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  • Anti-Piracy Group Says That Just Talking About File Sharing Should Be Illegal

    Earlier this year, we noted that the Dutch Usenet community FTD was suing BREIN, the local “anti-piracy” group, for suggesting that FTD was a criminal operation. As the case moves forward, FTD is pointing out that as a Usenet group, all that it enables is discussions and doesn’t see how discussions — even if about file sharing — should be infringing themselves. In response, BREIN still insists that a Usenet provider can, in fact, be a criminal organization, and asked the court to fine FTD $70,000 per day if it doesn’t get people to stop talking about file sharing. But, no, copyright doesn’t conflict with free speech at all… right?

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  • Rosenberg: Market Volatility Will Double And Stocks Will Collapse

    Having been on the wrong side of the market in 2009, Gluskin Sheff's David Rosenberg is doubling down his bearish bet. It's the smartest course of action for him at this point -- so expect market volatility to double in 2010:

    Bloomberg: “We’ll be in a year of heightened volatility,” Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates Inc. in Toronto, said in an interview. “We’ll see periods in 2010 where the VIX will be north of 30 in a period of risk aversion as the economy and earnings very likely fail to hold up to expectations. I see more of a 30 to 40 range in the VIX.”

    Rosenberg, 49, the former chief North American economist at Merrill Lynch & Co., the brokerage bought by Bank of America Corp., says investors are underestimating risks to the global economy. “There’s just a general level of complacency in the marketplace right now,” he said.

    “The cost of buying insurance to guard against a possible decline in equity valuations is currently very low. That’s very low because most investors don’t believe they need it.”

    Read more here.

    One would imagine that he's loading up on options. By his words, they're dirt cheap right now since they price-in only half the market volatility that will actually occur.

    ros

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Twin Condumax – a unique design to meet needs of a leading energy company

    Michell Instruments have been working with a leading energy company to develop a unique control solution for their natural gas storage site in the UK. The company required total security in their hydrocarbon dew-point readings, so Michell developed the Twin-Condumax II Sampling System to provide this with complete confidence.

    Employing two Condumax II EExd Hydrocarbon dew-point analysers means that there is always the reassurance of a reference instrument to confirm readings. The other advantage to this system is that it can be used continually, with no interruption in measurements caused by routine maintenance or other potential disruptions.

    The Michell System Engineering Division packaged the two analysers complete with their comprehensive sample conditioning systems into a single common enclosure, to satisfy the space limitations stipulated by the customer to suit their intended installation location.

    Further customisation of the analyser package included temperature controlled trace heated sample line, and provision within the conditioning system of a sample taking point to enable the customer to carry out periodic laboratory analysis in support of the on-line measurement.

    Condumax is recognised by many national and multinational companies involved in the production, storage and distribution of natural gas as the benchmark instrument with which to reliably record the hydrocarbon dew point of natural gas.

  • Vetamat®-Systems

    Ready-to-use centrifugal systems. The patented Vetamat® system separates the metal chips from the metalworking fluids.

    Wet chips are shaken into the funnel and fed automatically into the centrifuge from there. The delivery includes the centrifuge with hydraulics, chip conveyor with tank, base pan and controller.

    The Vetamat® Plus system design also includes a chip crusher and a lift & tip device. Long chips are first filled into the lift & tip device by a chip transporter and then tipped into the chip crusher. The crushed chips fall into the funnel and land in the centrifuge.

    Vetamat® systems achieve a throughput of 100 kg/h – 2,000 kg/h. Vetamat® systems are delivered ready to use.

  • Worth Your While: What Makes You Trust A Recipe?

    2009-12-14-TrustRecipes.jpgWith all the cooking and entertaining we’ll be doing over the next few weeks, we’ve been regarding every new recipe with a critical eye. We don’t feel like taking a chance on a recipe that sounds delicious, but has a high risk potential — we just want the recipe to work the first time! How do you decide if a recipe is going to be worth it?

