Tuesday, October 15, 2013

More People Would Camp If All Trailers Had Home Theaters


Heading into the great outdoors is supposed to be about getting away from it all. And for the most part, the campers and trailers from Germany's Dethleffs let you do just that, and in relative comfort. But at the Dusseldorf Caravan show the company showed off its Mini Movie Campy concept; a portable home theater that brings even more of the comforts of home into the woods.


Roughing it isn't the name of the game with the Campy. The 12.2-foot long trailer features seven comfy theater-style seats, a refreshment stand with a mini fridge and a popcorn maker, an integrated surround sound system, and most importantly a large flatscreen 3D Tv.


More People Would Camp If All Trailers Had Home Theaters


Since it's bound to get toasty warm in there, particularly in the Summer, the Mini Movie Campy even has air conditioning. And while there's no place to sleep, shower, or prepare proper meals—who cares when you've got an endless marathon of Kubrick films lined up? [Gizmag via OhGizmo!]


More People Would Camp If All Trailers Had Home Theaters


Source: http://gizmodo.com/more-people-would-camp-if-all-trailers-had-home-theater-1443834348
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Can Iran, The West Overcome Distrust To Make A Nuclear Deal?


Nuclear negotiators from six world powers and Iran head to Geneva for talks surrounded by more optimism than has been seen in years. Positive rhetoric from the new administration of President Hasan Rouhani has raised hopes that diplomacy may once again be ascendant instead of sanctions and threats of military action. Analysts say the trick will be getting the slow-moving negotiating process to respond before these expectations fade. Much will depend on the West's, and especially Washington's, willingness to consider leaving low-level uranium enrichment in Iran's hands, and on whether Congress can be persuaded to hold off on more punitive sanctions that could derail the diplomatic effort.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=234234173&ft=1&f=1009
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Sunday, October 13, 2013

RECREATION NOTES: Ackerman's ace earns him a nice prize | The ...

THE SPORTS DESK

The authority for sports coverage in the Fredericksburg region.











Maryland resident Nicholas Ackerman won a $15,000 prize with his hole in one on the 12th hole at last Friday’s Empowerhouse fundraising golf tournament at Pendleton Golf Course in Caroline County.

The annual tournament raised funds for Empowerhouse, which provides shelter and sustenance to victims of domestic violence.


SOFTBALL


HDT of the Spotsylvania Men’s Softball League went 13–1 in winning the league’s postseason playoffs and championship at Patriot Park recently. Led by Justin Smith, Marcus Curtis and Justin Bonacorsi, the team finished the season 33–4.


Permalink: http://news.fredericksburg.com/sports/2013/10/11/recreation-notes-ackermans-ace-earns-him-a-nice-prize/






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Source: http://news.fredericksburg.com/sports/2013/10/11/recreation-notes-ackermans-ace-earns-him-a-nice-prize/
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Friday, October 11, 2013

Ford’s Ultra-Efficient V6 Racer Breaks Daytona Speed Record




Racing technology eventually finds its way into your car, but it rarely goes the other way around. Ford is standing that axiom on its head by not only equipping its new prototype racer with the heart of a production car, but setting a new speed record at the famous Daytona International Speedway with the same engine you get in a pickup truck.


Ford donated its EcoBoost (read: twin-turbocharged) 3.5-liter V6 to the Riley Technologies Daytona Prototype, and after considerable tuning and tweaking, the race car took to the track at Daytona to set a new record of 222.971 mph in a single lap around the track. That was enough to topple the 26-year-old record set by Bill Elliott in a Ford Thunderbird at 210.364 mph.


Even better, Colin Braun, the driver of the EcoBoost-powered prototype, wasn’t even born when the original record was set.



“Our first run this morning was 209 mph, and it was an edgy drive at that speed,” says Colin. “I can only imagine how edgy it was for Bill Elliott doing those speeds in his Thunderbird stock car.”


