Showing posts with label deep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deep. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2014

VIDEO: The Crabster Deep Water Drone Gets Its Sea Legs

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VIDEO: The Crabster Deep Water Drone Gets Its Sea Legs

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Read before jumping into the deep end of NCAA pool








FILE – In this Dec. 18, 2012, file photo, Stanford coach Johnny Dawkins calls to his team during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against North Carolina State in Raleigh, N.C. If Johnny Dawkins and Craig Neal were still playing _ instead of coaching _ against each other, there’s no doubt which one you’d pick. The two will be back on opposing benches Friday night March 21, 2014, 28 years after they faced off as players. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome, File)





FILE – In this Dec. 18, 2012, file photo, Stanford coach Johnny Dawkins calls to his team during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against North Carolina State in Raleigh, N.C. If Johnny Dawkins and Craig Neal were still playing _ instead of coaching _ against each other, there’s no doubt which one you’d pick. The two will be back on opposing benches Friday night March 21, 2014, 28 years after they faced off as players. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome, File)





FILE – In this March 8, 2014, file photo, New Mexico coach Craig Neal tries to rally his team during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against San Diego State. If Johnny Dawkins and Craig Neal were still playing _ instead of coaching _ against each other, there’s no doubt which one you’d pick. The two will be back on opposing benches Friday night March 21, 2014, 28 years after they faced off as players. (AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi, File)





Senate Agriculture Committee Chair Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., gives a thumbs-up to Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., a member of the Senate Committee on Environment, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, March 11, 2014, as Democratic senators finish an all-nighter, working in shifts into Tuesday morning to warn of the devastation from climate change and the danger of inaction. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)













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Welcome to BracketRacket.


Think of it as one-stop shopping on game days for all your NCAA tournament needs. We’ll have interviews with celebrity alums drawn from sports, entertainment and politics, plus occasional “bracket-buster” picks, photos, news, gossip, stats, notes and quotes from around the tourney sites — all of it bundled into a quick read that gives diehard fans and office-poolers alike something to sound smart about.


So without further ado:


TAKE THIS JOB … AND DUNK IT


The business of America is business, and the NCAA tournament is bad for business; ergo, the NCAA tournament is bad for America.


The outplacement firm of Challenger, Gray & Christmas proved it by wasting a few hours again this year calculating how much U.S. employers could lose while employees (like this one, via wordpress.com: http://bit.ly/1fYuFac ) obsess over the tournament. In an annual report, the company set the figure at $ 1.2 billion for every unproductive hour.


“You have employees talking about which teams made or didn’t make the tournament. You have other workers setting up and managing office pools. Of course, there are the office pool participants,” Challenger’s statement cautioned, “some of whom might take five minutes to fill out a bracket, while others spend several hours researching teams, analyzing statistics and completing multiple brackets.”


Never mind that the math behind the estimate is fuzzy, or that both academic researchers and corporate managers who looked at the problem concluded the real numbers were considerably lower, mostly because employees tend to make up for lost time by working outside traditional hours.


So what should an employer do?


“Despite all of the scary numbers, Challenger suggests that employers not try to clamp down on March Madness,” the statement added. “Initiatives to block access to sports sites and live streaming in order to boost productivity in the short term, could result in long-term damage to employee morale, loyalty and engagement.”


Is this a great country or what?


___


CELEBRITY ALUM


Think the folks in Congress have trouble making up their minds now? Just wait. Nothing gets politicians procrastinatin’ and prevaricatin’ like the NCAA tournament.


Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia dispatched at least one representative into the 68-team field that began play Tuesday night. California topped the list with five, North Carolina, Ohio and Texas boasted four each, six others had three and Indiana — a.k.a, the “heartland of hoops” — had zero.


Generally speaking, elected officials from states with more than one entrant fear voters so much they’d rather talk about raising taxes than which school they’re backing. They make picking between them sound like “Sophie’s Choice.”


That made Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow thumbing her nose at the maize-and-blue recently seem refreshing.


“Oh, Michigan State! Michigan State,” she gushed during a groundbreaking ceremony at the university Monday.


“I have to tell you, after yesterday,” Stabenow added, referring to the Spartans’ win over state rival Michigan in the Big Ten championship game, “we are back. We’ve got the full team going, Coach (Tom) Izzo is primed and ready and I think we’ll take it all.”


