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  • 10 Tips To Make Holidays A Little Greener And Less Costly

    Christmas Tree MoneyEvery holiday season websites are full of tips to save money and help mother earth during the holidays. Here are 10 simple measures for a Greener less costly holiday season.


    1. Consider replacing older strings of holiday lights with more energy efficient LEDs (light emitting diodes). Now available in many traditional colours, they are not only energy efficient they are also shatterproof, shock resistant and safe to touch. They present no fire hazard and can save up to 80-90% in energy compared to incandescent bulbs.


    2. If LEDs are not an option consider buying new miniature lights which use about 70% less energy and last longer than larger bulbs.


    3. But if you prefer the brilliance of the larger bulbs, there is still an option to reduce electricity, switch to a five watt bulb, which will reduce your costs by about 30%.


    4. Defrost frozen food in the refrigerator. Doing this helps keep the fridge cold, because of the mass of cold items inside helps the fridge recover each time the door is opened.



    5. Do you remember you mom and dad always telling you to close the fridge door? I sure do, well they may have been right. Leaving the fridge door open while you take out the items you need is far more efficient than opening and closing it several times.


    6. Allow hot food to cool before storing it in the refrigerator or freezer. However, be sure to refrigerate or freeze hot foods within two hours of purchase or preparation or within one hour if the air temperature is above 90 degrees.


    7. Use the smallest pan and burner needed for the job. A six-inch pan on an eight inch burner will waste more than 40% of the energy. Cook with lids on your pans. For example, cooking pasta without a lid on the pot can use three times as much energy.


    8. If you use glass or ceramic pans, you can turn the oven temperature down 25 degrees and foods will cook just as quickly


    9. Household appliances keep using electricity even if you are not there. If going on vacation during the holidays unplug televisions, stereos, computers, VCR’s, chargers, etc., since they all draw small amounts of electricity even when they are turned off.


    10. When driving keep your tires properly inflated, tires at correct pressure improves gas mileage by around three percent.


    These are just a few of the many ways we can make our homes and lives a little more efficient, not just for the holidays, but year round.


    Have a safe and happy holiday season.

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    related.posts:

    1. The Ultimate Green Store: Eco Friendly Gifts For The Holidays
    2. Green Christmas Tips For This Holiday Season
    3. Mercury Creating Recycling Problems in Energy Efficient Light Bulbs


  • Is Sprint (and everyone else) spying on you all the time?

    Sprint: 50 million customers, 8 million law enforcement GPS requests in 1 year from Christopher Soghoian on Vimeo.

    Sprint’s Manager of Electronic Surveillance has revealed, during a panel discussion at a wiretapping and interception industry conference, held in Washington DC in October of 2009, that Sprint served more than 8 million law enforcement requests for GPS data from mobile phones used by subscribers.

    With about 48 million subscribers, that’s one request for every 6 people on the network and amounts certainly to mass surveillance of some kind.

    Of course no-one is claiming Sprint is the only carrier engaging in this practice, and who can forget the infamous surveillance rooms at AT&T but should make citizens of US wonder if they are really as free as they think they are, and of course brings home that all of us voluntarily carrying a tracking device with us constantly.

    Should we be concerned?  Let us know in the comments below.

    Source: Slight Paranoia via TechDirt via PPCGeeks

    Thanks Sean VanSickle  for the tip.

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  • Review: Symptoms, Neurocognition and Functional Outcome in Schizophrenia:A Meta-analysis

    The paper reviewed here is ‘Symptoms as mediators of the relationship between neurocognition and functional outcome in schizophrenia:A Meta-analysis’ by Joseph Ventura and colleagues. In the conclusion to the abstract the authors write that

    Although neurocognition and negative symptoms are both predictors of functional outcome, negative symptoms might at least partially mediate the relationship between neurocognition and outcome

    The authors begin with an introduction in with a discussion of the literature on cognition in relation to negative symptoms. They state their hypothesis thus

    that the meta-analysis would support a mediation hypothesis for negative symptoms based on the strength of the relationship between neurocognition and negative symptoms, and negative symptoms and outcome

    The authors detail the methodology. There are 12 search terms that they used in the specified databases which included pubmed and Psycinfo. These 12 search terms did not include IQ or components of standardised test batteries. They did include terms such as executive function and working memory. They also manually extracted further references from retrieved articles. They retrieved 200 articles and further analysed these according to inclusion criteria. Thus diagnoses should be specified in the papers according to DSM criterion which thus excludes those papers which use ICD-10 criteria. I thought the other inclusion criteria seemed to me to be quite sensible and pragmatic e.g. the data in papers should not have been published previously elsewhere.

