Blog

  • Twitter Already Profitable After Search Deals

    For quite a long time, speculating on how and when will Twitter make money has been a favorite discussion point for the tech media, but it now looks like the speculation is over, Twitter may have already reached profitability. The company still doesn’t have a constant revenue stream, but the revenue from the recent search deals it struck with Google and Microsoft are said to be enough to make it profitable for 2009, according to Bloomberg.

    The publication, citing people close to the matter, claims that Twitter got about $15 million from Google for full access to the stream and all the tweets and a further $10 million from Microsoft. These revenues alone are expected to be enough for the site to reach profitability as expenses are estimated to be at $20 million to $25 million. The biggest expenses for the service used to be carrier charges, which it paid to enable users to receive free updates from their streams via SMS. Recently though, the site’s popularity gave it much more bargaining power allowing it to lower those expenses.

    There are a few caveats for the moment though. Even if Twitter did indeed make the $25 million, which it hasn’t officially acknowledged, it’s unclear if the payments were an one-time deal or maybe yearly payment for the access. Twitter has had some other revenue generating deals t… (read more)

  • Product Blog update: the 37signals ID rollout

    Some recent posts at the 37signals Product Blog:

    37signals ID
    37signals ID begins rolling out
    Here’s a list of many of the major changes that come along with the 37signals ID username and password system upgrade.

    37signals Launchpad: A video walkthrough
    The Launchpad lets you access all your 37signals products from a single screen. Move between them with a click, jump back into each app where you left off, rename, reorder, and organize your workflow.



    37signals ID update: Now you can have different email addresses for each Basecamp
    Now you can have a different email address for each Basecamp account. Just log into a Basecamp account, click “My Info” and edit the email field.

    How to: Merge multiple 37signals IDs together
    We launched a feature that lets people merge/link different 37signals IDs together. This is helpful if you’ve created two or more different 37signals IDs by accident. Or maybe you created separate identities on purpose originally but would prefer a single ID instead.

    Quick tips for accessing your new 37signals Launchpad
    Have you transitioned your account to a 37signals ID? If so, here’s a shortcut to the universal login and Launchpad: http://37s.me. And if you’re a Safari user, try this: Add the 37s Launchpad as the first item in your Bookmarks Bar. Then hit cmd+1 to quickly load it up!

    Highrise
    Car accident? Highrise cases are perfect for handling the aftermath
    A car accident is a real pain to deal with on many levels. One way to make the process easier is to use Highrise to collect all the information you’ll need to track: details on the other driver/car, witnesses, passengers, accident location, insurance, attorneys, and more.

    case

    Multiple products
    Why Basecamp and Campfire would be a better learning management system
    “At our university, we use Blackboard as a Learning Management System, and I can’t say that it’s good at all. In this post, I outline the most important shortcomings of Blackboard, the benefits of Basecamp and Campfire, and why the latter would be a better fit for our classes…The thing is that [37signals] products are not designed for education, they are designed for business. Yet, Basecamp and Campfire would be a much better overall fit than the Blackboard we currently use.”

    Subscribe to the Product Blog RSS feed.

  • MUST SEE: Global Warming, Or A Lot of Hot Air? (FoxNews Dec 20 2009), WattsUpWithThat.com

    Article Tags: Copenhagen Conference, Steve McIntyre, YouTube

    6 Part YouTube

    Global Warming, Or A Lot of Hot Air? Part 1 (FoxNews Dec 20 2009)

    All six parts of the hour-long special aired during prime time Sunday night on Fox News featuring Steve McIntyre and Ross McKittrick are now online below. Both Phil Jones and Michael Mann ducked requests for interviews. I can perhaps understand Jones situation, since he has not been giving other interviews, but in Mann’s case he’s been on a media blitz writing op-eds for the Washington Post and giving interviews to dozens more. His bias, (or perhaps cowardice) is showing. If his work is so “robust”, why not defend himself in this venue?

    Source: wattsupwiththat.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • News Sentinel: Legal impact of ash spill: Lawsuits likely to flood court for years to come

    This News Sentinel story on the one-year anniversary of the Kingston, Tenn., ash spill quotes Gregory Button, a UT Knoxville anthropologist who studies environmental disasters.