Just to rub it in, she unveiled the little rhinestone number — courtesy of MSU Today alumni magazine — pictured here: http://bit.ly/1eiqiFK


Stabenow received both her undergraduate and graduate (magna cum laude) degrees from Michigan State, so while she might need those Democratic votes over in Ann Arbor someday, it won’t be until 2018 at the earliest.


Even then, Stabenow barely cracks the “how-to-alienate-alumni” list. Since-retired North Carolina Sen. (and UNC alum) Brad Miller locked up the top spot in 2012 when he told BracketRacket: “I have said very publicly that if Duke was playing against the Taliban, then I’d have to pull for the Taliban.”


___


DON’T I KNOW YOU FROM SOMEWHERE?


Speaking of “Sophie’s Choice,” a Pennsylvania high school coaching legend named John Miller could be facing one come early April.


That’s when Miller’s sons — Sean, who coaches No. 1 West seed Arizona; and younger brother Archie, who coaches No. 11th South seed Dayton — could meet in the Final Four. It’s a longshot, sure, especially since the Flyers only got off the bubble and into the bracket after winning nine of their last 10 games.


Then again, what were the odds that brothers from a tiny town in western Pennsylvania would wind up coaching in the same tournament? (Short answer: Who knows? The Beaver County (Pa.) Times said it was believed to be the first time that’s happened, but added such record-keeping at the NCAA was “sketchy.”)


“Sean, you kind of always figured he was going to be a coach. Archie always said he wasn’t going to coach,” John Miller, who won four state titles and more than 650 games before retiring from Blackhawk High in Beaver Falls, told the newspaper. “It was only three or four days after graduation, though, when we talked. He said, ‘All my contacts are in basketball, maybe I should try coaching.’”


After a number of stints as an assistant elsewhere, Archie’s best contact (and brother) came through with a two-year deal at Arizona.


“No question, being part of the tournament is going to be great for him,” Sean said.


John will be on hand Thursday in Buffalo, when Archie makes his NCAA tournament debut against Ohio State and coach Thad Matta, whom both Millers served under as assistants. But he’ll have to settle for watching Arizona’s opener Friday against Weber State in San Diego on TV. And even if both boys somehow get their teams to Arlington, Texas, on the tourney’s final weekend, John, who still coaches a youth team now and then, isn’t making any promises.


“This March Madness,” he fumed, “is getting in the way of basketball.”


___


DON’T I KNOW YOU FROM SOMEWHERE (Part 2)?


If Johnny Dawkins and Craig Neal were still playing — instead of coaching — against each other, there’s no doubt which one you’d pick.


The two will be back on opposing benches Friday night, 28 years after they faced off as players. But it looks like Neal has the upper hand now. His No. 7 New Mexico squad will be a slight favorite over Dawkins’ No. 10 Stanford when they meet in St. Louis.


The last time they did — competitively speaking — was the 1986 ACC tournament title game. Neal, who kicked around basketball’s minor leagues for seven seasons, played for Georgia Tech in that one. Dawkins, who was in his senior year at Duke, went on to win the game and become the ACC tourney MVP in 1986, as well as Duke’s career scoring leader until 2006.


Small wonder the Cardinal coach was happy to reminisce with AP’s Janie McCauley.


“He was younger than I was, so it was a little different,” Dawkins recalled. “We played in a great game. … It was an amazing environment.”


After a nine-year NBA career, the coaching racket hasn’t gone quite as smoothly. Stanford finally made the tourney in Dawkins’ sixth season there, amid talk that his job depended on it.


___


STAT OF THE DAY


From 2005 through 2009, a No. 1 seed was like an invitation to the Sweet 16. During that stretch all 20 top seeds got there. More recently, though, the big dogs haven’t been quite as lucky, according to research by STATS. One No. 1 has been eliminated in the first weekend three of the last four years. The mighty who fell: Kansas in 2010 (to Northern Iowa), Pittsburgh in 2011 (to Butler) and Gonzaga in 2013 (to Wichita State).


But if it’s any consolation, Butler and Wichita State wound up riding those upsets all the way to the Final Four.


___


QUOTE OF THE DAY


“She’ll probably be in tears, so that will be good.” — Peter Hooley, one of four Australians who play for the University of Albany, about how his mother and 20 other family members who got up at 3 a.m. to watch the game back home would react to the Great Danes’ win over Mount St. Mary’s.


