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  • ‘Top kill’ seems to be halting oil gusher in Gulf

    by Agence France-Presse.

    NEW ORLEANS—BP’s risky “top kill” of its
    ruptured Deepwater Horizon well appeared to stop the oil flow Thursday, even as
    new data showed the Gulf of Mexico leak had already become the worst in U.S. history.

    Moving to ensure
    the United States is never hit with such a disaster again, President Barack
    Obama was clamping down on the oil industry,
    putting on hold any deepwater oil exploration or drilling for the next six
    months.

    Coast Guard
    chief Thad Allen, who is coordinating the federal government’s battle against
    the spill, said the “top kill” maneuver begun on Wednesday by BP to
    plug the leak had stopped the gush of oil from the mile-deep well.

    But he cautioned
    it was still too early to declare victory as the British energy giant pumps
    heavy drilling liquids, dubbed “mud,” into the fractured wellhead to
    beat back the flow of oil, before sealing it with concrete.

    “They’ve
    been able to stabilize the wellhead, they’re pumping mud down it. They’ve stopped the hydrocarbons from coming up,”
    Allen told local radio WWL First News. But he cautioned that while they were
    optimistic, “there is no reason to declare victory yet. We need to watch
    it very, very carefully.”

    BP officials
    said they hoped to know later Thursday if the operation had succeeded.

    It was the first
    flicker of good news for BP in the five weeks since the Deepwater Horizon rig
    leased from Transocean exploded on April 20, killing 11 workers, and then sank.

    But government
    scientists confirmed fears that the Gulf of Mexico spill is set to be the worst
    in U.S. history, saying oil was flowing out at a rate up to four times higher
    than previously estimated.

    Unveiling new
    data, they said the oil had been gushing from the burst pipe at a rate of
    between 12,000 to 19,000 barrels a day—much higher than the previous
    estimate of 5,000 barrels a day.

    Under such a
    scenario, that would mean that between 18.6 million and 29.5 million gallons of oil have poured into the Gulf.

    The 1989 Exxon
    Valdez disaster off Alaska saw some 11 million gallons of crude spilled into
    the state’s pristine waters, in what was until now the worst U.S. oil disaster.

    BP has come
    under increasing pressure from the Obama administration and furious residents
    of the Gulf region helplessly watching oil wash ashore, with 100 miles of
    Louisiana’s fragile coastal wetlands and beaches now contaminated. The sticky
    crude is already imperiling rare species of animal and plant life, and has also
    led to a major fishing ban in the marine rich waters.

    In a new
    development highlighting environmental and health problems, all 125 commercial fishing boats helping to clean up the oil
    off Louisiana’s Breton Sound were recalled after four workers reported health
    problems. The crew members aboard three separate vessels working in the area
    reported experiencing nausea, dizziness, headaches, and chest pains, officials
    said. It raised new questions about the
    risks of working with the thick gobs of oil washing up on shores here and the
    toxicity of tens of thousands of gallons of chemical dispersants used by BP to
    break up the slick.

    Amid the
    desperate cleanup, there was more ominous news from U.S. experts, who warned
    the upcoming hurricane season could be one of the worst on record. It is feared
    that high winds could sweep huge oil-soaked waves further up onto the shores of
    Louisiana and its neighbors, Alabama, Mississippi, and Florida.

    A White House
    aide said Obama would extend for
    six months a moratorium on offshore oil drilling in deep water. He also will
    delay planned oil exploration projects off Alaska, and cancel plans to lease
    drilling rights in the western Gulf of Mexico and off the coast of Virginia,
    officials said.

    Meanwhile amid a litany of reported failures at the well,
    The New York Times said BP chose a casing for the deepwater well that was the
    riskier of two options, partly because it made “the best economic
    case.” Citing a BP document, the Times said it was feared that if the
    cement around the casing pipe chosen by BP did not seal properly, gases could
    leak all the way to the wellhead, where only a single seal would serve as a
    barrier. The other option under consideration would have provided two barriers
    in case of a gas leak, the Times said.

    Related Links:

    The Climate Post: BP oil spill washes up on Potomac shores

    The Climate Post: BP Oil Spill Washes up Potomac

    Finally: Obama halts new offshore leases and stumps for climate bill






  • TechUniversity: Advanced Image Editing with Keynote

    Many users have Keynote, part of Apple’s iWork suite, but don’t have (or even need) an image editing application like Photoshop. Thankfully, Keynote has image editing capabilities built-in as part of the application! We’ll show you how to use these tools to make both minor and major image adjustments in this TechUniversity screencast on image editing in Keynote! (subscription required)

    Topics covered:

    • Image masking and cropping
    • Adjustments: Brightness, Contrast, Exposure, Saturation and more
    • Instant Alpha
    • Power user tips

    Below is a sample of the video. The full screencast clocks in at just over 10 minutes.



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • Why Man-Made Global Warming is a load of cobblers; Pt 1 by James Delingpole also Details on London Meeting with Bob Carter

    Article Tags: Bob Carter, Book, James Delingpole, Meetings, Piers Corbyn

    Just been reading Climate: The Counter Consensus (Stacey International) the new book by Bob Carter – that’s New Zealand’s Professor Robert M Carter to you, mate: he’s one of the world’s leading palaeoclimatologists – and it’s a cracker. By the end, you’re left feeling rather as I did after the Heartland Conference, that the scientific case against AGW is so overwhelming that you wonder how anyone can still speak up for so discredited a theory without dying of embarrassment.

    All the same, it’s good to be reminded now and again why the “consensus” thinking on AGW simply doesn’t stand up. There are so many excellent examples from Prof Carter’s book, I might be forced to spread them out over several blogs.

    Take his chapter on the oceans. The other day some troll or other was brandishing a figure he’d got from NOAA, showing that the sea was warming. Well bully for you troll, but if you understand at all how climate works that fact does precisely zilch to support the case for AGW. Why?

