Blog

  • Joule Selects Texas for Ethanol Facility

    Ryan McBride wrote:

    Joule Biotechnologies, a Cambridge, MA-based developer of fuels and chemicals in a process that mimics photosynthesis, today confirmed a newspaper report in the Leander Ledger from last month that it is leasing property in Leander, TX, for its pilot ethanol plant. A company spokeswoman said that the lease on the property near Austin became official this week. Xconomy reported last month that Joule had selected a site for the pilot plant, but the firm had declined to reveal the exact location before the lease was finalized.







  • GM Vice Chairman Endorses Higher Gas Taxes

    AP Bob Lutz GM

    General Motors Vice Chairman Bob Lutz does not like fuel economy rules, once declared that hybrid cars made no sense to sell or buy, and on Monday said he sees a lot of value in a steady rise in gasoline tax, CNNMoney.com reports.

    Why?

    Lutz can’t stand how fluctuating gas prices drive consumer preferences. Gas goes down, Americans buy big cars. Gas goes up, small cars are back in fashion. Matching supply to demand becomes impossible.

    Another reason for Lutz’s support of a higher gasoline tax, he stated Monday, is his belief that conventional internal combustion engines will dominate the auto industry regardless of advances in electric vehicles.

    While Lutz may be right, it’s a strange message to send on the first day of the International Auto Show, where your company is heavily promoting the new electric Chevy Volt.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:


  • UT Knoxville Named a ‘Best Value’ Public College by Princeton Review

    Princeton_Review_SealKNOXVILLE — Now more than ever, parents and students want strong academics at an affordable price when it comes to choosing a college education.

    The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, offers just that according to The Princeton Review’s “Best Value Colleges for 2010″ list released today, which ranks the university among the 50 best values in higher education in the country.

    The Princeton Review ranks American colleges based on undergraduate academics, affordability and financial aid for the “best value” list. The 50 public and 50 private colleges and universities were selected from among more than 650 public and private colleges and universities.

    “We are proud to be nationally recognized for the value that a UT Knoxville education provides to students,” said Chancellor Jimmy G. Cheek. “From our merit and need-based scholarship programs to the support we give to help students maintain their scholarships and achieve, we deliver a first-rate academic and collegiate experience at a great value.”

    The Princeton Review is a New York City-based education services company known for its test-prep courses, college and graduate school admission services, books and education programs. The company is also known for its annual college, business and law school rankings.

    The Princeton Review describes UT Knoxville’s “dynamic campus” as having a “vibrant academic atmosphere located in one of the country’s best and most eclectic college towns.” Several of UT Knoxville’s nationally recognized programs are mentioned, including business administration and education. The profile also highlights the campus’ research facilities as being “among the best in the country” and that with such a diverse student life, “everyone is bound to find his or her own niche.”

    UT Knoxville also is recognized for strong financial aid support.

    The HOPE Scholarship is available to Tennessee high school graduates who earn at least a 21 on their ACT and have an overall weighted grade-point average of 3.0 or better. About 95 percent of UT Knoxville’s in-state freshmen received the HOPE Scholarship in 2009.

    In recent years, UT Knoxville has created several need-based scholarship programs that supplement the HOPE Scholarship and help ensure that money isn’t a stumbling block for academically eligible students who want to attend.

    The Tennessee Pledge scholarships help students from low-income families attend the university and allow those students to graduate debt-free by paying for mandatory college costs not covered by other federal or state aid. The Tennessee Promise scholarships target students from high schools that have not traditionally sent many of their graduates to UT Knoxville.

    In addition, the university has launched the “Achieve the Dream” program that makes grant money available to Tennessee students from lower-middle-income families whose incomes are too high to qualify them for Pell grants or the Pledge scholarship, but who still need financial help with college costs.

    Again this year, The Princeton Review teamed up with USA Today to present its “best value” colleges list. Previously, the list was reported on its Web site and in its book, “America’s Best Value Colleges.”

    The Best Value Colleges for 2010 rankings are available online.

    C O N T A C T :

    Kristi Hintz (865-974-3993, [email protected])

  • From Eternity to Here: Book Club | Cosmic Variance

    As promised, we’re going to have a book club to talk about From Eternity to Here. Roughly speaking, every Tuesday I’ll post about another chapter, and we’ll talk about it. Easy enough, right? (Chapters 4 and 5, about relativity, are pretty short and will be combined into one week.)

    For the most part I won’t be summarizing each chapter — because you’ll all have read the book, so that would be boring. Instead, I want to give some behind-the-scenes insight about what was going through my mind when I put each chapter together — a little exclusive for readers of the blog. Of course, in the comments I hope we can discuss the substance of the chapters in as much detail as we like. I’m going to try to participate actively in all the discussions, so I hope to answer questions when I can — and certainly expect to learn something myself along the way.

