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Guardian Unlimited -
6 hours and 56 minutes ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/4962?ns=guardianpageName=Life+and+style%3A+Give+us+a+twirlch=Life+and+stylec3=The+Guardianc4=Fashion%2CWomen+and+women%27s+interests%2CChristmas+%28Life+and+style%29%2CLife+and+style%2CWork+and+careers%2CMoneyc5=Personal+Finance%2CFashion+and+Beauty%2CNot+commercially+useful%2CWomen%2CChristmasc6=Jess+Cartner-Morleyc7=2008_12_03c8=1127740c9=articlec10=GUc11=Life+and+stylec12=Fashionc13=c14=h2=GU%2FLife+and+style%2FFashion"
width="1" height="1" //divpClose your eyes and picture the scene. The air is warm with adrenaline
and fake-tanned flesh, and thick with name-dropped designer labels. The atmosphere is one of
camaraderie, but also competition; the scent of hairspray and this season's cult perfume almost,
but not quite, masks an underlying buzz of nerves. /ppNo, I'm not talking about a Premier League
dressing room on a Saturday. I'm talking about the ladies loos in your office, or an office very
near you, at around 6.30pm one night this week or next. Because we are about to face one of the
toughest fixtures in the fashion calendar: the Christmas party. /ppThe top three all-time worst
wardrobe-crisis-inducing moments, in no particular order, are: the job interview, the first date,
and the Christmas party. But the Christmas party wardrobe crisis is, arguably, the worst of all.
After all, if you dress really, really badly to a job interview or a first date, chances are you
never have to see those people again. /ppDressing for Christmas parties is hard work for the same
reasons that the parties themselves are often quite hard work. First, Christmas parties tend to be
about getting drunk with people you already know, rather than meeting new people. It is much more
difficult to impress people with your dazzling wit when they have heard all your funniest and most
faux-self-deprecating anecdotes twice already. Second, there is the pressure to be all festive and
twinkly and marzipan-sweet, and no one apart from Cheryl Cole manages to do this without
sacrificing all fashion cred and sex appeal in the process. /ppSo it makes sense that the first
coping strategy of getting dressed for a Christmas party is the same as for dealing with the actual
party: fix yourself a large drink. Just enough to stop you taking the whole thing too seriously. Go
slow on the top-ups - 'tis the season to be merry, not so hammered that furry antlers start to seem
like an amusing accessory. /ppThe one unbreakable rule of Christmas parties is that festive-themed
accessories - antlers, Santa hats, tinsel trims - are a bad idea. Not because I'm trying to be some
sort of couture-obsessed killjoy, but because Dressing Up As Christmas screams of dumbed-down
literal mindedness. In other words, it's not just that the Santa hat looks stupid, but that it
actually makes you appear to be stupid. Beyond that, trust your instinct: the outfit that makes you
look at your reflection a few seconds more, that makes you start to imagine yourself having a good
time, is the outfit you should wear. And what's more: we think we've found that outfit for you.
These party outfits are Christmassy in a Wonderful Life kind of a way, rather than a Four
Christmasses kind of way. Some of them even have sleeves. Are we good to you or what? Why, I almost
feel like wearing a Santa hat./pdiv style="float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom:
10px;"ullia href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/fashion"Fashion/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/women"Women/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/christmas"Christmas/a/lilia
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Guardian Unlimited -
7 hours and 2 minutes ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/43031?ns=guardianpageName=Business%3A+The+road+to+ruinch=Businessc3=The+Guardianc4=Automotive+industry+%28Business%29%2CGeneral+Motors%2CFord%2CBusiness%2CUS+economy+%28Business%29%2CUS+news%2CWorld+newsc5=Motoring%2CNot+commercially+useful%2CBusiness+Markets%2CUS+Economyc6=Ed+Pilkingtonc7=2008_12_03c8=1127737c9=articlec10=GUc11=Businessc12=Automotive+industryc13=c14=h2=GU%2FBusiness%2FAutomotive+industry"
width="1" height="1" //divpThe Ford plant in Highland Park, a city within the city of Detroit, is a
monument to the American automobile. It opened in 1910, and three years later pioneered the world's
first car assembly line. In 1925, it spewed out 9,000 Model Ts in a single day. The revolution that
turned America into a car-owning democracy had arrived. Today, there is ample evidence of that
revolution. The factory looks over a six-lane highway that is heavy with traffic from dawn to dusk.
