Blog

  • Meet Garia, the World’s Most Exclusive Golf Cart

    Filed under: , ,

    Garia, the “World’s Most Exclusive Golf Cart” – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Normally, we might associate the so-called “World’s Most Exclusive Golf Cart” with Tiger Woods, but he’s surely got more important things on his mind at the moment. Plus, it’s Cadillac that’s supposed to be The Standard of the World, not Buick, the GM-owned automaker that Woods shills for. So then, just who is the Garia meant for?

    Honestly, we have no idea. Perhaps well-to-do golfers looking to one-up their frenemies at the local country club? In any case, the Garia is supposedly “built to the highest standards of the automotive industry.” Included in its kit, says the manufacturer, is a double-wishbone front suspension, a drivetrain built by the company that produces Ducati gearboxes and aluminum stampings sourced from the same company that supplies Aston Martin, Jaguar and Volvo.

    Inside the comfy confines of the golf cart is a built-in refrigerator to keep your beverages nice and chilled along with a couple of strategically-located cupholders. Valmet Automotive, which assembles the Porsche Boxster and Cayman along with the upcoming Fisker Karma, manufacturers the Garia. Starting in 2010, the manufacturer promises that the Garia will be street-legal in the States as a Low Speed Vehicle after being formally introduced at the Geneva Motor Show in March. Price? $17,499 or 13,999 Euros, plus tax and delivery.

    Gallery: Garia Golf Cart

    [Source: Garia]

    Continue reading Meet Garia, the World’s Most Exclusive Golf Cart

    Meet Garia, the World’s Most Exclusive Golf Cart originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 19:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Nobel Perspective on Solar Power and Energy Consumption

    Indiana University Professor Elinor Ostrom shares thoughts on innovation, collaboration, and sharing information with consumers to drive positive behaviors with respect to sustainable living. …

    … “She said it’s also important that people find ways to consume less energy by driving less, using solar power and insulating their homes. There are a very large number of things people can be doing on a small scale that give them benefits as well as reducing externalities … ” …

    Via Indiana University: Virtues of collaboration, research freedom

  • Hard Childhood May Lead to Adult Illness

    Children who are subjected to a difficult life may end up with a higher risk of chronic illnesses than than those adults who had happier childhoods, say researchers.

    iStock_elderly_woman_eatingAs the population ages in the more developed countries, there is also an increase in illness, many of which could be prevented to a certain extent, like type 2 diabetes and some types of heart disease. While some risk factors have been identified and are being targeted, researchers are reaching as far back as they can to perhaps stop the diseases before the risk factors even begin, rather than stopping the risks once they have started.

    To do this, researchers in the United Kingdom studied 1,037 people from New Zealand who were born during a one-year period between April 1972 and March 1973.

    The researchers monitored the subjects for their first 10 years of life, specifically looking at three particular issues:

    • poor socioeconomics
    • maltreatment
    • social isolation

    The subjects were then assessed again when they turned 32 years old. At this time, the researchers were looking for:

    • depression
    • high inflammation levels in the blood (which could indicate heart disease, for example)
    • high blood pressure
    • abnormal cholesterol levels
    • obesity

    What the researchers found was that the subjects who had had more difficult childhoods also had higher levels of depression and high inflammation levels, as well as high cholesterol,  high blood pressure and obesity.

    “The effects of adverse childhood experiences on age-related disease risks in adulthood were non-redundant, cumulative and independent of the influence of established developmental and concurrent risk factors,” such as family history, low birth weight or high childhood body mass index, the authors write.

    Of course, parents don’t usually want their children to grow up disadvantaged and usually do what they can to raise their children’s standard of living. But this type of finding may help doctors and other healthcare professionals take these issues to heart and be more aware of the long-term impact. Other professionals may work on interventions that could help minimize the impact of a difficult childhood on adults.

    ~~~

    Image: iStock.com

    Post from: Blisstree

    Hard Childhood May Lead to Adult Illness

  • Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 12.7.09

    Review: 2010 Suzuki Kizashi GTS is up for the Challenge

    Suzuki recently launched a promotion to pit the all-new Kizashi against the Audi A4 and Acura TSX. After a week behind the wheel, that seemingly insane challenge makes sense. Surprised? We were.

    REPORT: Diesel Beetle, electric Up! coming from Volkswagen

    With countless variants of the Up! concept, growing interest in diesel technology and a push for electric vehicles, VW has plans to bring it all to market… soon.

    Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 12.7.09 originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Modern Warfare 2 update incoming

    Heads up, CoD fanatics! A new patch for the console version of Modern Warfare 2 is on the way. It will include several bug fixes to address some game glitches that a lot of users have encountered.

