Sunday, April 15, 2007

Free Talk Live


What is Free Talk Live?

Whats on your mind? Unlike those right-wing or left-liberal extremist shows, Free Talk Live is talk radio that ANYONE can take control of. Yes, even you. Free Talk Live is the next generation of issues oriented talk. What is the meaning of freedom? This show is about Liberty with a capital L.

Check out some of the archives on the FTL Main Page to get an idea of what this all means.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE FOR MEDIA REFORM

The National Conference for Media Reform

Monday, November 06, 2006

World Wide Web creator warns of cheats and liars

THE GUARDIAN, LONDON
Sunday, Nov 05, 2006, Page 12


The creator of the World Wide Web said on Thursday night that the Internet is in danger of being corrupted by fraudsters, liars and cheats. Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the Briton who founded the Web in the early 1990s, says that if the Internet is left to develop unchecked, "bad phenomena" will erode its usefulness.

Berners-Lee's creation has transformed the way millions of people work, do business and entertain themselves.

But he warns that "there is a great danger that it becomes a place where untruths start to spread more than truths, or it becomes a place which becomes increasingly unfair in some way."

He singles out the rise of blogging as one of the most difficult areas for the continuing development of the Web, because of the risks associated with inaccurate, defamatory and uncheckable information.

Berners-Lee believes devotees of blogging sites take too much information on trust.

"The blogging world works by people reading blogs and linking to them. You're taking suggestions of what you read from people you trust. That, if you like, is a very simple system, but in fact the technology must help us express much more complicated feelings about who we'll trust with what," he said.

Monday, August 28, 2006

ALTERNATIVE ENERGY THAT'S SMART, CLEAN, SAFE AND READY

The quest for efficient energy affects every country on the planet. Worldwide there is an increasing interest in developing clean, reliable alternatives to petroleum fuels. Fuel cells are proof that there are smart, safe, and clean alternative power sources. Nuvera is proving that they are practical too.

Fuel cells are now a commercial reality.

Nuvera Fuel Cells is pleased to announce two new product offerings:

The 5-kW PowerFlow™, the first model in a family of fuel cell power modules, is available today for purchase to customers with qualified applications.

The 125-kW Forza™ Rail Power Module, a high-power fuel cell system, is available today for purchase to qualified customers. The technology can also be adapted for industrial and marine applications.

With the managed introduction of PowerFlow and Forza, we are entering a new phase in the technology life cycle - transitioning from pre-commercial systems to market-ready products. The PowerFlow and Forza systems now available are designed for commercial introduction and can be used by OEMs in real-world conditions - or by customers who wish to test Nuvera's latest fuel cell technology at their own facilities.

Over the coming several months, Nuvera will introduce three other commercial products: an expansion of the PowerFlow line, the PowerTap™ hydrogen generator, and an expansion of the Forza™ product family.

This is the future of energy. We invite you to experience its power today.

Friday, August 11, 2006

THE IMPOSSIBLE WILL TAKE A LITTLE WHILE:

A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear Basic Books
$15.95 2004


A few years ago, I heard Archbishop Desmond Tutu speak at a Los Angeles benefit for a South African project. He’d been fighting prostate cancer, was tired that evening, and had taken a nap before his talk. But when Tutu addressed the audience he became animated, expressing amazement that God chose his native country, given its shameful history of racial oppression, to provide the world with an unforgettable lesson in reconciliation and hope. Afterward a few other people spoke, then a band from East L.A. took the stage and launched into an irresistibly rhythmic tune. People started dancing. Suddenly I noticed Tutu, boogying away in the middle of the crowd. I’d never seen a Nobel Peace Prize winner, still less one with a potentially fatal disease, move like that—with such joy and abandonment. Tutu, I realized, knows how to have a good time. Indeed, it dawned on me that his ability to recognize and embrace life’s pleasures helps him face its cruelties and disappointments, be they personal or political.

Few of us will match Tutu’s achievements, but we’d do well to learn from someone who spent years challenging apartheid’s brutal system of human degradation, yet has remained light-hearted and free of bitterness. What allowed Tutu, Nelson Mandela, and untold numbers of unheralded South Africans to find the vision, strength, and courage to persist until apartheid finally crumbled? How did they manage to choose forgiveness over retribution while bringing to justice the administrators and executioners of that system? What similar strengths of spirit drove those who challenged America’s entrenched racial segregation, or the dictatorships of Eastern Europe and Latin America? What enables ordinary citizens of today to continue working to heal their communities and strive for a more humane world, despite the perennial obstacles, the frequent setbacks?

http://www.paulloeb.org/newimp/impindex.htm

Monday, July 10, 2006

LABOR AND ENVIRONMENTAL LEADERS JOIN FORCES TO FIGHT FOR ENERGEY INDEPENDENCE

LABOR AND ENVIRONMENTAL LEADERS JOIN FORCES TO FIGHT FOR ENERGEY INDEPENDENCE

Declare this Independence Day "Energy Independence Day"


WASHINGTON - In honor of the Fourth of July holiday, labor unions and environmental groups have come together to fight for energy independence through the Apollo Alliance by declaring this Independence Day, "Energy Independence Day."

