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  • The Ultimate Cell Phone Plan Comparison

    Last week, Verizon instituted new pricing plans that discounted its voice plans. Its biggest rival, AT&T, then came out its own cheaper voice offers. The two were simply matching what Sprint and T-Mobile USA have already been selling — cheap voice.

    It’s becoming virtually impossible for an average consumer to keep track of all the various deals on offer. Thankfully, a Good Samaritan from BillShrink has put together a graphical overview of all the cell phone plans. Check it out, especially if you’re in the market for a new cell phone service or want to switch carriers.

  • Climate science on thin ice by Cameron Stewart, Associate editor The Australian

    Article Tags: Himalayan Glacier Data

    THE prediction, if true, was an apocalyptic one. The “rapid melting” of thousands of glaciers across the Himalayas would lead to deadly floods, followed by severe long-term water shortages across the food bowl of central Asia.

    The melting glaciers would cause havoc to water supplies feeding Asia’s nine largest rivers, including the Ganges, Mekong, Yangtze and Yellow rivers, affecting hundreds of millions of people.

    The result, according to a 2005 report by environmental group WWF, would be “massive eco and environmental problems for people in western China, Nepal and northern India”.

    The WWF’s claim the 2400km Himalayan range was experiencing a rapid retreat in its glaciers was supported in stronger terms only two years later by the peak UN body on climate change, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

    In its 2007 report, the IPCC concluded: “Glaciers in the Himalaya are receding faster than any other part of the world and, if the present rate continues, the likelihood of them disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high if the earth keeps warming at the current rate.”

    Source: theaustralian.com.au

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  • Samsung Announces Ultraportable TL110 Digital Camera with 14.2 Megapixels

    samsung 300x218 Samsung Announces Ultraportable TL110 Digital Camera with 14.2 MegapixelsSamsung has announced the new TL110 with 14.2 megapixels, 2.7 inch LCD, 5x optical zoom and it is only 0.65 inches thin. Its super portable and the perfect compliment to any party dress as it comes in the colors orange, blue, black, and silver. Samsung’s TL110 features an improved 27mm wide-angle lens which is paired with Dual Image Stabilization (IS) to help reduce image blur by combining both Optical and Digital Image stabilizers to produce sharp images. New special effects include Fisheye and Lomo and HD video recording at a resolution of 720p / 30fps which is also an impressive addition. Expected availability of the Samsung TL110 will be in February however, pricing is TBD.

  • Lille, France`s Unknown Little Gem!

    Here are a few pics I took in Lille over xmas, Lille is such a great city. I would say one of the best cities i`v been too. It`s full of restaurants, bars and shit loads of retail! If you ever go to France you should deffo think about going to Lille. Lille is twinned with Leeds, but is a far more beautiful city then Leeds will ever be.

    [/QUOTE]

  • Blancpain’s passion for watches takes new shape for Valentine’s day 2010

    Blancpain's Valentine's 2010 edition watch has a   mother-of-pearl dial and is set with ov...

    Swiss luxury watchmaker Blancpain has continued its annual tradition of celebrating the most romantic day of the year with a new design set for release on February 14th 2010. This speciality timepiece combines an sinuously-contoured silhouette created by a glittering border of over 500 precious stones. A heart is set into the dial fashioned in white and pink mother-of-pearl and echoed in pink sapphires and diamonds encircling the dial. A heart-shaped diamond appears at 12 o’clock, while the pin buckle is set with a pear-shaped pink sapphire. The straps are satin, and only 14 of these extraordinary limited edition ensembles will be created – the price is unknown, but rest assured, it will represent a whole lotta love!..

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  • Media Gadget Showcase – Rothgar’s MythTV Setup

    It’s time for the first of 2010’s GeekTonic Media Gadget Showcase Series.  Today Rothgar shares with us his experience with HTPCs – in particular his current MythTV HTPC setup. 

