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  • Holiday Garden Links to Adore

    Today some holiday garden links – maybe you can just relax and have some reading time during this hectic week.

    garden blogs

    Why gardeners need to STOP growing flowers – this is an excellent post commenting on the whole beating the proverbial Jones’, growing with the use of chemicals to produce a showstopping garden when frankly it’s unnecessary, and how we can find a way to work with nature to grow better flowers. A great read.

    It’s a little late to grab gifts for the holiday but this Greenhouse Kit is pretty cute so I wanted to link to it anyhow. Made for kids this kit goes beyond theory and gets into the dirt of growing. The set has a four-tiered “global greenhouse” that’s an interactive habitat for water, flora, fauna, soil and air, providing real-world lessons on the environment and sustainability. Includes artificial soil, storm starter, thermometers, side panels to introduce animals and more. Makes a cool gift for kids to get them into growing before spring hits.

    An awesome post about the ever so lovely hellebores – a great plant for those with colder climates to reckon with. Actually this same blogger has an excellent post about how to build a tabletop boxwood Christmas tree as well that’s really worth checking out in case you’d like to have one next Christmas.

    A beautiful photo journey to Lake Wilderness Arboretum.

    See which flower is still blooming in the snow and ice (in Chicago no less).

    Around the World in 80 Garden Blogs – just like it sounds, this post dives into gardening around the world with 80 must read garden blogs.

    [image via stock.xchng]

    Post from: Blisstree

    Holiday Garden Links to Adore

  • German High Court Says That TV Schedule Info Is Covered By Copyright; TV Listings Sites Have To Pay

    I still can’t comprehend arguments in favor of allowing copyrights on facts. However, over in Europe they do allow copyrighting of facts if they’re in a database, using so-called database rights. Of course, there’s a big problem with such things. Contrary to the claim that database rights encourage a bigger database industry, the evidence (just like copyright and patents) points out that the opposite is true. And yet, Europe keeps believing in database rights. techflaws.org points us to a recent High Court ruling in Germany claiming that TV listings are covered by copyright and thus websites that display the factual information of what the TV schedule is have to pay up. In other words, it’s going to become harder to find out what time shows are on TV, meaning that fewer people will watch TV. How does this help anyone?

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  • ARTICLE: Breaking: BlackBerry BIS outage again plaguing North America?

    Reports are scattering around about a North American BlackBerry BIS outage, affecting e-mail, data, and any data-centric program.  The outage doesn’t seem to be tied to any carrier, and the ETA for resolution is 3-24 hours.

    Check BBerryDog for more information as we get it in.

    Update: RIM this morning released a statement regarding the outage:

    A service interruption occurred Tuesday that affected BlackBerry customers in the Americas. Message delivery was delayed or intermittent during the service interruption. Phone service and SMS services on BlackBerry smartphones were unaffected. Root cause is currently under review, but based on preliminary analysis, it currently appears that the issue stemmed from a flaw in two recently released versions of BlackBerry Messenger (versions 5.0.0.55 and 5.0.0.56) that caused an unanticipated database issue within the BlackBerry infrastructure. RIM has taken corrective action to restore service.

    RIM has also provided a new version of BlackBerry Messenger (version 5.0.0.57) and is encouraging anyone who downloaded or upgraded BlackBerry Messenger since December 14th to upgrade to this latest version which resolves the issue. RIM continues to monitor its systems to maintain normal service levels and apologizes for any inconvenience to customers.

    Via: CrackBerry


  • Comings and goings, farewells and hellos

    Odin, slayer of the Frost Giant, riding Sleipnir. 18th C. Icelandic, Danish Royal Library/Wikimedia Commons

    Three days before Christmas and a day past Winter Solstice, our lives are a crazy mixup of anticipation and loss. The longest night has given way to the rebirth of light. Summer’s a bare blip beyond the horizon, but we’ve turned the corner. Old Father Time is creaking toward New Year’s Eve, when that perky bouncing baby takes over with all the foolish optimism of inexperience. Christmas presents? Yup, we’re looking forward to ‘em. Midwinter indeed, but hope is on the rise.

    It’s a season for goodbyes and hellos and reinventions, and as we say a few farewells we suspect the people involved are like the seasons: This is a passage to something invigorated and refreshed.