    The book is divided into four parts: an overview, spacetime and relativity, entropy and the Second Law, and a discussion of how it all fits into cosmology. You can find a more detailed table of contents here, and here is the prologue to get you in the mood. Part Three is definitely the high point of the book, so be sure to stick around for that.

    So see you next Tuesday! Get reading!

    Part One: Overview

    • January 19: Chapter One (What is time?)
    • January 26: Chapter Two (Entropy and the Second Law)
    • February 2: Chapter Three (The expanding universe)

    Part Two: Relativity

    • February 9: Chapters Four and Five (Special and general relativity)
    • February 16: Chapter Six (Time travel)

    Part Three: Entropy and the Arrow of Time

    • February 23: Chapter Seven (Determinism and reversibility)
    • March 2: Chapter Eight (Entropy according to Boltzmann)
    • March 9: Chapter Nine (Information, memory, life…)
    • March 16: Chapter Ten (Recurrence and Boltzmann brains)
    • March 23: Chapter Eleven (Quantum mechanics)

    Part Four: Time and the Universe

    • March 30: Chapter Twelve (Black holes)
    • April 6: Chapter Thirteen (Evolution of the universe)
    • April 13: Chapter Fourteen (Inflation)
    • April 20: Chapter Fifteen and Epilogue (Explaining the arrow of time)


  • Lithium and REE: Hybrids steal spotlight at Detroit auto show TNR.v, CZX.v, WLC.v, LI.v, RM.v, LMR.v, CLQ.v, F, SQM, ROC, FMC, AVL.to, RES.v, QUC.v,



    Investment opportunities here will be connected to your ability to identify the technological winners in the end in function price/performance for the battery. Lithium batteries has became an industry choice, but particular chemistry and technological process of manufacturing will separate winners from losers. Pike Research expecting this market to grow exponentially from 800 million in sales to 8 billion by 2015. This is the place where money will be made, but who will make it?”


    The Globe and Male:

    Hybrids steal spotlight at Detroit auto show

    New models unveiled as battle heats up for green leadership; hybrid version of Ford’s Fusion sedan named car of the year
    GREG KEENAN
    DETROIT — From Tuesday’s Globe and Mail Published on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2010 12:00AM EST Last updated on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2010 3:12AM EST
    AUTO INDUSTRY REPORTER
    The hybrid war is bursting into overdrive.
    Three global automotive powerhouses introduced new hybrid cars yesterday at the North American International Auto Show as car companies battle for green leadership and strive to meet stringent new fuel economy and emission requirements later this decade.
    Toyota Motor Corp., which claimed hybrid leadership in the decade just ended with its Prius sedan, said it plans to expand the Prius into a family of vehicles with cars both smaller and larger than its flagship hybrid.
    The Japan-based company unveiled a concept car called the FT-CH, a vehicle about 500 millimetres shorter than the Prius that is aimed at younger buyers and is all but certain to become a model on the road within three years. (Its name stands for Future Toyota-compact hybrid.)
    Drivers may need a less expensive hybrid than the Prius, Yoshi Inaba, chief executive officer of Toyota Motor Sales USA, acknowledged, but said it’s far too early to tell what the price might be for the FT-CH. The Prius starts at $27,500 in Canada.
    The Prius and Toyota’s other hybrids sold in Canada and the U.S. are generating a profit, said Mr. Inaba, Toyota’s highest ranking executive in North America. “This is the third generation [Prius] we are in and every time we come up with a newer version, then we see improvements on profit.”
    Volkswagen AG said its first hybrid model will be on the road this spring. The German auto maker also unveiled a concept car code-named the New Compact Coupe that combines a hybrid motor with a turbocharged, 1.4-litre engine.
    That was followed by the new CR-Z from Honda Motor Co. Ltd., a hybrid sports coupe that will go on sale in the U.S. market this summer.
    The hybrid version of Ford Motor Co.’s Fusion sedan won car of the year honours at the annual Detroit show.
    “I think we’ll see a predominance of hybrids on the road by 2020,” said Ted Robertson, chief technical officer and executive vice-president of new production creation for Magna International Inc.
    The Canadian auto parts giant, which has a booth at the show, was sporting federal Industry Minister Tony Clement and other politicians to a drive in the battery-powered Focus compact that Magna developed for Ford.
    Electric vehicles are also moving to the forefront, which is where they were 100 years ago when the auto industry was just springing to life.
    A 1922 model made by Detroit Electric Car Co. is on display outside the show. About 12,000 were made between 1907 and 1939 before another electric development made them obsolete – the arrival of the electric starter. The 1922 model cost $2,985 (U.S.).
    The batteries alone for the new generation of electric vehicles now cost almost three times that amount at $8,000, industry sources estimate.
    Mr. Robertson said the battery is the most expensive item, but the costs of all the components in electric vehicles need to come down to make them commercially viable.
    The abundance of hybrid, electric and other environmentally friendly vehicles shows the industry believes it must meet stringent fuel economy goals through technology and not by convincing Americans to switch en masse to smaller vehicles, said industry analyst Dennis DesRosiers, president of DesRosiers Automotive Consultants Inc. of Richmond Hill, Ont.
    “The vehicle companies believe Americans won’t compromise on the size of their vehicles,” Mr. DesRosiers said.
    Nonetheless, several auto makers showed off smaller vehicles with traditional internal combustion engines, including Ford with its redesigned Focus compact, and General Motors Co. with the GMC Granite concept, a small crossover vehicle about 600 millimetres shorter than its GMC Acadia.”
  • Government of Canada Supports Next-Generation Biofuels Project – SYS-CON Media (press release)