    NOTE:  This is a guest post by Rothgar.  To read more about how to submit your photos and/or write-ups for the GeekTonic Media Gadget Showcase Series, read this.  Basic guidelines for writing and submitting a guest post at GeekTonic can be found here.

     

    Let me start with the specs of my media setup.

    Equipment
    TV: Samsung 43" DLP HLN4365WX
    Receiver: Sony STR-K670P
    Storage: HP MediaSmart Server ex485 (2.75 TB)
    Remote: Harmony 550
    Gaming: 40 GB PS3

    This is what the system originally looked like in 2005. I know it isn’t much but I started piecing this together while a senior in college on a limited budget.

    mmmmm...TV
    I bought the TV and receiver in 2005 with left over student loan money. My wife agreed that I could have $2,000 to buy everything needed for our home entertainment. At the time that included the TV, receiver, NTSC set top box, speakers, TV stand, speaker stands, and any other misc stuff I needed for the setup. That is not a lot of money, especially for 2005 when HDTV was still really new, but using eBay and some fancy sales I got everything I needed, even was a little under budget. My original plans was just for OTA HD but in just a few years I have gone way beyond that.

    My HTPC path has included many different machines and I’ve tried a lot of software suites (both Windows and Linux). Most of my previous HTPC’s were built using free/retired computers from work which meant they were always kinda slow. I started using MythTV back in 2006 and keep coming back because of the cost (free), hardware support, and features. You can see some of my HTPC history here as well as a couple other blog posts.

    But I didn’t want to dwell on my history with HTPC’s.  Here is my current machine setup:

    Currently the system looks a little bit different and looks like the picture below.

     

    PIPs

     

    mythtv 

    Current HTPC Setup Specs:

    HTPC
    Case: Silverstone LC13-B
    Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3P
    Processor:  Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 Wolfdale 3.0GHz
    Ram: 24 GB DDR2
    Video Card:  Nvidia 9500 GT 512 MB PCIe (fanless)
    Hard drive(s): 160 GB system drive, 250 GB media drive
    Capture card(s): 1 SiliconDust HDHomeRun Dual Digital HDTV Tuner, 1 HD-PVR, Hauppauge HVR-1600
    Remote: Windows MCE receiver
    Other: Battery backup, Motorola DCH-3200 STB

     
    Operating System: Mythbuntu 9.10 x64, Windows 7 Ultimate x64 (but I have only booted into it once).
    Software: Mythbuntu 8.10 with MythTV 0.22 (Planned to include XBMC, Boxee?, and Hulu Desktop)

    networking

    The whole HTPC probably cost me about $900-1000 including tuners which has made this build really more of a budget build than anything. Most of the items came from selling/trading things or gifts for Christmas or birthdays.
    Currently my HTPC is plugged directly into my TV using DVI with my HDHomerun and HD-PVR plugged directly in with ethernet and USB. The HD-PVR is plugged into a Motorola DCT3200 cable box and channel changes are done via firewire and the Mythchanger software. Recorded TV is stored on my 250 Gb hard drive and archived TV and other media is stored on my HP MediaSmart server. The MediaSmart server is mapped to ~/Music, ~/Pictures, ~/TV, ~/Movies, and ~/Videos which allows me to easily access any of the stored media.

    As for software, I am using the standard MythTV 0.22-fixes frontend installed with Mythbuntu 9.10 because it was the easiest and fastest way to get up and running. When the main TV is being used I also use my laptop as a remote frontend which allows me to watch live TV and recordings anywhere I have wireless access. I plan on moving over to MythBox once XBMC 9.11 officially comes out. I also hope to switch between XBMC and Boxee/Hulu Desktop just for more features if I ever decide I want them. Or there are a couple of plugins in development that might make these programs unnecessary.
    Right now the setup is great. Commercial flagging was as simple as checking a box, and adding and managing 5 tuners is much easier than I expected it to be.

    xbmc movies

    I look forward to the next release of MythTV 0.23 in Q1 2010 and hope that Nvidia continues to improve their VDPAU drivers. Right now I will just continue supporting the best open source media center software and look forward to new releases. Follow my how-to’s and reviews on my blog, my daily adventures on Twitter, or my Linux talks on the mintCast podcast I co-host.

