Archive for July 4th, 2008

(Credit: Radiohead)

The likes of iTunes, iLike, and Imeem might be making troubled record labels’ lives a bit more complicated. But on a brighter note for the music industry, they’ve also created digital music’s ultimate publicity stunt.

A press release came out Wednesday from our sister company Last.fm, …

Source [The social]

Comments No Comments »

By Harry Wilson Of FINANCIAL NEWS Barclays Capital, Citigroup and Deutsche Bank were among the worst hit banks in Europe in the first half of this year as investment banking fees dropped by more than a third in the wake of the credit crisis. The three banks each lost market share in investment banking and saw their fees fall by more […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

Comments No Comments »

(Credit: Apple.com)

Are you a .Mac subscriber who’s been using the built-in bookmark syncing app? Come Sunday that service will no longer exist as part of the MobileMe transition, so if you want to do one last sync you’ve got to get it done this weekend.

Shortly after the MobileMe announcement last month Apple sent out an e-mail to current .Mac subscribers detailing this change. Friday, the company extended the transfer deadline to July 6, along with providing a how-to guide to make sure you’ve got everything synced up one last time. You can get full instructions on how to do the sync here.

The July 6 deadline, which is Sunday, leads me to believe that the MobileMe changeover might be dropping a day or two early from the expected July 11 release date.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

Comments No Comments »

When I was a kid, youth-voting organization Rock the Vote teamed up with MTV when it wanted to reach young audiences. But in the 21st century, it’s MySpace: the News Corp.-owned social network has announced a contest called ‘DemROCKracy,’ in which bands that use the site as a …

Source [The social]

Comments No Comments »

DOW JONES NEWSWIRES Stock-index futures point toward a sharply lower opening for Wall Street Tuesday, with a steep fall in Europe and continuing worries about rising oil prices expected to start the third quarter on a negative note. Dow Jones Industrial futures were off 111 points to 11228. S&P 500 futures were down 13 points to […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

Comments No Comments »

State you just captured an amazing video of your cat doing something funny. It’s time to upload it to YouTube right? Why stop there? HeySpread, a service from the folks at Particles was just updated Thursday morning to take the video you just captured and push it out to nearly 20 different video hosts at once.

Superior yet, it keeps track of the views once they’re there. You can view each video with daily-stats analytics, view breakdowns, and comparison charts to see how the same video is doing on different services. It’ll also let you compare it with other videos (even if they’re not yours).

In case you’re already entrenched in YouTube, a built-in tool called YouClone will let you copy all your videos off YouTube and post them to other services without having to track down the original. All you need is your YouTube password and it will do the rest.

The service is not free, and uses a credit system that charges one to three 5 cent credits per video uploaded, transferred, watermarked, and tracked. If you’re a videographer looking to get a video out there it’s not a bad deal when you consider how much your time is worth.

If you’re a cheapskate like me, there’s also a free video stat-tracking service called TubeMogul that will do the tracking without the small fee. As for uploading to the rest of the services, though, you’re on your own.


Hey!Spread - Video Distributing Web Service from Bruno Celeste on Vimeo.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

Comments No Comments »

(Updated at 10:45 p.m. PDT with ping information from CNET China, and at 6:30 a.m. on Wednesday with further information.)

Rumors began to surface late on Tuesday that Facebook could no longer get past the Great Firewall of China.

The company has acknowledged the situation but

Source [The social]

Comments No Comments »

As has been repeatedly rumored, Silicon Valley legend Marc Andreessen will be taking a seat on Facebook’s board of directors. In a press release issued Monday afternoon, the veteran entrepreneur–co-founder of Netscape, former CTO of AOL, and now co-founder of social site Ning–was announced as the board’s …

Source [The social]

Comments No Comments »

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 is 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 completely negate the benefits of using biofuels. The New York Times said 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 state 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 suggests 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’s 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]

Comments No Comments »

Close
E-mail It