    The good Prof explains:

    The ocean covers more than 70 per cent of the Earth’s surface and over much of its area it is 3-5km deep. Comprising water, which is one thousand times denser than air the ocean has far more mass than the atmosphere – notwithstanding that the atmosphere covers the entire planet and is 50 km high to the top of the stratosphere. The result of this is that the ocean has a much greater heat capacity than the atmosphere, specifically 3,300 times more. Put another way, all the heat energy contained in the atmosphere is matched by the heat content of only the upper 3.2 metres of the worldwide ocean.

    DONT MISS IF YOUR IN LONDON FRIDAY 28th MAY – See Below for Details on Bob Carter Meeting in London

    Source: blogs.telegraph.co.uk

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Video: Dog rescued from inside car grille after highway hit

    Filed under: , ,

    One lucky pup – Click above to watch video after the jump

    If you live in a rural area, odds are you’ve had that heart-sinking feeling that comes along with hitting an animal with your car. Be it a squirrel, opossum, snake or skunk, no one likes killing another being while driving, an it’s made a million times worse by smacking someone’s pet. A Chilean driver was recently busting down the local highway when a dog ran out in front of his car. After hearing the thud, the driver apparently realized that the chances of survival were pretty slim and took his ride to a local body shop to survey the damage.

    Believe it or not, the technicians found one very scared, slightly roughed-up pup nestled behind the broken front fascia. Workers then set about removing the necessary bodywork to get the dog out and to a vet. So far, there’s no word on how the dog’s doing or if the owner was located, but we’re hoping for the best. Hop the jump to see a remarkable video of the pup getting extricated from the grille of the car.

    [Source: YouTube via Carscoop]

    Continue reading Video: Dog rescued from inside car grille after highway hit

    Video: Dog rescued from inside car grille after highway hit originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 27 May 2010 12:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Obama on Oil Spill: The Government’s in Charge

    Facing criticism that the administration has given BP too much control over the response to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, President Obama asserted that the government is in charge and is taking all necessary action to end the crisis.

    “The American people should know that from the moment this disaster began, the federal government has been in charge of the response effort,” he told reporters at a press conference at the White House just now. “Make no mistake: BP is operating at our direction.”

    But he criticized “the oil industry’s cozy and sometimes corrupt relationship with government regulators,” referring to close ties with the Mineral Management Service, the Interior Department office responsible for overseeing oil and gas development. “This oil spill has made clear that more reforms are needed,” he continued. He highlighted the decision to split MMS, but he initially made no mention of today’s announcement that the head of the service is stepping down. In response to a reporter’s question about whether she resigned or was fired, he said, “I found out about her resignation today. … I don’t know the circumstances in which this occurred.”

    Obama noted that the government gave BP approval to use a procedure called Top Kill to plug the spewing oil hole, but he chose not to discuss the move’s apparent success in halting the flow of oil. Instead, he treated the situation as a continuing crisis that requires the collaboration of the country’s top experts, including, he pointed out, the Nobel Prize-winning secretary of energy, Steven Chu.

    He also took a tough line against BP, promising that the oil company will be fully responsible for compensating the affected populations along the Gulf Coast. “We will demand they pay every dime for the damage they’ve done,” he said. “We’re not going to abandon our fellow citizens.”

    As a result of the spill, Obama said, the government will take several measures to clamp down on offshore drilling, including the suspension of two proposed oil exploration locations off the Alaskan coast.

    Environmental advocates have long hoped that Obama wouldn’t let this crisis — in the words of Rahm Emanuel — “go to waste.” Today, he used the disaster to urge the Senate to pass energy and climate legislation. “If nothing else, this disaster should serve as a wakeup call that it’s time to move forward on this legislation,” he said.

    The president will be traveling to Louisiana tomorrow for the second time since the spill began.

  • Lames: Aramis Ramirez, fantasy’s uncharming man


    Want to slam the Noise for his Clayton Kershaw(notes) analysis
    or misguided projections? Humiliate him in 140 characters or less on Twitter. And click here to follow Roto
    Arcade on Facebook
    .

    Panic on the streets
    of Chicago
    .

    Panic on the streets
    of Wrigleyville.

    I wonder to myself.
    Could life ever be
    sane again?

    No blessed DJ who constantly fills the airwaves with "Go Cubs Go!"
    should feel safe walking North Side streets.

    The Cubs, inching their way to another year of World Series futility, are
    quickly losing pace behind the punchless Cardinals and surprising Reds in the
    NL Central. Three games under .500, their seesaw performance has squelched fan
    optimism and transformed Lou Piniella into an expletive-spewing Santa Claus.
    And it’s not even June.

    Several reasons dominate Chicago’s
    disparaging play. Terrible middle relief, defensive miscues (Soriano!!!) and an
    occasionally slumberous offense are just a few. But one individual
    deserves far more responsibility for the organization’s latest demise – Aramis Ramirez(notes).

    Entering the season, the respected third baseman was
    expected to be an infield cornerstone. His consistent returns combined with his
    prime age and entrenched RBI-collecting spot in an above average lineup boded
    well for the two-time All-Star. His fantasy reputation was destined to be
    upheld. However, an epic slump to begin 2010 has left a very bitter taste (No,
    it’s not the Old Style). Due to the organization’s urgency to win, trade rumors
    involving Mike Lowell have even surfaced
    . Two months ago those whispers were
    unthinkable.

    Through 40 games (156 at-bats), fantasy’s "Top Kill" is
    batting a sickening .160 with four homers 20 RBI and 15 runs. Currently he
    ranks No. 47 at his position in the Y! game, behind such perennial Supermen as
    Willy Aybar(notes), Adam Rosales(notes) and Jamey Carroll(notes). Now nursing a bothersome thumb
    injury, the cold corner’s chances for a rebound are becoming increasingly
    hopeless. Though he is slated to return to action by Saturday, a two-week
    mental vacation might be the best medicine.