     

    receivers 

    tv with art

    About the Author:  Rothgar first got into media gadgets with the KISS DP-600 DVD player which could stream DivX from a file server. From then on I was hooked on media gadgets and all things home theater. I really got into Xbox hacking with Xbox Media Player (now known as XBMC) and have modded more Xbox’s than I can count. As the hardware started to show it’s age, and the growing desire to be able to record live TV I made the natural jump to HTPC’s. I started with MythTV, GotAllMedia, Media Portal, XP WMC, and tons of other software. I always stayed on the free side of things because I was putting myself through college and dirt poor. Hardware specs were also very important to me because I always was building systems on second hand hardware. While I am now out of college, and currently working full time for the university I graduated from, I still like to keep my expenses modest and almost every HTPC and tuner I have used has been a gift or from selling a previous HTPC system.
    The cost to feature ratio has always kept me coming back to MythTV (the hardware requirements and flexibility help) and that has opened up a whole new world of computing. I currently co-host the official
    Linux Mint podcast and frequently talk about Linux and HTPC’s on my blog, twitter, and youtube.


  • Climate Cools But Arctic Ice Scares Continue by Dr. Tim Ball, Canada Free Press

    Article Tags: Tim Ball

    My badge of honor is an attack by Phil Jones, disgraced and displaced Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) whose leaked emails showed how they falsified climate science. On May 22, 2009 Jones wrote to Mann, “Our web server has found this piece of garbage – so wrong it is unbelievable that Tim Ball wrote a decent paper in Climate Since AD 1500. I sometimes wish I’d never said this about the land stations in an email. Referring to Alex von Storch just shows how up to date he is.” The article in CanadaFreePress was one of eleven in a series written before the CRU exposé. The first two were written with Tom Harris, the rest are mine.

    They’re a history of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and indirectly control by the CRU gang.

    “Climate Since AD 1500” is a collection of articles edited by Jones and Bradley (J&B) published by Routledge in 1992. My chapter is titled, “Historical and instrumental evidence of climate: western Hudson Bay, Canada, 1714 ‚—1850”. Articles show the degree to which climate changes in short periods. Despite this J&B are already setting the focus on human causes. In a summary they claim two positions emerge from the evidence, but both “perspectives provide fuel for arguments over the veracity of anthropogenic greenhouse-gas-induced climatic change.” They argue, “To resolve this controversy, further modeling and paleoclimate studies are needed” (page 674). Their summary, analysis, and recommendation are distortions of the evidence.

    A.E.J. Ogilvie’s article examined climate change in Iceland from AD 1500 to 1800. It notes, “Iceland’s position within the range of the Arctic drift ice is also of major importance to the country’s climate.” Modern data defines “normal” when the drift ice spreading from Greenland is 90 to 150 kilometers from the northwest coast, “mild” when it is 200 to 240 kms. Severe is closer than 90 kms.

    Click source to read FULL report by Dr. Tim Ball

    Source: canadafreepress.com

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  • Perspectiva Fotografia

    Não existe nenhum Photoshop usado aqui. Isso e somente uma técnica chamada de perspectiva fotográfica Usada para manipular a percepção humana, essa técnica manipula a distância dos objetos fazendo-os parecer maiores, menores, próximos ou a uma distância maior do que a que eles realmente estão. Na verdade tudo que você precisa e de criatividade.

    Leia mais: http://www.patiinhu.com/2010/01/pers…#ixzz0d29urBMY

  • CDG’s LaForge Joins AirHop’s Advisory Board

    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    San Diego’s AirHop Communications, a 2007 startup that specializes in SON, or self-organizing networking technology, says CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) industry leader Perry LaForge joined AirHop’s advisory board. LaForge is founder and executive director of CDG, the Costa Mesa, CA-based CDMA Development Group, a trade association comprised of more than 100 of the world’s leading wireless operators and manufacturers. As I reported in November, AirHop’s technology is intended to simplify and coordinate the operation of 4G wireless networks while minimizing radio interference and maximizing mobile data rates.







