Tag Archives: companies

Electrons viewed in real time for the first time ever

In an unprecedented achievement, physicists have managed to directly observe electrons moving about the outer orbit of an atom. It's all thanks to some nifty quantum trickery and a machine that measures time in quintillionths of a second. The actual process used by the scientists, called attosecond absorption spectroscopy, is about as fiendishly complicated as its name, so let's take this slowly. They started by taking some atoms of krypton, one of the nobles gases. They then ionized the atoms using a near-infrared laser pulse. This pulse operated in cycles of a few femtoseconds each. A femtosecond is 10^-15 second, or a quadrillionth of a second. This ionization pulse caused anywhere from one to three of the eight electrons in the krypton's outermost shell to leave the atom, leaving an empty space in this furthest valence. Next, it was time for the attosecond pulse. An attosecond is a thousandth of a femtosecond, which is also 10^-18 second (not to mention a quintillionth of a second, just so all our bases are covered). They sent an extreme-ultraviolet attosecond pulse on the same path as that of the earlier, femtosecond pulse. And this is where the physicists were able to directly observe electrons at work in the wake of ionization. The attosecond pulse excited one or more of the electrons in the next energy orbital beneath the outermost shell, causing them to jump to the outer orbital and fill the gap created by the departed electrons. At that point, the electron starts “flopping” between the two orbits, creating complementary interference patterns that essentially merge into one, thanks to the quantum concept of coherence. It's that short-lived electron coherence that the attosecond pulses are able to measure, giving the physicists a direct measurement of the changing levels of coherence between the electron's two quantum states. This is one of the first direct applications of attosecond pulses, but according to Berkeley researcher Stephen Leone, this is just the tip of the iceberg for what the technology can do: “his revealed details of a type of electronic motion – coherent superposition – that can control properties in many systems. The method developed by our team for exploring coherent dynamics has never before been available to researchers. It's truly general and can be applied to attosecond electronic dynamics problems in the physics and chemistry of liquids, solids, biological systems, everything. http://io9.com/5605687/electrons-viewed-in-real-time-for-the-first-time-ever added by: pjacobs51

Glenn Beck’s final swan dive off the deep end: President Obama reminds him of Lucifer !

Believe it or not this Mormon has totally lost it! added by: kennymotown

Get Fast Cash Now!

If you need fast cash, you may not want to call the companies whose commercials may coincidentally resemble this one. This is just a suggestion- it is not our intention to publicly humiliate the many honest loan companies who make it possible for millions to go into debt. added by: Progresshiv

Image Of Impotence: Obama Admin Can’t Get Sherrod On The Phone

Operator, oh could you help me place this call? You see the number on the matchbook is old and faded.  Jim Croce, ‘Operator,’ 1972 The Obama administration, the folks that want to run our health care and who knows how much else of our economy and our lives, can’t get a simple phone call through to one of its former officials. In this afternoon’s press conference, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs repeatedly said that the Obama administration, through the person of its Agriculture Secretary, has tried but failed to have a phone conversation with Shirley Sherrod, the USDA official it forced out yesterday. ROBERT GIBBS: Secretary Vilsack is, has tried and is trying to reach Ms. Sherrod. When the Secretary reaches her, he will apologize for the events of the last few days, and they will talk about their next steps. . . . . GIBBS: The Secretary is trying to reach Ms. Sherrod . . . The next step that has to happen is the Secretary needs to speak with her. And he’s tried to reach her and we hope that they [inaudible]. What an image of impotence.  Will the MSM note it?

