Sunday, August 29, 2010

Attention, Indirection, Education

hth: 'functioning', on a personal level [sub-s5,s1], depends on indirection of reactions, asynchronous exchange of information for the purpose of density creation.
.) lower or change your expectations re:interchange (why would you expect an immediate response?)
.) pair-programming-like processes need different physical setup; two or three people sitting in a group, laptops on their lap! - or else ;)
.) sequence of writing (collaborative tool) and talking, talking while typing, listening while reading (remember: the driver-role), short intervals: lively interaction, one result.
.) finish, publish, next-action
===


I, Cringely . The Pulpit . War of the Worlds | PBS
http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/2008/pulpit_20080321_004574.html



  • Here, buried in my sixth paragraph, is the most important nugget: we've reached the point in our (disparate) cultural adaptation to computing and communication technology that the younger technical generations are so empowered they are impatient and ready to jettison institutions most of the rest of us tend to think of as essential, central, even immortal. They are ready to dump our schools.
Attention 102
http://blip.tv/file/730117

  • "we've reached the point in our (disparate) cultural adaptation to computing and communication technology that the younger technical generations are so empowered they are impatient and ready to jettison institutions most of the rest of us tend to think of as essential, central, even immortal."



===


The main reasons the cyber-culture revolution, taking place is so different than any other are twofold: First it is incremental and in that is almost invisible to the naked eye and second it is happening at a speed for which the dilapidated conceptual worldview of old is less than adequate. But these two reasons are embedded in a larger context, that of the infosphere ecology, or infocologies (the ecology of immersive, real time, on the fly information). 


http://spacecollective.org/Wildcat/5462/A-Cyber-Soaring-Humanity


===


http://piratepad.net/r20100829tid001
open talk
http://rsample.heroku.com/controlstrips/15
open write
http://wikilicious.blogspot.com/2010/08/i-cringely-pulpit-war-of-worlds-pbs.html
publish
http://fruehlingsrolle.googlecode.com/hg/scratchpad/re-search.html
some result

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

security 08/26/2010


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

FactCheckED.org list

  • AEI describes itself as dedicated to “limited government, private enterprise, individual liberty and responsibility, vigilant and effective defense and foreign policies, political accountability and open debate.” Christopher DeMuth, a former White House aide to Richard Nixon and head of Ronald Reagan’s Task Force on Regulatory Relief, serves as AEI’s president. AEI’s chairman is self-made commodities billionaire Bruce Kovner, and AEI’s board of trustees is heavily loaded with current and former corporate CEOs. Scholars and fellows include Lynne Cheney, wife of the vice president, and other prominent Republicans including former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Sen. Fred Thompson, and Richard Perle, one of the most vocal supporters of the Iraq war. AEI does not disclose donors but says that in 2003 it received 36 percent of its funding from individuals, 35 percent from foundations and 23 percent from corporations.

    tags: pro-business republican factchecked

    • AEI’s standards for factual accuracy are high, though its reports have a distinctly partisan tilt.
    • Campaign Finance; Civil Rights; Congress; Courts & Law; Crime; Domestic Policy; Economy & Jobs; Education; Energy & Environment; Government Spending; Health & Healthcare Insurance; Immigration; Medicare/Medicaid; National Security; Social Security; Taxes; Trade & Foreign Policy; Welfare & Income; Women's Issues
  • tags: factchecked politics research thinktank government conservative