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  • JPMorgan: Emerging Markets Will Surge 30% In 2010

    brazil link

    (This guest post originally appeared at the author’s blog)

    JP Morgan continues to like the risk trade. 

    They see the economic recovery continuing into 2010 and forecast that many of the trends that have driven equity markets higher in 2009 will continue into 2010.   They see a very strong outlook for corporate earnings and margin growth as the primary driver of equity prices.  In fact, they see profit margins expanding to their recent record highs:

    “Equity markets should rise again next year driven by strong earnings growth. Our $80 S&P 500 EPS forecast for 2010 is 27% higher than this year’s $63, implying a much faster rise in earnings than nominal GDP, i.e., an expansion in profit margins. Our forecast suggests that by the end of next year, US profit margins are likely to approach the historic highs reached earlier this decade.”

    The primary beneficiaries of this continued growth in the risk trade will be emerging markets.  JP Morgan is the most bullish bank I’ve seen on the street so far this year and forecast a very bold 30% increase in emerging market share prices in 2010:

    “EM equities should continue to outperform next year due to stronger growth and inflows. Our 2010 year-end forecast for MSCI EM is 1,300, an upside of 30% from current levels versus an expected 15% return for developed market equities.”

    JP Morgan now says the world economy is reaching “cruising speed” and should grow at a healthy 3.5% clip in 2010.  Credit markets should remain healthy and fixed income markets will slowly experience an upward drift in yield.  This will keep trends in the forex market largely intact.  All in all, look for a lot more of the same in 2010….

    Read more market commentary at The Pragmatic Capitalist >>

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  • Over €1,5bn for 15 CCS and off-shore wind projects to support European economic recovery

    The Commission approved on 9 December, 15 energy projects which will significantly contribute to the economic recovery of the EU, while increasing security of energy supply and substantially reduce CO2 emissions. With this decision, the Commission grants €1 billion to six Carbon Capture and Storage projects and €565 million to nine offshore wind energy projects.

    Energy Commissioner Piebalgs said: “With this decision the Commission has laid the foundation for the development of two key sustainable technologies that will be essential in our fight against climate change. This unique decision by the Commission does not only give a push to the economy and employment, but also it supports innovative energy technologies that may create further jobs and growth in the future.”

    These award winning innovative energy technology projects will contribute in reaching the binding targets of greenhouse gas emission reduction and renewables by 2020 and beyond.

    The decision on these 15 projects is the first step towards the use of almost €4 billion set aside by the EU in May 2009 for energy projects to support economic recovery. The landmark agreement on the European Energy Programme for Recovery in May foresaw Union financial assistance to energy projects in the fields of CCS, offshore wind energy and gas and electricity infrastructure. The procedures for the infrastructure projects are still ongoing. The decision is expected to be taken in February 2010.

    The funded projects are described in the MEMO/09/542 , MEMO/09/543

  • Europe, Asia, Gold, US Futures, All Powering Higher On The Great Tidal Wave Of Liquidity

    tidal wave surf surfers surfing

    It was just a week ago — yes, last Friday — that gold was plummeting, the dollar was rallying, and everyone was getting nervous about the end of the greate liquidity-filled, de-recession rally.

    Then Bernanke spoke earlier this week, convinced the world that money would not be going anywhere, and since then it’s been smooth sailing.

    Stocks were up solidly yesterday, and today the party looks set to continue.

    Asian shares wre up nearly 1% across the board. Europe was up a little less. Gold is back above the $1135 mark, while US futures are solidly in the green, with several hours before trading. Thank you Ben!

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Eco Cars: 2010 Hyundai IX-Metro low-emission vehicle features a hybrid engine

    hyundai ix metro_1

    Eco Factor: Concept car designed to be powered by a hybrid engine for low-emissions.

    Hyundai has unveiled the 2010 IX-Metro concept car at Design Korea in Songdo Convensia held in Incheon City, Korea. The low-emission car runs on a hybrid engine and produces just 80gm of CO2 for each kilometer the vehicle is driven.

