This is What Budget Cuts Have Done to Detroit … And It’s Freaking Awesome

"If our public servants are right, then chaos, anarchy and lawlessness should reign in Detroit now, right? Well, not exactly. Dale Brown and his organization, the Threat Management Center (TMC), have helped fill in the void left by the corrupt and incompetent city government. TMC now has a client base of about 1,000 private residences and over 500 businesses. Law enforcement isn't the only 'essential government service' that the private sector is taking over. The Detroit Bus Company (DBC) is a private bus service that began last year and truly shows a stark contrast in how the market and government operates." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThis is What Budget Cuts Have Done to Detroit … And It’s Freaking Awesome

Carl Icahn, Takeover Man: 60 Minutes

"At age 76, Carl Icahn is still shaking up corporate boards, criticizing management and demanding board seats. His hedge fund was one of the top performers in 2011 and has a long term track record of approximately 30%pa. His conglomerate Icahn Enterprises, invests in rail cars, retail, gaming, energy and automotive. He insists that most public companies around the world are very inefficient and most can be improved with the correct strategies. A Princeton drop out he is now one of the longest standing and most successful corporate take over artists in the world." Continue reading

Continue ReadingCarl Icahn, Takeover Man: 60 Minutes

A different world

"Official Tweets from the Seattle Police Department twitter feed: SPD Chief Jim Pugel was just driving down 4th Ave when he spotted a 79 Chevy w/fake pot leaves hanging from its rearview. Driver looked lost. That’s when Chief Pugel’s 30 years of policing experience kicked in. After stopping the car (which had out of state plates), Chief Pugel asked everyone in the car if they needed directions to Hempfest. Turns out they did." Continue reading

Continue ReadingA different world

Mellow mood at first Seattle Hempfest since pot legalization

"In the mid-1990s, McPeak recalled, police at Hempfest conducted undercover buy-and-bust operations, periodically slapping handcuffs on vendors of pot brownies and removing them from the premises. But this year, instead of writing tickets for public pot smoking — which remains forbidden in the state — police were handing out about 1,000 bags of Doritos tortilla chips bearing information on the state’s pot laws. 'It feels great that instead of issuing citations for public smoking, the police are issuing Dorito bags,' McPeak said. 'That seems like a big deal.'" Continue reading

Continue ReadingMellow mood at first Seattle Hempfest since pot legalization

Area 51 does exist and there were strange goings on admit CIA

"Its existence has been a badly kept secret for decades and it has fuelled the imaginations of conspiracy theorists and UFO hunters around the world. Now the existence of Area 51 has been officially acknowledged by the Central Intelligence Agency and its exact location revealed in Nevada. President Dwight Eisenhower approved 'this strip of wasteland, known by its map designation as Area 51, to the Atomic Energy Commissions Nevada test site and training range.' It then became central in the development of the U-2 spy plane. There are, however, some mentions of Area 51 that remain blanked out." Continue reading

Continue ReadingArea 51 does exist and there were strange goings on admit CIA

Beam me over, Scotty? A quantum leap in quantum teleportation.

"Recently, researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETHZ) used entanglement to teleport information across a quarter inch. That sounds easy. After all, the internet sends information thousands of miles in fractions of a second. But this time, the information wasn't carried through the intervening space. Quantum computers are still only theoretical, but if engineering catches up with theory, then they could process enormously large datasets with blinding speed. This could make extraordinary things possible – even time travel, at least according to one hypothesis." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBeam me over, Scotty? A quantum leap in quantum teleportation.

Fukushima scientists brace for riskiest nuclear fuel clean-up yet

"The operation, to remove 400 tons of highly irradiated spent fuel beneath the plant’s damaged Reactor No. 4, could set off a catastrophe greater than any we have ever seen, independent experts warn. An operation of this scale, says plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company, has never been attempted before. An uncontrolled leak of nuclear fuel could cause more radiation than the March 2011 disaster or the 1986 Chernobyl catastrophe. Here’s what needs to be done: more than 1,300 used fuel rod assemblies, packing radiation 14,000 times the equivalent of the Hiroshima nuclear bomb, need to carefully be removed from their cooling pool." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFukushima scientists brace for riskiest nuclear fuel clean-up yet

Scientists emerge after 4 months of space-cooking for simulated Mars mission

"The team lived in a mock-up of a Mars vehicle that was positioned on the side of a Hawaiian volcano, where they experimented with different instant foods and other provisions. For 118 days, Vermeulen and his five team members experimented with a variety of non-perishable ingredients and kept detailed journals of their health, well-being, weight and body mass to determine what foods would be best for a manned Mars mission. NASA recently awarded a $125,000 grant to a researcher who is exploring the possibilities of 3-D printing as a means of producing nutritious, non-perishable foods." Continue reading

Continue ReadingScientists emerge after 4 months of space-cooking for simulated Mars mission

Window coating electrically regulates heat and light passing through

"Scientists have created a window coating that can be switched electrically to regulate the amount of heat and light that enters a building. A team of molecular and material scientists from the United States and Spain created a transparent film using nanocrystals — microscopic clusters of atoms that can change the wavelength of light. The window is an electrochemical cell with two glass panes separated by an electrically conductive electrolyte liquid. But several issues must be fixed before the material can be used in windows — including replacing the highly flammable lithium metal used as a counter-electrode, and finding a solid electrolyte." Continue reading

Continue ReadingWindow coating electrically regulates heat and light passing through

Solar power to trump shale, helped by US military

"US marines go to war in Afghanistan with solar cells embedded in their rucksacks, efficient enough to recharge lithium-ion batteries for radios and greatly lighten loads. Field patrols will soon have almost weightless solar blankets as well. The US Naval Air Weapons Station already relies on a 14 megawatt array of solar panels in California's Mojave desert for a thrid of its power.The US Navy will derive half its energy supply from renewables by the end of this decade, according to a report. It may be a stretch to say that the US Naval Research Laboratory is the vanguard of the world's green revolution, but not a big stretch." Continue reading

Continue ReadingSolar power to trump shale, helped by US military