    The authors state their definition of neurocognition and also their use of the MATRICS initiative for structuring domains of cognitive functioning to be used in the analysis and these are ’speed of processing, attention/vigilance, working memory, verbal learning, visual learning, and reasoning and problem solving’. They excluded social cognition which they thought to be another important independent mediator of the relationship in question. PANSS, SANS and SAPS were used for the assessment of positive and negative symptoms while functional outcome was divided into three broad areas which in turn had a range of outcome measures.

    I didn’t understand the next stage. The authors aggregated the data from the neurocognitive domains into a single measure of neurocognition. I didn’t understand how aggregating speed of processing and problem solving for instance was meaningful. Each of these has been identified as a separate domain and so not only is data is being lost in this aggregation. However as the authors hint at in their discussion, not all of these domains are simply defined but are products of inter-related systems – different domains may share neural substrates. Thus if these domains are not entirely separate then I would argue that an additive operation is being applied to dependent data and that the result is not meaningful. I expected that individual test results would be aggregated and that after correcting for multiple comparisons effect sizes with p-values would be identified for the individual tests. While this would produce a large number of different results, these could be grouped after the initial analysis into broader categories if necessary.

    The authors have identified a large number of studies according to clearly specified criteria and listed these in the paper together with a brief summary of each paper. The authors have aggregated the data into a single neurocognitive score which I didn’t understand. I would be interested to see an analysis of the interaction between individual test scores and the relationship between negative symptoms and functional outcome.

    References

    Ventura J, Hellemann G S, Thames A D et al. Symptoms as mediators of the relationship between neurocognition and functional outcome in schizophrenia: A meta-analysis. Schizophrenia Research. 113. 2009. 189-199.

    Twitter

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

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

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

    Responses

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

    Disclaimer

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

  • Google Bug On Document Sharing Highlights Communication Problems

    Hopefully this is just a big mistake, but Slashdot points us to a bunch of Google Docs users complaining that Google is blocking them from sharing their documents claiming “inappropriate content,” even in cases where the content is clearly fine, such as college class notes and homework assignments. Even assuming this is just some sort of bug, the bigger issue seems to be Google’s lack of response, despite the issue cropping up weeks ago. This charge has been raised about Google in the past, and it’s only going to become more important. As more and more people rely on Google for services, the company is going to need to improve its handling of customer service issues and communication.

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  • United States Supreme Court Reaffirms That Defense Counsel Must Investigate for Mitigating Evidence in Death Penalty Cases

    The United States Supreme Court reaffirmed this week in a case from Florida, Porter v. McCollum, that a defense lawyer must conduct a reasonable investigation to uncover mitigating evidence in preparation for a capital trial.

    read more

  • AIDS Behind Bars

    Today is World AIDS Day and I’m thinking about the progress we’ve made in the last decade of so in fighting this disease, and the long road still before us. The issue of HIV and AIDS in American prisons serves as an example of the difficulty and the politics of fighting this disease around the world. And there aren’t many rays of hope when looking at AIDS in prison.

    More than 6% of prisoners in New York and 4% of prisoners in Florida are HIV-positive. A few months ago, I posted a map of HIV and AIDS rates in prisons across the country. Almost across the board, it’s higher than the national average.

    Health care is questionable in prison, but many prisoners weren’t getting proper care before being locked up — so prison provides access to AIDS drugs they never had. The most difficult treatment issue is their release. A study earlier this year found that 90 percent of prisoners would have an interruption of treatment within 30 days of their release.

    (more…)

  • DIY sous vide

    Last Thursday was Thanksgiving, and in the words of Arlo Guthrie, we had “a Thansgivin’ dinner that couldn’t be beat.”  Along with all the traditional Thanksgiving fare at Casa Eades, we had dueling turkeys: one cooked the traditional way and one cooked sous vide.  And let me tell you, there was no comparison.  I’m not saying this just because we’ve got a sous vide cooker for sale, either.  I’ve never had turkey that tasted so good.  Because I’m not really a big fan of turkey, I eat turkey on Thanksgiving, and Thanksgiving only.  I found our sous vide turkey to be so good, because it didn’t really taste like turkey.  At least not turkey cooked in the traditional way that I’m used to tasting.  It was like a different meat entirely.

