Image: Flickr via OregonDOT The electricity grid in Germany is actually in trouble because of too much solar power feeding into it. At least that’s what the chairman of the DENA agency , which advises the government on energy, has warned. Thanks in part to subsidies by the German government, solar installations have been spreading like wildfire.
Continue reading …Farmland near Mysore during the dry season, photo: Nikhil Verma / Creative Commons Some new risk analysis from Maplecroft ranks Bangladesh, India, Madagascar as the top three most at-risk nations for climate change. Nepal, Mozambique, the Philippines, Haiti, Afghanistan, Zimbabwe and Burma–as in, the usual suspects–round out the top ten. At the other end of the scale Norway, Finland, Iceland, Ireland and Swede… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …The last we heard about Acer’s Liquid Metal smartphone, an Android 2.2 unit with a 3.6-inch display and a lovely aluminum exterior, it was getting ready for a UK launch at the end of October . There’s just a little over a week left to meet that date, and all we have to show are some decidedly unofficial photos from Droid Sans . The first pic, above, shows off a very smudged up looking Liquid Metal (or what is said to be a Liquid Metal at least), but after that are photos of two mystery devices. The first of those (pictured below) has the same… distinctively lengthy form factor of the GW990 , while the other device is a tablet that we’ve not laid eyes on before. It looks to be running Android 2.2 (or later) and is said to be “big enough to shift the iPad.” We’re not sure exactly how to parse that bit of auto-translation, but maybe it’s a coded reference to JT Wang’s prediction of doom for the iPad’s market share. Continue reading Acer’s Liquid Metal spotted in the wild, chilling with two mystery friends Acer’s Liquid Metal spotted in the wild, chilling with two mystery friends originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 14:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …An 11-year-old boy led police in Marion, South Carolina on a police chase two days in a row earlier this week. Police released dashcam video from the first chase in a pick-up truck taken from the city fire department. (Oct. 21)
Continue reading …When Microsoft announced its Adaptive Keyboard , backed by an LCD not entirely unlike the Optimus Maximus and its dynamic ways, the company said it’d be hosting a contest to see which students could come up with the best way to use the thing. Now it’s time to look at some of the results. Highlights? One app, with the press of a button, replaces your keys with the icons on your desktop. Another brings Windows Media Player playlist control to your fingertips, and a third lets coders easily navigate namespace, class, and member variables. Oh, and then there’s the app that dynamically remaps your keys to frustrate keyloggers — and users. There are lots more, all presented by some generally uncomfortable looking students over the course of the video embedded after the break. Warning: it’s 24 minutes long, so you’d best get a refill before clicking “Play.” Continue reading Students get their hands on Microsoft’s Adaptive Keyboard, adapt it to their nefarious ways (video) Students get their hands on Microsoft’s Adaptive Keyboard, adapt it to their nefarious ways (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 13:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …So, remember that whole bailout thing that began a couple of years ago? It’s not over yet, at least not when it comes to those delinquent housing giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. According to new government projections, the Fannie and Freddie bailout fiasco could run up a $363 billion bailout bill for taxpayers through 2013. And as The Los Angeles Times reported Thursday, taxpayers are now the proud owners of almost 80% of both companies—lucky us!
Continue reading …Entrance to Zeta Rapid on Chile’s Futaleufu River. Photo via nwrafting Measuring our water footprint is the first step toward reaching efficiency. More businesses and communities are getting serious about these measurements, putting them on par with carbon and energy accounting . But Chile is getting extra detailed about its footprint, breaking it down into green blue and grey, to ensure a complete understanding of how water is sourced and cycled through the syste… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Police were clashing with demonstrators in the French city of Lyon Thursday, as street protests continued over plans to increase the retirement age to 62. The government, however, was moving to cut short Senate debate over the issue. (Oct. 21)
Continue reading …That’s how Karl Rove describes Obama’s closing message : At an April 2008 fund-raiser in San Francisco, Barack Obama let loose with his famous “they cling to guns or religion” line. Last Saturday at a West Newton, Mass., fund-raiser, the president said, “facts and science and argument [do] not seem to be winning . . . because we’re hard-wired not to always think clearly when we’re scared.” Memo to White House: Calling voters stupid is not a winning strategy. The economy and jobs are the No. 1 issue in every poll. Yet Mr. Obama of late has talked about immigration reform and weighed in (unprompted) on the Ground Zero mosque. He devoted Labor Day to an ineffective Mideast peace initiative. He demeans large blocs of voters and now is ending his midterm pitch with attacks on nonexistent foreign campaign contributions and weird assertions that “the Empire is striking back.” Much of the blame lies with the president, who has left his party with an incoherent closing argument 12 days before the election. In a penetrating piece in the New York Times Magazine on Oct. 12, Peter Baker profiles a president who “believes he is the smartest person in any room,” according to one prominent Democratic lawmaker. He and his aides think that the core of their difficulties is “a communications problem” and the result of a “miscalculation” that the president could “forge genuine bipartisan coalitions.” Communications? After the president devoted 58 speeches and events to health care over a 51-week period, his bill grew progressively less popular. The comment about bipartisanship is a joke. As a candidate Mr. Obama spoke about it, but as a president whose party enjoyed massive majorities in both houses of Congress, he ignored it. He could have severely weakened his opposition by drawing them in. Instead, Mr. Obama strengthened Republicans by taunting them with their seeming irrelevance, and he fashioned legislation that only Democrats could vote for. Now many of them will lose their jobs because of their votes. I’m actually kind of surprised Obama hasn’t asked the networks for time to make a last minute TV speech to once again remind us we’re not smart enough to understand his wise ways and that our only hope is continuing Democrat majorities in both houses of Congress. Barry and Michelle did try YouTube for a last minute pitch.
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