Archive for June 16th, 2008

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Backyard birders should tune into Bird Cinema. Proclaiming, “where the wild birds are always on,” this site is like YouTube if my two indoor-only cats ran it.

Full of short videos about every avian from finches to penguins, this site is a charming reminder of nature’s beauty. If you’re trapped in a cubicle all day, watching a few, short bird videos is nearly as good as a walk in the countryside.

Don’t miss the hummingbirds battling over a feeder. Watch a mother bald eagle bringing a fish back to her nest. Gaze upon the beautiful blue Stellars Jay.

Got footage of birds from your neighborhood or travels? Upload your bird flicks for everyone to care about.

These bird vids have a more resting type of ‘twitter’ we can all use in a sometimes too fast-paced world.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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(Credit: New Line Cinema)

United Airlines has been subject to some pretty bad press recently for being one of several airlines to slap a $15 fee on checked bags, but here’s a perk: the commerical carrier announced on Monday that it’s starting to install iPod and iPhone connectivity …

Source [The social]

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From L to R: Dave Morin, Josh Elman, Ruchi Sanghvi, Ben Ling, and moderator Dave McClure

(Credit: Caroline McCarthy/CNET News.com)

ARLINGTON, Va.–A quartet of Facebook’s platform engineers took the stage on Wednesday morning at the Graphing Social Patterns: East conference, for a discussion led by conference …

Source [The social]

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Sequels aren’t always as good as what comes before them (see Indiana Jones 2) but when it comes to technology and software, newer usually means superior.

Flock, the self-proclaimed social browser, is catching up with the times this week with a new version for brave Windows and Mac beta testers that employs technology from the upcoming Firefox 3. Dubbed version 2.0, the new Flock is largely a behind-the-scenes operation, including such FF3 niceties as the controversial “awesome bar”, improved render speeds, and the new bookmarking system, along with in-browser security notifications–which should keep the phishing sites at bay.

Flock's new people bar saves space by scaling up the services into scrollable feeds.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

That’s not to say Flock 2 is without its new polishes. For one, the media bar that sits atop your browser window and lets you browse and snag any media that’s on the page has been given a slight visual update. It’s still a film roll of sorts with a slew of clickable thumbnails. What’s new is that you can now save and bookmark media streams like you would Web pages. These items are saved alongside your bookmarks and can be called up, whether you’re on that site or not.

Flock devs have also redesigned the people toolbar to scale for more services. One of my initial criticisms with it, and on other similar services like Yoono, is that it worked fine with five or six sites, but moving up into something like FriendFeed, which pulls in more than 40 services, people would just run out of room. Flock’s solution is to compartmentalize each feed into three different sections, which–once you get the hang of it–works like a multi-pane e-mail client.

Another noticeable improvement is the built-in feed reader. If you’re using that instead of something like Google Reader or a mail program, you previously had to re-start the browser to get the latest feeds. The new version includes a refresh button and adds time stamps so you can see how old each story is. I hope that in future iterations feeds will automatically refresh like they do on other readers, but the change is a large step up from the old version.

We’ll be updating the Newbie’s guide when Flock 2.0 overtakes the current version (1.2), which should happen in the coming weeks.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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I saw CrowdSpring present at a current Under the Radar conference I was moderating. I like the service a lot, because it simplifies the process of licensing creative works, and it levels the playing field so anyone can play. What it does, in a nutshell, is let people who need design work done put their requests up on the site. Then creatives compete for the jobs.

It sounds familiar, doesn’t it — like TaskMarket, Elance, and other task boards?

It’s not. CrowdSpring has a radically different cashflow model. It works like this: If there’s a job you want done — say, the creation of a logo for your startup — you post that on the site. And you pay CrowdSpring in advance, before any contractor has even seen at your req. Wait, it gets better.

ID8 needs a new logo. Can you do superior than this?

The creatives who want to earn the fee don’t go through the process of marketing themselves to you to earn the right to work on your project. Rather, they do the work up front, submitting their work, in public, to the job page that’s on the site.

Once you pick the work you like, rights to it transfer to you and the artist gets paid.

Let’s review: Clients pay for their work up front. Artists do the work before they have the contract. CrowdSpring collects the float.

It’s the ultimate in weasel economics. But it works. Check out some of the closed jobs on the site - the quality of the work is quite good, there’s a lot of variety to choose from, and customers are paying bargain prices.

I wouldn’t suggest CrowdSpring for complex jobs or secret projects, but it’s a good tool for easy creative tasks. And if you find a contractor you like on the system, you are of course free to hire them for a longer engagement.