The car was prepared by Ford Racing’s partners at Roush Yates — legendary builders in their own right — but aside from a special set of tires developed by Continental with lower rolling resistance and lighter weight, neither Ford, Roush Yates, or Riley Technologies, is disclosing exactly how much power the race-modified engine is producing. But considering the V6 puts out 365 horsepower right out of the box, there’s no doubt the team has juiced the EcoBoost with well over 500 hp in its efforts to replace the outgoing V8 engine.


The team also set two new world speed records during their run: a 210.018 mph average for 10 miles from a standing start and another at 202.438 mph for a 10 kilometer run.


“This engine is the future,” says Doug Yates, the CEO of Roush Yates Racing. “This Ford EcoBoost engine includes all the newest technologies — direct injection, turbocharging and high efficiency. We’re looking at taking it to the next level through this sports car racing program.”


That next level gets proven this January when the new prototype makes its racing debut at the 2014 TUDOR United SportsCar Championship Rolex 24-hour race in Daytona.



Photo and video courtesy of Ford Racing



Source: http://feeds.wired.com/c/35185/f/661426/s/324e1553/sc/18/l/0L0Swired0N0Cautopia0C20A130C10A0Cford0Eecoboost0Edaytona0C/story01.htm
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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Bronco and former Hen holds football camp at UD

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20130708/SPORTS07/130708009/1004/RSS05

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Brad Richdale DIRECT MARKETING BUSINESS: Dead Man Down ...

When Colin Farrell worked with Tom Cruise in Minority Report he was brilliant with Terrence Howard in Dead Man Down he is spell binding. ?See the film it will blow your mind! ?Even better than Total Recall.

His performance will positively change his film and business career.

? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? written by Brad Richdale

Source: http://bradrichdale.blogspot.com/2013/07/dead-man-down-colin-farrells-greatest.html

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Countering Africa?s green revolution

Follow @{0}FEEDBACKEMAILPRINTEASY READSHARE

NAIROBI, 8 July 2013 (IRIN) - Civil society groups are taking on the policies of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), which promotes the use of genetically modified (GM) crops and Green Revolution technologies.
?
They argue that GM and Green Revolution practices - those aimed at increasing developing countries? crop yields through specific innovations - will, in the long run, be detrimental to ecosystems across the continent. Earlier this month, a coalition of almost 60 civil society groups across Africa came out to protest AGRA ahead of the G8 Summit in London.