Next door is a drive-thru McDonald's, where customers come to order Big Macs before rolling 50
metres to a drive-thru chemists to pick up indigestion tablets./ppThe story of the plant is told in
one of those green-and-gold heritage plaques erected by the main entrance. It says: "Mass
production soon moved from here to all phases of American industry and set the pattern of abundance
for 20th-century living." Pattern of abundance: the phrase reads like a sick joke, for the Ford
factory it describes is a shell of what it once was. Its red brick and granite walls still stand
proud, framed by decorative mosaics. But the windows are broken or boarded up, its ceilings have
gaping holes, the floor is covered in broken lumps of fallen plaster. On the roof, the flagpole
that for years flew the Stars and Stripes is rusty and bare./ppOther companies, other countries,
might have turned Henry Ford's factory of dreams into a museum rather than let it decay into the
pitiful wreck that it is today. But Ford, and its fellows in the Big Three - General Motors (GM)
and Chrysler - have enough to do staying alive without worrying about preserving the past. GM, the
giant of the three, has lost $73bn in the past three years; it is haemorrhaging $2bn a month. At
that rate it will run out of cash by the middle of next year and collapse by that year's end,
potentially bringing millions of workers down with it. Which is why the CEOs of the three giants
took their begging bowls to Washington earlier this month, pleading for a "bridging loan" of
$25bn./ppThey didn't get a warm reception. They were ridiculed by senators for having flown in
three separate corporate jets, an act that must rank among the most impressive PR disasters of the
decade. But what the senators and the largely hostile media coverage missed was that the miserable
condition of the Detroit car industry is not merely a comment on the failed leadership of its
corporate executives, though it is that. It is also a matter of personal survival for millions of
Americans who depend, directly or indirectly, on the revolution Henry Ford began 100 years
ago./ppNowhere is this more visible than in Detroit, the crucible of the Big Three. Half of GM's
100,000 workers live in the city, and they in turn support a spider's web of relatives, spin-off
industries and services. Detroit is really nothing but a company town. Hamtramckis a city within
the city that borders one of GM's main factories. When GM enjoyed good times, Hamtramck boomed. Now
GM is in the doldrums, Hamtramck is too. We walk along a stretch of shops along one of its main
streets. First in line is Anna's Beauty Salon: it's closed, but the sign on the door suggests Anna
is managing to stay open four days a week. Next, Popular Fashion and Variety Store: shut down.
Billiards and Burger Hall: abandoned. Antiques store, an oil painting portraying an autumn
landscape still in its window: deserted. Law offices: vacant. Funeral home: open. Even in a
recession, one aspect of life must go on - the ending of it./ppOn the other side of the road is the
Family Donut shop, a local institution run by a Polish family for the past 28 years. It has a
picture of Princess Diana on the wall, a gift from one of the regular clients, and another of the
Three Stooges. The owner, Vojno, is unloading a bundle of cardboard boxes used to pack the donuts.
A few years ago he would order up to 30 bundles a month; now it's 10. On Polish festive days, there
would be a line of customers out the door and round the corner, and the stools at the counter would
be loaded. Today, the line is more of a dribble and the counter is largely empty. Unless GM
recovers, and money starts flowing again, he will have to close in a few months. "It's not just me.
Everybody around here is going to shut down," he says. What will he do if he does have to close?
