, most of them will do so if they have the ability.

    Within film, the situation is a little different and far more experimental: viable ways of making money in the file-sharing reality are still being sought after. In the meantime, the barriers to both creation and distribution are being lowered, allowing more ambitious projects and drawing in talent that may not have been reachable before. At the same time, some argue, mediocrity is given a chance to thrive, but people will put their passion and support behind the content that they love. Essentially, consumers are becoming the ones who decide what content is worth, both in terms of money and in terms of reputation, rather than a company deciding what will make them money. Those who love content will open their wallets or their Internet connection in the pursuit of supporting or promoting it.

    This is mainly what I’m known for today – the pursuit of promoting content. In July of last year, I wanted to share some Creative Commons content with friends, but existing links and downloads for it were either too slow or not packaged in a coherent way, so I decided to remedy this. I simply downloaded the content, renamed some files, added some information and changed it into the format that made sense to me, then released it on The Pirate Bay and Mininova. The main interest in the downloads came from my friends, as that was the original purpose of the releases. I decided to package xkcd comics in a similar fashion and released those, which brought interest to the other torrents.

    At the time, Mininova was one of the largest sites on the Internet, and I decided that their Content Distribution service would make releasing things easier, so I applied, using my existing torrents as a reference. Within a couple of days I had a second Mininova account with no CD access, after being accepted for the program. A quick conversation with Erik Dubbelboer later, I had a working account and re-released the existing torrents under Mininova’s CD service. Mininova CD was at the time a way of giving privilege to legal content, such as that offered under Creative Commons licenses, and as a result any torrents I posted would be put at the top of the front page for about a day, in the Featured Torrents category. I established a simple rule for content I posted: If I liked it a lot and was legally able to, I would publish it.

    Most of the content I posted at first came from sites like FrostClick, through which I discovered some of the most played music in my collection. It is also how I discovered the #2wkfilm project (aka two week film challenge – shoot, edit, finish a feature length movie in a two week window) and got dragged kicking and screaming into the strange world of Twitter. As the preferred method of communication for #2wkfilm participants was Twitter, I used it to contact them and discuss the torrents and films. I also used it to mention newly uploaded torrents, so that people who particularly liked my releases could easily stay up to date with what I published, either through Twitter or RSS.

    Soon after republishing the old torrents, I contacted one of the artists, Adam McHeffey, and told him about the download count which was at the time about 250. As a thanks, he sent me two pressed CDs of the album and a personal note. The album was at the time only available as a set of highly compressed MP3s, so I ripped the CD into lossless files and made multiple releases in various formats which all got a similar reception on Mininova, quickly bringing the count to 1000. I also helped him set up LetsKickFire.com, which has served as the home of the album since, as well as, occasionally, a blog. By the end of the year it had been downloaded just over 11,000 times.

    Since what I was doing didn’t cost me anything but small amounts of time and effort, and it was making people happy, I sought out more Creative Commons content. This is how I discovered the Intercontinental Music Lab, right after they had released their third album. I released all three albums in four formats simultaneously on Mininova, gathering a decent number of downloads in a couple of weeks, but (at the time) more importantly allowing the albums to be downloaded and shared in a coherent, easy manner, rather than as single files or large slow downloads. Eventually things got to a stage where seeking content has been much easier and some content creators would even contact me when they wanted to put out some large content. As of Oct 1st there was 25,000 downloads, and by the end of things, everything was sitting at around 750 downloads, and there was a total of 36,000 downloads.

    Towards the end of November, Mininova deleted all non-Content Distribution torrents from their servers in order to comply with a court order. Whilst the traffic to the site dropped significantly, the demand for the remaining content went way up, as seen in this picture, taken on December 1st during the aftermath. Downloads have remained at a constant 4000-per-day average, and on December 8th total downloads had reached 100,000. As a result, interest in the #2wkfilm projects, as well as the music of Adam McHeffey, the Intercontinental Music Lab and nearly everything on my Mininova account increased significantly. Total downloads for the IML have recently broken 100,000 and the total downloads for the #2wkfilm projects on Mininova recently reached 25,000.

    The overall impact of my actions as a simple fan of content has been much larger than I expected. I would love to say that I am responsible for the content creators being rich and prosperous, but this is not the case, mainly because most of the content was not originally intended to be a way of making money, so there was not much information within the releases about where to purchase merchandise or donate money. My personal goals for my actions were simple: to spread the word about content I loved and wanted to share with others, as well as gain exposure for those who I believed deserved it. In both of those respects, in my opinion, I’ve been successful.

    As of 11:25am PST on December 31st, 2009, content I’d published had been responsible for a total of over 59,685 gigabytes of Internet traffic, nearly 60 terabytes. This bandwidth has mainly been provided by the people who downloaded the content and cared enough about it to contribute to the distribution of it, as well as Mininova Content Distribution’s “seedbox” servers. The phrase “ZORLiN-CC” on Google now returns 37,200 Google results, and the torrents I created ended up on hundreds of different torrent sites and mirrors. The power that fans have to influence the popularity of content that they like is real, and will change the way things are both created and distributed, and the way profit is made on content. There is no longer a monopoly on distribution, and for better or worse, there is no longer control over the free availability of content.