?Green Revolution technologies benefit relatively few farmers, often at the expense of the majority. These technologies produce concentration of land ownership, increasing economies of scale (production has to be at a large scale to get into and stay in markets), and a declining number of food-producing households in a context of limited other livelihood options,? they said in a sent to AGRA?s president, Jane Karuku.
?
They also believe that the intellectual property of many plant types may be transferred to large multinational corporations as part of Green Revolution practices.
?
?Private ownership of knowledge and material resources 0(for example, seed and genetic materials) means the flow of royalties out of Africa into the hands of multinational corporations,? they said.
?
Technology for the needy
?
AGRA was founded in 2006 through a partnership between the Rockefeller Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. It works with smallholder farmers across the continent by giving them microfinance loans, hybrid seeds and fertilizers to increase their crop yields. In this way, AGRA hopes to alleviate hunger and poverty across the continent.
?
The Green Revolution A period from the 1940s until the 1970s when, through the use of new technologies such as irrigation, improved seed, fertilizers and pesticides, as well as an economic environment that supported industrial agriculture, a massive increase in agriculture output in developing countries (particularly in Asia) occurred. Norman Borlaug, who won the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize for improving agricultural technologies, is widely considered as the ?Father of the Green Revolution?, and is often credited with saving a billion lives through his innovations.
?There are millions of skilled farmers in Africa who simply need the tools,? said Sir Gordon Conway, a scientist and author of One Billion Hungry: Can We Feed the World?, speaking by video message at an agriculture conference in Nairobi. In his book, he argues that both microcredits - to help smallholder farmers - and macro-investment are needed for farmers to benefit from Green Revolution technologies.
?
He believes traditionally marginalized groups - such as women, youth and ethnic minorities - will benefit from the use of new agricultural technologies targeted at smallholders, and that the total number of hungry will be drastically reduced. For example, Conway calculates that by ensuring female farmers have access to the same productive resources as men, the number of undernourished people globally could be reduced by 100 to 150 million.
?
?If we are going to feed some 9 billion people by 2050 and do that in environmentally sustainable ways and in the face of climate change, then we are going to need access to the very best that modern science can offer,? said Peter Hazell, a leading agriculture expert who has worked with the World Bank and International Food Policy Research Institute. ?All technologies have risks (e.g., cell phones may cause brain cancer) but as these things go, GM crops seem to be doing rather well.?
?
Serving corporate objectives
?
But civil society groups disagree. ?AGRA aims to move farmers in exactly the wrong direction, by encouraging them to take on debt in order to use more agrochemicals and corporate hybrid seeds,? Teresa Anderson of the Gaia Foundation told IRIN.
?
?For many years, NGOs across Africa have worked with farmers to encourage them to stop using fertilizers and pesticides, and to improve their soil health, their ecosystems, their seed diversity and their food sovereignty. AGRA is undoing a decade of agro-ecological progress in Africa by getting farmers into debt and back on the agribusiness treadmill,? she said.
?
?World over, the same companies that own the seeds also own the chemicals; it is a mafia-like cartel that has proven to be ruthless towards poor small-scale farmers?
Genetically modified crops are allowed to be used commercially in only three countries in Africa - Egypt, Burkina Faso and South Africa - according to Gareth Jones of the African Centre for Biosafety. Of these countries, only South Africa uses them extensively. Jones believes it is a mistake to think their model could be replicated elsewhere across the continent.
?
?The legacies of colonialism and then apartheid left South Africa with a well-resourced and supported white commercial farming sector, many of whom (including maize, cotton and soya farmers) cultivate on large pieces of land, using modern inputs,? he told IRIN via email. ?Projects to get smallholder farmers in South Africa to grow GM seed such as in the Makhathini Flats, though much heralded by the biotechnology industry at the time, have been largely unsuccessful.?
?
The Makhathini Flats project, which started to grow cotton in 2002, ended after just five years. High loan repayments on the seed and poor climate meant that smallholders were unable to afford to grow the crop. ?There is no reason to believe that the introduction of GM seeds would have different results in the rest of the continent,? Jones said. He accuses initiatives such as AGRA of spurring the push for greater use of genetically modified crops on the continent.
?
In September 2012, over 350 civil society organizations wrote a statement AGRA?s agricultural approaches.

?We are concerned that as a result of the AGRA seed program, the rich pool of African indigenous seed varieties will become the property of corporate seed companies, displacing and reducing farmers? access to indigenous varieties, and locking them into an expensive high-input agricultural system,? they said. Signatories included the African Biodiversity Network, the African Centre for Biosafety, Kenya Biotechnology Coalition, Participatory Ecological Land Use Management, and ActionAid Tanzania and Uganda.
?
These groups cite a study by the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development, conducted with the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), UN Environmental Programme, World Bank and others, which concluded that industrial agriculture is not likely to be majorly beneficial in mitigating hunger and poverty.
?
Patents or people?
?
In 2009, the three largest seed companies controlled more than a third of the global seeds market, according to a 2011 commissioned by the Commission on Genetic Modification.
?
Under most current legal frameworks, farmers growing patented seeds are not allowed to use the seeds naturally produced from their crops.? Large firms such as Monsanto routinely sue farmers who propagate their patented crops.
?
?World over, the same companies that own the seeds also own the chemicals; it is a mafia-like cartel that has proven to be ruthless towards poor small-scale farmers,? Ruth Nyambura of the African Biodiversity Network told IRIN.
?
But Karuku, AGRA?s president, insists the organization tries to collaborate with local partners to develop new breeds of seed. In Kenya, she said, they work with the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute, which then owns the patents to the seeds, not large multinational corporations.
?
She also pointed to growing populations and said that scarcity of land meant that African farmers needed to increase the productivity of their crops. With 239 million undernourished people in Africa, according to the FAO?s State of Food Insecurity in the World 2012, she said there is a need for strong action. ?If we don?t do anything, it will be way more than that,? she said. ?We should be worried.?
?
?Nobody forces farmers to grow GM crops, so if they prove less profitable than the alternatives, farmers will simply stop growing them,? noted Hazell. ?Farmers have been able to reduce the use of pesticides on many GM crops with significant environmental and health benefits.?
?
Still, the Gaia Foundation?s Anderson isn?t convinced. ?The most effective, and cost effective, strategy for African food security would be to revive seed-saving knowledge and practices among farmers,? she said. ?If you separate farmers from their traditional practices of seed saving, you destroy African farming.?
?
?aps/am/rz
?

