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  • Help during the Cold & Flu Season

    I’m singing the winter blues… and it came to me in the form of a Katy Perry song!

    I’m hot and then cold
    I’m yes and then no
    I’m in and then out
    I’m up and then down

    My 11 year old son has a cold.  And, loving his mama so much, he decided to share it with me.  My immune system is very low.  Ergo, I catch anything that anyone has to throw at me.  I must stand there in the forefront with my baseball glove in hand waiting for the next foul ball. So far, during this awful flu & cold season, my record is 2-2.  Damn I’m good.

    The flu and cold season usually starts in October and doesn’t end until sometime in April.  Unfortunately, there is no cure for the common cold or the flu.  But, there are some things that you can do to help boost your immune system before you get sick and even when you do get sick.

    Foods that can boost your immune system before you get sick

    • Garlic has the ability to increase your resistance to infection and stress.  During the holiday season most people feel some sort of stress.  Let’s face it, when you’re stressed, you definitely feel worse.  Right?  Of course I’m right.  Try adding more garlic to your diet during this cold and flu season and see how much better you feel.
    • Cheese and other dairy products have conjugated linoleic acid, a natural component of dairy fat that have antioxidant and anti-cancer properties.  
    • Yogurt and other cultured milk products contain probiotics which help boost your immune system. Probiotics are live microorganisms that help fight the bad organisms.
    • Vitamin C, found in citrus fruits and fruit juices, can help boost your immune system.  You can also find Vitamin C supplements over the counter.  Make sure you check with your Dr. before taking any supplements.
    • Zinc, found in the meat group and supplements, plays a major role in boosting the immune system.

    Foods that help you to heal when you’re sick

    • Ginger root used in small portions can help the common cold.  It induces sweating and decreases nausea and vomiting.  You can add fresh ground ginger root to your tea with a little bit of honey.
    • Honey has powerful antimicrobial properties.  A teaspoonful topped with lemon juice every couple of hours does wonders for a sore throat.
    • Chicken soup helps with nasal congestion, warms you up inside, and tastes great!
    • Eating well balanced meals is important at all times.  But, more-so when you’re sick.

    Other things to do to help boost your immune system

    • Eat a well-balanced diet
    • Take your daily vitamins
    • Wash hands regularly, and then wash again.
    • Exercise regularly
    • Decrease stress as much as possible.  I know, easier said than done.
    • Drink lots of fluids, ie. water, juice
    • Cut back on unhealthy habits such as alcohol intake and smoking.

    These are just suggestions and are not meant to override a doctors advice.  You know your own body.  Therefore, if your cold or flu symptoms persist or worsen, CONSULT YOUR PHYSICIAN.


  • Oracle Makes a Public Commitment to MySQL

    MySQL’s future is very uncertain at this point after Oracle made a bid to acquire Sun Microsystems which owns the database system. The deal is still waiting for approval from regulators in the EU which are debating weather and how the acquisition will affect the database market in which Oracle has a very strong presence and where the free MySQL has been making inroads especially at the lower end, cutting into Oracle’s bottom line.

    Now, MySQL’s creator, Michael “Monty” Widenius, is stepping up his disapproval of the deal and is urging people to make their voices heard by contacting the European Commission (EC). Oracle has responded with a public statement committing to keeping MySQL open source, as well as making other assurances to the customers and the EC.

    “I, Michael “Monty” Widenius, the creator of MySQL, is asking you urgently to help save MySQL from Oracle’s clutches. Without your immediate help Oracle might get to own MySQL any day now. By writing to the European Commission (EC) you can support this cause and help secure the future development of the product MySQL as an Open Source project,” MySQL’s creator wrote.

    He is adamant that, if things go ahead in their current form, MySQL’s future isn’t guaranteed and that Oracle will effectively kill the project by not committing to it o… (read more)

  • Are vitamins worth the money?

    Do you pop vitamin pills daily to keep yourself healthy? If you do you’re likely in the majority, because half of adults take vitamins daily. But are you taking the right ones and in the right amount?

    If you don’t know, you could be spending too much and possibly even causing your body harm. Vitamin sales have been growing at the pace of 4% annually and as more people lose health insurance, those numbers are expected to increase more rapidly. The Nutrition Business Journal expects sales to grow by 8% to a total of $9.2 billion annually as people turn to vitamins hoping they will stay healthy and avoid the doctor.