  • Actor Ron Livingston Sues Wikipedia; He Should Use The Site To Look Up Section 230

    I’ve been a fan of actor Ron Livingston for a while, so it’s disappointing to see him push forward with an obviously dead-in-the-water lawsuit against Wikipedia. Livingston is upset that someone keeps changing his Wikipedia entry to claim that he’s gay, when the actor (who recently got married) is pretty sure he’s not. Of course, the problem here is that there’s nothing that he can reasonably sue Wikipedia for. He’s trying “libel, invasion of privacy and for using his name and likeness without his permission.” None of these will stand, as all will quickly be dumped due to Section 230 of the CDA — which you can all read about on Wikipedia. Now, he might have a stronger argument if he actually sued the individual making these changes, rather than Wikipedia itself, but even then, it’s difficult to see the lawsuit getting very far. Update: In the comments people are saying that the UPI reporter got the story wrong, and the actual lawsuit is against the individual — though, again it’s difficult to see the lawsuit getting very far. So much for the “professional reporters” at an organization like UPI doing fact checking.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Amanda Knox found guilty in Italy; public reacts

    Not a senator’s place to degrade a nation’s legal system

    Editor, The Times:

    The recent statement on the Amanda Knox guilty verdict released by Sen. Maria Cantwell was insulting to all the citizens of Italy — our NATO ally — as well as to Americans of Italian descent [“Knox support network: friends, lawyers, scientists and a senator,” page one, Dec. 5].

    She was clearly out of line to make them, as I suspect they were based largely or entirely on information provided to her by the Knox family. Her remarks were arrogant, to the point that she basically said Knox is innocent.

    Knox may be, but the senator is simply not in a position to know, and she should take better measure of the available facts before making provocative public statements that disparage the legal system of an entire nation.

    Too bad Sen. Cantwell wasn’t around when two Italians by the names of Sacco and Vanzetti were unjustly tried and executed in 1927, here in America. I’m certain she would have spoken out against the flaws in the justice system on display in this country. Or would she?

    — Dan Possumato, Portland, Ore.

    Boycotting all things Italian

    I think it would be highly appropriate for Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to converse with Sen. Maria Cantwell regarding the transfer of Amanda Knox to the U.S. to serve her prison term while her appeal undergoes the glacially slow injustice system that is Italy’s.

    For my part, however, I have begun boycotting Italian products, starting with Perugina chocolate and San Pellegrino, both of which I like. I will not buy them or any Italian cheese, wine, or other products as long as Knox endures incarceration as a consequence of the farcical trial just concluded.

    I urge others to join me in getting the attention of the Italians who were overjoyed by Prosecutor Giuliano Mignini’s successful vendetta against Knox and Raffaele Sollecito, whose cases probably should never have been brought to trial.

    — Earl J. Bell, Seattle

    Meredith Kercher and family are the only victims

    Isn’t it time to show some balance in this matter [“Knox ‘railroaded from day one,’ ” News, Dec. 5]? The victims, the only victims, are Meredith Kercher and her family. The murderers are found to be Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito. Neither deserve our sympathy, although compassion shown to their families is in order.

    The attempts by Sen. Maria Cantwell and others to portray Italy and Italian justice as biased and unfit to try this case are highly offensive and should cease at once.

    Knox and her family should be thankful she committed her crime in Italy and not in the U.S.

    She can expect to be released from prison in around 15 years if she behaves well. She’ll be less than 40 years old. Her sentence here in the states likely would have been much harsher.

    The Seattle Times would do its readers a service if it carried comment from Britain and Italy. The views of the rest of the world would be informative. We do not need to read further articles attempting to deny this crime.

    — Bruce Bailey, Seattle

    Why are we defending Amanda Knox?

    My daughter shared a two-bedroom apartment in college freshman year with two girls who partied and brought boys home on a nightly basis. Out of fear for her safety, my daughter not only purchased a lock for her bedroom, but spent most nights squeezing into a single bed with a friend because she was too afraid to sleep in her own apartment.

    This continued until one night a drunk male college student punched through an apartment wall with his fist and attempted to sexually assault my daughter’s fourth roommate returning from band practice. After my husband and I met with the dormitory authorities, nothing was done and our daughter had to change dormitories during finals.

    Reading about the Amanda Knox case, I am thankful my daughter was not hurt, or worse. It seems Washington is trying to defend Knox just because she is from Seattle, while ignoring the brutal reality that a gruesome act was committed to a young, innocent life, plus the horrendous loss to Meredith Kercher’s family.

    So many parents might have done better to provide direction in their children’s lives versus throwing money and influence after the fact. I shudder to think my daughter might have suffered a similar fate.