    MD has posted on how she cooked both turkeys on her blog and on the Sous Vide Supreme blog, giving precise recipes for both.  As you can see when you read the posts, cooking a turkey the traditional way is a major pain (both figuratively and literally).  It’s just not worth it when the taste and texture outcome is so much better using sous vide.  Especially since the sous vide method is so much easier and less time consuming. Vastly easier, in fact.

    Lest you think this is another post cleverly designed to promote and sell the Sous Vide Supreme, let me disabuse you of that notion.  I’m going to show you how you can try the sous vide method at home without having to purchase a machine to see if it’s really for you.

    Not long ago I wrote a post on how MD and I came up with the idea for what ultimately became the Sous Vide Supreme.  We wanted to try cooking sous vide, but there were no sous vide units available for the home cook, and we weren’t about to fork over $1500 for a commercial unit just to give the technique a try.  So, we cobbled together a Rube Goldberg kind of set up and tried it out.

    I went back and pulled some of the photos I took of our contraption, which was made of a stock pot, a steaming basket turned upside down, and a candy thermometer.  And, the most important piece of equipment of all: constant attention.

    The secret of cooking sous vide is the maintenance of a constant temperature over the cooking period.  Since most things are cooked sous vide at a significantly lower temperature than 212F/100C (the temp at which water boils), you can’t put the container directly on the stove even with the burner on its lowest setting.  The lowest setting is typically for simmering, which holds the temp right at the boiling point.  When we were trying to set up our first try, we experimented with several different ways to get the stock pot high enough up off the flame of our gas stove so that we could get the low temperatures we needed.  We found that the steaming basket (made to set inside a pan) turned upside down gave us the height we needed given the flame on our stove.

    Sous vide cooking requires that the temperature be maintained precisely for long periods of time, sometimes up to 72 hours for, say, fall-off-the-bones beef ribs.  On the Sous Vide Supreme, you simply set the temp and walk away.  It’s not so easy with a homemade unit.  You’ve got to monitor it closely because temperature fluctuations of even a degree or two will make a difference in your outcome for many foods.  One of the ways you keep the temp where you want it is to use an important piece of equipment not pictured in the photo above: a pitcher of ice water.  You watch the temp carefully – you don’t have to stand there and watch it minute by minute – checking the candy thermometer every few minutes or so.  If the temp starts to drift up a little (the most common thing), you need to pour in a tiny bit of ice water to bring it down.

    Since you’ve got to stay on top of it, it’s best that you limit your cooking in a homemade device to foods that don’t require a long time in the bath.  Which means you’ve got to stick with good-quality beef cuts such as rib eye, New York strips or tenderloin, chicken breasts, salmon, turkey breast, etc.  If you read MD’s post on cooking our Thanksgiving turkey, you’ll notice that she cooked the breast for 2.5 hours at 140F and the dark meat at 176F for eight hours.  If you’ve got a Sous Vide Supreme, you can stick the dark meat in, set it for 176F and get it out eight hours later.  If you’re cooking it using the homemade device, you’re going to be standing close by watching it for eight hours.  Since you probably don’t want to spend eight hours fiddling with it, I would avoid trying the dark meat of a turkey as your first outing in the homemade device.  Try the breast or, better yet, some salmon or even steak, lamb or pork chops.  You want to minimize the amount of time you have to remain vigilant in your temp watching.

    Let me give you a couple of never-fail recipes so you can give it a try. And let me say that these were not the same recipes we used the first time we tried our rigged-up machine.  These are recipes that we’ve developed after a lot of bad experiences.  We suffered them so you don’t have to.

    Chicken breast sous vide

    The first thing you should try is chicken breast.  Why?  Because it’s easy and because the taste difference between a chicken breast cooked sous vide and one cooked any other way is so huge that you can really experience the virtue of cooking this way.

    Take your chicken breasts (they can be skinless or with skins in place) and brine for for hours in an 8 percent brine.  You make an 8 percent brine by putting five tablespoons of salt in one quart of water.  Make your brine, put the breasts in, and put in the fridge for four hours.

    Pull the breasts from the brine, rinse with fresh water and pat dry.

    Put each breast into a food-grade plastic bag along with a big pat of butter.  (If you like it, you can add some cracked pepper or herbs to the bag at this stage)

    Vacuum seal the bags with a Food Saver or one of the little hand vacuum pumps.  (You can even press all the air out with your fingers if you don’t have a pump of any kind, though you risk having your meat float and cook unevenly–and perhaps incompletely, which isn’t good with poultry–if any significant amount of air remains.)

