Image courtesy of Cape Farewell. This guest post was written by Kevin Buckland, Arts Ambassador for 350.org, as part of the Cape Farewell project . This post comes to you from a 100 year-old sailboat in the middle of the Arctic ocean. For the past three weeks, I have been traveling as part of the Cape Farewell Expedition , a project that brings artists and scientists together to reflect on how to communicate the science and reality of climate change. The beauty I have seen here is indescriba… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …New York Times media reporter Brian Stelter found it easy Tuesday to embrace the idea that liberalism means forward progress. In a story on MSNBC’s new motto, Stelter began: MSNBC, once the also-ran but now the No. 2 cable news channel, has a new tagline that embraces its progressive political identity. The tagline, “Lean Forward,” will be publicly announced Tuesday, opening a planned two-year advertising campaign intended to raise awareness of the channel among viewers, advertisers and distributors. It can also easily be mocked as lean forward, as in to vomit — or lean forward in a bow, as Obama does to foreign leaders. The story continued: The tagline “defines us and defines our competition,” said Phil Griffin, the president of MSNBC, his implication being that the Fox News Channel, which is No. 1 in cable news and a home for conservatives, is leaning backward. Some of the new MSNBC ads include shots of President Obama on his election night; others, directed by the filmmaker Spike Lee, showcase hosts like Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow preparing for their nightly programs; and still others feature quotes like “the future belongs to the fearless.” Stelter didn’t suggest that perhaps Olbermann could throw a trash can through the window of a pizza parlor, and then burn it down — as in the crucial police-brutality-race-riot scene in Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing. Since Lee is involved, unsurprisingly, Hurricane Katrina is one of MSNBC’s themes (if not his conspiracy theory that the levees were blown up on purpose): The resulting ads are not day-and-date promotions for specific programs; rather, they are emotional set pieces about the national debate that moves America forward. The MSNBC brand “is about ideas and change and making the country a better place,” Mr. Griffin said. “It’s an umbrella that’s pretty wide, but that does have a progressive sensibility,” he continued. “We’re confident. We’re strong. Let’s not live in the past, let’s not live by fear.” Two 60-second television commercials that introduce the message are patriotic and poignant. One begins with a child learning how to walk and intersperses scenes of war, rescues in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, a peace protest and the moon landing. “When we understand the world around us, we lose our fear and we move ahead,” the narrator says. The other 60-second commercial says, “Starting today, may the ideas that advance our country, no matter who or where they come from, win.” The remaining commercials feature individual hosts like Mr. Olbermann, who is shown in his office writing one of his trademark commentaries, and Lawrence O’Donnell, the new 10 p.m. host, who is overheard saying, “We deserve answers, so we don’t ask the same questions tomorrow.” Stelter also doesn’t consider that MSNBC can be cited for pushing a lot of fear — first, fear of the impending Bush dictatorship, and now, fear of a violent Tea Party movement, not to mention pushing the fear of disastrous global warming. Stelter even suggests that it’s “coincidental” (instead of an obvious part of the branding) that Obama is featured in MSNBC ads: Mr. Obama is shown only briefly in the two 60-second commercials. He is both seen and heard in a video about the ad campaign that was screened for MSNBC employees on Monday, coincidentally summing up the channel’s progressive message. “We can go backward, or we can keep moving forward,” the president was shown saying in a June speech at Carnegie Mellon University. “And I don’t know about you, but I want to move forward.” There are no voices critical of MSNBC in the Times article.
Continue reading …Image credit: Which? It’s a common assumption in green foodie circles that the more information we get about our food, the better off we’ll be. But that’s not always the case. From labeling food miles in Japan to stickers announcing that produce is air freighted , there has been an explosion in labels, schemes and metrics designed to communicate different aspects of sustainab… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …If only this was a hoax. Yes, that’s some bitter talk alright, because this Motorola MT716 from China Mobile is almost the perfect Droid that we once had on our dusty wish list: a similar slider form factor but with a hard-cap keyboard, as opposed to one with spongy mashers. In fact, eagle-eyed readers might have already spotted that this is the exact same keyboard as featured on the Cliq . Compared to its distant relative, other differences on this OPhone include an 8 megapixel camera (with dual-LED flash and 720p camcorder feature), an extra VGA front-facing camera, TD-SCDMA radio, WAPI connectivity (WiFi-compatible), and CMMB TV streaming; otherwise, you’ll find the same weedy 600MHz TI OMAP3430 chip, 480 x 854 LCD , AGPS and Bluetooth 2.1 inside. Now if you’ll excuse us — we have a petition to write up. Motorola’s MT716 OPhone launched in China, looks just like a Droid with Cliq’s keyboard originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 10:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Pedal power epitomises the type of solutions we need to embrace for a brighter future: efficient, accessible, human scale, non-polluting, simple, field-repairable, etc. Hence this little homage. We begin with a link to an external slideshow from ABC Online , showcasing 12 examples of the wonderful power of the pedal. The photograph above, from that collection, shows Vietnamese bicycles transporting bamboo fish traps. Another, shown after the jump, highlights the bicycle generating electricity to operate a fan cooling Filipino jail inmates. See another, amongst that c… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Fresh from mocking Americans concerned about illegal immigration ( and from making a mockery of a congressional hearing ), comic Stephen Colbert showed his disdain for another group of Americans: Tea Partiers. In the introduction to the Oct. 4 “Colbert Report” on Comedy Central, the host said, “Then, the Tea Party reaches out to kids – I assume for help with spelling.” That’s a harmless enough little joke, except that it comes from the man who once called Sara Palin ” a f***ing retard .” In keeping with hi theme of contempt for conservative America, without pause, Colbert said, “And my guest Eugene Robinson has a new book about the four groups that make up black America.” Robinson, a left-wing Washington Post columnist, recently called the American electorate “spoiled brats” for their impending electoral rejection of President Obama’s big government policies. Robinson, who is African-American, also called Dr. Alveda King – the niece of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. – a ” figurehead or puppet ” for participating in Glenn Beck’s “Restoring Honor” rally. In response to Beck’s rally and the Tea Parties, Colbert and fellow Comedy Central host Jon Stewart are staging their own simultaneous demonstrations in Washington, D.C. the weekend before the Nov. 2 midterm election. Colbert’s “March to Keep Fear Alive” and Stewart’s “Rally to Restore Sanity” are obviously intended to mock the conservative grassroots uprising while giving an immediate pre-election shot in the arm to liberal election hopes. Colbert and Stewart are wildly successful. Just think how much more successful they’d be if they didn’t show obvious contempt for half of the American people.