___


TUESDAY’S RESULTS


At Dayton, Ohio


First Four


Albany (N.Y.) 71, Mount St. Mary’s 64


N.C. State 74, Xavier 59


WEDNESDAY’S GAMES


Cal Poly (13-19) vs. Texas Southern (19-14), 6:40 p.m.


Iowa (20-12) vs. Tennessee (21-12), 30 minutes following


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Read before jumping into the deep end of NCAA pool

Monday, March 17, 2014

New Scientific Evidence Suggests There’s An Ocean The Size Of All Oceans Combined Deep Inside The Earth

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New Scientific Evidence Suggests There’s An Ocean The Size Of All Oceans Combined Deep Inside The Earth

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Deep Politics, Dark Events” with Peter Dale Scott

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Deep Politics, Dark Events” with Peter Dale Scott

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Medical Marijuana Gains Traction in the Deep South

Medical marijuana has been a non-starter in recent years in the Deep South, where many Republican lawmakers feared it could lead to widespread drug use and social ills. That now appears to be changing, with proposals to allow a form of medical marijuana gaining momentum in a handful of Southern states.

Twenty states and the District of Columbia have legalized medical marijuana, and this year powerful GOP lawmakers in Georgia and Alabama are putting their weight behind bills that would allow for the limited use of cannabis oil by those with specific medical conditions. Other Southern states are also weighing the issue with varying levels of support.


The key to swaying the hearts of conservative lawmakers has been the stories of children suffering up to 100 seizures a day whose parents say they could benefit from access to cannabidiol, which would be administered orally in a liquid form. And proponents argue the cannabis oil is low in tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the psychoactive compound in marijuana that makes users feel high.


“I’m an unlikely champion for this cause,” said Georgia Rep. Allen Peake, a businessman from Macon who attended the evangelical Dallas Theological Seminary. “Once people realize it’s not a 6-year-old smoking a joint, most folks realize this is the compassionate thing to do.”


Peake’s bill has already earned the backing of more than 80 state lawmakers, including several members of the House Republican leadership, who signed on as co-sponsors and the state’s largest professional association of doctors. The bill would revive a long-dormant research program allowing academic institutions to distribute the medical cannabis and would be “limited in scope, tightly restricted, well regulated and managed by doctors,” Peake said.


Alabama Rep. Mike Ball, a retired hostage negotiator for the State Patrol, is behind a bill that would allow people to possess the cannabis oil if they have certain medical conditions. It passed a key committee vote on Wednesday.


“The public is starting to understand what this is,” said Ball, who chairs a powerful House committee and is a prominent voice on law enforcement issues. “The political fear is shifting from what will happen if we pass it, to might what happen if we don’t,” Ball said.


The bills in Georgia and Alabama still have more vetting, and their ultimate prospects are not certain. But what is happening offers a strong signal of what’s to come in other states.


In Louisiana, although a bill has yet to be introduced, a recent committee hearing at the Capitol on legalizing medical marijuana drew a standing-room-only crowd, and Gov. Bobby Jindal made comments last month indicating he was willing to consider it.


“When it comes to medical marijuana … if there is a legitimate medical need, I’d certainly be open to making it available under very strict supervision for patients that would benefit from that,” Jindal said, according to a report in The Advocate.


Technically, both Georgia and Louisiana have laws on the books from the 1980s and 1990s that allow for the use of medical marijuana, but those programs essentially ended before they could start. Georgia’s law established the academic research program for those diagnosed with glaucoma and cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy and radiation, but the program stalled when the federal government stopped delivery of legal cannabis.


Louisiana’s law allowed for glaucoma and cancer patients and those suffering from spastic quadriplegia to receive marijuana for therapeutic use but regulations to govern the program were never developed.


In Mississippi, Republican state Sen. Josh Harkins of Brandon is sponsoring a cannabis oil bill similar to the ones in Alabama and Georgia. Harkins said one of his constituents has a 20-month-old daughter with Dravet syndrome, a form of pediatric epilepsy, and the oil can help reduce the number of seizures.


Elsewhere, both Kentucky and Tennessee have medical marijuana bills under consideration although they have yet to gain traction. Kentucky Senate President Rover Stivers, R-Manchester, has said he’s not convinced marijuana has legitimate medical purposes and called it an area ripe for abuse.


In Florida, it’s likely to become a campaign issue in the fall given that Gov. Rick Scott is up for re-election and a proposed constitutional amendment will be on the ballot that would allow for the medical use of marijuana as determined by a licensed physician. Former Republican Gov. Charlie Christ, now a Democrat seeking to challenge Scott, has called it “an issue of compassion, trusting doctors and trusting the people of Florida.”