    Unlike some slumping players, pinpointing the source of
    Ramirez’s troubles is relatively easy. Examining his profile, an extreme
    upswing in strikeouts (0.35 BB/K) and fly-ball percentage (0.40 GB/FB) clearly
    explain the prolonged drought. Strangely, he’s made more contact on outside
    and less on wheelhouse offerings, which is atypical of most hitters.
    Often, the underperforming will jab weakly at offspeed junk outside the zone. For
    the maligned Cub, just the opposite has occurred. Inside fastballs, which he’s
    historically crushed, have baffled him. Renowned hitting coach Rudy Jaramillo
    believes the necessity to perform combined with timing issues have caused the
    malfunction. From ESPN Chicago:

    Ramirez has been a little too quick at times, rushing to
    swing at pitches outside his comfort zones. Is it because he’s overanxious,
    trying too hard, having trouble with pitch recognition or feeling a need to
    "cheat" to catch up with the hard stuff? No one has been able to
    solve that Sudoku puzzle.

    "It’s basically the same thing," Jaramillo said. "His timing
    is off, and he’s not letting the ball get deep enough [in the strike
    zone]."

    Jaramillo refers to that phenomenon as "backing the ball up." The
    precious milliseconds sacrificed through excessive jumpiness can mean the
    difference between a productive at-bat and a lost cause.

    "When you stay square and back the ball up, it allows you to make a
    good decision," Jaramillo said. "It’s something he has to work out as
    he goes. It can be mechanical, it can be mental, or it can be both."

    Ramirez claims he’s seeing the ball fine, but right now, he’s swinging at olives
    with a toothpick. Until his thumb and cerebral strains fully heal, he’ll
    continue to roundhouse owner midsections.

    Still, this is a buyer’s market. He’s
    an established commodity who’s historically stumbled out of the gates. In
    April/May his career average is .264. After June 1, it’s .291. July though
    September are usually his best power months (HR per 18.1 at-bats). Sunnier days
    are on the horizon.

    The 79-percent owned Ramirez may be the boy with the thorn in his side. But
    as David Ortiz(notes) owners can attest, patience should replace panic when debating
    dealing proven players.

    Fearless Forecast (rest of season): 368
    at-bats, .281 BA, 20 HR, 78 RBI, 67 R, 1 SB

    CATEGORY KILLER
    Vampiristic commodity sucking
    the life out of your team owned in competitive Yahoo! leagues
    .

    Jose Lopez(notes), Sea,
    1B/2B/3B (48-percent owned)
    : The versatile Mariner has remained out to sea
    for much of the season.  His .214
    BA with just one homer and 16 RBI is in Ramirez’s ballpark. Another tortoise of
    sorts, Lopez is a notorious slow starter. Recall last season in April/May he
    tallied a bland .229 BA, five homers, 26 RBI and 21 runs. Overall, his
    contact and batted ball profiles are in line with career averages which points
    to a turnaround in the near future. If a Lopez owner is wallowing in the
    basement, fire a lowball offer. This week he was shipped for Kerry Wood(notes), Gordon
    Beckham
    (notes)
    and Raul Ibanez(notes) in one-for-one Y! league trades.

    3…2…1…IMPLOSION!
    Widely owned starter
    who will soon maim an innocent Gatorade cooler

    Matt Cain(notes), SF (5/28
    vs. Ari, 95 percent-owned):
    Based on past performance, Cain probably
    doesn’t relish snake exhibits at the local zoo. The powerful Diamondbacks have
    routinely injected venom into the pitcher’s bloodstream. Last season in four
    starts, San Fran’s most unsupported starter notched a 5.16 ERA, 1.56 WHIP and
    one win against the division rival. Arizona’s
    whiff-happy ways suggest Cain could total admirable strikeout numbers, but his
    walks proneness coupled (3.34 BB/9) with a .255 BABIP and skyward-leaning GB/FB
    (0.86) are tough to ignore. Keep in mind A.J. Hinch’s club is the current
    NL pacesetter in runs. Fangless they are not. 

    SABER SLEUTH
    Uncovering fantasy’s
    lucky bastards one decimal place at a time

    Jeff
    Niemann
    (notes),
    TB, SP (79-percent owned)
    : Our
    love for The Kraken is well-documented. We spewed over 1,000 words of hyperbole
    back in March predicting 2010 would be his breakthrough campaign. So far, the
    prognostication has been spot on. Niemann is the 23rd-most valuable
    starter in fantasy according to Baseball Monster. Still his 4.04 FIP and very
    fortunate .244 BABIP imply an ERA spike is forthcoming. No monster, no matter
    how tentacled, can maintain a 14.9 line-drive percentage over an entire season.
    Because the Rays boast a juggernaut offense and marvelous bullpen, he’ll likely
    finish with 15-20 wins, but an ERA closer to 4.00, not 3.00, should be expected.
    Take a profit.

    Image courtesy of the AP

  • New de Blob oozing to Wii, DS

    Good news, blob fiends. There’s a new de Blob game coming, and the first full print reveal will be made in the pages of Nintendo Power’s July issue.

  • Lieberman Remains Undecided as Blumenthal Maintains Lead in Connecticut Senate Race

    Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) told Politico today that he remains undecided on who he will support in the race for the state’s open Senate seat, even as a new poll showed his erstwhile party’s candidate leading substantially despite a recent Vietnam service flap.

    Lieberman said he was open to supporting former WWF CEO Linda McMahon, the frontrunner for the Republican nomination in the race.