"I'll stay home and sleep. I'm hungry for sleep," he says./ppOne of the few clients, dressed in a
bomber jacket with Detroit written across the back, shouts over at him. "You only work one job, so
why do you need to sleep?"/pp"Shut up, Eddie," Vojno replies./pp"I work three jobs to make my
money," Eddie Fabiszak says, prompting the only other customer in the bakery to say, under his
breath: "Lucky man."/ppThe other customer is Melis Lejlic, 27, a naturalised American originally
from Bosnia. His father and mother, two uncles and a cousin all work in the car business. All now
fear redundancy. Lejlic works in construction, but that is no better. Car workers are no longer
spending on home improvements, so demand for his work has fallen by half. Of 10 builders he knows,
seven are unemployed. "Everybody in a small town like this is looking to the car industry, and
there's no hope there," he says. "Drive around, you'll see. Detroit is worse right now than
Baghdad."/ppThe comparison sounds far-fetched, but in the streets around the GM plant you can see
what he means. Several houses have no glazing in their rickety wooden walls. Front lawns have
turned into littered pasture. Walls are lined with barbed wire. A mural of a Stars and Stripes has
been graffitied. And though it is nothing like Baghdad, there is clearly a market in lawlessness. A
poster advertising the services of a lawyer says: "Aggressive criminal defence. Drugs CCW [carrying
a concealed weapon] Theft Murder All felonies misdemeanours." That is how Henry Ford's dream looks
in November 2008./ppGM's headquarters in downtown Detroit dominate the city's skyline. The seven
cylindrical glass towers of the Renaissance Centre were built in 1977 as a statement of the
company's untouchable status as the then unquestioned king of the auto world. Inside the main
tower, there is an exhibition of some of GM's most memorable models, dating back to the 1950s. It
is almost shocking to see how beautiful and exhilarating those cars were. There is a 1953 Chevrolet
Corvette Roadster, built largely by hand, its white, sensuous curves set off by red leather seats.
Then there's a 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air in black, the quintessential car of the American dream, big
enough to carry a family to its suburban home but sufficiently powerful and sleek to avoid any
sense of frumpiness. Pride of place goes to a 1959 Cadillac series 62 convertible, which is an
outrageously attractive work of art. This was the baby of Harley Earl, GM's legendary designer.
Inspired by the tail of a second world war fighter plane, he placed fins on the back of the car,
with rear brake lights the shape of rockets and exhausts mimicking those of a jet. The 59 Cadillac
summed up an entire generation - young, dangerous, fast, unstoppable./ppPeter DeLorenzo spent 22
years working in the car business as an advertising and marketing consultant and now runs an
influential website called Autoextremist. He explains that when the explosion of creativity burst
out in the 50s, Detroit had just emerged from the crucial role it had played as the manufacturing
backbone of the war effort, churning out tanks and missiles at extraordinary rate, and confidence
was riding high. "Coming out of the second world war, the automobile was the symbol of American
might. GM was the symbol of American might, and most Americans were proud that GM was a successful
corporation that turned out magnificent cars people wanted."/ppThe design-led strategy not only
generated exquisite cars, it worked handsomely for GM. In 1955, four out of every five cars around
the world were US-produced and half of those came from GM. The Big Three monopolised around 95% of
the domestic market, and between them they transformed the US. They provided the stimulus for the
biggest construction project in world history - the laying of the US interstate highways - and gave
birth to the suburbs and to urban sprawl. Think Los Angeles. Think Phoenix rising out of the desert
of Arizona./ppHow you get from the invincibility of those days to the verge of bankruptcy is a
cautionary tale for the whole of America as its dominance wanes in an increasingly globalised
economy. DeLorenzo, who has written a book called The United States of Toyota, dates the start of
the rot to 1979 - just after GM had moved into its monolithic new headquarters in the Renaissance
Centre. By then Japanese car companies were already snapping at the heels of the Big Three, but
Detroit ignored the threat, steeped in complacency that the good times would last for ever.
Leadership within the business also crucially changed hands, from the designers to what DeLorenzo
calls the "bean counters". /ppBy the 1990s, the Big Three's reputation for innovation and beauty
had withered, replaced by a reputation for faulty products. "People started to associate Detroit
with cars coming off the assembly line and their doors falling off," says Micheline Maynard, a New
York Times business reporter and author of The End of Detroit: How the Big Three Lost Their Grip.
