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  • CHART OF THE DAY: Manufacturing Capacity Was Demolished In 2009

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    In 2009, the U.S. experienced one of the worst bouts of manufacturing capacity destruction in decades.

    This is shown by the relatively large negative bar for 2009, below.

    This capacity destruction was likely the result of inefficient and outdated U.S. capacity being rendered uncompetitive as the economic downturn separated the wheat from the chaff.

    Is it a bad thing? Actually, no. The removal of uncompetitive capacity means that the remaining players face less over-capacity going forward. If there are too many weak players, they all kill each other via price competition. In the long-run this is what we want to happen — weaker players are mothballed during downturns, making room for stronger ones.

    The trend we show was keenly and originally highlighted by the excellent site Econompic, though our numbers may be slightly different. Definitely check their site out.

    chart of the day, Manufacturing Capacity Growth


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  • Schedule Change

    There will be a change to the usual schedule of articles for the last few weeks in December. The usual schedule will be suspended till January 1st 2010. The remaining articles for this year are technically tricky and most of them will be published towards the end of December.

    Twitter

    You can follow ‘The Amazing World of Psychiatry’ Twitter by clicking on this link

    Podcast

    You can listen to this post on Odiogo by clicking on this link (there may be a small delay between publishing of the blog article and the availability of the podcast).

    TAWOP Channel

    You can follow the TAWOP Channel on YouTube by clicking on this link

    Responses

    If you have any comments, you can leave them below or alternatively e-mail [email protected]

    Disclaimer

    The comments made here represent the opinions of the author and do not represent the profession or any body/organisation. The comments made here are not meant as a source of medical advice and those seeking medical advice are advised to consult with their own doctor. The author is not responsible for the contents of any external sites that are linked to in this blog.

  • Blog Review:Why Evolution is True

    The blog reviewed here is ‘Why Evolution is True‘ by Dr Jerry Coyne and colleagues. 2009 is the 150th anniversary of Darwin’s publication of ‘On the Origin of Species’, a work which has had a profound impact on biology and related disciplines such as medicine and well beyond. The authors of this blog focus on evolution using examples from the natural world as well as covering debates in the field.

    Appearance and Design

    The background on the left one-third of the screen is a graded red and is demarcated from the beige two-thirds of the screen on the right-hand side by a grey line. The colours might be playing tricks on my eyes but the text appears to me to light brown in colour. The rich array of colours are joined by orange category tags, calendar highlights and miscellaneous other text throughout. I thought the colour scheme worked. There are several articles per page and at the time of reading this amounted to 10 on the home page. The blog is navigable through the calendar whereby the reader can locate archived articles, through hypertext links to popular posts and through category clouds. Articles are displayed in part and the reader must click on those of interest to reveal the full article.

    Content

    The archive extends back to January 2009. Here is a selection of some of the articles I found interesting

    Conclusions

    The authors are prolific and cover a vast range of interesting material from nature to support evolution and to show the reader the many wonders that exist in the natural world. The articles are typically several hundred words in length and use various approaches. For example they may include debates on controversial topics, reports on recent news stories or discussion of certain notable topics in evolutionary theory. This blog will appeal to those with an interest in the natural world, those in the related life sciences or people with an interest in evolution.

    Conflict of Interest

    None

    Twitter

    You can follow ‘The Amazing World of Psychiatry’ Twitter by clicking on this link

    Podcast

    You can listen to this post on Odiogo by clicking on this link (there may be a small delay between publishing of the blog article and the availability of the podcast).

    TAWOP Channel

    You can follow the TAWOP Channel on YouTube by clicking on this link

    Responses

    If you have any comments, you can leave them below or alternatively e-mail [email protected]

    Disclaimer

    The comments made here represent the opinions of the author and do not represent the profession or any body/organisation. The comments made here are not meant as a source of medical advice and those seeking medical advice are advised to consult with their own doctor. The author is not responsible for the contents of any external sites that are linked to in this blog.

  • The cutest gingerbread houses ever

    Not Martha’s Amazing Gingerbread Houses

    Megan, from Not Martha, is excellent when it comes to devising unusual holiday goodies. This year, her take on a traditional gingerbread house is no exception. She baked up some mini gingerbread houses that fit on the rim of a mug of hot chocolate (or coffee). Although I’ve seen gingerbread competitions with houses almost big enough to live in, these mini houses are just as impressive – and a whole lot cuter!