Meanwhile, Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley has signaled a willingness to discuss medicine that might be derived from marijuana with appropriate federal regulation.


“If someone wants to use the medicine that is in marijuana, go through the same testing that you have to go through when you do that through the (U.S. Food and Drug Administration), you go through all of that, do the testing, the drug testing, that’s fine,” Bentley said last month. “I have no problem with that. I am not just for prescribing marijuana.”


Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal has declined to take a position, but noted the “strong case being presented by some of the families with very serious situations involving their children.”


Dustin Chandler, a police officer in Pelham, Ala., has been a major part of the effort there. His daughter, 2-year-old Carly, has three to five seizures each day from a severe neurological condition she has had since infancy. Chandler believes cannabidiol could help control his daughter’s seizures and improve her cognitive functioning based on anecdotal evidence seen elsewhere.


“We’ve been battling the stigma from the m-word,” Chandler said. “I’d love to hear my daughter talk. I’d love to hear her say one word. You know that is something most parents take for granted.”


Overall, public opinion in support of legalization has shifted in less than a decade, according to William Galston and E.J. Dionne, who co-wrote a paper last year on the topic for The Brookings Institution. The authors noted proponents were shrewd in focusing the earliest campaigns on efforts to allow the use of marijuana for medical purposes, citing a 2013 Pew Research Center survey that three-quarters of Americans, including 72 percent of Republicans, believe marijuana has legitimate medical uses.


Among critics’ biggest concerns is that allowing medical marijuana even under a narrow list of circumstance would eventually open the door to widespread use. Peake, the Georgia lawmaker, has been adamant that will not be the case.


“I am concerned as anyone that we would get to a slippery slope of a broader scope of marijuana use in the state,” Peake said. “I promise you I will fight that with every bit of energy in me.”


Georgia Rep. Terry England, chairman of the powerful House Appropriations Committee and a deacon at his Baptist church in Auburn, is a prime example of a state lawmaker who never thought of legalizing medical marijuana but is now open to it, even signing on as a co-sponsor to Peake’s bill.


“I’ve not made a complete 180-degree turn, but I’m probably at 178 degrees,” England said.


© Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – America



Medical Marijuana Gains Traction in the Deep South

Monday, January 27, 2014

South may face a deep freeze



As dangerous temperatures hit much of the nation, another deep freeze is moving in, making January the coldest month so far this century. NBC’s Dylan Dreyer reports.



By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News


The Deep South is the next target for the deep freeze in a winter that won’t quit.


Forecasters warned that ice could soon coat the front porches of Charleston, S.C., and Savannah, Ga., where winter storm alerts were posted Monday for the first time in almost four years.


At the same time, the Great Lakes shivered yet again under wind chills that approached 50 degrees below zero. The University of Minnesota and schools around Minneapolis closed for the day. Chicago closed school through Tuesday, and the city’s airports scrapped more than 500 flights.


Jeff Wheeler / The Star Tribune via AP



A woman walking around Lake Harriet in Minneapolis on Sunday pauses to shoot some video of the blowing snow.




“The North is suffering winter burnout,” said Tom Niziol, a winter weather expert for The Weather Channel. “The South is going to see some weather that many parts have not seen in years.”


For the South, forecasters said the worst of it would come Tuesday — a band of dangerous ice, threatening trees and power lines, from the coast of Texas to the coast of North Carolina.


Just to the north was the likelihood of snow. Atlanta and Charlotte, N.C., could see 3 inches or more, Columbia, S.C., 5 inches or more, and the Outer Banks of North Carolina as much as a foot.


Snow accumulation was possible in Houston, New Orleans and Mobile, Ala. 


Up north, Minnesota took the brunt of the latest punishing blast of arctic air. Air temperatures dived lower than 20 below toward the Canadian border. Minneapolis woke up to 16 below, with a wind chill of minus 36.


Xcel Energy began telling about 100,000 customers in North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin that they could crank their thermostats back up. They had been asked to keep their homes at 60 degrees after a natural-gas shortage caused by a pipeline explosion in Canada over the weekend.


Still, the Anoka-Hennepin school district said it was closing based on a warning from the National Weather Service that wind chills would be severe enough to freeze exposed skin in five to 10 minutes.


For some school districts, it was the fourth cold-related closing this year.


