Go See Billy Joel's "Last Play at Shea" Documentary...

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Vote for Steve Bellone: Long Island Business News Poll


The matchup is set.
Although it took a bit longer than expected, the combatants are now in place for Long Island's Suffolk County Executive race coming this fall.
For the Democrats, the candidate is Babylon Town Supervisor Steve Bellone, who had been the presumptive nominee ever since County Executive Steve Levy turned Republican.
For the GOP, the nominee is Suffolk County Treasurer Angie Carpenter, the only one who really wanted the job after all. Others, such as businessman Randy Altschuler and state Sen. John Flanagan, flirted with running, but Carpenter from the start was overt and enthusiastic about the position.
Now, who should win? 
Click on Picture above to Vote and leave a comment below.

Friday, May 20, 2011

USGBC-LI's Peter Caradonna Foresees a Sustainable Future

As a 3rd generation architect, Peter Caradonna eventually married (what else?) an architect.  But his life’s work truly started in the mid 1990’s, working on a branch library in Brooklyn.  Peter was handed the NYC Department of Design and Construction High Performance Building Guidelines.  Curious what such a building would be, Peter spent the weekend reading the guidelines, gaining a new understanding of “the future of our business.”  

Peter’s introduction to sustainability convinced him that architects could regain their former importance to society, becoming “a catalyst to a critical paradigm shift.”  Starting his own firm in 1996, He sought to learn everything he could about green building.

In 2000 he joined the US Green Building Council (USGBC), working on the programs committee for USGBC New York, one of the organization’s six original chapters.  Recruited to help start the Long Island Chapter, Peter became its first chair.  His leadership skills impressed the national organization, where he now sits on the Chapter Steering Committee.  USGBC now has over 79 chapters, and Peter enjoys a national network of bright, forward-thinking progressives to share ideas with anywhere he goes.

Of course, sustainability faces a huge challenge from entrenched business and political entities.  Peter says the green movement must work twice as hard to achieve its goals.  He also believes the next generation will use their life-long relationship with computers to take up this struggle, informed by a different understanding of the world.  “I can’t wait to see what they come up with,” he says.  “They’re my greatest hope.”

“Anywhere you go on earth,” Peter notes, “the human footprint is evident.  Even in the furthest wilderness areas.”  In addition to sustainability, he foresees restorative and regenerative systems to maintain the planet, even as our society grows exponentially.

For now, the current generation needs to determine the standards for making all buildings carbon neutral.  “And you know what?” Peter asserts.  “That’s not a bad way to end this generation’s work.”

Post written by David Sporn.

Originally posted on the USGBC-LI Blog

Monday, April 11, 2011

My Top 5 Android Apps for Long Island


I can't say enough about my Droid X which runs on Google's Android Operating System.  I had previously owned a BlackBerry and it just doesn't compare.  Below is my Top 5 Android Apps for Long Island.  Enjoy.

The Long Island Wine Country (LIWC) app is an interactive guide to Long Island's wine region, with hundreds of listings for accommodations, restaurants, and wineries! This app makes it easy and convenient for you to plan your Long Island Wine Country getaway, or simply navigate the vineyards once you have arrived.




The #1 source for what's happening in New York - news, sports, gossip and more.  No other city is quite like New York and the Daily News is the number one paper for coverage of what goes on – from the politics to the gossip. And when it comes to Sports, our writers know the Yankees, Mets, Giants and Jets better than any – its why year after year we win awards for the best Sports coverage.




The latest breaking news in New York, New Jersey, and Long Island; plus weather, sports and entertainment headlines from the PIX11 News Team.

App features:
Read on the go even when you lose your network connection.
Share your favorite stories via Facebook, Twitter and e-mail.

Enjoy the award-winning journalism of The New York Times on your Android™- powered smartphone. Download the application and get our Top News section for free, or subscribe to unlock all the sections in the app of The Times, plus blogs, videos and slide shows. The app downloads and syncs the latest news directly to your device for online or offline reading. Improved design, a directory of New York Times blogs and added offline bookmarking features enhance your reading experience. View in portrait or landscape, with adjustable font size. Share articles via e-mail, SMS, Facebook and Twitter. And get breaking news alerts to be the first to read about events as soon as they occur.