    But, you shouldn’t just start popping pills. For example, Vitamin A in the right dosage can help maintain healthy teeth, bones, skin and vision, but if you take too much, you can end up reducing bone density, encouraging hair loss and developing liver problems.

    So how can you avoid the pitfalls of taking too many vitamins? Do your homework. If you want to use vitamins and supplements to stay healthy, do so with some professional help. I work with a doctor dual-certified in internal medicine and naturopathic medicine. Naturopathic medicine believes that the human body has an innate healing ability. Naturopathic doctors (NDs) teach their patients to use diet, exercise, lifestyle changes and cutting edge natural therapies to enhance their bodies’ ability to ward off and combat disease. My doctor, using basic blood and saliva tests, helps me to determine what vitamins and minerals I need to stay healthy and avoid costly medical treatments in the future. Read more…

  • In Memoriam: Deborah Rhatigan

    Deborah RhatiganUT Knoxville psychology professor Deborah Rhatigan has died of colon cancer at age 40. Rhatigan, an award winning teacher and mentor, continued to work tirelessly for the university and for her students throughout her heroic battle with cancer.

    Psychology department head James Lawler noted that Rhatigan “was an extraordinary woman and her long struggle with cancer is an inspiration to us all. She will be greatly missed.”

    Rhatigan received her doctorate in clinical psychology from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in 2002. She completed a postdoctoral research fellowship at the Boston VA Healthcare System National Center for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder in 2004.

    From 2005 to 2006, Rhatigan served as an assistant professor at the University of Houston, Downtown. From 2006 to 2007, she was a UT Knoxville Visiting Scholar, and was hired as a tenure-track assistant professor in the psychology department in 2007.

    Rhatigan’s research focused on examining risk factors and resiliency among battered women. She was particularly interested in developing and refining interventions aimed at reducing the risk for abuse. She studied risk factors for abuse, such as substance abuse and other psychological problems, and protective factors, such as self confidence and the ways in which family and friends provide support. This work has the potential to transform the way in which battered women receive treatment.

    “Deb cared deeply about her graduate students and their training,” said Deborah Welsh, director of the department’s clinical psychology program. “She was enormously loved and respected by everyone who knew her. She provided an example of how to live a rich and meaningful life, even while enduring the hardships of cancer and its treatment.”

    Survivors include Rhatigan’s husband, UT Knoxville psychology professor Todd Moore, and their 5 year-old daughter, Anna.

    Click here to read the News Sentinel obituary.

  • Sony: PS3 Slim could have been smaller

    The PS3 Slim is small and cheap enough as it is, but did you know that Sony actually wanted to make it even smaller? Sony Computer Entertainment’s Masayuki Chatani let Nikkei in on Sony’s scrapped plans for

  • Australia ranks poorly on climate action: WWF

    Australia has been ranked fourth last in an assessment of the actions being taken by industrialised and emerging countries on climate change.

    "It is simply not good enough for Australia to pretend we are too small to have an effect on global climate change," said Kellie Caught, WWF-Australia’s Climate Change Policy Manager.

    "While Australia is ranked 16 in terms of total emissions, its poor ranking on climate action is because it has the highest emissions per capita in the developed world, and its emissions continue to increase at approximately twice the world average.

    "Australia is a significant contributor to climate change and what this ranking clearly shows is that while we might talk the talk, we are not walking the walk when it comes to action.

    "It’s critical for Australia to enact the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme and other laws that reduce greenhouse pollution and also provide greater support for emerging renewable technologies so we can reverse our growth in emissions."

    The Climate Change Performance Index, published annually by Germanwatch and Climate Action Network Europe, compares the climate protection performance of 57 industrialised countries and emerging economies. Together these countries account for more than 90 per cent of global energy related CO2 emissions.

    The 2010 Index, released overnight at the UN conference in Copenhagen, shows Australia comes in at the bottom of the list, just between Luxembourg and Kazakhstan. Even the world’s largest emitters, China and the US, rank higher than Australia.

    In the three areas assessed by the index – emissions trends, emissions levels and climate policy – Australia achieved a rating of very poor, very poor and moderate respectively.

    WWF is calling on the Australian Government to do all it can to seal an effective deal in Copenhagen, and then work to make sure that commitment can be implemented at home.

    "Australia desperately needs a clear, effective and science-based plan to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions. This should be in line with an international, legally binding agreement that limits warming to less than 2 degrees," said Ms Caught.