  • Alteraciones del clima afectarían economía latina

    CHILE, EFE
    Sin un acuerdo internacional para mitigar los efectos del cambio climático, el costo de este problema podría significar para América Latina y el Caribe hasta el 137% de su PIB actual en el año 2100, según la Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (Cepal).

    Las predicciones están contenidas en el informe ‘La economía del cambio climático en América Latina y el Caribe’, de la Cepal, elaborado para ser presentado en un evento paralelo a la Cumbre sobre el Cambio Climático que se celebra en Copenhague (Dinamarca).

    Grave repercusión
    Según el documento, sin acciones de mitigación la región podría sufrir para fines del siglo pérdidas importantes en el sector agrícola y en la biodiversidad, fuertes presiones sobre la infraestructura y un aumento en la intensidad de fenómenos naturales extremos.

    Las proyecciones se basan en cálculos de 15 países: Argentina, Belice, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, México, Nicaragua, Panamá, Paraguay, República Dominicana y Uruguay.

    Aunque es la segunda región mundial que menos gases de efecto invernadero emite (la primera es África), América Latina y el Caribe están sufriendo los efectos del calentamiento global más que ninguna otra, según el informe.

    Fuente Bibliográfica

  • The First Hydrogen Vehicle Was Not a Car, Train, or Boat

    Since the holidays are in full swing, I thought I would get a little nostalgic at this time of year and talk about the history of hydrogen used help people travel. As noted in the headline, the first hydrogen vehicle for carrying people from point A to point B was not a car, train or boat.

    The first hydrogen vehicle was actually a manned balloon filled with H2 created by Jacques Alexandre César Charles and flown over Paris, France in 1783. Charles worked with two brothers Anne-Jean Robert and Nicolas-Louis Robert who helped develop part of the balloon.

    Approximately 4 months before the first manned hydrogen balloon was flown, an unmanned balloon was flown and it scared the local peasants so much they stabbed it with pitchforks when it landed. The launching of the manned hydrogen balloon was attended by approximately 400,000 people including dignitaries like Ben Franklin.

    The manned hydrogen balloon attained a height of about 1,800 feet, stayed in the air about 2 hours and traveled 22 miles outside of Paris.

    According to Absolute Astronomy about Charles’ experiments with hydrogen balloons, “He developed several useful inventions, including a valve to let hydrogen out of the balloon and other devices, such as the hydrometer and reflecting goniometer, and improved the Gravesand heliostat and Fahrenheit’s aerometer. In addition he confirmed Benjamin Franklin’s electrical experiments.”

    Now, if you’re wondering about the first hydrogen car invented it was by an engineer in Switzerland named Francois Isaac de Rivaz in 1807. Rivaz created a 4-wheel vehicle and the hydrogen oddly enough was contained within a small balloon.

    So, with this historical perspective it is not difficult to see that hydrogen vehicles are not a new phenomenon. Instead, hydrogen has been used to carry people around for more than 225 years and will continue to do so for hundreds of years to come.

  • Maine may add warning labels to cellphones

    warning

    Maine could well become the first state in the Union to require cellphone manufacturers to add a cigarette-like warning to cellphone packaging. The idea is to remind people that cellphones may be dangerous, and that you would do well to limit your exposure to them.

    Of course, for every study that comes out that says cellphones may be dangerous, there’s another that says they’re not, or, at the very least, that more data is necessary to make any conclusions.

    Whether or not the warning message should be added will be brought before the Maine Legislature next month in a session that’s “usually reserved for emergency and governors’ bills.”

    The proposed warnings would advise people, especially children and pregnant women, to limit their exposure to cellphones.

    For its part, the CTIA, which is the mobile industry’s public face, says that it always bases its policies on hard science. To date, there has been no definitive “eureka!” study. Of course, that ignores the numerous studies that say, “you know, there’s some evidence here that says we should limit exposure.”

    Besides, why make sure a big deal about a warning sticker? What’s so bad about limiting your exposure to cellphones?