  • tags: factchecked

    • The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research is a private, nonpartisan, not-for-profit institution dedicated to research and education on issues of government, politics, economics, and social welfare. Founded in 1943, AEI is home to some of America's most accomplished public policy experts--from economics, law, political science, defense and foreign policy studies, ethics, theology, health care, and other fields. The Institute sponsors research and conferences and publishes books, monographs, and periodicals. Its website, www.aei.org, posts its publications, videos and transcripts of its conferences, biographies of its scholars and fellows, and schedules of upcoming events.
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    • Disclosure. AEI scholars and fellows are required to disclose in their published work any affiliations they may have with organizations with a direct interest in the subject of that work. AEI discloses the source of project-specific donations to research on subjects in which the donors have a material interest. AEI scholars, fellows, and officers provide annual reports to AEI's president listing all of their outside activities; the president then provides a summary report to the Nominating and Governance Committee of the AEI Board of Trustees, which includes at least one long-time trustee and one new trustee. The president may bring particular issues to the attention of this committee or to an internal committee of senior scholars and fellows for their review and counsel. The Nominating and Governance Committee also reviews the commercial, professional, and civic engagements of individuals being considered for election to the Board of Trustees. Whenever AEI engages in a substantial commercial transaction with a firm with which a trustee is affiliated, that trustee may not be involved in AEI's decision on the transaction, and its nature and rationale are presented to the other trustees for their approval.
    • Reputation. Honesty and integrity--and the value of maintaining one's reputation for honesty and integrity--are critical means of dealing with conflicts of interest. When individuals are being considered for appointment to AEI's research faculty, management and staff positions, or advisory bodies, or for election to its Board of Trustees, their personal honesty and integrity are as important as their aptitude, knowledge, experience, and skills for the position in question. AEI's reputation for honesty and integrity is guarded zealously, and AEI's prominence in policy debate provides a strong incentive to continue to guard this reputation. The Institute would never accept a donation that was conditioned on predetermined research conclusions or recommendations or that otherwise compromised the intellectual independence of its scholars. AEI's long association with a set of philosophical principles--such as limited government, competitive markets, and individual freedom and responsibility--and its thousands of publications applying these principles to specific policy and political problems provide ready measures for judging the integrity of each new publication.
    • Intrinsic quality. AEI is committed to the proposition that arguments concerning government policies and economic and social arrangements should be evaluated on their own terms and intrinsic merits. This is not an "ethics policy"--it is a precept of all of the Institute's activities and ambitions for improving public dialogue. But it carries an important ethical implication: in striving to produce work that is lucid, precise, informative, and wise, AEI hopes that the honesty and integrity of its work, also, can be judged on its face.
    • AEI welcomes comments on the policies and procedures described here. They should be sent to Arthur C. Brooks, President, American Enterprise Institute, 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20036, or Arthur.Brooks@aei.org.
  • Breakthechain.org says that its mission is "to educate people about the shortcomings of e-mail chain letters as a means to distribute information and to empower all users of the Internet to make informed, logical decisions about the information they distribute." The organization is supported by advertising income and donations from users. Visitors can search for particular e-mail chain letters, browse them by category, or get information on the most recent viral e-mails.

    tags: factchecked

    • Breakthechain.org is an excellent source of information on the origins and accuracy of the vast array of e-mail chain letters that circulate continually.
    • Hoaxes & Urban Legends
  • Brookings is the oldest of the Washington-based “think tanks,” tracing its origins back to 1916 and founder Robert Somers Brookings, a wealthy St. Louis businessman. It has very strong academic credentials.  Reports from the institute and its scholars can be viewed by research programs, policy centers and research projects. The list of scholars and staff tilts to the Democratic side but also includes a sprinkling of Republicans. The president of Brookings is Strobe Talbott, a former journalist and ambassador-at-large in the Clinton administration. The board of trustees includes prominent Democrats including Richard C. Blum, the husband of Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, and former Harvard University President Lawrence H. Summers, who was secretary of the treasury under President Clinton. But the board also includes Kenneth M. Duberstein, a Republican lobbyist who was President Reagan’s chief of staff in 1988-89, and corporate officials whose donations favor Republicans, such as Michael H. Jordan, CEO of EDS Corp. Brookings says it is funded by “foundations, corporations, and individuals, and to a lesser extent by endowment income.”

    tags: factchecked

    • Brookings has a well-earned reputation for scholarly excellence. Its reports are, for the most part, clearly written and free from partisan slant. They can be fine guides to understanding how government programs work, or don't work.
    • Liberal
    • Campaign Finance; Civil Rights; Congress; Courts & Law; Crime; Domestic Policy; Economy & Jobs; Education; Energy & Environment; Government Spending; Guns; Health & Healthcare Insurance; Immigration; Medicare/Medicaid; National Security; Social Security; Taxes; Trade & Foreign Policy; Welfare & Income; Women's Issues
  • Cato Institute describes its work as broadening public-policy debate on “individual liberty, limited government, free markets and peace.” For the last decade, Cato has supported Social Security reform through private accounts and championed deregulation of the drug industry. Cato was founded in 1977 by Edward H. Crane, a chartered financial analyst and former vice president of Alliance Capital Management Group. Cato’s board is composed of business leaders and conservative economists, including David H. Koch, one of the largest donors to conservative causes, but it also includes former Democratic donor Richard J. Dennis, a longtime advocate of decriminalization of marijuana. Most of Cato's funding comes from private foundations and individuals, with only a small amount from corporations. Cato argues for free markets and against taxes and government regulation. To that extent its philosophy is consistent with Republican ideology, but it also strongly rejects government infringement on individual rights and opposes broad provisions of the Patriot Act as “incompatible with civil liberties.” Extremely skeptical of foreign military intervention, Cato’s scholars also disagreed with the Bush administration’s 2003 invasion of Iraq. Cato’s publications and reports can be explored by research area, which include defense and national security, constitutional issues, and a variety of domestic issues. The institute hosts a separate site focusing on Social Security.

