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CSW54: New Media, Social Action & Women’s Economic Security

March 2, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

“From Social Media to Social Action” was the subject of one of the morning sessions on Day 1 of the 12-day 54th annual Commission on the Status of Women, at the UN headquarters in New York. A panel of pioneering and accomplished women, from diverse fields of research, activism, and enterprise, offered a far-reaching exploration of the ways in which new media can help to effect change and improve the situation of women, around the world. Outreach, social networking, and informational access, were integral to the morning session’s discussion.

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‘Economica’ Exhibit Explores Women’s Role in the Global Economy

March 1, 2010 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

The International Museum of Women, an online art gallery, which aims to foster dialogue and promote new educational directions for women and in relation to issues of women’s rights and opportunity, is hosting an exhibit called ‘Ecomomica’, which explores the role women play in the evolving global economy.

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‘Psychic Numbing’: Why does mass suffering induce mass indifference?

February 27, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

‘Psychic numbing’ is a relatively new term, assigned to the phenomenon which shows people tend to feel less urgent compassion, and tend to give less, when the suffering in question is shown to be more systemic and more pervasive, or affecting larger numbers of people. Some psychologists believe it is linked to our intuitive sense that if one suffers alone, the suffering is worse, but if one is accompanied, there might be some security in numbers, not just emotionally, but practically.

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International Response to Congo War: How to Stop the Genocide

February 15, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The war in the Democratic Republic of Congo has killed 6.9 million people in 12 years. No war has cost more innocent lives since World War II, and the level of extreme violence, brutality against women, and even the enslavement of families and villages, appears to be escalating. The world’s attention has yet to fully focus on the plight of the Congolese civilians living in a state of perpetual extreme crisis day after day.

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Apple Unveils iPad Tablet, Laptop-like Touchscreen to Sell for $499

January 27, 2010 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Apple’s new tablet computer has finally been unveiled, after years of speculation. The iPad will function as a genuine cross-over between the realm of the iPhone and the laptop computer, in a format smaller than a laptop screen, similar to a netbook, and designed to optimize the experience of reading online or working with files and e-publications. It will be able to run over 140,000 of the apps already made for iPhone and iPod Touch, with a whole new class of iPad-optimized apps to come. Perhaps most important of all, it will retail for a starting price of only $499.

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How the Apple Tablet Can Change Communications

January 26, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The Apple tablet should be an intensely user-friendly device that achieves a paradigm shift in the way we deal with information. That sounds big, but Apple is well-equipped to do this, even by just making a few key upgrades to what it has already made possible with its laptops and touch-sensitive handhelds.

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Disaster Response for Haiti Earthquake — A New Paradigm? (discussion)

January 14, 2010 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

The 7.0 magnitude earthquake that struck Haiti two days ago has left an unknown number of thousands of people dead or missing, destroyed the service infrastructure in the capital and left a precarious situation for millions of survivors. The disaster response effort has been swift and international, with rescue and relief teams scrambling from across the world to get to Haiti.

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Copenhagen Accord Gives No Guarantees, but Could Drive More Ambitious Targets

January 8, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

After decades of environmental scientists seeking to raise awareness about the detrimental impacts of burning ever more carbon-based fuels, the Copenhagen Accord shows a global willingness to recognize the gravity of the issue and to take concrete —if as yet unnamed— policy actions to address the challenges of coming decades.

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Sabia, indefensa, veo

January 4, 2010 :: Carmen Visna :: No Comment Yet

La luna se aleja, no veo el camino; estoy lista, medito, pero el futuro no me pertenece. Por lo tanto, no duermo. Busco en las tinieblas, hacia las cuatro, mi nombre; ya no existe. Esta experiencia desconcertante me gusta, porque ayuda a definir los límites; sé hasta dónde tengo que limitarme en sociedad. Imagino que el yo, en general, es un fenómeno menos comprobado que lo que pensamos.

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Financial Regulatory Reform: Neural Architecture & Practical Proposals

December 31, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

That too many people, including policy-makers and media figures “are out of their intellectual depth and easily manipulated” by the bewildering complexity of the financial-political feedback-loop is almost irrefutable, and I agree with comments in this debate it’s “a symptom of the limitations of our neural architecture”. But I don’t know if we should take the question of neural architecture in the biological sense. There’s a cultural and practical response that needs to be considered at least as strongly.