    Crunch Network: CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors


  • Vancouver Olympics Demands All Copyrights And Royalties From Musician Just To Hear Her Song

    Ah, the Vancouver Olympics. The example of intellectual property entitlement insanity that just keeps on giving and giving and giving. It’s no secret that the Vancouver Olympics has convinced the Canadian government to grant it extra special intellectual property rights that go way beyond what would be allowed for any normal business. This includes getting special control over words like “2010,” and “Vancouver” if you use them in any way associated with the sporting event known as the Olympics (also protected). It’s using these extra rights to stop ticket reselling and to take down signs they don’t like (even on private property).

    And, of course, acting in a maximalist manner also means little respect for anyone else’s intellectual property or free speech rights. We’ve already noted that some musicians have complained about a contractual gag order, that forbids any musician performing at any Olympics event to speak ill of the Olympics ever. However, it appears that the Vancouver Olympics folks are taking the maximalism even further. Michael Scott points us to a complaint from a musician who wrote a song which she thought the Olympic committee might like. She sent it to them, and was surprised to get back a contract demanding she sign over all ownership and royalties associated with the song before they would even listen to it. And, of course, it would also grant them the ability to do whatever they wanted with the song.

    Now, I recognize that many folks in these sorts of business will not listen to/view/read/etc. any sort of “unsolicited” material for fear of later running into a legal fight if something they do is similar. But, as such you just make it clear that you refuse to pay attention to any unsolicited material sent in. You don’t send a contract that would require the creator to hand over all copyrights and royalties in a work. I guess, if you’re the Olympics, however, you do exactly that.

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  • iPhone Developer Tapulous Captures Sales of Nearly $1 Million Per Month

    Reuters reports on iPhone developer Tapulous, the team behind the popular Tap Tap Revenge applications, noting that the small company is reportedly bringing in nearly $1 million per month in revenue. The success of Tapulous, which boasts only 20 employees, illustrates the ability of small development firms dedicated to the iPhone to carve out profitable niches for themselves in the App Store.

    Read more from MacRumors iPhone Blog

  • Un ejemplo de “pueblo solar”

    BUENOS AIRES, TIERRAMÉRICA

    Los habitantes de la norteña Puna están lejos de todo menos del Sol. Viven en aldeas pequeñas y dispersas, sobre un suelo árido y a miles de metros sobre el nivel del mar, que van camino a convertirse en ‘pueblos solares’.

    En el norte de la noroccidental provincia de argentina de Jujuy, los pobladores comprueban que la energía del Sol, una fuente limpia e inagotable, puede reemplazar a la leña, cada vez más escasa, mediante una serie de proyectos que desarrolla la Fundación EcoAndina.

    Su trabajo
    EcoAndina busca mejorar las condiciones de vida de las poblaciones locales, aprovechando la riqueza sustentable del Sol, del viento y del agua, y manteniendo la identidad cultural e histórica de esas comunidades, muy vulnerables y con exiguos recursos materiales.
    Desde que comenzó su labor, hace dos décadas, se instalaron en la zona unos 400 equipos de energía solar en 30 sitios.
    Cocinas familiares y comunitarias, hornos panaderos, calefactores, colectores de agua caliente y riego por goteo son las técnicas y dispositivos que se desarrollan a partir de distintas aplicaciones de esta energía.

    ¿Cómo lo hacen?
    Además de cocinar en hornos tan efectivos como los de gas, las familias pueden acceder a calefacción y agua caliente para sus hogares. En las escuelas hay colectores solares para entibiar las aulas y paneles fotovoltaicos que producen electricidad.
    Los proyectos se realizan con financiamiento de fuentes diversas. Uno de estos programas permitió desarrollar una tecnología para verificar la reducción de emisiones de dióxido de carbono por emplear las cocinas solares. La certificación permitirá obtener créditos de carbono que se venden en el mercado y dejan fondos para adquirir nuevos artefactos.

    Antes
    Silvia Rojo, presidenta de EcoAndina, explicó que tradicionalmente la población puneña cubría su demanda térmica con tres tipos de plantas leñosas: tolas, queñoas y yaretas. Pero su extracción provocó una grave desertificación, pérdida de diversidad de especies y daños a las cuencas hídricas.