    The old business model will continue to exist and be profitable for at least the next 4-5 years, but today, consumers and creators alike are working together to carve out a new one.

    Welcome to the new creative age.

    Benjamin Arntzen is a self-proclaimed expert in digital culture who distributes content via BitTorrent. You can visit his profile on Mininova here.

    Article from: FreakBits

  • Sevilla | Recuperación Expo92

    Abro este hilo para hablar sobre la recuperación que se está llevando a cabo desde hace unos meses del antiguo recinto donde se celebró la exposición internacional de Sevilla en 1992. Después de muchos años de abandono, la aparición del parque tecnológico Cartuja93 y del parque temático Isla Mágica consiguieron devolver la vida a la zona pero faltaba lo más importante, reurbanizar aquella zona y ponerla presentable de cara a los ciudadanos y a los foráneos. Después de casi 20 años, por fin se está llevando a cabo un proceso de urbanización de calles, parques y recuperación de edificios emblemáticos de aquel grandioso acontecimiento.

    Quote:

    Cartuja 93 invertirá 1,6 millones en la rehabilitación del Pabellón de la UE

    El actual estado de abandono del que fue pabellón de la Unión Europea durante la Expo del 92 tiene los días contados. Tras no pocas vicisitudes y después de que quedara en la cuneta el proyecto puesto en marcha por la Asociación de la Prensa a finales de la década de los noventa para convertirlo en Centro de Prensa, el pabellón fue cedido por el Pleno del Ayuntamiento de Sevilla a Cartuja 93 el pasado mes de octubre. A pesar del escaso tiempo transcurrido desde entonces, la entidad que preside Isaías Pérez Saldaña asegura a ABC que en breve procederá a sacar a concurso público las obras de rehabilitación del inmueble previas a los trabajos para convertirlo en un centro de interpretación del parque tecnológico.
    La recuperación de este simbólico edificio de la Expo por parte de Cartuja 93 empezó a fraguarse a mediados de 2008. El mal estado de conservación del inmueble, abandonado desde la clausura de la muestra, en octubre de 1992, hacía necesario antes que nada un proyecto de rehabilitación. Cartuja 93 encargó el proyecto a los arquitectos José Ramón Ruiz de Terry y Fernando Piñar Parias y, además, destinó en sus presupuestos una partida de 1.600.000 euros para acometer los trabajos.
    El edificio, señala José Ramón Ruiz de Terry, uno de los arquitectos autores del proyecto de rehabilitación, está estructuralmente en buen estado a pesar de ser un inmueble construido para ser efímero y para soportar unas condiciones climatólogicas, entre abril y octubre, que nada tienen que ver con la época de lluvias y frío que ha soportado en estos casi 18 años.
    Esa buena impresión de la estructura del edificio se viene abajo sin embargo cuando se hace una visita a su interior. El pabellón -un inmueble subterráneo del que surge una estructura cónica de 50 metros de altura, flanqueada por otras doce torres- ha sido objeto de todo tipo de expolios y daños y poco queda de sus instalaciones.
    El objetivo del proyecto de rehabilitación, destaca Ruiz de Terry, es adecuarlo para que Cartuja 93 pueda darle el uso que la entidad decida -un centro de interpretación- y eso implica de momento dotarlo de todo tipo de instalaciones adaptadas a la normativa, y crear un espacio y una infraestructura básica que se pueda adaptar a las futuras necesidades. Así se le dotará de nuevas instalaciones de agua, luz, sistema de protección contra incendios, preinstalación de aire acondicionado, pero también se levantará todo el suelo, muy afectado por la inundación de los sótanos, que han llegado a tener dos cuartas de agua.
    Además, el proyecto hará su propia aportación al conjunto del pabellón y la plaza de Europa: perforará la plaza superior para que la luz natural llegue a los sótanos. La razón, explica Ruiz de Terry, es que esos sótanos se diseñaron para acoger una exposición basada ante todo en elementos audiovisuales y la idea que Cartuja 93 plantea para ese espacio es darle un expositivo y administrativo y esos usos necesitan de una mayor claridad.
    En principio, se estima que la rehabilitación del pabellón necesitará unos ocho meses de obra. Ese plazo empezará a correr una vez que Cartuja 93 adjudique el proyecto y obtenga la licencia de obras, algo que se espera se produzca en breve.
    El presupuesto para esta obra de rehabilitación es de 1,6 millones de euros a la que luego habrá que sumar el coste de la adecuación del pabellón a su uso como centro de interpretación del parque tecnológico.

    http://www.abcdesevilla.es/20100119/…-20100119.html



    Esperemos que esto se lleva a cabo y Sevilla vuelva a recuperar este edificio tan emblemático, dios muero por volver a verlo iluminado por las noches…

    Interior del edificio:

  • Boeing to Bid on International Space Station Cargo Contract

    The Boeing Company [NYSE: BA] today announced it will draw on its human spaceflight experience, as well as its knowledge of International Space Station (ISS) operations and cargo processing, to bid on NASA’s ISS Cargo Mission Contract.