"We all know America is facing a growing addiction to oil that is hurting our security, our economy and our environment," said Jerome Ringo, president of the Apollo Alliance. "It's time for the public to send a message to our leaders in Washington that we need a national commitment to energy independence and good American jobs. It's time to declare this Independence Day 'Energy Independence Day.' There's no better way to celebrate this July 4."

The Apollo Alliance has a 10-step national agenda to create energy independence by the year 2015. The alliance represents a coalition of national security, labor, environmental, civil rights and business leaders who are fighting for energy independence from foreign energy sources. It unites nearly 16 million union members and 11 million environmental organization members across the country.

Michigan labor and environmental leaders joined together last week to launch a new coalition - the Michigan Apollo Alliance - to urge state leaders and lawmakers to take the lead on clean energy by developing new technologies that can improve the environment while also creating good paying jobs.

On Saturday afternoon, Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak donned a colonial-style coat and tri-cornered hat to sign a Declaration of Energy Independence. The ceremony was part of Energy Independence Day, organized by the Green Institute, a Minneapolis environmental organization.

Last month, actor and environmentalist Robert Redford joined Ringo at the Campaign for America's Future's annual "Take Back America" conference to launch the "Apollo Challenge," a national campaign to inspire citizens to rise up and encourage elected officials to end our nation's addiction to oil and create 3 million good jobs.

Thousands of Americans have already signed the "Apollo Challenge" pledging to challenge our country's leaders to empower America within the decade by kicking the oil habit, harnessing clean, homegrown energy sources, saving energy with high performance buildings and cities, and creating 3 million good, clean energy jobs.

Thursday, June 08, 2006

How open source gave power to the people

How open source gave power to the people
By Richard Waters
Published: September 19 2005 12:46 | Last updated: September 20 2005 16:42


The sedentary art of software development and the extreme sports of kitesurfing, sailplaning and canyoning would appear to have little in common.

However, both are examples of a new force that could eventually affect a far broader range of companies and industries: the power of users to shape how products are developed.

In the internet age, it seems, the next big idea to change your industry may come from an unexpected direction.

As related* by Eric von Hippell, professor of management and innovation at the Sloan School of Management at MIT, followers of extreme sports have become expert at adapting and refining the equipment they use. Sometimes, the way these informal communities work can look very similar to the way open source software developers create their elaborate products.

Kitesurfers, for instance – who stand on surf boards holding kites which whisk them over breaking waves, producing acrobatic leaps and twists – have taken to using sophisticated computer modelling software to design the most efficient kites. They then share their ideas over the internet, refining their concepts before sending them to a manufacturer.

Sophisticated tools that let individuals take part in the process of creation, the internet as a means to draw together communities of like-minded people, a willingness to share ideas for the common good – these are the basic ingredients of a new approach to innovation.

The information technology industry has not merely created the means for these practices to take root. In the form of the open source software movement, it has also provided one of the most powerful examples yet of distributed innovation. And, thanks to the experiments in software licensing behind Linux and other open source programs, it has created a new framework for defining intellectual property rights when the brain power comes from a broader community.

Even corporate giants are starting to learn from this. Microsoft, for instance, may take issue with many of the claims made for open source products but it does not dispute the power of some of the new working practices that are bringing them about.

“The real magic is the community process – it has nothing to do with the software,” says Bill Hilf, an open source veteran who now works at Microsoft.

Jonathan Schwartz, chief operating officer of Sun Microsystems, goes further: “The participation age is about [people at] the edges of the network telling the centre what is going on.”

Donald Becker, one of the early contributors to the Linux kernel while an engineer at Nasa, says the internet has made it possible to find and work with other technical specialists in ways that weren’t possible. “There are not that many people who are interested” in any given technical subject, he says. “But the internet makes it possible to find them in all corners of the world.”

The repercussions are already spreading much wider than software. In media, a number of new forms – blogging, wikis and podcasts – have already attracted big audiences online. All are user generated content, with blogs and wikis generally made available in a way that lets other users add to their content or borrow from them liberally.

In science and academia, the concept of openness already has a strong foundation – but the internet is making it work better. Many companies in other industries, while not adopting all the ideas of open source, are experimenting with more “open” approaches to innovation – often by letting customers adapt their products, then learning from the results.

Through its “connect and develop” programme launched two years ago, for instance, Procter & Gamble set out to draw a lot more of its ideas from outside the company.