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Image Of Impotence: Obama Admin Can’t Get Sherrod On The Phone

Obama Administration’s Actions in Auto Bailout Added to Unemployment, Audit Says

The Obama administration’s policies in steering the auto bailout drove unemployment up, according to an audit by the Office of Special Inspector General for the Troubled Assets Relief Program (SIGTARP).   “At a time when the country was experiencing the worst economic downturn in generations and the government was asking its taxpayers to support a $787 billion stimulus package designed primarily to preserve jobs, Treasury made a series of decisions that may have substantially contributed to the accelerated shuttering of thousands of small businesses and thereby potentially adding tens of thousands of workers to the already lengthy unemployment rolls – all based on a theory and without sufficient consideration of the decisions’ broader economic impact,” the audit by SIGTARP Neil Barofsky stated.   “It is not at all clear that the greatly accelerated pace of the dealership closings during one of the most severe economic downturns in our Nation’s history was either necessary for the sake of the companies’ economic survival or prudent for the sake of the Nation’s economic recovery,” the audit added. The federal government committed $80.7 billion out of TARP, the $700 billion rescue bill enacted in late 2008, to save General Motors and Chrysler. Chrysler closed 789 dealerships, while GM is set to have closed 1,454 dealerships by October 2010 as a cost cutting measure.   The Treasury Department pushed General Motors and Chrysler to close dealerships at a faster rate than the companies suggested, without taking job losses into consideration, the audit says.   “Although there was a broad consensus that GM and Chrysler generally needed to decrease the number of their dealerships, there was disagreement over how, where and how quickly the cuts should have been made,” the audit says.   “In the fact of the worst unemployment crisis in a generation and during the same period in which government was spending hundreds of billions of dollars on a stimulus package to spur job growth, the Auto Team rejected GM’s original plan (which included gradual dealership terminations), expressly indicated that GM’s pace of terminations was too slow, and then encouraged the companies’ use of bankruptcy to accelerate dealership terminations,” the audit continued.   White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said Monday that if the administration had not taken the actions it did, far more jobs would have been lost.   “I think it’s important to look at the decision to put into bankruptcy and restructure both Chrysler and GM. I think it is safe to say without that decision that the president made, it is likely that neither of those two auto companies would exist today,” Gibbs said. “Because of the president’s actions to date, there are tens of thousands of auto jobs, auto manufacturing jobs, auto dealership jobs that exist and auto parts manufacturing jobs. “   The Treasury Department strongly disagreed in a letter to the special inspector general’s office.   “In the absence of government assistance, both GM and Chrysler faced almost certain failure and liquidation, which would have resulted in the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs across multiple industries,” said the letter from Herbert Allison, assistant Treasury secretary for financial stability.   Meanwhile, GM also weighed in with a statement Monday.   “The events depicted in the SIGTARP’s report have since been overtaken by a new GM and a stronger dealer network to match,” the GM statement said. “More than a year since its bankruptcy, GM is showing substantial progress.   “The company’s business performance is stronger, sales of its four brands are up 32 percent, and it is investing billions of dollars in its plants and bringing several thousands back to work. The new GM is also moving forward to improve dealer relations and has already reinstated several hundred dealers and completed the arbitration hearings for the remaining dealers who filed cases,” the statement added.   The inspector general’s audit also said the closing of plants lacked transparency.   “Just as troubling, there was little or no documentation of the decision-making process to terminate or retain dealerships with similar profiles, making it impossible in many cases for SIGTARP to determine the causes of deviations from the supposedly objective criteria,” the audit says.   The GM statement said the firm was completely cooperative with the inspector general’s office.   “Throughout its review, GM cooperated fully with the SIGTARP to best document the company’s efforts, as well as the criteria and numerous business factors used in GM’s dealer wind-down and appeals process,” the statement said. “The GM which existed at that time did its best to develop and implement an objective dealer consolidation process under extraordinary circumstances.” Crossposted at NB sister site CNS News

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Obama Administration’s Actions in Auto Bailout Added to Unemployment, Audit Says

Attacks on Business Fill Newsweek’s List of ‘Best Business Literature’