Theme (s): Environment, Food Security, [This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
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FEEDBACKEMAILPRINTEASY READSHARE

NAIROBI, 8 July 2013 (IRIN) - Civil society groups are taking on the policies of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), which promotes the use of genetically modified (GM) crops and Green Revolution technologies.
?
They argue that GM and Green Revolution practices - those aimed at increasing developing countries? crop yields through specific innovations - will, in the long run, be detrimental to ecosystems across the continent. Earlier this month, a coalition of almost 60 civil society groups across Africa came out to protest AGRA ahead of the G8 Summit in London.

?Green Revolution technologies benefit relatively few farmers, often at the expense of the majority. These technologies produce concentration of land ownership, increasing economies of scale (production has to be at a large scale to get into and stay in markets), and a declining number of food-producing households in a context of limited other livelihood options,? they said in a sent to AGRA?s president, Jane Karuku.
?
They also believe that the intellectual property of many plant types may be transferred to large multinational corporations as part of Green Revolution practices.
?
?Private ownership of knowledge and material resources 0(for example, seed and genetic materials) means the flow of royalties out of Africa into the hands of multinational corporations,? they said.
?
Technology for the needy
?
AGRA was founded in 2006 through a partnership between the Rockefeller Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. It works with smallholder farmers across the continent by giving them microfinance loans, hybrid seeds and fertilizers to increase their crop yields. In this way, AGRA hopes to alleviate hunger and poverty across the continent.
?
The Green Revolution A period from the 1940s until the 1970s when, through the use of new technologies such as irrigation, improved seed, fertilizers and pesticides, as well as an economic environment that supported industrial agriculture, a massive increase in agriculture output in developing countries (particularly in Asia) occurred. Norman Borlaug, who won the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize for improving agricultural technologies, is widely considered as the ?Father of the Green Revolution?, and is often credited with saving a billion lives through his innovations.
?There are millions of skilled farmers in Africa who simply need the tools,? said Sir Gordon Conway, a scientist and author of One Billion Hungry: Can We Feed the World?, speaking by video message at an agriculture conference in Nairobi. In his book, he argues that both microcredits - to help smallholder farmers - and macro-investment are needed for farmers to benefit from Green Revolution technologies.
?
He believes traditionally marginalized groups - such as women, youth and ethnic minorities - will benefit from the use of new agricultural technologies targeted at smallholders, and that the total number of hungry will be drastically reduced. For example, Conway calculates that by ensuring female farmers have access to the same productive resources as men, the number of undernourished people globally could be reduced by 100 to 150 million.
?
?If we are going to feed some 9 billion people by 2050 and do that in environmentally sustainable ways and in the face of climate change, then we are going to need access to the very best that modern science can offer,? said Peter Hazell, a leading agriculture expert who has worked with the World Bank and International Food Policy Research Institute. ?All technologies have risks (e.g., cell phones may cause brain cancer) but as these things go, GM crops seem to be doing rather well.?
?
Serving corporate objectives
?
But civil society groups disagree. ?AGRA aims to move farmers in exactly the wrong direction, by encouraging them to take on debt in order to use more agrochemicals and corporate hybrid seeds,? Teresa Anderson of the Gaia Foundation told IRIN.
?
?For many years, NGOs across Africa have worked with farmers to encourage them to stop using fertilizers and pesticides, and to improve their soil health, their ecosystems, their seed diversity and their food sovereignty. AGRA is undoing a decade of agro-ecological progress in Africa by getting farmers into debt and back on the agribusiness treadmill,? she said.
?
?World over, the same companies that own the seeds also own the chemicals; it is a mafia-like cartel that has proven to be ruthless towards poor small-scale farmers?
Genetically modified crops are allowed to be used commercially in only three countries in Africa - Egypt, Burkina Faso and South Africa - according to Gareth Jones of the African Centre for Biosafety. Of these countries, only South Africa uses them extensively. Jones believes it is a mistake to think their model could be replicated elsewhere across the continent.
?
?The legacies of colonialism and then apartheid left South Africa with a well-resourced and supported white commercial farming sector, many of whom (including maize, cotton and soya farmers) cultivate on large pieces of land, using modern inputs,? he told IRIN via email. ?Projects to get smallholder farmers in South Africa to grow GM seed such as in the Makhathini Flats, though much heralded by the biotechnology industry at the time, have been largely unsuccessful.?
?
The Makhathini Flats project, which started to grow cotton in 2002, ended after just five years. High loan repayments on the seed and poor climate meant that smallholders were unable to afford to grow the crop. ?There is no reason to believe that the introduction of GM seeds would have different results in the rest of the continent,? Jones said. He accuses initiatives such as AGRA of spurring the push for greater use of genetically modified crops on the continent.
?
In September 2012, over 350 civil society organizations wrote a statement AGRA?s agricultural approaches.