To outsiders, the prospect of loose communities of innovators sharing their ideas can seem counter-intuitive. Why would creators of valuable intellectual property freely hand it over to others to exploit?

"Sophisticated tools that let individuals take part in the process of creation, the internet to draw together like-minded people, a willingness to share ideas – these are the basic ingredients of a new approach to innovation"

A growing body of literature, along with the experience of industries such software, provides some explanation. By building on work already done by others, companies can use their scarce R&D resources more efficiently.

IBM, for instance, first dabbled in open source software when it realised that Apache, a community-developed product, had come to dominate the market for web server software, says Rod Smith, head of emerging technologies in the company’s software division. “We decided it was better to collaborate than compete against this,” he says.

Many companies wrongly over-value their in house intellectual property, Mr Smith adds: often, similar ideas are being developed elsewhere, and ideas can quickly be copied once they become publicly known.

According to this view, it is sometimes better to act pre-emptively, opening up intellectual property in order to seed a market. It has now become standard operating procedure for new software companies to give away their products in the hopes of securing an instant user base.

Andi Gutmans, one of the developers behind PHP, a fast-growing scripting language used for writing applications that run on the web, says of the decision to open source the technology: “We just wanted to get our work out there and get people to use it. It would have been very difficult otherwise for two university students in Israel to get millions of users without having millions of dollars behind us.”

And even when there isn’t a business end, the approach can still bring personal advancement. “The best way to create a career will be start a software project and become the best in the world at it,” says Winston Damarillo, whose sold his first open source company, Gluecode, to IBM this year.

Customers, meanwhile, contribute ideas because they can lead to products that more closely meet their needs. Or, suggests Mr von Hippel, they do it for the recognition they get from their peers – something noted** by Eric Raymond, one of the first chroniclers of the open source community – or just for the fun of it.

What does this mean for businesses that rely on more traditional “closed” approaches to innovation? The software industry provides some of the first lessons. One is that open innovation, when used successfully, forces established companies to think much harder about where they channel their research and development investments: there’s no point spending heavily in areas where a community approach has produced an acceptable alternative.

Deciding where to draw the line between “open” and “closed” development, however, is not easy.

The software industry is still sharply divided over the extent to which open source projects can produce true innovation. Even advocates such as Mr Becker concede that most of the myriad open source software projects – SourceForge, the website which tracks them, lists more than 100,000 – lack originality. That has much to do with the nature of the community process.

“It is much easier to get people to agree around imitating a system that already exists,” he says, whereas true innovation often relies on the strong vision of an individual.

Microsoft goes further. While representing an appealing way for a community of like-minded people to share ideas, says Mr Hilf, the open source process cannot handle much of the hard work needed to produce a sophisticated product from scratch: the initial market research and design work, the time consuming product testing and the assurance of long-term support.

Yet the open source world is plugging many of these gaps. “There’s an ecosystem that has now emerged of open source service providers,” says Kim Polese, whose start-up, SpikeSource, provides the testing and certification needed to “productise” open source software. Many start-ups have been created to help companies install and maintain open source software.

Faced with such competition, many established companies – whether in software or other areas of intellectual property susceptible to attack from open development models – will have to change the way they charge for their products, says Mr Schwartz at Sun.

“Companies won’t be able to monetise intellectual property before it is delivered,” he says. They will only be able to sell additional services to customers who already have it. “IP isn’t losing its value: what is losing its value is the toll booths that people have set up to charge for access to it,” he says.

Many established software companies, meanwhile, have adopted some of the methods of open source in their own development processes, releasing open-source versions of some of their more commodity-like products in an attempt to harness wider community interest.

Sun’s Solaris operating system, which had lost ground to Linux, has been licensed on 2.5m machines since being released in open source form this year, about 10 times as many as Sun would have reached under a commercial licensing arrangement, says Mr Schwartz.

Companies that attempt to play by the new rules of open innovation, however, face one overriding challenge: to change the deeply ingrained working habits of their own staff.

“We had smart folks, and smart folks who live in one company are hermetically sealed,” says Mr Smith at IBM.

“When they see a project outside, it’s threatening to them,” he says. “We experienced that. It’s a humbling experience to realise there are a lot of smart people out there with good ideas.”

*Democratizing Innovation. Eric von Hippell, The MIT Press.
**The Cathedral and the Bazaar. Eric Raymond.

The New Power Generation

In the old days, being green meant being hardcore. Earnest enviros plugged their poky electric cars into the wall like four-wheeled toaster ovens. They bought organic food at dusty co-ops staffed by vegan clerks in hemp ponchos. And if they were really serious, they disconnected from planet-ravaging modernity altogether and lived in a creaky cabin off the grid.
Today, hardcore has given way to hybrid. Soccer moms tool around in the Toyota Prius, with its nifty gas-electric engine that saves both fossil fuel and family funds. The suburbs are stuffed with flexitarians - mostly-veggies who pick up their staples from the gleaming organic produce section at the local Whole Foods but also opt for an occasional free-range-chicken breast.

