Sunday, June 26, 2011

The refrigerator on top of your television

All I can say is, "Wow."
There are 160 million so-called set-top boxes in the United States, one for every two people, and that number is rising. Many homes now have one or more basic cable boxes as well as add-on DVRs, or digital video recorders, which use 40 percent more power than the set-top box.

One high-definition DVR and one high-definition cable box use an average of 446 kilowatt hours a year, about 10 percent more than a 21-cubic-foot energy-efficient refrigerator, a recent study found.

These set-top boxes are energy hogs mostly because their drives, tuners and other components are generally running full tilt, or nearly so, 24 hours a day, even when not in active use. The recent study, by the Natural Resources Defense Council, concluded that the boxes consumed $3 billion in electricity per year in the United States — and that 66 percent of that power is wasted when no one is watching and shows are not being recorded. That is more power than the state of Maryland uses over 12 months.
Full story from the New York Times.

And then there's this from a few months ago, also from the Times:
In California, where about 400,000 people are licensed to grow marijuana for personal medical use or to sell to dispensaries, indoor cultivation is responsible for a whopping 8 percent of household electricity usage, costing about $3 billion yearly and producing the annual carbon emission of a million average cars.

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Saturday, June 25, 2011

Cuomo rocks: "We reached a new level of social justice this evening."

Here's a great speech from New York Governor Andrew Cuomo after last night's historic passage of gay marriage in New York state:

(Video link)

Think about it... 25 years ago, the New York Times obituary section still referred to the partners of gays and lesbians as "longtime companions."

We've come a long way, baby.

Happy pride, San Francisco! Happy pride, Seattle! And most of all, HAPPY PRIDE, NEW YORK!!!

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Friday, June 24, 2011

New York becomes the 6th and largest state to legalize same sex marriage

Woo hoo, who would have ever believed it? From the New York Times:
The same-sex marriage bill was approved on a 33-to-29 vote, as 4 Republican state senators joined 29 Democrats in voting for the bill. The Senate galleries were so packed with supporters and opponents that the fire marshals closed them off....

Senate approval was the final hurdle for the same-sex marriage legislation, which is strongly supported by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and was approved last week by the Assembly. Mr. Cuomo is expected to sign the measure soon, and the law will go into effect 30 days later, meaning that same-sex couples could begin marrying in New York by midsummer.

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Thursday, June 23, 2011

Quote for the day

"No Americans are in harm's way. It's just flying robots killing Libyans. You know, peace."

-- Stephen Colbert, last night on The Colbert Report

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Friday, June 17, 2011

Another "what's wrong with our healthcare system" story

Double CT scans:
Performing two scans in succession is rarely necessary, radiologists say, yet some hospitals were doing that more than 80 percent of the time for their Medicare chest patients, according to Medicare outpatient claims from 2008, the most recent year available....

In 2008, about 75,000 patients received double scans, one using iodine contrast to check blood flow, and one that did not. “If you do both, you bill for both,” Dr. Pentecost said.

Radiologists say one scan or the other is needed depending on the patient’s condition, but rarely both. Double scanning is also common among privately insured patients who tend to be younger.

Double scans expose patients to extra radiation while heaping millions of dollars in extra costs on an already overburdened Medicare program. A single CT scan of the chest is equal to about 350 standard chest X-rays, so two scans are twice that amount
The New York Times has an ongoing series of investigative reports about the overuse and misuse of radiation for medical purposes in America.

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Fishy

It sucks that you can't trust anyone:
Recent studies by researchers in North America and Europe harnessing the new techniques have consistently found that 20 to 25 percent of the seafood products they check are fraudulently identified, fish geneticists say.

Labeling regulation means little if the “grouper” is really catfish or if gulf shrimp were spawned on a farm in Thailand.

Environmentalists, scientists and foodies are complaining that regulators are lax in policing seafood, and have been slow to adopt the latest scientific tools even though they are now readily available and easy to use.
Particularly because it's so important that consumers choose their seafood wisely.

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Obama's logic problem

Funny how everything seems different when you get into that big White House...

I have been generally supportive of our efforts in Libya, but I have to admit I'm a little dubious about President Obama's reasoning on this one:
President Obama rejected the views of top lawyers at the Pentagon and the Justice Department when he decided that he had the legal authority to continue American military participation in the air war in Libya without Congressional authorization, according to officials familiar with internal administration deliberations.

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Brilliant

Courtesy of a co-worker:


(Click for larger image)

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Saturday, June 11, 2011

Quotes for the day

If you can find a path with no obstacles, it probably doesn't lead anywhere.
-- Frank Howard Clark
It is important to expect nothing, to take every experience, including the negative ones, as merely steps on the path, and to proceed.
-- Ram Dass
Remember when life's path is steep to keep your mind even.
-- Horace
All paths are the same, leading nowhere. Therefore, pick a path with heart!
-- Carlos Castaneda

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You did it

Congrats to all those riders and roadies who are finishing up AIDS/LifeCycle 10 today!