    “I said I’m open,” Lieberman told POLITICO. “Is it theoretically possible? Yes. I probably know Blumenthal better, but I know Linda McMahon – she was on the state board of higher education, and I met with her a couple of times in that capacity. This is the great privilege that voters of Connecticut gave me in 2006 as an independent. Wait and see.”

    Lieberman’s comments came as a new Quinnipiac University poll showed state Attorney General Richard Blumenthal (D) leading McMahon 56-31 percent despite the recent controversy. This represents a drop in support — he led McMahon 61-28 in Quinnipiac’s March 17 poll — but the drop is far less severe than the one indicated by a Rasmussen Reports poll earlier this month that showed Blumenthal’s lead dropping by 10 points.

    The Vietnam incident appears to be less of an issue in the campaign than was generally believed, as 61 percent of people in the poll said Blumenthal’s flap made no difference in whether they would vote for him. Thirty-three percent said it made them less likely to vote for him. Fifty-three percent of those surveyed said they were satisfied with Blumenthal’s explanation.

    “It looks like Connecticut voters forgive Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, or feel that there is nothing to forgive in the Vietnam service flap,” Quinnipiac Poll Director Douglas Schwartz said in a press release on the poll results. “While he has taken a hit with voters, his poll numbers were so high to begin with that he still maintains a commanding lead over Linda McMahon.”

  • On Murkowski’s “Resolution of Disapproval”

    The American Power Act, the bill that would give EPA new tools to regulate carbon pollution, make us more energy secure as a nation, and enhance our competitiveness, is the best chance we have for a comprehensive climate and clean energy bill this year, maybe even this decade.

    Instead of rallying around Senators Kerry and Lieberman’s “all of the above” strategy, some senators appear to be for “none of the above.” A resolution introduced by Sen. Lisa Murkowski would strip EPA of all of its existing authority under the current Clean Air Act to reduce carbon pollution. That would make us more dependent on foreign oil, do nothing to help American manufacturing compete with China or other nations in clean energy technologies, and cripple efforts to address global warming.

    How is this possible?

    Basically, Sen. Murkowski’s bill would nullify EPA’s finding of scientific fact that greenhouse gases cause harmful global warming – a finding that forms the legal basis for any further steps EPA can take to address carbon pollution. A vote for Murkowski’s bill is a vote against the strong scientific consensus that climate change is a real threat we must avoid.

    Sen. Murkowski’s bill would also block a key step in fighting America’s oil addiction. It would dismantle the government’s program to reduce carbon pollution from cars and trucks – a program that U.S. automakers and the Obama Administration agreed last year to put in place. The program will save Americans more than 1.8 billion barrels of oil over the lifetime of the affected vehicles, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. At oil prices of $80 a barrel, that’s more than $80 billion worth of foreign oil Americans will not have to buy thanks to these standards.

    Sen. Murkowski’s bill would also lead to greater red tape and conflicting regulations for our auto manufacturers (and their suppliers) at a time when many are struggling to recover in these tough economic times. That’s because the agreement the Obama Administration and automakers reached last year also included California and 13 other states that agreed to set aside their own regulations of automobile emissions. With no national program, the agreement would fall and states would be free once again to move forward independently, leaving the automobile industry without the nationwide uniformity that it has described as vital to its business.

    It’s truly ironic that even as we watch what may end up being one of the most serious environmental and ecological disasters in our nation's history – the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico – some senators are actively trying to block pollution regulations and hamstring the EPA's ability to protect the public. This is both inexcusable and unforgivable.

  • Hundreds Of POW’s Left To Die In Vietnam, Abandoned By Their Government

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    Ron Unz
    The American Conservative
    Thursday, May 27, 2010

    In the closing days of the 2008 presidential campaign, I clicked an ambiguous link on an obscure website and stumbled into a parallel universe.

    During the previous two years of that long election cycle, the media narrative surrounding Sen. John McCain had been one of unblemished heroism and selfless devotion to his fellow servicemen. Thousands of stories on television and in print had told of his brutal torture at the hands of his North Vietnamese captors, his steely refusal to crack, and his later political career aimed at serving the needs of fellow Vietnam veterans. This storyline had first reached the national stage during his 2000 campaign, then returned with even greater force as he successfully sought the 2008 Republican nomination. Seemingly accepted by all, this history became a centerpiece of his campaign. McCain’s supporters touted his heroism as proof that he possessed the character to be entrusted with America’s highest office, while his detractors merely sought to change the subject.

    Once I clicked that link, I encountered a very different John McCain.

    I read copious, detailed evidence that hundreds of American POWs had been condemned to death at enemy hands by top American leaders, apparently because their safe return home would have constituted a major political embarrassment. I found documentation that the cover-up of this betrayal had gone on for decades, eventually drawing in a certain Arizona senator. According to this remarkable reconstruction of events, the average teenage moviegoer of the 1980s watching mindless action films such as “Rambo,” “Missing in Action,” and “Uncommon Valor” was seeing reality portrayed on screen, while the policy expert reading sober articles in the pages of The New Republic and The Atlantic was absorbing lies and propaganda. Since I had been believing those very articles, this was a stunning revelation.

    Hundreds Of POWs Left To Die In Vietnam, Abandoned By Their Government 130510banner3

    But was this alternate description of reality correct? Could this one article be true and all the countless contrary pieces I had read in America’s most prestigious publications be false, merely the presentation of official propaganda endlessly repeated? I cannot say. I am not an expert on the history of the Vietnam War and its aftermath.