Now come the first stirrings of what may be the most telling sign of this shift from hardcore to hybrid: people who are both middle of the road and off the grid. Across the US some 185,000 households have switched from the local power company to their own homegrown, renewable energy. The fastest-growing segment of this population - their ranks are doubling each year - isn't doing a full Kaczynski. Sure, these folks are slapping solar panels on the roof and erecting the occasional wind turbine, but they're staying connected to the grid, just to be safe. And in many cases, they're operating as mini-utilities, selling excess electricity back to the power company. Just as their cars aren't kludgy and their food isn't flavorless, their homes aren't drafty or dimly lit. Call them hygridders. And look for them soon in a neighborhood near you. Because - trendmeisters, take note - hygrid is the new Prius.

Three hours northwest of Indianapolis, plopped in the middle of an ocean of cornfields, sits the unincorporated village of Stelle, Illinois, population 110. Steve and Jan Bell make their home here, on Tamarind Court, in an ordinary house with blue siding, a tidy front yard, and an attached garage. There's a 32-inch Sony in the rec room, family photos in the living room, a Kitchen Aid double oven and a hefty Amana refrigerator. Steve, a 52-year-old former firefighter with thinning reddish-blond hair and a neatly trimmed beard, rounds out the picture of Midwestern normalcy. The Sunday afternoon that we meet, he's wearing jeans and a floral patterned shirt - just a regular middle-class guy spending the weekend helping a friend move, mowing the lawn, and tinkering in his basement.

In the backyard, the scene is less ordinary. Standing 115 feet tall, a wind turbine gazes out on the surrounding cornfields. Next to it is a 14-foot solar tracker - 880 watts' worth of photovoltaic panels that follow the sun atop a swivel pole. There are 28 more panels on the roof. All this feeds into a basement power plant. The alt-energy control center features an inverter, about the size of a PC tower, that converts sun and wind energy into AC current to run the lights and appliances. A bank of 24 batteries, each about 160 pounds, stores the electricity for later use.

On cloudy or windless days, the Bells rely on the batteries and then, when they run dry, draw juice from the Commonwealth Edison grid. But when the wind blows or the sun shines, their homegrown energy powers the house. And if their turbine and solar panels are producing more electricity than they need or can store in their battery bank, the couple sells the excess to ComEd.

The Bells prefer to live autonomously. They heat their home with a wood-burning stove. Their hot water, dryer, and stove use liquid propane. When I ask about their energy costs, Steve grabs some old electric bills and a pocket calculator and we take a seat at the dining room table.

In the last year, he figures, he purchased about 4,400 kilowatt-hours of electricity and sold back about 2,400 kilowatt-hours. For approximately five months in 2004, his electricity bill was zero. He pecks at the calculator to add the heating expenses, then taps a few more keys and scribbles a figure on his notepad. Last year, the total cost of electricity and gas to run this perfectly ordinary, perfectly comfortable 2,200-square-foot home was $340. The typical American household spends about $1,400 annually on heat and electric utilities. But by living neither totally on the grid nor totally off it, the Bells met all their heating and electricity needs for a full year for about the price of an iPod.

The electricity meter is one of those things that homeowners scarcely think about. Each time you flick a light switch or turn on a coffeemaker, your meter creeps forward a bit, registering the inflow of energy and charging you for it. But the sun is shining on Maplewood Court this afternoon, so I'm stationed in the bushes outside Robert Candey's ranch house to watch his Westinghouse meter perform a little hygrid magic.

Candey, who lives with his wife, Amy Hansen, outside the nation's capital in Greenbelt, Maryland, has 48 solar panels on his roof and a grid-tied inverter in the basement. On this sunny, temperate day, the Candeys are producing more electricity than their home uses; they've already topped off their batteries. When I first begin staring at their meter, the dial - think of it as an electricity odometer - reads 4,561 kilowatt-hours. Then the silver platter in the center of the device begins slowly spinning from right to left, instead of its usual left-to-right course. Three minutes later, the dial clicks. Presto! 4,560 kilowatt-hours. Welcome to the Candey Utility Company.

What's going on in Greenbelt could soon be unfolding in suburbs across America. A combination of forces is pushing hygridding into the mainstream. Start with the cost of energy. Most US homes use natural gas for heat. Natural gas prices have been soaring. So has the price of electricity produced by coal-burning power plants. And that's not even factoring in the more than $1 billion in subsidies that go to the oil and gas industry, or the environmental damage - increased greenhouse emissions and mercury pollution - caused by burning fossil fuels.

http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.05/solar.html