I hope, but am not convinced, that CrowdSpring can stay as good as it is this day. An existing and more massive task market, like Elance, could add a CrowdSpring-like assignment option, giving designers and clients exposure to a larger selection of business partners. CrowdSpring does have two things going for it, though: First, a purity of purpose that shows itself in a simple and easy-to-use marketplace. And second, there are apparently people out there willing to do creative work based only for the hope of getting paid. I’m wondering now how many other new businesses can be built to leverage this desperation.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Finding the the next shoe to fall is how you make a big fortune out of wall street’s packet. Lehman: More Real-Estate Woes LEHMAN BROTHERS’ REAL-ESTATE PROBLEMS, including an equity stake in the leveraged buyout of apartment developer Archstone-Smith, continue to plague it. The firm, which stunned Wall Street last week by disclosing that it anticipates […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — Moody’s Investors Service on Friday put Lehman Brothers Holdings’ A1 rating on review for a possible downgrade. The move follows Lehman’s announcement that Chief Financial Officer Erin Callan is leaving. The ratings bureau noted that although the purpose of the management change appears to be an effort to assure accountability for its losses and to […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Firefox Mobile Concept Video from Aza Raskin on Vimeo.

Update 10:20 a.m. PDT: This was updated to clarify the point about mobile browser alternatives.

The buzz about Firefox these days might be focused on the impending Firefox 3, but the folks at Mozilla are already thinking beyond that …

Source [The social]

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NEW YORK–The inaugural World wide web Week New York was eight days of open bars and missed opportunities.

On the red carpet at the 12th Annual Webby Awards on Tuesday night, the final event of the week-long city-sanctioned festival, I called out to Internet Week executive director David-Michel Davies and asked him …

Source [The social]

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Robert BonnieThis post is by Robert Bonnie, Co-director of the Land, Water, and Wildlife Program at Environmental Defense Fund.

Corn FieldThe New York Times recently reported that thousands of farmers are dropping out of the federal government’s Conservation Reserve Program.

The prices for corn and other crops are so high that conservation subsidies can’t compete with what farmers can make by planting the land.

One reason for the high prices is the ethanol mandate in the energy bill Congress passed last year.

Shifts in land use from diverting food-producing land to grow crops for energy — called “indirect land-use change” — can potentially negate the environmental benefits of corn ethanol.

There’s still much debate on how to measure it, but no question it’s important to take into account. One recent study published in Science (Searchinger, et. al.) found that using croplands for biofuels causes a significant increase in greenhouse gas emissions relative to gasoline when indirect land use change is taken into account.

Unintended consequences such as these highlight the danger of mandating a specific clean energy technology, and the importance of relying on performance standards instead.

What is “indirect land-use change”?

When food-producing land is diverted for energy production, the food that would have been grown on that land must be grown elsewhere. This prompts farmers to convert land not currently in production into cropland.

When grassland or forestland is cleared to grow crops, the carbon sequestered in the soil and trees is released into the atmosphere.

If a lot of new land is cultivated, the resulting carbon release can totally negate the benefits of using biofuels. The New York Times stated as many acres as in Rhode Island and Delaware combined were removed from the Conservation Reserve Program, and that’s just one corner of the country.

Not all the land was removed due to U.S. biofuel policy, but it plays a part. Some research has found that U.S. policies can contribute to deforestation in southeast Asia and the Amazon.

Assessing the impact of indirect land-use change is tricky, and experts disagree on how to quantify it. According to the Searchinger study, when indirect land-use change is factored in:

  • Corn ethanol nearly doubles greenhouse gas emissions relative to gasoline when considered over a period of 30 years, and emissions remain elevated for 167 years.
  • Even biofuels from switchgrass, if grown on U.S. corn lands, increase emissions relative to gasoline by 50 percent.

We can’t state whether these numbers are exactly correct, but we have the ability to say that indirect land use effects — particularly tropical deforestation — are important to consider.

Shaping policy to reduce emissions

Government mandates for a specific technology to lower greenhouse gas emissions risk unintended consequences — even higher net emissions.

An effective policy that ensures lower emissions has two key components:

  • A market-based system that rewards less carbon-intensive technologies and land-use practices, whatever they may be.

    The Searchinger study recommends that a possible solution to the corn ethanol problem is to use waste products as a “feedstock” (raw material to produce biofuels). Unlike cultivated crops, waste products don’t compete for agricultural land and drive up commodity prices. Sustainably produced cellulosic ethanol made from grasses and wood also might be a viable substitute. Another possibility we’ll discuss in an upcoming post is using algae to make ethanol.

    But a policy that specifically mandates corn ethanol doesn’t encourage exploration of these other options.

  • Performance standards based on full lifecycle analysis, including emissions from tropical deforestation and other indirect land use changes.

    There is some recognition of this in current policy, but also an important gap. The California Air Resources Board (CARB) Low-Carbon Fuel Standard and Environmental Protection Bureau (EPA) Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) both require consideration of indirect land use in assessing emissions.

    But the EPA’s RFS exempts corn ethanol from existing facilities from having to meet lifecycle emissions standards.

Biofuels may have a role in our energy future, but only if they’re produced in ways that lower emissions. Performance-based standards and market incentives can prevent the unintended consequences of mandating the wrong technology.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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