    Megan has pdfs of the patterns she used available if you want to try your hand at making some yourself. It takes a little bit of time and precision to put them together, but it is well worth the effort because the effect is amazing. A batch of these, and a few coffee mugs, and you would have one impressive last minute Christmas gift, too!

  • Cordarone

    Any body else taking this stuff?

    Looks pretty bad

    Common Cordarone Side Effects
    Hyperthyroidism 8%
    International normalised ratio increased 8%
    Condition aggravated 5%
    Bradycardia 5%
    Fall 5%
    Pulmonary fibrosis 5%
    Atrial fibrillation 4%
    Dyspnoea 4%
    Pneumonitis 4%
    Interstitial lung disease 4%
    Asthenia 4%
    Hypothyroidism 3%
    Malaise 3%
    Pleural effusion 3%
    Cardiac failure 3%
    Renal failure 3%
    Renal failure acute 3%
    Lung disorder 3%
    Torsade de pointes 3%
    Anaemia 2%
    Loss of consciousness 2%
    Weight decreased 2%
    Haemoglobin decreased 2%
    Pyrexia 2%
    Cardiac arrest 2%
    Hypotension 2%
    Pulmonary oedema 2%
    Arrhythmia 2%
    Balance disorder 2%
    Cholestasis 2%

  • iPhone and iPod Touch See International Surge

    AdMob, the mobile advertising network, has released its latest metrics report (PDF), which looks at trends for the year. In 2009, one of those would be 150 percent growth for iPhone OS devices on AdMob’s network, with the greatest growth for the iPhone and iPod touch outside the U.S. While this is great news for the platform, it’s not quite the world domination the pretty charts suggest.

    According to AdMob, there were 25.3 million unique iPhone OS users in their network in November, a unique user being one that has seen at least one ad request in a given month. That represents less than half the 60 million or so iPhone OS devices that have been sold, but it’s still a valid sample measuring change, change that favors Apple, at least for now.

    As previously reported, the iPhone in Japan has come to represent nearly half the smartphone market, so that’s in keeping with what AdMob reports in Japan this year. France saw a big jump too, which could be a result of the end of carrier exclusivity. While China is also up, the lackluster official launch of the iPhone, only 5,000 units sold, likely has little to do with that growth. Gray-market, often pre-owned iPhones will continue to dominate iPhone sales in China into 2010, but that’s not biggest problem for Apple; that would be continued growth in the U.S.

    Not that 100 percent growth is bad, but in the U.S. iPhone OS devices have likely reached a saturation point, at least compared to other countries. For those pining for a Verizon iPhone, this relative slowing of growth should be a strong incentive for Apple to abandon its exclusivity agreement with AT&T. Another incentive would be competition from Android.

    AdMob shows Android traffic up dramatically over the year. For November, Android accounted for 27 percent of ad requests, up from 20 percent in October, with 88 percent of traffic generated in the US. Expect that to change in 2010 with a profusion of Android devices and deals being made domestically and internationally. While 2009 may have been the year of iPhone OS, unless Apple abandons carrier exclusivity 2010 may belong to Google.


  • VIDEO: Citroën C3 Visiodrive advertisement is for swingers

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    Citroen C3 Visiodrive commercial – Click above to watch video

    A Citroën commercial without robots or an NRJ radio station soundtrack? We might have thought it impossible, but here it is. Promoting the new C3 hatchbach and its zenith windscreen meant to give you all kinds of panoramic views, the kids take this car on a joyride unlike any you’re likely to see outside of a Top Gear episode.

    Follow the jump for more information on the C3 and to see the swingin’ commercial along with a special “making of” video.

    [Source: Citroën via YouTube]

    Continue reading VIDEO: Citroën C3 Visiodrive advertisement is for swingers

    VIDEO: Citroën C3 Visiodrive advertisement is for swingers originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 15:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • ANDERSON’s NOTEBOOK: It’s Down to the Final Hours

    Fred Anderson is providing an inside look at COP-15 in Copenhagen to The Bureau of National Affairs (BNA) World Climate Change Report. 

    Today, Anderson’s Notebook (12/18/09), titled It’s Down to the Final Hours, discusses the encouraging signals from China and what the final day will bring.

    To read the full entry, please click here 

  • Google Hires Open Web Leader For Social Initiatives

    smarrpic.jpegRespected industry thought leader, Joseph Smarr, announced on his blog today that he is leaving Comcast-acquired Plaxo to join Google and help drive the company’s next steps in the social web. Smarr has been a key innovator in the OpenID, Oauth and related technical movements.