    Fuente Bibliográfica

  • The Biology of the Na’vi

    The Na’vi, Avatar’s humanoids, were built for looks, not so much for their local environment. For example, they have breasts, big eyes and sternocleidomastoids because human moviewatchers like these features, even though the Na’vi are described as being non-mammalian in other respects.

    If you look closely, you’ll see that the Na’vi have a little muscle running down their necks. We’ve got them, too—it’s called the sternocleidomastoid muscle—and it’s a uniquely mammalian feature. Ours make a very distinctive V-shape, and when creature designers want an alien to seem attractive and familiar to its human viewers, they often slap one on. “Even C3PO has it, in the form of little pistons on his neck. Watch Star Trek: The good guys always have them, and the bad guys don’t. It’s a classic alien designer trick.”

    Actually, I wonder if they aren’t actually plants, a la the Delvians of Farscape, another bunch of blue skinned, sexy aliens.

    More: Mark Morford on the kinky hotness of the Na’vi.

  • Climate Chaos: Is There a Silver Lining to the Copenhagen Fiasco?

    President Barack Obama put in 13-hours of negotiations and appears to have saved the Copenhagen climate talks from utter collapse with his last-minute push. But is George W. Bush the real victor?

    One of the early and overwhelming conclusions in the wake of the “Copenhagen Accord” is that the United Nations process for reaching agreement on climate change is broken. Take this, for example, from Newsweek: “The best chance of reining in emissions of greenhouse gases and avoiding dangerous climate change is to stamp a big green R.I.P. over the sprawling United Nations process that the Copenhagen talks were part of.”

    The goal of giving every country, big and small, equal say in crucial issues and the need for unanimous consent led to countries such as Sudan and Tuvalu playing an outsize role in global negotiations. British climate secretary Ed Miliband called the two-week process a “farce,” and called for a reform of the UN process, saying “We cannot again allow negotiations on real points of substance to be hijacked in this way.”

    Indeed, it’s not clear whether the summit’s conclusion underscores the need to ditch the existing UN framework or whether that framework has already been scuttled.

    Thanks to the opposition of a handful of countries—luminaries of international cooperation such as Bolivia, Venezuela, Sudan, and Cuba—the conference ended not with a formal agreement but simply by “taking note” of the 3-page climate accord. Which, in diplomatic language, means pretty much what it means when you tell your mother-in-law you’ll “take note” of her suggestions.

    So what’s that leave? Perhaps a return to climate talks between a handful of major economies which between them account for the vast majority of greenhouse-gas emissions. As Michael Levi puts it:

    This conference has also starkly demonstrated the limits of the UNFCCC process. Future climate arrangements are far more likely to be hammered out in small groups like the one that gathered Friday night to salvage a deal than in plenaries of nearly two-hundred countries…this is likely to be the last time that the world places such high hopes on the global climate conference.

    Yes, there’s a name for that—the Major Economies Meeting or Forum. That’s something that then-president George W. Bush started, and which President Obama kickstarted. It puts the emphasis on reaching emissions agreements between countries—with the U.S. and China at the forefront—whose climate policies actually will make or break global attempts to rein in emissions, and whose economies produce clean-tech gear and generate the hundreds of billions of dollars needed to help the rest of the world adapt.

    Of course, as Mr. Levi points out, President Bush’s idea alone wouldn’t bear fruit: Witness the rest of the world’s intransigence on taking steps without some sort of U.S. commitment in writing.

    That is, the breakdown of the UN process in Copenhagen may drive climate talks in a more productive direction—but even that won’t go far unless the U.S. Senate takes up climate legislation in earnest next year.


  • BREAKING: Ex-Microsoft CFO Chris Liddell named CFO of General Motors

    Filed under: ,

    In the search for an auto industry outside, General Motors has announced that Chris Liddell will become the automaker’s vice chairman and CFO in 2010.

    Set to replace Ray G. Young — a 20-year veteran of GM — Liddell, the former Chief Financial Officer for software giant Microsoft, will report to GM’s chairman and acting CEO Ed Whitacre and use his financial expertise to right the General’s ship after one of the worst years in the automaker’s history.