    — Anchi Miller, Kirkland

  • Rummble Foursquare-like location-based social network comes to Windows Mobile

    CoffeeSearch-180x300 FriendsView-180x300

    Rummble, the easiest way to find people and places nearby you love, today announced the public availability of Rummble for Windows® Phone at Heroes of the Mobile Screen event in London. With this launch, Rummble is set to open new doors for Windows Phone, making its unique personalised real-time recommendations platform available for the first time on Windows® Marketplace for Mobile. using a touch-optimised interface compatible with Windows Mobile 6.5 & 6.1

    “We are excited to be working closely with Rummble, and by having their latest and most up-to-date release on our Marketplace, our Windows Phone customers will have access to one of the best and most powerful location based services available today” said David Weeks, the Marketing Manager for Windows Phone.

    Rummble empowers people to become an influencer among their own social circle. Anyone using Rummble can, rate, share, & review any location, and with Rummble’s patent pending technology, the service delivers personalised results to users learning their tastes as they go.

    Most services re-publish directories containing the same bars, restaurants and hotels where as Rummble is designed to help you create and share the “long tail” of local content in the physical world; be that a museum, a favourite park bench, meeting place, salon, dog walk, public art or hiking spot.

    Features in version one of Rummble for Windows Phone include:

    • Discover personalised recommendations nearby, quickly and easily
    • Check-in to any venue and notify your group of friends instantly
    • Show the buzz from specific venues in real-time from the twittersphere
    • Find out where your friends are and what they are doing
    • Connect Rummble to Twitter, Facebook, Bebo and Linked-In
    • Fast and accurate location lookups with Skyhook Wireless

    Rummble for Windows Phone fits neatly into anyone’s business and personal life, whether you’re looking for a meeting spot with colleagues at a conference or hoping for serendipitous meeting with friends while out on the tiles.

    “Windows Mobile has always been one of the most capable mobile platforms available, but there is no question new entrants have increased competition in the market” said Andrew J Scott, Rummble Founder “Windows Phone 6.5 is an important upgrade and with over 30 new handsets launching in 2010 that is many millions of people who we want to be Rummbling around the world!”

    To download Rummble for Windows Phone search ‘Rummble’ in the Windows Marketplace installed on your handset.  Windows Mobile 6.0 and 6.1 users can install Marketplace here.

    You can find more information on Rummble’s blog http://blog.rummble.com or follow them on Twitter @Rummble or [email protected]

    Share/Bookmark

  • Fanblogs Bowl Pick Em Contest/Sweepstakes/Jamboree

    I really don’t know why they don’t include the bowl season in the regular pick em–probably so they can have a Final Jeopardy crazy-like finale with the post season. Regardless, if you want to participate, go to Yahoo and sign up. You will need a yahoo email address, but you can have notifications sent to your regular one if you like. The name of our group is Fanblogs, but you need our group ID # which is 17240. The password for our group is fanblogs09 (but don’t tell anybody).

    I believe we’re still limited to the first 50 pickers (or grinners), so hurry up and join. Bowl season starts December 19th and ends some time in the summer (I think). Although it makes it really easy to follow if you use the same yahoo name as your fanblogs name, you can remain anonymous if you like, but for those of you who join, chime in below so we can get a head count.

    And as always, this contest is free and is not for the wagering of bets, real or imagined, but may, in fact, be used for trash-talking purposes freely.Member FBIC. If you spend four hours or longer making your picks, this is a rare medical condition known as pickempism. Please consult your doctor immediately. DO NOT TAUNT HAPPY FUN BALL. Thank you.

    © fanblogs.com

    View the original post or comment on Fanblogs Bowl Pick Em Contest/Sweepstakes/Jamboree…


  • Maurice Clemmons and five fallen police officers

    Enough is enough

    Enough. Please quit writing about the lunatic who gunned down the Lakewood officers. He doesn’t deserve the ink [“A path to murder,” page one, Dec. 6].

    I did not read the lengthy article in the paper, but The Times sure devoted a lot of space to a man who took so much. He’s not worth my time to read about. His name should never be mentioned again.

    What is the point of showcasing his miserable life? To show how society failed him? His family failed him.

    I wonder how the left-behind family members feel about seeing his picture every day in the paper? What’s the point?

    — John Meadows, Bonney Lake

    Aunt deserves to be recognized for her courage

    Please, won’t someone recognize the incredible courage of the aunt Chrisceda Clemmons and her husband Michael Shantz, who turned Maurice Clemmons in to the police [“‘I didn’t want him to hurt any more people,’ ” page one, Nicole Brodeur staff column, Dec. 3]?

    It must have been a terribly difficult decision for them. Put yourself in their shoes. Would you have the courage to do what they did? I’m not sure I would.

    The community should rise up to recognize them. They deserve more than a trashed house for their efforts. They deserve public recognition.