    Smarr’s work is all about enabling innovation by making it easy for users to move data from site to site.

    Sponsor

    While noting Google’s support for specific open web technologies, Smarr also said: “Getting the future of the Social Web right – including identity, privacy, data portability, messaging, real-time data, and a distributed social graph – is just as important, and the industry is at a critical phase where the next few years may well determine the platform we live with for decades to come. “

    Smarr was the first non-founding employee of Plaxo, a dynamic contact management service that was once the darling of Silicon Valley, and then became its spammy boogeyman, and was finally acquired by Comcast 18 months ago. Plaxo was co-founded by Napster co-founder Sean Parker and was backed by Sequoia Capital, the fund that backed Google and YouTube.

    Chris Messina, fellow open-web leader and the self-described evangelist that helped turn Smarr from the dark side of Plaxo’s early days (“champions of the open web can come from all corners,” he told us), said of the move: “Smarr joining Google is a logical next step for him – I think he’s done great work at Plaxo with John McCrea, but advancing the open web has not been able to be his priority since he took on the CTO role there.”

    Kaliya Hamlin, who says she introduced Smarr to the Identity community, said of his move to Google: “His spirit and energy to get things done, work across company boundaries and a deep commitment to open standards innovation will be a great asset for Google. One thing that really stands out for me was his innovation with Microsoft on the Portable Contacts API. That idea originated at the Data Sharing Workshop seeking to make progress on what was possible and within six months under his leadership it was complete.”

    OpenID leader Scott Kveton said this announcement is just the beginning. “That’s great news,” he told us, “and just the first of more to come I hear. It’s going to be down to Google, Microsoft and Facebook. They are hiring all of the people building the open web. I’ll be curious to see what kind of impact it has.”

    Smarr photo by Adactio.

    Discuss


  • NBC, Defender Of All Things Copyright, Copies Blogger’s Post Without Permission; Removes Her Name When She Complains

    We’d love to get an explanation from NBC Universal General Counsel Rick Cotton on the following story. Cotton, of course, is the very, very, very strong defender of copyrights for NBC Universal. He was, of course, the main source for the propaganda “oh no piracy is killing the movie business” segment on 60 Minutes, and as we all know, he’s been quite concerned about the poor, poor (yet, heavily subsidized) corn farmers hurt by “piracy.” He’s come out as a supporter of having ISPs spy on users to block the transmission of copyright works (which should be useful once Comcast takes over). And, finally he’s also been involved in NBC’s attempt to make it more difficult for anyone to watch the Olympics online, even though the evidence showed that the people who watched Olympics content online were more likely to then watch it on TV (ads and all) as well.

    So, with all that, you’d have to imagine that if he found out about a company associated with the Olympics copied someone’s blog post without first getting their permission, he’d be pretty upset. But what if that company was NBC Universal? Reader JC points us to the news that NBC Universal’s Olympics website has been caught copying a blog post and then when alerted to it, rather than removing the content, it just removed the writer’s name. It looks like the attention this story has received has resulted in NBC Universal putting her name back on the story, but the story remains on the site. I’m assuming there must be more to this whole situation. According to the link above, the original site, Tourism Vancouver, says this is “an ongoing issue with the NBC Olympic site, and [it] has been battling them for some time over it.” Surely, NBC Universal, as such a strong defender of copyright, wouldn’t be in the business of copying others’ content without permission? Even if it believed it had the right to use her content, removing her name after being alerted to the issue appears really sketchy. Perhaps there’s an explanation that involves helping out those poor corn farmers?

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  • Don’t Worry About Government Debt, America Knows Exactly How To Deal With It

    printing press

    The Economist reminds us just how quickly America has been able to make debt disappear in the past.

    Thanks to inflation.

    Economist: Debt-concerned pundits often cite the example of America’s postwar debt as evidence that such high debt levels can be paid down over time. All that’s needed, they say, is the resolve to put the budget on a sounder path. But in fact, that’s not all that’s needed:

    [B]etween 1946 and 1955, the debt/GDP ratio was cut almost in half. The average maturity of the debt in 1946 was 9 years, and the average inflation rate over this period was 4.2%. Hence, inflation reduced the 1946 debt/GDP ratio by almost 40% within a decade.

    That’s right, one of the principle ways the country addressed its debtload was to inflate it away. Could, and should, something similar be done today?

    Problem is, it may not be so easy this time around given that the nation faces the deflationary forces of de-leveraging citizens and corporations.