    Bring your sous vide machine to 140F and put the bags in.  Watch it like a hawk (assuming you’re using your homemade setup) to maintain that temp for about 1.5 hours.

    Remove the bags, open and dump out the breasts.  They won’t look particularly appetizing, especially if they have been cooked with the skins on.  If the breasts are skinless, you can actually slice and eat just as they come out of the bag, and they’ll taste something like poached chicken, but infinitely better. But they are better yet if you sear them first to give them a little color and caramelized flavor.

    To sear them, you need to put a stainless or cast iron skillet on the stove at the highest temperature you can get.  Gas or electric both work, just put the burner on its highest setting.

    Leave the empty skillet on the hot burner for about ten minutes.

    Add some clarified butter (ghee), which will sizzle and steam like crazy if the skillet is hot enough.

    Put the breasts in the hot skillet and turn from side to side about every 30 seconds with tongs until you get a nice golden brown exterior.

    Remove and eat.  You won’t be disappointed.

    Steak sous vide

    You can also try steak.  Here’s how we did it last night.

    Get a nice cut of steak, a rib eye or porterhouse or something tender.  I wouldn’t use grass-fed beef for this experiment because you have to cook it too long to get it nice and tender.  If you use a regular grocery-store steak that isn’t too think – one inch, say – you can get by cooking for only 40 minutes to get it perfectly medium rare.

    MD puts a sprinkling of sea salt on each side, a few turns of the pepper mill and a little garlic powder then puts each steak in a food-grade plastic bag and vacuum seals it.

    Heat your water bath to 135F, put the bagged steaks in the bath, and watch carefully.

    Pull the steaks out after 40 minutes and let them sit at room temperature for 5 or 10 minutes to drop their internal temperature just a bit.  Remove them from the bags and pat dry.  (The patting dry is actually an important part of the process.)

    Do the deal with the skillet as described above for the chicken breasts.  Get it hot, add the clarified butter, then sear the steaks.

    sous vide steaks cooking1

    Sear them on each side no longer than about 20 seconds.  If you want, you can flip them around a bit from side to side.  You should even hit the edges of the steak with the hot skillet as well so that they are seared all around and the fat on the edges gets a nice color.

    Serve immediately.

    You can see from the photo on the right how the interior looks.  Perfectly medium rare from side to side with a tiny layer of caramelization on the surface.  Must be tasted to be believed.

    Several of your fellow readers have used the sous vide method and posted on it.  You can read their posts here, here, here and here.

    One of the nice (and sometimes aggravating) things about the sous vide method of cooking is its precision.  If you don’t like your steaks at 135F, try them at 130F or 140F.  Or even at 133F.  You can get as precise as you want.  The meat at each temperature will be a little different than when cooked a degree or two hotter or cooler.  It takes some diddling with and experimentation to find the temperature that works best for you.

    Once you do, you can turn out steak after steak after steak or pork chop after pork chop perfectly cooked just as you like it.  The food will be more nutritious because nothing is lost in the cooking process, including the moisture, which is why the meat is so tender.

  • LA 2009: Cadillac CTS Coupe vogues, dazzles

    Filed under: , , , ,

    2011 Cadillac CTS Coupe – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Cadillac invited us down to a dance hall south of downtown Los Angeles and the convention center for a little lunch and a lot of talk concerning their new CTS Coupe. In fact, they brought a CTS Coupe along with ’em. A production CTS Coupe we should point out. The exact same car you’ll be able to purchase from Cadillac in just a few short months (most likely May 2010 as a 2011 model).

    First thing is first and WOW – what a fabulously stunning automobile. Those of you in the LA area owe it to yourself to schlep down to the Staples Center just to see this here Caddy Coupe live in the flesh. Yes, it is another in a long lined-trend of modern vehicle that looks ten times better in person than in photos. For reals, this Caddy Coupe is a knockout. Make the jump to continue reading.

    Live photos copyright (C)2009 Drew Phillips / Weblogs, Inc.

    Continue reading LA 2009: Cadillac CTS Coupe vogues, dazzles

    LA 2009: Cadillac CTS Coupe vogues, dazzles originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 18:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Canal House Cooking, Volumes I & II Book Review 2009

    2009_12_02-canalhouse.jpgThe Canal House Cooking is a series of beautifully produced cookbooks that you can either subscribe to or purchase individually. Right now there are two volumes. Volume I is for Summer and Volume II, which was just released, is for Fall and Holiday cooking. Volume III will be released next year and will be for Winter/Spring. The series will continue, with Volume IV looping us back to Summer again.

