Amazing Pollution in China

Chemical waste from Jiangsu Taixing Chemical Industrial District dumped on top of the Yangtze River bank. May 15, 2009 Photo by Lu Guang

Overall, China is now the world’s leading emitter of greenhouse gas that leads to global warming. Per capita, the United States is still far and away the leader on that, but our emissions are on track to start falling soon, mainly because of the economy and the EPA is beginning to more aggressively regulate clean air and water. It’s also possible that we will get some type of climate change legislation soon; and many other factors such as new technologies and a clean energy and jobs focus. We really don’t know what the future holds, but it looks as though the Bush years of inaction on climate change really are over. We can still be optimistic on this, even if the start on emissions reductions is slow. Due to worsening climate events across the world, that may finally change.

We may not be sure what China is doing to solve climate change, but they are not ending their use of coal.  As far as toxic pollution goes, China still has a huge problem.

This group of photos is part of a photo essay on China’s pollution.  All photos are by Chinese freelance photographer, Lu Guang.

We can’t be sure what other countries are planning to do on climate change, despite their public pronouncements and despite what they said at Copenhagen.  It’s possible that they don’t mean to reduce emissions as much as they tell reporters and their own public.  We will only know by what they eventually do.

Rajendra Pachauri of the IPCC thinks the grouping at Copenhagen of India, China, Brazil and South Africa (BASIC) will make that group stronger and more relevant.  Hopefully it will not remain  a group that stalls and refuses to make binding agreements,  as it seemed to do in Copenhagen.  India admitted it and the other BASIC countries were the reason that a binding agreement was blocked:

In November, the BASIC countries forged a united front in Beijing to put pressure on developed countries in Copenhagen.  India said the BASIC countries were successful in thwarting global pressure to agree to a legally-binding emissions cut.

Interestingly, The Guardian is not taking the side of those who say the U.S. skewered the climate talks, but are reporting that China was the country that contributed the most to that.

It’s interesting that India and China might be the main reasons we didn’t get a binding agreement in Copenhagen, given the attacks on the performance there of the United States by so many.  Even usually fair alternative U.S. media seemed to (without any proof of any kind) blame Obama for what they called the “failure” of Copenhagen.  Yet according to the Guardian:

“The truth is this: China wrecked the talks, intentionally humiliated Barack Obama, and insisted on an awful “deal” so western leaders would walk away carrying the blame. How do I know this? [...]

Capitalism and Freedom in North Korea

Milton Friedman would not be surprised by this story:

North Korean leader Kim Jong Il moved early this month to wipe out much of the wealth earned in the past decade in his country's private markets. As part of a surprise currency revaluation, the government sharply restricted the amount of old bills that could be traded for new and made it illegal for citizens to have more than $40 worth of local currency.

It was an unexplained decision -- the kind of command that for more than six decades has been obeyed without question in North Korea. But this time ... the markets and the people who depend on them pushed back.

Grass-roots anger and a reported riot in an eastern coastal city pressured the government to amend its confiscatory policy. ...

The currency episode reveals new constraints on Kim's power and may signal a fundamental change in the operation of what is often called the world's most repressive state -- a change driven by private markets that now feed and employ half the country's 23.5 million people, and appear to have grown too big and too important to be crushed, even by a leader who loathes them.

These events do not guarantee that North Korea will soon become a freer state, but they do suggest that economic freedoms help constrain oppressive government, which is precisely the point of Friedman's famous work.

The Place Where Cameras Are Reincarnated [Cameras]

Do you believe in gadget heaven? How about reincarnation? The Precision Camera repair facility brings a good part of a million smashed, malfunctioning and dead shooters back to life every year.

They get almost 3000 broken cameras a day—from warranties, users and extended warranties. Technicians focus their expertise on a particular brand and fix them using manufacturer specific diagnosis machines that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars each. The Nikon and Olympus camera repair lines are in one building, "with Sony, Kodak and Fuji are in another". Most repairs happen in 3 days or less.

The company has been around since 1948 but they don't fix film loading devices any more, citing the rising costs of parts.

If your camera dies, it'll probably go somewhere like this if you care enough about it to give it a second lease on life. [Courant]



Gay Marriage: Surprise, surprise, it’s all about the Cash $$$

by Eric Dondero

We Libertarians are the most tolerant people around, particularly when it comes to Sexual Freedom issues, and more specifically Homosexual Rights.

Consider:

* We Libertarians fiercely oppose any and all Anti-Sodomy Laws.

* We Libertarians are about the only ones out there who favor complete Legalization of (adult) Prostitution; Escort services, Brothels, even Streetwalkers.