If Newsweek magazine isn’t anti-business enough for you, perhaps their list of ” Business Books You Need to Read Now ” will satisfy. On July 14, Newsweek published a list of ten books they described as “best business literature out there.” The list of ten current titles was decidedly anti-business. Newsweek included an interview with each book’s author. The list included: “War at the Wall Street Journal: Inside the Struggle to Control an American Business Empire,” by Sarah Ellison. The book detailed Rupert Murdoch’s purchase of the Wall Street Journal in 2003. Newsweek couldn’t help but highlight Murdoch’s “obsession” at competing with the liberal darling New York Times . “Money for Nothing: How the Failure of Corporate Boards is Ruining American Business and Costing Us Trillions,” by John Gillespie and David Zweig. Gillespie and Zweig examined how the boards of directors at companies such as Lehman Brothers and General Motors were “paid handsome sums to oversee the activity of the executives and protect shareholders’ interest” while the “CEOs ran the companies into the ground.” In their interview with Newsweek, the authors criticized former General Motors CEO Rich Wagoner for the company’s “disastrous strategy” but didn’t mention the unions’ role in GM’s demise . “Extra Lives: Why Video Games Matter,” by Tom Bissell . Bissell’s book argues that video games are a “legitimate creative medium” and in his interview, Newsweek’s Nick Summers wondered: “Is one problem that games make too much money? That it’s so easy to make millions with crap that no one takes time to make quality stuff?” Newsweek’s list also included books investigating everything from the oil industry to hedge funds and ignored a number of pro-businesses books for sale on bookstore shelves. Some of the titles Newsweek failed to mention are  ” Return to Prosperity: How America Can Regain its Economic Superpower Status ,” by Arthur B. Laffer, ” Freedomnomics: Why the Free Market Works and Other Half Baked Theories Don’t,” by John Lott, and ” Applied Economics: Thinking Beyond Stage One ,” by Thomas Sowell. Newsweek has a history of championing liberal ideas and criticizing capitalism , so perhaps this latest list is simply Newsweek’s background reading. Like this article?  Sign up  for “The Balance Sheet,” BMI’s weekly e-mail newsletter.

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Attacks on Business Fill Newsweek’s List of ‘Best Business Literature’

Google Compensates Gay Couples for Extra Taxes

If you think Google is a future Big Brother, maybe Big Brother isn't so dystopic after all–because Google is showing the world how corporate responsibility is done. Our wonderful federal government mandates that employer-provided health benefits for employees in domestic partnerships–benefits which are tax free for fully married couples–count as taxable income if the partner isn't considered a dependent. Congress noticed and tried to do something about it, eliminating the tax in the health care overhaul legislation passed by the House last November–but the provision didn't make it into the version that was signed by President Obama in March. So what do you expect to happen when a gay employee at Google brings up that GLBT employees will pay an average of $1,069 more per year than their straight married coworkers? At many companies, this might get you in trouble, but Google has proven once again that they are not the typical company. Starting Thursday, Google will begin compensating employees whose domestic partners (and those dependent on them) receive health benefits–for the extra taxes which married couples do not have to pay, retroactively to January 1st. The extra compensation will only cover domestic partnerships of the same sex, because opposite-sex couples can get married and avoid the added tax. The company also eliminated gay couples' one-year waiting period for infertility benefits and added domestic partners to its family leave policy. “If you were to add it all up, it’s not like we are talking hundreds of thousands per employee,” said Laszlo Bock, Google's vice president for human resources. “It will cost some money, but it was more about doing the right thing.” Experts say other companies might follow Google's lead, especially Google's Silicon Valley competitors, and offer similar benefits. 36 percent of large companies that offer health benefits provide coverage for same-sex domestic partners, and more than half of Fortune 500 companies provide domestic partner coverage. Very few (such as Cisco, Kimpton Hotels and the Gates Foundation) compensate for the extra taxes, though. So if Google is the next Big Brother… can I get in on that? “Google supports its LGBT employees in many ways: raising its voice in matters of policy, taking a moment to remember the plight of transgender people around the world and going the extra mile to ensure that its employees are treated fairly.” http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/07/celebrating-pride-2010.html http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/01/your-money/01benefits.html?_r=2 added by: Pawper

Ethical Consumer Asks: Who Makes Ethical Outdoor Gear?

Images: Ethical Consumer Ethical Consumer is a British not-for-profit co-operative, who are, in their own words, “dedicated to the promotion of universal human rights, environmental sustainability and animal welfare. We produce independent research into the social and environmental records of companies, and to inform the development of ethical consumerism.” One of their latest such reports is their 62 page Outdoor Gear Special, which rather than ranking individual products, scores the companies behind the gear. And it sure makes for intriguing reading. Nearly 30 brands are assessed for their waterproof jacket… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Ethical Consumer Asks: Who Makes Ethical Outdoor Gear?