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  • Royal Scam? UK license plate “D1ANA” expected to fetch £100,000 at COYS auction

    Filed under: , , ,

    Coys of Kensington will be hosting a True Greats auction on December 1, and among the items for sale will be an MG service manual (Lot 1), a Corvette poster (Lot 61), and some pre-WWII driving gauntlets (Lot 81). Oh, and there’ll also be the matter of Lot 142, a number plate reading “D1ANA” expected to pull down £100,000. That’s $164,174 to us here in the American system.

    That’s no small beer, certainly, yet while it might appear to be impressive, other less obviously impressive number plates have recently been fetching ridiculous amounts: aside from the UK tuner who bought the “F 1” plate for $870,000, earlier this year a gent – also in the UK – bought “1 D” for $513,000. And it’s not just our British pals in that game: “D1ANA” is far less fetching than the number “6,” which was bought by a Delaware man for $675,000. So there.

    The preliminary viewing was today, but it’s not too late to get in on the auction. Follow the jump for the press release, and get your pounds and pence ready.

    [Source: Coys]

    Continue reading Royal Scam? UK license plate “D1ANA” expected to fetch £100,000 at COYS auction

    Royal Scam? UK license plate “D1ANA” expected to fetch £100,000 at COYS auction originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 18:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Ravensword: Why Birds and Blades Don’t Mix

    Chillingo’s Ravensword ($6.99, iTunes link) is being touted as a Morrowind-type experience for the iPhone. That’s a lot to live up to. A full-fledged action RPG on my diminutive Apple portable seems like a dream come true, if it can actually hold a candle to its console counterparts. That’s a big if.

    The iPhone faces control issues and what seems like a natural reticence towards developing lengthy, in-depth game experiences on the iPhone. I say natural because most users still game only casually on the device, since that’s what a phone lends itself to. So does Ravensword manage to pull off an in-depth action RPG gaming experience? Read on to find out.

    Graphics and Audio

    At least superficially, Ravensword looks like the console and PC games from which it so clearly takes its inspiration. By default, you operate your character from a third-person perspective, and you can switch to first-person. That’s a standard borrowed from the Morrowind series, among others.

    It’s a little jarring to see some of the visual effects the game has in store. For example, everyone’s eyes are plastered open all the time, and look painted on and terrifying. Every time your character wakes up after having fallen in battle, I have to suppress a little scream.

    Ravensword’s soundtrack and effects sound a little pre-packaged and stock, but they don’t really hurt the experience, and you can always flick the silent switch is the soundtrack becomes too repetitive, as it did for me.

    Gameplay

    If you’ve ever played any kind of RPG before, the game mechanics of Ravensword will be familiar to you. Basically, you run around killing monsters and get experience for doing so. In most cases, the RPG mechanics are a little more structured and complex than that. In most cases. In Ravensword they are not.

    As soon as you venture out beyond the city walls, bad guys appear, and you hit them with whatever you happen to be wielding, then they die and you get experience, or you die and wake up in town. If you kill enough critters, you gain a level, and your stats are increased by a pre-determined amount. No level customization, no skill selection, nothing. To make matters worse, you don’t choose a class/race/gender etc., so you’re stuck as a human warrior whether you like it or not.

    Nor is combat challenging. The most you can do is switch between your bow and your sword when killing animals and forest creatures. Otherwise, you just hit the attack button like it’s going out of style. Also, you die a lot early on, since the game design is unbalanced.

    Plot

    It’s a bad sign when the first thing I have to say about a game’s plot design is to question whether or not it actually has one. To be fair, there is a story lurking somewhere in the background, about a kingdom in denial and a king who’s been missing for three years. Presumably, you’re meant to find out exactly what’s up with all of that nonsense at some point, but after spending quite a bit of time killing rats and warthogs, I just wasn’t convinced that finding out would be worth it.

    Verdict

    I was perhaps too excited to pick up Ravensword, since it seemed to have a lot of promise as an action RPG for the iPhone, but even if you aren’t expecting much, I’d definitely take a pass on this offering from Chillingo. Dungeon Hunter is a much better experience, and if you’re looking for a Morrowind clone, I’d suggest just waiting a few months since I’m sure Gameloft will get to copying it, too, in due course.


