Watch Out For The Green Police

08/02/2010 · Leave a Comment

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Go Red For Women:: Help fight heart disease

05/02/2010 · Leave a Comment



Choose to be a leader. Inspire friends, family and coworkers to wear red and speak up about heart disease — our No. # 1 killer — on National Wear Red Day!
But building awareness shouldn’t be confined to just one day. Consider organizing a Wear Red Day on any day you like. Plan one at your office, in your community, or even in your home. Just sign up and download the tools from our Wear Red Day Kit to get started. You’ll even get your very own free Go Red For Women pin to let the world know you’re fighting to raise awareness of heart disease in women.
Get started today!

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Toyota: Software to blame for Prius brake problems

04/02/2010 · Leave a Comment



Tokyo, Japan — Without issuing a recall of its iconic Prius hybrid vehicles, Toyota said Thursday a software glitch is to blame for braking problems in the 2010 model.
“We would want to be given a little time,” Hiro Yuki Yokoyama, Toyota’s managing officer, said when reporters asked whether a recall was in the works.
The company changed its braking system software in January as part of what it called “constant quality improvements,” but did not say what it would do about vehicles manufactured before then.
Toyota officials described the problem as a “disconnect” in the vehicle’s complex anti-lock brake system (ABS) that causes less than a one-second lag. With the delay, a vehicle going 60 mph will have traveled nearly another 90 feet before the brakes begin to take hold.
Brakes in hybrids such as the Prius operate differently from brakes in most cars. In addition to standard brakes, which use friction from pads pressed against drums or rotors, the electric motors in hybrids help slow them. The process also generates electricity to recharge the batteries.
The Japanese government has warned Toyota to take seriously mounting complaints with the Prius. Toyota Vice President Shinichi Sasaki met with Japan’s transport minister on Wednesday.
In Japan, 14 complaints about brakes in the Prius have been lodged since July. Japan’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism has asked Toyota to investigate, according to the Japan Automobile Dealers Association.
“The complaints received via our dealers center around when drivers are on a bumpy road or frozen surface,” said Paul Nolasco, a Toyota Motor Corp. spokesman in Japan. “The driver steps on the brake, and they do not get as full of a braking feel as expected.” Keep reading →

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Democrats push to peg energy to jobs

03/02/2010 · Leave a Comment



Might the new jobs bill be the new energy bill?

Democrats are pushing to have energy provisions included in the new jobs bill, even as climate advocates warn that pulling popular programs from the climate bill could further cripple their already-dimmed chance of passage this spring.

“If you take some of the green stuff out, some of the goodies, and put it in the jobs bill, you’re hurting the idea of having an energy package that would attract support,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who’s working on drafting a climate bill with Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John Kerry (D-Mass.).

The three senators have been meeting regularly and hope to take up their legislation this spring, with significant bipartisan support.

But the outlook for passing a climate bill has dimmed after a bruising battle over health care reform and the loss of the Democrats’ 60-vote supermajority in the Senate.

And that has moderate Democrats looking to put some of the most popular energy provisions into the jobs package that is rapidly taking shape.

Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu, who opposes passing a climate bill this year, suggested using the energy bill as the base for jobs legislation, which has had bipartisan backing.

“We can use that bill and combine it with parts of the jobs package and really lay out a framework to get America working again,” said Landrieu, who voted against the energy bill in committee. “I think energy is the best place we could go right now to create jobs.”

Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0210/32430.html#ixzz0eU7m2raT

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Steve Jobs Introduce The New iPad

28/01/2010 · Leave a Comment

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Los Angeles Council Curbs Pot Dispensaries

27/01/2010 · Leave a Comment



AP

The Los Angeles City Council gave final approval Tuesday to an ordinance that will close most medical-marijuana dispensaries in the city.

The ordinance, which passed 9-3, caps the number of dispensaries at 70 and provides guidelines that will push the clinics out of neighborhoods and into industrial areas. More than 130 shops that registered before a 2007 moratorium could also be allowed to stay open if they comply with the rules.

No one is sure how many pot clinics there are in Los Angeles—the best estimate is somewhere between 800 and 1,000—and the ordinance will likely meet resistance from clinic owners.

More than 600 medical-marijuana dispensaries have opened in the city over the past 10 months, despite the moratorium. The shop owners took advantage of a loophole that allowed them to open while awaiting city approval.

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Apple’s Super-Hyped Ipad

26/01/2010 · Leave a Comment


It could be the best thing for publishing since the invention of the Guttenberg Press. Then again it could be the ideal business tool, the perfect device for gaming, or the long-awaited gizmo that functions as the love child of the TV and computer worlds and makes all the myriad entertainment choices available on one screen.