    Government of Canada Supports Next-Generation Biofuels ProjectSYS-CON Media (press release)"Successful commercialization of biofuel production technology relies upon capturing value from all of the major components in biomass feedstock. …Media A…


  • Bicycle Concept Has Laptop Docking Compartment, As Starbucks Never Has Enough Available Sockets [Concepts]

    You want to be green, but you also want to take your MacBook to Starbucks without bothering with a backpack. It totes ruins your look. Designer Yuji Fujimura has conjured up a laptop-docking bike concept, just for these moments.

    The laptop storage space actually docks your laptop, charging as you cycle. The inbuilt screen on the handlebars not only gives you internet access via your laptop (presumably you have to stick a 3G dongle in somewhere), but also ensures you wind up in the A&E ward several times a month. I’m sure the nurses will all like your tales of masochistic hipsterdom. [Coroflot]







  • UK : Mercedes Benz Promotes the Use of Winter Tires

    In order to keep its customers on the road when snow, ice and negative temperatures become everyday conditions (and, why not, score points in various safety statistics) Mercedes Benz UK has launched a cold weather tire program, as reported by autochannel.

    A large range of winter tires are now available through this programme, and the company’s dealers have been trained to offer assistance to the customers, whether they choose to change their current tires or opt for a new tire-rim… (read more)

  • Fiat apresenta linha 2010 do hatch Bravo para o mercado italiano


    Para quem estava pensando que o Bravo iria ser lançado aqui no Brasil já defasado em relação ao europeu, pode ficar tranqüilo, pois a Fiat acaba de divulgar fotos do modelo 2010 para aquele mercado, na verdade para o mercado italiano, mais que em breve estará disponível para o resto do continente europeu. Nessa revisão de estilo o modelo ganhou apenas algumas modificações externas que não o deixaram diferente do modelo 2009, coisa mínima perto do que aconteceu com o Punto Evo.

    O modelo ganhou uma grade frontal redesenhada que dependendo da versão pode ser total ou parcialmente (leia-se o contorno) cromado, os faróis dianteiros ganharam um aplique que o deixa com a aparência escurecida, mais não chega a ser uma máscara negra. Além também de ganhar duas novas cores, a “Griogio Bel Tenebroso”, que é um cinza chumbo, e a “Perla Scuro” que é um tom de bege claro.

    Além disso, a Fiat fez uma revisão no motor 1.4 de 90cv que agora está dentro dos padrões das normas EURO 5 emitindo 146 gramas de CO2/ km². A Fiat passou a disponibilizar também novos pacotes de personalização para o hatch médio começando pelo Active Sound Pack que oferece faróis de neblina e rádio com CD e MP3. O pacote Dynamic Blue vem com os mesmos itens do Active Sound Pack e adiciona Blue&Me, vidros traseiros elétricos e sensores de estacionamento e o pacote Blue Sport junta os itens do Active Sound Pack e Dynamic Blue mais rodas de aro 18” e vidros escurecidos.

    Os preços do Fiat Bravo 2010 não tiveram alteração em relação aos preços de 2009 e partem de 16.650 euros na versão Active com motor 1.4 16V de 90cv a gasolina e pode chegar a 32.600 euros na versão Emotion com motor 2.0 16V Multijet de 165cv e todos os opcionais.

    Uma notícia que pode deixar muitos fãs da Fiat feliz, o modelo pode chegar ao mercado brasileiro já com essas atualizações.

    Fonte: Autoblog.it


  • Dark matter DNA

    Our universe is largely built with matter that shapes large structures, but doesn’t interact with electric fields – including light. It’s dark matter.