    Liddell, an engineering and philosophy major, oversaw Microsoft’s global acquisitions, accounting and reporting while leading its financial team, and will depart from the software colossus on December 31. More details on this corporate breath of fresh air in the press release after the break.

    [Source: General Motors]

    Continue reading BREAKING: Ex-Microsoft CFO Chris Liddell named CFO of General Motors

    BREAKING: Ex-Microsoft CFO Chris Liddell named CFO of General Motors originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 21 Dec 2009 11:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Copenhagen: a look back at the most striking narratives

    by David Roberts

    Let the untangling of Copenhagen begin!Photo: Adam Selwood via Flickr Creative CommonsLast week was absolutely extraordinary, full of more drama and consequence than anything I’ve witnessed in the green world in the six years I’ve been covering it. It was the coming together of so many forces and narratives that the tangle will likely be unpacked over years, not days.

    For a close look at the details of the Copenhagen Accord, see Robert Stavins. For a wonderful tick-tock of how the last day unfolded, see John Vidal and Jonathan Watts. For more analysis, see Andrew Light, Michael Levi, Jeremy Symons, Julian Wong, Jake Schmidt, and Noah Sachs.

    Having had a chance to catch my breath after a manic couple of weeks, here are a few of the more striking narrative threads that have stayed with me.

    Clash of expectations

    What made Copenhagen such a charged atmosphere was the clash of two forces. On one side: the rising   expectations, engagement, and intensity of civil society. Activists have spent the last two years characterizing COP15 as humanity’s last chance to save itself; success was characterized as a full legally binding treaty targeted at 350 ppm of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. On the other side: a set of political circumstances and leaders that rendered activist aspirations all but impossible.

    A situation like that is bound to end in strife, and it did: civil society groups were locked out of Copenhagen’s Bella Center during the crucial final two days of negotiations and ended up mounting marches and demonstrations in the streets. Who knows if it was intended as a direct insult by the UNFCCC or the Danes—if reports on the ground are to be believed, one can’t discount managerial and logistical incompetence —but it created a disastrous visual: a vibrant, diverse youth movement locked out while heads of state negotiate their future behind closed doors.

    The limits of politics became “official,” as it were, in isolation from the people whose lives are at stake. You couldn’t haven engineered an outcome more likely to generate fury and despair among activists, and there’s been plenty. The anger at Obama and other world leaders, the sense of betrayal, is palpable, and it shouldn’t be discounted or minimized.

    At the same time, that anger shouldn’t cross over into self-indulgence. Nor should it serve to obscure the more systemic or institutional features of the challenge ahead.

    Leaders up in it

    One of the most unusual and fascinating stories of the summit is the fact that heads of state got down in the muck and negotiated text. This never happens. When leaders arrive at international negotiations they typically expect to sign something that’s already been hashed out, call it a victory, and fly home. At most there are a handful of remaining issues. Last Friday at Copenhagen there were dozens, large and small, remaining when over 100 heads of state arrived. That left them in a frantic game of phone calls, leaks, and meetings, sometimes with mid-level negotiators, sometimes one-on-one, sometimes even unexpectedly, as when Obama famously barged in on a meeting with China, India, and Brazil.

    At a press conference afterwards, U.N. Assistant Secretary-General Robert Orr spoke about what had transpired with something close to awe. He said he’d never seen so many heads of state at a negotiation, much less directly involved in textual details. To boot, he said, they knew what they were talking about, even down to the nitty-gritty details.

    Activists point out that Kyoto is legally binding and this new accord isn’t, but it can reasonably be responded that even a legally binding treaty isn’t worth much without serious, high-level commitment from the countries involved. (Kyoto hasn’t exactly been a wild success, after all.) Whatever the weaknesses of the document that emerged, there can no longer be any doubt that the leaders of the world’s major economies are directly engaged on the subject. That may prove as significant as any treaty in the long-term.

    China fail

    Obama being the hypnotizing, endlessly fascinating figure that he is, much attention has focused on his role in the talks. To hear some green lefties tell it, Obama is single-handedly responsible for failing to secure a full, legally binding treaty.