    Read more here >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • No Real Deal, and No Exit

     

     

     

    "It will take lot of us – probably in the streets" to make politicians face the truth, says climate scientist James Hansen. Credit: TerraViva/Stephen Leahy

    "It will take lot of us – probably in the streets" to make politicians face the truth, says climate scientist James Hansen. Credit: TerraViva/Stephen Leahy

    No Real Deal, and No Exit

    Analysis by Stephen Leahy

    COPENHAGEN (IPS/TerraViva) The roof of our house is on fire but our leaders, our economic system and we ourselves are ignoring the alarms and continuing to add more fuel. There are no exit doors in our house; there is nowhere else to go.

    Dangerous climate change is already here.

    The two-week climate summit in Copenhagen came to an end with disappointing results and details that are still vague.

    A ”Copenhagen Accord” was agreed by the US, China, South Africa and India by Friday night. It was unclear which other countries were willing to support it.

    But coral reefs are dying, the Arctic is melting and rising sea levels threaten the homes of millions. And we’re on our way to a planet-transforming four-degree C rise in global average temperatures in as soon as 50 years.

    Future generations could face an utterly transformed planet, where large areas will be seven to 14 degrees C warmer, making them uninhabitable. In this world-on-fire, the one to two metre sea level rise by 2100 will leave hundreds of millions homeless, according to the latest science presented at the “4 Degrees and Beyond, International Climate Science Conference” at the University of Oxford in September.

    That’s the science-based, slap-in-the-face reality as the Copenhagen climate talks fizzle out here with little progress Friday.

    “Our leaders do not get the scale of the problem or the rapidity of the changes. They don’t get that it must be dealt with now,” said Andrew Weaver, a climatologist at Canada’s University of British Columbia and lead author of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports.

    “Now” means that global carbon emissions peak in five years and begin to decline shortly thereafter to near zero by 2050, according to a report summarising the very latest science by the world’s top climate scientists, including Weaver. Called “The Copenhagen Diagnosis, 2009: Updating the World on the Latest Climate Science”, it was released a week before the talks began here Dec. 7.

    “More modest, achievable targets in the short term will get the planet on the right track,” Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been often quoted as saying. Harper’s “modest” target for Canada amounts to a three-percent reduction from 1990 levels by 2020. The U.S. target is little better.

    Based on the scientific evidence, the world’s best and brightest climate scientists conclude that Canada and other industrialised nations must reduce emissions 25 to 40 percent by 2020 compared to 1990 to have any hope of keeping the warming at two degrees C.

    “Two degrees C will be a very difficult for modern society to cope with,” said Pål Prestrud, an Arctic researcher and director of Center for International Climate and Environmental Research in Oslo, Norway.

    Even if all emissions were cut off today, global temperatures would decline very slowly – over a period of a thousand years. “If we wait too long, it will be too late to do anything,” Presetrud warned TerraViva here.

    No scientist considers stabilising the climate at two degrees warmer to be getting the planet on the right track. The Arctic is already melting at the present 0.8 C of warming. There may be no sea ice in the summer in just 5 to 10 years.

    What happens when the cold top of the world that drives the global weather system warms up? Temperature and precipitation patterns in Europe and North America will change, affecting agriculture, forestry and water supplies, the “Arctic Climate Feedbacks: Global Implications” report warned in September.

    Worse still, a warmer Arctic will emit large volumes of carbon and methane, which are currently stored in the frozen soils called permafrost. Once that process gets underway, runaway global heating may be unstoppable.

    At two degrees warmer, the majority of corals will die due to a combination of warmer temperatures and ocean acidification. Coral reefs are the nurseries for much of the fish in the oceans and hundreds of millions of people are dependent on them. Sea level rise will displace many millions more.

    Finally, two degrees C of warming is only the global average. What it really means is that temperatures will range from one to four or five degrees hotter depending on the region. It also means at least one metre of sea level rise by 2100. Countries in Africa, small islands states and the least developed countries are calling for a 1.5 C target here.

    Humans have enjoyed 10,000 years of climate stability, in which the global average temperature varied less than one degree C – even during the Little Ice Age and Middle Warming Period, says Robert Corell, director of the Global Change Programme at the H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics, and the Environment in Washington, DC.

    Global emissions over the past five years have been above the worst case scenarios of the IPCC, and on a path for a five- to six-degree C rise in temperatures by 2100, Corell told TerraViva.