  • Watch: Red Dead Redemption "My name is John Marsten" trailer, take two

    PS3 (http://ps3.qj.net/category/Red-Dead-Redemption/cid/5481),

  • Who Lives Where? Income Demographics versus Rent in NYC

    who_lives_where.jpg
    The slick interactive map titled Envisioning Development: What is Affordable Housing? [envisioningdevelopment.net] solves the questions “Who lives where?” and “Who can afford to live here?”.

    Users are able to select individual neighborhoods in New York City and investigate the number of families in each income category on an animated bar-graph-like construct at the bottom of the page. Selecting the question ‘Who can afford to live here?’ allows for the exploration of more detailed rent price information.

    Housing is ‘affordable’ if one spends 30% or less of income on rent or mortgage payments.

    See also Social Explorer. Via @DataMasher.


  • Yay or Nay? Smoked Cheese The Cheesemonger

    2009_12_01-idiazabal.jpgWe’re purists when it comes to cheese. While we’re willing to offer the occasional exception to horseradish cheddar, a guilty if entirely realized pleasure, the peppercorned, the fruited, and the flavored inspire a resounding, collective “nay.”

    But what about smoked cheeses? Below, the three cheeses, one of which pictured here, that keep smoked cheeses on our “yay” list. And if you’ve never been a believer but you’re willing to become one, just read on.

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  • School Tech Guy Fired For Running SETI@Home?

    SETI@Home, one of the earlier and (still) largest distributed computing projects was launched more than 10 years ago, and it’s still pretty common for lots of folks (geeks and non-geeks alike) to run the screensavers and work through the mounds of SETI data. That’s why it’s a bit surprising to find a News.com writeup by Chris Matyszczyk, about a guy fired for running the software written up as if SETI@Home were some sort of wacky new project by UFO enthusiasts. Basically, it sounds like the guy installed the SETI@Home software on a bunch of computers at the school, and that upset school officials. This isn’t the first time we’ve seen this sort of thing. Five years ago, we wrote about a similar firing of an employee by the state of Ohio.

    Still, if you look at the details of this particular firing the situation seems a lot different than the News.com report suggests (or than even the article from AZCentral suggests). There’s actually a criminal investigation going on, but the bigger issue (even though it’s downplayed in the article) is the fact that the school district claims the guy stole 18 computers from the district and had them in his home (turned up by a warrant). That seems a lot more understandable as an offense leading to termination. Separately, it appears he did not complete his job duties — such as installing firewall software that never showed up (oddly, the article never actually defines the guy’s job title, but it sounds like some sort of IT job). The whole SETI@Home stuff just seems exaggerated. This includes the claim, made in the article, that the guy’s actions cost the school district between $1.2 million and $1.6 million. While some of this may be tied to the missing computers, the article implies that much of it is from running SETI@Home, which the school claims was a burden on the computer systems. While he probably shouldn’t have been running the software on those machines without permission, that alone is hardly that big of a deal. It seems like most people at the school district and the writers of the articles linked above don’t understand how SETI@Home works, which seems to create an awful lot of confusion.

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  • Endowment for a Rainy Day

    Judging from media accounts, U.S. nonprofits are facing unprecedented, if not catastrophic, financial distress because of endowment losses. Hiring is being frozen, facility maintenance is being deferred, programs are being dropped, performance seasons are being shortened, and construction projects are being cut back or even halted. As the president of Harvard University, Drew Gilpin Faust, put it when defending her decision to sharply reduce expenditures following a 30 percent drop in the value of the school’s endowment, “Tinkering around the edges will not be enough.” Harvard isn’t the only institution making dramatic cuts in response to a falling endowment. The J. Paul Getty Trust, which runs the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, slashed 14 percent of its workforce and delayed exhibitions and acquisitions after its endowment fell from $6.4 billion to $4.2 billion. Yale University cut capital expenditures by $2 billion and staff salaries and benefits by 7.5 percent after its endowment fell from about $23 billion to about $16 billion. And the Shriners Hospitals for Children considered closing 6 of its 22 children’s hospitals after its endowment fell from $8.3 billion to $5.0 billion. The Shriners tabled that motion, but are considering billing insurance and Medicaid for…

  • Al Gore Gets Crazy About Global Warming

    On NBC’s green week, Al Gore stopped by Saturday Night Live and gave a little news update about global warming. If you can get past him way too obviously reading the cue cards, it’s pretty darn hilarious. Since no one is taking global warming seriously, his plan is to sell crazy. My favorite green idea is trees with guns. Too funny.