WABC 7 Online ABC New York News is now available for Android! 
We offer tons of local content, including:

                      -Constantly updated news articles
                      -Weather with maps

                      -Sports scores and news
                      -Flight tracker
                      -Horoscopes
                      -Lottery results
                      -Local cheap gas prices
                      -Movie showtimes
                      -Streaming video
                      -Slideshows


Friday, April 8, 2011

Who Will Be The Star Trek Generation?

As I listened to Billy Joel’s “Summer, Highland Falls” last night I couldn’t help but compare it to the political climate of today. We live in a world without compromise. Neither side wants to give, they only want to get. When Billy Joel sings this song in concert he usually dedicates it to “All the Manic Depressives in the audience.” Is that what our society has become?


Our leaders can’t seem to look past today. They have become obsessed with today while sacrificing tomorrow. It is not a sustainable political or social environment. Everyday we are confronted with our own inhumanity, the rising poverty rate and the decline of the middle class, the spread of disease and infection, and the differences in each others religious beliefs. Our leaders seem to choose their own madness over the reality of the situation. They needlessly dissipate their energies promoting their own selfish agendas while distracting others from the respective similarities of the issues.


They have been arguing and so called compromising on the same issues for over 6 decades but it seems that nothing has changed. They are still standing on the ledges of their own unwavering beliefs with an unwillingness to take a step back and see it from another perspective.

What generation is going to standup and sacrifice to become what I like to call, The Star Trek Generation? By that I mean, the generation that is going to put the future of our world ahead of their own agenda. If any of you are fans of Star Trek you know that in that world there is no more disease, social classes, or political unrest. Everything is done with the good of society as a whole in mind. Only then will we truly become a sustainable society.




Thursday, December 16, 2010

Roger Waters: Why am I doing the Wall again now?

FEAR BUILDS WALLS - Graffiti  in Jerusalem.
I recently came across this quote of mine from 22 years ago:
” What it comes down to for me is this: Will the technologies of communication in our culture, serve to enlighten us and help us to understand one another better, or will they deceive us and keep us apart?”
I believe this is still a supremely relevant question and the jury is out. There is a lot of commercial clutter on the net, and a lot of propaganda, but I have a sense that just beneath the surface understanding is gaining ground.  We just have to keep blogging, keep twittering, keep communicating, keep sharing ideas.
30 Years ago when I wrote The Wall I was a frightened young man. Well not that young, I was 36 years old.
It took me a long time to get over my fears. Anyway, in the intervening years it has occurred to me that maybe the story of my fear and loss with it’s concomitant inevitable residue of ridicule, shame and punishment, provides an allegory for broader concerns.: Nationalism, racism, sexism, religion, Whatever!  All these issues and ‘isms are driven by the same fears that drove my young life.
This new production of The Wall is an attempt to draw some comparisons, to illuminate our current predicament, and is dedicated to all the innocent lost in the intervening years.
In some quarters, among the chattering classes, there exists a cynical view that human beings as a collective are incapable of developing more ‘humane’ ie, kinder, more generous, more cooperative, more empathetic relationships with one another.
I disagree.
In my view it is too early in our story to leap to such a conclusion, we are after all a very young species.
I believe we have at least a chance to aspire to something better than the dog eat dog ritual slaughter that is our current response to our institutionalized fear of each other.
I feel it is my responsibility as an artist to express my, albeit guarded, optimism, and encourage others to do the same. To quote the great man, ” You may say that I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one.”


Thursday, December 2, 2010

Aliens Among Us — Just Don't Expect ET

Alien life has been among us all along, according to new biological findings announced by NASA Thursday.
Research conducted by biochemist Dr. Felisa Wolfe-Simon from the U.S. Geological Survey has turned the quest for alien life on its ear, suggesting that phosphorous, carbon, and the other fundamental elements found in every living thing on Earth aren't the only signs of life. Wolfe-Simon will explain the findings at a hotly anticipated NASA press conference today at 2 p.m.

After a two-year study at California's Mono Lake, near Yosemite National Park, Wolfe-Simon found that a bug will grow in the presence of the toxic chemical arsenic when only slight traces of phosphorous are present. It's a radical finding, says molecular biologist Steven Benner, who is part of NASA's "Team Titan" and an expert on astrobiology -- forcing the space agency to redefine the quest for other life in the universe.