    He also warned that Earth’s natural absorbers of carbon, the oceans and forests, are taking up less carbon every year, meaning concentrations of heat-trapping carbon will increase faster than expected.

    All the commitments for reductions made in Copenhagen up to date translate into a 3.8-degree C rise in global temperatures, he said in an interview.

    “Canada’s federal government doesn’t have a freakin’ clue what two degrees means,” said Canada’s Weaver with vehemence. Vested corporate interests from one sector are blocking the transformation to a low carbon economy, he said: “Big oil is running things.”

    “I am sorry to say,” writes James Hansen, “that most of what politicians are doing on the climate front is greenwashing – their proposals sound good, but they are deceiving you and themselves at the same time.”

    One of the most respected climate experts, Hansen is director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies.

    “Governments are stating emission goals that they know are lies,” Hansen wrote in the Observer newspaper Nov. 29.

    “Are we going to stand up and give global politicians a hard slap in the face, to make them face the truth?” he asked. “It will take lot of us – probably in the streets. Or are we going to let them continue to kid themselves and us, and cheat our children and grandchildren?”

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  • Voices in a void

    I wrote this earlier this afternoon, on paper. Anna’s already blogged about the intervention, but here are my thoughts:

    I’m sitting in the new youth convergence space, a huge bright white hall near the central station and the Klimafoum called Oskerhalle. A young climate activist from London is standing on the stage with his guitar, doing a sound-check which has turned into a short impromptu concert.

    Music is just what I need right now – I’ve just heard the last youth ‘intervention’ or speech of the COP, given by Juan Carlos Soriano, from Peru.  His eloquent, empassionned words were recieved by a crowd of cheering, watching here over video link. But my tears were of anger because they were delivered to a huge empty plenary room, while all of the powerful people who should have been listening and being moved are making the important decisions somewhere else, in a closed room.

    Juan Carlos is one of the few young people to have been allowed into the Bella centre today, the last day of the negotiations, but this ‘privilege’, which should have been a right, is hollow – he and the other youth and NGOs and other members of civil society inside are not allowed to witness the real decisions being made.

  • ATT MB E-Class “a pleasant original deluxe-sportster, stiring the blood of every real man”

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    ATT-TEC E Class sedan — Click above for high-res image gallery

    ATT-TEC has been busy this end of the year, and here they are presenting yet another softly tuned German car, this time an E Class sedan. Called “a car of extra class – no doubt!” and “flawless everywhere,” it wears a comprehensive aero kit and 20-inch wheels. Intriguingly, it also sports a round void where the grille emblem once lived, and a matching void in the vents aft the front wheels.

    ATT didn’t mention the engine at all, so we figure they left it alone. The remaining mods will run you €10,321 ($14,757 U.S.). A press release after the jump will tell you about a car that could be ticketed for “stiring [sic] the blood of every real man,” and there’s the gallery of high-res photos below to get you even more worked up.

    [Source: ATT-TEC]

    Continue reading ATT MB E-Class “a pleasant original deluxe-sportster, stiring the blood of every real man”

    ATT MB E-Class “a pleasant original deluxe-sportster, stiring the blood of every real man” originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 15:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • LG eXpo unboxed

    MobilityMinded has published this unboxing video of the LG eXpo on AT&T. While they show the LG eXpo to be about the same size as the HTC Touch Pro 2, the device is clearly much narrower and pocket-friendly.

    Read more at MobilityMinded here.

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  • Best Wishes from the Superintendent

    jim_teressa

    BSSD Staff, Students, & Parents,

    It has been a very busy first semester as usual. Looking back through the last few months of StraitTalk articles, as well as my own pictures that I’ve collected from emails sent to me and collected from my travels, I am pleased to be reminded of all the great work being done across our school district. We are very busy, but also very productive. These last few months have seen the BSSD Educational Conference, Elementary/ Jr. High Wrestling and Cheerleading Tournaments, Regional Mix-six Volleyball and High School Wresting, Strategic Planning and AEC Workshop, and many other activities that are happening at the site level.

    Not only is this the close of 2009, but this is the closing of the first decade of this new millennia. If you are a student, I encourage you to think about your future. Where do you want to be in another ten years? If you are a parent, I encourage you to continue to support your child by having them attend school on a regular basis ready to learn. If you are a teacher, whether a first year teacher or a twenty year veteran, I encourage you to take time over the next few weeks to think about all of the great things that have happened during your time with BSSD. What projects are worth repeating or developing, and how can you play a role?