    "A strengthened Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme that puts a cap on emissions and sends a price signal to shift to low carbon products and services is an important tool to put Australia on track. Politicians need to stop bickering and start acting."

    The full report can be viewed at http://www.germanwatch.org/ccpi

    More information

    Jonathon Larkin, WWF Media Officer, WWF-Australia,
    Mobile: 0410 221 410
    Email: [email protected]

    Kellie Caught, WWF Climate Change Policy Manager, WWF-Australia,
    Mobile: 0406 383 277
    Email: [email protected]

  • Can Entrepreneurs Drive People Movers to Success?

    Q&A with: Benjamin G. Edelman
    Published: December 14, 2009
    Author: Martha Lagace

    Imagine you’ve arrived for a meeting at a corporate campus. But now you discover that the conference room is in another building a quarter mile away. Sure, you could walk there … but in the rain? Up purrs an automated people mover, a vehicle shaped like a segment of a subway car, big enough to carry solo travelers or small groups. You step inside, press a button for your destination, the door closes, and off you go down a narrow track. Two minutes later—presto, the door opens again and you alight at your destination. You’ve arrived for your meeting on time and fresh as a daisy.

    The concept of personal rapid transport, or PRT for short, has been percolating since the mid-1950s and is finally gaining ground, according to HBS professor Benjamin G. Edelman. Business and communities small and large are increasingly aware of PRT as a “green” solution to multiple transportation problems from (in)convenience to price to congestion, he says.

    The concept is well known—you have likely encountered automated, driverless people movers in cities such as Detroit, amusement parks (Disneyland coined the name PeopleMover for its transport/ride launched in 1967), and numerous airports.

    However, these systems were largely designed to move a large number of people on a fixed schedule along a track from point to point to point. In today’s revival, people movers are downsized into single cars, a lightweight “pod car,” that quickly ferry from one to four passengers with no waiting to a number of possible destinations.

    Grey body yellow doors

    PRT is an innovative approach to short-distance transportation, continues Edelman, whose other research interests include the design of electronic marketplaces.

    “These vehicles travel on an exclusive right of way, typically an elevated guideway, though track can also be installed at or below ground level. A vehicle leaves when passengers are ready, and service is nonstop from origin to destination, with no intermediate stops for others to get on or off.”

    An assistant professor at Harvard Business School, Edelman recently wrote about Vectus, Ltd., a Sweden-based PRT firm, on his Web site; a case study is available from Harvard Business Press. Other firms in the PRT business landscape include Advanced Transport Systems (which won a contract for Heathrow Airport’s Terminal 5), 2getthere, and Cabintaxi. In the past decade PRT projects been weighed for sites as diverse as the docklands in Cardiff, Wales; the airport-to-town route of Ciampino, Italy; and the Technical University of Eindhoven, The Netherlands.

    We asked Edelman more about PRT in an e-mail Q&A.

    Martha Lagace: How did you first become interested in PRT systems?

    Ben Edelman: As a longtime user of public transportation, I often wish for more widespread transit links, more frequent services, and faster journeys. Yet I’m shocked by the costs of existing transit systems. At $200 million per mile (the approximate cost of recent subway projects in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.), subways can be tough medicine. And cost aside, subways are no panacea—disruptive construction, limited residential connections, and for many routes, long trips due to line changes and waits between trains.

    Most of the cost of a subway system comes from the guideway—digging tunnels, building stations, laying track. And when you look at that track, it’s usually empty. Every ten minutes a train sweeps by, and then the track lays fallow for nine more minutes. That always struck me as inefficient: We built this expensive track only to leave it vacant most of the time.

    PRT offers a different approach. With much lighter vehicles, the guideway can be proportionally slim—above ground in many areas, with a visual intrusion as small as an elevated bicycle path. Stations can be equally small—even integrated into the side of existing structures, improving convenience while further reducing construction costs. Because service is on demand, passengers need not wait for a vehicle to arrive, and changing lines would be a thing of the past. I had been thinking about some of these concepts independently. Then I was thrilled to learn that implementation is well under way.

    Q: Have you ridden in a PRT? If so, how was it?

    A: I’ve ridden the Vectus test track in Uppsala, Sweden, and I’ve toured the new installation (scheduled to open in 2010) at Heathrow Terminal 5. They’re both impressive: smooth track, elegant vehicles, and a polished user interface.

    Q: In 1972 a PRT was launched at the University of West Virginia in Morgantown, and it continues to operate today. As you write, the concept of PRT is not new; it has been public since the mid-1950s. Since PRT seems a great idea, how do you explain the long gestation? What have been the main obstacles to date?