    ***************

    Fifty-two Pieces, one of Art Scatter’s favorite blogs, is about to enter its fifty-second week, and for its authors, Amy and LaValle, that will mean an ending and a beginning. They started their blog on Jan. 1, 2009, with the express intent of continuing it for fifty-two weeks and then letting a good thing go.

    Each week this year they’ve chosen a single artist in the collections of the Portland Art Museum and explored his or her life and work in all sorts of fascinating ways. We’ve enjoyed the journey immensely, and now it’s almost over. We can hardly wait to see what comes next. God Jol.

    ***************

    Father Christmas riding a goat; origin unknown. Wikimedia CommonsOur good friend Barry Johnson, the original Scatterer, who had the idea for this blog and brought it into being before parting amicably to pursue his own arts column and Portland Arts Watch blog for The Oregonian, has come to another parting. Friday, Dec. 18, was his final day with The Oregonian: He took one of the buyouts that have become business as usual in the newspaper racket, following Mr. Scatter’s example from two years ago. Time to reboot, Barry said in his final column. Out with the old. In with new ideas.

    Some of the newest ideas he’s packing with him. We welcome Barry with open arms into the outside world, where we’re sure he’s going to have a key role in reinventing arts journalism for the post-print universe. Have your people call Mr. Scatter’s people, Barry. We’ll do coffee. (Lunch, in the post-paycheck economy, is a rarer commodity, but hey, we might spring for that, too.)

    ***************

    As newspapers continue their freefall toward what every sane observer hopes will be a soft landing spot of shrunken but lively equilibrium, a lot of other former colleagues from The Oregonian have accepted their walking papers, too. Informed opinion has it that the 30-plus in the newsroom who accepted the latest buyout aren’t enough, and next time around, for the first time, it’ll be layoffs — maybe as early as February. Oh, yes. It’s midwinter, all right.

    A few from the class of late ‘09 (there was a spring class, too; Mrs. Scatter got her diploma then) I don’t know, or barely know, or in a few cases, such as photographer Olivia Bucks, don’t really know except through their often exemplary work.

    Let me mention a few I have known and admired and enjoyed as colleagues. As the song says, the best is yet to come:

    Inara Verzemnieks, a wonderful storyteller whose stories are only going to get bigger and better. We swapped ideas and talked about writing. I even learned how to spell her name without looking it up.

    John Foyston, a terrific feature writer and a good amateur painter who was a bracing antidote to journalism by Ivy League degree. Not many newspapermen are also experienced motorcycle mechanics. Fortunately he’ll continue writing his yeasty beer column for the O.

    Don Colburn, a damn fine poet; Jonathan Brinkman, who knows how to make business writing lively and engaging; Abby Haight, a model of journalistic flexibility; Gordon Oliver, quiet competence and all-around good sense incarnate.

    Ralph Wells, an articulate gentleman and former cab driver (and husband of Carol Wells, a freelance theater critic who’s brought some sparkle to the O).

    Copy editors Jan Jackson and Pat Harrison, who on many occasions quietly saved me from myself. Copy editor Ann Ereline, an Estonian who gave me good advice about visiting there 10 years ago. And copy editor and old friend Ed Hunt, who was at the O and its late sister the Oregon Journal even before I was, and who helped me through a post-merger crisis when a long-departed editor was gunning for me. Ed’s advice was stunningly simple and practical: Go over his head.

    Photo guy Mike Davis, who fought for visual storytelling.

    John Hamlin, who moved from news and design (he was once a managing editor) into the strange new world of computerization and ably helped the rest of us do the things we needed to do.

    The brain drain in the newspaper industry has been swift and barely fathomable. While a few nitwits in the blogosphere celebrate this, it’s creating a crisis for the great American experiment in representative democracy.

    But the days are getting longer. A whiff of hope is in the air. Some of these people will be finding solutions to the newsgathering crisis. All of them will move into fresh new lives. It’s cold, but it’s also kind of exhilarating.

    Goodbye and hello, my friends. And thanks.

    ***************

    Illustrations:

    • Top: Illustration from an 18th century Icelandic manuscript of Odin riding his steed Sleipnir after defeating Ymir, the Ice Giant. In the midst of darkness, let there be light. Danish Royal Library/Wikimedia Commons
    • Inset: Father Christmas riding a goat; origin unknown. Wikimedia Commons.
  • Metformin side effects

    I’m reposting from Pre-Diabetes forum. I would appreciate any insights…

    Last Thursday I was diagnosed with PCOS insulin resistant/pre-diabetic.

