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#5931 Re: Guns N' Roses » Mysteron confirms "Shackler's Revenge" as an actual new GN'R song » 931 weeks ago

What happens Monday? Does Rock Band 2 songlist get officially announced?

#5932 Re: The Sunset Strip » The BATMAN Thread » 931 weeks ago

tejastech08 wrote:

As for hard to take seriously, it's hard for me to take a person seriously that looks like a 14 year old playing the role of an assistant District Attorney. I didn't buy her in that role at all the entire movie.

If that's your beef with her then you're saying she was mis-cast, which falls on the directors and producers, not her.

#5933 The Garden » Boone Pickens » 931 weeks ago

PaSnow
Replies: 1

Anyone see the commercial by this guy?? I saw it last night. Apparently he's some rich oil guy who is stating America needs to leave oil importing alone. I checked up on him, and apparently he is politically unaffiliated (not a swiftboat ad for either McCain or Obama). I think what it is is he's invested heavily in smaller, new-eco companies, and is hoping they will take off. I'm sure he has ulterior motives and a vested interest, but I give him credit for his new and outside the box thinking. Just think, our economy could have a boom in new jobs and the stock market with new energy companies similar to that of the dot com boom of the 90's. we'll see, pretty funny, at the end of the article he says "I'm 80 years old and worth $4 billion dollars, I don't need to make any more money."

http://www.pickensplan.com/

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July 8, 2008, 9:26AM
Pickens promotes his plan to get off foreign oil


The Dallas Morning News

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Boone Pickens has a plan to solve the country's $700 billion-a-year dependence on foreign oil.

Replace gasoline with natural gas. Replace natural gas-fired power plants with wind, solar, nuclear and clean coal. Basically, replace foreign oil with domestic fuel without straining those resources."We've gotten ourselves in a trap," Pickens said last week in an interview in his Dallas office. "The problem is, we said, 'Send us the oil, and never mind the cost.' "

"Things were fine until the price went vertical on us," said Pickens, who calculates that, at $140 a barrel for crude, Americans spend $700 billion a year on 5 billion barrels of oil from foreign countries. That amounted to about 65 percent of total U.S. supply last year.

Pickens kicked off a media campaign today to promote his energy policy ideas -- which align perfectly with his business investments. He'll spend tens of millions of dollars on television and Web advertising and will make talk show appearances along the way.

He aims to make energy a central issue in the presidential election. He'll challenge the candidates to go beyond pandering on gasoline prices to create real energy plans.

"I feel like I'm going into a huge arena and tapping on the glass and asking people to listen," said the 80-year-old multibillionaire.

Would the Pickens plan work?

Some of the smartest energy analysts in the country say the U.S. cannot stop importing fuel.

Besides, cutting oil imports wouldn't necessarily reduce the price of oil, if Americans just replace it with domestic oil. Nor would switching to natural gas reduce our dependence on foreign fuel if the U.S. begins importing more liquefied natural gas.

Still, shifting to natural gas vehicles could cut transportation costs because natural gas costs less per British thermal unit than oil does. And moving to more renewable energy and nuclear power could reduce electricity prices and cut pollution. High natural gas markets have boosted power prices, particularly in Texas.

"His idea has some merit," said Bruce Bullock, director of Southern Methodist University's Maguire Energy Institute. "I give him all the credit in the world for putting something out there. That's the kind of out-of-the-box thinking that will pull us out of this."

Of course, there are hurdles, Bullock said. They include building the infrastructure to dispense natural gas as a vehicle fuel, building new power plants to replace natural gas-fired plants, overcoming possible opposition from oil companies and politicians.

Rayola Dougher, an economist for oil lobby group American Petroleum Institute, didn't immediately jump on board the Pickens plan.

"It sounds a little gimmicky to me," she said. But she hopes the plan pushes politicians to open more areas to oil and natural gas drilling -- one of the group's chief platforms.

Pickens agreed that the shift to natural gas and renewable power will take time. He isn't trying to address current prices at the pump; Americans will have to find ways to live with expensive gasoline, he said.

And he acknowledges that building natural gas pipelines to every service station, erecting more wind turbines, and stringing the transmission lines to service them, would cost billions of dollars.

But with the U.S. spending $700 billion a year on foreign oil, investing several billion in wind turbines and new transmission lines would be an attractive trade-off, he says.

The legendary oilman, hedge fund manager and philanthropist is worried that U.S. oil consumption tends to support unfriendly Middle Eastern countries. He sounds mistrustful of members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

He concedes he hasn't spent a lot of time in the Middle East, outside of recent trips to Iraq, Doha in Qatar, and Dubai. But he's been around the block a few times and says he knows better than most people how to solve this country's energy woes.

Pickens has been presenting his plan to politicians and other billionaires. He doesn't want to say who, but he says, "I can't find anybody that thinks it's a bad idea."

He's been promoting bits and pieces of his plan for decades. Pickens has been investing in vehicular natural gas for years and now has plans to build a massive wind farm in the Panhandle. But that's not the reason for his campaign.

"I'm 80 years old. I'm worth $4 billion. I don't need to make any more money," he said.

Instead, he said, this is about patriotism and his reputation as a man who "sure puts his money where his mouth is."