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Snowflake Solar Cells 100 Times More Efficient than Standard Solar Cells

December 28, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

The Sandia National Laboratories have achieved a landmark breakthrough in solar-voltaic power-generation technology. The snowflake-like “solar glitter” uses 100 times less material to produce the same amount of electricity as today’s standard 6-inch square solar cells. This achievement of ultra-miniaturization now has the potential to move solar-voltaic power generation to the forefront of the clean energy revolution, and help speed the transition away from carbon-based combustible fuels.

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UK PM Brown Plans Backup Talks if Copenhagen Fails

December 18, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Gordon Brown plans “plan b” 2nd round of talks if Copenhagen conference fails to achieve global pact. The plan would call for a smaller number of nations to meet to agree to concrete steps to curb emissions and move their contribution to the world economy toward a green energy future.

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Heavy Investment in New Energy Technologies Needed to Curb Emissions (discussion)

December 18, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

With the US promising to commit $100 billion over ten years to help fund mitigation efforts against the impacts of climate destabilization and China all but refusing outright to agree to any pact that requires international verification of emissions reductions and/or how international funds are spent, the technological solution remains a key priority.

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Are Gene Patents Hijacking Your Biology?

December 14, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Intellectual property laws designed to help protect the ability of researchers to retain compensation for major innovations have led to a uniquely problematic “innovation” in the laws themselves, where specific genes, or the informational access to them, are patented, barring individuals or their physicians from dealing directly with those genes except through the for-profit patent-holders.

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Hubble Ultra Deep Field Rendered in 3D, Shows Shape of Universe (video)

December 10, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

The deepest image ever taken of the universe, using the ultra-powerful Hubble Space Telescope, known as the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, shows there to be 100 billion galaxies in the universe, some projecting light from a distance of 47 billion light years. A study of the Doppler redshift of galaxies speeding away from the Hubble’s vantage point has allowed astronomers to create a 3-dimensional projection of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field image, the deepest photograph ever taken of the observable universe.

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Bottled Water 10,000 Times as Expensive as Tap Water & Not Regulated (discussion)

December 5, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Bottled water is a high environmental-impact product, which is not regulated like municipal water reserves that feed tap water, and can cost as much as 10,000 times per volume as much as tap water. Nevertheless, aggressive and often misleading marketing campaigns have made bottled water one of the most significant rising trends in American and European consumer sales.

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Job Creation: Reforms Will Hinge on Whether Banks Deploy Adequate Funding

November 29, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The United States is trudging through the tailing winds of an economic storm that saw trillions of dollars in wealth wiped away, major financial institutions demolished, and an investment-based nationalization of the nation’s largest banks, and the mystery, according to most observers, is: where are the jobs? One after another source will say job recovery trails recovery in national economic growth by six to eighteen months.

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Multi-sense Inflow Registers: Hearing through the Skin

November 28, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Scientists have discovered evidence that human hearing is in part dependent on tactile cues that come not from audible sounds, but from pressure fluctuations and air-particle displacement against skin around the ear.

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Is Dubai facing widespread default on major debt?

November 28, 2009 :: Eva Scherson :: No Comment Yet

Dubai is the jewel of the Arabian peninsula, the region’s financial capital and a city of global importance. Exorbitant wealth has become something like a national sport there, and major institutions there took the position that they could outlast the global financial panic without substantial government intervention.

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Can We Expect China’s Cooperation on Cutting Emissions? (discussion)

November 21, 2009 :: Eva Scherson :: No Comment Yet

Can we expect China’s cooperation on emissions reduction? It’s clear that China has shifted its energy policy somewhat, to take account for the potential long-term strategic economic benefit of being a major source for green energy technology, know-how and to use green energy to fill out the nation’s energy supply and possibly permit exportation of energy or fuels.

