GE To Buy Lineage Power, Makers Of Green Data Center Equipment, For $520 Million

Consumer and business uptake of cloud computing, mobile internet voice, video and real-time data are increasing energy demand dramatically among data centers, telecom and IT service providers. Anticipating the trend will continue for quite some time, General Electric (GE) today announced its plan to acquire Lineage Power Holdings from Los Angeles private equity firm, Gores Group, for $520 million.

Lineage Power, formerly Tyco Electronics Power Systems, designs, manufactures and sells what it calls “high-efficiency power conversion infrastructure technology.” Its used to convert alternating to direct currents or vice versa in a wide variety of contexts. The equipment is installed in systems that run small to large power plants, data centers, networks, even airplanes (namely in navigation tools in the cockpit, or in-flight entertainment systems).

The company claims its technology in the data center can:

“Reduce energy loss and lower cooling costs by 50-70%…prioritize sustainable energy sources like solar, wind, water and fuel cells over traditional utility grid or diesel generator sources – and [allow power systems to] intelligently respond to smart grid information to reduce [a company’s energy] consumption during peak demand periods.”

Among Lineage Power’s clients are Verizon, Cisco, Ericsson, HP and Oracle.

This acquisition will cost GE more than five-times what the company is investing through its Ecomagination Challenge in earlier stage clean tech companies and concepts. GE Energy Services has been involved in about a dozen deals in the last 6 months, with its largest a bid to acquire Dresser — another privately held energy infrastructure company — for $3.1 billion. Its other acquisitions during that time have been in smart grid companies in the U.K., Australia and Canada, and in joint ventures and other deals with energy businesses in China and Turkey.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Fast Society: Not Your Mother’s Group Messaging App (TCTV)

When a good idea comes along, often what you see are multiple startups pop up who were all working on it independently but launch around the same time. Look at Foursquare and Gowalla in geo-location apps or Instagram, PicPlz, and Path in geo-photo apps. Right now, a lot of the action seems to be in group messaging, with Groupme, Beluga, and Fast Society all vying for mobile group supremacy. Groupme, which came out of one of our TechCrunch Disrupt Hackathons, recently raised $10.6 million (sending all those text messages is expensive); Beluga was started by a few ex-Googlers, and Fast Society is still bootstrapping but blew people away at Chris Sacca’s Tahoe conference.

I recently caught up with Fast Society CEO and co-founder Matthew Rosenberg in New York City to understand why everyone is going gaga over group messaging. After all, it’s nothing new—one of the original use cases for Twitter was as a group messaging platform. In the video above, Rosenberg explains what he is trying to do with Fast Society. It is targeted specifically at 13 to 30 year-olds, young people going out in groups. Fast Society’s tagline is “Built to Party.”

With Fast Society’s iPhone app (it also works with text commands), you can create groups from your contact list or add people to groups, and then send group text messages or initiate a conference call (everyone gets a number to call into). You can also share your location with everyone on a map. Unlike most of the other group messaging apps, groups are designed to be temporary. You set them up for a few hours a or a couple of days, and then they disappear. (Groupme has this functionality also, but it isn’t the default way you set up groups). The idea here is that groups are fungible and they change every night you go out.

The key thing here is that these groups are private and you are not broadcasting to the entire world and your Mom on Twitter or Facebook. “My Mom ruined Facebook,” says Rosenberg. He promises, “Fast Society won’t get you grounded.” The app is already being sponsored by MTV, which is promoting its new show Skins on it.

My prediction is that at this year’s SXSW conference, Fast Society and the other group messaging apps are going to try to break out. But like any social app, whichever one gains the most traction earliest will have the advantage because you are going to use the app your friends use. Which one will you adopt?


Apple Obtains Patent For Solar-Powered Devices

Are we going to be seeing solar-charged iPhone and iPads in the near future? This could become a reality if Apple executes on a recently awarded patent that describes solutions for charging a variety of devices (including laptops, tablet devices or mobile phones) via solar power.

