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  • Small Business Bankruptcies Shoot Up 81% In California

    arnold schwarzenegger knife

    Owning a small business in this economy is tough, but it’s a whole different ballgame in California:

    LA Times: As credit lines have shrunk and consumers have cut back on spending, thousands of small businesses have closed their doors over the last year. The plight of struggling firms has been aggravated by the reluctance of banks to lend money, said Brian Headd, an economist at the Small Business Administration’s office of advocacy.

    California has been particularly hard hit. The latest data show small-business bankruptcies up 81% in the state for the 12 months ended Sept. 30, compared with the previous year. Filings nationwide were up 44%, according to the credit analysis firm Equifax Inc.

    Read the rest of this story ->

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  • More Contraction: NY Fed Says Regional Economy Shriveled In November

    First we got the bad GDP report, and now the New York Fed brings new unpleasentness about the region.

    —-

    november

    Regional Indexes of Coincident Economic Indicators
    Our Indexes of Coincident Economic Indicators (CEI) for November show a contraction in economic activity in New York State, New York City and New Jersey. While there had been preliminary indications of some leveling off of activity in the region during the summer, subsequent data releases point to continued declines.

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  • Hot Deal: Free Lifetime Phone Service for $150!

    Free Phone Service

    Free Phone Service

    I got a heads up the other day that Amazon has a deal on free lifetime phone service through Ooma for $150. Before you jump on the deal, here is a little bit what you need to know. The Ooma Telo service looks highly rated based on the Amazon reviews. While the Ooma name isn’t exactly a brand like Apple that jumps off the page, Vonage wasn’t always a big name.

    I bring up Vonage, because the device seems to work a lot like Vonage. You simply plug it into your high speed Internet and plug your phone into that. Unlike something like MagicJack (which does cost $20 a year), you don’t need to have a computer on and active to use it. That seems to be all there really is to it. You get free US calling and cheap international calling through your regular phone handset (my picture shows an optional Ooma handset which is not included in this deal).

    Why jump on this deal? The Ooma device usually costs $250. It’s on sale for $200 on Amazon… but if you buy from the first link I mentioned, you get a $50 Amazon gift card for free. I consider Amazon gift cards to be very close to cash since you can buy almost anything (and usually at a competitive price). By the time you are done it’s effectively paying $150 (hence the title). You only have until December 26th to get in on it. They might go quickly, so it’s probably not worth waiting.

    This is an offer that I’m seriously considering. Ooma has a very handy cost savings calculator. I currently pay around $17 a month for 500 Vonage minutes (more than I ever use, but that’s the cheapest plan they offer). In the first year, it says that I’d actually lose $46. This is actually incorrect since I’d be effectively paying $150 via Amazon rather than the $250 retail price. I’d be coming out ahead before the first year. And since Ooma is free while the Vonage bills keep coming, I’d be saving $258 by the end of the 2nd year. In the third year, I’d see $462 worth of savings. If I can save that on my very cheap phone service imagine what you might be able to save if you pay more than $17… and the savings would continue to add up for the life of the device. I imagine this device would live for a long time as well, since there’s no motors or moving parts.

    There are very few opportunities to take a monthly recurring cost and turn it into a fixed cost. Getting them to pay off in the first year is even more unusual. If you can grab a deal like this… well, it seems like the deal of the year.

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  • Broken promises follow Tennessee coal ash disaster

    by Sue Sturgis

    Aerial view of the coal ash spill at the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Kingston power plant.Photo: SkyTruth via FlickrIt was one year ago today that a 60-foot-tall dam broke at a holding pond
    at the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Kingston power plant in Roane
    County, Tenn., dumping more than a billion gallons of toxic coal ash
    onto a nearby community and into the Clinch and Emory rivers.

    The largest industrial waste spill in U.S. history, the ash slide
    covered more than half a square mile, damaging 42 residential
    properties, knocking one home completely off its foundation and
    rendering three others uninhabitable. It dumped some 2.66 million
    pounds of 10 toxic pollutants including arsenic, lead, and mercury into
    the nearby rivers—more than all the surface-water discharges from
    all U.S. power plants in 2007, according to a recent analysis. The pollutants in coal ash have been linked to health problems including cancer, liver damage and nervous-system disorders.

    The
    disaster pushed the obscure issue of coal ash waste disposal into the
    national spotlight and spurred the Tennessee Valley Authority and
    federal regulators to promise swift action to prevent anything like it
    from occurring again.

    But on the first anniversary of the TVA coal ash disaster, those promises have been broken.