Jennifer Shephard / The Elkhart Truth via AP



A man waves to thank a passing car for giving them room on the road as he and a friend walk in Elkhart, Ind., during heavy snow on Saturday.




“We’ve had a few people calling and emailing, saying, ‘You know, it’s Minnesota, get used to it,’” Mary Olson, a spokeswoman for the Anoka-Hennepin schools, told NBC affiliate KARE. “But for the most part, people have been happy that we’ve closed.”


The Northeast got a break, relatively speaking, at least for a day. New York peeked above freezing on Monday morning, just enough to melt snow that has lingered on sidewalks since the middle of last week.


But the big cities of the Eastern Seaboard won’t be spared for long. The forecast low for Monday night was 9 degrees in New York, 9 degrees in Philadelphia, 10 in Boston and 13 in Washington.


This story was originally published on






South may face a deep freeze

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Deep Cover #2

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Deep Cover #2

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Nuke troubles run deep; key officers "burned out"





FILE – This April 15, 1997 file photo shows an Air Force missile crew commander standing at the door of his launch capsule 100-feet under ground where he and his partner are responsible for 10 nuclear-armed ICBM’s, in north-central Colorado. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Eric Draper, File)





FILE – This April 15, 1997 file photo shows an Air Force missile crew commander standing at the door of his launch capsule 100-feet under ground where he and his partner are responsible for 10 nuclear-armed ICBM’s, in north-central Colorado. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Eric Draper, File)





Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh talks to a reporter in his office at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh talks to a reporter in his office at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh talks to a reporter in his office at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





Top Headlines



Nuke troubles run deep; key officers "burned out"

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Kerry says he understands Israel"s "deep concerns" over Iran


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry speaks at a reception at the Japanese Ambassador’s Residence in Washington November 12, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Yuri Gripas




Reuters: Politics



Kerry says he understands Israel"s "deep concerns" over Iran

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

A Look At the Deep & Lingering Differences Between the U.S. North & South

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A Look At the Deep & Lingering Differences Between the U.S. North & South

Friday, September 6, 2013

DARPA goes deep: New Hydra project to see underwater drones deploying drones



Published time: September 06, 2013 11:19

DARPA

DARPA ‘Hydra’ (Image from darpa.mil)




The sky is no longer the limit for US drone warfare, with secret military research agency DARPA considering a conquest of the seven seas with an underwater drone carrier.


America’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) recently held a presentation of its new Hydra unmanned underwater drone carrier project at John’s Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. ‘Proposer’s Day’ was set to beef up interest from defense contractors.


“The Hydra program will develop and demonstrate an unmanned undersea system, providing a novel delivery mechanism for insertion of unmanned air and underwater vehicles into operational environments,” says the Hydra Proposers’ Day website.


In order to tout military contractors, DARPA’s Tactical Technology Office (TTO) envisages that their Hydra unmanned submarine carrier would use “modular payloads within a standardized enclosure to enable scalable, cost-effective deployment of rapid response assets.”


Hydra network is expected to be capable of deploying both the unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs) and ‘conventional’ unmanned aircraft (UAVs), notably all of that remaining submerged. Also DARPA engineers consider developing for the submersible a special capsule for stealth underwater transportation of troops.


“The rising number of ungoverned states, piracy, and proliferation of sophisticated defenses severely stretches current resources and impacts the nation’s ability to conduct special operations and contingency missions,” DARPA’s proposal paper maintains.


In broader terms, the Hydra project implies building an underwater drone fleet to ensure surveillance, logistics and offensive capabilities at any given time globally, throughout the world’s oceans, including shallow waters and probably any river deltas or systems.


“The climate of budget austerity runs up against an uncertain security environment,” said Hydra program manager Scott Littlefield in a media release. “An unmanned technology infrastructure staged below the ocean’s surface could relieve some of that resource strain and expand military capabilities in this increasingly challenging space.”


DARPA’s gadget gurus believe they’ll have a functional demo of an underwater Hydra drone network by 2018, in case they find sufficient funding.


This all sounds sci-fi, yet drones deploying drones could be the future of unmanned warfare. Concurrently with the Hydra project, DARPA is developing a similar program with Lockheed Martin aimed at developing unmanned vehicles and drones to supply troops by air and land.


Last January DARPA also announced another program exploring an upward falling payloads (UFPs) concept, implying storage of necessary supplies on seabed in waterproof containers. Yet the UFP and Hydra are two separate projects, a DARPA spokesman stressed.