"When we're searching for alien life, if it's not a Ferengi from Star Trek, what would it be?" Benner asked FoxNews.com. In his estimation, we've always defined life as something that has the exact same chemistry as a life-form on Earth. The new discovery will likely change that equation, because it means the basic building blocks of DNA are not quite what we thought.
Benner, said the arsenic-loving organism at Mono Lake grew without high levels of the nutrient phosphate (although some phosphates were still present). Just as important, it could change how we look for alien life on other planets, especially on Saturn and the moons of Jupiter.

"It's a paradigm shift," says Dimitar Sasselov, an astrobiologist who leads the Origins of Life Initiative at Harvard University. "The possibility that Earth-life biochemistry is not universal is a transformational concept. It fills the search [for alien life] with optimism. NASA is moving in a good overall direction. What is needed is to take alternatives for life's chemistry to heart and fund research work better."

Arsenic is poisonous to nearly all forms of life on earth. Even small amounts of the poison become embedded in living tissue, causing liver failure and ultimately death -- in nearly everything BUT these bacteria. 
However, as science fiction author Robert Sawyer told FoxNews.com, there could be even more profound implications. We have always looked for alien life that matches our biology, but now we have found a different life-form that uses arsenic in its basic DNA structure, he said.
Sawyer explained that NASA science probes have always looked in the most likely places we thought life could exist -- on Mars or Europa, a moon of Jupiter. There is an old joke, he says, about how someone lost a quarter in their garage, then looks out in the yard for it. A neighbor asks why they are looking there instead of in the garage; the light is better, he answers.
"We tend to use the tools we know and the places we know to look for alien life," Sawyer said, explaining that humans want to find a walking, crawling alien and not one that just has different DNA.
The change, he says, is that NASA will start looking for arsenic as well, and possibly other chemicals. This could mean new missions to Titan, which is known for having traces of arsenic. Another change could be the scientific equipment we send to space – probes might be retrofitted to search for arsenic.
Benner said the finding even impacts earlier research. Several years ago, when a Martian meteorite crash-landed on Earth, scientists examined it for the presence of phosphates. Now, it may be possible to re-visit some of the earlier findings. This hints at what experts call the "shadow biosphere" -- the existence of other life-forms, even on Earth, that have a radically different DNA structure.
"It's a huge breakthrough. It changes the probabilities for their being life on other planets," Sawyer told FoxNews.com. "If there is more than one recipe that makes life, then there are chances of rolling the dice in a chemical soup of all over the universe, and the chances of that chemical soup giving rise to life is much larger."

For NASA, the scientific discovery could help the agency acquire new funding, serving as a catalyst to convince Congress to green light for new missions to Mars or Titan.

In fact, the Internet buzz about finding alien life, as Sawyer noted, is partly due to how NASA has timed the announcement. A new Congress means new opportunities for scientific missions. He says the reality of the finding is somewhat of a joykill -- we have not found E.T. -- but there are still major implications for science and the search for extra-terrestrial life in our solar system and beyond.

Benner says the findings need further review -- there are questions about how much phosphorous is needed to sustain life. 

"The next phase is to grow more of the stuff in a lab using a defined cultured, maybe cook up a broth that contains no phosphorous at all, look at this with a critical eye," he said.

However you view the announcement, the Lake Mono findings are profound, and the possibilities for finding life -- especially the primordial kind -- are now even greater.

Story taken from FoxNews.com

Monday, November 29, 2010

WikiLeaks Prove The Facebook Effect Definitely Has Limits

I have recently finished reading The Facebook Effect by David Kirkpatrick.  A much more detailed and less salacious account of the story behind Facebook than the book with which the screenplay for the movie, The Social Network (Horrible movie.  Don't waste your money.) was based off of.  It is a great book that tells the story of how Facebook grew up and the decisions (and no decisions) by Mark Zuckerberg that have kept him in control of his dream. 


The Facebook Effect is the causatum of Zuckerberg's dream to turn our society into a more open, transparent world with the ultimate goal of uniting our fractured cultures via Facebook.  Zuckerberg's logic is that people and governments in that kind of society will be more accounable for their actions in such an open and transparent world in which everyone is so forthcoming with their information about their likes and with what, how, and with whom they spend their time.  The key to Zuckerberg's theory is the information that each individual volunteers to share with his/her network.  The more people share, the more open each individual network becomes and the more transparent and accountable our society as a whole becomes.  With some small privacy control exceptions, there is No Hiding on Facebook. 