    Shortly
    after the incident, at a public meeting held in the Roane County
    community of Harriman, Tenn., TVA President and CEO Tom Kilgore told
    affected residents that the utility would make them whole again and
    clean up the waste in six to eight weeks.
    But today, the Emory River remains closed to public traffic near the
    spill, ponds in the area are still clogged with several feet of coal
    ash, and dust from the ash is a chronic problem for local residents,
    some of whom complain of related health problems including coughing, nosebleeds, and headaches.

    While
    TVA has bought out some property owners, other affected residents say
    moving isn’t possible because the utility isn’t offering them fair
    compensation for their property, or because it doesn’t consider them to
    be close enough to qualify for a buyout.

    “Residents here have
    letters from pulmonologists, cardiologists, and family doctors stating
    that they need to move or be relocated until the cleanup is complete,”
    says Randy Ellis, a Swan Pond resident and a member of the Roane County Long Term Recovery Committee. “Their concerns and health are being totally ignored by the TVA.”

    But coal ash is not a hazard only for the people living near TVA’s Kingston plant: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has documented 584 coal ash waste disposal sites across the United States and classifies 49 of those as high-hazard,
    meaning that a breach in their impoundments could kill people.

    At
    the same time, an unknown number of those sites are leaking
    contaminants into the environment—a disaster less dramatic than what
    happened at Kingston but still dangerous to human health. Most coal ash
    surface impoundments in the U.S. are still unlined and thus pose the
    very real risk of water contamination. In fact, coal ash disposal sites
    have already poisoned surface or groundwater supplies in at least 23 states, while all 13 of those operated by the two major utilities in North Carolina are leaking contaminants to groundwater.

    EPA
    Administrator Lisa Jackson promised that the EPA would release a
    proposed regulation of coal ash by the end of this year. But last week,
    EPA announced that it was delaying the rule’s release “due to the complexity of the analysis.” Meanwhile, TVA has said it intends to convert all its existing wet coal ash storage ponds to
    somewhat less hazardous dry storage—but it’s waiting for the EPA’s
    proposal before making any firm plans.

    So on the first
    anniversary of the Kingston disaster, coal ash remains unregulated by
    the federal government—and thus Americans remain at serious risk
    from its hazards.

    Held hostage by TVA

    It was in
    the early morning hours of Dec. 22, 2008 when the dam constructed of
    coal ash gave way at TVA’s Kingston plant. Shortly before 1 a.m., calls began pouring into the local 911 operator about a “mud slide.” One caller panicked because she couldn’t reach her
    father—who as it turned out was trapped inside his house by the ash.

    More
    than 22 residences were evacuated, but no one was hurt or killed by the
    dam’s collapse. Had the the incident occurred on a sunny summer day
    when people were outside in their yards or on the river, things could
    have turned out much differently.

    The morning after the dam’s
    breach, the sun rose to reveal a shocking sight: a once-scenic
    riverside community covered in gray coal ash six feet deep in some
    spots. TVA’s Kilgore himself likened the appearance of the ruined land to a “moonscape.”

    As
    it turned out, TVA had already known there were serious problems with
    the integrity of its Kingston ash impoundment. Local residents reported
    earlier leaks in the dam going back as far as 2001, and the utility
    itself later acknowledged there were leaks in 2003 and 2006. But the
    company obviously failed to take adequate action to guard against
    collapse.

    And in the disaster’s wake, TVA continued to behave in ways that deepened distrust in the local community and wider public.

    For example, the company released inaccurate information about the incident, as confirmed by an audit released in June by the agency’s Inspector General. TVA’s documented
    inaccuracies included dramatically underestimating the amount of ash
    spilled, claiming incorrectly that no dead fish were found downstream
    of the disaster, and describing coal ash as consisting primarily of
    “inert material not harmful to the environment,” the audit found.
    Scientists have documented serious potential health effects from coal ash.

    The
    utility also misled the public about the radiation threat from the ash,
    likening the material to table salt when in fact researchers found significant levels of cancer-causing radioactive elements.

    In
    addition, the Inspector General found that TVA had failed to
    communicate policies and decisions to victims of the spill in a timely
    manner. In a recent report to the community [pdf], TVA said it’s “learned a lot” over the past year including the
    “importance of listening”—but some spill victims remain unhappy with
    the way the utility is dealing with them.

    During a press conference held last weekend in Harriman, Tenn., residents of the Swan Pond Road
    community spoke out about their ongoing problems with TVA. Some
    neighbors have asked the utility to buy their homes but say it’s
    offered them less than what their properties were worth before the
    spill. Others say TVA has refused to negotiate with them and in some
    cases cut off communications entirely.

    They’re also upset over
    an incident back in September in which the utility—with permission
    from Tennessee’s Department of Environmental Conservation—conducted
    an unannounced test burn of a high-sulfur coal at the Kingston plant,
    which resulted in mysterious white fallout snowing down on their community. The pollution reportedly damaged
    automobile finishes and gardens, yet Kingston plant officials told
    local residents they didn’t know whether it was hazardous.