    The Endo put me on Metformin. 500 mg said to start with one and every couple oh days add another and work up to 4 x a day.

    I am SO sick. I’ve never gotten past one a day. Symptoms are major nausea occasional stomach cramps. I am very tired occasionally get light headed and feel faint as if my blood sugar is too low.

    The Endo said nothing about diet. The pharmacist encouraged me to try a low glycemic diet. Said I might be able to avoid meds.

    So, I don’t know if I’ve over done it on restricting carbs or if I am one of those who have a really tough time with met.

    Thoughts? Any tricks for alleviating nausea?

  • Last-Minute Shopping? Try a Fitness Ball

    Filed under: ,

    If you’re looking for a fun last-minute gift for someone who enjoys fitness, remember that balls are for grown-ups, too! Available in a wide range of sizes and colours, a fitness ball is a great gift that can be enjoyed for years to come. Here are … Read more

     

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  • Brightkite Launches Nation’s First AR Advertising Solution

    Social discovery networking mogul, Brightkite, has launched the first augmented reality (AR) advertising solution in the nation. The California based company which has been bringing people together since October of 2005 partnered with AR application developer “Layar” back in August of 2009. Since then, the same social networking tools that have made Brightkite a success have been available in real-time through the lens of your phone’s camera.

    Now, in addition to photos and posts from friends, users of the Brightkite layer can receive up-to-date and relevant location based advertising in an AR format simply by opening the application and pointing their phone at a participating business. As the holiday season hits a fever pitch, timing couldn’t be more perfect for the new feature, which is set to run through the end of December and will act as a proving ground for the new ad solution.

    It appears the new feature is available to both Android and iPhone users.  So what do you think, on demand advertising through the lense of your camera… helpful or intrusive?

    To read more about Brightkite please visit Brightkite.com | Download Layar from the Android Market for free:

    Layar

    Popular Posts That You Might Enjoy!


  • Mandy Moore’s New Year’s Resolutions, Hangover Prevention and More

    Filed under:

    Each morning, we dish out a few links we love.

    Be careful this boxing day — studies show that this day in particular is hazardous to the heart.

    This Christmas, prevent a hangover with these handy tips.

    Thinking of health-ifying your house … Read more

     

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  • When Do You Stop Buying Toys?

    I’ve been hit with a question for my readers. I’m just about all done shopping for Christmas, a few last minute things but that’s it. I was so proud that I’d got items on Christmas lists and a few extras and had them all

    IMG: Sxc.hu

    IMG: Sxc.hu

    wrapped under the tree, that is until last night.

    We began opening our gifts on Decemeber 21st, which is our tradition. He now knows what his gifts are by the shape. Last night he was watching the three younger (he’s 12) play with their toys and replied, “I wish I was younger.”

    I looked up and responded, “Why?” He said, “So I could play with toys again too.”

    I freaked out inside because there wasn’t a single toy I’d bought him, he’d requested games, dvds and music…not toys. Later he saw me on amazon and told me wanted army men, I thought he was joking but wonder now if he was serious. He loves to line things up and shoot his darts (NERF) at them, so he could. Should I make a rush out to grab at least one toy? What would you do? I understand the need/want to feel like a kid and he still is.

    What age do you stop buying toys?

    Post from: Blisstree

    When Do You Stop Buying Toys?

  • Simple green steps for the new year

    Green goals are excellent, but there’s no need to go overboard. Starting slow means you can concentrate on making sure you follow through on the little green tasks you choose before you try to build up to bigger goals naturally. Following are four totally easy green goals you can take on for 2010 – they won’t take much time, won’t cost much (if anything), and are a great start if you’re new to green living.

    new years green goals

    Ditch common paper trails – two common paper trails include bills and notes. You can easily leave these trails behind in 2009. Get some whiteboards, leave them by phones, hang one on the fridge, and place little ones out where you normally take and leave notes for people. You can thus skip pads of paper and memos. As for bills, sign up for paperless billing whenever possible. There’s no point to paper bills nowadays and paying bills online saves you a check as well.

    Green your take out – the best way to green take out meals is to eat less of them. However, if you still grab food on the go once in a while make sure you skip the extra napkins, silverware, and other extras you already have at home. This is a simple step to remember for the year.