From the general description of the actual patent: Portable devices having multiple power interfaces are described herein. According to one embodiment of the invention, a portable electronic device includes, but is not limited to, a processor, a memory coupled to the processor for storing instructions, when executed from the memory, cause the processor to perform one or more functions, a battery coupled to provide power to the processor and the memory, and a battery charging manager coupled to charge the battery using power derived from a plurality of power sources including a solar power source. Other methods and apparatuses are also described.

According to Patently Apple, Apple originally filed for the patent in Q1 2009. But there have been many rumors over the past few years that Apple is readying a solar powered device.

Photo credit/Flickr/nikonvscanon

Information provided by CrunchBase


Mechanical Men: Live From IBM’s Watson Robot Vs. Human Jeopardy Champions

Greetings, fellow humans. Nicholas here live from IBM’s Watson Research facility in upstate New York where I’ll be witnessing the absolute latest in IBM’s artificial intelligence, a fine robot named Watson, take on past Jeopardy champions Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter. Just a live blog for now—pics and video to come afterward. I have but two hands. Feel free to refresh every 8 seconds for the next few minutes or so.

11am: The world’s press is here. CNN, Fox, NTV, CNET, PBS’ NOVA. I feel well out of place.

11:05am: IBM shows a video explaining why it’s damn near impossible for a robot, no matter how complex, can play a game like Jeopardy well to any degree.

11:10am: The video continues to explain Watson’s evolution. IBM hopes to “revolutionize” the filed of AI, in the process changing the world forever.

Read more…


Labour victorious in Oldham East

Ballot boxThe by-election is the first since the general election

Polls have closed in the Oldham East and Saddleworth by-election, the first such contest since the coalition government was formed last year.

The by-election was called after a specially convened election court found Labour Party candidate Phil Woolas had lied about his Lib Dem opponent.

Labour won the seat by just 103 votes in May from the Liberal Democrats with the Conservatives in third place.

The result is expected to be declared at about 0200 GMT on Friday.

The by-election is the first significant opportunity that voters have had to pass judgement on the policies of the coalition government and Ed Miliband’s performance as opposition leader.

All the main party leaders visited the constituency during the campaign, with Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg making three appearances to support his party’s candidate.

Polls have suggested Labour are on course to hold the seat.

However, BBC chief political correspondent Laura Kuenssberg said the indications were that the result would be close and that Labour were not taking victory for granted.

Labour sources have told the BBC they believe turnout in the contest was considerably lower than in the general election.

Between 40% and 45% of registered voters are thought to have cast their ballots before polls closed at 2200 GMT, compared with 61% in May.

Ten candidates are standing in the contest.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Hunt for Brazil flood survivors

Woman being rescued from flood waters

A woman in Brazil narrowly avoids being swept away

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Rescuers are trying to find survivors in cut-off areas of south-eastern Brazil hit by deadly floods that have left more than 400 people dead.

Relatives have been joining in the search but often only find the bodies of loved ones.

Heavy rain has brought massive mudslides down on the towns of Nova Friburgo, Teresopolis and Petropolis. Thousands have been made homeless.

President Dilma Rousseff visited and expressed solidarity with communities.

Darkness has fallen in the mountainous Serrana region, north of Rio de Janeiro, bringing a pause in the work of more than 800 rescue workers.

Many have spent Thursday scrabbling with their bare hands through debris.

In the Campo Grande area of Teresopolis, which was earlier cut off, rescuers found family members pulling bodies from the mud.

One Campo Grande resident, Carols Eurico, told the Associated Press: “I have friends still lost in all of this mud. It’s all gone. It’s all over now. We’re putting ourselves in the hands of God.”

At The Scene

If you reach the city centre of Teresopolis, you might not think the scale of destruction was too great, but on the outskirts and other neighbourhoods – such as Campo Grande and Posse – there is a sense of just how much was affected.

In these places, there is mud everywhere – some of it more than 3m high. Cars are destroyed and turned upside down, from small sports cars to big trucks. The river that runs through the city is known to be calm, but it is now completely flooded. Most of the houses destroyed were poor quality, made out of timber. Emergency services are everywhere.