    A: PRT designers in Morgantown started with the right concepts—small vehicles and on-demand service. But the designers worried about the occasional rush, so they enlarged the vehicles, which required strengthening the track and enlarging the stations, which led to a cost spiral. These days, designers understand the crucial importance of small vehicles to limiting system cost. Another key improvement: Robust computer control is the core of a successful PRT—tracking vehicle locations, knowing who wants to go where, sending appropriate instructions. With modern IT, these tasks are far easier than in the past.

    Morgantown’s system attracted early complaints for its cost and visual intrusion. But Morgantown’s PRT stacks up well against decades of shuttle bus costs—particularly given its speed and reliability advantages. Indeed, Morgantown’s system provides more than 10,000 rides per day, continuing for decades with good reliability.

    Q: What is the potential now for PRTs to “take off,” so to speak? What are the incentives both for PRT businesses and for the public?

    A: Certainly interest in clean technology is an important part of the story here. What would it take to get commuters out of their cars and into public transit? I envision a subway system with stops further apart, so long-haul transit can be faster and more efficient. Then each subway stop enjoys a feeder network of PRT serving businesses and residences with proximity at least as convenient as current bus stops, and a quality of service far above what buses can offer.

    Right now, the field is wide open. Companies with existing transit experience are certainly watching PRT. But the first PRT installations are coming from small companies and entrepreneurs.

    Q: What sorts of hurdles remain?

    A: One challenge is general distrust in the approach. PRT is complicated—numerous small vehicles rather than a few large vehicles, computer control in place of drivers. Simulations say these changes are workable, but some people want to see proof through operational installations. That’s fair—and I’m hopeful that demos will be available in 2010.

    Also uncertain is public response to an elevated guideway. I well know the impact of elevated highways—recall the elevated I-93 in downtown Boston—and I’m no fan of that kind of intrusion. To me, PRT feels quite different from an elevated highway: A bidirectional PRT guideway can be narrower than a single lane of highway, and some PRT guideway designs let light pass through to areas below.

    We accept all kinds of intrusions in our urban environments—buses, highway ramps, traffic lights, telephone poles. I am hopeful that PRT will stack up well—huge benefits relative to the intrusion it asks a community to permit. But a lot depends on public response.

    Q: Might the potential for PRT be greater in countries with good and already-established public transportation infrastructures as compared with, say, the United States, where most citizens like and need their automobiles?

    A: Certainly Americans like cars. Although no one likes traffic jams, shoveling snow in the winter, or paying for parking. With the right combination of price, speed, and convenience, PRT could beat the private automobile. There are already routes that are faster by bicycle than by car, particularly when you consider parking. PRT can widen the gap.

    In the very densest cities—parts of New York City and plenty of cities elsewhere—PRT probably isn’t a great fit. But even small to midsized cities struggle with automobile congestion, particularly since subways and light rail often don’t match their needs. In this spirit, Santa Cruz, California, and Ithaca, New York, are already looking at the benefits of PRT.

    Q: What sorts of questions should managers at Vectus or other PRT businesses ask themselves going forward?

    A: I’m convinced that PRT creates huge value—reducing automobile congestion, and getting passengers to their desired destinations more quickly and more reliably. But how can a system vendor claim a fair share of that value—enough to justify building the system in the first place? One possibility is to seek government funding. That’s not a bad idea—so much transit is government-funded—but it’s a tough requirement for an upstart business.

    Car station

    Another possibility: Build PRT on a corporate or educational campus. The campus owner internalizes benefits, and could pay to build the system. I’m particularly struck by the use of PRT to increase the value of land that might otherwise be viewed as undesirable. Consider a parcel that’s a bit beyond walking distance from the subway, restaurants, and the like. Right now, a developer must accept a dramatically reduced price for that kind of land. But PRT could connect outlying buildings directly to a subway platform and a restaurant district. A PRT-connected outlying building could be a two-minute ride from a subway station a mile away—closer, in terms of time and convenience, than a close-in building just a block from the station. Suddenly the outlying land is as valuable as the close-in land, and the developer can afford to pay for PRT with private funds. It’s an exciting possibility, and I believe it’s workable for a broad class of PRT installations.

    Q: What are you working on next?