    Hang a water saving note – if you haven’t been shutting off the tap while you brush or shave you’re wasting a ton of water; up to 3 gallons a minute. Hang a simple note in the bathroom reminding people to simply turn the tap off while not actually using the water. Think about it, if you brush your teeth for two minutes, three times a day, you’re saving almost 18 gallons of water per day while brushing your teeth alone.

    Donate a cell phone or two – each year about 65,000 tons of waste are created when people toss their cell phones away. Cell phones can contain icky stuff like lead and mercury and although small add up to a lot of toxic trash in our landfills. It’s also totally unnecessary to toss a cell phone. There are plenty of cell phone donation sites and recycling centers all over and even available via mail.

    [image via stock.xchng]

    Post from: Blisstree

    Simple green steps for the new year

  • The Pros and Cons of Sports Drinks

    Filed under: ,

    Over at MSNBC, they’ve unpacked the pros and cons of using certain sports drinks to quench your post-workout thirst. The candidates include electrolyte drinks, enhanced waters, coconut water, cherry juice, chocolate milk and good, old-fashioned, … Read more

     

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  • Review: Altec Lansing BackBeat 903 Bluetooth Headphones

    Altec Lansing BackBeat 903 Bluetooth Headphones

    Bluetooth headphones have long been criticized, sometimes rightfully so, for their poor audio quality, but the Altec Lansing BackBeat 903 bluetooth headphones stand head and shoulders above the competition. Sporting a flexible design that combines street-style over-the-ear headphones with in-ear buds, the BackBeat 903s are comfortable to boot. If they sound so great and feel darned good, there’s got to be a drawback, right? Well, for all that awesomeness there’s absolutely no sound-isolation that makes the “OpenMic” system a gimmick at best.

    read more

  • Yahoo! Will Kill MyBlogLog Next Month [Update]

    Five years to the month after it was founded, cross-blog social networking widget MyBlogLog will be closed down by Yahoo! in January, we’re hearing from sources close to the project. MyBlogLog is a service that shows blog writers and readers the faces and profile information of other MyBlogLog users that visit their sites.

    MyBlogLog was a wildly innovative service that grew fast after launching and was acquired in January 2007 by Yahoo! for $10 million. It made a deal with users: Give us your personal information and we’ll show you the faces of people who read your blog. That was a compelling offer and the resulting data amassed could have proven invaluable, had Yahoo! chosen to cultivate it and a developer ecosystem around it. That potential was so great, in fact, that sunset for MyBlogLog is downright tragic. It’s also likely to anger bloggers all around the web.

    Sponsor

    In addition to showing the faces of recent blog visitors, MyBlogLog also offered programatic access to activity streams from social networks that users associated with their MyBlogLog accounts. For example, Yahoo’s Kent Brewster, now at Netflix, built a bookmarklet that would display the recent bookmarks on Delicious, photos on Flickr and job titles from LinkedIn of the latest MyBlogLog users to visit any given blog.

    Yahoo! has let the service atrophy for years and will now put it to rest. To think that this service offered publishers and developers access to personal, demographic, taste and activity data of a website’s readers – and yet that offering has in the end gone no where – that’s downright crazy.

    Here at ReadWriteWeb we scraped a feed from our MyBlogLog page of the new users just added to our community, then reached out to thank them for their support and welcome them personally. That was just the beginning of what could have been a very valuable source of data. Imagine getting a feed of the LinkedIn job titles of all your recent readers and presenting that to a blog’s advertisers. Both analytically and financially, there was so much potential in MyBlogLog. See our 2008 post The Significance of the MyBlogLog API if you’re a social web geek and want to have your heart broken.

    Looking at the ecosystems beginning to form around Twitter, Facebook and other user data – MyBlogLog may just have been ahead of its time. The service isn’t alone among potentially world-changing technologies acquired and then starved of support at Yahoo! We’ve asked Yahoo! for comment and will update this post if we receive any.

    Image representing MyBlogLog as depicted in Cr...

    Image via CrunchBase

    We called co-founder Eric Marcoulier for comment and he offered the following perspective:
    “So much of your company’s long term sucess when it’s acquired is based on the amount of executive juice it has. The only way it survives and flourishes is if you have an executive champion who promotes it internally. Shortly after we were acquired we were transfered away from our champion and under someone who didn’t feel the same way about MyBlogLog. In those circumstances, things simply slow down.