Continue reading …Image credit: Duke University Duke University’s Bleed Blue, Live Green campaign created a clamor of attention from fans wanting to get hold of a limited edition shirt. So much so, we had to post a follow up on where to find the green Duke shirts . I’m wondering if the University’s latest initiative will be quite so popular—because Duke is getting into pig poop…. Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …NVIDIA’s Fermi architecture has been around the block or two in the consumer universe , but it’s touching the company’s pro line today with the introduction of the entry-level Quadro 600 and mid-range Quadro 2000. Boasting 96 and 192 CUDA processor cores, respectively, these guys utilize the new Scalable Geometry Engine technology to “deliver dramatically higher performance across leading CAD and DCC applications such as SolidWorks and Autodesk 3ds Max.” More interesting still, however, is the design of the Quadro 600 — it touts a half-height form factor that can be crammed into just about anything. Oh, and both of these boards have 1GB of graphics memory and are compatible with 3D Vision Pro — you know, in case you need a round of Avatar between research projects. The pair is available now in North America for $199 and $599 in order of mention, with plenty more of the nitty-gritty awaiting you beyond the break. Continue reading NVIDIA brings Fermi to the entry-level professionals with Quadro 600 and 2000 GPUs NVIDIA brings Fermi to the entry-level professionals with Quadro 600 and 2000 GPUs originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 09:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …American Values president Gary Bauer on Monday said the audience at ABC’s “Holy War” special edition of “This Week” was stocked with people that support radical Islam and the building of the Ground Zero mosque. As NewsBusters reported after Sunday’s program, host Christiane Amanpour presented a tremendously skewed view of so-called American Islamophobia cueing up advocates of the premise while attempting to discredit skeptics. One of those in attendance was Bauer who in a radio interview with WOR’s Steve Malzberg the following day said the audience was also stacked to support the Islamophobia view (audio follows with transcript and commentary): GARY BAUER: When we got there, we had all been told we can bring guests. So we ended up getting there, and our guests didn’t get in. But when Daisy Khan, the wife of the Imam planning the Ground Zero mosque, walked into the room where the audience was, this raucous cheering broke out. When Franklin Graham and myself and those on the other side walked into the room, there was stony silence. So in a city, New York, where 70 percent of the public is against the mosque at Ground Zero, they had managed to put together an audience where 90 percent of the audience was on the side of radical Islam and the side of building the mosque. STEVE MALZBERG, HOST: So you’re telling me that your guests and other guests who were on your side of the issue were not permitted in. What did they say? BAUER: Well, what ended up happening was that the audience just, the audience they had in there filled the seats very early on, so… MALZBERG: The pro-Islamic, the pro-Islamic audience. BAUER: Yes, exactly. And I know that there were some 9/11 families that were told they would be able to attend as guests of the one gentleman that had lost his son at Ground Zero. You know, they didn’t get in. There were a few other 9/11 families there, but not the others. The producers of this show and everyone at ABC News should be ashamed of themselves for this despicably biased presentation concerning this issue. That our media are once again not only on the opposite side of the American people on a key matter facing the nation, but would also do whatever they could to alter public perception should go counter to the basic tenets of journalsim. Sadly, this entire episode has demonstrated the unashamed advocacy mentality so prevalent in so-called news outlets today. It’s a wonder that anything truly American is at all reflected on the airwaves at this moment in history.
Continue reading …When the iPad finally dropped in April it was greeted with the expected fanfare, but opinions were rather divided about whether the thing would be a long-term success — even amongst we humble writers. Six months on there can be no doubt, with the tablet selling 4.5 million units in its first quarter of availability according to CNBC . The truly magical iPhone ? That managed a (relatively) paltry one million units in the same timeframe after launch, while the now ubiquitous DVD player pushed just 350,000 in its first four months of availability. You know what that means: it’s time for analysts to start breaking out the hyperboles — again. Colin McGranahan from Bernstein Research says “the iPad is a runaway success of unprecedented proportion,” meanwhile Pete Najarian from TradeMonster.com calls it a “total media device” and concludes “there’s not much a PC can do that you can’t do on an iPad.” That last bit is certainly debatable, and you know exactly where you can debate it. Just keep it respectful, yeah? iPad becomes ‘most quickly adopted non-phone electronic product,’ analysts get giddy originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 09:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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