She recounts how in 2002 GM's vice-chairman, Bob Lutz, declared that their vehicles were every bit
as reliable as Honda's and Toyota's; that same afternoon GM recalled 1.5m minivans./ppFrom the
sleek elegance of the 1959 Cadillac to the lumpen brutality of the Hummer: what was in the mind of
the GM executive who conceived putting a machine modelled on armoured vehicles on to the civilian
streets of US cities, at barely 13 miles per gallon? But then Lutz has argued that that hybrids
like the Toyota Prius "make no economic sense" and once called global warming "a total crock of
shit"./ppThe other key element in the demise of Detroit concerns the staple of the American auto
industry - the car worker. Ron Nidiffer is drinking beer in the New Dodge Lounge in Hamtramck,
temporarily off work as the GM plant has suspended production for want of sales. He has worked in
car factories for 36 years, 10 of them on the assembly line. He is one of a dying breed of car
workers who had their pay and conditions set back in the heyday. His union, the United Auto
Workers, negotiated a series of deals in the 1970s and 80s that have become the albatross around
the industry's neck. He makes $29 an hour - substantially more than American workers in Japanese
plants that have been transplanted to the non-unionised south, from Alabama to Texas. /ppBut the
trouble really starts when you include the so-called "legacy costs", the generous terms agreed for
pensions and health care that allowed workers to retire as young as 48. GM now carries about
470,000 retirees and spouses on benefits - more than four times its productive workforce - adding a
total of about $2,000 for every car it makes, a terrible burden in the face of fierce foreign
competition./ppThe symbol of excess that the UAW's critics like to point to is the "jobs banks", by
which workers are paid 95% of their salaries for doing nothing. The scheme was introduced as a way
of ensuring minimum employment levels, but billowed uncontrollably until it included about 40,000
workers. Nidiffer concedes that looking back, the jobs bank was indefensible. "Yes, it was a bad
idea. And I understand why some people are jealous of what we've had. We had good conditions, even
to excess."/ppBut what annoys him is the assumption that the largesse and complacency that
epitomised the attitude of both unions and management is still prevalent today. The job banks have
been whittled down to 3,500 workers, and wages have been cut in half for all new employees. He is
one of the last at the GM plant in Hamtramck to enjoy the old $29 an hour rate, the others having
taken redundancy. A deal has also been struck to lift the burden of legacy costs from GM's
shoulders by transferring health insurance into an independent fund administered by the union.
After all that, to hear Congress turn away the plea for $25bn from the Big Three CEOs makes
Nidiffer see red. "I'm extremely mad. We've made all these concessions, taken the hit, and yet
we're still accused of being lazy and greedy."/ppIt has not made him any happier that while
Congress rebuffed Detroit, it has bailed out the banks with apparent alacrity, including Citibank
which was last week handed the exact amount requested by the Big Three. "We're looking for a
pittance compared with what they've given the banks," Nidiffer says. His anger is echoed in the
front-page headline in the Detroit Free Press: "$85 billion for AIG. $700 billion for financial
firms. $25 billion for Citigroup. Why is the bar so high for $25 billion to Detroit?"/ppNidiffer's
frustration is heightened by his belief that if Detroit can see it through another 18 months it
will have turned the corner. His GM plant is poised to produce the Volt, a new plug-in electric
hybrid that will run for 40 miles on one full battery before a tiny petrol motor recharges it. The
cutting-edge model, which goes into production in 2010, has been spearheaded by Bob Lutz, the
global warming sceptic - a sign of how dramatically the outlook has changed at GM./ppBut none of
the new ideas being scrambled out by the Big Three will matter if they fail to make it to 2010.
