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See Inside Solyndra’s New Manufacturing Plant (Video)

Image via Solyndra video Ever wonder what the inside of a solar panel manufacturing plant looks like, and wanted to see the steps of the process? What about the making of cylindrical solar panels? Solyndra, a company we first started watching a couple years ago as they announced their distinctive solar technology, has released a very cool video highlighting their new Fab 2 plant, and shows off some of the key steps in creating their rather unusual solar panels. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Is "Peak Fertilizer" Nearer Than We Think? New Report Fuels Concern

Image credit: Soil Association Earlier this week John was musing about how “peak fertilizer” could make manure a valuable commodity once more , and if Gene Logsdon’s guide to managing manure is to be believed, some mega-farmers are getting back into… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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(H/T to maymay ) In the words of Emily Litella, “Never mind.” Never mind that I thought the rest of the tax cut deal was worth swallowing, because that was when I thought there were 13 months’ additional unemployment benefits in the picture. There aren’t. It only maintains the status quo. According to Calculated Risk , this is just the same kind of “bridge” legislation we’ve seen before, in which people who were eligible for the next level of extensions (but couldn’t get them because they expired) are now eligible to move on to the next extension level. It’s not another tier. There are no new benefits . You still can’t collect any more than 99 weeks. All it does is maintain the same system that was already in place. This deal isn’t worth a bucket of warm spit, as my mother used to say. Arthur Delaney at Huffington Post: The programs provide up to 73 weeks of federally-funded benefits for workers who exhaust 26 weeks of state benefits . The average weekly benefit is about $300, and the total cost of a yearlong reauthorization is roughly $60 billion. Republicans and conservative Democrats ostensibly concerned about the deficit impact of the benefits have blocked several attempts to renew them in the past couple weeks, but they’ve signaled they will relent if the benefits are attached to the even-costlier tax cuts for the rich. Some 800,000 laid off workers have already received cutoff notices, and another 1.2 million will stop receiving benefits by the end of the month unless Congress reauthorizes the recently-lapsed programs. . In other words, please curl up in your cardboard box and die. We wouldn’t want to upset the bond market, would we? It’s simply amazing that the White House is allowing the press (and the voters) to think otherwise. I mean, does Obama think they won’t notice when their checks are shut off? This is the same trick they pulled back in March. The 99ers weren’t able to rally the troops because the media (and the general public) thought Congress had approved additional aid, when all they did was fund the existing extensions. Yes, it preserves the existing benefits. Well, why the hell shouldn’t they? Obama expects applause for this? In the name of common decency, this shouldn’t even be an issue. And in exchange for this emergency support, basic humane aid, we’re supposed to give away the store so that millionaires and billionaires can make even more money? All this money for war, for banks, for big business, and nothing for the people getting buried by the economic fallout. Bah, humbug.

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Major tech manufacturers to drop VGA by 2015, Apple wonders what took ‘em so long

A syndicate of consumer electronics titans including AMD, Dell, Intel, Lenovo, Samsung and LG announced this week that its products will collectively drop support for VGA by 2015. Saying sayonara to the 20+ year-old analog technology is pretty self explanatory to us in this day and age, but the council of doom apparently felt compelled to cite DisplayPort’s and HDMI’s benefits of increased energy efficiency, smaller size and support for higher-resolutions as proof the move wasn’t personal — just business. AMD plans to lead the charge by starting the VGA removal process in 2013 and even intends to go the extra mile by stripping DVI-I and low voltage differential signaling technology (LVDS) support too. We definitely side with AMD’s desire to focus on cutting edge standards like Displayport 1.2 and HDMI 1.4a sooner, but if plenty of lead time and “going green” excuses help everyone else involved in the sentencing sleep better at night, then so be it. Continue reading Major tech manufacturers to drop VGA by 2015, Apple wonders what took ‘em so long Major tech manufacturers to drop VGA by 2015, Apple wonders what took ‘em so long originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 10:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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What Is Nature Worth? (Video)

Image via What Is Nature Worth video What is nature really worth? We have become adept at placing a value on nature’s products, but as a short video produced by University of Minnesota’s Institute on the Environment points out, we don’t really understand the immense value of nature’s services. The video, inspired by the Natural Capital Project, looks at global biodiversity loss and how it impacts us financially, socially, and ecologically. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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ElBaradei calls for Egypt presidential vote boycott

Egyptian opposition activist Mohamed ElBaradei slams parliamentary elections, warns of violence if authorities impede reform rallies

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Divided We Fall? The Role of Debate in the Environmental Movement

Image credit: “Professional Disagreement” by pasukaru76 , used under Creative Commons license. When I asked, in my own skeptic atheist way, whether we must embrace the sacred to survive peak oil , commenter robertrfiske urged us to not “feed that beast” of division. After all, he argued, ideological differences will be exploited by opponents of the green movement to bring us down. We heard similar arguments when Lloyd… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Beekeepers & Activists Demand EPA Remove Pesticide Linked to Bee Deaths