    But if there’s a party to blame, it’s China. It’s China that was off meeting with India and Brazil, trying to avoid getting ensnared in any commitments at all, forcing Obama to track them down. It was China that refused to sign off on the target of 50% global reductions by 2050. It was China that forced rich countries not to commit to 80% reductions by 2050, lest it some day have to live up to that target. (Yes, China forced rich countries to trim their ambitions. “Ridiculous,” said Merkel.) It was China who, up until the very last minute, refused to agree to any international verification at all, and only upon the personal intervention of Premier Wen Jiabao agreed to accept a voluntary system of reporting. (Read The Washington Post for that extraordinary story.)

    It’s China, in short, that was unwilling to sign onto anything but the most bare-bones framework. But it’s China without which no international climate system can work—it is, after all, the top emitter in absolute terms. By all accounts Obama practically knocked himself silly against the wall of Chinese intransigence, with two extended one-on-one meetings with Wen, but in the end he could only get what he could get, and it sounds like it was something of a miracle he got anything at all.

    UN fail

    Here’s what you need to know about the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change: it’s based on a framework that can’t solve the problem, but changing the framework requires unanimity among 192 wildly diverse nations, so it’s stuck.

    The Kyoto Protocol requires nothing of “developing nations,” an unwieldy and utterly outmoded category that now includes such wee economies as China, India, Brazil, South Africa, Mexico, and Korea. Obviously those countries are going have to participate somehow. But poor and island states don’t want to let go of Kyoto,  because it’s legally binding and takes their interests into account. The rich developed countries want a new, post-Kyoto framework that requires emission reduction commitments from emerging economies. And emerging economies, led by China, are in the catbird seat. They know they’ll have to accept some responsibility of some kind at some point, but they can absolutely dictate what shape it takes. Other countries have little leverage over them, since they’re protected by the current framework, and that—see above—is almost impossible to change.

    That is the stalemate climate talks have been in for years. It didn’t budge in the run-up to Copenhagen, making the hope of a full-fledged post-Kyoto treaty forlorn (thus the “two-step” process that begins with a political agreement). And it didn’t budge during Copenhagen: in the middle of last week, after a week and a half of negotiations, the process was on the verge of total failure. No progress had been made on the key issues and there was every sign that the deadlock was terminal.

    It was only by forging a non-UN side agreement that Obama and other national leaders averted disaster. The UNFCCC “took note” of the accord, but since Sudan, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Venezuela, and Cuba wouldn’t sign on, it couldn’t formally adopt it.

    That’s right—a clutch of hostile Latin American kleptocracies practically derailed the entire process. This can’t help but raise serious questions about whether the UN is the proper venue to hash out emission reductions. Does it really make sense to give 192 nations veto power when the vast bulk of emissions come from under 20 of them?

    Watch for more of the action to move to groups like the Major Economies Forum and the G20. This will leave poor developing countries more exposed than ever. The climate justice movement has its work cut out for it.

    Senate fail

    In retrospect it might not have mattered, given Chinese intransigence, but the reason Obama went to Copenhagen with such weak targets is that he couldn’t promise anything the U.S. Senate—the world’s most dysfunctional legislative body—wouldn’t deliver. Even the 17% by 2020 that Obama promised was a little risky, given the lingering possibility of failure in the Senate.

    Conversely, the reason Obama engaged so intensely and personally to get some kind of deal is that he knows failure in Copenhagen would mean failure in Congress. There’s no way in hell the U.S. Senate will pass a bill after the rest of the world makes it clear they can’t get their sh*t together.

    Will the agreement in Copenhagen be strong enough to positively affect the Senate debate? Given how isolated and self-regarding most senators are, that strikes me as unlikely. But it will be something to watch over the next few months as the bill nears the floor.

    Twitter win

    For the green world, Copenhagen marked a real coming of age for social media. The NGOs made unprecedented use of Facebook and Twitter to mount campaigns and keep in touch, but for me as a journalist the real story was Twitter.

