Archive for June 20th, 2008

(Credit: ComScore)

New numbers from metrics firm ComScore show that in Might, the battle of the social-networking sites may have gained a new front-runner: Facebook appears to have surpassed longtime rival MySpace in worldwide one-of-a-kind visitors for the first time. ComScore representatives stated that this began in April when Facebook …


Source [The social]

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It’s no longer entirely up to individual companies and individual investors to make solar a significant source of U.S. electricity — rather, if it is going to happen, it is up to utilities.

Clean Edge and Co-op America have released a report analyzing the role of utilities in getting solar to be a viable source of electricity generation and states solar could be the source of 10% of U.S. electricity generation by 2025. Their 76-page report, the Utility Solar Assessment (USA) Study, provides a map for utilities, regulators, and solar companies to reach the goal — and they all must get in sync if this goal is to be achieved.

A few of the major points include utilities using solar to alleviate grid congestion; for solar companies to get systems to $3 or less per peak watt within 10 years (and grid parity is within reach sooner than that) and make solar a “plug-and-play” technology; and for regulators to pass investment tax credits for solar and other renewables (remember, ITCs were not renewed).

The transition won’t be cheap. According to Clean Edge, the investment to get us to using 10% solar will average $26 billion to $33 billion a year until 2025. But considering utilities spent about $70 billion on new power plants and transmission and distribution systems in 2007 alone, it is pretty likely that we can scrounge up the funds to make solar a serious component of our electricity use.

Additionally, according to the report, installed solar PV prices are expected to shrink from $5.50-$7.00 per peak watt to $3.02-$3.82 per peak watt within seven years, and then shrink again to $1.43-$1.82 per peak watt by 2025, making solar increasingly un-ignorable. And, as Intel’s SpectraWatt spin off illustrates, solar is soon to be ubiquitous.

On a recent press call, Ron Pernick, co-author of the report and Clean Edge cofounder, pointed out that while solar is within striking distance of fossil fuel, thanks to the rising cost of oil and shrinking cost of solar, the future of solar is really in the hands of utilities.

Thankfully, utilities are indeed stepping up to the plate. Southern California Edison is looking to install 250 MW, Duke Energy is investing $100 million in rooftop solar, and PG&E is investing in thousands of megawatts of concentrating solar power in California deserts, as well as other solar hybrid projects. We are certainly making progress already.

For your reading pleasure, the USA Study is available for free download at www.cleanedge.com and www.solarcatalyst.org

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Reddit, the social news site that publishing giant Conde Nast acquired in 2006, has made a massive announcement: The site’s code, as of Wednesday, is open source. It’s been released under the Common Public Attribution License (CPAL).

The Reddit alien mascot. 'You can play with me now!&#…

Source [The social]

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Register.com is looking into the hijack of Photobucket’s DNS records that redirected customers to an unrelated Web page this week.

“The Photobucket site was down for a very short time and was restored immediately when we became aware of the issue.” Roni Jacobson, general counsel of Register.com, said in a statement on Thursday. “We are currently investigating the source of the problem.”

On Tuesday afternoon, some Photobucket customers trying to access the site were temporarily redirected to a page that appeared to have been hacked by a Turkish group calling itself “NetDevilz.”

Photobucket discovered the problem within about an hour of when it started and soon thereafter began rolling out a fix. Some customers were able to access the site within a few hours, but for others it took as long as two days, according to the site.

The company is urging customers to do a DNS Flush on their personal, as well as reboot the modem and/or the router if they’re still having trouble reaching the site.

“If this does not resolve the issue, please try again later, as the redirect might still be cached in your ISP’s DNS files. Depending on the ISP, it may take up to 72 hours (or longer) for their DNS cache to be cleared (or for it to expire), so you should consider contacting them to see if anything can be expedited,” the company said in a blog post.

In Might, Comcast’s DNS records and site were hijacked.

Many customers of Photobucket were unable to reach the site for anywhere from hours to days this week after the site's DNS records were hijacked.

(Credit: Photobucket)

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Liberal news site The Huffington Post might just have expanded into eco-news, but the downtown New York-based company isn’t stopping there: Local news sites are on the way, starting with a Chicago edition. And it will be raising more venture money to fund the expansion.

Huffington Post co-founder and …

Source [The social]

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The top headlines at a given time on Wednesday morning at OurSignal. Yeah, a bit short on relevant news.

(Credit: OurSignal)

On Wednesday morning, I read about a new site called OurSignal, which mashes up the top headlines from Digg, Reddit, Delicious, and HackerNews, promising to show a more diverse …


Source [The social]

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While blogging platforms like WordPress and Movable Type have considerable name recognition among Web users, few outside the development community know about this flexible and open-source content management system Drupal, which powers sites like Sony BMG’s Myplay, PopSci.com, and the Web 2.0 blog Center Networks.

Drupal’s avid developer community voted the product into a Webware 100 award earlier this year, so when Drupal creator Dries Buytaert came to town this week I took the opportunity to catch up with him and learn a little about the upcoming commercialization project for Drupal called Acquia.

Acquia, of course, is not the first company to take an open-source product and try to commercialize it; the most popular company in this game is Red Hat, which commercializes Linux.

Acquia will be available late in July, Buytaert said. The open-source app at its core, Drupal, will be free, and Acquia will package it into a distribution with the necessary (also open-source) supporting apps and installers for Apache and MySQL. The company will make money from support contracts (various fees for various levels of support) and pre-installation consulting. It will also offer some on the web services for Drupal setups, like a “heartbeat” or monitoring service, and an anti-spam solution.

Acquia may also set up a free certification program for Drupal contractors. The company won’t, at first, offer hosting services for Drupal. Rather, Buytaert hopes to partner with current Drupal hosts.

All together it is a decent model for building a product, and a community around it, and then turning it commercial in a way that can feed some financial rewards back to contributors. Buytaert contrasts this model to the schedule of building a product first in a commercial setting and then unleashing it as open source, as Six Apart is doing with Movable Type (my example, not his). Buytaert states this plan is more of a marketing scheme than a development strategy, and that it’s the wrong way to go if you want to build a community of open-source developers.

Buytaert was the original developer of Drupal and is still The Man when it comes to coordinating the community code that goes into the core of the platform. He says “Acquia doesn’t own Drupal,” although Acquia will be where Drupal becomes commercialized.

While I’m always suspicious of products that are built without business models–as Drupal clearly was, at least at first–looking at the history of the platform and the timing of the Acquia launch does reinforce the fact that there are alternate ways to build a technology business. If you can win over a group of fanatical developers while the platform is still pre-revenue, then you know you really have something. The trick is to move these idealists into the commercial world.

After talking with Buytaert and with Acquia’s CEO, Jay Batson, my sense is that this company can do that. Buytaert is the real deal, a community leader, not just a technical architect. And Drupal is not just a science project, either; it’s a technology platform that serves a market that’ll only grow.

See also: Joomla.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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FDIC chief calls for more investment-bank oversight By Greg Morcroft, MarketWatch Last Update: 6/18/2008 2:03:00 PM NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Amplifying on the discussion about increasing oversight of the global financial system, one of America’s top banking regulators called for more restrictions on risk, liquidity and capital at investment banks. “It makes sense to extend some form of greater prudential regulation […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Brokers threatened by run on shadow bank system Regulators eye $10 trillion market that boomed outside traditional banking By Alistair Barr, MarketWatch Last Update: 6/19/2008 6:29:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — A network of lenders, brokers and opaque financing cars outside traditional banking that ballooned during the bull market now is under siege as regulators threaten a crackdown on the so-called […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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