    Environmental
    advocates have been critical of TVA’s behavior since the disaster as
    well. Activists with United Mountain Defense experienced harassment by TVA’s police force while working with local residents. And Upper Watauga Riverkeeper Donna Lisenby of Appalachian Voices reports that in her river trips near the disaster site she found TVA’s
    automated water sampler almost a mile downstream from where the ash
    cleanup operations are underway—a distance she believes is probably
    too far to measure any re-contamination that might be occurring as a
    result of the dredging. UMD and Appalachian Voices are among the 15
    groups that recently wrote to President Obama asking that TVA be held accountable for its violations.

    “They want our trust,” said Kingston neighbor Rick Cantrell. “They’re not going to get any. They’ve
    shut the residents out. They won’t talk to us, and we just can’t trust
    them.”

    A promise the President must keep

    At her
    Jan. 14, 2009 confirmation hearing to head the EPA under President
    Obama, Lisa Jackson promised to immediately assess coal ash disposal
    sites and to consider ways to regulate the ash—something the agency
    recommended in 2000 but declined to do under the Bush administration.

    “The
    EPA currently has, and has in the past, assessed its regulatory
    options, and I think it is time to re-ask those questions,” Jackson said at the hearing.

    U.S.
    power plants produce over 130 million tons of coal ash waste each year—the nation’s second-largest waste stream after ordinary household
    trash. Currently subject to an uneven patchwork of state regulations,
    the ash is not treated as hazardous under federal law despite the clear
    risks it presents to human health and the environment.

    After
    being confirmed as EPA chief, Jackson did take action on coal ash. The
    agency sent out information requests to more than 160 electric
    generation facilities and more than 60 corporate offices in an effort
    to gather data on coal waste surface impoundments like the one that
    failed at Kingston. It created a database with information on the ash
    dumps, and it identified the 49 high-hazard facilities using utilities’
    self-reported data.

    The agency also completed a study on toxins in wastewater discharges from coal ash impoundments,
    concluding that current guidelines should be revised because of the
    significant toxic releases from these facilities and the likelihood
    that these will increase in the future as better air pollution controls
    are developed and installed.

    But the EPA has proven reluctant at times to share its findings with the public.

    For example, the agency initially refused to reveal the location of high-hazard coal ash dumps,
    citing security concerns. It eventually relented under pressure from
    Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and environmental advocates.

    Today
    EPA continues to withhold certain data about more than 70 coal ash dump
    sites at the request of power companies, honoring their claim that it
    represents “confidential business information.” Among the pieces of
    data being withheld by companies including Duke Energy and the Southern
    Company are the size of the ash ponds, the date they were last
    inspected, and whether any problems were found. The environmental
    advocacy groups Earthjustice, the Environmental Integrity Project and
    Sierra Club filed a complaint in federal court earlier this month in an effort to get the information.

    Also
    sparking criticism among some environmental advocates was EPA’s
    decision to allow the coal ash being dredged from the spill site to be
    sent to a landfill located in a high-poverty and largely African-American community in rural Alabama. That decision was among the topics of discussion in a recent meeting between EPA officials and environmental justice leaders concerned about the agency’s treatment of low-income communities and communities of color in the South.

    Jackson promised that the EPA would release proposed regulations for coal ash by the end of this year, and reportedly is considering several different approaches.
    But environmentalists expressed disappointment after the agency
    announced last week that the regulation’s release would be delayed “for
    a short period.” They also raised concerns that lobbyists for
    coal-fired utilities have mounted a disinformation campaign designed to
    minimize the hazards of coal ash and make regulation seem less urgent
    than it is.

    In the meantime, toxic coal ash continues piling up
    at power plants across the country. The waste also continues to be used
    to make various products including grout and wallboard [pdf], spread on roads for ice control, used as fill for abandoned coal mines or to prepare roadbeds. It’s even promoted as a soil amendment for food crops—all without the benefit of strict federal oversight.

    The
    EPA said it expects to issue a proposed rule in the “near future.”
    Environmental advocates say they hope that means early next month.

    “The
    Obama administration has pledged to let law and science guide its
    environmental decisions, not the arm twisting of industry lobbyists,”
    according to a statement from Earthjustice, the Environmental Integrity Project, Natural
    Resources Defense Council and Sierra Club. “That is a promise President
    Obama must keep.”

    This post originally appeared at Facing South.

    Related Links:

    New EPA map shows the year in eco-enforcement

    Copenhagen coal in the stocking?