    (more…)

  • WebGL and Chrome OS

    There’s a great trend to move everything online these days. It’s not exactly clear if this is a good thing in all circumstances, but everyone’s getting on the bandwagon and there’s no reversing it at this point. One problem, a big one, with doing everything in a browser is that the performance and functionality sees a significant dive. On the performance front, there’s been a lot of attention to JavaScript speed in browsers, and on the functionality one, we have the WebGL project which aims to bring hardware-accelerated 3D graphics to browsers. Development is moving fast and the standard has been released in draft form with a finalized version possibly coming in early 2010.

    “Even without a draft specification of WebGL in circulation, we’ve seen some promising 3D content using WebGL appear on the web, put together mainly through developer ingenuity and the fact that Firefox, Chromium, and WebKit are open source projects with early support for the technology,” Arun Ranganatha, chairman of the WebGL working group and standards evangelist at Mozilla, wrote. “Today, the WebGL Working Group at Khronos released a provisional public draft of the WebGL specification, and we are very excited for what this means for the web.”

    The WebGL standard is under the supervision of the Khronos Group, a consortium of indust… (read more)

  • Data Visualization Activism: Showing the Trends in Global Temperature

    climate_data.jpg
    A few days ago, the UK’s Met Office (short for Meteorological Office) released a large data subset containing a record of global temperatures. The subset is one of the global temperature records that have underpinned IPCC assessment reports and numerous scientific studies. The data show monthly average temperature values for over 1,500 land stations.

    Both Manuel Lima (of Visual Complexity) and Jer Thorp (of blprnt.com) have called for the “data community” to step in and use this opportunity to create meaningful data representations. Accordingly, an open online forum titled “#ClimateData“, has been created where data visualization enthusiasts are invited to participate in a constructive dialogue towards this goal.

    In the meantime, some early visualization results have already trickled in.

    – Information is Beautiful (of the book The Visual Miscellaneum) has developed a very detailed infographic depicting the different arguments in the ongoing debate between the Global Warming Sceptics versus the Scientific Consensus.

    – Flink Labs mapped the temperature readings of more than 200 years on an animated 3D globe.

    – Lastly, blprnt has created 12 monthly data representations, visualizing all 1,670,354 released Met Office Climate records.

    Is this a worthwhile initiative? Are there more visualizations around? Are you planning to make one? Let us know in the comments below!


  • Private health… or private spammers?

    My private health insurance company has been leaving messages for weeks on the phone about some support service run by nurses. The messages made it sound substantial, but looking on the net it ends up being mainly a phone reminder service to go to doctors appointments, get reminded to get blood pressure checked, etc. I assume this means they get more info about where you are going, who you are seeing, what your problems are etc. I can imagine this might be useful for some people who can’t keep a diary or program their phone to remind themselves, and I fully admit I’ve been like that at times in the past. But I don’t want it and consider it sus.

    Being the "we’ve called you, just to let you know, or you can chase it up on the net" kind of messages, I didn’t think I’d need to take the time to actually inform them to give it a rest. Looks like I thought wrong. They called again today and I told the nurse I did not appreciate being spammed by my private insurance fund, and that I wasn’t interested. She sounded like I had forced a lump of poison down her throat and I basically had to hang up on her as she kept insinuating I was somehow neglecting my health from not wanting it. Urgh. Does this sound familiar, is this something spawned in the US now being trialled on us?

  • Eco Boats: Island Queen DIY electric boat touts bamboo interior

    island queen

    Eco Factor: Zero-emission boat powered entirely by electricity.

    Island Queen is the brainchild of a Southern California resident Ray Young, who wanted an electric boat and didn’t want to cruise in the ones available on the market. Ray set out to build his own version and after five years he came up with a 21-foot mahogany electric boat that features bamboo interiors.

    (more…)

  • Eco Gadgets: CoolerBot – A solar-powered nature photography robot

    coolerbot_1

    Eco Factor: Solar-powered robot built using a Coleman cooler.