    Take a look…

    Post from: Blisstree

    Al Gore Gets Crazy About Global Warming

  • Mortgage related: Ira Has 2, Cram Downs 2, Upscale FHA, Reverse Mortgage Factsheet, Few Mods, Walk Away Morality, NY Foreclosure Protection

    Bill-Coppedge original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

    independent-institute   +  nyt1

    2 from Ira Artman – thanks Ira

    Government Responds to Economic Woes by Making More Bad Mortgage Loans – By Robert Higgs – The Beacon Blog at Independent Institute 

    Athletes and RE – For Athletes in Motion, Real Estate Can Be a Burden – By JANE McMANUS – Last season, the veteran fullback Tony Richardson came to the Jets as a free agent, but he remained tethered to Minnesota by real estate. As the house Richardson bought during his two seasons with the Vikings languished on the market, he began paying rent in New York. Brett Favre also joined the Jets that season, coming in a trade from the Packers and soon he and Richardson were bonding over the headaches of trying to sell in a difficult real estate market. So when Favre became a Viking this season, he knew exactly where to go … – NY Times

    ————

    beat-the-press american-prospect

    If Obama Flip-Flopped on Mortgage Cram-Down It Should Be Big NewsDean Baker’s Beat The Press Blog @ The American Prospect

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    tombrown bankstocks

    On Long Island, a Dumb and Expensive Ruling – Thomas Brown  – In voiding a legitimate mortgage contract, a judge helps make borrowing a little harder for everyone – … This isn’t complicated. A mortgage is a legally binding contract. Both parties to the contract should expect that a judge will uphold the contract’s terms if they are challenged in court. But Judge Spinner didn’t do that. Instead, he tossed the mortgage aside, for no legally defensible reason … –Bankstocks.com

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    washington-post

    The FHA goes upmarket – Washington’s latest benefit for the not-so-poor – … Legislation last year nearly doubled the maximum mortgage the FHA could insure, to $729,750 for single-unit properties and almost $1 million for multi-unit ones … and House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) has spoken of making both ceilings $100,000 larger and permanent. … – Washington Post

    good summary of our irresponsibility (BC) – The moral dimensions of ditching a mortgage – Kenneth R. Harney – Go ahead. Break the chains. Stop paying on your mortgage if you owe more than the house is worth. And most important: Don’t feel guilty about it. Don’t think you’re doing something morally wrong.  That’s the incendiary core message of a new academic paper by Brent T. White, a University of Arizona law school professor, titled “Underwater and Not Walking Away: Shame, Fear and the Social Management of the Housing Crisis.” – Washington Post 

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    rmd1    rmdlogo

    Reverse Mortgage Factsheet, Moving in the Right Direction – Developing a simple way to explain reverse mortgages for consumers using one image isn’t an easy task, but that didn’t stop ReverseMortgage.net from trying.  The website created its own non-commercial visual with the help of the designers behind Mint.com – has link to 1 page chartReverse Mortgage Daily

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    latimes

    Few mortgages have been permanently modified – By E. Scott Reckard – Lenders have temporarily restructured hundreds of thousands of loans, but long-term changes have proved elusive, raising the specter of a new wave of foreclosures.  – …Responding to an Obama administration initiative, lenders have temporarily restructured hundreds of thousands of mortgages, with hundreds of thousands more modified under the banks’ own programs.  But achieving longer-term changes in the terms of mortgages has proved elusive, raising the prospect of a bigger wave of home repossessions that could cause a fresh decline in home prices only months after they appeared to hit bottom. … – LA Times

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    nyt1

    (NY) Foreclosure Protections for All – By BOB TEDESCHI – LAST year, a new law was put into place in New York to help protect subprime mortgage borrowers from foreclosure. Now the state is on the verge of extending similar protections to prime borrowers, too.  A bill passed by the State Legislature this month would require, among other things, that lenders give all borrowers 90 days’ warning before starting foreclosure proceedings and that they take part in settlement conferences with borrowers before proceeding with a foreclosure action. The bill also covers co-op owners. – NY Times

  • More about Windows Phones in Latin America

    Windows Phone with Windows Marketplace for Mobile is finally coming to Latin America. The local  Marketplace  will feature applications made in U.S. or Europe and local applications in Spanish and the catalog will initially be available in Mexico and Brazil only.

    Source: emovilPRO

    This post was submitted by teo.

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  • By the Numbers – November 2009: Strengthen Your Core Edition

    Filed under:

    Hyundai up 46%, Nissan up 30% and all GM core brands positive

    It’s pretty easy to stage a comeback when a prior year’s monthly sales are so dismal, but that still doesn’t dull the sheen off what happened last month for auto sales in the U.S.