    I wish everyone a restful and safe winter break. Happy Holidays!

    Sincerely,

    Jim Hickerson
    Superintendent

  • Obama’s Speech

    Here is Obama announcing what is essentaily “a carefully managed collapse” in the form of the Copenhagen Accord.

  • My local movie theatre offers “mom & baby” showtimes, should I go?

    michaelrich_smallMedia expert Michael Rich, MD, MPH, director of the Center on Media and Child Health at Children’s Hospital Boston, answers your questions about media use. Last week, he discussed negative portrayals of black women in the movies.

    Here’s this week’s question:

    Q: There is a movie theatre near my home that has afternoon shows for moms, where they put out a changing table in the theater and don’t lower the lights all the way—but then they show very adult movies. What effect does being exposed to these movies have on infants and toddlers, most of whom are not talking yet?
    Skeptical about Screenings, Pacific Palisades, CA

    A: Dear Skeptical,

    This accommodation for moms certainly seems like a great convenience, but you are right to question its effects on the babies. Because the babies are not yet ready to talk — a stage called “pre-verbal” — it’s tempting to believe that they are not affected by what’s on screen. And it’s true that they probably can’t figure out the images in any meaningful way. So what’s the problem?

    The main problem with this kind of arrangement is that babies are exquisitely attuned to their mothers’ feelings. Films geared toward adults often involve fear, violence, and/or sexuality, and if the films are any good, they are probably affecting the moms’ emotions.  Babies will feel those changes in emotions, and they can form associations between mom’s emotional response and whatever is in the environment at that moment. For example, if a dog barks during a scary scene and mom’s adrenalin increases, the child may end up with an almost intangible fear of dogs.

    Research shows that anxiety and fear responses tend to be tied to single exposures; in other words, becoming scared of something can happen even if someone’s only seen it once. One study showed that some young adults who saw Jaws as children would not go into the water–not even swimming pools–even years later because they had such a deep fear of sharks.

    These sorts of fears are easily formed in a baby’s brain, which creates 700 new synapses, or connections, per second. These synapses are created in response to whatever is going on around the baby. For that reason, parents should put their infants in environments that will build their brains the way they want them to be built. Movies made for adults are likely to have the opposite effect. When moms want to go to the movie theater, their best bet for helping to build their baby’s brain to be strong and healthy is to hire a sitter and head out for some well-deserved fun without their little one.

    Enjoy your media and use them wisely,
    The Mediatrician

    Do you have a question about your child’s media use? Ask it today!

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  • So, Is Operation Chokehold Melting AT&T In Your Area?

    Screen shot 2009-12-18 at [ December 18 ] 11.47.37 AM

    It’s just after 12 o’clock here on the left coast, which means Operation Chokehold should now be in full effect. What that means (if anything at all) is still up in the air — which is why we’re turning to you for a status report.

    For the uninitiated: Operation Chokehold is a sort of cyber-protest against AT&T, as conjured up by some dude playing a dude disguised as another dude. For one solid hour between 12 and 1 Pacific, angry iPhone owners are supposed to gobble up as much data as they can in an “attempt to overwhelm the AT&T data network and bring it to its knees.”

    The discussion on the merits of this bit of disobedience have already been done into the ground, so we won’t dive into that. The FCC and ATT have already condemned the whole thing, and Fake Steve has back-pedaled a bit to make it clear that the whole thing was intended as a joke. Joke or not, its taken off with a life of its own now – some people are taking this pretty dang seriously.

    With all that said, we want to know: has Operation Chokehold affected the quality of your AT&T connectivity? Here in San Jose, CA things seem as good as ever — that is, they’re not all that great, but certainly don’t seem worse than normal. Let us know where you’re at and how the 3G network is acting in your area down in the comments.

    [Image via Kakiseni]

    Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0


  • 2010 Will Feel Like The 1890s, A Deflationary Recovery Except With Robots

    Jonathan Wilmot, the Credit Suisse strategist who recently graced us with his presence here on FT Alphaville, has decided against sending out a 2010 tome this year.

    Instead, he’s come over all Twitterish.

    Here, in 140 characters or less, are previews of the 10 short pieces he’ll be posting on his CS blog over the holidays…

    The Great Divide: correlations cluster near one in crises; now it’s not so macro. Re-focus on alpha and country specific trades.

    Think 1890s: a deflationary recovery that may feel like a depression. Plus Robots and Virtual Worlds and How To Live Forever.

    Read the rest of his predictions at FT Alphaville >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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