    Built by nature loving DIYer Steve Norris, the CoolerBot is a solar-powered telepresence robot that carries an infrared video camera and a Nikon digital SLR camera for nature photography and is powered entirely by the energy harvested by its two solar panels.

    (more…)

  • Hackers Use Amazon’s Cloud

    Security researchers for Amazon recently spotted the Zeus botnet running an unauthorized command and control center on the company’s EC2 cloud computing infrastructure. This is the first known time that Amazon Web Services’ cloud infrastructure has been used for this type of illegal activity, according to onw of the security researchers in question. The hackers reportedly got onto Amazon’s infrastructure by first hacking into a Web site that Amazon’s servers hosted, and then installing their command and control infrastructure stealthily.

    The security company declined to say whose Web site was used to get onto Amazon’s cloud, but the Zeus software has now been removed. Zeus is a password-stealing botnet. Variants of this malware have been linked to over $100 million in bank fraud in the past year.

    In the past few years, law enforcement takedowns and bad publicity have made it more difficult for criminals to host their sneaky infrastructure through legitimate or even semi-legitimate datacenters, so they have been steadily moving to Web-based services. Courtesy of infoworld.com

  • Yahoo Integrates Twitter in Search Results

    Yahoo Search isn’t dead and buried just because Microsoft pretty much bought it outright. No, Yahoo can be an innovator even if it’s running Bing and putting a big purple Yahoo sticker on it, or, at least, that’s the official version. And just to show everyone that it’s not out of the picture, it has added tweets to the search results because real-time search is “where it’s at.” But not only is it last to add this functionality, it also looks very much stitched together for the sake of it. What’s more, people are starting to wonder if this entire real-time craze isn’t going a little overboard in the first place.

    It’s interesting to point out that Yahoo has been adding tweets to its searches for about a month now but they were confined to the News Shortcut search integrated in the main search engine and relegated to their own “Twitter” tab. Now, tweets will make it into the main search results page but only for select searches, the ones Yahoo deems as trending yet not trending enough to make it to the news section. It should be nice to know how exactly Yahoo determines that, where it draws the line.

    “When we launched a Yahoo! News shortcut with Twitter content integration earlier this month, we said more was coming. Starting today, you will see recent tweets directly integrated on… (read more)

  • How to Bring Up Your Children Properly

    Childhood years are the best times to learn. Somehow, a person’s comprehension is at its peak during childhood. Parents should take advantage of these learning years to ingrain the values of life in their children.

    If you’re a parent, teach them positive habits so that they will know and see the beauty that life has to offer. Make them enthusiastic about life. Instill into their hearts and minds all the wonders and magnificence of being alive by living life to its fullest in a positive way.

    There’s a startling difference between children learning through self-discovery, and children learning through self-discovery with proper guidance. The first things that children learn are usually the things that stay with them and mold formative years until they reach adulthood.

    Let us suppose you let your children learn through self-discovery. To a certain extent, self-discovery is good since it develops full independence and self-reliance. However, the learning process might be slow. In a sense, it is like a trial and error experience for children. They have to segregate the good from the bad, the right from the wrong, what they like and what they don’t. It is most likely that what they will like are the ones that come easy to them or the ones that they enjoy the most. And the ones that they enjoy the most might not necessarily be the good ones. Without proper guidance, what they like and enjoy the most might actually be hurting them although they are not aware of it. Perhaps later, if they find out that they picked the wrong choices, it may be too late.

    With self-discovery through proper guidance, you will be able to leave room for them to develop independence and self-reliance. At the same time, show them what is right and what is wrong. Explain to them why. If possible, cite instances or examples based on true-to-life events to make them more convincing and realistic. The more realistic they are, the more easily the children are convinced. Likewise, try teaching them in a friendly and humorous atmosphere. Children are more attentive and eager to learn when all (both teachers and students) are in an easy mood. You will know and feel their eagerness to learn through the sparkle in their eyes and by the way they answer your questions. You can be sure that what they learn from you is acceptable to them and will stay with them. That is why, as a parent, you must show enthusiasm in life to your children.