    A: These days, online shoppers face deceptive offers that promise discounts (“$10 off your next order”) while they attempt to check out at ordinary retail Web sites. Because an online checkout requires a series of “yes” and “I agree” confirmations, it’s all too easy to press an extra button that purportedly accepts one of these offers, without realizing that the offer actually carries a charge of $15 per month or more. Notably, these offers obtain consumers’ credit card numbers directly from partner sites—playing into consumers’ reasonable but mistaken belief that, if an offer doesn’t request a card number, the service must be free. As a result, a user may enter a billing relationship and face credit card charges without actually providing a card number to the company that posts the charges.

    I analyzed deceptive characteristics of these offers in a statement to the Senate Commerce Committee in November. At present, I’m comparing these practices with applicable rules from Visa, MasterCard, and American Express. Card networks do not let merchants copy customers’ card numbers willy-nilly, so I hope to get these charges removed from the credit card ecosystem.

    Meanwhile, this holiday shopping season users ought to exercise special caution. A link promising extra savings may not be what it seems. Be careful even at trusted sites: Sites as well-known as Buy.com, Expedia, and US Airways all confronted consumers with these deceptive offers.

    To learn more about PRT:

    Advanced Transport Systems, Ltd.

    Vectus PRT

    2getthere

    Cabintaxi

    About the author

    Martha Lagace is the senior editor of HBS Working Knowledge.

  • REPORT: Former Volvo directors and politicians fear sale to BAIC

    Filed under: , ,

    Back in October, Ford anointed China’s Geely Holding Group as its preferred bidder for Swedish Automaker Volvo. The move made perfect sense for Ford, simply because Geely was offering money and the recent happenings in the auto industry proved that, beyond the shadow of a doubt, you can never have too much money. But it should come as a surprise of nobody that there is a significant delegation of past and present members of Volvo management that aren’t all that thrilled with being engulfed by an up and coming Chinese company.

    Sweden news site The Local is reporting that eight former Volvo directors have collaborated on a letter to Ford Chairman Bill Ford Jr. asking the Blue Oval to reconsider a sale to Geely. The letter reportedly states that Geely doesn’t have the technical competence to keep the Swedish automaker going. The letter also allegedly stated that Volvo is concerned about technical details being leaked to Geely — a situation Ford likely wouldn’t be too happy with.

    While past Volvo directors appear to be very concerned about the prospect of Geely taking over the company, current Volvo management is speaking out in favor of the deal. That’s probably a good idea considering the real possibility that the Chinese automaker could soon be the masters of the current management’s future with the safety-oriented automaker. Politicians are getting in on the debate as well, as democrats are reportedly likening ceding control of Volvo to Geely to selling the company to China and to Communism.

    [Source: The Local | Image: Olivier MorinN/Getty/AFP]

    REPORT: Former Volvo directors and politicians fear sale to BAIC originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 14 Dec 2009 08:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • When “Life” Means Life

    About 1 in 10 American prisoners is serving a life sentence. Although most are technically eligible for parole at some point, many of those convicted of violent crimes will never see the outside of a prison. They are being judged not on their rehabilitation but on their original crime.

    A California case before the federal Ninth Circuit questions the legality of refusing parole based solely on a person’s crime. While a decision finding that states must consider rehabilitation could open doors nationwide to second chances, many fear that a negative ruling could be another nail in the lifer’s coffin.

    More than 140,000 people are serving life sentences in the U.S., according to a report this year from the Sentencing Project, up from 34,000 in 1984. California has between 27,000 and 34,000 lifers. Despite chronic overcrowding (and now court orders to reduce the prison population), prisoners with murder convictions are rarely granted parole in California. And if governors thought they were right before in denying parole despite evidence of rehabilitation, the Clemmons case in Washington will only strengthen that conviction. It’s a shame that one horrific crime can have such power over thousands of lives.

    The case before the Ninth Circuit involves prisoner Ronald Hayward’s application for parole 27 years after he was convicted of stabbing to death a gang member who had allegedly attempted to rape Hayward’s girlfriend. The question before the court is whether states must present evidence that a prisoner presents a current threat to society, beyond just showing that his original crime was heinous.

    (more…)

  • Exxon: Here’s Why We Just Spent $41 Billlion On Natural Gas

    gas4 Here’s a great example of a company sticking its money where its mouth is.

    This morning, Exxon (XOM) announced that it’s spending $41 billion to acquire XTO Energy (XTO), a major player in natural gas and unconventional shale.

    This announcement comes just a few days after the company made a major presentation about the natural gas, and how its era had arrived.