Google was created to index the world.  To gather all the world's information in one place to be easily searched, accessed, and engaged.  (That has been accomplished and now they are just starting to try to take over the world tech markets with their Android operating system.)  Facebook was created to unite our own individual social network of friends and family to create a strong, open, and transparent world (network) in with which to live and share.  Although you can Google and find a group, business or any individual's Facebook Profile you can't actually gain access to that information without that party's explicit consent.  That is the real value in the business of Facebook;  Their Ad Space.  The very accurate personal data that is voluntarily entered into their system by people sharing information about themselves within their network has helped Zuckerberg create the first "Pin Point Marketing" System that he can sell to advertisers looking to get their brand or product in front of the most precise demographic as possible.    The Google model of Cost-Per-Click (CPC) advertisements cannot compete.  It is why Google has attempted to buy Facebook countless times and Zuckerberg hasn't broken yet.    Google can't Google the information inside Facebook's servers.  Facebook has basically created the very first world wide intranet.  


And then in The Facebook Effect's Ripple, comes WikiLeaks.  WikiLeaks is an international non-profit media organization that publishes submissions of otherwise unavailable documents from anonymous sources and leaks.  Its website, launched in 2006, is run by The Sunshine Press.  Within a year of its launch, the site claimed a database that had grown to more than 1.2 million documents.  The organization has described itself as having been founded by Chinese dissidents, as well as journalists, mathematicians, and start-up company technologists from the U.S., Taiwan, Europe, Australia, and South Africa.  Newspaper articles and The New Yorker magazine (7 June 2010) describe Julian Assange, an Australian journalist and Internet activist, as its director.


WikiLeaks has made headlines recently by releasing hundreds of thousands of State Department documents with dangerous and unknown consequences to our national security.   In this Age of Facebook, this is exactly the kind of transparency that, in theory, Facebook is trying to create.  But with one major problem.  The information was not voluntarily shared by The State Department.  The information was stolen by an individual now being held in solitary confinement for months by the United States government.   This article started out many weeks ago titled, "Will We Be Thankful for Facebook?"  I wanted to get it out in time for Thanksgiving.  But I was having trouble writing the article and tying all my thoughts together coherently.  Thanksgiving came and went with me not having enough to publish the article.  So I let it go.  Almost deleted everything that I had staring frustrated at the screen very early Thursday morning.


After reading the papers today outlining exactly what was leaked, this article became much clearer but my main question was still unanswered.   I don't know if I am "thankful" for Facebook.  Yet.  It is way too early to weigh all the positives and negatives to come up with a grand conclusion for its effect on our society.  For as much good it has and will do for us, it has created a world of vultures who think that everything is a matter of public record.  You did not have to read the paper today to know that not everything is for the public's consumption.  The key to Facebook's society is the voluntary submission of information by persons directly involved with said information.  There has to be a line, and not a fine one either.  It has to be clear and concise.  No Shades of Gray.  This what not a bunch of papers leaked that showed how our government was mismanaging our tax dollars.  There was no benefit to the world's peoples by leaking this information.  Besides damaging American relations with foreign dignitaries, the only people benefiting from this information besides Wikileaks was our enemies.  New York Representative Peter King is calling for the swift prosecution of the founder and persons directly involved at WikiLeaks.   Which I believe to be totally justified.  They put many American lives at risk for their own financial benefit.  That to me is the true definition of terrorism.  They should be arrested, tried, and hung from the top of The Empire State Building with all of world watching on YouTube.  They should not be incarcerated and protected from a society that they have knowingly damaged.

The goal of an open and transparent society is a great one.  And one I hope we get to.  It can only benefit our society to hold individuals, corporations, and governments accountable for their actions.  We are definitely not their yet, we still have major boundaries to define.  But the information has to be shared voluntarily and cannot come at the expense of other individual lives and reputations.  


WikiLeaks has shared their information, we know who they are and what they are about.  Let's now hold them accountable for their actions. 


Hopefully many years from now I will be able to write an article entitled, "Why We Are Thankful for Facebook."

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