    Someone — perhaps the police union — should offer to help her with the cleanup. That would be good community relations as well as simple justice.

    If someone will start a fund to help her family with the cleanup, I would be happy to contribute.

    — John Watkins, Seattle

    Windows and doors are replaceable, lost lives are not

    I am not surprised that after the tragedy of four police officers being murdered in cold blood, people are upset that Chrisceda Clemmons’ house was trashed by the Seattle Police Department in their search for a murderer [“Help is coming, and it’s only right,” NWFriday, Nicole Brodeur staff column, Dec. 4].

    Yes, it is sad that the house was trashed, but the Seattle Police Department is helping her and her family. I admire her for doing the right thing, when no one else who knew this murderer would.

    People don’t get it that the police just couldn’t go up to the front door, knock and say, “Come out Maurice Clemmons, we know you’re in there.” The police are trained in how to safely apprehend such a suspect without the loss of their lives or the suspect’s.

    Broken windows and a front door — those and the other material things in Clemmons’ house that were trashed are replaceable, but those four officers are gone forever.

    How sad that after this tragedy, people still get upset with the police for doing their job to protect us and keep us safe. Just because a person has a bad experience with the police, no police department should be judged as being bad.

    — Donna Carlton, Federal Way

    Wishing the blame game enacted real change

    When something good happens, politicians run for the camera. When something bad happens, the blame game begins [“Fixing blame won’t fix this mess,” NWWednesday, Danny Westneat staff column, Dec. 2].

    Within hours of the four police officers being shot, the blame game began. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee blamed the system, the system blamed the judges and so on. Then Gov. Chris Gregoire blamed Arkansas, Huckabee, their system and our system.

    Do these politicians not realize that they are the system?

    These are the very politicians we elect to make sure these things do not happen. Wouldn’t it be refreshing to have one of our politicians step forward and say, I am part of the system, so therefore I am part of the problem. They are all paranoid about their futures and therefore are hesitant about taking any blame.

    How about taking the blame and take a stand to change the system.

    Are these officers going to be soon forgotten or is this a turning point to protect the people who give their lives, to protect us? The catch-and-release program we seem to offer criminals needs a slight review.

    Our judicial system needs to be changed to offer assistance to officers, rather than adding to their challenges.

    — Bill Heimkes, Shoreline

    Reflecting on recent events

    Being a Seattle cop for the past 28 years has taught me one thing: Nothing surprises me about human behavior.

    My reflecting over the past month about the abhorrent, vicious and senseless acts against our region’s police officers has caused me to rethink that statement. I understand that there are selfish, narcissistic criminals in society who go through life victimizing others and accepting no responsibility for their actions. I also know that a small percentage of those criminals present a clear danger to our community and to the police officers whose sole job is to protect society from them.

    Even with this in mind, the carnage launched against this area’s law-enforcement officers over the past 30 days defies any logic, reasoning or justification.

    These cowardly acts of murdering five of this community’s police officers in cold blood are so disturbing that it makes one question just how civilized our society is, and reminiscent of the Third World mayhem we all read about and dismiss as being irrelevant to our nation.

    The late Maurice Clemmons is a shining example of people who leave behind a trail of victims throughout their life, with apparently no conscience or remorse for their acts. Not only did he discard the lives of four cops during his murderous rampage, but added a multitude of additional casualties such as the officer’s children, spouses, families, co-workers and most important, an increasingly frightened public for which no amount of comfort will ever make them feel safe.

    — Jim Ritter, Seattle

  • Forks, Wash., and its life-sucking ‘Twilight’ fans

    Where is true America?

    Emerson Richards’ recent plea to save Forks from commercialization [“Sucking the life out of Forks,” Opinion, guest commentary, Dec. 5] was heartfelt, but way off base.

    I found the statement, “Forks is what is left of true America” profoundly offensive. The only true America is America, and all of America.

    The American character is a product of diversity. America is made up of a hundred immigrant stocks, religions, cuisines, colors, classes, climates, geographies and environments. To declare one place, people, or subculture to be more American than the others, is to miss the whole point of the American experiment.

    We are an inclusive culture, not an exclusive one.

    To claim that one group of Americans represents true America is to disinherit the rest of us. It creates a dangerous division with a minority of so-called true Americans besieged by a vast majority who have been branded less American. We get too much of that kind of dangerous divisiveness from our pundits and politicians.

    The “Twilight” fad will fade as soon as the last book is made into a movie. In the meantime, let Forks enjoy the boost to its economy brought by true American tourists visiting a true American town.

    — John J. McKay, Seattle

    A note from a Port Angeles native

    I just read “Sucking the life out of Forks,” and as a Port Angeles native, and a fellow undergraduate, I am disappointed by the writer’s selfishness.