    There’s a funny similarity to our DNA …

    Borna Virus Discovered in Human Genome – Carl Zimmer – NYTimes.com

    …Fossil viruses are also illuminating human evolution. Scientists estimate that 8.3 percent of the human genome can be traced back to retrovirus infections. To put that in perspective, that’s seven times more DNA than is found in all the 20,000 protein-coding genes in the human genome.

    In the physican universe dark matter is only about 70% of all matter, but in humans “dark DNA” is 97%+ of all DNA. So our DNA is about 2% protein coding, 8% retrovirus, and 90% other – including non-retroviral virus origin and “structural”. (Yes, I know that’s “four times” and Zimer says “seven times” – his numbers are more likely correct.)

    So from a DNA perspective, are we basically an ambulatory viral ecosystem with a fraction of information capacity that does things like make brains and bodies? Seems a bit much, but it turns out even some of the most important protein coding DNA is of viral origin. In a companion post on his blog Zimmer writes

    … a virus protein called syncitin … is essential for placentas to develop. Cells push the protein to their surface, where it lets them latch onto other cells, fusing together to create a special layer through which nutrients can pass from mother to child. The protein got its start on viruses, which use it to latch onto host cells and fuse to them, allowing their genes to slip in.

    But recent research has revealed an intriguing new twist to our viral legacy. It turns out that the viral surface protein in question has a second job. It also tamps down the immune system of its host…
    So is there any non-structural DNA in humans that’s not of fundamentally viral origin?
    See also: Presser on the bornavirus article … UTA News Center
    PS. A search on Preeclampsia and bornavirus has 180 hits today, but I think they appear to be loose and coincidental relationships. I didn’t see research relating bornavirus-like superinfection triggering auto-immune placental disruption and thus pre-eclampsia / toxemia.
    Update 1/30/2010: io9 quotes Frank Kelly: “[T]he human genome has evolved as a holobiontic union of vertebrate and virus… “. A Coral holobiont is “the entire community of living organisms that make up a healthy coral head”.
  • By the Numbers: Running Windows-Based MMOs On the Mac

    For 90 percent of my daily toil, OS X is the best platform for me. I use it during my day job, freelance writing, school, graphic design, and the usual goofing off everyone does. However, there is one glaring desire missing: I play Massively Multiplayer Online Games (MMOs), and the Mac-native offerings are slim. I’ve had to result to running games in emulators, virtual disks, and Boot Camp partitions, and after running some numbers I thought I’d share my findings with you.

    The Games

    I play the following MMOs: World of Warcraft, EverQuest 1 and 2, Warhammer Online, Lord of the Rings Online, and Dungeons and Dragons Online. Of these, only WoW and Warhammer have native clients. Which means I’m forced to use some sort of emulation to play them. A commenter  on Liam’s Windows 7 piece said, “You bought an Apple computer so use the Apple software. If you want it so bad go buy a PC.” For me, Apple and OS X are fantastic for my productivity needs, but when it comes to gaming, sadly, it’s still a Windows world.

    The Emulators

    Fortunately, all is not lost. Once Apple went to Intel chips, running Windows in some sort of emulation became possible. For a gamer like myself, it became a saving grace that let me enjoy OS X for my daily usage, but lets me have my games and play them, too. For the purposes of testing, I played games in the following programs:

    • CrossOver Games 8.1.3. CrossOver is a Wine-based emulator, so you’re not actually running any Windows code; it’s all handled via the app.
    • Parallels Desktop 4 version 4.0.3848 with a Windows 7 virtual,
    • Windows 7 running in Boot Camp on OS 10.6.2. Unfortunately, Parallels can only access a Boot Camp partition officially supported by Apple, so I was unable to test Parallels directly accessing Boot Camp.

    These were all tested on a 2.26 GHz 13″ MacBook Pro with 4GB of RAM, a 500GB hard drive and at native 1280×800 resolution.

    The Results

    Costs
    For Boot Camp, Windows 7 Home Professional is $199.99. CrossOver Games is $39.99.  Parallels is easily the most expensive. Windows 7 Home Professional is $199.99 and Parallels is $79.99.

    Setting Things Up

    Boot Camp: This is the easy one. Since Boot Coomp runs Windows natively, installing all the games tested was very easy — albeit time consuming since they each had to be downloaded off the net.

    Parallels: Again, very straight forward. The process takes a little longer since it’s running in a virtual environment, and Parallels needs to install the Parallels Tools after the setup. I had no issues installing the games. Really, for all intents and purposes Parallels is just like running Windows.