“The basic difference is that UFP involves systems deployed at the bottom of the deep sea for years at a time, while Hydra plans for modules in shallower water that are submerged for weeks or months at a time,” he explained the difference on request from InformationWeek.


The Hydra platform might also be in demand in case of natural disasters, as drones could deliver emergency equipment close to coastline of the affected areas.


“Hydra will integrate existing and emerging technologies in new ways to create an alternate means of delivering a variety of payloads close to the point of use,” informs DARPA, which eyes the not-so-remote future primarily through the prism of military application of innovative technology.


With all the technological ambitions in hand, DARPA may soon be seen setting Guillermo del Toro’s movie ‘Pacific Rim’ as benchmark. In any case, surfers in, say, 2020, will have to act with discretion. Who knows what will be watching them from underneath.




RT – USA



DARPA goes deep: New Hydra project to see underwater drones deploying drones

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

House panel approves deep EPA cuts

Gina McCarthy is shown. | AP Photo

The cuts come less than a week after the Senate confirmed Gina McCarthy. | AP Photo





Over fierce Democratic objections, House Republicans took initial steps Tuesday toward slashing the Environmental Protection Agency’s budget by a third while blocking a central part of President Barack Obama’s climate agenda.


The Appropriations Interior and Environment subcommittee voted 7-4 to send the full committee a $ 24.3 billion spending plan that would deliver a nearly 19 percent cut to the EPA and the Interior Department, going beyond the reductions agreed to under sequestration. The bill includes a 34 percent cut in the EPA’s budget, leaving the agency $ 5.5 billion next year.







Republican appropriators said they’re forced to make such heavy cuts in discretionary spending because the White House and Congress haven’t made a deal to sufficiently reduce mandatory spending, such as entitlements.


The Interior-EPA bill is the first fiscal year 2014 spending plan “where push comes to shove in this budget cycle,” House Appropriations Committee Chairman Hal Rogers (R-Ky.) said Tuesday.


The deeper cuts for Interior and the EPA stem, at least in part, from appropriators’ decision to approve higher spending for programs like defense in earlier bills. But the bill also allows Republicans to go after one of their favorite political targets: the EPA.


Republicans included a slew of riders that would block EPA actions, including the agency’s proposals to control greenhouse gas emissions from power plants — a central part of Obama’s plans to address climate change. The bill would also block the EPA from moving ahead with its proposed Tier 3 rule on sulfur in gasoline or finishing its rule for cooling towers on power plants and major manufacturing facilities.


“There is a great deal of concern over the number of regulatory actions being pursued by agencies in the absence of legislation and without clear congressional direction,” subcommittee Chairman Mike Simpson (R-Idaho) said. “This is especially true with the EPA.”


But top subcommittee Democrat Jim Moran of Virginia stormed out of the markup, calling the bill a “disgrace.”


“It should be an embarrassment to the subcommittee, the full committee and to the Congress as a whole,” Moran said.


He noted that the cuts come less than a week after the Senate confirmed Gina McCarthy to head the EPA after a record-long nomination fight.


“In fact, even her own office is cut by 20 percent,” Moran said, adding: “We know that if we had a job to do and somebody cut our resources by 20 percent, it would be very, very difficult to fulfill the missions that Congress has given.”


Moran estimated that Tuesday’s bill contains 31 “special interest earmarks,” including 13 “brand-new” riders that Republicans didn’t warn him about ahead of time. Nine riders protect the grazing industry; six “limit the EPA from being able to provide clean water”; and four “prevent EPA from implementing clean air regulations,” he said.


Moran said he had expected the usual riders aimed at blocking the Interior Department from funding its “wild lands” program and trumping enforcement of the EPA’s lead paint rule. But he was not expecting GOP members to blindside him with the new riders, which also include language prohibiting the EPA from changing its regulations on the pesticide sulfuryl fluoride.


“I just can’t participate in this markup,” Moran said before walking out.


Simpson said, “I’ll mark you down as undecided.”


Appropriations ranking member Nita Lowey (D-N.Y.) noted that the GOP plan would give the EPA the same funding levels it saw during the Reagan administration and said clean water and safe drinking water revolving loan funds would be cut by 83 percent and 61 percent, respectively. “Unfortunately, this bill’s disastrous levels and atrocious riders exemplify that the road to redemption is long for this committee,” Lowey said.