    As someone who loves hiking around the Olympic Peninsula, I admit that I understand wanting Forks to remain pristine. However, the writer fails to realize that a major reason why Forks seems so pure and genuine to author Emerson Richards, is that many people from the Olympic Peninsula are poverty-stricken.

    So, by urging people not to visit Forks because of “Twilight,” Richards implies Forks is only worthy of upward mobility if new businesses are sufficiently quaint.

    It is shameful that she prioritizes her desire for a remote vacation spot over the livelihoods of everyone capitalizing on “Twilight.”

    Granted, it would be nice if everyone could make a living without embracing teen vampire fads. It would also be nice if more people wanted to visit Forks just for the nature, but neither is likely to happen, and I wish the author would consider that the Olympic Peninsula does not just exist for her enjoyment, but that there are people here trying to make a living.

    — Katherine Flowers, Port Angeles

  • Dodge Challenger tops Consumer Reports owner satisfaction survey

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    2009 Dodge Challenger SRT8 6-Speed – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Consumer Reports has surveyed 380,000 subscribers to rank the most satisfied new car owners and a newcomer came in and dethroned the Toyota Prius. An amazing 92 percent of V8-powered Dodge Challenger owners said that they would definitely buy another Mopar pony car if they had the chance to do it all over again. That’s a big-time win for Chrysler, as the Pentastar has been getting dinged badly in recent CR studies. Hybrids have been very popular in the satisfaction survey over the past few years, but the perennial champ Prius wasn’t even the number one battery-assisted model. That honor goes to the new Ford Fusion Hybrid, which came in second overall with a 91 percent rating. The Chevrolet Corvette, Porsche 911 and Prius round out the top five. To make the top of the satisfaction list at least 80 percent of customers need to say that they would definitely buy the same vehicle again.

    Detroit automakers substantially improved their standing in the annual survey versus last year, as nine percent of overall Motown models were at the top of the list. That’s still down substantially against the 12 percent Asian automakers and 23 percent of European automakers scored in the top tier. While GM, Ford and Chrysler each found success at the top, each scoring a hit in the top five, two of the three automakers also filled out the entire bottom ten. Owners of the four cylinder Chrysler Sebring were the least satisfied among all surveyed. In all, GM had seven of the bottom ten while Chrysler had three unlovable losers. Head over to the Consumer Reports site for more details.

    [Source: Consumer Reports]

    Dodge Challenger tops Consumer Reports owner satisfaction survey originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 18:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Seneca White Deer

    Romulus, New York | Fascinating Fauna

    For years, rumors have circulated about the strange herd of white deer living in the former Seneca Army Depot in Seneca County, New York. Many people have speculated that the “albino” breed of deer were freak-accidents in an army experiment gone wrong. Others have attributed the animals’ appearance to an underground supply of radioactive military weapons. Neither of these rumors, however, are true.

    The white deer were first spotted around 1941, when the U.S. Army fenced off 24 square miles of land for the Seneca Army Depot, a munitions storage site. Under the protection of the security fencing, the deer population thrived — and, along with it, a recessive-gene for white coloration. Though the animals appeared to be albino, they were in fact White-tailed deer who carried the recessive-gene for an all-white coat.

    As the white deer population proliferated through the 1950s, the U.S. Army decided to protect the unique herd. Aiding in the process of artificial selection, a depot commander managed the brown deer population through hunting and forbade GI’s from shooting any white deer. Since then, the white deer population has grown to approximately 300, making it the largest herd of white deer in the world.

    The Seneca Army Depot was shut down in 2000 and has been closed to the public ever since. A non-profit group, Seneca White Deer, Inc., has been fighting to turn the area into a conservation park and Cold War museum. Until then, dozens of deer can still be visible from the highway, frolicking among the hundreds of abandoned bunkers.

  • Press Coverage of WTO Protests 10 Years Later

    Though the mainstream Seattle media focused on mostly on confrontations, tear gas, and “where were you?” person-on-the-street reminiscing, some outlets took the 10 year anniversary of the WTO protests in Seattle as a point to look at the future, what’s happened since, and where we go from here.  Below are just a few articles and pieces that caught our eye (beyond the uncharacteristic appearance of the phrase “WTO Protesters were right” on the Seattle Times business page)

    TV:

    Seattle WTO Anniversary Today, 11/28/2009 on Q13 Fox – Featuring interviews with People’s Summit organizers and CAGJ members!

    RADIO:

    KBCS 91.3 is offering a full week of WTO & People’s Summit programming, from Monday, 11/30 – Friday, 12/4

    KBCS – N30: It Still Matters: November 30th, 1999 brought with it one of the largest global justice protests in the U.S. Now ten years later, what happened? In this series we ask participants and organizers where we have come since 1999. Produced by award-winning journalist Jill Freidberg who also co-directed the independent documentary about the WTO protests, This Is What Democracy Looks Like.