And what will it be called? The iPad, iTablet, iSlate or perhaps the iWhatever? As geek sleuths around the world searched for information on Monday, the latest proof of the imminent wonder gadget came from mobile tracking firm Flurry, which found evidence of about 50 previously unidentified kinds of devices surfing the airwaves around Apple’s Silicon Valley headquarters.

All these possibilities have been breathlessly discussed on the internet since Apple announced an event earlier this month to unveil its “latest creation.” The cryptic invitations sparked a whirlwind of Tabletmania speculation on tech blogs, Twitter and newspapers, as though the latest Apple invention could single- handedly reimagine the landscape of consumer technology.

“I can’t wait for next week,” noted blogger John Aloysius Farrell, “and for Apple to turn my world upside down.” That’s not as preposterous a proposition as many might think.

Apple has a long track record of doing exactly that, from the days of the Macintosh through to the modern day transformations inspired by the all-in-one iMac in 1998, not to mention the iPod and iPhone. Keep reading →

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China attacks Clinton’s Internet speech as ‘harmful’ to relations

22/01/2010 · Leave a Comment


BEIJING — China’s Foreign Ministry sharply criticized Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s Thursday call for broad Internet freedom, saying that the United States should “cease using so-called Internet freedom to make groundless accusations against China.”

Ma Zhaoxu, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, said on the ministry’s Web site that “the U.S. has criticized China’s policies to administer the Internet and insinuated that China restricts Internet freedom. We are firmly against the words and deeds contrary to the facts and harmful to China-U.S. relations.”

A Chinese newspaper also joined the criticism of Clinton, who gave her speech in the wake of Google’s declaration that it would stop censoring results on its Chinese-based search engine even if that meant losing its license after a cyberattack on its computers.

The Global Times said that the U.S. “campaign for uncensored and free flow of information on an unrestricted Internet is a disguised attempt to impose its value on other cultures in the name of democracy.”

Clinton said that freedom on the Internet is closely linked to other basic freedoms, including freedom of speech, worship and assembly. And she said the U.S. government would help fund and foster individuals and companies that help those in countries with restricted access find ways to circumvent obstacles. Keep reading →

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Calm Restored In Nigerian City

21/01/2010 · Leave a Comment



JOS, Nigeria (Reuters) – Nigerian authorities relaxed a 24-hour curfew in the city of Jos on Thursday to allow thousands of residents to return to their homes following clashes between Muslims and Christians that killed hundreds.

The strong presence of troops and police has helped restore calm in the capital of Plateau state with no reports of major violence for nearly a day.

Four days of sectarian clashes this week killed more than 460 in and around the central Nigerian city.

The Red Cross estimated 17,000 people have been displaced and took shelter in colleges, hospitals and schools since clashes began on Sunday.

“There are so many people that need clothing, food and water. The Red Cross is focussing on those injured and referring some to hospital,” an agency spokesman said, adding that about 990 have been hospitalised.

Plateau State Governor Jonah Jang relaxed the curfew in Jos to operate between 5 p.m. (1600 GMT) and 10 a.m. to allow people to return to their homes. Keep reading →

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GOP sees Mass. win as stop sign for Dems

20/01/2010 · Leave a Comment

By CHARLES BABINGTON
The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Reeling from the loss of a long-held Massachusetts Senate seat, Democrats are rethinking the lessons of Barack Obama’s 2008 election, with the GOP cheerfully suggesting they scale back their ambitions and agenda.

Republican Scott Brown’s win in a liberal state will do more than vastly complicate Obama’s bid to overhaul the U.S. health care system. It will send his party into a painful re-examination of voters’ anger and desires ahead of the November elections for Congress, governorships and state legislatures.

Questions will include whether Americans really want more government help in matters such as obtaining health insurance, even though Obama campaigned on that very issue.

Most immediately, Brown’s win Tuesday over Martha Coakley to replace the late Edward M. Kennedy will deprive Democrats of a filibuster-proof Senate majority. That could kill the Democrats’ effort to revamp health care unless House Democrats reluctantly embrace a previously passed Senate version that many of them dislike. It would require no new Senate action, although liberal groups might be furious.

Gleeful Republicans warned against such a move. The message from Massachusetts, said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., is: “Go back to the drawing board” on health care.

Democrats didn’t go quite that far, but some were clearly chastened.

“In many ways the campaign in Massachusetts became a referendum not only on health care reform but also on the openness and integrity of our government process,” said Sen. James Webb, D-Va. He urged that “we suspend further votes on health care legislation until Sen.-elect Brown is seated.” Keep reading →

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