  • DIY Lady Gaga Glasses Make You Look as Ridiculous (and Blind) as She [Hacks]

    At least with those Kanye West Venetian blind glasses, you could kinda see. These things are just two screens on your face, blocking your entire field of vision. Get ready to run into walls, just like Lady Gaga probably does.

    DIY Lady GaGa Video Glasses from Angela M. Sheehan on Vimeo.

    So this hack is pretty much just two small digital picture frames (like those ones you find on a keychain at your local CVS) stuck into the eye-holes of a pair of big sunglasses. You put the word “POP” or whatever on each screen, take off your pants, and presto! You’re Lady Gaga. Now you just have to hope that people remember who she is by the time Halloween 2010 rolls around. [Instructables via Engadget]







  • Climategate Scandal Deals Blow to Global Warming Fears by Sterling Burnett, Heartland Institute

    Article Tags: ClimateGate, Sterling Burnett

    A series of e-mails between scientists who serve as gatekeepers for the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change leaked from the University of East Anglia Climate Research Unit has caused a firestorm of controversy that has yet to die down several months after the news first broke.

    Smoking-Gun Emails

    The incident, which has come to be known as “Climategate,” revealed longstanding efforts to manipulate, hide, and destroy scientific data that cast doubt on global warming alarmism. The late-November document leak also exposed pernicious tactics used to strong-arm the peer-review publishing process in order to keep skeptical scientists from publishing their findings.

    Evidence of data tampering includes an email from Climatic Research Unit (CRU) head Phil Jones to fellow global warming alarmists reporting he had “just completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps … to hide the decline.”

    Source: heartland.org

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  • The rise and rise of Mobile Application Stores

    Source: Gartner

    The appstore model pioneered by Apple will unquestionably become the predominant model for mobile phone users, with remarkable growth prospects in the next few years. Mobile application downloads will exceed 4.5 billion this year, growing to 21.6 billion downloads by 2013. Consumers will spend US$6.2 billion this year in mobile application stores, growing to US$29 billion three years from now. Free applications will continue to account for an ever greater share, growing from 82 per cent of all downloads in 2010, to 87 per cent of downloads by 2013. This year alone, advertising revenue is expected to generate US$600 million worldwide. ..

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  • Rebtel Buying a Part of Talkster

    Rebtel, the Stockholm, Sweden-based VoIP service provider, is buying Free World Dialing, a division of Toronto-based VoIP service provider, Talkster for an undisclosed amount. As part of the agreement, Rebtel will carry all of Talkster’s international traffic over its network. Late last year, Rebtel acquired Gorilla Mobile to expand is business to Asia. The company had switched to a white-label model in 2008 and since then has been trying to find steady growth.

    The company says it has more than 4 million registered customers worldwide, and is adding more than 100,000 new users each month. It has $20 million in sales in 2009 up 75 percent vs. 2008. Rebtel expects to grow at a similar rate in 2010, the company said.

  • Climategate: The Truth Hurts When It Hits You in the Head by Dexter Wright, AmericanThinker.com

    Article Tags: Dexter Wright

    The joke on the internet these days is “What do Tiger Woods and Phil Jones of East Anglia University in Britain have in common? They both got hit in the head by a model.”

    In 2007, Professors David Douglass, John Christy, Benjamin Pearson, and Fred Singer wrote a scientific paper in the International Journal of Climatology, which compared Global Climate Models (GCMs) with real observed data. GCMs were theoretically designed to forecast how greenhouse gases (GHGs) are warming the planet.