    WTO in Seattle ten years later,”  a series of stories by KPLU 88.5

    The WTO Protests: 10 Years Later, on KUOW with Naomi Klein, Paul Schell, David Solnit, and more, 11/23/2009

    LOCAL PRINT/BLOGS:

    The “Special WTO Edition“, Eat the State, 11/26/09

    “WTO Anniversary, Part 1″ & “WTO Anniversary, Part 2″, Real Change, 11/25/09

    WTO – 10 Years Later, Don McIntosh with NW Labor Press, 11/20/2009

    Change and Pains: 10 years after the No WTO Combo, Krist Novoselic on Seattle Weekly’s Blog, 12/1/2009

    OTHER PRINT:

    The Battle of Seattle Ten Years Later: Organizers Reflect on 1999 Shutdown of WTO Talks and the Birth of a Movement, Amy Goodman on Democracy Now!

    Ten Years After Seattle – The Global Justice Movement Evolves, by Christopher Moraff with In These Times, 10/19/2009

    10 Years After: Labor Needs Spirit of Seattle Protests, Roger Bybee with In These Times’ “Working in America” Blog, 11/17/2009

    The Seattle activists’ coming of age in Copenhagen will be very disobedient“, by Naomi Klein, 11/12/2009

    Ten years after Battle in Seattle: Another World is Necessary, by John Nichols on the Nation’s Blog, 11/30/2009

    Finding WTO significance beyond the protests, by Stephen Dunphy, crosscut.com, 11/30/2009

    From Seattle to Detroit: 10 Lessons for Movement Building on the 10th Anniversary of the WTO Shutdown, By Stephanie Guilloud; An article written for the Project South Fall Newsletter

    The Meaning of Seattle: Truth Only Becomes True Through Action – WTO+10: Before 1999, the momentum of globalization seemed to sweep everything in front of it, including the truth. But in Seattle, ordinary women and men made truth real with collective action. By Walden Bello

    The “Battle in Seattle” at 10 – WTO+10: Did the 1999 protests against the World Trade Organization actually make a difference? By Mark Engler

    The World Turned Out in Seattle – WTO+10: Ten years later, what has been the legacy of the 1999 Seattle protests? By Anuradha Mittal

    The Battle for Reality. What really happened at the 1999 WTO demonstrations in Seattle? On television, it looked like vandalism and random violence. On the streets, it looked like part festival, part uprising, part police riot. Now there’s a movie version. Activist and author David Solnit was there—organizing in the streets and speaking up on the set. By David Solnit

    One More Thing Seattle’s WTO Shutdown Taught the World – Among the many ripple effects of the successful shutdown of the WTO in Seattle in 1999 is one that few know about. The organizing that went into the direct action, marches, media center, and forums inspired the organizers of the World Social Forums, which have become some of the world’s most important centers of people power. By Sarah van Gelder
    The WTO and the Myth of Activist Violence. From the Boston Tea Party perpetrators to Civil Rights activists, the people who have made our world through direct action have been treated as dangerous, even if they are revered when their radical acts are at a safe distance. By Rebecca Solnit

    Seattle + 10. Time to declare our independence from Wall Street. By David Korten, Yes! Magazine.

    The Battle Since Seattle: The Road to Pittsburgh and Beyond, by Paul J. Comeau and Wes Strong for Infoshop News, 12/08/09

  • Detroit Salt Mine

    Michigan, US | Natural Wonders

    Detroit is known for many things: the auto industry, the failure of the auto industry, hockey, Motown, and lately as an example of a city gone to pot. But there is another part of the city far fewer people seem to be aware of, and it lies directly underneath their feet.

    Some 1,200 feet beneath the streets of Detroit, under the north end of Allen Park, Dearborn’s Rouge complex, and most of Melvindale runs 50 miles of subterranean roads over an area of more then 5.6 kilometers. It is the Detroit Salt Mine, and as a Detroit industry it is older then automobiles. As a geological entity, this salt deposit is older even than the dinosaurs.

    Created some 400 million years ago during the Devonian Period — a time when the first fish were beginning grow legs and make their way onto land, and the first seed-bearing plants came into existence — it was the result of ancient oceans pouring into a huge basin, evaporating, and leaving huge amounts of salt behind in the process. All of which would be covered up by dirt pushing glaciers.

    The salt was first used by Indian tribes by filtering it from salt springs, and the existence of an enormous rock salt deposit was officially discovered in 1895. There was just one problem, it was beneath a thousand feet of stone and glacial drift.