    Not surprisingly, Hyundai continues its winning ways with the largest increase in sales by volume at 45.91 percent. Newcomers to the I Know How To Sell Cars In A Down Market list include Nissan, up 19.94 percent, and Mercedes-Benz, up 19.11 percent. Subaru and Kia again perform flawlessly, posting gains of 23.95 and 18.27 percent, respectively.

    Perhaps more interesting is the fact that all four core brands of General Motors (Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC) posted positive sales numbers last month, and in the case of Buick rose 14.78 percent. Ford also continued to stay positive, but just barely posting 2.02 percent gain for the brand against a 0.04 decrease for the motor company. You can blame that on Lincoln and Mercury, both of which were down.

    As the U.S. auto industry continues to claw its way out of this recession, the Chrysler Group is seemingly being left behind. Of the multi-brand companies we follow, the Pentastar performed the worst (-25.45 percent). The next worst performer, BMW Group, was down only 7.54 percent. With sales down only 8.09 percent, the Dodge brand was the company’s best performer.

    *Brands and companies are displayed in descending order according to their percentage change in volume sales. There were 23 selling days in November 2009 and 25 selling days in November 2008, so the change in monthly sales volume will be different than the change in the average daily sales rate (DSR) for each brand/company.

    Brand Volume% Nov-13 Nov-12 DSR*% DSR Nov-09 DSR Nov-08
    Hyundai 45.91 28,045 19,221 58.60 1,219 769
    Nissan 29.94 50,644 38,974 41.24 2,202 1,559
    Subaru 23.95 16,988 13,706 34.72 739 548
    Mercedes-Benz 19.11 16,797 14,102 29.47 730 564
    Kia 18.27 17,955 15,182 28.55 781 607
    Porsche 18.00 1,626 1,378 28.26 71 55
    Buick 14.78 8,627 7,516 24.76 375 301
    Lexus 14.04 18,500 16,223 23.95 804 649
    Volkswagen 13.68 16,250 14,295 23.56 707 572
    Acura 11.17 8,769 7,888 20.84 381 316
    Cadillac 10.28 9,721 8,815 19.87 423 353
    GMC 5.38 21,301 20,214 14.54 926 809
    Volvo 5.15 4,631 4,404 14.30 201 176
    Chevrolet 4.46 100,023 95,756 13.54 4,349 3,830
    BMW 3.23 15,708 15,217 12.20 683 609
    Ford 2.02 105,133 103,055 10.89 4,571 4,122
    Toyota 0.98 115,200 114,084 9.76 5,009 4,563
    Mazda 0.86 14,255 14,134 9.63 620 565
    Audi 0.32 6,810 6,788 9.05 296 272
    Honda -4.55 65,234 68,345 3.75 2,836 2,734
    Dodge -8.09 24,268 26,404 -0.10 1,055 1,056
    Mercury -9.68 6,994 7,744 -1.83 304 310
    Lincoln -20.08 6,409 8,019 -13.13 279 321
    Jeep -24.45 15,339 20,302 -17.88 667 812
    Infiniti -26.04 5,644 7,631 -19.61 245 305
    Chrysler -37.33 12,544 20,017 -31.88 545 801
    Pontiac -38.83 7,426 12,140 -33.51 323 486
    Mitsubishi -42.60 2,925 5,096 -37.61 127 204
    Mini -43.59 2,564 4,545 -38.68 111 182
    Suzuki -52.11 1,540 3,216 -47.95 67 129
    Saturn -54.03 3,737 8,130 -50.04 162 325
    Saab -56.46 371 852 -52.67 16 34
    Smart -70.44 661 2,236 -67.87 29 89
    Hummer -84.80 221 1,454 -83.48 10 58
    COMPANIES
    Nissan NA 20.78 56,288 46,605 31.28 2,447 1,864
    Toyota Mo Co 2.60 133,700 130,307 11.53 5,813 5,212
    Ford Mo Co -0.04 123,167 123,222 8.65 5,355 4,929
    General Motors -2.23 151,427 154,877 6.27 6,584 6,195
    American Honda -2.93 74,003 76,233 5.52 3,218 3,049
    BMW Group -7.54 18,272 19,762 0.50 794 790
    Chrysler Group -25.45 63,560 85,260 -18.97 2,763 3,410

    By the Numbers – November 2009: Strengthen Your Core Edition originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 17:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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