    There are certain rules that must be followed in scientific investigations in order to ensure that the results and conclusions are not erroneous. Basically, the process requires an investigator to operate under multiple hypotheses so that he is not blinded to facts that might contradict one of his hypotheses and leave him with a dead end. An investigator should start by working from the known to the unknown, from the simple to the complex, and always bend the theory to fit the facts — not the other way around. This is exactly how the four scholars led by Professor Douglass conducted their investigation into the accuracy of the GCMs.

    Click source to read FULL report by Dexter Wright

    Source: americanthinker.com

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  • PollDaddy Hits 1 Billion Page Views a Month, Major Updates Coming Soon

    According to WordPress founder Matt Mullenweg, poll/survey web service PollDaddy has just hit the one billion monthly page views mark.

    Other than Gravatar, this makes the PollDaddy network the second Automattic web property – excluding Gravatar – to reach this milestone. Automattic’s holdings inlcude content management system and blogging software WordPress.com, spam blocker Akismet and more.

    Sponsor

    PollDaddy’s traffic, according to Quantcast, also shows a decent breakdown of regulars frequenting the site:

    Moreover, users of the company’s WordPress.org plugin will now be able to add PollDaddy’s rating feature. This feature allows users to place ratings on their blog posts, pages and comments, like so:

    Mullenweg writes, “Watch for some other major updates coming up soon.” As frequent users of PollDaddy on this platform, he can be sure we’ll keep an eye out for news about this service.

    In honor of this momentous traffic milestone, we present you this commemorative poll, powered by PollDaddy:

    What other Automattic web property has achieved one billion monthly pageviews?(survey)

    Discuss


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  • Mac Pro and Xserve firmware, restore CD updated

    Filed under: , ,

    Mac Pro and Xserve owners, take note — Apple has released the following updates today:

    Xserve EFI Firmware Update 1.2 for Xserve (Early 2009)

    • Improved compatibility with virtualization products utilizing VT-d
    • Improved system reliability during the boot process
    Mac Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.4 for Mac Pro (Early 2009)

    • Improved compatibility with virtualization products utilizing VT-d
    • Improved storage performance under Windows XP for Boot Camp users
    • Improved system reliability during the boot process
    • Restoration CD for the following products: Mac Pro (Early 2009), Xserve (Early 2009).
    • Addresses reliability issues, targeting the use of multiple Unitors.
    The updates are now available via Apple’s support downloads page and via Software Update.

    Thanks for the tip, Jeff!

    TUAWMac Pro and Xserve firmware, restore CD updated originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 00:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Debate sobre Parque El Espino

    Construcción de parque El Espino revive debate en congreso
    Quijano y Navas pretenden ejecutarlo en 129 manzanas de terreno. FMLN lo rechaza.

    Escrito por Mayrene Zamora
    Martes, 19 enero 2010 00:00

    El perfil del proyecto denominado parque Los Pericos expuesto ayer por los alcaldes de ARENA Milagro Navas, de Antiguo Cuscatlán, y Norman Quijano, de San Salvador, ante la comisión de medio ambiente de la Asamblea Legislativa fue rechazado de tajo por el FMLN.

    Este proyecto, que se pretende desarrollar en 129 manzanas de terreno ubicadas en la finca El Espino, fue una de las insignias del ex alcalde de capitalino Mario Valiente en 1994, pero el FMLN insiste en que atenta contra el único pulmón ecológico que tiene el país.

    “Una vez se haga el daño es irreversible. Tal como se ha planteado atenta contra el medio ambiente, por eso nosotros hemos presentado piezas de correspondencia rechazando el proyecto”, señaló el diputado Yohalmo Cabrera, del FMLN.

    El efemelenista fue más allá al asegurar que el proyecto no cuenta con la venia del Ministerio de Medio Ambiente, porque no han presentado el formulario ambiental, uno de los requisitos del MARN. “No hay ningún tipo de trámite relacionado con el proyecto de Los Pericos, la nota oficial del titular Herman Rosa Chávez lo indica”, manifestó Cabrera.