    Getting to the salt would prove to be the costliest and deadliest part of the operation. Six men were killed during the dig, and the Detroit Salt and Manufacturing Company was bankrupted in the process. The 1,060-foot shaft was finally completed in 1910. Everything had to be lowered into the mine, and once lowered in, it wasn’t coming back out. This included mules, which once lowered in on ropes stayed in the mines until they died.(It is unclear what happened to their remains.)

    A second tunnel was dug in 1922 so salt could be brought up faster and larger equipment lowered in. Lowered piece by piece (large truck tires had to be compressed and tied up to fit) and then reassembled in a machine shop in the mine, like the donkeys the machinery is there to stay.

    Deeper then the Empire State Building is tall, miners ride down to the mine smushed face to face in a tiny elevator. Once down there they extract the salt in the “room and pillar” method where they leave half the salt to act as enourmous pillars. To extract they cut a large slice between the floor and a desired section of salt. they then drill holes for explosives and blast out some 900 tons of salt in less then three seconds. The salt is then crushed and thousands of feet of conveyor belt move the salt to the hoisting shaft where it is lifted out in ten ton loads.

    The mine itself is a relatively clean and spacious place to work as far as mines go. It has no vermin, who would have nothing to eat, and workers are even allowed to smoke, as long as it isn’t in sensitve areas. Today, the salt from this mine is used exclusively as road salt. Public tours are currently unavailable.

  • Lethal Injection in Ohio: And Then There Was One

    Tomorrow’s scheduled execution of Kenneth Biros may be a first in U.S. history. Biros, convicted of killing and dismembering a woman in 1991, has been delivered to the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville where he awaits lethal injection by a single drug. No one has ever been executed by this novel method, which some observers fairly note is a form of “human experimentation.”

    The one-drug protocol was embraced by state authorities last month after Ohio botched the execution of condemned murderer Romell Brown — the latest in a long line of instances demonstrating the state’s cruel and inhumane ineptitude at dispatching of the condemned. Biros is scheduled to be injected intravenously tomorrow with about 14 times the dosage of anesthetic used in other states’ lethal injection protocols.

    Experts indicate that the one-drug method is likely to induce death more slowly than Ohio’s former method, which states have relied on as the exclusive method of lethal injection since restoration of capital punishment in the 1970’s. As a fallback, in case Ohio once again proves a clumsy killer, state authorities will employ a two-drug injection into Biros’ muscle.

    (more…)

  • Lithium and REE: Electric Cars on DOE’s Mind TNR.v, CZX.v, WLC.v, LI.v, RM.v, CLQ.v, SQM, FMC, ROC, AVL.to, RES.v, QUC.v, F, TTM, TM, NSANY, DAI, BMW,

    As the global market for electrified vehicles grows rapidly over the next several years, lithium ion (Li-ion) batteries in a variety of chemistries will be the technology of choice for auto manufacturers.” – this is the most important take out for us and our investment strategy from this report. We have mentioned before that auto makers have confirmed this choice of Lithium-ion technology on a number of auto shows. Another important message is a growth rate of this market expected by this company: from $878 million estimated in 2010 to 8 billion in 2015. It means an explosive growth for Lithium Demand if these estimations are valid. Big stakes will be taken in the big game. More about introduction to the sector is in “BBC Rare earth: The New Great Game

    The U.S. government is looking to give out a second $100 million funding round to developers of fuels and batteries for electric cars.
    The U.S. Department of Energy has another $100 million to give to cutting-edge research, and it’s focus remains on accelerating electric car deployment.
    The DOE said Monday it’s looking for projects in transportation, liquid fuel and batteries as part of its second round of funding from the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E). The America Competes Act of 2007 created the ARPA-E, which is meant to support sciences that could make a significant contribution to the national goals of reducing foreign oil imports and emissions, and promoting energy efficiencies.
    The DOE awarded its first round, $151 million to 37 projects back in October. At the time, $23.7 million of the funding went to startups and universities to investigate ways to make liquid transportation fuels from using sunlight as a key ingredient or even act as a catalyst (see New Form of Solar Energy: Direct Solar Fuel).
    For example, BioCee and the University of Minnesota, which received the money from the previous round, are looking at using sunlight and carbon dioxide to grow two organisms for producing hydrocarbon.
    Another company, Sun Catalytix, plans to use solar electricity to split water for producing hydrogen, which could be used as a car fuel or fed to fuel cells for electricity generation for homes and businesses at night (see Hydrogen-Harvesting Catalysts From the Sun).
    For the latest round of funding, the DOE is again looking for similar, sunlight-to-fuel projects. But instead of projects that rely on the sun, typically for photosynthesis, the DOE wants to fund research that could use engineered microbes to convert carbon dioxide to fuels.
    The use of photosynthesis is innovative, but the “overall efficiencies remain low,” the DOE said. Plus, the need for sunlight also would limit production to during the day.
    Specifically, the DOE is looking for projects to develop microbes that can harvest energy from hydrogen, metal ions or from electric current.
    Besides liquid fuel projects, the DOE also wants to fund battery technologies for electric cars, as well as materials and methods to capture carbon dioxide emissions at coal-fired power plants.
    Carbon capture remains a focus of various types of DOE funding, given that roughly 50 percent of the country’s electricity come from coal-fired power plants.”
  • Former Saab PR manager Jan-Willem Vester succumbs to illness