    Yet consider the source. The author of that remarkable 8,000-word exposé—“McCain and the POW Cover-Up,” published on The Nation Institute’s website—was Sydney Schanberg, one of America’s foremost Vietnam War journalists. His reporting won him a Pulitzer Prize, and his subsequent book on Cambodia was made into “The Killing Fields,” an Oscar-winning movie. Schanberg later served as one of the highest-ranking editors at the New York Times, with a third of the reporters at our national newspaper of record working under him. A case can be made that no living American journalist can write with greater credibility on Vietnam War matters. And he had labored for years researching and exhaustively documenting the story of American POWs abandoned in Indochina—a story that if true might easily represent the single greatest act of national dishonor ever committed by our political leaders.

    He presented a mass of evidence with names, dates, and documentary detail. Many of the individuals mentioned are still alive and could be interviewed or called to testify. Sealed government records could be ordered unsealed. If America wishes to determine the truth, it can do so.

    Yet what I found most remarkable about Schanberg’s essay were not its explosive historical claims but the absolute silence with which they were received in the mainstream media. In 2008, John McCain’s heroic war record and personal patriotism were central to his quest for supreme power—a goal he came very close to achieving. But when one of America’s most eminent journalists published an exhaustive report that the candidate had instead served as one of the leading figures in a monumental act of national treachery, our media took no notice. McCain’s public critics and the operatives of his Democratic opponent might eagerly seize upon every rumor that the senator had had a private lunch with a disreputable corporate lobbyist, but they ignored documented claims that he had covered up the killing of hundreds of American POWs. These allegations were serious enough and sufficiently documented to warrant national attention—yet they received none.

  • Motorola Motoroi headed to Cincinnati Bell

    Motorola Motoroi

    We haven’t heard much about the Motorola Motoroi since it launched overseas, but now the device is back in the headlines as it finally comes to the U.S. to Cincinnati Bell.  Cincinnati Bell is a smaller, regional carrier based in Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky.  The Motoroi isn’t the carrier’s first Android device, but judging by the success of the carrier’s first Android phone, the Bell Blaze, there will be many more to come.  The Blaze sold out quickly, and we’re sure that the Motoroi will do the same.  Specs for the U.S. version of the Motorola Motoroi aren’t locked down yet, but it does look like the device will ship with Android 2.1, possibly skinned with Motoblur, as well as HDMI-out, 720p video recording, and an 8 megapixel camera.  Pricing and availability info isn’t available right now, but we’ll let you know as soon as we get something.  So are any of you Cincinnati Bell customers excited about the Motoroi?

    Via Phandroid


  • “Synthetic Life” in the words of Craig Venter

    Craig Venter unveils “synthetic life”. [18 minutes video via TED Talk]

    About this talk

    Craig Venter and team make a historic announcement: they’ve created the first fully functioning, reproducing cell controlled by synthetic DNA. He explains how they did it and why the achievement marks the beginning of a new era for science.”

    Filed under: people, Science & Technology, TED, Video, YouTube

  • Treating American Muslims Like Citizens vs. Treating Them Like Threats

    If ever you want a distillation of the differences between Obama’s conception of how to handle the emerging problem of domestic extremism and how his right-wing critics view it, check out the National Security Strategy’s take on what intelligent domestic counterterrorism looks like:

    Several recent incidences of violent extremists in the United States who are committed to fighting here and abroad have underscored the threat to the United States and our interests posed by individuals radicalized at home. Our best defenses against this threat are well informed and equipped families, local communities, and institutions. The Federal Government will invest in intelligence to understand this threat and expand community engagement and development programs to empower local communities. And the Federal Government, drawing on the expertise and resources from all relevant agencies, will clearly communicate our policies and intentions, listening to local concerns, tailoring policies to address regional concerns, and making clear that our diversity is part of our strength—not a source of division or insecurity.

    The Department of Homeland Security has documented increased attempts by al-Qaeda and those inspired by it in recent months to attempt what John Brennan, Obama’s chief counterterrorism adviser, calls attacks of “low sophistication” within the United States. That creates a choice for intelligence and law enforcement. One answer is to apply counterinsurgency principles of population protection. That entails treating host communities as essentially “at-risk” cohorts that run the risk of infection by radical recruitment techniques. By partnering with community leaders, you give financial and political support to the recognized and legitimate authority figures so they can prevent extremism from taking hold — and to isolate, marginalize, identify and target for law enforcement those people who might still fall under its sway. This is what the NYPD’s old counterterrorism chief, Mike Sheehan, did in Muslim communities in New York City early last decade. It was as often as simple — and as crucial — as showing up to mosque meetings and letting people vent their grievances.

    And this is the approach the National Security Strategy embraces: one that distinguishes between the extremists and the communities that they emerge from and exploit; treats the communities as under threat; and empowers those communities to handle that threat at the most immediate, legitimate and basic levels.

    There’s another approach. You could treat the communities as the threat. Andy McCarthy, the most influential conservative legal authority on national security at the moment, ridicules the very idea of “Muslim ‘moderates’” as a “hopelessly ill-conceived construct.” His new book portrays Islam itself as a threat to America. The natural remedy is to empower law enforcement to target those Muslim communities in the United States. Subject them to surveillance. Detain them when necessary. If every Muslim who looks to their faith to inform their politics — which is all the wide, varied, catch-all term “Islamist” means — is on a slippery slope to swearing fealty to Osama bin Laden, then that approach makes sense.

    Except that it doesn’t. And as John Brennan explained yesterday, it’s the exact strategy that bin Laden wants the U.S. to pursue, because it will guarantee that greater numbers within those communities turn to extremism in their frustration, precisely the outcome the strategy seeks to prevent. It’s worth quoting extensively from Brennan’s remarks:

    Finally, remaining faithful to our values requires something else – that we never surrender the diversity and tolerance and openness to different cultures and faiths that define us as Americans. Several months ago, I had the opportunity to speak at NYU, where I was hosted by the university’s Islamic center and the Islamic Law Students Association. The audience included people of many faiths – Muslim, Christian, Jew, Hindu and Sikh. I was there to have a dialogue on how, as Americans, we can all work together to keep our country safe from the terrorists who seek to drive us apart.