Will the Volt go down in history as a great idea that GM carried with it to its grave? "There used
to be a saying, so goes GM, so goes the country," Nidiffer says. "That was in happy days. But the
same is true now. If GM goes under, the ripple effect will be felt throughout America."/ppA car
worker desperate to hold on to his job would say that, wouldn't he? But economists agree. Susan
Helper, a professor at Case Western university, says if GM went into bankruptcy next year, it could
set in train a knock-on effect that would hit not just the 240,000 employees of the Big Three, but
also 730,000 suppliers and about 1 million people working in dealerships across the country. Harder
to quantify, but potentially even more devastating, would be the loss of social capital - the
knowledge that is imbedded in a generation. "The idea that you can just liquidate Detroit and start
again is crazy. Knowledge is not held by any one person, but comes from how people in a company
interact."/ppCrunch time is coming. The tragedy of the American car is approaching its climax. You
can feel it, palpably, on the lot of Galeana's Dodge dealership, a short drive away from Nidiffer's
watering hole. Balloons in red, white and blue festoon the long line of cars, but who are they
fooling? A more accurate reflection of the mood are the signs propped up under a succession of
bonnets that spell the word S-A-L-E. Inside, a query about how things are going is met with the
reply: "Look at the board." The board in question has just one car handwritten on it - the extent
of today's business. Two years ago, the daily average was 15 cars./ppChrysler, which owns the Dodge
brand, used to offer huge discounts on the price of the cars disguised as leasing agreements. But
in July it announced it was suspending all leasing, and business went through the floor. The Big
Three can no longer afford to lower their prices, so instead the cars sit on the lot, looking
cheerful beneath the balloons. There is one small cause for hope for Galeana's dealers. A local
Chrysler plant has just announced 5,000 job losses, and each worker made redundant will be given a
voucher to buy a new Dodge car. It's come to this: the only chink of light for the dealers are the
redundancy packages of the workers who make the cars they sell./ppThis week, the CEOs of the Big
Three have one last shot at saving Detroit. They are travelling back to Washington to plead their
case again. And this time, they won't be going by private jet - Ford's Alan Mulally will drive a
Ford hybrid, and GM chief executive Rick Wagoner and Chrysler CEO Bob Nardelli will fly on
commercial planes. Tomorrow and on Friday, they will present Congress committees with a new
business plan that is expected to include a cap on top bosses' pay, concessions from the UAW and
the death of the most loss-making brands. Less certain is the outcome. Will they get their $25bn
and, if they do, will it be anywhere like enough? Or will this once great institution, this
embodiment of American might and ingenuity - and with it the livelihood of millions - go the way of
Henry Ford's factory of dreams./pdiv style="float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom:
10px;"ullia href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/automotive"Automotive industry/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/generalmotors"General Motors/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/ford"Ford/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/useconomy"US economy/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/usa"United States/a/li/ul/diva
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk"guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2008 | Use of
this content is subject to our a
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ismap="true"/img/a/p

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Rhizome.org Calendar -
7 hours and 42 minutes ago
[img]http://www.environment.pl/websitefoto/panopticon1m.jpg[/img]br / br / Panopticon is an
installation consisting of eighteen CCTV cameras, arranged in two parallel rows and partly
submerged in concrete. The concrete mass covering 100m2 (Gallery room) will be bristled with glassy
vandal-resistant domes. Transparent shields hide the lens of CCTV cameras aimed at monitoring of
public space. Through its very form, the installation directly refers to the issue of Surveillance
Culture - social surveillance carried out by means of technological devices. This problem has been
entering our everyday lives in an increasingly aggressive way for some time now, since the borders
of our privacy are being constantly explored, penetrated and gradually took over. br / The
Panopticon installation puts the viewer in an unusual space which, due to its form and mysterious
ambiguity, inspires a moment of reflection. The viewer is surrounded by operating monitoring
devices; he can hear them working, yet he does not know whether he is being recorded by a single
camera or by all of them. And if he is being recorded, what will happen to the material on which he
has been registered?br / br / Looking for hosting gallery and financial support.br / br / Project
and concept by Roch Forowicz.img src="http://rhizome.org/syndicate/nothing.gif?f=announce"
border="0"img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/rhizome-announce/~4/473072717" height="1"
width="1"/

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GigaOM -
8 hours and 39 minutes ago
In a measurement of statewide web-surfing speeds, Nevada came out on top with speeds of a mere
781 kbps, and that was far above the not-even-broadband speeds of 322 kbps experienced by users
in New Mexico, the lowest ranked state, according to PCMag.com. The technology magazine published
today its list of top Internet Service Providers, as well as the nation’s fastest states
for broadband.