The Economy: Avoiding the ‘U-Word’ Doesn’t Mean It’s Not Still Happening

The establishment press is either getting tired of being beaten up over using the U-word (“unexpectedly,” or sometimes “unexpected”) to the point of excess when economic news disappoints, or has itself wearied of using the word. Here’s the Associated Press’s Martin Crutsinger on today’s retail sales report letdown, courtesy of the Commerce Department . The bolded sentence seen after the jump is Crutsinger’s substitute for the U-Word: Retail sales plunged in May by the largest amount in eight months as consumers slashed spending on everything from cars to clothing. The big drop raises new worries about the durability of the economic recovery. The Commerce Department says that spending fell 1.2 percent last month. Auto sales were down 1.7 percent but there was weakness in a number of areas. Excluding autos, sales fell 1.1 percent. The big decline cast new doubts about the strength of the economic recovery. Consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of total economic activity. … The 1.2 percent decline in May sales was the largest decline since sales had fallen 2.2 percent in September. Analysts had been forecasting sales would be weak but remain in positive territory. For May, the 1.7 percent drop in auto sales followed a 0.6 percent increase in April sales and was the poorest showing in this category since a 2.5 percent February decline. Expecting a slight positive and getting a large negative is what I would call a “big miss.” The auto sales drop may be suspect, because it’s not consistent with direct sales data from the car companies earlier this month . But there is a clue to how to reconcile the conflict in this statement at the link: “GM sales rose 17 percent, led by a jump in sales of its four remaining brands – Chevrolet, Buick, GMC, and Cadillac – and big orders from fleet customers, such as rental car agencies.” Fleet sales are not part of consumer spending. If those orders were big enough, it may really be that individual and families were buying fewer vehicles in May. That’s a big “uh-oh,” because fleet sales aren’t particularly profitable, and they may not be sustainable at current levels. That fleet sales and not direct consumer sales might be driving what growth there is in vehicle sales this year (especially, I believe, at government wards GM and Chrysler, and not so much at other companies) is consistent with my observation last week at this post about the “private investment – transportation equipment” sector’s outsized contribution to first-quarter GDP growth. Until “analysts” figure out how to incorporate FUD (Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt) into their estimates (admittedly difficult, but they get paid to estimate these things), you can expect that the “unexpected” will “unexpectedly” continue to occur — even if the press stops using the words. Cross-posted at BizzyBog.com .

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The Economy: Avoiding the ‘U-Word’ Doesn’t Mean It’s Not Still Happening

Boehner: Government–i.e. Taxpayers–Should Help Pay For Oil Spill

Congressional Democrats and the White House are toying with different ways to force BP to cover the costs of damages from the Gulf oil spill. But they face stiff opposition from industry…and it seems leading Republicans. In response to a question from TPMDC, House Minority Leader John Boehner backed Tom Donohue, President of the Chamber of Commerce, in saying taxpayers should help pick up the tab. “I think the people responsible in the oil spill–BP and the federal government–should take full responsibility for what's happening there,” Boehner said at his weekly press conference this morning. On Friday, Donohue made clear that he opposes efforts to stick BP, a member of the Chamber, with the bill. “It is generally not the practice of this country to change the laws after the game,” he said. “Everybody is going to contribute to this clean up. We are all going to have to do it. We are going to have to get the money from the government and from the companies and we will figure out a way to do that.” So I asked Boehner, “do you agree with Tom Donohue of the Chamber that the government and taxpayers should pitch in to clean up the oil spill?” The shorter answer is “yes”. The Chamber is extremely influential in Republican politics, so on that level it's not particularly surprising that Boehner has Donohue's back on this one. But the politics of asking the federal government (i.e. taxpayers) to help cover the multi-billion dollar cleanup and rescue efforts are deadly. Look for Democrats to jump all over this one. added by: TimALoftis