    Filed under: ,

    We here at Autoblog want to pass along our sincere condolences to the family and friends of Jan-Willem Vester who passed away last night. Until last spring, Jan-Willem was the communications manager for Saab USA. In that role, the amiable Dutchman was always extremely helpful and prompt in answering our queries about Saab’s products and business.

    Beyond being a great PR guy, Vester was a singularly wonderful advocate for the troubled brand, and we had hoped he would find a prominent position with the Swedish automaker should it ever find a new owner. He wasn’t just a hired gun, but a true longtime fan, owning an older 900 back in the Netherlands and new 9-5 Sportcombi for carting around the family. In recent months, Vester had been fighting an inoperable brain tumor to which he finally succumbed.

    Jan-Willem is survived by his wife Mariska and their three children.

    [Image: Saabhistory.com]

    Former Saab PR manager Jan-Willem Vester succumbs to illness originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Cream Cheese-Stuffed Chocolate Chip Cookies

    Cream Cheese-Stuffed Chocolate Chip Cookies

    A classic chocolate chip cookie is good, but sometimes it seems like they’re missing something. Something like a cream cheese filling that will lend the cookies a bit of cheesecake flavor and make them even moister and chewier than they would be without the filling!

    The cookie dough for this twist on a classic chocolate chip cookie is a fairly standard cookie dough. It even bakes up into tasty cookies on its own if you don’t want to go for the filling. The dough needs to be chilled before you work with it so it is easy to handle, then individual chunks of cookie dough are flattened into discs and packed with a cream cheese and white chocolate filling. These cookies are huge, but with good reason. The cream cheese filling is soft when you compare it to the firm cookie dough and it’s easiest to wrap the dough around it when you’re working with a fairly large amount. Not that I heard any complaints about cream cheese-filled chocolate chip cookies being too big from anyone I shared these with!

    These cookies are real crowd-pleasers and very satisfying to eat – thanks in large part to their size! The cream cheese filling has a nice tang to it and it contrasts well with the sweet, chocolaty cookie dough. The centers of the cookies may sink a little bit after baking, but as long as you take your time when wrapping the dough around the filling, every cookie should have a well-defined layer of cream cheese at the center.

    (more…)

  • Judge Finalizes Tenenbaum Ruling, Trashes Nesson For Chaotically Bad Defense

    It’s no secret that almost all of the observers of Charles Nesson’s defense of Joel Tenenbaum — no matter where you stood on issues related to file sharing and copyright — felt that Nesson’s plan was a complete and total disaster, doing himself, his client, and all copyright reformers a huge disservice. It was a complete disaster that made it that much harder for those with reasonable arguments to be heard. And, to date, he’s done nothing but continue to suggest that he has no clue how badly he screwed up. It’s a true shame.

    Today, Judge Gertner finalized the ruling, which will almost certainly be appealed (though, hopefully with better legal representation). But, perhaps more interesting is that Judger Gertner also issued a separate memo where you can basically feel Gertner’s frustration with Nesson’s defense. In it, she even makes clear that she would have been open to a limited use of fair use to defend certain actions:


    “As it made clear previously, the Court was prepared to consider a more expansive fair use argument than other courts have credited—perhaps one supported by facts specific to this individual and this unique period of rapid technological change. For example, file sharing for the purposes of sampling music prior to purchase or space-shifting to store purchased music more efficiently might offer a compelling case for fair use. Likewise, a defendant who used the new file-sharing networks in the technological interregnum before digital media could be purchased legally, but who later shifted to paid outlets, might also be able to rely on the defense.”

    This wasn’t a huge surprise — given that Gertner had previously slammed RIAA tactics, and has also suggested that Congress really needs to change the punishment allowed for copyright infringement, as it appears to be totally unrelated to the actual lawbreaking. So, in her memo, she notes that she gave Tenenbaum every chance to make a reasonable defense, but instead Nesson and his team of law students provided “a truly chaotic defense.”

    Once again, we’re left wondering what Nesson was possibly thinking, and what would have happened if a competent litigator was actually in charge of his case.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story