    “For any startup that has earn outs, and this didn’t affect us, you’ve got to keep in mind that in 3 months you could be reorganized and the new guy could shut you down. The picture that gets painted early on when you have your product champions can change in a heartbeat and it’s important for entreprenuers to consider that when looking at the deal terms.”

    R.I.P. MyBlogLog.

    Update: Chris Yeh, head of the Yahoo! Developer Network, has responded over at the YDN blog: “Frankly, it’s no secret within Yahoo! that we’re actively discussing the future of MyBlogLog. However, it’s also true that we have not made any final decisions at this point. Is a shutdown on the table? Sure, that’s an option. But there are other options as well.”

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    Discuss


  • Nutrition Survival Tactics for Holiday Indulging

    Filed under: ,

    I’m currently in the midst of my annual trek home to the parents’ place for the holidays. Like a lot of people, no doubt, I always have mixed feelings about my return to the ol’ homestead. I love hanging out with my family; the raucous, “spirited … Read more

     

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  • Title Question

    How do you get the little title thing after your name to be what type of diabetic you are? I swear sometimes I go forum stupid, hope this is the right place.
  • ARTICLE: iPhone, BlackBerry are most popular, says Nielsen

    Numbers are a funny thing — especially when it comes to cell phones. Separate them by company, and one brand comes out on top. But isolate different models, and suddenly another maker’s doing a happy dance.

    Such is the case with two current cellular giants: RIM’s BlackBerry and Apple’s iPhone. In one report, BlackBerry handsets cumulatively outsell the Apple smartphone by nearly two to one. But a recent report from The Nielsen Company shows that the iPhone is still the most popular handset over other individual phone models.

    According to the chart, the top two phones are the iPhone (accounting for 4.0% of all mobile phone owners) and the BlackBerry 8300 series (which nabbed 3.7%), both of which are smartphones. The rest of the list is comprised primarily of feature phones. (BlackBerry’s Storm and 8100 series show up in 7th and 10th places, respectively.) Since the iPhone 3GS doesn’t show up as a separate item, the presumption is that it’s grouped with the 3G.

    (What about Android? Well, don’t forget that the platform’s biggest boost — otherwise known as the Verizon Moto Droid, which debuted on the nation’s largest carrier along with the Droid Eris — has only recently launched. No doubt, Nielsen hasn’t factored that in yet.)  

    Other noteworthy nuggets from the report:

    • Pre-paid phones are still going strong. And the top reason people get them? It’s not due to lack of contract, but because the fees and plans are simple and uncomplicated (followed by “no monthly bills” and “emergency use only.” The lack of contract is #4 reason on the list.)
    • More than 1/5th (or 21%) of households have cut their landlines and gone cell phone–only. This figure has shot up 6% in three years (it was 15% in 2006.)
    • 15% of households now own at least one smartphone.

    Is it possible to be astonished by these results, while simultaneously not being surprised at all? I am. I knew smartphone usage was on the rise, but 15% is a huge segment. And I wonder how long it will be before the majority of American households are cell only. (Hey, maybe that’s an argument I can use with my hubby. He refuses to give up our landline. But I’m still working on him. Seems crazy to spend the extra coin when we have perfectly good mobile phones, no?)

    Has anyone out there cut the cord completely? Good decision or no?

    Via: MobileCrunch


  • How The Telegraph Was Supposed To Kill The Newspaper Business

    It seems like the old telegraph system is suddenly getting lots of new attention. A few weeks back, we wrote about some lessons from the old telegraph system that could be enlightening in the net neutrality debate. And, now, James Gattuso points us to a fun read over at The Economist about how people freaked out that the telegraph was going to kill newspapers. There was concern about how this device would lead to destroying quality reporting, getting people to focus more on the quick hits, and that there would be less reason to do “real” reporting — leading to more annoying opinion writing, rather than actual journalism. Sound familiar? Of course, it didn’t work out that way:


    What lessons does the telegraph hold for newspapers now grappling with the internet? The telegraph was first seen as a threat to papers, but was then co-opted and turned to their advantage. “The telegraph helped contribute to the emergence of the modern newspaper,” says Ford Risley, head of the journalism department at Penn State University. “People began to expect the latest news, and a newspaper could not succeed if it was not timely.”