    The top green stories of the ‘00s






  • Firmware Update Could Maybe Resolve One of iMac’s Problems, At Least

    If you’re having problems with your new 27-inch iMac, you’ll be interested to know that Apple released a fix via Software Update for the machines that’s said to resolve screen flicker issues. Now your expensive new purchase will only disappoint you in two or three other ways.

    Many users are also reporting issues with cracked screens and yellow tinting on the displays, with a gradient from cool to warm as you move from top to bottom down the monitor. I had the latter issue on two replacement iPhone 3GSes, too, so I can’t help but wonder if Apple’s increased ability to move product isn’t affecting quality control.

    Apple’s also passing the buck in the description of what the new fix for the software-based flicker problem actually does. To wit:

    The 27-inch iMac Graphics Firmware Update applies to the graphics firmware on ATI Radeon HD 4670 and 4850 graphics cards to address issues that may cause image corruption or the display to flicker.

    Elsewhere, the company notes that the firmware update isn’t a cure-all:

    If your screen remains black after applying the updater or if you continue to experience image corruption or display flickering after successfully completing this update, contact AppleCare or an Apple Authorized Service Provider.

    So not only does Cupertino seem to be blaming ATI for the issue, it’s not actually promising to necessarily fix anything with this update, either. Whether Apple goes with ATI or NVIDIA, it just can’t seem to avoid graphics card-related issues. At least this time around it didn’t take two or three years for Apple to acknowledge the problem. Still, sales of the 27-inch iMac have been halted, which probably isn’t making consumers or Apple very happy.

    Let us know if you’ve tried out the update, and whether your problems have been resolved following its installation. I’ve heard from at least one or two people that they haven’t noticed any improvements. One thing’s for sure: Apple has to nip iMac-gate in the bud before further damaging its quality and reliability reputation.


  • Reading and studying the Bible on your BlackBerry

    One major advantage of the @BBGeeks Twitter feed is that we hear so much feedback. My favorites are content suggestions. We try to provide as much useful BlackBerry information as possible, and what better way to gauge usefulness than by listening to our audience? One request we received frequently was of various options for Bible viewing and study on your BlackBerry. So, with Christmas just a few days away, what more appropriate time than to share some of our favorite links? There are dozens of options, but we’ve gone through our own store, App World, and some choice third-party sites to deliver some of the best Bible content available for your BlackBerry.

    (more…)

  • New game in development at Atlus Japan?

    Atlus Japan has a new game in development. It hasn’t been officially announced, but they are recruiting a lot of debuggers for it. A new Weekly Famitsu scan seems to have narrowed it down a bit. Reportedly,

  • Latest Parker HMI cylinders designed to boost productivity

    The latest generation of hydraulic tie rod cylinders from Parker Hannifin, the global leader in motion and control technologies, incorporate a number of innovative features designed to minimise machine assembly and maintenance times, resulting in considerably increased productivity levels. In particular, Parker’s HMI hydraulic cylinders are now available with four-face spanner flats for simplified maintenance in confined spaces, while specially designed thrust keys can be specified to ensure secure mounting and make machine assembly easier, faster and safer than ever before.

    The option of four-face spanner flats on each piston rod end, rather than the standard two, for both ISO and DIN versions of the HMI cylinders, makes each piston rod easier to hold and rotate in confined spaces. As a result, both installation and maintenance are quicker, while the risk of damage to equipment is significantly reduced; just as importantly, this latest development to the proven HMI tie rod cylinders helps to reduce downtime and operating costs.

    Similarly, the design of the thrust key mechanism has been enhanced for use with Parker’s foot-mounted HMI cylinders, and helps to eliminate the problems caused by rotational forces applied to the cylinder body during cylinder operation. Engineers now have the option of an integrated thrust key, formed as part of the front retainer plate, or a separate key that locates within keyways machined in the foot mounting at the head end of each cylinder and the machine bed. The integrated key is supplied as standard on HMI cylinders between 25mm and 32mm, while the separate unit is intended for use with cylinders of 40mm bore or greater; this version complies with the most recent version of the ISO 6020/2 standard.

    Additionally, all bore sizes of Parker foot mounted cylinders now feature slotted mounting holes in the cap end feet. The mounting holes allow for the dimensional variations that result from tolerance build-up that can occur during cylinder construction, making assembly to the machine simple and fast, and helping to reduce installation time and costs still further.

    The latest Parker range of ISO and DIN tie rod cylinders have been developed for applications of up to 210 bar, in bore sizes from 25 to 200mm, with piston rod diameters of 12 to 140mm. Both single and double rod designs are available, with an almost unlimited choice of stroke lengths and a wide variety of options, including cushions and seal materials.

    Full details of the latest Parker cylinders can be found in the new version of the HMI/HMD catalogue, HY07-1150, which is currently available in English and German, with French and Italian versions to be released shortly.