    CrossOver: Well, the install is quick — you just install CrossOver like any OS X program. Getting the games to run…well, that’s a different story. While there’s a decent compatibility listing on Codeweaver’s site, since CrossOver is a Wine emulator results are very mixed. If an app has a Gold rating from Codeweaver, it’ll install and run well. Unfortunately, none of the games I tested received Gold ratings so installation was challenging. With DDO and Lord of the Rings, the actual installer won’t work; you’ll have to download the full client off a third-party site. After that, a program called Pylotro is required to launch the game — it’s a custom front end someone wrote to handle the launcher duties. There’s no guarantee an installed game will keep working, either; a previously working EQ2 broke in a patch of CrossOver.

    Load Times

    Frankly, the load times were the biggest source of agony during my tests. Not because of the load times, but because the results were hard to sort out because of a lot of variables. Every game is an online-based game, so, to get my character in the game I had to pass an authentication server, several load screens and a character select. Therefore, Internet latency and a whole host of issues come to play.

    Here’s how I got the numbers. I loaded all the games and timed from when I started and stopped when I was able to control my character in-world. With Parallels and Boot Camp I also added the boot times of the required OS to the chart. I did this three times and averaged the results.

    I did notice an odd thing in Parallels: if I rebooted my Mac, the load times for both the OS and the game were significantly longer. However, after further testing I noticed that if I loaded Parallels/Windows 7 and immediately launched a game, the load results were almost double the value above. If I let the OS “sit” for a few, the load times were normal. Rather than report those numbers, I’ll just say this: a watched OS never loads — go get your beverage and snacks while Parallels loads and by the time you’re done the game will load faster.

    In-Game Performance

    Boot Camp: Unsurprisingly, the performance here was the best. At high I was getting around 40 FPS, and the game just flew. No issues.

    Parallels: I’m actually amazed gaming performance under Parallels was decent. With graphics settings on High (but shadows turned off) I was getting around 20 FPS average. Turning down options like view distances got the FPS closer to 30. I noticed no major issues outside of a slight stutter when loading a crowded area. Both windowed mode and full-screen worked fine. As an added bonus, you can set Parallels to share your OS X and Windows home directories, so any screenshots I took went right into my OS X Documents folder for easy viewing.

    CrossOver: The performance was about half-way between Parallels and Boot Camp. I was getting just over 30 FPS in the games. There were, however, some significant trade-offs. Neither DDO or LotRO handle windowed mode well — once the window loses focus, you can’t click inside the window when you get back to it. Also, there’s a big issue with LotRO where the screen will go black forcing a reboot. I was able to get around both issues by forcing the virtual to run in a window. The game would think it’s full screen, but the OS treated it as a window. This way I could have access to Skype and if LotRO crashed it didn’t take the entire OS down with it. As I mentioned earlier, a previously working EverQuest 2 install broke with a recent patch release of CrossOver.

    Conclusions

    I used to be a huge fan of CrossOver due to its overall speed and low footprint. However, I’ve had enough and will be deleting the files. The final straw was EverQuest 2 breaking. While it’s cheap, getting a lot of games running is a gigantic hassle and there’s no guarantee they’ll keep working. As an aside, the community on the official forums is very helpful, and just about every issue someone’s had is at least addressed, even if there’s no solution.

    For now, I’m running my games in Parallels. While the performance isn’t as great as in Boot Camp, the convenience of not needing to reboot is a big bonus for me. Often, I’ll game when taking a break from a project and I’d like to not have to reboot. As an added bonus, it’s very easy to resize the virtual disk in Parallels. It took less than 5 minutes to add another 32GB to the virtual disk (in Boot Camp, I’d have to repartition and reformat). I’m really surprised at how well these games ran in Parallels. Version 5 claims to add better support for Shader Model 3, so I’m planning on upgrading.

    I’m not deleting the Boot Camp partition, though. Once Apple releases official support for Windows 7, I plan on re-paritioning it to a 100GB partition and have Parallels access that directly. That’ll cover me for the best of both worlds: for every day gaming, I can load Parallels, but if I need it, I can reboot and use the same install files in Boot Camp.

  • Reading Between The Still Secret Lines Of The ACTA Negotiations

    There’s been a lot of back and forth talk about ACTA and all the secrecy behind the negotiations on it. But what’s really happening behind the scenes? Some experts are pointing out that it’s a very profound shift in US policy — but done in a way that most people wouldn’t notice unless they’ve spent a lot of time understanding how DC politics works. Basically, the entertainment industry is driving through massive changes behind the scenes, and doing so in a way that lets them (falsely) say to the public “this really doesn’t change anything.”

    Yesterday I attended a fascinating panel discussion about ACTA, hosted by Google at its Washington DC offices, as a lead-in to today’s World Fair Use Day event. The four participants each brought a different perspective to the panel, though only one, Steve Metalitz, a lawyer who represents a coalition of entertainment industry interests, was there to defend ACTA. Jamie Love of KEI was his main sparring partner, though Jonathan Band (a lawyer representing various tech and library organizations) made plenty of insightful points as well. The final participant was a legislative staffer from Rep. Zoe Lofgren’s office, Ryan Clough, who tiptoed the line of expressing some concern about ACTA, without fully coming out against it.