    Today, papers are doing their best to co-opt the internet. They have launched online editions, set up blogs and encouraged dialogue with readers. Like the telegraph, the internet has changed the style of reporting and forced papers to be more timely and accurate, and politicians to be more consistent. Again there is talk of news being commoditised and of the need to focus on analysis and opinion, or on a narrow subject area. And again there are predictions of the death of the newspaper, with hand-wringing about the implications for democracy if fewer publications exist to challenge those in authority or expose wrongdoing.

    The internet may kill newspapers; but it is not clear if that matters. For society, what matters is that people should have access to news, not that it should be delivered through any particular medium; and, for the consumer, the faster it travels, the better. The telegraph hastened the speed at which news was disseminated. So does the internet. Those in the news business use the new technology at every stage of newsgathering and distribution. A move to electronic distribution–through PCs, mobile phones and e-readers–has started. It seems likely only to accelerate.

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  • Geoffrey Lean is dead wrong, and here’s why

    by Ken Ward

    “So where do we go from here?” asks Geoffrey Lean. “How do we get from the … debacle of Copenhagen to a new and worthwhile climate treaty?”

    The question reminds me of the old Bert & I tale about the Maine farmer who, when asked by a motorist for directions to Millinocket, answers, “You cahn’t get theyah from heea.”

    Lean observes that “Rarely have such high hopes [for Copenhagen] been dashed so swiftly,” and says “the summit was only saved from total disaster by unprecedented negotiations between the leaders themselves.”

    I’m more inclined to see the unprecedented, last-minute, let’s-save-ourselves-from-complete-embarrassment negotiations as adding final insult to grievous injury, but be that as it may, what’s most interesting in Lean’s analysis are the “7 Steps” he outlines to get from debacle to a worthwhile treaty, which may be summed up:

        1. Smooth ruffled feathers in the 187 nations cut out of the last-minute, 5 nation deal cutting.
        2. Persuade countries to pledge significant greenhouse emissions reductions, particularly the Europeans.
        3. Pass U.S. cap & trade bill.
        4. Revamp UN treaty negotiations process.
        5. Ensure that monies pledged in Copenhagen become monies spent.
        6. Figure out what we’re trying to do (extend Kyoto?, do something else?, extend Kyoto without the US?).
        7. Convince China of what we know, but they apparently don’t know, which is that signing a climate treaty is in their best interest.
     
    Come now.

    This is a list of things we’ve been trying for at least a decade (2, 3, 6 & 7), plus some stuff we apparently need to do now because what we’ve been trying to do for the last decade didn’t work (1, 4), and one thing to follow up on (5). Nowhere does Lean give even a flicker of an idea of how these things might be approached differently and nowhere does Lean consider the possibility that the debacle in Copenhagen might be the direct result of pursuing the wrong climate strategy.

    I think we tried an extraordinary, radical approach to political change—in essence, to sneak something into place, bypassing the tough business of challenging how things are—which has inarguablly failed and it’s past time we return to more traditional means of winning tough stuff. In that spirit, here are 7 Steps + 3 I think will be far more productive.

        1. Ramp up the conflict between those nations that have recognized climate realities and are willing to take on the US, China, India, etc. (along with nations that think they can make a buck, and most likely deserve to).
        2. Drop the misplaced attention to emissions and focus on shutting down extractions. There are only a handful of oil, coal, and gas fields in the world, controlled by a few countries—like, whaddya know? the 5 that cut the deal in Copenhagen. Shutting down mines and wells is the only practical, last-minute measure humanity can take, so we’d best start a drumbeat for it now.
        3. Defeat any half-measure, in the US or elsewhere, intended to protect fossil fuel burning, particularly coal, and/or that tries to put off what must be decided immediately to some hypothetical future where political conditions are better, or someone else is responsible.
        4. Use the UN to focus pressure on the top 5-10 nations, but aim for a desperate, multi-lateral agreement between the US, China, Australia, and maybe India to phase out coal extractions (covering over 80% of supply), coupled with the massive ramp-up in efficiency and renewables to replace it; the lion’s share paid for by the US.
        5. Denounce the Copenhagen pledges as the pittance they are (though they should still be paid), and demand spending on a scale concomitant with saving our collective bacon.
        6. Figure out what we’re trying to do (see 4).
        7. Convince China that it is in their interest to sign a climate deal by making it in their interest (see 4). and,

        8. Focus on multi-nationals as well as nations. In all the swirl of action between and about nations, we seem to have forgotten that it’s Exxon-Mobil, BP, Peabody Coal, Gazprom, Shell, and the like that are making more money than the world has ever seen by selling out our future.
        9. Stop dissembling about how bad it is and stop pretending to ourselves that we’re not being disingenuous. Whenever we put this civilization-busting threat in terms of an opportunity (for energy independence, green jobs, or whatever), rather than what it is (a last bid to save our asses), we completely undercut the only point that matters.
        10. Increase—and dramatically increase—turmoil, dissent, civil disobedience, and conflict. We are never, and were never going to quietly negotiate an orderly transfer away from oil, gas, and coal. It will take an immense, global upheaval, which we must both foment and ensure remains non-violent.

