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  • How Apple's Market Share Will Propel Stock to $500, Part 1 [View article]
    Remember the notion of a "killer ap"? Well the hottest thing today is making YouTube videos. Everyone who's tried to edit a few videos using the crappy Windows MovieMaker piece of junk immediately tries to find out what works best, then they learn that Apple has the best system by far for editing videos, plus you can run your old pirated Windoze software (not me nor anyone I know, but apparently some people have some on their computers...), and the next think you know they are thinking about buying an Apple computer.
    Oct 24 09:16 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Infrastructure Investment Will Be a Slow Economic Stimulus Path [View article]
    Good article

    It would make sense however to ensure funding of infrastructure projects that are already at an advanced design stage but are threatened with cancellation because of the financial crisis.
    Nov 28 08:05 am |Rating: +2 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Black Swans and Greenwashing Solar and Wind [View article]

    Winds are diurnal in places such as California where windfarms are placed in gaps in the coastal mountains in order to capture the winds generated by pressure differences between the ocean and interior as the dry interior warms and cools every day much faster than the does the air over the ocean. Many other regions such as Eastern Canada do not have a diurnal pattern. Instead you see a seasonal pattern where the wind blows more strongly in the autumn and winter than in the spring or summer.

    On Nov 21 11:57 AM m. melius wrote:

    > rrbatch wrote: "Solar and wind power? Off-cycle - they generate peak
    > power at mid-day or at night, not at the time of peak demand. "<br/>
    >
    > Huh? Mid-day is one of the times of peak demand (evening is another).
    > One of the advantages of solar PV power is its peak production at
    > the time of peak demand. Source: Wikipedia.
    >
    > I keep reading claims that wind is strongest at night. Where does
    > this myth come from? Maybe there are locales where that is the case,
    > but in general, winds are diurnal. Source: IWEA
    Nov 22 05:00 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
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