    The National Journal’s Tech Daily Dose has a short summary of the event, but there were a lot more interesting things going on in the discussions — which got pretty heated at times. Metalitz began with the usual talking points from the entertainment industry on ACTA: (1) “copyright industries” represent a huge part of the economy and (2) piracy is a huge problem — thus, ACTA is important. Love challenged Metalitz on the numbers (and Metalitz simply said he’d have to get back to Love on the specifics), and it was nice to see Clough counter Metalitz’ numbers by pointing out that using the same counting methodology as the entertainment industry used to claim how “big” the copyright industry was, the size of industries that rely on exceptions to copyright law — like fair use — are even bigger. Love also countered Metalitz’ one-sided claim of “economic harm” from infringing by pointing out that almost every “infringement” could be seen as an economic benefit in some area as well — and discussed how research into medical cures — that was almost certainly infringing — was saving lives and how infringing on content for the purpose of teaching was making a smarter society.

    But where the debate got really interesting, and dug in well beneath the talking points, was when Love and Band (with an occasional hand from Clough) read between the lines to explain how these things tend to work, and what’s really going on, including the careful language choices by supporters of ACTA, such as Metalitz. They basically pulled back the curtains on the talking points and what happens in the backrooms during these types of negotiations. Amusingly, many on the panel had seen parts of some of the ACTA documents (briefly), but couldn’t talk about them since they had signed an NDA. Band, in particular, kept noting that his comments were not based on the document he signed an NDA over, since he couldn’t comment on that, but on a “leaked” copy that hit the internet. As Love and Band pointed out, the fact that they could only discuss the leaked content rather than what had actually been seen only served to highlight the ridiculousness of the process.

    The key point, raised by both Love and Band, is that there are other forums for discussing international IP protections, such as TRIPS and WIPO — both of which have become increasingly more transparent and open to holding discussions with many different parties (including consumer rights people). As an example, Love pointed out that at the most recent WIPO meetings about IP issues, folks from EFF and Public Knowledge participated along with the big copyright interests — and he noted that as the discussion has become a more open and real conversation (rather than backroom dealing), the folks involved in WIPO and TRIPS are finally paying attention to the real impact of expansive copyright policy. Not only that, but the public has been able to speak up, and what’s being said online and elsewhere by people concerned about these issues is being heard within these organizations. But, of course, the copyright folks don’t like that.

    On top of that, Band pointed out, within TRIPS and WIPO there are numerous developing countries who are recognizing — correctly — that strict IP enforcement is designed solely to benefit a small group of companies in developed nations at the expense of the people in developing nations. Thus, they’re starting to push back on IP expansion. Combine all that, and you get ACTA — an entirely new forum to take on these issues, which (conveniently) only includes developed nations and leaves out the developing nations who had become so pesky. Metalitz pulled out the “but this won’t really change US law” gambit, to which Band pointed out that the real goal here was never to make huge changes to US law, but to eventually force all those developing nations to go along. Basically, you get the developed nations to agree to ACTA, written by the big copyright players, and then you start putting pressure on developing nations about how they need to conform to ACTA as well to join the club.

    Even worse, the panelists explained multiple ways in which the claim that “this won’t change US law” is bogus. First, if that were really true, there would be no reason to keep it secret. Love noted that the only reason to keep it secret is because the industry is “ashamed” of what’s in the document, and won’t come out and discuss it, knowing that the public would go nuts. Love also pointed out that in what’s been leaked in ACTA, what you basically have is all the stuff from previous agreements (WIPO and TRIPS) that the copyright industry liked — but without the consumer protections that were built into both agreements. And then, on top of that, the copyright industry put in dispute resolution concepts that greatly help it, not consumers. Effectively, it’s a way to claim that nothing changes — since it took the parts that favor the industry folks, but leaves out the protections and potentially aspects of the safe harbors.

    Furthermore, Band and Love took on the fact that it’s being called the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, since almost none of that is true. It’s got little to do with counterfeiting and little to do with trade. In fact, one of the “talking points” from the entertainment industry is that this is just an “executive agreement” rather than a “trade agreement” (which would require congressional approval). But why shove copyright into what’s officially a “counterfeiting” agreement? Because “counterfeiting” is one of those words that no one wants to be in favor of. No politicians will speak out against a treaty supposedly designed to stop “counterfeiting” since people intuitively believe that counterfeiting is bad. As Love explained, it’s like calling something “The Patriot Act.” No politician wants to vote against something like that, no matter what the details are. He notes, tragically, that the only politicians who have spoken out against ACTA have spoken out about the transparency issue — but not about the substance of what’s being negotiated.