Moran’s protest was mere theater, and, as usual, the real debate on the spending bill won’t happen until the full committee takes it up — with Tuesday’s markup continuing the tradition of not offering amendments until the full panel.


It also underscored the reality that political messaging is the main point of House spending bills that stand little to no chance of getting through the Senate and becoming law.


On the other hand, the bill signals the potential elements of a compromise down the road if lawmakers are able to fashion a bicameral deal on Interior-EPA spending and the larger deficit.


Both Simpson and Rogers acknowledged as much, saying the Interior-EPA draft was intended to prove a point — that Obama and Republicans have to agree on cutting mandatory spending.


“I fully expect to take a lot of heat over some of these decisions,” Simpson said. “But my intent is to show what happens when Congress allows mandatory spending to grow and grow and places the burden of cutting spending solely on the discretionary side. It’s an unsustainable pattern that must be addressed and very soon.”




POLITICO – Congress



House panel approves deep EPA cuts

Monday, July 15, 2013

Zimmerman trial expands deep divide

Scenes from outside the George Zimmerman trial are shown. | AP Photo

The verdict shows how politicized every speck of American life has become, Scarborough writes. | AP Photo





The Trayvon Martin case highlights more than the flaws of Florida law or the inadequacies of courtroom justice. It also paints in vivid display the vulgar state of American political culture.


Within seconds of Saturday night’s verdict exonerating George Zimmerman, liberals and conservatives scurried to their shabby political corners and began tweeting hyperbolic political pronouncements on a judicial process that few of them knew anything about.







Liberals launched anguished attacks against George Zimmerman, the state of Florida, stand-your-ground laws, the gun culture, and the current state of racial relations in America in under 140 characters. Some conservatives used the opportunity to gloat and continue their attacks against Al Sharpton, the national media, racial politics, American liberalism, and a dead teenager.


The entire spectacle was repulsive.


The Zimmerman verdict showed just how politicized every speck of American life has become for a hyper-partisan political class that has little in common with most Americans. In fact, they are probably why most Americans hate politics.


How exactly was it that liberals and conservatives could so neatly line up on opposite sides of a troubling courtroom trial involving a Hispanic man and an African-American teenager?


And how could one side unanimously proclaim the verdict a victory for courtroom justice while the other side immediately declared the verdict a defeat for racial tolerance?


There has to be a liberal somewhere in America (who is paid to express his viewpoints) who understands that the prosecution had a difficult burden to carry in the trial, just as there must be a conservative who is deeply troubled by the of events of this case.


If it seems like I am taking a removed, middle-ground approach on this trial, let me assure you that I am not.


I am angry that George Zimmerman could chase a teenager through his neighborhood, ignore a dispatcher’s pleas, make racially charged statements, provoke a confrontation with a young man armed only with Skittles, and pull the trigger that ended that teenager’s life, only to walk away without as much as a misdemeanor attached to his name. But I also know that the laws of Florida favored the defense, that the prosecution overreached in its efforts to convict Zimmerman on a second-degree murder charge, and that we will never know which man was screaming for help in the moments that George Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin. I also know that it is a fool’s errand to second-guess the conclusions of a jury that sat through countless hours of testimony and evidence before reaching a verdict.


But that doesn’t mean I can’t draw my own personal conclusions, like my belief that George Zimmerman is a racist idiot who chased an unarmed teenager through a neighborhood for little reason more than he was a black man wearing a hoodie. I can also conclude that many conservative commentators were offensive in their reflexive defense of Zimmerman, as well as their efforts to attack the integrity of a dead black teenager. I am also not sure how it is that the right-wing’s professional chattering classes usually find themselves on the other side of African-Americans in racially sensitive cases.


I do not remotely suggest that all conservatives opposed Zimmerman’s trial. The National Review’s Rich Lowry agreed with a handful of conservatives like myself that Trayvon Martin’s killer should be tried in a court of law. But I remained confused by a political party that desperately tries to expand its minority outreach by considering the granting of citizenship to millions of illegal immigrants while refusing to even give the benefit of the doubt to a young black man gunned down for no good reason in a suburban Florida neighborhood. I just don’t get it.


What I do get is why over 90 percent of African American voters have been voting against GOP presidential candidates for most of my life. Conservative commentary and GOP stand-your-ground laws only exacerbated that divide. If Republicans are to take back the White House anytime in the next generation, that reality has to change. After this week, it has definitely become a longer, harder slog.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Zimmerman trial expands deep divide