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On the Profitability of Investments in Energy Sector (discussion)

November 19, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

If we’re looking at a rise in overall global energy consumption as an “opportunity”, we should class all particulars of the debate in terms of the long-term viability of the energy resource to be exploited. While carbon-based commodities may see steep returns in the short term, heavy front-end investment in carbon-based fuels will reduce the long-term viability of those commodities as business models, thus curving down the benefit over time.

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Comparing Kindle 2 & Kindle DX

October 16, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The Amazon Kindle 2 is ideally sized for one-handed reading. In this category, it beats the traditional book, because it’s single pane is more ergonomic for the purpose of reading with one hand and seeing the text clearly at a consistent angle, than struggling to balance a side-bound traditional book.

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Google Voice Pushes Free Phone-service Envelope

October 14, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Google Voice, an ingenious use of web-based voice communications service, allows users to combine a range of phone numbers under one standard, permanent Google phone number. Any linked phone number can be removed or replaced, and the service is free. All domestic calls inside the US are free, and sms is free. The service even converts voicemail to readable transcripts in an online inbox.

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Social Networking Tools are Representative of Human Evolution

October 13, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

An attractive woman, 34-ish, drives a compact station-wagon, late model, over a still-cobblestone side street in the center of Madrid. She advances slowly, toward a red light, and talks on her cell phone. She seems equally concentrated on both activities. Driving an automobile is a potentially dangerous activity, in which one’s own life or the lives of others may be at risk, while a casual conversation is not so much that. Yet she seemed to give equal weight, her body, her manner, seemed to give equal weight to both activities.

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Water Resource Depletion Threatens Global Food Supply

October 3, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Water resource depletion leads not only to chronic scarcity of clean, safe drinking water for increasing numbers of people, but means arable land is harder to cultivate and to maintain. Persistent drought and accelerated desertification (the expansion of deserts into the farmed and/or built environment) are results of water resource depletion.

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Clean Water Scarce for 3 Billion People Worldwide

October 2, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Clean, safe drinking water is scarce for over 3 billion people across the world. At least 1 billion literally never have access to clean, safe drinking water, putting them at constant risk of severe thirst-related ill health effects, infectious diseases or toxic contamination. Over 100 countries face either sporadic or chronic crisis-level problems related to clean water scarcity.

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RT: the Global Roundtable

October 2, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The phenomenon of “re-tweeting”, reposting and linking back to items already posted on the real-time updated short-message feed site Twitter, has allowed for the emergence of what sometimes turns into a global roundtable discussion, made up of short, sometimes superfluous, sometimes provocative ideas, and in many cases links to surprising but potentially effective online sources that spread a message or expand and deepen awareness of an issue.

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Apple Tablet to Revolutionize Print Media, News Publishing

September 30, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

Apple’s long-awaited tablet computer, likely to run a version of Mac OS X and to merge the touchscreen stylings of the iPhone and iPod Touch with the full functionality of the MacBook line, is expected to be aimed at revolutionizing the way print media deliver text to readers. If true, the device would again put Apple at the cutting edge of a field where Amazon, Microsoft, Sony and others, are trying to set the standards for e-book distribution and licensing.

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Ecology is About Awareness, not a System of Control

September 29, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The field of ecological research and reporting is a part of the basic human urge to engage the world through reason and a quest for understanding. It is not about seizing control of society’s urges and services and limiting the freedom of anyone, but rather about making sure we have the information we need to make the best choices, then advocating for those choices, when inertia and custom stand in the way of better health — for individuals and in the manner in which human individuals respond to their social and natural environments.

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Response to a Health Reform Skeptic

September 22, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

This article began as a response to a very heated comment left by one user of the Open Salon network who seems to be a physician, based on some of his phrasing. The usefulness of the exchange is meaningful, because the commenter is a physician who is very afraid of some of the key elements of the proposed healthcare reform framework. (As a margin note: the AMA —the doctors’ biggest national association— favors the proposed reforms and says they will help both doctors and patients.)

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California Could Build Renewable Resource Export Economy

September 16, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

One solution for California would be the expansion of its efforts across the region and the nation, to spur the creation of a full-scale renewable resource-based power grid, to optimize both generative capacity and distribution. The question is, now that the decision has been made to shift toward renewables, how can California go beyond the 1/3 threshold and build a strong renewable-energy export economy?

