Climate Corps 2010: Reaching Beyond the ‘Low-Hanging Fruit’

When I originally set out to spend the summer as an EDF Climate Corps fellow at eBay Inc., I anticipated spending my 10-week fellowship focused on making the business case for energy efficiency in the company’s data centers. On my first day at eBay headquarters, I realized I had been mistaken. The greatest energy efficiency gains would actually not be in the data centers, but found elsewhere.

Near the start of my fellowship, eBay Inc. unveiled a new data center named Project Topaz that was 30 percent more efficient than any other data center in the company’s portfolio. In “geek speak,” it has a power usage effectiveness (PUE) rating of 1.4 thanks to water-side economization, in-row cooling and 400V power distribution.

As a Climate Corps fellow who has been trained on data center efficiency measures aimed at enabling companies to pick low-hanging fruit and cut costs on wasted energy, it has been nearly impossible to make any recommendations for a facility that is already so advanced in its green initiatives.

Obviously I needed to refocus the scope of my project.

Thankfully, my supervisor introduced me to colleagues throughout the organization in workplace resources, procurement, IT and corporate communications. Considering over 2,400 of eBay Inc.’s employees are members of the Green Team, I was not surprised by the contagious enthusiasm for sustainability.

Academic studies on energy efficiency in California show that while commercial consumption has grown, efficiency has remained the same. Despite this marketplace reality, I was not surprised to hear that as of May 2010, the number of watts per listing on eBay had declined 55 percent since the second quarter of 2008. Members of the Green Team are efficiency experts in a company that has championed sustainability in both its e-commerce business as well as its own operational footprint. Atop the building I’ve been sitting in this summer, stands the largest commercial solar installation in San Jose. Next to it is a 500kW installation of Bloom Energy boxes that together account for more than 30 percent of the campus’s energy needs.

All of these factors do, however, make my 10-week treasure hunt for energy efficiency that much more difficult.
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While other Climate Corps fellows this year have reported massive savings from finding lights on at night and changing fluorescent lighting to T-8s from T-12s, eBay’s facilities and operations have yet to yield such low-hanging fruit.

The Green Team has already installed automated lighting schedules and motion sensors, upgraded to T-8s years ago, employed direct digital control and air-side economization in HVAC, and certified a building as LEED Gold back in 2008. I even eat from the “Low-Carbon Diet” line at the cafeteria.

Very rapidly, I’ve adjusted any expectations of sweeping in to heroically discover major energy efficiency gains. This is not to say that eBay Inc. has finished a “job well done.” On the contrary, I have found my value add this summer as a needed resource for ongoing projects as colleagues try to manage the energy usage and carbon output of their business unit or department. Although energy efficiency is a continuing goal, rarely does a decision-maker understand the energy impacts of each option up for consideration without relying on other expertise.

And who knows? I still have three weeks left this summer — plenty of time to continue digging around for that hidden goldmine of energy efficiency treasure.

Megan Rast is a 2010 EDF Climate Corps fellow at eBay Inc. and a member of Net Impact. She is an MBA candidate at Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley. Further coverage of the Climate Corps program is available at GreenBiz.com/edfclimatecorps. This content is cross-posted at Environmental Defense Fund Innovation Exchange Blog.

In lawsuit, XPRT says it gave eBay the idea to buy PayPal

A company called XPRT Ventures has sued eBay for patent infringement, asking the court for US$3.8 billion in damages.

XPRT claims that by pitching its technology to eBay, it gave the auction site the idea that buying PayPal could significantly improve its business by reducing costs associated with other forms of payment.

XPRT says the inventor of one of its patents, covering a way to streamline e-commerce transactions, contacted eBay in 2001 and later spoke with an eBay lawyer to gauge the company’s interest in using the patent-pending technology.

The inventor failed to get a response to a follow-up letter asking the lawyer if eBay was interested in the technology. Shortly thereafter, eBay announced its intention to buy PayPal.

“EBay’s familiarity with the confidential information provided by the Inventors allowed eBay to recognize the advantages it would realize by acquiring, modifying and integrating PayPal’s payment platform with eBay’s own e-commerce payment platform,” the lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware, reads. “EBay also knew or should have known that such modification and combination would violate Inventors’ patent application claims should they issue as patents.”

EBay has benefited “enormously” from the use of the ideas in the patents, the suit claims.

The lawsuit says eBay later filed its own patent applications based on technologies that PayPal uses. Those applications use technology in the XPRT patents, yet eBay did not initially cite those patents in the application, the suit alleges. Later, eBay lawyers did add citations of the patents. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has rejected eBay’s application four times, citing XPRT’s patents, the suit says.

XPRT alleges that eBay and related companies including PayPal, Bill Me Later, Shopping.com and StubHub all knowingly infringe six of its patents. It also charges eBay with the misappropriation of trade secrets. It is asking for a minimum award of $3.8 billion in damages.