    There’s a third method of making children learn. That is through proper guidance leaving negligible room for self-discovery. But there are drawbacks. You take away from them the benefits of self-reliance and independence. The guidance you devote to them may be good and well intended, but they must not rely on you on almost everything they do. They become decision-dependent on you. There are instances wherein this type of guidance might be worse than giving no guidance at all.

    There are parents who underwent hardships during their childhood, strived, and became successful financially. Although they are financially in the position to guide and assist their children to a better life, they prefer that their children undergo the same difficult experience they underwent during their younger years. Their reason: so that their children will value and experience the same things they went through. This may be applicable to stubborn and rebellious youngsters, but not to disciplined ones. Why must their sons and daughters repeat the same difficulties? There’s no reason to. This is like punishing the innocent. Instead of repeating the experience, they should learn from it. Life is too short to repeat unsavory experiences.

    One of the best ways to broaden your children’s knowledge about life is by traveling. The world – its varied people, places, and cultures – has a lot of information to offer. It is perhaps as important as the conventional classroom. If you are financially able, traveling is one of the best educational experiences you can give your children. Look for exhibits or world fairs, and take your children there. Books are the next best things. It’s traveling by reading.

    Fill your children with thoughts of self-importance, confidence, and positive attitude so that there will be no room for negative thinking. More importantly, fill their world with laughter, love, and understanding. You‘ll never go wrong.


  • HP Pavilion MS214 Review

    A new HP Pavilion Entertainment PC has arrived, it delivers an excellent mix of features, performance, and price–so long as you can do without a touchscreen and a variety of external connections. This is not your typical Windows 7 PC but check out the review by David Murphy of the PC World.

    ********
    HP Pavilion MS214: Good Performance For It’s Budget Price

    David Murphy, PC World

    PC World

    In the past, most budget all-in-one PCs (20 inches or smaller) have come with an Intel Atom processor–a low-powered netbook favorite. So it’s interesting to see HP use a faster 1.5GHz AMD Athlon 64 X2 CPU for the MS214 ($600 as of December 8, 2009).The move pays off for the system’s general performance, as its WorldBench 6 score of 59 is among the highest of any all-in-one desktop of this size and price.

    Only two other sub 20-inch all-in-ones that have also ditched Atom beat the MS214: The $650, 20-inch MSI Wind Top AE2010 (with a 1.5GHz Athlon X2 dual-core 3250e) scored 60; and Dell’s $944 Studio One 19 (with a 2.5GHz Pentium dual-core E5200) is way out in front with a WorldBench 6 score of 93. But as good as the 19-inch Dell is, $900 will now also get your the 23-inch Acer Aspire Z5610 all-in-one; it scored 101 in WorldBench.

    Integrated graphics don’t do much to assist the MS214 with games–it reached a wimpy (and unplayable) 11 frames per second in our Unreal Tournament 3 benchmark (even at a high-quality resolution of 1024 by 768). No surprise there, though, that’s pretty much standard for all-in-ones at this price.

    Two gigabytes of DDR2 memory are double what you’d typically find on an all-in-one system of this size (or smaller). So is the system’s included storage capacity of 300GB (where typically we used to see 160GB). Integrated wireless-N connectivity is an excellent touch for those seeking speedy file transfers, as is the system’s included gigabit LAN connectivity. You also get a DVD writer, and you can rip off the MS214’s back panel and upgrade the system’s hard drive and memory should you so desire–a tricky process, but HP does spell it out in the online documentation. It’s rare to see a company outright supporting the direct tweaking of an all-in-one system, given the complexity involved in doing so. For that, I applaud HP.

    Although the MS214’s 18.5-inch (1366-by-768 resolution) screen doesn’t do 1080p, the matte panel offers excellent contrasts without any of the unfortunate glare found on glossy-based systems. Picture saturation is as impressive as it is colorful, adding a rich vibrancy to images and movies that does much to make up for a drab exterior.