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Generative Economics: How to Expand the Resource Base as We Access It?

September 13, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

As the “perfect storm” gathers from inchoate, deceptively non-threatening winds, we can look ahead, backward and into the mirror and ask how crisis comes, or why, if it is inevitable, if we might just fall right out of it, as we fell into it. But the answer is simple: human crisis comes from excess, from inordinate ambition, from misplaced aggression, from over-exploitation of resources, each of which generates real and problematic tension across the landscape of human experience.

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Lies About Healthcare Need Clearing Up: Lives Depend on It

September 13, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

The scope and variety of lies being told about the nature of proposed healthcare reforms in the United States are threatening to undermine the possibility for meaningful reforms that would save literally tens of thousands of lives each year. Those lies need to be dispelled, or reform will be delayed and more lives lost.

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How Education Can Lift Children Out of Poverty

September 9, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Cornel West: “The child crisis converges with the failure of the American public school system to accomplish a central part of the mission of schools in a democracy: to rescue children from the limitations of class and family situation, giving them access to a world of longer memory, broader imagination and stronger ambition.”

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Artificial Intelligence: Will It Understand or Reject Our Human Qualities?

September 8, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Is the very thing we demand of our computers the thing that will make them intolerant of our humanity, if and when they awaken to an artificial intelligence? One of the fundamental problems in achieving a state of computational agility and independence that would allow us to say a synthetic entity has acquired ‘artificial intelligence’ is the problem of autonomy. If we give real autonomy to artificially intelligent machines, can we trust them to cooperate with us, in the ways we, as human beings prefer?

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Light & Dark Are Not So Different as they Seem (discussion)

September 7, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Light and dark, however we perceive them, are not necessarily opposites, but rather more like degrees of radiant energy intensity, along a spectrum of detectability. If we think only in terms of the capacity of human vision to capture light energy, we see evidence of presence and absence, but wave energy in one form or another might be more ubiquitous than we can believe.

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Are Financial Exotics a Long-term Risk to the US Economy? (discussion)

September 6, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

In the wake of last year’s collapse of American credit markets, and the contagion of financial sclerosis to markets around the world, Wall Street’s major banks, which took tens of billions of dollars in taxpayer bailout money, may again be looking to securitize fixed-asset financial products.

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Hacker Runs Ubuntu on Amazon’s Kindle

September 6, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Amazon’s Kindle family of e-book readers has changed the game on e-books and e-book distribution, by making an intuitive, easy to use e-paper reader into a mass-market publishing platform. Books are now sold on many websites as “Hardcover, Paperback, Kindle”, referencing the format of the book’s publication in varying editions. Now, a hacker has put a variation of Linux on a Kindle 2, raising the question as to what Amazon might do to enhance the device’s range of operative capabilities.

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Apple to Announce New Products, Possibly Tablet at Wednesday Event

September 5, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

On Wednesday, 9 September, Apple will be hosting an iTunes-centered event, to announce new features, including possibly upgraded or more dynamic iPod models. Rumors that the event could also include the much-anticipated Apple tablet computer may be premature. The San Francisco Chronicle reports the tablet may be more likely to debut at the beginning of 2010.

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Mercedes Producing First-ever Mass-market Fuel-cell Vehicle

September 4, 2009 :: Riga Listin :: No Comment Yet

The Mercedes B-class F-cell will be out in 2010 in the US and Europe, with an initial limited production fleet of 200 vehicles. The vehicles will be lease-only, as Mercedes works to perfect the technologies and market strategies it needs to bring the car to mass market.

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Apple’s multi-billion-dollar App Store speeds hyper-convergence

August 31, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Apple’s iPhone App Store is reported to be bringing in $200 million per month, roughly $2.4 billion per year. Such soaring earnings reflect that high value users place on the App Store system and its ability to deliver targeted-use software “widgets” that do one thing well. But doing just one thing is far from the goal of the App Store.

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Israeli Scientists May Be Able to Detect Lung Cancer in Breath

August 31, 2009 :: staff :: One Comment

A new innovation developed by scientists in Israel may be able to detect traces of lung cancer in human breath, by identifying molecules linked to the condition. The device would be hand-held and easy to use, and could potentially be available at any family doctor or general practitioner’s office, in the future.