* We Libertarians are viciously opposed to zoning regulations, liquor licensing laws, and other attempts by local municipalities to outlaw or severely restrict Gay Clubs, Bars, and Discos. Consider, it was the Libertarian Party of Georgia earlier this year who came to the defense of a downtown Gay Bar that was raided by the Atlanta Police Chief on orders from Democrat Mayor Sheila Franklin.

* We Libertarians are totally cool with every variety of (adult) Gay Pornography, and fiercely oppose any attempts at censorship.

* We Libertarians stand up for Human Rights around the World, particularly Gays who are persecuted and killed in Muslim nations like Iran, Uganda, Nigeria, and Somalia.

But the whole Gay Marriage issue, has left us Libertarians scratching our heads. Why is the Gay Rights movement clammoring for the State to give sanction to their Love Life? What's stopping Gays from going to some public park somewhere's hiring an attorney or two to work up a contract, invite all their friends, and have a priest or rabbi conduct a ceremony?

And since when did the Gay Rights movement become so Traditionally-oriented, when in the 1970s and '80s they were precisely the people railing against the institution of Marriage?

Now we have the answer...

From Fox News:

This year's legislation, sponsored by Rep. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., an openly gay lawmaker, and with 138 cosponsors, would allow for homosexual partners of federal employees to receive the same benefits as married spouses, which include health insurance, survivor annuities, compensation for work-related injuries and travel and relocation benefits.

President Obama has indicated his support for the measure, which is still awaiting a vote in both the House and Senate. The Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee voted Dec. 16 to forward the legislation on to the full Senate. The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee approved it in November.

You see, it's all about the Cash $$$. And after they force the Feds to cough up the cash, they'll no doubt go after private corporations and then small businesses, as well. It's only fair, right?

Then the shocking price tag to the American taxpayer is revealed. Fox continues:

Extending federal benefits to same-sex couples will cost taxpayers $898 million over the next nine years, according to an analysis of "domestic partnership" legislation released last by the Congressional Budget Office.

The CBO said in its Dec. 17 report that the House version of the Domestic Partnership Benefits and Obligations Act -- H.R. 2517 -- would cost $596 million in direct spending and $302 million in discretionary spending through 2019.

The independent nonpartisan agency found that "providing additional health insurance benefits through the Federal Employee Health Benefits (FEHB) program" -- for active and retired gay federal workers with spouses -- "causes the largest increase in both mandatory and discretionary spending -- $590 million and $266 million, respectively."

Ouch! In other words, your Gay buddy, or that Gay chic who works with you at the office, wants to stick you - the American taxpayer - with this enormous bill for his/her partner's living expenses, health care, survival benefits, and even burial expenses.

No doubt, conservative Republicans in Congress will be staunchly opposed to the legislation. And many of them, social conservatives that they are, may approach the issue from a traditionalist point of view.

They may soon be joined by fiscal conservatives and libertarian Republicans in fierce opposition to this proposed legislation. Not because we're uncomfortable with homosexuality.

You're Gay and you want to get married? You want to have a Big Fat Gay Wedding? Invite all the friends. Get drunk. Sing Judy Garland songs on Karaoke. Dance the night away. Well then, Mazaltaf! I raise my glass to you and your partner and wish you eternal happiness.

Just don't ask me - the American taxpayer - to pay for it.

Nigerian Terrorist Umar Farouk Abdul Mutallab, shows Big Fail for Janet Napolitano and DHS to protect Americans over Holiday Season

"an intelligence and security failure of staggering proportions" -- London Telegraph, editorial, Dec. 27

by Tim Daniels, Left Coast Rebel

I read several sources that showed that the Department of Homeland Security laxed their alerts for Christmas travel. Both the FBI and Homeland Security issued intelligence in November of this year that pointed to a decreased threat level for the holiday season. And only now, a day after the attack is DHS raising the threat level (NY Times).

Could it be that DHS and the FBI have been too busy profiling, harassing and/or investigating law-abiding citizens speaking out against the malfeasance of our 'leadership'?

Big Government too worried about Rightwing Political Opponents, rather than Islamic extremists

I wrote back on Aug. 19:

AP story today that highlights the fact that the DHS pushed through the recent 'Right-Wing Extremist' report regardless of known civil liberty concerns. Nothing shocking here. I'll make this one simple, the DHS knew full well that singling out illegal-immigrant opponents, right-to-lifers, gun-owners, vets and others as possible security threats is a clear infringement on their rights.

If the following is true, it is nothing new.

Just look at this from NYDailyNews.com:

The terror suspect who tried to blow up a Detroit-bound plane is the son of a Nigerian banker who alerted U.S. authorities to his "extreme religious views" months ago, it was reported Saturday.

The father, Alhaji Umaru Mutallab,(photo here), a former minister and chairman of First Bank in Nigeria, is shocked that his son was even was allowed to fly to the U.S., family members told the Nigerian newspaper This Day.