  • Aerotech’s new PRO165LM linear stages

    Aerotech’s new PRO165LM linear stages are built for high throughput high precision, industrial positioning

    • Low cost stage builds on well proven hard top & side sealed design
    • Linear motion guide bearings, direct-drive linear motors and high resolution linear encoders make for exceptionally high reliability and long life time positioning systems

    Aerotech has launched a new range of high precision linear positioning stages for high throughput industrial production and test applications. The low-cost PRO165LM series features and improves upon Aerotech’s time-tested hard-top and side sealed stage design with a powerful direct-drive brushless linear motor, micron level linear encoder feedback and long-life linear motion guide bearings for extremely smooth motion and exceptional servo system sensitivity.

    With a nominal width of 165 mm and ten travel range options from 100 mm to 1 metre, the new stages can handle payloads up to 45 kg, speeds to 2 m/sec and acceleration to 3g with sub-micron level repeatability. Available in standard accuracy grade to ± 4 microns or with Aerotech’s certified HALAR option to ± 1.5 microns, the PRO165LM series is aimed at challenging applications such as laser processing and MEMS micromachining where superior manufacturing quality, rapid production throughput, long service life and low maintenance are of primary importance.

    A choice of standard linear encoders includes 0.1 micron line driver or amplified sine output alternatives to provide a practical system resolution down to 250 nanometres. Aerotech’s cog-free brushless servomotors provide exceptionally high force output combined with very smooth motion and excellent in-position stability. Matched performance servo drives with ±320 VDC bus voltages are available across Aerotech’s range of motion controllers.

    Sealed linear motion guide bearings and a high stiffness base plate system help to guarantee the load handling capability, the rigidity and the long service life capability of the PRO165LM series. MTBF life is specified at 20 000 hours across the range.
    The rugged Teflon® impregnated tabletop and hard top way cover provides full protection from hot sparks and machining debris, and tensioned side straps effectively seal the internal bearing system, motor and encoder. The hard top sealing system has been used extensively across Aerotech’s range of linear positioning stages and has proven to be much more effective that bellows type stage sealing.

    The PRO165LM series can be supplied in X-Y, XZ or YZ configurations with orthogonality certified to 5 arc-secs. The versatility built into the stage design includes a selection of tabletop plates that include mounting patterns with steel inserts for Aerotech ADRS and AGR series rotary stages as well as standard metric (or inch) plates. All stage travel and mounting configurations have a chain type cable management option for ease of installation into the customers’ system.

    To complement the performance of the PRO165LM series stages, Aerotech manufactures a wide range of advanced motion controls and servo amplifiers. The A3200 Digital Automation Platform is a Windows™ based software-only controller for up to 32 axes of Firewire® interfaced high performance motion and machine control and includes optional HMI, PLC and vision control modules. It is programmable in a choice of languages including powerful .NET, RS-274 G-code, high level AeroBASIC™ or optional LabVIEW™.

    The A3200’s distributed control architecture delivers fully deterministic motion updates to Aerotech’s Ndrive® servo drives that process motion and I/O commands at bandwidths up to 20 KHz. Additional Ethernet 10/100 Base T interfaced third party I/O and PLC’s may be added to Ndrives for further system expansion.
    The PRO165LM is also available for use with Aerotech’s multi axis Ensemble™ Epaq – a desktop or 19 inch rack mounted system with integral linear or PWM stage amplifiers, or stepper drives and a full complement of machine I/O. It is capable of controlling up to 6 axes of motion and machine control internally with the possibility of adding a further three external drives. For single axis applications, Aerotech’s Soloist™ can provide high performance motion control with integrated servo drive and the possibility for Ethernet based multi-axis control.

    Aerotech motion systems are delivered fully tested with all motor power and encoder cables plus performance and calibration related documents. For straightforward commissioning, a delivery pack with interconnection drawings and all motor parameter set-up data for the system is provided along with product training and comprehensive on-line technical support.

  • Standard rubber wheels, pressed steel discs

    The series is used for many applications; it can be fitted under charts and trolleys of any kind, with light and standard carrying capacity. It can be used also for outdoor applications.
    Typical usage: trolleys for indoor and outdoor industrial handling, bin containers.

    Technical features
    LOAD CAPACITY: 65-390 daN
    WHEEL TREAD: standard rubber tread; hardness 83 Shore A.
    CENTRE: made of two riveted galvanizec pressed steel discs

    Usage conditions
    Suitable for humid environments and outdoors; not suitable for applications where organic solvents, chlorinated substances, hydrocarbons and mineral oils.