I'm looking forward to see if they can beat this:

(Video link)

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Thursday, June 09, 2011

One big score

I think I'm going to let Gunther IV hump my leg.

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

Another "what's wrong with our healthcare system" story

You may have heard that there's a new drug for one of the deadliest forms of skin cancer, melanoma. Combined with an existing cancer drug, the treatment has the potential to lengthen the lives of patients with skin cancer that has spread. The story got a lot of airtime over the weekend and was described by a melanoma specialist as offering an "unprecedented time of celebration for our patients."

But if you look closer, you might notice that "more than half of patients with metastatic melanoma would not be helped all that much by either drug" and that "experts said they might add two to several months to the expected lifespans of people with advanced melanoma."

Two to several months? I can only speak for myself, but that doesn't seem like much of a breakthrough to me. If I had advanced cancer, I would find it difficult to put myself through any treatment that wasn't likely to extend my life for more than a year (maybe even two).

This "breakthrough" highlights one of the major reasons we spend so much on healthcare in this country: expensive new drugs that provide marginal improvements in lifespan or quality of life. And most of the media lacks the expertise to accurately report on medical and scientific research or even to identify which stories are truly significant.

Sigh.

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Saturday, June 04, 2011

One man's experience: living with HIV for 30 years

In today's New York Times, Mark Trautwein shares his experience of being infected with HIV for the last 30 years. From the early days of uncertainty, fear, and death and the years of juggling complicated pill regimens, Trautwein has learned some lessons about life:
The dead don’t have problems, so I was grateful for mine. I was alive and my deathly companion less insistent. AIDS and I have been together for almost 30 years now. My relationship with AIDS is one of my most enduring ones, and has both enriched and beggared my life. It robbed me of friends and loved ones, and with them memories we would have had and repositories of my own history. It ended a career I loved. It cost me a marriage. My intimacy with health care in America has been costly and exhausting. I know these are small prices to pay for life.

What I’ve gained is precious. Above all, the constant companionship of plague has taught me that life is about living, not cheating death. Fighting disease is required and struggling with life inevitable. But I accept the outcomes now, whatever they are. My disease does not make me special, nor does my survival make me courageous.

On that day I walked from the hospital knowing I had “it,” I was given a great gift: the realization that we all dangle from that most delicate of threads and that the only way to live a life is to love it.

I haven’t died on schedule, and I’ve been learning not to live life on one either

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Thirty years ago...

Tomorrow will mark the 30th anniversary of the first report in the medical literature of the disease that was to become known as AIDS. From the CDC's MMWR Weekly:
In the period October 1980-May 1981, 5 young men, all active homosexuals, were treated for biopsy-confirmed Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia at 3 different hospitals in Los Angeles, California. Two of the patients died. All 5 patients had laboratory-confirmed previous or current cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and candidal mucosal infection. Case reports of these patients follow.
I was fifteen at the time, still struggling in a small Midwestern town with my conflicted sexuality. It would be four more years before Rock Hudson died of AIDS and brought the disease home to me personally, leading me to slam shut a door I was just on the verge of opening. I remember riding around in my car one warm summer night, taping myself on my cassette recorder: Why did this have to happen now? Just when I was thinking that I could finally express who I am? Will I have to hide forever?

Thirty years. In those three decades I've come out. Demonstrated with ACT-UP and Queer Nation. Had countless friends test positive and several diagnosed with AIDS (though miraculously, only a couple have died). I've walked to raise money. Danced to raise money. Rode to raise money. I've studied the disease in classes. Been tested for it dozens of times. I've seen infection with HIV transition from being a death sentence to something much more manageable... and watched attitudes shift as well. Throughout these years the virus and the disease have been constants in my life as a gay man. Something to be afraid of. Something to fight. Something to assimilate as a fact of life. But it's never over, and each year brings a change in how this disease affects my community and how it affects me.

THE TENTH ANNUAL AIDS/LIFECYCLE begins tomorrow: a couple thousand riders and many hundreds of volunteers making the 545 mile journey from San Francisco to Los Angeles. I rode that route in 2007, and last year I volunteered for the medical team. I so wish I were going to be there this year!

To all my friends who will be: "Know that you are heroes for countless people. Ride safe and don't forget to use the hand sanitizer. :-) But most of all, when the going gets tough, remember that I love you. I'm so very proud of all that you're doing."

From ALC6

(Click to see a larger image)

And as a reminder of the long road from where this all began to the future we still hope for, here's the "I just wanna be there" scene from 1989's Longtime Companion.

(Video link)

I just wanna be there.

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