    Far from the silly diversion it began, Twitter has become an indispensable tool for reporting. It was through Twitter that I kept up with journalists and NGO reps on the ground, tracked breaking developments, and found my way to the best analysis. It was where I spent most of my time tracking and where I did the bulk of my writing—distributing good information and links and tossing in bits of analysis, context-setting, and humor. (Follow me!)

    Obviously there are many things Twitter can’t do, but in terms of keeping a broad eye on the latest developments, it’s arguably superior to being on site. Many reporters in Copenhagen themselves gleaned the latest details from Twitter. There’s no replacing reporters digging behind the scenes, but Twitter opens a kind of second-level reporting that’s accessible to everyone.

    It struck me at, oh, 3am Saturday morning that I was living an extraordinary moment. While a fateful debate among the world’s countries took place, I watched it on live, streaming video and reported the important details to thousands of people in real-time. And while I’m a journalist by title, there was nothing preventing anyone from doing exactly the same thing; indeed, many non-journos were.

    All the information is available all the time, and anyone can distribute it—we’re all media now.

    Looking forward

    As an exhausted Obama said before leaving Copenhagen:

    One of the things that I’ve felt very strongly about during the course of this year is that hard stuff requires not paralysis but it requires going ahead and making the best of the situation that you’re in at this point, and then continually trying to improve and make progress from there.

    Along similar lines, Matt Yglesias has been drawing attention to the last paragraph of Max Weber’s “Politics as a Vocation”:

    Politics is a strong and slow boring of hard boards. It takes both passion and perspective. Certainly all historical experience confirms the truth—that man would not have attained the possible unless time and again he had reached out for the impossible. But to do that a man must be a leader, and not only a leader but a hero as well, in a very sober sense of the word. And even those who are neither leaders nor heroes must arm themselves with that steadfastness of heart which can brave even the crumbling of all hopes. This is necessary right now, or else men will not be able to attain even that which is possible today. Only he has the calling for politics who is sure that he shall not crumble when the world from his point of view is too stupid or too base for what he wants to offer. Only he who in the face of all this can say ‘In spite of all!’ has the calling for politics.

    What came out of Copenhagen is nothing but a faint promise. To make it something real, much less what’s needed,  will require intense pressure from civil society, elites, businesses, enlightened governments, and ordinary citizens. And guess what? If there is a robust, legally binding treaty signed in Mexico next year, with sufficient targets and timetables … intense pressure will still be required.

    This will be a century-long fight. If the green movement is going to sustain itself over time, it might be wise to try to avoid the emotional roller coaster of “last chances” and “historic failures.” That’s a recipe for burnout. There will be no cathartic moment, no final breakthrough, only a war of inches won by sheer persistence and creativity.

    Spread the news on what the føck is going on in Copenhagen with friends via email, Facebook, Twitter, or smoke signals.

    Related Links:

    What happens now for the forests?

    Copenhagen coal in the stocking?

    What you need to know following the Copenhagen climate summit






  • Huge Santa Claus Rally Underway

    Here’s the Santa Claus rally, within the market. Tons of major stocks are at-or-breaking 52-week highs today. Momentum continues:

    New Highs

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Personal Finance Links (and on being NFL perfect)

    Hall of Fame receiver Michael Irvin said a week ago that he’d trade his Hall of Fame inclusion and his 3 Super Bowl rings for a perfect season. Earlier this past Sunday, he went into more detail on his reasoning, which many found curious. Irving said that there have been very few players who can say that they’ve been part of a perfect team. Since you can’t live a perfect life, if you get a chance to perfect in your professional life, that’s worth it. He made a point that it wouldn’t be an individual accomplishment like the Hall of Fame one either.

    I can’t rationalize his logic. I think he’s trying to be humble and say the right things from a public relations standpoint… but I’m going to put more focus on it. Giving up 3 Super Bowl rings is significant… few people have ever done that (even fewer than people who have been part of perfect teams). If you are going to try be the “ultimate teammate”, what about taking the 3 Super Bowl rings away from your teammates such as Troy Aikman and Emmitt Smith? Also if you give up your Hall of Fame credentials and opt to be another cog in the system of a perfect team, do you have a job with the NFL Network? I think no. How many of the 1972 Dolphins (the only other team agreed by all to have a perfect season) worked in broadcasting after their career?