Many of the people who lost their homes have taken shelter in the local gymnasium. Every now and then a new list comes out of people that have been confirmed dead.

Surprisingly at the gym, most people managed to remain calm and were chatting, although many have lost a friend or family member. But everyone in Teresopolis can feel just how terrible this disaster has been.

Another resident, Nilson Martins, held a lucky pet rabbit that had survived.

“We’re just digging around, there is no way of knowing where to look,” he told AP.

Another resident of Teresopolis told AFP: “One woman tried to save her children, but her two-month-old baby was carried away by a torrent like a doll.”

The Brazilian armed forces have brought in a field hospital and hundreds of people have taken refuge in the gymnasium in Teresopolis.

But the number of injured was threatening to overwhelm the medical services.

Jorge Mario, the mayor of the Teresopolis, said: “There are three or four neighbourhoods that were totally destroyed in rural areas. There are hardly any houses standing there and all the roads and bridges are destroyed.”

In one dramatic filmed rescue, 53-year-old Ilair Pereira de Souza was pulled by rope from a destroyed house surrounded by raging water.

“I thought I was going to die,” she said.

Ms Pereira de Souza had jumped with her dog Beethoven but was forced to let him go to survive.

“If I had tried to save him, I would have died. The poor thing. He stayed for a moment looking me in the eyes, and then he was swept away.”

President Rousseff visited the area on Thursday and vowed a shipment of seven tonnes of medicines.

Map

“It’s very overwhelming. The scenes are very shocking,” she said.

On Wednesday she had signed a decree authorising 780m reais ($480m; £296m) in emergency funding for the affected areas.

Ms Rousseff described the destruction as an act of God but she also expressed anger at illegal construction.

“We saw areas in which mountains untouched by men dissolved. But we also saw areas in which illegal occupation caused damage to the health and lives of people.”

Saying that building houses in risky areas was “the rule rather than the exception”, in Brazil she added: “When there are no housing policies in place, where will a person with an income of up to two minimum wages live? He will live where he is not allowed to.”

Ms Rousseff said the state would care for the victims but said stopping future tragedies would be a priority.

Nova Friburgo, Teresopolis and PetropolisThe towns, which lie in a region called the Serrana, are popular holiday destinations for city dwellers keen to enjoy fresh mountain air and verdant surroundingsThey also attract mountain climbers from around the country and elsewhereIn the 19th Century they were a popular summer destination for emperors and aristocrats. Petropolis was named after Emperor Pedro II, and is known as the Imperial City of BrazilThe area also has historical links with German and Swiss settlersTourism has replaced agriculture as the region’s principal economic activityThe towns’ populations have quadrupled over the last 30 years, according to the local governor

“We are here to guarantee that this moment of reconstruction will also be a moment of prevention.”

Rio de Janeiro Governor Sergio Cabral blamed local governments for allowing poor building and illegal occupations.

“Unfortunately, what we saw in Petropolis, Teresopolis and Nova Friburgo, since the 1980s, was a problem similar to what happened in the city of Rio – letting the poorer people occupy risk areas.”

He said some rich mansions had been damaged but most of the victims were “humble people”.

Mr Cabral ended the press conference by asking people in risk areas to leave their houses and seek public shelter or in other families’ homes.

“The weather forecast is not reassuring, and new mudslides could occur,” he said.

About 200 people are so far known to died in Nova Friburgo, some 175 in Teresopolis and dozens more in Petropolis, media report.

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Funeral for young Arizona victim

Christina Taylor Green, in a handout photoMr Obama asked the nation to live up to Christina’s expectations

Christina Taylor Green, the nine-year-old killed in Saturday’s shooting in Arizona, is being buried on Thursday in the first of six such funerals.

Christina, whom President Barack Obama hailed on Wednesday night, was a top student, dancer and athlete.

She had hoped to meet Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords at a constituency event on Saturday when she was killed and Ms Giffords gravely injured.

Doctors say Ms Giffords is making “encouraging” progress in hospital.

They said they had begun intense physical therapy, and that she was able to lift her legs on command.