The dad was meeting with security officials to discuss his son, identified as Umar Farouk Abdul Mutallab, 23. The younger Mutallab was not on any no-fly list when he flew from Nigeria to Detroit through Amsterdam, Rep. Pete King (R-L.I.) told the Daily News.

A Failure of Big Government on Steroids

Meanwhile Bungalow Bill reports/comments:

The Department of Homeland Security relaxed their alerts for the holiday season according to My Way. Both the FBI and Homeland Security issued an intelligence release on November 20, 2009, about the threat picture for the holiday season. They had no reason to believe Al Qaeda or other terrorists was going to attempt anything for the holiday season according to the report.

I guess they were too busy profiling Americans who go to church, believe in life, and have Don't Treat on Me flags and stickers on their property.

Can you imagine this? The failure of big-government on steroids, (DHS), to even accomplish the most simple task of keeping us safe is mind-boggling. If this story doesn't speak to the inept nature of our Federal government in the most extreme scenario possible then nothing does. We should be jettisoning the powers that these bureaucrats and pols hold, not adding to them.

And bumbling Napolitano? Give her a one-way ticket back to Bullhead City, AZ.

Editor's Note - Both Left Coast Rebel and Bungalow Bills are two of the premiere Right Libertarian news blogs. Please give them a visit and add them to your daily favorites.

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A 2D physics problem. A car of unknown weight is going up a hill at some angle theta. Distance between tires are 2.90m with C.O.G situated 1.15m behind front wheel. Co-efficient of static friction between road and tires is given to be 0.7. The question posed is what the maximum angle would be that t

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800 Pound Beachball to Drop Over Panama City Beach, Florida on New Year’s Eve

New York may be famous for its 11,875-pound, 12-foot diameter Waterford crystal ball that drops over Times Square every New Year’s Eve, but it’s no longer the only for revelers wishing to count down the minutes to the new year. For the second consecutive year, Panama City, Florida will celebrate New Year’s Eve by dropping an 800-pound glowing beach ball at Pier Park.

Watch the video below of last year’s event, which attracted more than 12,000 attendees:

Festivities, all of which are free and open to the public, begin at 5:30 p.m. with family entertainment that will include bounce houses, party favors, street performers, stilt walkers and face painters, and culminates at 8:30 p.m. with fireworks and a drop of 7,000 inflatable beach balls.

Streets will be closed for the countdown celebration from 9:00 p.m. – 1:00 a.m., and the 120-foot descent of the beach ball will begin just before midnight, followed by a midnight fireworks display over the Gulf of Mexico. Southwest Airlines is sponsoring this year’s event in celebration of the May opening of Panama City’s new Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport and their entry into the market. In addition to the lineup of events, Southwest has donated six pairs of round trip airfare tickets as prize giveaway.

Panama City Beach is also offering great packages on accommodations, with rates at select properties start at $99 per night for gulf-front accommodations when reservations are booked online using promo code: NYE. It’s a novel, family-friendly event, and best of all, there’s no freezing temperatures to endure.

Video courtesy of Panama City Beach

Article by Barbara Weibel at Hole In The Donut Travels

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Reversing power transmission in an emrgency

We live along a dead end rural road with 5 other houses and a fish farm. The fish farm has a large generator to run pumps during a power failure. In an extended emergency could you disconnect from the main line and back feed power to the 5 houses from the fish farm generator? Would you simply run

Can Google’s Chrome Banner Change the Course of the Browser Wars? [Browser Wars]

Google has an ad banner in their search home page for their Chrome browser. Can it eventually change the course of the browser wars? And what can happen if it does?

Google's search home page has stayed clean forever, with no clutter or advertising banners of any kind. When Chrome came out, they broke their self-imposed rule to promote their browser whenever an Internet Explorer user arrived to their page. Using their most powerful nuke—the most popular home page in the world—Google is looking to change the course of the Browser War. Now that Chrome is available for Mac, the banner has started to appear in Safari too. According to the latest statistics, their strategy is working well, growing to a 4.4% browser market share in 15 months.

Google knows they need to control the web in every sense, and Chrome is now one of the most important pieces in their strategy to keep their web stronghold. It's clearly the cornerstone of their future plans to take over the incoming new computing world—a world of smart phones and new devices that will eventually replace the computer as we know it. They are hoping the majority of those smart phones would be running Android, and tablets and computers would running ChromeOS. And rendering their web world, there will be Chrome. Not Internet Explorer, Safari/Webkit, or Firefox. Google wants to own the delivery medium, power the hardware, deploy the browser, and then control the delivery of the content. They want the whole enchilada.