  • Case Study of POS Application -The Store In the Busiest Area

    The total passenger transport volume of 300,000 person-times per day, the Taiwan¡¦s largest transport transit center which consist of 6 levels above ground and 4 levels under ground and has pedestrian underpass connected with Taipei Intercity Bus Terminal, Taipei Main Station is the junction station for Taiwan Railway System, Taipei Metropolitan Rapid Transit System and Taiwan High speed Railway System.

    ¡§The Railway Shop¡¨ is a convenient store located in the main building of the Taipei Main Station and offers snack foods, bottled beverage, take-away and souvenirs to passengers who are rushing for their trains or buses.

    For handling almost 100 or more transactions per hours and zero margin of error is allowed, The Railway Shop needs a robust, reliable and low MRT POS system to handle such high-loaded operation requirement, and the EBN SolidPOS 615 is the chosen one.
    In the space limited retailing shops like The Railway Shop, to increase the value on every selling floor is the vital consideration. Thanks to the Solid POS 615 with small footprint, The Railway Shop can maximum every inch of space to offer service to customers and earn the revenue.
    Highest reliability design, using proven technology from The Railway Shop, EBN is the best POS solution partner of The Railway Shop to offer fast and high quality service to customers, and also yours.

    SolidPOS 60 Series Features
    -Built-in with Intel ULV Celeron M 1GHz low power consumption and high performance technology being the fanless terminal.
    -Integrated with 8.4¡¨ / 12.1¡¨ / 15¡¨;5-wire resistive touch screen for interactive interface.
    -Stylish touch POS terminal with remarkable visibility
    -Compact size designed for space-crucial applications
    -Tool-free and modular design – easy upgrade and assembly/disassembly
    -Optional Programmable Keyboard, Customer Display, MSR

  • The Queen Chateau Soapland

    Japan, Asia | Watery Wonders

    An invention of the Japanese sex industry ‘Soaplands’ are descended from Turkish water brothels, places where the hard-working Japanese salaryman can go to get himself soaped down by a young and nimble nymph. Originally known as toruko-buro, or Turkish baths, after protestations from the Russian Embassy the name was changed to Soapland.

    Soaplands became popular after outright prostitution was made illegal in Japan, as here the service is being bathed not explicitly sex. The legality of these places is much in question, with a wider range of deeds considered legal than you might expect. Due to this semi-legality, the places are often run by ‘yakuza’- Japanese gangsters, situated in red-light districts.

    The Queen Chateau Soapland Haikyo (Haikyo is a Japanese term meaning ruins) in Ibaraki is at once a grand but squalid folly. A bath-based brothel rising 5 fairy-tale stories into the sky, cornered with towers and capped with bright red tile, it represents an era gone mad with indulgence, audacity, and hopefulness.

    Today the Queen Chateau Soapland lies in crippled ruin, its bright colors fading, its halycon days of glamor and glitz supplanted by ghost-like hangings in its dim and dusty bars. Its grand playing-card Queen still stands aloft emblazoned across the front of the building, but her stare is now more that of a toothless Ozymandius than a haughty mademoiselle.

    Written by Japanese Haikyo expert and explorer Michael John Grist. More about this place and other Haikyo can be found on his site here.

  • In the field: Discovery in Alexandria

    drhawass.com

    Press release (with photo):

    On Thursday, the Minister of Culture, Farouk Hosni, and the Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA), Dr. Zahi Hawass, witnessed the extraction of a red granite tower, originally part of a pylon, from the Mediterranean seabed at the archaeological site of Alexandria’s eastern harbor.

    Hosni described the pylon’s tower as unique among Alexandria’s antiquities. The Minister explained that it was discovered in 1998, along with 400 other artifacts, by a Greek archaeological mission in collaboration with divers from the Underwater Archaeology Department in Alexandria while conducting a comprehensive archaeological survey along the coastal area of Qaitbey. Hosni added that the tower is 2,25 meters tall, weighs 9 tones, and is cut from a single piece of red granite.

    Hawass announced that although the SCA has prohibited the removal of submerged artifacts since 2002, the tower is considered an exception – it is intended as the centerpiece for the future Underwater Museum to be constructed in the Stanley area of Alexandria. The museum will exhibit over 200 objects taken from the seabed of Alexandria’s eastern harbor and from Abu Qir.

    Hawass explained that the SCA has prohibited the extraction of submerged pieces because on the one hand, the SCA is conducting an extensive archaeological and cultural project with UNESCO, studying all the procedures necessary to build a new underwater museum in Alexandria. Visitors will be able to enjoy an underwater tour walking along special tunnels among the different sunken artifacts. On the other hand, extracting further pieces would require a great amount of time as would the cleaning the objects from accumulated salts.

    According to Harry Tzalas who headed the 1998 mission, the tower was part of an entrance to a temple dedicated to Isis Lochias located on Cape Lochias. According to ancient sources, Cleopatra’s Mausoleum was near this temple – a door lintel and a coin bearing the image of a similar tower were among objects discovered in 1998.