    So, longsuffering natural gas bulls, your moment may have finally arrived!

    See why here >>

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Russia Is The One BRIC Energy Companies Aren’t Interested In

    vladimirputin scratching tbi

    While Chinese, Indian, and Brazilian energy-related investments remain hot, foreign interest in Russia’s energy industry is actually waning.

    It might have something to do with private companies being screwed so many times in the past.

    Oil & Gas Eurasia: Russian oil and gas resources are of decreasing interest to foreign companies, Russian Minister of Natural Resources Yuri Trutnev admits. He now intends to liberalize the foreigners’ access to the Russian resources.

    He believes the lower level of exploration and field investments eventually could lead to “serious problems” for Russia. According to new figures from the Ministry of Natural Resources, the level of hydrocarbon exploration has over the last year dropped ten percent, Newsru.com reports.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Fed may reconsider $500k salary cap for new GM CEO, limit pay for 2nd tier execs

    Filed under: ,

    It’s official: pay czar Kenneth Feinberg’s executive compensation rules for companies yet to return their bailout funds means a cap of $500K for second-tier executives. Importantly, that number represents the total compensation allowed, but only 45 percent of it — $225,000, can be in cold, hard ducats. Stock remuneration must be held or paid out over at least two years, and extracurricular perks like country club memberships and private jet escapades can be valued at no more than $25,000.

    Regarding General Motors, to lure the kind of executive the company seeks it will probably need a bit more flexibility with pay than the rules previously enforced on it by the pay committee. Feinberg said he will look at GM’s compensation proposal when a suitor is located. It would be nigh on impossible to lure that candidate with the come-on, “Fix everything, here’s a million bucks now, you’ll get some Scooby Snacks in 2013, let us know when you’re done, kthxbai.”

    Feinberg appeared to refine his pay re-examination statement, though, citing a case where GM brings someone in “laterally,” not simply chooses from among the ranks. Like him, we all know that “It is vitally important that GM, under the law, be competitive and be able to compete in the automobile marketplace,” especially if we want to get any more of that $30 billion back.

    [Source: Automotive News – sub. req. | Image: Win McNamee/Getty]

    Fed may reconsider $500k salary cap for new GM CEO, limit pay for 2nd tier execs originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 14 Dec 2009 08:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Mega-Merger: Exxon Makes Huge Natural Gas Bet With Acquisition Of XTO Energy For $41 Billion

    natural gas

    How about a huge energy deal to kick off your week. Exxon (XOM) is buying XTO Energy (XTO) for $41 billion.

    It will be a taken as a major bullish signal on natural gas.

    Earlier this month, Exxon made a presentation on how the natural-gas era was set to begin.

    They were serious.

    ——–

    IRVING, Texas–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Exxon Mobil Corporation and XTO Energy Inc. announced today an all-stock transaction valued at $41 billion. The agreement, which is subject to XTO stockholder approval and regulatory clearance, will enhance ExxonMobil’s position in the development of unconventional natural gas and oil resources.

    Under the terms of the agreement, approved by the boards of directors of both companies, ExxonMobil has agreed to issue 0.7098 common shares for each common share of XTO. This represents a 25 percent premium to XTO stockholders. The transaction value includes $10 billion of existing XTO debt and is based on the closing share prices of ExxonMobil and XTO on December 11, 2009.

    “We are pleased that ExxonMobil and XTO have reached this agreement,” said Rex W. Tillerson, chairman and chief executive officer of Exxon Mobil Corporation.

    “XTO is a leading U.S. unconventional natural gas producer, with an outstanding resource base, strong technical expertise and highly skilled employees. XTO’s strengths, together with ExxonMobil’s advanced R&D and operational capabilities, global scale and financial capacity, should enable development of additional supplies of unconventional oil and gas resources, benefiting consumers both here in the United States and around the world.”

    Tillerson said the agreement is good news for the United States economy and energy security, as it will enhance opportunities for job creation and investment in the production of America’s own clean-burning natural gas resources.

    XTO’s resource base is the equivalent of 45 trillion cubic feet of gas and includes shale gas, tight gas, coal bed methane and shale oil. These will complement ExxonMobil’s holdings in the United States, Canada, Germany, Poland, Hungary and Argentina.

    Following the transaction closing, ExxonMobil intends to establish a new upstream organization to manage global development and production of unconventional resources, enabling the rapid development and deployment of technologies and operating practices to increase production and maximize resource value. The new organization will be located in Fort Worth, Texas, in XTO’s current offices.