    Para Douglas Avilés, del CD, el perfil presentado por las alcaldías tiene un vacío al dejar de lado el impacto ambiental que el proyecto desencadenará: “En toda obra hay un impacto ambiental y aquí no lo han expuesto. Aclaro que no se trata de crucificar a los funcionarios, pero hay que conocer sobre el impacto”.

    ARENA, GANA, PCN, PDC y el movimiento PP aprobaron la exposición.

    El alcalde Quijano aseguró que el proyecto no debe verse “ni políticamente ni como una obra de interés de lucro… Nuestro sueño es tenerlo cuando se celebre el bicentenario del primer grito de independencia”.

    La Asamblea aprobó un decreto legislativo en 1993, en el que cedió a las alcaldías de San Salvador y Antiguo Cuscatlán 129 manzanas de terreno de la finca El Espino para usarlo como parque metropolitano, pero no se ha logrado concretar un proyecto.

  • Washington Startups Raised $21.7M in December, Down from $44.4M in Previous Month

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Just a quick recap of the venture deals in Washington state from the last month of 2009. Things really slowed down heading into the dead of winter, with just four venture financings, all in software and Internet, worth a total of $21.7 million (see table below). That’s less than half the money invested in November, when Washington-based companies saw $44.4 million put into 10 venture deals across healthcare, energy, and software.

    That’s the official tally from ChubbyBrain, the New York-based maker of tools for investors, startups, and entrepreneurs. The figures include only companies headquartered in Washington state.

    The good news, in my view, is that the December deals were all Series A or Series B financings of up-and-coming tech companies, all of whom we’ve been tracking at Xconomy. They ranged from LiveMocha, a Bellevue, WA, startup developing online language-learning software, to the brand new online-shopping startup Zulily in Seattle (both companies are backed by Seattle-based VC firm Maveron).

    The fear is that, as the effects of the recession reverberate, venture firms will stay in triage mode and devote less of their energy to new startups and new ideas. So far, 2010 is looking a little more promising, but it’s still early.

    Here is the recap of December 2009 venture deals in Washington:

    .

    December 2009 venture deals for Washington State (courtesy of ChubbyBrain)







  • When it comes to energy, Mark Jacobsen thinks big

    by Osha Gray Davidson

    Mark Z. Jacobson, director of the Atmosphere/Energy Program at Stanford University, is an unusual figure in the field of climate change. He literally wrote the book on computer modeling for atmospheric changes, and he is a respected expert in the economics of energy production. But what truly sets Jacobson apart is his vision. He’s a “Big Picture” kind of thinker, focused on finding large scale, but practical, solutions to the problems of climate change. For example: a few months ago, Jacobson co-authored a cover-story in Scientific American sub-titled, “Wind, water and solar technologies can provide 100 percent of the world’s energy, eliminating all fossil fuels.”

    Large solutions make large targets, and Jacobson’s work is often controversial. The coal industry attacked his credibility in 2001 after he argued, in the journal Science, that electricity generated by wind power was cheaper than electricity generated by coal. More recently, some environmental groups got upset when Jacobson published evidence that substituting ethanol for gasoline would cause as many or more deaths from air pollution.

    Only 44, Jacobson is bound to prompt more controversies in the future. He is poised to play a crucial role in moving public opinion passed a tipping point where transformative ideas that were once thought impossible are considered not just conceivable, but doable, and necessary.

    Q. How did you get interested in climate change?

    A. I’ve always wanted to solve large scale problems. It probably began in high school when my tennis team went to Los Angeles for a match. The air quality in LA was so bad I that I couldn’t play. I was coughing, couldn’t catch my breath – it was terrible. So, air pollution was my introduction to climate change. You can’t separate the two.

    Q. You’re talking about more than just CO2 here?

    A. Yes, but they still connect in the end. The first thing to understand is that between two-and-a-half and three million people die each year because of air pollution. A lot of those deaths, particularly in the U.S., are caused by inhaling particles from vehicles and from coal-fired power plants.

