Pace in terra
Eric Clapton – “Holy Mother” (Hyde Park) — link to lyrics here
Italy’s Padoa-Schioppa talks to the Financial Times
Interesting short video interview here with Italy’s Minister for Economics and Finance (“TOMMASO PADOA-SCHIOPPA talks to Martin Wolf — The Italian Finance Minister discusses market turmoil”, Financial Times, Dec 20, 2007). Padoa-Schioppa talks about the Euro-zone, various key issues at present, and how Europe is being affected by what’s happening in world market conditions.
Toward the end of the nine-minute talk, interviewer Martin Wolf complimented Padoa-Schioppa on recent improvement in Italy’s economy, describing it as “remarkably successful on the fiscal side.” In response, the Italian minister agreed that he is “much more comfortable” with Italy’s situation now than a year and a half ago, saying that Italy is “out of the financial emergency.”
Answering Wolf’s question about Italy’s situation at present in “what may be a very turbulent world economy,” Padoa Schioppa said that the “recent turbulence doesn’t seem to hit Italy in any significant sense.”
Darth Vader, are you out there?

Distribution of Dark Matter – 3.5 Billion Years Ago
NASA, ESA, and R. Massey (California Institute of Technology)
Well, it’s a question that might come to the mind of many movie-goers after watching the impressive multi-media presentation Dark Energy on the Hubble Telescope website.The presentation’s video introduction, complete with spooky music in the background, is studded with phrases such as “an unexplained force,” “mystery force,” and “death of the universe.” Evoking the fun of being scared out of your wits by the fantastic and threatening seems to be one intention of the video creators.
It is only the frame, though, for telling the story of the revolutionary discovery only a few years ago of what really is a great mystery, the dark matter filling most of space. Just what this dark matter is actually doing to the universe is the heart of this stirring true tale.
The Boldness of Boly
In a small village in the Hungarian countryside, the 3,800 residents of a slo-mo place called Boly are showing the world how to take technology seriously and change daily life as most of us know it. In Boly, they’re wired, as the reporter in the Reuters video says (A village that clicks, reporter Matt Cowan, Reuters, Nov 27, 2007).
How small can it go
That’s still very much an open question about the ever-shrinking transistor, according to a recent Reuters news video. Last week scientists in the semiconductor field celebrated the 60th anniversary of the electronic device which one engineer describes as possibly the 20th century’s most important innovation. And he explains why (Transistor turns 60, reporter Matt Cowan, Reuters, Dec 13, 2007).
What nation is top dog in the digital revolution
The United Kingdom is ahead of the pack in the digital revolution, says James Thickett, Director of Research of Ofcom, the UK’s official regulatory body of communications industries.
The pack he’s referring to is made up of the twelve countries surveyed for a new Ofcom report just released yesterday. Nations studied were France, Germany, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Japan, Canada, the UK, and the U.S. The report on the global communications market also provides a look at the four arriving powerhouse economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China.
Some of the Ofcom report findings were:
- The UK is picking up digital television at a higher rate than other countries, with 76 percent of UK households having gone digital by the end of 2006. In second place was the U.S., with 61 percent, followed by Japan with 60 percent;
- Broadband connections had arrived at over half of all UK households by the end of 2006, bringing the country ahead of the U.S., for the first time;
- Women use the Internet more than men, both in the UK and in the U.S. In the United States, women, at 52 percent, led men in online presence, while in the UK men and women spent the same amount of time online except in the 18-34 age group where women were a leap ahead of men in percent of use (57 to 43).
Thickett summarizes the new Ofcom report findings in a video presentation (below). He particularly highlights what he describes as enormous growth in mobile communications across the globe.
In the sector of mobile phones, for example, he said the UK has one of the highest rates of growth in the world, with 115 mobile connections for every 100 people. Only Italy has a higher rate, with 130 connections for every 100 people.