    NASA released a Request For Proposals on Jan. 15 for a contract to provide technical support services including the analysis and physical processing of pressurized cargo and flight crew equipment to be transported to and from the ISS.

    The contract also covers launch preparations and post-landing activities related to processing the flight crew equipment.

    “Boeing’s experience with the International Space Station program allows us to provide an offer that supports NASA’s priorities for safety, mission success, and innovation,” said Brad Cothran, Boeing’s capture team lead for the contract. “We look forward to continuing our support of NASA and the future of the International Space Station.

    The ISS is an important international asset as both a research laboratory and test bed for living and working in space.”

    Boeing is the prime contractor to NASA for the ISS. In addition to designing and building all the major U.S. elements, Boeing also is responsible for ensuring the successful integration of any new hardware and software — including components from international partners — as well as for providing sustaining engineering work for the ISS.

    The services and support Boeing provides under its Checkout, Assembly, and Payload Processing Services contract include planning for and receiving payloads, maintaining associated ground support systems, integrating payloads with the space shuttle, launch support, and space shuttle post-landing payload activities.

    Proposals are due to NASA on April 1. NASA is scheduled to select a contractor at the end of September; work will begin in January 2011. The performance period for the contract is three years with four one-year options, for a potential total of seven years.

    About Boeing Defense, Space & Security

    A unit of The Boeing Company, Boeing Defense, Space & Security is one of the world’s largest defense, space and security businesses specializing in innovative and capabilities-driven customer solutions, and the world’s largest and most versatile manufacturer of military aircraft.

    Headquartered in St. Louis, Boeing Defense, Space & Security is a $32 billion business with 70,000 employees worldwide.

    MEDIA CONTACT:

    Adam Morgan, 281-226-4030
    Space Exploration
    [email protected]

    Ed Memi, 281-226-4029
    Space Exploration
    [email protected]


  • IkaSystems Gets Capital Infusions from Essex Woodlands Health Ventures and Providence Equity Partners

    ikaSystems logo
    Ryan McBride wrote:

    IkaSystems, a Southborough, MA-based provider of software for the healthcare payer market, said it has finalized an investment from New York City and Palo Alto, CA, private equity fund Essex Woodlands Health Ventures, a month after reeling in capital from Providence Equity Partners. The terms of both deals were undisclosed, but Venture Wire reports that Providence and Essex Woodlands pumped a total of $120 million into the company.

    Last month the firm revealed that Eran Broshy, an advisor to Providence, RI-based Providence Equity Partners, had become chairman of the software firm. Peter O. Wilde and Jesse Du Bey of Providence have also joined the board of directors. Steve Wiggins, a managing director of Essex Woodlands, who is managing that firm’s interest in ikaSystems, was an existing board member at the company and invested in ikaSystems before he joined Essex Woodlands in 2007.

    The back-to-back investments from deep-pocketed private equity players should boost the profile of ikaSystems, which has already garnered awards from analysts for its Web-based software called “ikaEnterprise.” The software helps healthcare payers automate the payment lifecycle for all categories of health plans, including individual plans, employer plans, Medicare, and Medicaid. Ravi Ika, the founder and CEO of the company, launched the firm in 1999 believing that legacy systems lacked the flexibility to enable health plans to adapt to changes in the healthcare industry, according to the company’s website.

    The company’s backers seem to share that philosophy. “They are exceptionally well positioned to benefit from health insurance reform,” said Wiggins, in a statement. “I believe they have the best people, the best software and the best strategy for responding to changes in the healthcare industry.”

    Essex Woodlands manages $2.5 billion in commitments and Providence has $22 billion in commitments.







  • Artificial Leaf Nano Structures for Hydrogen Production

    I’ve talked before about researchers at the University of Rochester in New York using artificial photosynthesis to create hydrogen. Now, researchers in China at the Shanghai Jiao Tong University are taking a slightly different tactic to produce hydrogen by developing artificial leaves.

    For several years now other scientists have been using sunlight through solar panels to generate electricity, split water via electrolysis and create hydrogen. But, the Shanghai Jiao Tong University researchers have decided to go nano scale and try to mimic the structure of a plant leaf, which in nature is very adept at using sunlight to split water into hydrogen.

    According to New Scientist, “Then they dried the leaves and heated them to 500 °C to burn away most of the remaining plant material. This left a crystallised titanium dioxide framework plus many of the leaves’ natural structures. Titanium dioxide is commonly used in solar cells to enhance their efficiency, and in the leaf it catalyses the splitting of water molecules.

    “The leaf retained features such as the lens-like cells at its surface, which catch light coming from any angle, and veins that help guide light deeper into the leaf. The replicas also captured very fine detail, including structures called thykaloids, which increase the surface area available for photosynthesis and are just 10 nanometres thick.”

    The scientists found that leaves are twice as efficient as titanium dioxide that one can buy commercially at splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen. By mimicking this structure in leaves and materials, the researchers believe they can also create a very efficient method of producing hydrogen.