In a statement, eBay said it is still reviewing the complaint. “We believe it is without merit, and intend to defend ourselves vigorously,” it said.

Q+A: Why is China so important to Google?

(Reuters) – Google Inc surprised markets on Friday by saying Chinese authorities had renewed its license to operate a website. In a bid to secure the license, the world’s largest search engine said last week it would stop automatically redirecting users of its China search site, Google.cn, to its uncensored Hong Kong site.

The saga began when Google said in January it may quit China over censorship concerns and after suffering a hacker attack it said came from within China.

WHY HAS GOOGLE FOUGHT SO HARD?

Without the Internet Content Provider license, Google’s search presence in China would have reverted back to when it did not have a localized search page. China users keen to access Google search had to turn to its offshore sites, meaning longer search times — and a boost for Baidu, the top local player.

Google’s current search business in China accounts for a tiny slice of its $24 billion in annual revenue, with analysts putting its annual China revenue at $300-$400 million. But the long-term growth prospects are key.

For one, Google is keen to provide non-search functions on the Google.cn site, such as music search and text translation.

As the world’s largest Internet market with nearly 400 million users, China has huge potential. Firms that got out of it early, such as eBay and Yahoo Inc, haven’t been able to regain a foothold.

WHAT’S THE UPSIDE AND DOWNSIDE TO BEING ALLOWED TO STAY?

Google’s hard-fought effort to stay in China may pay off if it successfully maintains access to the world’s largest Internet market by users.

With an Internet penetration rate of 25 percent, China’s online sector is still in its infancy. Japan and South Korea, the two most Internet savvy Asian countries, have penetration rates between 70 to 80 percent.

China holds not only huge market potential for search, but also from other Internet sectors including social-networking, e-commerce and online gaming.

The downside of operating in such a market is the strict government controls — a source of friction between Google and Beijing that was largely responsible for the original dispute.

Allowing itself to be subjected to China’s censorship rules could undermine Google’s credibility after it won plaudits on the world stage earlier this year for its tough China stance.

BEYOND SEARCH, WHAT DOES GOOGLE HAVE IN CHINA

Beyond search, Google still has its Android platform, an open source operating system for mobile phones.

Credit Suisse analyst Wallace Cheung expects Android to become the most popular mobile operating system in China in the long run, beating out Apple’s popular iPhone.

China’s two main telecom firms China Mobile and China Unicom already offer smartphones running Google’s Android system.

The non-renewal of Google’s ICP license would have spelled uncertainty for Android as China could also find a way to make it hard for Google to develop and market the platform in China.

WHAT OBSTACLES DO OTHER GOOGLE PRODUCTS IN CHINA FACE?

Google Maps may face difficulties in the near future as China recently implemented new laws requiring firms wanting to provide online mapping services to apply for a license.

On Wednesday, China’s State Bureau for Surveying and Mapping released a preliminary list of 23 companies approved for online mapping. Baidu was on the list but Google was not.

Other popular Google products such as Blogger and YouTube are blocked in China, which defends the move on the need to ensure public security and social harmony.

Yahoo! Provides Millions of Sony Customers in More Than 100 Countries with an Enhanced TV Viewing Experience

Yahoo! Dramatically Expands Availability of Yahoo! TV Widgets on Sony`s BRAVIA
LCD Televisions
SUNNYVALE, Calif.–(Business Wire)–
Yahoo! (NASDAQ:YHOO) today announced the expanded availability of the Yahoo!
Widget Engine on Sony`s Internet-connected BRAVIA LCD TVs, providing consumers
easy on-demand access to thousands of content sources, movies, TV shows, and
Internet content.

Consumers can check the latest videos on Showtime® and the latest sports scores
on USA Today®, shop on eBay®, play games, or catch up with their friends on
Twitter® and Facebook®, all while watching TV. BRAVIA Internet Widgets powered
by Yahoo! are now available in more than 100 countries across North America,
Europe, Latin America, and Asia.

“Sony is the world leader in entertainment with the unique position of not only
creating content, but also delivering highly advanced devices that allow
consumers to view that content in their homes,” said Toshifumi Okuda, senior
general manager, Home Entertainment Business Group, Sony Corporation. “Extending
our relationship with Yahoo! is another example of how Sony is focused on
delivering attractive features to worldwide consumers.”

“Our expanded partnership with Sony increases the number of countries where
Yahoo! TV Widgets are available by nearly seven-fold, enabling us to connect
millions of additional consumers to compelling Internet content and services
right on their TV,” said Jeff Kinder, senior vice president, Media Products and
Solutions, Yahoo! Inc. “Yahoo! is delivering the right content on the right
platforms – across mobile, PC, TV, and tablets – ensuring the best experiences
for our users, publishers, and developers.”