    Related Links:

    With new year comes second chance to save the world

    A conversation with Indian youth activist Ruchi Jain

    Sarkozy scrambles to salvage carbon tax






  • Curried Ham Salad with Pineapple

    What a wonderful way to turn leftover ham into a delicious and light salad for lunch the next day. This curry is not too spicy but you can use your favorite curry and make it as hot as you like. The curry spice is balanced with a little sweetness from the pineapple in the salad and a little coconut milk in the dressing. Quick and easy to prepare, this is sure to be a real crowd pleaser and family favorite for its flavor and you’ll love its simplicity and low carbohydrates. I hope you enjoy.

    Curried Ham Salad with Pineapple

    Ingredients:

    Dressing
    1/2 cup reduced fat mayonnaise
    1/4 cup reduced fat sour cream
    2 1/2 tsp. yellow curry powder
    2 Tbsp. fresh cilantro, chopped
    3 Tbsp. coconut milk

    Salad
    2 cups ham, diced
    1/2 cup fresh pineapple, diced (you can substitute canned but it has a few extra carbs)
    1/2 cup red bell pepper, diced
    1/2 cup onion, diced
    1 cup celery, diced
    4 scallions, thinly sliced

    Prepare the dressing first by blending all ingredients well. Set aside in the refrigerator for the flavors to marry while you gather the ingredients for the salad.

    Place all of the salad ingredients in a large bowl and toss to blend. Pour about half the dressing over the top and stir to combine. Add the rest of the dressing or to taste. This makes ample dressing for the salad. Chill for at least 1 to 2 hours before serving.

    Nutrition Facts
    8 – 1/2 Cup Servings
    Amount Per Serving
    Calories 137.2
    Total Fat 9.4 g
    Saturated Fat 3.3 g
    Polyunsaturated Fat 3.0 g
    Monounsaturated Fat 3.0 g
    Cholesterol 22.2 mg
    Sodium 594.3 mg
    Potassium 264.5 mg
    Total Carbohydrate 7.0 g
    Dietary Fiber 1.3 g
    Sugars 0.3 g
    Protein 6.9 g

  • MSI Wind Netbook Gets a Fresh Coat of Paint With Atom N450, Little Else

    In what’s sure to be a parade of new netbooks for 2010, MSI is leading the march with news of the Wind U135. Like just about every other new netbook coming soon, the U135 is built around the Intel Atom N450 at 1.66 GHz with integrated GMA 3150 graphics. Sadly, that’s about all that’s new when compared to the Wind U100 I bought nearly 15 months ago, aside from a revamped keyboard. The same 10.1″ inch display is there, as is the 1024 x 600 resolution. I realize that this display panel keeps costs down, but consumers might like the option of a higher resolution screen in 2010. The good news is that the increased power efficiency of the new Intel chipset will help with battery life while mobile. My old U100 typically lasts for five hours with the included six-cell battery — MSI claims the U135 will run for up to 7.5 hours.

    The $329 price tag also includes Microsoft Windows 7 Starter Edition — although additional $80 will remedy that — a 250 GB hard drive, 4-in-1 memory card reader, 1 GB of DDR2 RAM, 1.3 megapixel webcam and three USB ports. MSI did give the wireless capability a boost over my old netbook by adding support for 802.11n, but there’s no mention of Bluetooth in the email I received from the company. We’re sure to see the new U135 at CES and I’d expect availability soon after the show.

    Both LAPTOP Magazine and Engadget have shared some hands-on reviews, so now’s your chance to get an early look. My Wind was — and still is — a workhorse, but it appears that other new netbooks are offering noticeably more battery life. And if most of these netbooks are the same in terms of specifications, I’d generally opt for the one that can stay away from an outlet longer than the others.