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Sony advances touchscreen e-paper paradigm with Sony Reader Touch Edition

August 30, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Like the Amazon Kindle family of e-readers, the Sony Reader Touch Edition uses an e-Ink e-paper display. But it’s interface works like a touchscreen. The advance is a major improvement for the standards of design in e-paper e-book readers. The touchscreen standard may be the most significant challenge Sony has put forth for the Amazon Kindle readers, none of which uses a touchscreen interface.

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Friends & Furies: Republicans in the Family

August 30, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

One of my closest friends in the world is a committed Republican, as is my father, whose father was a Republican elected to various offices in our state. The friend —whom we’ll call “Dutch”— often chides me for our differences of opinion, and we often have energetic philosophical debates in which we try to detail the workings of the universe according to our own personal abstractions or tastes.

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In Memory of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Discussion on Extending Best-quality Education to All

August 29, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The United States was the first nation in the world to establish a universal public education system, and has paved the way for many innovations in that area, including mandatory attendance and universal literacy as standards in law and in practice. But in a nation of more than 309 million people, there are countless ways that underfunding, personal and family misfortune, community disintegration, crime and other causes, can impede many millions from accessing the best-quality education our society has to offer.

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Recycling Technology, Planting Trees, Spurring Education (discussion)

August 15, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Jude Ndambuki is a native Kenyan chemistry teacher in New York, who has been collecting, refurbishing and shipping used, discarded and donated computers, to Kenyan schools in order to help protect the environment, reduce the chemical contamination of landfill sites and spur technological educational resource availability for young Kenyans. He is celebrated by CNN as one of its do-gooder “heroes”, an example of someone helping to improve the lot of others.

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Fuel Efficiency: Hybrid, Electric, Solar or ‘Exotics’ (discussion)

August 15, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The quest for the most fuel-efficient vehicles has entered a new phase, with major government private-sector investment in research and development for industrial-scale commercial production of a new class of gas-electric hybrid vehicles and EVs (all-electric cars). Swiss-based Solar Impulse is building the world’s first 100% solar-powered airplane, an achievement that will revolutionize the travel, industrial production, transport and fuel sectors.

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Chevrolet Volt Shatters Fuel Efficiency Paradigm at 230 mpg

August 13, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

The Chevrolet Volt will get 230 miles per gallon in city driving. The Volt is a plug-in hybrid not yet on the market, which will mark a technological breakthrough if it achieves the projected fuel efficiency, “changing the game” as some observers see it on automotive transport and fuel usage. If realized, the 230 mpg standard will shatter the existing paradigm for automotive fuel efficiency.

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Thoughtful Tourism: reflections of a local stranger (discussion)

August 11, 2009 :: l.johr :: No Comment Yet

Instead of going on a cruise this year or flying off to dream-like destinations, more people are choosing to tour locally. No matter what constitutes ‘local’, there are likely enough interesting and stimulating activities to last a few hours or a few days’ worth of leisurely investigation. Finding a new restaurant, park or museum will not only help boost the local economy, but it might also help to boost your spirits while saving some money.

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Rights Policies, Fair Use & the Health of the Free Press (discussion)

August 5, 2009 :: staff :: One Comment

Now, we face unprecedented challenges to the right of people everywhere to access information intended for public consumption. Repressive governments are building state-of-the-art censorship , tracking and filtering mechanisms (the ‘Great Firewall of China’, for example), and internet service providers (ISP) are seeking to establish profit-dr… that limit users’ access to certain websites or content-producers.

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Against the Good Nukes / Bad Nukes Fallacy

Cynicism often lends itself to the construction of intellectually convenient, overly facile descriptions of future events, which —bolstered by the impassioned worries and self-promotion of the cynic, the anti-prophet— quickly assume an air of prophetic certainty. Buoyed by the psychological satisfaction of carrying prophetic certainty within, the cynic then commits more and more fully to the proclamation of unshakeable doctrines about the future, based on bad-faith arguments and a passion for the despairing global outlook.

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