    Furthermore, Band pointed out another neat trick used by the entertainment industry with ACTA. Because they can pretend it’s not really an intellectual property agreement, but a “trade agreement,” they can compare it to other trade agreements that were also negotiated in secrecy. But, as Band notes, this isn’t really a trade agreement. There may be good reasons for certain aspects of trade agreements to be negotiated in secrecy, as it actually could involve national secrets. But a multilateral negotiation on IP policy is not a trade negotiation and involves no state secrets. The only other reason to call it that is to pretend that the level of “secrecy” is normal, despite it being a totally different type of negotiation.

    Again, discussing the idea that ACTA wouldn’t “change” laws very much, a lawyer in the audience pointed out how incorrect that statement was, and noted how none of the countries negotiating had clear laws on secondary copyright liability to the level required by the leaked ACTA documents — and that even in the US secondary liability was far from settled law (and, in fact, aspects of it were disputed in various courts). But by mandating such secondary liability (things like an “inducement” standard for copyright infringement), it would mandate that countries go much further than they have already, sometimes in massive ways.

    Metalitz, once again, didn’t seem to think this is a problem — misstating the meaning of the Grokster rulings (and the IsoHunt ruling) way beyond what the court intended — and suggesting that other countries had a moral imperative to put in place similar laws. Not surprisingly, he singled out Canada — despite Canada’s strong copyright laws — insisting that ACTA “might finally drag them into the 21st century.” By putting in place more draconian 19th century monopoly rules designed to prop up one industry? No thanks.

    All in all, it was an entertaining and enlightening talk. Mostly it was professional, though Metalitz regularly resorted to bizarre personal attacks and sarcastic digs at everyone else. He insisted that those who were complaining about secrecy “just don’t want any agreement at all.” He mocked Love for claiming that earlier treaties were more open by saying that the anti-circumvention clauses came out of “one of those super open treaties that Jamie likes so much,” and most obnoxiously of all, when Love asked why the industry and the US government couldn’t be more open on these things, Metalitz shot back that the US could absolutely be more open, “if it felt Jamie’s concerns were more important than progressing on an agreement.” This suggests that no agreement could be reached if the US government were honest about it. That statement alone should be pretty telling. There was also a really telling Freudian slip at one point by Metalitz, though he didn’t realize it, and I don’t think most people noticed. In trying to explain why ACTA negotiations made sense, he insisted that because ACTA would benefit some industries deeply, it made sense for countries to meet about it. Notice that he switched from talking about industry at the beginning of the sentence to countries at the end. To him, it’s all the same. ACTA is really protectionism for a particular industry. The negotiations are effectively collusion, but perpetrated by gov’t officials acting as proxies for industry.

    I definitely learned a lot at the session, but came out of it more afraid of ACTA than when I went in. But I certainly have a much better understanding of how ridiculous and misleading the entertainment industry’s talking points are on this discussion — and hopefully you do too.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Augmented Reality Façade Shows Building’s Real-Time Deets and Tweets [Augmented Reality]

    The street-facing side of Tokyo’s N Building is covered in QR codes that can be read by your phone for up-to-date information—including Twitter updates from the building’s inhabitants as they happen.

    The project is a collaboration between Qosmo and Teradadesign. Any mobile device that can read QR codes can access shop information, but more in-depth content like tweets (located by GPS tagging), coupons, and reservations can be seen through a dedicated iPhone app that’s available only by request.

    Now this is a use of augmented reality I can really get behind: instead of cluttering up a building with billboards and sale signs, they’re hidden within an aesthetically pleasing QR Code design. More of this! Please? [Creative Applications via Design Boom]







  • Why A Hyperinflationary Fiasco Is Brewing In Japan

    hyperinflation debt

    I have felt rather lonely after suggesting in my New Year Predictions that Japan is dangerously close to blowing up on its sovereign debts, with consequences that will be felt across the world.

    My intended point — overly condensed  — was that 2010 will prove to be the year that Japan flips from deflation to something very different: the beginnings of debt monetization by a terrified central bank that will ultimately spin out of control, perhaps crossing into hyperinflation by the middle of the decade.

    So it is nice to have some company: first from PIMCO’s Paul McCulley, who said that the Bank of Japan should buy “unlimited amounts” of long-term government debt (JGBs) to lift the country out of a “deflationary liquidity trap” and raise the souffle again.

    Read the whole story at The Telegraph — >

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Heidi Klum Dannon Light & Fit Campaign [Print & Commercial Ad]

    Heidi Klum is the new face of Dannon Light & Fit yogurt.