    tags: factchecked

    • Cato's research is thorough and well-documented, and advances a libertarian agenda.
    • Libertarian
    • Abortion; Campaign Finance; Civil Rights; Congress; Courts & Law; Crime; Domestic Policy; Economy & Jobs; Education; Energy & Environment; Government Spending; Guns; Health & Healthcare Insurance; Immigration; Medicare/Medicaid; National Security; Social Security; Taxes; Trade & Foreign Policy; Welfare & Income; Women's Issues
  • The Center for Public Integrity is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that publishes investigative journalism projects on issues of public concern. The center’s mission, according to its Web site, is to “make institutional power more transparent and accountable.”Its reports, as well as databases it compiles, are available on its site and disseminated to other journalists, as well as policymakers and scholars. The center has tackled projects in such areas as the environment, public health, lobbying and campaign finance. Investigative reports have included: “The Climate Change Lobby,” about the universe of interests seeking to shape the debate on climate change; “Tobacco Underground,” about the illicit trafficking of that substance; “The Transportation Lobby,” about the obstacles to fashioning a coherent transportation policy; and “Who’s Behind the Financial Meltdown,” about the banks behind the subprime lenders. The center encourages whistleblowers to send it information. Every four years, during a presidential election, the center publishes “The Buying of the President,” an examination of the role of money in the campaign.A board of directors, made up mainly of prominent journalists and journalism educators, oversees the center. Its staff includes journalists, Freedom of Information Act experts, researchers and data experts. The center is funded by foundations, including the Carnegie Corporation, the Rauch Foundation, the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Park Foundation and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, according to its 2008 annual report. It doesn’t accept money from labor unions, governments or anonymous donors, but individuals also contribute.

    tags: factchecked

    • The Center for Public Integrity conducts time-consuming, detail-oriented investigative work that requires the kind of resources that many journalists at mainstream media organizations don’t have.
    • Campaign Finance; Congress; Consumer Safety; Domestic Policy; Energy & Environment; Government Spending; Health & Healthcare Insurance; Lobbying
  • The Center for Responsive Politics tracks political donations and their influence on public policy. It keeps an exhaustive database of all federally disclosed donations received by presidential and congressional candidates. Visitors may find, for example, how much the tobacco industry or the pharmaceutical industry has donated in a given election and to whom. The organization accepts no money from political parties or corporations. Funding comes from the Ford, Carnegie, Joyce and Sunlight foundations and the Pew Charitable Trusts, along with individual contributions. The records maintained on the Web site are searchable by donor, recipient, state, industry, locality, year and election cycle. Visitors can find campaign finance profiles for all elected officials, which include top contributors and campaign expenditures, as well as personal financial disclosures for all election cycles in which the official participated. Visitors may also enter a ZIP code or state to see how much people who live there have donated and to whom.

    tags: factchecked

    • Journalists and partisans on both sides of the campaign-finance debate rely on this well-designed Web site to track money raised and spent by candidates, parties and independent political groups.
    • Neutral
    • Campaign Finance; Congress
    • CBPP generally argues for more spending for social programs (or fewer cuts) and against cutting taxes or raising military spending. The facts it cites in support of its arguments are generally solid and well-documented, though sometimes one-sided.
    • Liberal
    • Government Spending; Health & Healthcare Insurance; Medicare/Medicaid; Social Security; Taxes; Welfare & Income

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Company list // high tech



    • Safran is a leading international high-technology group with three core businesses: aerospace, defense and security. Operating worldwide, the Group has 54,500 employees and annual sales exceeding 10 billion euros.







    • MorphoTrak, Inc., a subsidiary of Safran USA, provides biometric and identity management solutions to the U.S. and Canadian markets. Formed in April 2009 from the merger of Sagem Morpho Inc. and Motorola's biometric division, Printrak, MorphoTrak’s markets include law enforcement, border control, civil identification, facility/IT security and access control. MorphoTrak and its global parent Sagem Sécurité - part of the Safran group - are leading innovators in large fingerprint identification systems, facial and iris recognition, as well as identification technologies such as smart cards, secure travel documents, e-passports, and drivers’ licenses. MorphoTrak employs over 450 persons in the U.S., with headquarters near Washington D.C., major corporate facilities in Anaheim, CA and Tacoma, WA, and regional facilities throughout the U.S.







Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Wetter, Wien, Woskau

delicious/wikilicious Tags: , , ,
 
Megayacht "Apoise" (Project Marlin)

Image by schmense via Flickr

REKORD-HITZEWELLE

Moskau stöhnt unter heißestem Juli seit 130 Jahren

29.07.2010 12:24

Die russische Hauptstadt Moskau stöhnt unter einer Rekordhitze. Der Bevölkerung macht der heißeste Juli seit 130 Jahren deutlich zu schaffen. Moskau ist zudem in dichten Rauch gehüllt, denn im Umland wüten zahlreiche Waldbrände und Torffeuer, die beißenden Qualm in die Stadt drücken. (dcrs/fm 29.07.2010 12:24)

===

06.08.10|WALDBRÄNDE (43)

Hitzewelle lässt Todesrate in Moskau explodieren

Die Todesrate in Moskau ist im Vergleich zum Juli 2009 um 50 Prozent angestiegen. Das Atmen in der Stadt fällt den Bewohnern schwer. (welt.de)

===

Wer in Moskau lebt, muss derzeit hart im Nehmen sein. Schwere Torffeuer und verheerende Waldbrände überziehen die Stadt mit beißendem Rauch. Dazu kommt eine Rekord-Hitzewelle mit Temperaturen von fast 40 Grad. (spiegel.de/wissenschaft/natur)

===

Moskau: Hitze und Smog – Anzahl der Notrufe steigt dramatisch

In Moskau ist die Luftverschmutzung inzwischen so schlimm, dass die Botschaften den Familienangehörigen ihrer Mitarbeiter empfehlen, das Land zu verlassen.

Wegen der seit Tagen anhaltenden Hitze und der dicken Rauch- und Staubwolke über Moskau sterben in der russischen Hauptstadt mittlerweile fast doppelt so viele Menschen wie sonst. Normalerweise seien es jeden Tag 360 bis 380 Menschen, sagte der Chef des Gesundheitsamtes, Alexander Selzowski, am Montag vor der Stadtverwaltung und fügte hinzu: "Jetzt sind wir bei etwa 700." Ursache des Anstiegs seien vor allem Hitzeschläge. Die Anzahl der Notrufe in der Stadt mit rund 10,5 Millionen Einwohnern sei um ein Viertel auf 10.000 angestiegen. Es gebe mehr Herzprobleme, Asthma und Schlaganfälle. Selzowski verwahrte sich zugleich gegen Vorwürfe, das das wahre Ausmaß der Folgen von Hitze und Waldbränden verschleiert werde. Es gebe keine Geheimnisse, sagte er.

[...]

Ernteausfälle

Die Dürre in Russland lässt inzwischen auch schwere Ernteausfälle erwarten. Vergangene Woche verhängte Ministerpräsident Wladimir Putin bereits ein Exportverbot für Getreide, was umgehend die Preise auf dem Weltmarkt ansteigen ließ. Experten zufolge dürfte die Weizenernte mit etwa 43 Millionen Tonnen um ein Drittel geringer ausfallen als 2009. Auch bei Zuckerrüben wird mit geringeren Erträgen gerechnet. Das dürfte Experten zufolge aber nicht zu mehr Importen führen, da Russland über ausreichende Reserven verfügt.

(reuters/hahn)

===

Hitzewelle in Moskau (50 Tote)

http://www.heute.at/news/welt/Experte-zu-Wetterkrise-Erst-der-Anfang;art414,389433

Warum das Weltklima so verrückt spielt, erklärt jetzt Experte Mojib Latif, Meteorologe an der Universität in Kiel. „Das Klima auf der ganzen Welt hängt zusammen. Wenn es irgendwo heiß ist, muss es an einem anderen Ort regnen. Was aber jetzt in Russland passiert, ist nicht mehr normal, sondern sehr extrem.“

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