?We are concerned that as a result of the AGRA seed program, the rich pool of African indigenous seed varieties will become the property of corporate seed companies, displacing and reducing farmers? access to indigenous varieties, and locking them into an expensive high-input agricultural system,? they said. Signatories included the African Biodiversity Network, the African Centre for Biosafety, Kenya Biotechnology Coalition, Participatory Ecological Land Use Management, and ActionAid Tanzania and Uganda.
?
These groups cite a study by the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development, conducted with the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), UN Environmental Programme, World Bank and others, which concluded that industrial agriculture is not likely to be majorly beneficial in mitigating hunger and poverty.
?
Patents or people?
?
In 2009, the three largest seed companies controlled more than a third of the global seeds market, according to a 2011 commissioned by the Commission on Genetic Modification.
?
Under most current legal frameworks, farmers growing patented seeds are not allowed to use the seeds naturally produced from their crops.? Large firms such as Monsanto routinely sue farmers who propagate their patented crops.
?
?World over, the same companies that own the seeds also own the chemicals; it is a mafia-like cartel that has proven to be ruthless towards poor small-scale farmers,? Ruth Nyambura of the African Biodiversity Network told IRIN.
?
But Karuku, AGRA?s president, insists the organization tries to collaborate with local partners to develop new breeds of seed. In Kenya, she said, they work with the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute, which then owns the patents to the seeds, not large multinational corporations.
?
She also pointed to growing populations and said that scarcity of land meant that African farmers needed to increase the productivity of their crops. With 239 million undernourished people in Africa, according to the FAO?s State of Food Insecurity in the World 2012, she said there is a need for strong action. ?If we don?t do anything, it will be way more than that,? she said. ?We should be worried.?
?
?Nobody forces farmers to grow GM crops, so if they prove less profitable than the alternatives, farmers will simply stop growing them,? noted Hazell. ?Farmers have been able to reduce the use of pesticides on many GM crops with significant environmental and health benefits.?
?
Still, the Gaia Foundation?s Anderson isn?t convinced. ?The most effective, and cost effective, strategy for African food security would be to revive seed-saving knowledge and practices among farmers,? she said. ?If you separate farmers from their traditional practices of seed saving, you destroy African farming.?
?
?aps/am/rz
?

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Original story
The material contained in this article is from IRIN, a UN humanitarian information unit, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
All materials copyright ? UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 2013

Source: http://article.wn.com/view/2013/07/08/Countering_Africa_s_green_revolution/

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