    After I was finished speaking, person after person stood up to share their perspective and to ask their questions. Mothers and fathers, religious leaders and students, recent immigrants and American citizens by birth. One after another, they spoke of how they love this country and of all the opportunities it has afforded them and their families. But they also spoke of their concerns, that their fellow Americans, and at times, their own government, may see them as a threat to American security, rather than a part of the American family. One man, a father, explained that his 21-year-old son, an American born and raised, who was subjected to extra security every time he boards a plane, now feels disenfranchised in his own country.

    This is the challenge we face. Even more than the attacks al-Qaida and its violent affiliates unleash or the blood they spill, they seek to strike at the very essence of who we are as Americans by replacing our hard-won confidence with fear and replacing our tolerance with suspicion; by turning our great diversity from a source of strength into a source of division; by causing us to undermine the laws and values that have been a source of our strength and our influence throughout the world; by turning a nation whose global leadership has meant greater security and prosperity for people in every corner of the globe into a nation that retreats from the world stage and abandons allies and partners.

    That is what al-Qaida and its allies want – to achieve their goals by turning us into something we are not. But that is something they can never achieve, because only the people of America can change who we are as a nation. Al-Qaida can sew explosives into their clothes or park an SUV with explosives on a busy street. But it is our choice to react with panic or resolve. They can seek to recruit people already living among us, but it is our choice to subject entire communities to suspicion, or to support those communities in reaching the disaffected before they turn to violence. Terrorists may try to bring death to our cities, but it is our choice to either uphold the rule of law or chip away at it. They may strike our communities, but it is our choice to either respond wisely and effectively or lash out in ways that inflame entire regions and stoke the fires of the violent extremism.

  • Android 101: Clean your lens for clearer pictures (natch)

    example

    One thing that seems to be a common complaint is "My pictures just look crappy." Many mess with settings, lighting, and more but nearly all of us have overlooked one very obvious thing, which Locoman from our forums reminds us. He just brought us some amazing moon pictures from hi HTC Droid Incredible, and now he brings us the simple tip: Clean your camrea. Simply take a cleaning cloth, any microfiber cloth should work just fine, and clean off your lens, and voila, clearer pictures. Could it be any simpler? Check out the improvement seen in the example pictures here, and be sure to use the forums to share any other tips you may have for us!

    This is a post by Android Central. It is sponsored by the Android Central Accessories Store

  • Palm loses their lead webOS designer to the Google Android team, others may follow

    In what may very well be considered the geekiest sort of fandom possible, I consider myself a fan of Matias Duarte. As I’ve written before: “Wherever this guy goes, awesome user interfaces follow.” He and his team at Danger built a tremendously usable interface for the Sidekick, his work at Helio (especially the stuff that went to waste at the end, never to be seen by the public eye) was incredible, and then.. then there was webOS.

    Say what you will about the Palm Pre and Pixi from a hardware standpoint, but the software that runs on’em is pure user interface gold. That’s largely because of the work of Matias and his team. Alas, Palm just lost Matias to the lil’ green robot that could: Android. Google has confirmed to AllThingsD that Matias is joining them as the Android team’s User Experience Director.

    Score one for Google.

    This talent acquisition could be incredibly important for the folks in Mountain View. Android has a lot of fantastic selling points, but its user interface has never, ever been one of those. Since day 1, users (and nay-sayers) have been vehemently complaining about the interface. It is — and I say this as a pretty huge fan of the platform — rather ugly, and far from intuitive. (Every time I speak to someone who just got their Android phone within the last few days, its the same story: showing them how to reveal the (very important) notification bar results in wide eyes and gaping maws, as if I’d revealed the key to time travel. That’s not good.)

    And what does this mean for Palm? Given their recent buyout by HP, it’s probably a bit of a mixed bag. HP has their own team of designers — failing that, they’ve got the money to hire replacements. No matter how talented said replacements may be, though, it’s an uphill battle. webOS has very finely tuned design messages; throw a new cook in the kitchen, and half of their work will be learning the old cook’s recipes.

    Making things worse, Matias doesn’t generally roam from company to company alone. When he left Danger for Helio, he brought members of his team. When he left Helio for Palm, he brought members of his team. When he leaves, a good chunk of his team tends to go with. Neither Palm nor Google has confirmed any shifts beyond Matias; with that said, I wouldn’t be surprised if Palm lost 2-3 more designers to Google in the coming weeks, if they haven’t already.


  • Elizabeth Birnbaum Resigned! Elizabeth Birnbaum quits MMS!

    Elizabeth Birnbaum has resigned! Elizabeth Birnbaum acts as Director of the Minerals Management Service (MMS) from July 15, 2009 and resigned on May 27, 2010 as a consequence of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

    It has been reported by the Associated Press that US President Barack Obama has fired the head of the Interior Department’s Minerals Management Service. The news agency has stated that Obama will publicize later today that Elizabeth Birnbaum has been taken off the job.



    Elizabeth Birnbaum’ agency, which grants leases to oil companies and monitors offshore drilling, has come under condemnation for negligence since the BP well explosion in the Gulf of Mexico on April 20.

    As of 12:08 p.m. ET: The Associated Press reported that Elizabeth Birnbaum has resigned.

    Interior Secretary Ken Salazar relayed to lawmakers, according to the Associated Press account, that Elizabeth Birnbaum resigned “on her own terms and her own volition.”

    Related posts:

    1. BP prepares operation “top kill” to stop leakage of oil in the Gulf of Mexico
    2. Offshore Drilling Approved by Obama
    3. BP Uses Dome To Stop Oil Leak

  • Mobile Devices Push Apple To Front Of Tech Stock Pack

    After decades playing second (and often times third or fourth) fiddle to Microsoft, Apple finally moved to the head of the class yesterday, passing the software behemoth to become the most valuable tech company in the world.