Image credit: wolfpix , used under Creative Commons license. The puzzle of the red bees of Brooklyn may now be solved , but conclusive answers regarding the larger honeybee mystery of Colony Collapse Disorder remain elusive. Nevertheless, in my roundup post about the epic fight to save the bees , I noted that the British Beekeepers … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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C&L Opening Bell: Special No-One-Cares-About-the-Deficit Edition!

enlarge If the last week has taught us anything it’s that nobody in Washington actually gives a damn about the deficit. That’s because a bipartisan consensus has emerged that we need to spend hundreds of billions of dollars per year to extend the Bush tax cuts. If these tax rates are kept in place over the next decade they’ll add around $4 trillion to the national debt. The bond markets have noticed this, for what it’s worth. The yield on the 10-year t-bill closed at 3.27% today, although as Krugman notes this is still very low from a historical perspective. All the same, let’s remember that when I started this here feature a mere two weeks ago the yield on the 10-year t-bill stood at 2.8%. And you can bet that if such a quick rise in bond yields over a two-week period had occurred because Obama decided to triple unemployment compensation or lower the retirement age or just write a $383 billion check to Mumia, the shrieking from the Washington Post editorial page would have be deafening. But because it involves tax cuts for rich people they give it a big thumbs up . So we’ve learned that nobody actually cares about the deficit. Which is just as well since it’s daft to enact deficit reduction during such horrible economic conditions. But it would be nice if we could all stop pretending, wouldn’t it? In other news: So who’s going to benefit the most from the Obama tax deal? Do you even have to ask ? Households with two paychecks each topping $100,000 stand to be the biggest winners from a proposed payroll tax cut under the agreement between the White House and congressional Republicans. The proposal to reduce the Social Security payroll tax for employees by 2 percentage points for one year means that those households would get as much as $82 more each week in after-tax income. By contrast, a single worker earning $10,000 would pocket less than $4 a week. Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy!!!! Almost four whole bucks!!!!!! And hey while we’re at it let’s extrapolate these figures out for a year: Households earning $200,000 will get $4,264 in extra income while lucky duckies earning $10,000 in annual income will get $208. Everybody wins and everybody has a share! Bank of America has ponied up $137 million in “Oopsie!” Cash to settle big rigging in the muni bond market. So why is this a big effing deal, you ask? Check out this classic Matt Taibbi piece for a more detailed explanation but it basically boils down to this: Many big banks like BofA and J.P. Morgan rigged bids for municipal bond contracts. Once these banks “won” their bids, they sold municipalities some truly toxic interest rate swaps that blew up on them when the housing market started to deteriorate. The result is that counties around the country have gone completely belly up. “So someone’s gonna go to jail for this horses*** right?!!?!!” you ask. HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA! No : Bank of America won’t be prosecuted as long as it continues to cooperate with the government. And that’s largely how Wall Street rolls: They swindle the hell out of everyone, leave a trail of ruin in their wake and then pay a little bit of “Oopsie!” Cash to make up for it. We live in a deeply corrupt and sick system. And lastly, we have this wonderful and charming statement from Citigroup’s Chairman Richard Parsons: Citigroup remains too “interwoven” to fail even after the government has plowed billions into rescuing the banking titan and Congress has passed laws taking aim at financial behemoths, Citi Chairman Richard Parsons told CNBC. “It’s not a question of too big to fail,” Parsons said in a live interview. “It’s a question of too interwoven in the fabric of the global financial life to fail.” Parsons said allowing Citi to fail previously or in the future would be akin to having “the heart, the pump of the economic system fail because then everybody else dies.” “It’s probably the most important private financial institution for maintaining our economic strength and presence around the world. You can’t let an institution like that go down,” he said. Some 95 percent of the Fortune 500 companies are clients of Citi, he added. “We can meet the needs, satisfy their needs and provide services to them in any country in the world in which they are operating. You have to have scale to be able to do that,” Parsons said. “You don’t have to be an enormous colossus to be deemed too big to fail. It’s the interrelatedness of your business to the global economy that matters.” This sounds… somewhat scary. Why hasn’t anyone come up with a financial reform bill that would break up some of these way-too-powerful megabanks? Oh right, some people did. And it failed . Democracy sucks. Have a super rest-of-your-day, friends!

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Tascam Portastudio for iPad could make you a four-track superstar all over again

If you’ve never experienced the joy of conveying four precisely-played tracks onto a single, rattly plastic cassette tape, prepare to see what you’ve been missing. The iconic Tascam Portastudio is coming to iPad in a very virtual way, a $10 app that presents a simplified replication of the original’s decidedly more tactile controls. You can mix four inputs to stereo output, which is stored on a pretend cassette — and can then share via iTunes or Soundcloud, which is rather more useful than a picture of a tape. It’s available right now for the iPad only, with no plans for a release on any other platform. Yeah, boo. Tascam Portastudio for iPad could make you a four-track superstar all over again originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 09:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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