    Bob R. Simpson, chairman and founder of XTO, said that over the company’s 23-year history, XTO has developed technical expertise and has assembled a substantial, high-quality and diverse resource base in producing basins across the United States.

    “XTO has a proven ability to profitably and consistently grow production and reserves in unconventional resources,” said Simpson. “As the world’s leading energy company, ExxonMobil will build on our success and open new opportunities for the development of natural gas and oil resources on a global basis.”

    Tillerson said the agreement is part of an ongoing, disciplined evaluation of timely investment opportunities to create value for shareholders, and to help meet long-term global energy demand growth. The agreement is consistent with ExxonMobil’s business model which is focused on sustainable, long-term value creation.

    Completion of the transaction is expected in the second quarter of 2010. In connection with the transaction, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. are acting as financial advisors to ExxonMobil and Barclays Capital Inc. and Jefferies & Company Inc. are acting as financial advisors to XTO.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Woman Arrested For Filming Snippets Of ‘New Moon’ May Sue Theater

    The latest in the saga of the young woman, Samantha Tumpach, who was arrested and jailed for two nights because her attempt to film some of her sister’s birthday party at the movies happened to catch a few snippets of the film New Moon, is that Tumpach is now considering suing the theater, even though the charges against her have been dropped. Unfortunately, thanks to the draconian anti-camera laws pushed by the MPAA to punish people for these sorts of things, she might not get very far with such a lawsuit. As Copycense points out, the Illinois law in question basically lets the theater do exactly what it did, even if the circumstances are ridiculous. So, any lawsuit is unlikely to last, though it should lead us to questioning why legislators around the globe have passed similar laws at the behest of the movie industry. There are already perfectly good copyright laws to be used against anyone actually filming a movie for “piracy” purposes. These anti-camcorder laws go above and beyond that, and lead to ridiculous scenarios like this one.

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  • Financial Bubble Spreads To The Phillipines, Where Markets Are Soaring Despite Terrible Economy

    MANILA – The buoyant Philippines’ stock market, which has almost doubled in the past nine months, might suggest a similarly lively economy, yet government stimulus spending is failing to make a dent in the jobless rate, and economic growth is barely showing.

    The Philippine Stock Exchange PSEi Index has surged from below 1,800 in mid-March to over 3,000. Yet 2.9 million Filipinos of working age were unemployed as of July, with the unemployment rate rising to 7.6% that month from 7.4% a year earlier, according to the National Statistics Office. Workforce participation  was at 64.6% against 64.3% for the same period last year.

    The economy is expected barely to grow this year, possibly between 0.8% and 1.8%, before recovering to between 2.6%-3% in 2010.

    “What is recovering is the stock market, mainly the financial sector,” said Rene Ofreneo, a labor and industrial relations expert and executive director of the multi-sectoral Fair Trade Alliance. “Right now, only the call centers are hiring, but even that is not at the rate that was originally projected.”

    Read the whole story at Asia Times Online >>

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  • Google Chrome's New UK Newspaper and Billboard Ad Campaign

    There’s been a lot of hard work put into Google Chrome, and the browser has finally reached a stage where Google is confident it can take over a big share of the market. With beta builds out on all platforms and an extensions gallery now live, it is time for ‘stage two’ of the plan when engineers step aside to let the marketing people do their job.

    It’s not a natural state at Google, one of the most engineering-centered tech company out there, but it’s one we’re seeing more often lately. The last time Google did ‘real-world’ advertising it promoted Apps its enterprise office and collaboration suite, but now it’s pushing Chrome, the browser which is becoming increasingly central to the company’s plans.

    The Next Web spotted a couple of ads from Google’s just launched campaign in the UK and it’s clear that the company hasn’t skimped out. It bought a full page ad in a popular, and free, UK daily. The ad itself epitomizes Google, a mostly blank page with a big Chrome logo and the words “Chrome by Google – A fast, new browser. Made for everyone.” The ad opens up to reveal a list of some of the browser’s strong points. Not exactly revolutionary, but pretty much what you’d expect from Google based on the previous Apps campaign.

    The company is also running a b… (read more)

  • REPORT: Next UAW president to be Ford lead negotiator King

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    Ron Gettelfinger, the United Auto Workers’ (UAW) president during the recent tumult, is moving on from his post, and has thrown his support behind Bob King. King is currently a vice president in the union and manages the relationship with Ford.