    At the eastern harbor is where Mark Antony died after being defeated by Octavian. It is also where Cleopatra tragically ended her life. However, we do not think the couple was buried here.

    eTurboNews (Hazel Heyer)

    On December 17, Egypt’s Culture Minister, Farouk Hosni, and the secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA), Dr. Zahi Hawass, unveil yet again an important find in Egypt’s Mediterranean coast.

    The precious artifact is to be the centerpiece in the future Underwater Museum to be constructed in the Stanley area of Alexandria. The museum is set to display over 200 objects excavated from the Mediterranean over the past several years.

    Media attending an international press conference at the Qait Bey Citadel on the eastern harbor in Alexandria – Egypt’s historic city on the Med will be given the first view of the relic. Both Hosni and Hawass will unveil a unique, sunken artifact from the Mediterranean’s seabed. This piece is said to be a granite pylon tower of Isis temple found beside the Cleopatra Mausoleum off the royal quarter at the eastern harbor.

  • Aston Martin One-77 closes in on being fastest car in marque’s history, breaks 220 mph

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    Aston Martin One-77 development mule – click above for high-res image gallery

    Move over Jaguar XJ220. At 217 mph, your top end is just too slow. Hell, move over Batmobile. Why? The Aston Martin One-77, Britain’s most expensive car ever, is now nearly its fastest. If not for the pesky, eternal problem of the McLaren F1 and its 241 mph top end, the One-77 would be the fastest production car in the history of Old Blighty. As it stands, or in this case flies, a One-77 has just crested 220 mph.

    Can the latest and no question greatest from Aston Martin go even faster? Probably, as AM was quick to point out, that the 220 mph velocity was achieved in “dry, but windy conditions.” Never forget the amount of power this 7.3-liter V12 beastie makes – between 700 and 740 horsepower, and around 553 lb-ft of torque. For the sake of national pride, the McLaren F1 produced “just” 627 hp and 480 lb-ft of torque. Obviously, the 2,514 pound F1 is much lighter than the 3,308 pound One-77, however, which actually makes 220 mph run all the more impressive.

    0-60 mph? Quarter mile? Lateral acceleration? We don’t know yet, but we do know that Aston Martin will keep us up to date as soon as all that information gets logged. For its part, the matte gray beauty you see above is at a “top secret proving ground in southern Europe” where its being flogged about in anticipation of the One-77’s mid-2010 release. If not for the £1.25 million price tag (just shy of $2M Yankee bucks), we’d be losing sleep. Full press release after the jump.

    [Source: Aston Martin]

    Continue reading Aston Martin One-77 closes in on being fastest car in marque’s history, breaks 220 mph

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  • Sweden: Autoliv Closes Four Plants- Over 800 Job Cuts

    The world’s biggest airbag and seat belt manufacturer, Swedish company Autoliv, has decided to shut down four of its foreign factories in France, Germany, Mexico and Tunisia. As a result, 820 company employees will lose their jobs.

    The company was forced to adopt this measure as part of a cost-cutting plan developed to deal with the seriously decreased orders that resulted from the general decrease of the automotive market.

    The seat belt assembling plant in Tunisia … (read more)

  • Lamentan fracaso de Cumbre

    GINEBRA, EFE
    El Foro Humanitario Global se apenó por el fracaso de los gobiernos reunidos en Copenhague en alcanzar un acuerdo contra el cambio climático.

    “Este resultado representa una oportunidad perdida para terminar con esta crisis de manera definitiva, además varios países pequeños se sintieron marginados en el proceso”, dijo esta organización no gubernamental (ONG) presidida por el ex secretario general de la ONU, Kofi Annan.

    Logros
    No obstante, la organización reconoció que “el hecho de que grandes economías como Brasil, China e India pactaran el ‘Acuerdo de Copenhague’ con Estados Unidos, con el que en principio tenían puntos de vista diferentes, supone un avance significativo”.
    Por ello, el Foro considera que, aunque aún queda mucho trabajo por hacer para alcanzar el tipo de acuerdo internacional que el mundo necesita, la cumbre “representa un importante paso adelante en el esfuerzo de la humanidad para luchar contra el cambio climático”.
    “En Copenhague el mundo se comprometió con este tema por primera vez”, afirmó.

    Fuente Bibliografìa

  • Toyota May Close Altona Engine Plant

    Japanese carmaker Toyota, one of the most battered (on several fronts) carmakers of 2009 is reportedly considering two options for its Australian Altona engine plant: either retool it and get it ready to receive production of the new-generation engine of the 2012 Camry, or shut it down and send all 300 workers home.

    According to GoAuto, the management of the plant is trying its best to convince the upper management of the company to invest for the retooling.