Jared Loughner, 22, is jailed pending trial in the attack in the city of Tucson. Six people were killed in the shooting, including Christina Green and a federal judge. More than a dozen were wounded.

Mourners at the St Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church in Tucson, where the massacre took place, unfurled the largest flag recovered from Ground Zero, the site of the 9/11 terror attacks in New York City. The flag is a tribute to Christina, who was born that day in 2001.

Mourners in white, some dressed as angels, lined the road leading to the church in silence. Relatives and friends were seen entering the church amid heavy security.

Among those were dozens of Christina’s classmates and boys wearing baseball outfits – Christina was a fan of the sport and was the granddaughter of former professional baseball player and manager Dallas Green.

“I want our democracy to be as good as she imagined it”

President Barack Obama

The night before, President Barack Obama honoured Christina and other victims of the shootings, urging the US to heal divisions opened by “sharply polarised” political debate.

“Imagine,” Mr Obama said at a public ceremony in Tucson, “here was a young girl who was just becoming aware of our democracy; just beginning to understand the obligations of citizenship; just starting to glimpse the fact that someday she too might play a part in shaping her nation’s future.”

The 9/11 flag at Christina Green's funeralThe 9/11 flag was hoisted by two fire engines

A witness to Saturday’s attack said Christina had been smiling broadly as she waited in line to meet Ms Giffords.

Christina had just been elected to the student council at Mesa Verde Elementary School, and her father has said her interest in politics was inspired by Mr Obama.

“President Obama and his campaign is where she started getting interested in politics, and at least to have heard him mention her makes me feel better,” John Green said. “She began her life on a tragedy, on 9/11, and her life was ended with a tragedy, here in Arizona.”

Mr Obama called on the nation to honour her: “I want us to live up to her expectations. I want our democracy to be as good as she imagined it.”

Meanwhile, Ms Giffords’s doctors said on Thursday morning that she had opened her eyes and appeared to be trying to focus her vision, “encouraging” signs she was recovering.

Ms Giffords is moving both legs and both arms, has opened both eyes and is responding to friends and family, doctors said.

“She’s making the progress that we could hope for her,” Dr Michael Lemole said.

In another development, documents released by Pima Community College, where Mr Loughner attended school in the months before the attack, show a pattern of increasingly bizarre behaviour that troubled school officials and police.

The documents suggest Mr Loughner was prone to nonsensical outbursts and was confronted several times by police.

School officials described Mr Loughner’s “dark personality” and some feared for their safety around him.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Man jailed over JFK airport plot

The outside of a terminal at JFK airportThe plotters intended to blow up fuel tanks at JFK and pipes that run through a nearby neighbourhood
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A US court has sentenced a militant from Guyana to 15 years in jail for taking part in a plot to blow up fuel tanks at New York’s JFK airport.

Abdel Nur pleaded guilty last year to providing support for the plot planned by Russell Defreitas and Abdul Kadir, a former member of Guyana’s parliament.

Kadir and Russell Defreitas, who worked at JFK, reportedly intended to kill thousands of people in the 2007 scheme.

Kadir, 58, was sentenced to life in prison last month.

Nur, 60, attempted to locate an al-Qaeda explosives expert and introduce Kadir and Defreitas, a former airline cargo worker from Guyana who became a naturalised US citizen, to a leader of a militant group in Trinidad, court documents said.

“Nur believed that the attack would cause extensive damage to the airport and to the New York economy, as well as the loss of numerous lives,” the US justice department said after the sentencing on Thursday in New York City.

Kadir and Defreitas, who began preparations for the attack in 2006, planned to use explosives to blow up fuel tanks and underground pipes that run through a nearby neighbourhood, the court said.

The scheme was uncovered when an informant recorded a discussion about the planned attack between Kadir and 67-year-old Defreitas.

A US District Court judge said last month that the plot, which Kadir and Defreitas thought would shake the US economy, would have caused “unimaginable” devastation.

Kareem Ibrahim, a fourth alleged member of the scheme, was previously found too ill to stand trial. He faces the same charges as Defreitas and Kadir and is due in court in April.

Defreitas’s sentencing is scheduled for February.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.