    Yesterday, the value of Apple on Wall Street stood at $222.12 billion, a few billion more than Microsoft at $219.18 billion. In addition to making Apple the #1 tech company in terms of total value, it also made the iPhone maker the second-highest American company overall next to Exxon Mobil ($278.64 billion).

    What has finally pushed Apple — previously viewed as a niche computer manufacturer — over the top has been the company’s focus on portable personal electronics.

    The turnaround started almost a decade ago with the introduction of the iPod — and of course the iTunes store, which has since gone on to sell much more than music.

    Then of course came the iPhone, which has added billions in revenue to the Apple coffers since its introduction in 2007. Additionally, Apple has lined its pockets with money from the iPhone (and now iPad) App Store, the only place that users can purchase and download applications for the device.

    Explains the NY Times:

    And Apple is in the right place at the right time. Although it still sells computers, twice as much revenue is coming from hand-held devices and music. Over all, the technology industry sold about 172 million smartphones last year, compared with 306 million PCs, but smartphone sales grew at a pace five times faster.

    Microsoft loudmouth Steve Ballmer pish-poshed the changing of the guard. “No technology company on the planet is more profitable than we are,” he said. “On any given day, the stock market is a voting machine… in the long run is it a weighing machine.”

    Apple Passes Microsoft as No. 1 in Tech [NY Times]

  • Bald Eagles nesting successfully off the California coast

    From Green Rigth Now Reports

    Bald Eagles continue to recover from their dangerous decline in the last century, and this week  enthusiasts can celebrate the successful hatching of two bald eagle chicks on Santa Rosa Island off the coast of California.

    Bald Eagle chicks (Photo: US Fish and Wildlife Service)

    Bald Eagle chicks (Photo: US Fish and Wildlife Service)

    The chicks are the first to hatch on that island in more than 60 years, and what’s more they’re one of a record number of successful hatchings in the Channel Islands this breeding season, according to the National Parks Service.

    The last Bald Eagle chicks to be reared on Santa Rosa were hatched in 1950, before the rain of chemicals that nearly wiped out America’s national bird.

    Six bald eagle chicks are expected to leave their nests in the next few weeks in the northern Channel Islands, bringing to 40 the number of bald eagles in that area.

    Biologists were to band and tag two bald eagle chicks in a nest on Santa Cruz Island, off the coast of Southern California (northwest of Los Angeles), an event that was being streamed online at the Channel Islands Live Bald Eagle webcam. (It’s for real. The NPS has a Bald Eagle webcam, where you can hear the Non-Silent Spring sounds of those chicks!)

    The 2010 eagle births in the Channel Island’s breakdown like this:

    • Four chicks, a pair of chicks in two nests on Santa Cruz
    • Two chicks on Santa Rosa, one each in two nests
    • Seven nests with nine chicks on Santa Catalina Island in the southern Channel Islands.

    “We are cautiously optimistic about this trend of bald eagle recovery as the chemicals that contributed to their decline persist in the southern California marine ecosystem,” said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biologist Annie Little. “We hope for a self-sustaining population and a return to historic levels of bald eagle nests on the northern Channel Islands.”

    “Southern Californians can be proud to know that just in this past decade they are seeing recovery of bald eagles to nearly half the historic population on the Channel Islands following their significant decline in the 1960s,” said Russell Galipeau, Superintendent of Channel Islands National Park.

    The Bald Eagle population declined precipitously in the last century because of contamination from PCPs and the pesticide DDT, which was liberally used in the 1950s before officials had adequately studied or considered its toxic impact. The chemicals migrated up the food chain and when ingested by eagles caused them to lay thin-shelled eggs that either cracked or weren’t viable.

    Their recovery can be attributed to the ban on DDT and protection for many years under the Endangered Species Act. Bald Eagles were delisted from the ESA in 2007.

    For more info and a discussion board on the Channel Island eagles see Channel Islands Live!

  • Heidi Montag “Transformers 3″ Audition VIDEO

    Lights, Scalpel, Action! Heidi Montag has made good on her threat to audition for the Transformers vixen role recently vacated by actress Megan Fox.

    …Need we say more?!

    Last week, the nipped & tucked reality star launced an online campaign for a role in the next installment of the action franchise. Now a heat-packin’ Heidi is showing off her trigger-happiness in a new video originally uploaded to Facebook, in which she’s supposedly training for an upcoming Transformers audition in front of director Michael Bay. Good luck with that, Toots — especially since the Gossip Wire is abuzz with whispers that Victoria’s Secret model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley has already been cast as Meg’s replacement.

    Transformers 3 is due in the theaters across the US on July 1, 2011.


  • Agenda 21 Alert: Science and Sewage

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Cassandra Anderson
    Prison Planet.com
    Thursday, May 27, 2010