    While the outlook is positive for King’s nomination, he’s going to have some reconciliation to do. In the last go-round with Ford, King asked his membership to agree to concessions that took strikes off the table, which the UAW’s rank and file promptly denied. Despite the contention, King has been thought of as Ron Gettelfinger’s replacement for some time, and the union hopes King will be a tougher customer in the throes of negotiation.

    [Source: Wall Street Journal – Sub. Req.]

    REPORT: Next UAW president to be Ford lead negotiator King originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 14 Dec 2009 08:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • From 1nm up to 6µm – New Innovative Particle Size Analyzer VASCO

    Developed in collaboration with the French Institute of Petroleum (IFP), VASCO offers a range of instruments for physical-chemistry analysis dedicated to particle size measurements in concentrated suspensions from 1 nanometer up to a few microns.

    Several options are available for specific applications :
    1. In line measurement cell for real time particle size kinetic analysis,
    2. Optical fiber probe and remote probe cell for harsh environment
    measurements (glove box, explosive atmosphere, aggressive
    solvents,…)

  • Compacting PET bottles – RUNI SK240 Screw Compactor

    The screw compactor for the greater requirements

    Save space and handling costs through rapid, efficient waste management
    Save energy – no heat required in the process
    Profit from selling for reuse
    Airtight – suitable for compacting dust
    Different configurations for a large number of materials

    Heavy Duty Pre-crusher can be fitted for particularly tough and dense materials.
    The SK240 Screw Compactor compacts various materials, e.g. EPS fish boxes and packaging in the ratio 50:1. This achieves a density of about 270 kg/m³.

    The RUNI SK240 can be fitted with either a 45o hopper or a vertical hopper, depending on the requirement.

    The machine shown here is fitted with a feed hopper designed for manual feeding of fish boxes, etc. Custom solutions are available as required for dust, alu cans, PET bottles etc.

    The machine is fitted with hydraulic/electrically-controlled jaws, which allow it to maintain an almost constant compression pressure.

    Power consumption
    Primary motor 5.5 kW
    Hydraulic pump 0.55 kW
    Pre-crusher motor 1.1 kW or 5.5 kW

    Capacity
    This machine can compact approx. 75 kg of EPS per hour (approx. 110 fish boxes with lids) or 3,000 half-litre PET bottles per hour.

  • Moderate weight loss in obese people improves heart function

    Obese patients who lost a moderate amount of weight by eating less and exercising more improved their cardiovascular health, says a study at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

    The results of this two-year study, published in the Dec. 15, 2009, issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, showed that weight loss led to improvement in four key measures of heart and vascular health. The improvements seen in the study participants included decreased thickness of heart muscle, improved pumping and relaxation functions of the heart and decreased thickness of the carotid artery walls. Heart muscle thickening and impaired pumping and relaxation functions are predictors of heart failure, and increased carotid wall thickness is a predictor of plaque formation.

    The researchers studied 60 moderately obese individuals at regular intervals, and 46 people (78 percent) completed the entire two-year follow-up period. The participants ranged in age from 22 to 64 and had BMIs (body mass indexes) of between 30 and 44. During the study, the subjects were instructed to eat low-calorie diets (1,200 to 1,500 calories for women and 1,500 to 1,800 calories for men) and to exercise for about three and a half hours per week, principally walking.

    On average, they lost weight for about six months, reaching a maximum loss of nine percent body weight or 22 pounds. Maximum cardiovascular benefit lagged behind weight loss, with the greatest improvement coming six to 12 months after the study began.

    Starting at about six months, most participants slowly regained some of their lost weight. At the end of two years, the participants averaged about nine pounds below their initial weight. Even though they regained some weight, after two years they still retained some of the heart and blood vessel benefit they had received.

    “Losing 20 or so pounds might seem daunting to some people, but we showed that even a more modest weight loss can yield heart and vascular benefits,” says first author Lisa de las Fuentes, M.D., a Washington University heart specialist at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and assistant professor of medicine in the Cardiovascular Division at the School of Medicine. “It’s important to realize that you can choose goals that are attainable and work progressively toward them. You don’t necessarily need to lose 50 pounds to improve your heart function.”

    The study participants were randomly assigned to either low-carbohydrate or low-fat diets. Both diet groups experienced similar improvements in heart and vascular measurements. That’s reassuring for people who prefer one type of diet over the other, says de las Fuentes.Read more…