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/hea … 76693.html




(BTW, I posted this in the political section, while it myb should be in the Garden, I'm thinking some discussion may turn political, so I figured just keep it here. Do what you want with it)

#5934 Re: Guns N' Roses » Chinese Democracy Elimination- Round 6 » 931 weeks ago

madagas wrote:

I love the ideas behind Maddy and the direct, simple, heartfelt lyrics. I would eliminate the MLK quotes, but keep the movie stuff. However, the studio version has a horrible vocal (especially the 16 Axl's at the end) and very pitchy, whiny guitars in spots.

Great post. Maddy has a ton of potential, and can certainly be epic, but needs some work done on it. Otherwise it's a poor man's 'Coma'. And Coma isn't even all that.

#5935 Re: Guns N' Roses » Chinese Democracy Elimination- Round 6 » 931 weeks ago

Maddy, good grief I'm beginning to hate this song even more now & I haven't listened to it in 2 weeks.



THe Blues?? WTF. That's the best song on there!!

#5936 Re: The Garden » YouTube Ordered To Hand Over User Details! » 931 weeks ago

I agree with you polluxm, and wasn't trying to defend the invasion of privacy. I was just stating that they probably were not going to come after individual users with lawsuits like they did with the big-time song downloaders.


Apoch that lawyer you spoke to needs to go to night school for a couple classes. It's blatant use of copyrighted material without authorization, and worse yet, youtube was making money off of advertising. Its not the users Viacom will go after, but youtube & google. As polluxlm said, wahhhhhhh we only made $100 million dollars this year, wahhhhhhhh...


I don't feel bad for Viacom, but at the same time you & I can't just start up a website repeating last nights Daily Show episodes either...

#5937 Re: The Garden » YouTube Ordered To Hand Over User Details! » 931 weeks ago

I don't think so BH. They're not going to sue the individuals for watching it (similar to when they sued people who downloaded 30,000+ songs or whatever). I think they are forcing Google to hand over the information so they will have documented "how many users wathced their clips and how many times they watched them" This would be relevant to the amount of damages in lost advertising Viacom could have had. I agree it's BS, because Viacom didn't have clips up on their own site at the time, or it wasn't very popular at least. However, possibly youtube & Google were making $ off advertising. So say $.05 per play, video played 500,000 times, well you get the idea.

The IP's are requested because advertisers make a difference between views and unique views (ie, not the same person watching it 40 different times). Youtube is a great site, but they need to work with the copywright holders & share revenue if they want to move forward. Otherwise, it's going to end up with a bunch of morons on their cell phone taping themselves & their friends for 40 seconds.

#5938 The Garden » Japanese man, 45, died of overwork » 931 weeks ago

PaSnow
Replies: 0

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080709/ap_ … work_death


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Labor bureau: Japanese man, 45, died of overwork By JAY ALABASTER, Associated Press Writer
Wed Jul 9, 12:33 PM ET



TOKYO - A Japanese labor bureau has ruled that one of Toyota's top car engineers died from working too many hours, the latest in a string of such findings in a nation where extraordinarily long hours for some employees has long been the norm.

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The man who died was aged 45 and had been under severe pressure as the lead engineer in developing a hybrid version of Toyota's blockbuster Camry line, said Mikio Mizuno, the lawyer representing his wife. The man's identity is being withheld at the request of his family, who continue to live in Toyota City where the company is based.

In the two months up to his death, the man averaged more than 80 hours of overtime per month, according to Mizuno.

He regularly worked nights and weekends, was frequently sent abroad and was grappling with shipping a model for the pivotal North American International Auto Show in Detroit when he died of ischemic heart disease in January 2006. The man's daughter found his body at their home the day before he was to leave for the United States.

The ruling was handed down June 30 and will allow his family to collect benefits from his work insurance, Mizuno said.

An officer at the Aichi Labor Bureau on Wednesday confirmed the ruling, but declined to comment on the record.

In a statement, Toyota Motor Corp. offered its condolences and said it would work to improve monitoring of the health of its workers.

There is an effort in Japan to cut down on deaths from overwork, known as "karoshi." Such deaths have steadily increased since the Health Ministry first recognized the phenomenon in 1987.

Last year, a court in central Japan ordered the government to pay compensation to Hiroko Uchino, the wife of a Toyota employee who collapsed at work and died at age 30 in 2002. She took the case to court after her application to the local labor bureau for compensation was rejected.


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My father once gave me the following sage words of advice "No one ever went to their death bed saying 'I wish I worked harder'". Never could this be more true. Take it easy out their fella's, there's more to life than work.

#5939 Re: The Garden » The NFL 2008 Offseason Thread » 931 weeks ago

NY Giants82 wrote:

(or Brohm down the line potentially), .

That's right I forgot about that. They drafted Brian Brohm [sp?] from Lousiville. He was like a late first rd pick or something wasn't he?!  That was just wierd in itself. I feel for Rodgers man, 1st round pick, didn't even play your first start, and they've already drafted your replacement 16


"No pressure Aaron"

#5940 Re: The Sunset Strip » The BATMAN Thread » 931 weeks ago

I liked Katie Holmes in it. I think she's a good actress. Slightly OT, I saw "Go" a few weeks ago & couldn't get over how young she looked in that. Time goes by fast I imagine. Anyway, I thought she was good & played the role pretty well.  The actor (Sandman or whatever) was horrible.

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