That's why this is happening. Chrome will now get exposed to the hundreds of millions of people who visit Google's home page every day. Many will look at the banner and, trusting the Google brand, they will download and install it. My feeling is that many will click that big thing on the top right corner, but even if it's a small percentage of visitors, the potential for change is enormous. We will see soon how effective this campaign could be, but there's one fact that can't be denied now: This is a competitive advantage that browsers like Firefox or Opera don't have. If it ends being powerful change force, Google could eventually face an anti-trust investigation like the one Microsoft faced when they used their domination of desktop operating systems to win the Browser War 1.0 against Netscape. After all, the web is the new OS and Google owns the web.

Would Mozilla whine about this now, like they did about Microsoft? Would the Department of Justice keep an eye on this? Would the European Commission order Google to place banner's for Firefox, Opera, Safari, and, o the irony, Explorer in Google's home page, alongside Chrome's?

It's too early to tell if this is part of a long term aggressive push, but I can't wait for this clusterfuck to happen. It's going to be fun. [Silicon Alley Insider]



First Look: GV Mobile 2.0 for the iPhone [Google]

GV Mobile is now available for jailbroken iPhone devices for free, but there's something better coming up… GV Mobile 2.0. Here's a first look at the app.

It's pretty simple: Apple's iPhone OS is basically the only major smartphone operating system without an official or unofficial Google Voice client. We used to have GV Mobile and VoiceCentral, but as we all know, those were abruptly removed from the App Store and even Google's official client was turned away. Well, at least Apple didn't Amazon your iPhone and take away the Google Voice applications you already bought/downloaded, right? They might as well have as GV Mobile was rendered useless after a Google Voice-side update, and with no way of updating existing user's applications, anyone who had been a GV Mobile user up until that point in time was out of luck.

GV Mobile is now available for jailbroken iPhone devices for free, but there's something better coming up: GV Mobile 2.0. We're really excited to tell you about it, too. It has been polished and refined — it had an injection of features —and we love using it, even in its non-final and beta form. For starters, dialed calls connect almost instantly, your iPhone contacts and favorites are accessible right within the app, there's voicemail transcription viewing, and even multiple Google Voice account support. Advanced features like call forwarding phones, do not disturb settings as well automatic syncing, and even Growl support are on the to-do list, but for now, we're just happy to have GV Mobile back on our non-jailbroken iPhone. Hopefully Apple reverses course and lets this version through their pearly gates when it is finished, though we wouldn't bet the farm on it.

Super shout out to Sean Kovacs for hooking us up!

BGR features the latest tech news, mobile-related content and of course, exclusive scoops.



The Terrorism And Engineering Link

Over the past couple of years, I have been ashamed to note that terrorists, atleast the high profile ones always have engineering degrees. For illustration : The mastermind of 9/11, Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, was a mechanical engineer. The mastermind of the 1993 WTC bombing, Ramzi Yousef, was an

Privacy Win: Cellphone Search Without Warrant Declared Illegal [Privacy]

Score for privacy rights: In a 4-to-3 vote, the Supreme Court of Ohio has ruled that police has no right to search your phone without a search warrant, overruling previous lower court decisions on the matter. This is great news.

In the State of Ohio vs Antwaun Smith, the Supreme Court has declared the search of Smith's cellphone—who was arrested at the time on drug charges—to be unconstitutional, breaking the protection against unreasonable search provided by the Fourth Amendment. The court has decided that cellphones are "capable of storing a wealth of digitized information" and, as such, they should be considered private. Therefore, police should obtain a search warrant before "entering" into the phone to look for evidence against a subject.

It's great to see some reasonable, informed logic in this ocean of stupidness and privacy abuse we live in. [Supreme Court of Ohio's PDF ruling via NYT]



Panasonic’s Future High Power Lithium Ion Batteries Will Kick 20-30% Harder [Battery]

Great news: Panasonic not only started mass producing laptop type battery with a record setting rating of 3.1 amp hours this December, but in the next few years, will make these cells with up to 4.0 amps in 2013. Yowzer.

Part of the secret is to use nickel instead of carbon for the positive terminal in each cell. The previous record at Panasonic for type cells were 2.9 amp hours, and a quick search shows that most are in the 2.2 amp range.

Battery tech still remains one of the slowest developing sectors in technology, which is why Obama put billions of dollars in grant money towards its research. And why this is great news for all. [Panasonic]



Travel Bags Versus 10,300-Pound Elephant: FIGHT! [Travel]

It's not a scientific test, but is there any other better way to test the strength of five bag brands than using a 10,300-pound elephant? Maybe there is, but it won't be this fun. Surprisingly, one bag resisted:

It took 14 minutes to crack open a $545 Tumi, eight minutes to open a $218 Delsey, one minute to open a legendary $240 Samsonite, and twenty minutes to rip apart a cheap $99 American Tourister. So much for premium pricing. The only un-cracked winner: A $320 Victorinox which, coincidentally, is the one I bought a few months ago. [CBS]