    Agenda 21 Sustainable Development is the overarching blueprint for depopulation and total control, using the environment as the excuse for that control.  The 3 major tools that are used are :
    •  Global warming
    •  Water Shortages
    •  Endangered Species Act
    In the case of the California Delta, man made water shortages have been imposed on farmers by way of the ESA (Endangered Species Act) for the last three years.  Still, the Delta smelt populations have declined, despite the restrictions.  While the federal government refused to acknowledge that the cause for the decline in smelt populations was due to up to 1 BILLION gallons of partially treated sewage being flushed into the Delta per day, they blamed the water pumps for the decline in smelt.  Their disastrous solution was to cut the water flow to farmers (who supply our country with 50% of its produce and nuts), thereby increasing the water levels in the Delta to dilute pollution.
    This didn’t work, smelt populations declined.  In fact, California had a wetter-than-ususal winter and instead of allowing more water to be delivered to farms, when the Shasta Reservoir filled to its safe capacity level, the water was bled out into the Pacific Ocean.
    Due to mounting pressure against the corrupt Department of Interior and obvious waste of water, the federal pump’s water delivery was increased in some areas.  Many allege that this was also in part due to Central Valley Congressmen Dennis Cardoza and Jim Costa voting in favor of Obamacare, in trade for water to the farm areas.(1)  Ironically, the farms were promised 25% of the amount of water that had been contracted (40% is what is needed to keep the farms viable).  Further, the farmers were promised a delivery up to 25%, but they were only guaranteed a 5% increase, thereby making it difficult for them to get loans because the farmers, in turn, couldn’t guarantee a harvest with only a 5% increase of water.
    Last week, Patricia Gilbert, a professor of ecology and oceanography from the University of Maryland, concluded that the smelt decline was a result of high ammonium levels from urine and feces.  Specifically, she cited that the pollution was coming primarily from Sacramento, which doesn’t fully process its sewage before it is dumped into the Delta.  Dr. Patricia Gilbert was then forced to resign from the National Academy of Sciences panel.  The Academy forced her resignation because she went public with the information and they found it a conflict of interest for her to review her own work.(2)  This is incredibly hypocritical, given the profound conflicts of interest within the National Academy of Sciences.
    Specifically, the National Academy of Sciences is a quasi- governmental agency, created during Lincoln’s administration.  The Academy advises the government in scientific matters in order to set public policy and law.  The NAS is also a tax exempt private corporation (they do not publish their financial records on their website, nor do they list their donors).  NAS is subsidized by federal grants and other “contributions” from undisclosed donors.  New members are elected by current members, thus ensuring cronyism, a depopulation agenda and fraud.
    For example, some of the prestigious members of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) include Paul Ehrlich and John Holdren, Gene Likens and Frederick Bormann, and Mario J. Molina.(3)
    John Holdren (Obama’s current science czar) and Paul Ehrlich are rabid eugenicists- supporters of selective breeding often through brutal means like genocide and forced sterilization, who co-authored ‘Ecoscience’, which advocates a “global police force” to enforce totalitarian measures of population control that includes forced abortions and mass sterilization programs conducted via the food and water supply, among other horrors.  It is interesting to note that Ehrlich’s work also appears in the United Nations Agenda 21 Global Biodiversity Assessment Report.(4)

    Agenda 21 Alert: Science and Sewage 140410banner4

    Gene Likens, along with Frederick Bormann, invented acid rain.  In 1980, the NAS predicted acid rain would double the number of acid-dead lakes within 10 years, so a $600 million dollar study by the US government, that spanned 10 years, discredited Liken’s theory.  Dr. Ed Krug found that acidity in the Adirondack lakes was not caused by coal processing in Pennsylvania (as theorized by Likens), but by local plants and soil.  Because of the enthusiasm of policy makers this scientific scandal was hidden until 60 Minutes got ahold of it and it became widely publicized.  After awhile, people forgot about Liken’s and Bormann’s science fraud and acid rain regulations were written into the federal Clean Air Act.  The EPA trashed Dr. Ed Krug’s career thereafter.(5)
    Mario J. Molina, a professor at MIT, won a Nobel Prize in Chemistry for creating alarmism over the ozone hole in the Antarctic, for which he blamed CFCs (chlorofluorocarbon gases from refrigerants and aerosol products like hairspray).  Freon refrigerants were vilified as a major cause of the Arctic ozone depletion.  It later came to light that ozone over the Arctic cyclically thins for a brief period of time, and there is no hole.  However, corporate controlled policy makers rushed to ban freon because the DuPont patent was expiring on it, and DuPont would lose the monopoly because other companies could manufacture freon cheaply.  DuPont did own a patent on an alternative product that was more expensive and more difficult to produce, so freon was banned.(6)
    There is an obvious lack of easily accessible information about who funds the National Academy of Sciences in addition to the US federal government; clearly, the ruling elite monopoly owners have an overwhelming amount of ‘influence’.  There is evidence of financial ties to the Rockefeller Foundation and Ford Foundation, who are cohorts in depopulation of the planet, as evidenced by the support of Rockefeller’s Population Council.(7)
    The lawsuit to save the California Delta smelt and to close down the water pumps, based on the corrupt Endangered Species Act, was brought by the Natural Resources Defense Council, and is funded by the Ford Foundation (the annual budget is $87 million dollars).  The California Delta smelt debacle is a model of how the globalists plan to create water shortages via the Endangered Species Act in order to pursue the objectives of Agenda 21 (depopulation and control).  Therefore, science should be scrutinized.
    Valid science is independent and does not have a political or economic agenda attached to it.
    Valid science considers ALL data, as opposed to ignoring that which does not fit in its paradigm.
    Valid science has reproducible results.
    Valid science freely provides information to the public without the necessity of the Freedom of Information Act.
    The good news: Federal Judge Oliver Wanger ruled on 5/25/2010 that the biological opinion, provided by the National Marine Fisheries Services, a sub agency of the Department of Interior, failed to consider the impact that turning off the federal pump (owned by the Department of Interior) had on humans.  Therefore, he allowed the pump to be reactivated at 40%- enough to irrigate farms, until June 15th and then the case will be revisited.  It is important to remember that the Department of Interior also determines which species are ‘endangered’.
    While there are many good scientists out there, when public policy is concerned, or an economic agenda is at stake, we can see what can happen to them, as evidenced by Dr. Ed Krug and Dr. Patricia Gilbert.  The NAS wanted to drag their feet until Fall 2011 to issue their recommendation on the Delta issue, but now their advice is becoming irrelevant.
    For more information on the Endangered Species Act (8) and past articles by Cassandra Anderson about Agenda 21, visit www.MorphCity.com.
    Sources: