Thursday, May 22, 2003

RE:Change Is Moving

Due to the tremendous response we've gotten on our RE:Change observations page, we've decided to give the RE:Change site room to grow by moving it to a new, improved location:

http://www.ruggedelegantliving.com/change/

Please re-set your bookmarks as all the new change observations will occur in the new location.

We've also transitioned to a Moveable Type content management system, which will allow us to add more editors while providing better search and categorization capabilities.

Thank you your continued support. Change is good.

-Tim
6:51:03 PM    

 Wednesday, May 21, 2003

Atkins Studies Report Meaty Results

USATODAY.com:

Just a month after his death, controversial diet guru Robert Atkins may be getting a little more respect. Two new studies in Thursday's prestigious New England Journal of Medicine show that dieters who followed the meat-lovers' low-carb diet lost more than twice as much weight as those on a traditional low-calorie, high-carb diet.

11:50:09 PM    

Camera Phones Send a Pretty Picture

Business 2.0:

In the quest to stay one step ahead of the law, organized crime syndicates have become the quintessential early adopters. Thus, it came as little surprise last week when the Mafia was accused of using camera phones and next-generation wireless networks to rig elections in Rome. Mobsters allegedly coerced voters into photographing themselves in the voting booth to prove they had cast their ballots for the Mafia's candidate. Morality aside, the scheme highlights one of the wireless industry's fastest growing, and most successful, trends: mobile photography.

9:19:50 PM    

LPGA To Hold First-Ever Open Monday Qualifying

The Golf Channel:

The Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) will hold its first-ever open Monday qualifying round at the start of the ShopRite LPGA Classic tournament week, on Monday, June 23, at the Marriott Seaview Resort Bay Course in Galloway Township, N.J., host site for the ShopRite LPGA Classic.

More 'girl power!'

-Tim
9:14:47 PM    


Flat-screen Displays Outsell CRTs by 4:1

PC Advisor -U.K.

High street retailer PC World today revealed a huge increase in flat-panel display sales following computer maker Advent's first ever TV debut.

Looks like Steve Jobs was right when he predicted the end of the CRT.

-Tim
9:10:15 PM    


Case of Mad Cow in Canada Prompts U.S. to Ban Its Beef A picture named mad.cow.canada.jpg

New York Times:

Mad cow disease was diagnosed in a cow in Canada today, and United States health authorities immediately placed a ban on imports of beef, cattle and animal feed from Canada.

10:44:37 AM    

World Health Body Adopts Historic Anti-Smoking Pact

New York Times:

More than 190 countries on Wednesday approved the first ever international treaty against smoking, including an advertising ban. By Reuters.

10:20:17 AM    

FedEx Delivery Trucks Go Green

New York Times

The FedEx Corporation announced today that it planned to replace 30,000 of its delivery trucks with energy-saving, environmentally friendly hybrid-powered vehicles.

The company said that it had already purchased 20 such trucks to begin building what would be one of the first big commercial fleets of hybrid vehicles. The new trucks [~] powered by both diesel engines and electric motors in a mix controlled by onboard computers [~] will be introduced over the next several months in four American cities


10:01:50 AM    
 Tuesday, May 20, 2003

Chimps Are Human, Gene Study Implies

New Scientist:

The latest twist in the debate over how much DNA separates humans from chimpanzees suggests we are so closely related that chimps should not only be part of the same taxonomic family, but also the same genus.

Could one also argue that humans are chimps?

-Tim
8:00:59 PM    


New Hope for AIDS Vaccine

BBC NEWS:

The search for an AIDS vaccine could be a step closer.

Researchers have discovered that a small group of Ugandans seem to have natural protection against HIV.

Sobering fact: 13 million children have been orphaned by AIDS.

-Tim
7:51:26 PM    


Pentagon Reassures Congress on Spy System

ABCNEWS.com :

The Pentagon assured Congress that its planned anti-terror surveillance system will only analyze legally acquired information and changed the name of the project to help allay privacy concerns that prompted congressional restrictions.

5:48:04 PM    

Nanotech Spins Futuristic Furnishings, Functional Fibers

Small Times:

Imagine pressing a dot on the arm of your sofa to start the kettle boiling. Davina Jackson enters the inventive world of fabric technology.

5:09:14 PM    

Discovery of Fast Winds Breathes Life into the Corpus of Climate and Energy Solutions

Business Wire:

Can we light up the world and fuel our vehicles without polluting the environment? The answer may be blowing in the wind.

Since the wind isn't always blowing, its reliability has been a barrier to its exploitation as an energy source. But wind's intermittence would no longer be a problem if wind farms were networked to reduce the effect of unproductive days at individual sites, the researchers say. Linking at least eight wind farms virtually eliminates the chance of a windless hour during the year.


11:14:26 AM    

Tainted Harvest

Mercury News:

The winter and spring harvests are nearly over in Southern California's Imperial Valley, where imported water has made the desert bloom for a century. But the miracle of irrigation seems a tainted blessing these days, with the discovery that the water is contaminated by the rocket fuel chemical perchlorate.

11:12:46 AM    
 Monday, May 19, 2003

New U.S. Policy on Dollar

Financial Times:

It is not uncommon for the emperor to be accused of having no clothes. It is less usual for the emperor himself to say he is naked and proud of it.

This is essentially what John Snow, the US Treasury secretary, has done with his recent comments on the strong dollar policy.


4:05:07 PM    

Anti-Terrorist System to Use 50X More Data Than Library of Congress

Guardian Unlimited:

To track and thwart terrorists, the Pentagon wants to give U.S. agents fingertip access to records from around the world that could fill the Library of Congress more than 50 times. The library's collection includes more than 18 million books.

3:50:43 PM    

America's Prison Popluation: 2 Million and Growing

International Herald Tribune:

The population of America's jails and prisons passed two million last year, for the first time in history. The United States has one of the highest incarceration rates in the world, and one that falls unevenly. An estimated 12 percent of African-American men between 20 and 34 are behind bars, more than seven times the rate for white men the same age.

There is clearly a direct tie-in with the research I saw presented last Wednesday. According to Mark Coehn in The Monetary Value of Saving a High Risk Youth, the lifetime cost to society of a career criminal is $1.3 million per prisoner. The cost to society, therefore, is $2.6 trillion to deal with 2 million prisoners.

What to do? Support an early prevention and intervention program, such as Friends of the Children, which finds seriously at-risk children and gives them a paid adult mentor from age 6 through 18.

An ounce of prevention is certainly worth a pound of cure.

-Tim
2:08:53 PM    


Girls Rule at the Intel Science Fair

CIOL:

Girls stole the show at the Intel International Science & Engineering fair held in Cleveland. The top awards this year went to Anila Madiraju, of Canada, Elena Glassman of Pennsylvania and Lisa Glukhovsky of Connecticut.

This is further evidence of the advances that girls are making at all levels.

-Tim
1:05:41 PM    


Where are the fans? Baseball attendance in free-fall

Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

There are explanations, and all of them are valid.

The weather has been brutal. Schools are just now letting out. The economy is restless. There was a war.


11:07:08 AM    

Iris Recognition Could Mean the End of Physical Privacy

PBS.org by Robert X. Cringely

Security and privacy always seem to be in the balance when we think about emerging digital technologies. Encryption vies with detection Entire industries are built around the opposite ideas of maintaining privacy and invading it.

Ultimately, we have to decide how much we are willing to give up in order to feel safe. Or at least, it seems we have that decision when actually we probably don't. Get ready for a brave new world where someone will likely know where you are at every second, whether it is at the movies with your kids or at the Bide-A-Wee Motel with your neighbor's wife.

Sounds much like the future envisioned in the recent Tom Cruise's movie, Minority Report.

-Tim
10:09:50 AM    

 Sunday, May 18, 2003

Medical Apparatus Imports Skyrocket in Beijing

People's Daily (China):

Beijing's imports of medical apparatus and medicines skyrocketed in the first four months of this year, according to statistics from Beijing Customs. Statistics show that Beijing imported 106 million US dollars worth of medical apparatus and instruments during the period, an increase of 54.6 percent over the same period last year. Affected by the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic, the imports consisted mainly of medical equipment such as respirators, monitors and X-ray machines.

12:45:44 AM    

Washington Post:

The World Health Organization, anxious to repair weaknesses exposed by the global struggle to contain the SARS epidemic, is seeking strong, new powers to fight future international threats.

A second-order effect from the SARS outbreak.

-Tim
12:36:40 AM    


Oracle Hires Top-Level Strategist

Mercury News

Oracle hired a prominent Wall Street analyst, Morgan Stanley's Charles Phillips, to a top strategy and business-development position, the Redwood Shores company said Friday.

"An analyst moving to a top position at a company like Oracle is unheard of,'' said Ron Glantz, a former director of research at PaineWebber.


12:31:21 AM    

A picture named annika.sorenstam.2.jpg Why Mixing With Men Matters

New York Times by Diana Nyad

(Annika) Sorenstam is a self-effacing, dignified, understated Swedish champion out of the Bjorn Borg mold. This woman is the center of the show, but she's no showwoman. She's teeing it up with the men in Fort Worth this week to find just where the ceiling stops at the top of that beautiful swing of hers.

12:07:06 AM    
 Saturday, May 17, 2003

Dowry Demands Too High. Lose Bride and Go to Jail A picture named nisha.sharma.jpg

New York Times by James Brooke

Nisha Sharma, who rejected her groom's dowry demands and had him arrested, has become India's new overnight sensation.

According to the bride's family, the dowry of two televisions, two home theater sets, two refrigerators, two air-conditioners and one car was considered to be too cheap by the groom's family. With the wedding about to start, the groom's family wanted an additional $25,000 in rupees, now, under the wedding tent. A fight between the families erupted and Nisha put her foot down by calling the police and calling off the wedding.

Sounds like the makings for a blockbuster movie. I say, "You go girl!"

-Tim
2:48:04 PM    


National Guard Plans Major Restructuring

FOXNews.com

The Air National Guard and Army National Guard will reduce the number of their headquarters in 54 states and territories by two-thirds, the chief of the National Guard system said Friday.

2:31:36 PM    

Japan's Landmark Military Move

BBC NEWS by Charles Scanlon:

The move by Japan's parliament to pass bills which strengthen the military is considered controversial in a country that renounced the right to wage war more than half a century ago.

2:22:55 PM    

Terrorists in Saudi Arabia May Strike Again, U.S. Warns

Mercury News

The State Department issued an alert late Thursday warning that terrorists may be planning to attack American targets soon in the Saudi city of Jidda, triggering a new wave of fears among Westerners in the region even as a U.S. team arrived in the country to investigate Monday's car bombings in the capital.

While Tim questioned posting this story because it seems speculative in nature, RE encouraged it. RE thinks there is an interesting emerging major change, with Saudi Arabia feeling the direct impact of terrorism and implications for Muslem vs. free world, energy markets, etc.

What do you think?

- Jen
5:14:50 AM    

 Friday, May 16, 2003

Has Technology Lost Its 'Special' Status?

New York Times

Beyond the timing of any short-term recovery, however, is the longer-term question about the future of information technology: Is it still a growth industry?

10:42:07 PM    

Latest SARS Victim Is Clothing Industry

New York Times by Tracie Rozhon

In the heart of Manhattan's garment district, Denise White slides on a pair of white latex gloves and starts opening the brown cardboard boxes that Federal Express has just dropped off at her company, Bernardo Fashions. The shipment -- from China -- is a week late.

A few blocks away, Cynthia Rowley, a fashion designer with a $22 million business, has been waiting since April 30 for 40 cartons of summer clothes, due from Asia, that will be sent on to waiting stores.


10:24:11 PM    

The New Gender Gap

BusinessWeek:

From kindergarten to graduate school, boys are fast becoming the second sex. "Girls are on a tear through the educational system," says Thomas G. Mortenson, a senior scholar at the Pell Institute for the Study of Opportunity in Higher Education in Washington. "In the past 30 years, nearly every inch of educational progress has gone to them."

7:16:07 PM    

The Surge in Female Entrepreneurs

BusinessWeek

Wall Street has taken a battering, unemployment is up, and the economy continues its struggle to sustain even modest expansion. But there is one area where growth is undeniable: the burgeoning number of women-owned businesses.

7:11:08 PM    

A picture named michelle.wie.jpg

Michelle Wie, 13, Gets Spot in Men's Tourney

San Jose Mercury News:

Teenager Michelle Wie has accepted a sponsor's exemption to play in the Boise Open on the Nationwide Tour, becoming the first female golfer to compete on the PGA Tour's developmental circuit. The event is Sept. 18-21.

Wie, a 13-year-old eighth-grader in Honolulu who hits the ball farther than some PGA Tour players, will be the third female player this year to go head-to-head with the men.


6:58:22 PM    

Siebel Changes Course

San Jose Mercury News

Siebel Systems will hold a live, in-person shareholders meeting after all.

One day after the San Mateo software maker took heavy fire for announcing that it would hold this year's annual shareholders meeting only in cyberspace, Siebel reversed itself Thursday and said it will allow stockholders to show up at the Marriott Hotel in San Mateo, where the Webcast will be broadcast.


6:49:55 PM    

Worm Research Sheds Light On Aging Process

San Jose Mercury News by Lisa M. Krieger:

It's not the Fountain of Youth, but it is intriguing: a class of molecules that researchers have discovered prolongs life and prevents a debilitating age-related illness.

These findings, announced by a team of University of California-San Francisco scientists in today's issue of the journal Science, are thus far confined to a lowly worm found in compost heaps everywhere.


6:45:01 PM    

Instant Messaging Moves Beyond the Simple Chat

New York Times by John R. Quain

America Online says 195 million people use its instant messaging service, their keystrokes generating more than 1.6 billion messages a day. For those users, instant messaging - or IM - has become an intrinsic part of their social fabric.

"On the phone, you can only talk to one person at a time,'' Ms. Gittleson, a 15 year old in Colts Neck, NJ said. "Online, you can talk to a dozen people at once."


6:40:08 PM    

Yahoo! Needs Overture

Motley Fool

If there's one thing Yahoo!'s just-released 10-Q makes clear, it's that Overture Services is very, very important to its well-being. At the same time, Overture's success could be harmful to its own health.

1:51:59 PM    

Drop in US Producer Prices Stirs Deflation Fears

Financial Times by Peronet Despeignes in Washington:

Wholesale prices in the US fell in April at the fastest pace on record while industrial output fell for the second consecutive month, according to official figures. The reports, which were two of several released on Thursday, appeared likely to enflame debate about the risks of deflation and economic slowdown.

10:47:46 AM