This massive rate of growth in the use of mobile phones also is happening in Brazil, Russia, India and China, according to Thickett, with those countries accounting for over 40 percent worldwide of new mobile connections.
The full report is available online
Reflecting on the world’s move to the city
Earlier this year, a report from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) announced that in 2008, for the first time in history, more people will be living in cities than in rural areas. The number of city dwellers will be 3.3 billion, the report stated, and within less than two-and-a-half decades that urban population will mushroom to almost five billion (State of World Population 2007).
This week, New York Times writer Stephen J. Dubner asked five prominent American scholars for their thinking about what we should be thinking about this increase in urbanization (“How Should We Be Thinking About Urbanization?“, by Stephen J. Dubner, A Freakonomics Quorum, New York Times, Dec 11, 2007). The thinkers Dubner consulted were James Howard Kunstler, Edward Glaeser, Robert Bruegmann, Dolores Hayden, and Alan Berube.
The five responses were varied, complex and thought-provoking. Among other things, there is some discussion of how the UN chooses to define “city”, the ways in which cities are expanding, and also an update on who lives in suburbs today as opposed to when “the burbs” first came into being.
Exaflood: Is it real or is it Oz?
When I came across a video on the website of the Internet Innovation Alliance (IAA) warning that at predicted growth rates, online user traffic soon is going to overwhelm capacity, I was fascinated. This approaching tsunami of user demand has been christened with its own name, the Exaflood. What exactly this is, and the user growth patterns of the Internet that are feeding its ominous arrival are presented by IAA in an informative and concise visual package.
Of course, the question that then came to mind was whether there is more than one side to this story.
Nosing around online, I soon found a recent article by New York Times technology reporter Steve Lohr that addressed this very issue (“Is the Exaflood Coming?”, New York Times, Nov 30, 2007).
So in this post, for anyone interested, I re-trace my beginning path in learning some basics about this dark spectre of the Exaflood. Is the threat real? Or is it mostly a scary PR tactic by those opposed to net neutrality (net neutrality = all users are created equal, in effect)?
I recommend that you first read Lohr’s brief analysis (link above). Then, watch the IAA video below. Then decide for yourself.
Whether you agree, disagree or reserve judgement, you’ll be more prepared, in any case, to understand this crucial discussion that is underway.
Television losing younger viewers
The Internet has surpassed television as the first choice among 16-24 year-olds in Europe, according to a new study released by a media trade organization, the European Interactive Advertising Association (EIAA).
Titled “Shifting Traditions: Internet Rivalling TV In Media Consumption Stakes,” the September 2007 survey is based on more than 7,000 random telephone interviews, according to the EIAA press release. Countries represented were the UK, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Belgium, Holland, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden.
The study found that in the 16-24 year-old age span:
- 82% use the Internet between 5 and 7 days each week while only 77% watch TV as regularly (a decrease of 5% since last year);
- 10% more time is spent on the Internet than in watching television;
- almost half (48%) claim their TV consumption has dropped off as a direct result of the Internet.
Other key findings of the survey found that 169 million people are now online across ten European markets. That growth is being driven by increased use of the Internet among seniors and women. Internet users are staying online nearly 12 hours a week on average, the report said, and social networking sites, MySpace and Facebook as two examples, are now visited by 42% of Internet users.
R-E-S-P-E-C-T. Aretha’s call to arms
The song that launched Aretha Franklin into the rock music stratosphere 40 years ago was much more than a pop music hit, according to a multimedia celebration of “RESPECT” on the website of the daily newspaper the Detroit Free Press. The year of the song’s release was 1967, and the civil rights movement in the U.S., was fully in motion. Aretha’s “R-E-S-P-E-C-T” arrived just at the right time.
“It gave an anthem to the civil rights movement and, ultimately, it served as a call to arms for women everywhere,” the text of the presentation states.
The video below (“Forty Years of ‘RESPECT’,” Detroit Free Press) is a music-filled, narrative history of the singer, the song and the times. A text version is here.