    The real culprit is combustion itself. No matter what the source, combustion produces gases and some of them become particles – air pollution. How dangerous they are depends on all sorts of factors like size, constituents, concentration.

    We tend to focus on CO2, which is understandable because it’s the largest contributor to climate change. But I come to the issue from an air pollution perspective. I looked at the role of soot, a leading cause of air pollution mortality, and I found that it’s probably the second most important factor causing climate change.

    Q. When I hear “soot” the image that comes to mind is grimy 19th Century London with all the chimneys spewing smoke from coal furnaces.

    A. That’s right – definitely soot. But there are other sources and they share one thing: combustion. Soot is a byproduct of burning fossil fuel, bio-fuels or biomass. So soot comes from coal-fired power plants, tail-pipe emissions – anywhere material containing carbon is burned.

    The promising side of this discovery is that soot doesn’t stay in the atmosphere very long – especially compared to greenhouse gases. And because of that short lifespan, reducing and then eliminating soot emissions is the fastest way to slow global warming.

    Q. But that means eventually eliminating our reliance on combustion as a source of energy, right?

    A. We have to take drastic steps, right now, to reduce both particle and gas emissions. It’s something we can do, though. I’d argue that it’s both technically and economically possible to transform the world’s energy system to a sustainable one in two decades.

    Q. I think that qualifies as tackling a “large scale problem.”

    A. (Laughing) It does. In our Scientific American article we cited examples in which the United States made massive transformations before. In WWII, the U.S. converted auto factories to produce 300,000 aircraft in a short time. Starting in 1956, we started work on the Interstate Highway System which eventually covered 47,000 miles, completely transforming commerce and transportation.

    Our Wind, Water and Sun (WWS) plan is also ambitious. To complete the change to a sustainable energy society we’ll need 3.8 million wind turbines, 90,000 solar plants and many geothermal, tidal and rooftop photovoltaic installations around the world.

    But it has some advantages beyond the most important one, which is to stop global warming. The U.S. Energy Information Administration projects that by 2030 the U.S. will need 2.8 trillion watts (or terawatts, TW, of energy), and the world will need 16.9TW. If only WWS sources are used, the U.S. energy need drops to 1.8TW. The projected world total declines to 11.5TW.

    Q. To ask the obvious: how does that happen?

    A. For one thing, burning gasoline is an extremely inefficient way to power a car. As much as 80% of the energy produced escapes as heat. Running a car on electricity, only about 20% is wasted.

    Q. The Obama administration is investing billions of dollars in clean energy research, development and deployment. As someone who lives and breathes these issues, what do you think of their efforts?

    A.They’re moving in the right direction, but what the Obama administration is doing is not even close to what needs to be done.

    Q. What about Energy Secretary Stephen Chu? Do you get the sense that his efforts are hamstrung by politics?

    A. No. I think the problem of global warming is one or two orders of magnitude greater than what Secretary Chu thinks it is. They’re talking about making big changes within fifty years. But we need some of these changes to be in place within one or two years.

    I’ll give you an example: carbon capture and sequestration (CCS). The Department of Energy is pouring billions of dollars into a technology that even its backers admit won’t be online for another 20 years. First, I think that’s an optimistic assessment. But more important is the fact that we have proven, up-and-running technologies right now that could do the job. The money that could be used deploying wind turbines and solar power plants today, is being wasted on CCS. That’s a serious, serious mistake.

    Q. I know that you were a professional tennis player for a while, a teammate of Patrick McEnroe’s at one point. Are there any insights from playing competitive tennis that either helped you in your work or that could apply to how we need to address climate change?

    A. The key is to keep your eye on the ball. Don’t let distractions get in the way of your focus on the best strategy (or in the case of climate change, the best solutions). Also, don’t be intimidated by your opponent (or special interests). They will always try to knock you down. Finally, give it your best effort. Even if you lose in the end, you should always be able to say you gave 100%.

    Related Links:

    Upping the ante on climate

    Happier living that happens to be more sustainable

    India, Italy, Brazil can fill America’s blanks