For those of you who looked at those speeds and noticed how much they differ from the multiple
megabits per second most of us buy from our ISP, Jeremy Kaplan, executive editor for PCMag.com,
explains that the publication’s measurements are a reflection of typical web surfing rather
than a straight-up broadband speed test.
PCMag’s SurfSpeed application isn’t measuring speeds the way the ISPs or popular
applications such as Speedtest.net do. Instead of sending a large file to test speeds, SurfSpeed
measures how fast normal web sites can load the multiple frames of information sent down from a
variety of servers. This is affected not only by broadband speeds but by the processing engine
inside your browser, the latency on the servers delivering the web content and countless other
points where a data packet might pause.
To see how your state ranked, check out the PCMag article and charts. I was
bummed to see Texas, my home and the headquarters of AT&T, the nation’s largest ISP, was ranked
19th.


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BLOG and MABLOG -
22 hours and 19 minutes ago
Most boys growing up need to be taught their strength, as when they are horsing around with their
younger siblings. They are bigger, stronger, and much more influential let us say, than they
think they are. But this need for teaching this lesson doesn't disappear when boys get past the
horsing around stage. In their families, men are much more important, crucial and influential
than they believe themselves to be.
It is the easiest thing in the world for a man to grow up, get married, have kids, and still
think of himself the way he did when he was a boy. He believes that he is just one more person
living in this household -- one of the roommates. But our perceptions are not authoritative,
especially our perceptions of ourselves.
The Bible tells us that fatherhood is the font of the triune Godhead, and that all fatherhood
here on earth is a reflection of that deep and ultimate fatherhood (Eph. 3:14-15). This means
that, for good or ill, what a father does is potent. Words of reassurance, offered or
withheld, are monumental in a child's growth. Words of encouragement, or exhortation, or patient
teaching, are the same.
When a child has grown up under the devastation of unmitting harshness (and sometimes not so
unwitting), or the devastation of neglect, the one thing a father may not say is that it "was not
that big a deal." Of course it was a big deal. Your child is (hopefully) going to be praying the
Lord's Prayer for the rest of his life. What will naturally, readily, come to mind whenever he
starts, whenever he says, "Our Father . . ." What does that mean to him, and
who taught it to him?
Many years ago I was teaching a class of high school kids at Logos, and it was during the time
when awesome was the descriptor of pretty much everything. And I was at war with it. I
would tell the class that the Grand Canyon is awesome, crab nebulae are awesome, and God is
awesome. Your quiz scores are not awesome." I remember telling one bright young student
there that I knew I could not make them stop saying that. But I went on to say that I
could behave in such a way that, throughout the rest of their lives, whenever they said
it, they would flinch, expecting an admonition from me.
It is the same kind of thing with fathers. You (whether you recognize it or not) are behaving in
a way that will shape your children's understanding of what it means to be a father, and that
understanding will occupy a central place in their lives. Are you their protector, or the
principle thing they need protection from? Are you the provider, or the main impediment
to provision? Are you the driving engine of joy in your household? or the central reason for
depression?

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GigaOM -
1 days and 4 hours ago
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GNOME-Look.org Content -
1 days and 23 hours ago
I like my Desktops numbered just for frame of reference. I took advantage of Cube Reflection by
transposing the bottom cap so you can see the number in the reflection. I kept it simple so you can
bucket fill with gimp if you want it to match your color scheme. under Cube Caps>Behaviour>
set "Clamp" for top and bottom so the numbers don't move around on you. Cube
Caps>Appearance>Cube Top/Bottom Color>Opacity = 0 for transparency You may want to turn
down Opacity on Cube Reflection...

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