    I unde… (read more)

  • “Responsible communication” as a libel defence for reporters and bloggers: Supreme Court of Canada

    Toronto Star,

    In a landmark ruling on freedom of expression, the Supreme Court of Canada has created a new legal defence to libel lawsuits that would shield journalists who fairly and responsibly report stories of public interest.

    The new defence, dubbed “responsible communication” by the country’s top court, gives greater protection to broadcasters, writers and bloggers who do a form of reporting due diligence.

    It is a huge legal victory for the Toronto Star, which along with a broad coalition of Canadian media outlets, and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, had called for just such a defence.

    The decision breaks new ground for Canadian common law, bringing it in line with decisions in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and the United Kingdom.

    CBC News (with video),

    Two Ontario newspapers will get new libel trials, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled, opening the door for journalists to defend themselves against libel using the defence of “responsible journalism.”

    The Ottawa Citizen and the Toronto Star launched appeals under rules for the possible new defence that were outlined by the Ontario Court of Appeal two years ago.

    Read the full SCoC “Grant v. Torstar Corp.” decision. I’ve excerpted three paragraphs 96, 97, 113 that are very relevant to blogging and bloggers (emphasis added). [HT Michael]

    [96] A second preliminary question is what the new defence should be called. In arguments before us, the defence was referred to as the responsible journalism test. This has the value of capturing the essence of the defence in succinct style. However, the traditional media are rapidly being complemented by new ways of communicating on matters of public interest, many of them online, which do not involve journalists. These new disseminators of news and information should, absent good reasons for exclusion, be subject to the same laws as established media outlets. I agree with Lord Hoffmann that the new defence is “available to anyone who publishes material of public interest in any medium”: Jameel, at para. 54.

    [97] A review of recent defamation case law suggests that many actions now concern blog postings and other online media which are potentially both more ephemeral and more ubiquitous than traditional print media. While established journalistic standards provide a useful guide by which to evaluate the conduct of journalists and non-journalists alike, the applicable standards will necessarily evolve to keep pace with the norms of new communications media. For this reason, it is more accurate to refer to the new defence as responsible communication on matters of public interest.

    [113] As Lord Nicholls observed in Reynolds, news is often a perishable commodity. The legal requirement to verify accuracy should not unduly hamstring the timely reporting of important news. But nor should a journalist’s (or blogger’s) desire to get a “scoop” provide an excuse for irresponsible reporting of defamatory allegations. The question is whether the public’s need to know required the defendant to publish when it did. As with the other factors, this is considered in light of what the defendant knew or ought to have known at the time of publication. If a reasonable delay could have assisted the defendant in finding out the truth and correcting any defamatory falsity without compromising the story’s timeliness, this factor will weigh in the plaintiff’s favour.

    See also “Quan v. Cusson, 2009“.

    Posted in Canada, Law, politics, Video

  • Pharos Marine Orcageno Hydrogen Diesel Yacht Will Float Your Boat

    Pharos Marine Hydrogen YachtThis past summer I had talked about a hydrogen yacht sailing around the Mediterranean Sea and just yesterday I had talked about how the first hydrogen transport vehicle was not a boat. So, today, of course I’d like to talk about a new hydrogen yacht on the scene.

    Pharos Marine, based out of Egypt, has in fact, unveiled the Orcageno hydrogen diesel hybrid super-yacht. The Orcageno is 197 feet long is has been built to cut through the water with minimal friction and have minimal impact on marine life as well.

    In regard to hydrogen safety, “High safety standards are applied for hydrogen tanks to provide reliable operation conditions during loading and consumption of hydrogen fuel. The tanks are well isolated and fabricated from stress resistant material connected to each other by means of pipes and valves with sensors to indicate any leakage of hydrogen gas with a reliable shut down emergency system to ensure safety at all times.”

    The hydrogen-diesel system is dual fuel and either can be used with the flip of a switch inside the vessel’s internal combustion engine, which in turn drives the Pharos Marine Orcageno’s generator. The generator then powers the Azipod electrical propulsion system.

    Of course, being a yacht the Orcageno is not only environmentally friendly but also a luxury vehicle as well. It features a spa, health center, swimming pool and dining room so that guests can relax and enjoy the sunrises and sunsets aboard this eco-vessel.

  • Gold Crashes Through $1100, Investors Left Wondering How To Hedge Against US Mayhem

    Yesterday’s gold slip has today been made definitive. Gold $1,100 has been smashed, we’re now near $1,085.

    It’s quite a conundrum for investors looking to use gold as a hedge. U.S. GDP was just reported lower than expected, which means the fed’s punch bowl is more likely to stay around. Yet gold is falling. Buy on dips?

    Gold

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