    My other thought here is that there’s too much focus on “perfect” in the NFL. It’s a by-product of the league not having too many games. You never hear a basketball, hockey, or baseball team even consider the prospect of going perfect. In baseball in particular, I think few (if any) teams ever go 11-0 in the postseason (probably due to the competition and the fact that you can’t throw your best pitcher each game). So when a team like the Dolphins finish their 17 games without a loss, it’s a great accomplishment… but I don’t think it’s any more an accomplishment than the Patriots winning 18 to start a season. We’ll never know one way or the other if the Dolphins would have won if they had to play two more games. It’s also of note that the Colts have now won some 24 regular season games in a row… an accomplishment that I consider to be way ahead of the 1972 Dolphins – especially in free agent era.

    I guess I see any talk of a perfect season in the NFL, much ado about nothing. Then again, I was the one who wrote quite a bit about it a couple of seasons ago… so maybe I’m just subconsciously playing it down in hindsight 😉

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  • A Climatology Conspiracy? by David H. Douglass and John R. Christy, American Thinker

    Article Tags: ClimateGate, David H. Douglass, John Christy

    The CRU e-mails have revealed how the normal conventions of the peer review process appear to have been compromised by a team* of global warming scientists, with the willing cooperation of the editor of the International Journal of Climatology (IJC), Glenn McGregor. The team spent nearly a year preparing and publishing a paper that attempted to rebut a previously published paper in IJC by Douglass, Christy, Pearson, and Singer (DCPS). The DCPS paper, reviewed and accepted in the traditional manner, had shown that the IPCC models that predicted significant “global warming” in fact largely disagreed with the observational data.

    We will let the reader judge whether this team effort, revealed in dozens of e-mails and taking nearly a year, involves inappropriate behavior, including (a) unusual cooperation between authors and editor, (b) misstatement of known facts, (c) character assassination, (d) avoidance of traditional scientific give-and-take, (e) using confidential information, (f) misrepresentation (or misunderstanding) of the scientific question posed by DCPS, (g) withholding data, and more.

    *The team is a group of climate scientists who frequently collaborate and publish papers which often support the hypothesis of human-caused global warming. For this essay, the leading team members include Ben Santer, Phil Jones, Timothy Osborn, and Tom Wigley, with lesser roles for several others.

    Click source to read FULL article by David H. Douglass and John R. Christy

    Source: americanthinker.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • REPORT: Fiat makes 500 engine plant in Michigan official

    Filed under: , ,

    Fiat currently owns 20 percent of Chrysler and can raise its stake to 35 percent once it satisfies three criteria: builds a plant in the U.S. to assemble fuel efficient engines; builds a 40 mpg car in the U.S. and expands Chrysler’s international reach. For each milestone achieved, Fiat gets another five percent of Chrysler. The first hurdle looks like it will be cleared next year, with Fiat committing to building the 500’s 1.4-liter, 92-horsepower engine in Dundee, Michigan at what was once the Global Engine Manufacturing Alliance plant.

    According to Automotive News, Fiat is putting $179 million into the location. Yet while the powerplants will be built in Michigan, they’ll be shipped immediately to Mexico to be placed in the waiting engine bays of the cutest car in the world. That’s because 500 production will happen at Fiat’s Toluca, Mexico factory. Half of those finished cars will come to America, half will go to Brazil, with sales predicted to begin at the end of next year.

    As for what to make of the alliance so far, and recent news like Chrysler’s speak-no-evil plans for Detroit Auto Show, Fiat CEO Marchionne said that it is going to take two years “to show some real results. We’ll try and do it faster,” he said, “but by the end of 2011 and in early 2012, you should be able to tell how our plan is working.”

    [Sources: Automotive News – sub. req.; Drive.com.au | Image: Bill Pugliano/Getty]

    REPORT: Fiat makes 500 engine plant in Michigan official originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 21 Dec 2009 11:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Blizzard: We will definitely work on a console game

    No Blizzard game has appeared on a console in a decade now, but that doesn’t mean the company will stick only to developing for PC. Blizzard’s J. Allen Brack recently told Gamasutra that they remain open to