    One of the biggest drawbacks of the MS214, however, is that, unlike its TouchSmart brethren, it is not equipped for multitouch. The lack of a touchscreen is a notable omission given that its 64-bit Windows 7 Home Premium operating system begs to be touched, and less expensive all-in-one PCs often include at least single-touch functionality. And although the MS214’s included speakers don’t sound that bad given their small, laptop-quality size, the volume itself tends to run a bit lower than what you might otherwise expect to hear (get ready to turn it up to 11).

    Instead of mindless bloatware, the collection of preinstalled HP software actually adds a bit of useful functionality. For example, the software dashboard is a great tool for inexperienced users to get a basic, graphics-heavy handle on what exactly their PC is doing in terms of storage capacity, security features, and other important tidbits. A number of MediaSmart programs for viewing movies and pictures are fun additions as well, but they’ll likely frustrate you by forcing you to think about how much better it would be to manipulate your media by jabbing and swiping your finger around the screen. Bummer.

    Another way HP shaved cost from MS214 was to cut back on connectivity. Two of the six USB ports will likely be taken up by the generic mouse and keyboard that HP’s shoved in the box alongside the rig. That leaves you with a very low number of single-connection offerings for additional devices, as the system has no alternative connection standard, be it FireWire, eSATA, DisplayPort, or HDMI.

    HP’s MS214 is a big, fast (for its price) all-in-one system that’s really rivaled only by the MSI and Dell machines mentioned earlier. So if you’re looking to balance budget and speed, you’ll find lots of appeal in the MS214.

    –David Murphy

    **********

    Hope you enjoyed this HP Pavilion Entertainment PC review and feel free to share this with friends and families who will benefit from this.

    Source


  • Uh oh, the biopsy’s back

    Number of open. painful and growing lesions led my PCP to send me off to the Dermatologist who biopsy’d a part of one, dx’d staph infection and sent me on my way with a topical steroidal cream, Cephlexin and a comforting suggestion that I’d feel better in a couple of days.

    I thought that I was getting better, until today…went back for my one week followup only to discover that he was not happy with my progress. Biopsy going to another Pathologiist and lesions are resistant to the antibiotic. I’m pretty bummed about this, my skin has betrayed me in an ever widening sea of sharply painful, wet lesions.

    Put me on a new mega-steroid dose in addition to a new antibiotic and we’ll see what the Pathologist says.

    I’m miserable, can’t sleep and so I’ll wait. I crave some relief…not in sight yet, but hoping. (A tleast I’ve stopped posting here at 2 or 3 in the morning 😀 ).

  • Getting Backup Exec To Work with Windows Server 2008 R2

    If you read yesterday’s article you know I am working to get the kinks out of our Backup Exec deployment. My goal is to have a smooth, self sufficient backup server running, that I only need to look at when an alert tells me something is wrong rather than daily. I know daily checks are a good thing, but I would rather stare at a bunch of successes than failures.

    One of the errors I was seeing was on our Windows Server 2008 R2 servers. In fact, when you install the agent you get a warning about compatibility problems. Does that mean Backup Exec won’t back up Windows Server 2008 R2? Not in this case.

    The error I was seeing was this:

    V-79-57344-65225 – A failure occurred accessing the Writer metadata.

    V-79-57344-65225 – AOFO: Initialization failure on: "System?State". Advanced Open File Option used: Microsoft Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS).

    Snapshot provider error (0xE000FEC9): A failure occurred accessing the Writer metadata.

    Check the Windows Event Viewer for details.

    At first I thought that maybe it was related to the VSS issues I blogged about a few months ago. It wasn’t related at all as the writer status was fine. No the problem is with the 100MB System Reserved partition windows creates when you install it.

    To get the error to go away all you have to do is assign that partition a drive letter:

    drive letter system reservedI know! So simple it almost makes you want to puke right? What? Am I the only one? Okay, sorry then. Still, it is pretty awesome how easy it is to fix that.

    Know of any other 2008 R2 tricks for backup exec? Hit me up in the comments!