    The Project Runway host has teamed up with the food brand to endorse its popular 21-flavor low-calorie snakc. Heidi’s humorous new Dannon advertising campaign features the supermodel and mother of four devouring a 6-ounce container of Light & Fit during a workout.

    “I’m very happy to partner with this brand,” Heidi glowed in a release last week. “I really love Dannon Light & Fit because it’s a great snack with a delicious taste.”

    Get your coupons — and the full scoop on all 21 flavors @ LightAndFit.com…..


  • Eemsteintoren, Zwijndrecht

    Gegevens
    Naam: Eemsteintoren
    Hoogte: 73 meter
    Plaats: Zwijndrecht
    Oplevering: 2008
    Functie: Woningen
    Architect: Kokon Architecten & Ingenieurs
    ____________________________________________________


    Emporis – Michiel van Dijk


    Emporis – Michiel van Dijk

    Foto’s van deze toren zijn welkom!!

  • Biotech News: Provenge for Prostate Cancer, Tysabri for M.S.

    San FranciscoJ.P. Morgan is hosting its big drug-industry conference this week in San Francisco. Here are a couple tidbits from the first few days:

    Sales of the multiple sclerosis drug Tysabri topped $1 billion last year, Biogen Idec said today, and the number of patients taking the drug neared 50,000.

    On the one hand, that’s notable, given that the drug (which Biogen co-markets with Elan) was pulled from the market in 2005 because of safety concerns. On the other hand, Biogen recently said its CEO will step down later this year, a move that Dow Jones Newswires said was linked in part to concerns about Tysabri’s growth trajectory. The CEO, James Mullen, will be speaking at the conference at 4:30 Pacific time today. You can tune in online.

    Biogen Update: Mullen said that there were 28 known cases of a rare brain infection in M.S. patients receiving Tysabri treatment as of mid-December. That’s up from 24 that regulators reported in October. Here’s more from DJ Newswires.

    Dendreon now has about $600 million in cash, which came largely from a supplemental stock offering in December. Dendreon has had a long road trying to win FDA approval for Provenge, a vaccine intended to treat advanced prostate cancer; a decision from the FDA is expected by May 1.

    The vaccine is tailored to each patient; manufacturing it is a complex chore that involves taking cells from the patient and shipping them to the company for processing. The company is using some of its cash to speed up its build-out of manufacturing facilities. Here’s the Dow Jones Newswires story on what the CEO said yesterday; here’s a Webcast of the presentation.

    Photo: Associated Press


  • 2010 Detroit: Cadillac XTS Platinum Concept, should the 7-Series, LS and S-Class be scared?

    2010 Detroit: Cadillac XTS Platinum Concept

    • Key Competitors: BMW 7-Series, Lexus LS, Mercedes-Benz S-Class.
    • Power: 3.6L V6 direct-injected gasoline engine mated to a plug-in hybrid system – 350-hp / 295 lb-ft.
    • Transmission: 6-speed automatic.
    • Production: Nothing confirmed yet, but it’s pretty certain that it will.

    Late last night we brought you details on the new concept from General Motors, the Cadillac XTS Platinum. Unveiled here in Detroit today, the XTS has yet to be confirmed for production. All GM is saying for now are things like these:

    “The XTS Platinum concept is the next expression of Cadillac’s Art and Science execution philosophy, reflecting our drive to deliver the latest innovations in the most artful manner,” – Bryan Nesbitt, Cadillac general manager.

    But then we heard Ed Welburn, GM’s design chief, talking to some other GM employee after CEO Ed Whitacre checked out the car for himself. “Looks like he likes it – let’s just hope the public likes it now.” With that in mind, the XTS is destined for production and should replace the Cadillac DTS and STS very soon.

    Can we expect a XTS-V to go head-to-head with the Mercedes-Benz S63 (or S65) AMG? Only time will tell.

    2010 Detroit: 2010 Cadillac XTS Platinum Concept:

    2010 Detroit: 2010 Cadillac XTS Platinum Concept 2010 Detroit: 2010 Cadillac XTS Platinum Concept 2010 Detroit: 2010 Cadillac XTS Platinum Concept 2010 Detroit: 2010 Cadillac XTS Platinum Concept

    All Photos Copyright © 2009 Omar Rana – egmCarTech.

    2010 Cadillac XTS Platinum Concept:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • ATG Acquires InstantService

    Wade Roush wrote:

    Art Technology Group (NASDAQ: ARTG), the Cambridge, MA-based provider of e-commerce software and services, announced today that it has acquired Seattle-based InstantService, which offers SaaS-based live chat services, for $17 million in cash. ATG said the acquisition will make it easier for its clients to offer live text-based chat with customer service agents as an option for e-commerce site visitors.