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14 Oct 09

Closing The Book On The Bush Legacy - The Atlantic Politics Channel

  • On every major measurement, the Census Bureau report shows that the country lost ground during Bush's two terms. While Bush was in office, the median household income declined, poverty increased, childhood poverty increased even more, and the number of Americans without health insurance spiked.
09 Jan 09

Education Week: Justices Hear Peer-Harassment Case

  • The case arises from claims that a kindergarten girl was subjected to sexual harassment by a 3rd grade boy while riding the bus to school in the 2000-01 academic year. Each time the girl wore a dress to school, the boy allegedly forced her to lift her skirt, pull down her pants, and spread her legs, according to court papers.
16 Sep 08

William Shunn : Inclination [book]

The official site for Nebula Award nominated science fiction writer William Shunn. Contains stories, essays, games, and deconstructions of Mormon theology.

www.shunn.net/inclination - Preview

10 Jan 08

Semantic Web: What Is The Killer App? - ReadWriteWeb

  • True, with the Semantic Web the information is structured, but it does not mean that the computer can necessarily solve complex problems.
    These are two completely different things. Just because you have a map, does not mean that you know the best way to get from point A to point B. Having a map is necessary, but it is not sufficient, you need the algorithm to find the best path.
10 Aug 07

The Hill Blog » Politics

  • The American people and the planet are the big winners in the comprehensive energy legislation the House passed just before the August recess.  Kudos to Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) for demanding that we do more as a Congress and country than accept yesterday’s energy solutions as tomorrow’s energy policy.


    Our energy legislation is bigger and bolder than a barrel of oil.  It’s all about developing clean and renewable energy resources and emphasizing energy efficiency.  We’re providing homeowners, business owners and utilities with the tools and resources to reduce consumption and greenhouse gas emissions.  Our energy legislation unleashes America’s ability to create and innovate — credit for this will to succeed goes to Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.


    We live in a nation addicted to oil and we simply can’t afford it.  It’s too expensive for America’s pocketbook, too adverse for America’s national security, and too perilous for earth’s atmosphere.  When it comes to energy policy, we have not risen to the occasion or to America’s potential, until now.





    Posted by
    Wash. Dem. Rep. Jim McDermott

Green Grid announces roadmap to efficient data center nirvana


  • Green Grid reps stressed today that understanding and then defining energy efficiency has to come before any plans to increase it. Having metrics to measure energy efficiency at the level of an entire data center has been a longstanding problem in the business, and one that makes it difficult to do comparisons between facilities. The Green Grid wants to develop a common set of such measurements, or to build on the work of other groups where such metrics have already been developed.



    Once that's done (hopefully by the third quarter of this year), the group will embark on an "efficiency baseline study" to see what sorts of practices data center managers are following now in regards to energy efficiency. Eventually, it will compile a database so that data center owners can see how their facilities compare to others in the business.

US servers now use more electricity than color TVs

  • Anyone paying attention to recent technology headlines knows that buying servers is just one part of the total cost. It costs power to run them, and power to cool them, and power costs money. AMD has just sponsored a study by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory staff scientist Jonathan Koomey that tries to answer the question: just how much power do US servers slurp down each year?



    Koomey, who is also a consulting professor at Stanford, claims that his analysis is the most comprehensive to date and is based on the best available data from IDC. He concludes that in 2005, the total power consumption of US servers was 0.6 percent of overall US electricity consumption. When cooling equipment is added, that number doubles to 1.2 percent—the same amount used by color televisions.



    Between 2000 and 2005, server electricity use grew at a rate of 14 percent each year, meaning that it more than doubled in five years. The 2005 estimate shows that servers and associated equipment burned through 5 million kW of power, which cost US businesses roughly $2.7 billion.



    Koomey notes that this represents the output of five 1 GW power plants. Or, to put it another way, it's 25 percent more than the total possible output from the Chernobyl plant

02 Aug 07

Courts Turn Against Abusive Clickwrap Contracts

  • Courts Turn Against Abusive Clickwrap Contracts
29 Jul 07

Intute - Free social science resources based in the UK

  • Intute is a free online service providing access to the very best web
    resources for education and research. All material is evaluated and selected
    by a network of subject specialists to create the Intute database.
26 Jul 07

Race and Ethnicity Classification Consistency Between the Census Bureau and the National Center for Health Statistics

  • the Census Bureau relies on self-identification in assigning racial and
    ethnic categories whereas in NCHS data these categories may be assigned by an observer
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