Archive for March 17th, 2008

An anonymous reader writes “The British space bureau, BNSC, is reconsidering its 1986 decision to reject all human space missions. The decision has dominated British space policy ever since, leaving Britain out of many American and European space projects. The UK is the only nation in the G8 group of leading economies that does not have a human space flight program. But space enthusiast groups like the British Interplanetary Society are trying to persuade the British government to participate in both manned and unmanned space activities.”

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It should probably come as tiny surprise that the U.S. trade deficit actually dropped last year, falling 9% from the record all time high set in 2006. I state it should come as no surprise, mainly because you would have to have been living in a cave the past year not to realize that the U.S. dollar has been in free-fall.

While no one likes to see the current shape of the American currency, the one good thing that comes from a weak dollar is that our exports become more attractive to the rest of the world. In 2006, America ran a trade deficit of a large $811.5 billion. That number shrank to $738.6 billion last year, and should drop even further in 2008 considering the current economic landscape.

So at least we’ve something to celebrate right? Well, before you go doing cartwheels over the drop in the deficit you should take a second to consider just what it means to run a deficit of $738.6 billion.

What it breaks down to, is that America is, on average, borrowing $2 billion every single day in order to finance its appetite for foreign goods. Definitely something to consider. Keeping that in mind, maybe it is starting to make sense why the dollar has reached the point where it is right now. Last year’s decline comes after five straight years of record setting deficits.

Of course I’m not suggesting that the only reason the dollar finds itself in the situation it is currently is the trade deficit. There are many other things working against the dollar right now. Big spending on two wars, falling housing market, and the coinciding credit crunch leap to mind. But for sure, the persistent trade deficit that America has been running is a massive contributor. After all, Americans do love those Japanese automobiles and TVs!

For now, foreign countries have continued to be willing to ship their goods to America in exchange for dollars, but concern is starting to spread that America is on thin ice at this point. The dollar has been in a constant free fall, and is still showing completely no signs of life. Should the situation around the dollar continue to erode, you have to wonder just how long foreign countries are going to be willing to accumulate the troubled currency.

Michael Fowlkes has worked as a stock trader for seven years and spent the last four years working as an analyst for the on the internet investment advisory service Investor’s Observer.

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Businessman lived high life before bankruptcy - The News Journal

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KentuckyFC writes “If we’re ever going to benefit from the perfect security of quantum communication, we’re going to need ways of transmitting entangled photons around the globe and certainly further than the current record of 144km through the atmosphere. Anton Zeilinger at the University of Vienna and colleagues have taken an important step towards this by bouncing individual photons off the Ajisai geodetic satellite (essentially a space-based disco ball) which is orbiting at 1400km. The group states the experiment is an important proof of principle for satellite-based quantum communications.”

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Popular Science has up a feature looking at “how it works”, analyzing the innards of several new technology-based innovations. We’ve talked about the Sayaka endoscope in a pill, but did you know it captures images in 360 degrees? We’ve discussed the cute little Pleo dino-bot, but did you know how adaptive it is to stimuli? And what about the tank-burning laser that can be fired from an airplane? Well, we haven’t discussed that but I’m at a loss as to explain why. “A kind of reverse telescope called the beam expander inside a retractable, swiveling pod called the turret widens the beam to 20 inches and aims it. The laser’s computer determines the distance to the target and adjusts the beam so it condenses into a focused point at just the right spot. Tracking computers help make microscopic adjustments to compensate for both the airplane’s and the target’s movement. A burst of a few seconds’ duration will burn a several-inch-wide hole in whatever it hits.”

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RickRussellTX writes “The UN reports that a variety of the rust fungus originally detected in Uganda in 1999 has already spread as far north as Iran, threatening wheat production across its range. The fungus infects wheat stems and affects 80% of wheat varieties, putting crops at risk and threatening the food sources for billions of people across central Asia. Even though scientists believe they can develop resistant hybrids, the fungus is moving much faster than anticipated and resistant hybrids might still be years away. Meanwhile, national governments in the path of the fungus are telling folks that there’s nothing to worry about.”

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mrogers writes “British police want to collect DNA samples from children as young as five who ‘exhibit behavior indicating they may become criminals in later life’. A spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers argued that since some schools already take pupils’ fingerprints, the collection and permanent storage of DNA samples was the logical next step. And of course, if anyone argues that branding naughty five-year-olds as lifelong criminals will stigmatize them, the proposed solution will be to take samples from all children.”

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