The increased distribution of the Yahoo! Widget Engine provides developers and
content creators with unmatched scale and the ability to reach millions of
engaged consumers around the globe. With new Web-based development interfaces,
publishers can easily create TV Widgets with the Yahoo! TV Widget Development
Kit (WDK).

About Yahoo!

Yahoo! attracts hundreds of millions of users every month through its innovative
technology and engaging content and services, making it one of the most visited
Internet destinations and a world-class online media company. Yahoo!’s vision is
to be the center of people’s online lives by delivering personally relevant,
meaningful Internet experiences. Yahoo! is headquartered in Sunnyvale,
California. For more information, visit pressroom.yahoo.com or the company’s
blog, Yodel Anecdotal (yodel.yahoo.com).

For additional information about Yahoo! Connected TV, including images, please
visit: http://connectedtv.yahoo.com/newsroom

Yahoo! is the trademark and/or registered trademark of Yahoo! Inc. All other
names are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

Yahoo!
Cory Pforzheimer, +1 408-349-2686
coryp@yahoo-inc.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Talend Selected as Red Herring Top 100 Europe Winner

LOS ALTOS, Calif. & SURESNES, France–(Business Wire)–
Talend, the recognized market leader in open source data management software,
today announced that it has been selected as a Red Herring Top 100 Europe Tech
Startup. The Red Herring Top 100 award recognizes the leading private companies
from Europe, celebrating the startups’ innovations and technologies across their
respective industries.

Red Herring`s Top 100 Europe list has become a mark of distinction for
identifying promising new companies and entrepreneurs. Red Herring editors were
among the first to recognize that companies such as Facebook, Twitter, Google,
Yahoo, Skype, Salesforce.com, YouTube, and eBay would change the way we live and
work.

“Choosing the companies with the strongest potential was by no means a small
feat,” said Alex Vieux, publisher and CEO of Red Herring. “After rigorous
contemplation and discussion, we narrowed our list down from hundreds of
candidates from across Europe to the Top 100 Winners. We believe Talendembodies
the vision, drive and innovation that define a successful entrepreneurial
venture. Talend should be proud of its accomplishment, as the competition was
very strong.”

“Our selection as a Red Herring Top 100 Europe winner is another clear sign that
Talend`s open source data management solutions have become a technology standard
that is helping organizations of all sizes optimize their processes and improve
their bottom line,” said Bertrand Diard, co-founder and CEO, Talend. “We will
continue to drive our business to maintain an unmatched pace of innovation and
track record at delivering high value, cost-optimized solutions to our
customers.”

Red Herring`s editorial staff evaluated the companies on both quantitative and
qualitative criteria, such as financial performance, technology innovation,
management quality, strategy and market penetration. This assessment of
potential is complemented by a review of the track record and standing of
startups relative to their sector peers, allowing Red Herring to see past the
“buzz” and make the list a valuable instrument of discovery and advocacy for the
most promising new business models in Europe.

About Talend

Talend is the recognized market leader in open source data management. More than
1,000 paying customers around the globe, including eBay, Virgin Mobile, Sony
Online Entertainment and Allianz, subscribe to Talend`s solutions and services
to minimize the costs and maximize the value of data integration, ETL, data
quality and Master Data Management. With more than eight million downloads,
Talend`s solutions are the most widely used and deployed data management
solutions in the world. The company has major offices in North America, Europe
and Asia, and a global network of technical and services partners. Within the
last year, Talend has received a number of prestigious honors including: named a
Network World open source company to watch, and a winner of the AlwaysOn Global
250, the Red Herring Top 100 Europe, The VAR Guy’s Open Source 50 and
Infoworld`s Bossie Award. For more information, please visit

http://www.talend.com.

Talend
Yves de Montcheuil
press@talend.com
or
Schwartz Communications
Britt Gottlieb, 415-512-0770
talend@schwartz-pr.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Whitman far ahead in GOP race for Calif. governor

SAN FRANCISCO, June 4 (Reuters) – Former eBay Inc Chief Executive Meg Whitman holds a two-to-one lead among voters over California Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner in their race for the Republican nomination for governor, according a Field Poll report released on Friday.

Poizner, a former Silicon Valley entrepreneur, since March has nearly halved billionaire front-runner Whitman’s lead in their race for the party’s nomination but he faces a seemingly insurmountable gap as California’s June 8 primary election nears, said Field Poll Director Mark DiCamillo.

“The odds are clearly in Whitman’s favor,” DiCamillo said. “There is not a lot there to move it over into Poizner’s column.”

San Francisco-based Field Poll’s final pre-election survey on the race found Whitman leading Poizner by a 51 percent to 25 percent margin among likely Republican primary voters, with another 6 percent preferring other candidates and 18 percent undecided.

Worse for Poizner is that the Field Poll found Whitman strongly favored across the Republican spectrum, including its conservative core.

She leads Poizner among voters identifying themselves as strongly conservative by 52 percent to his 26 percent and enjoys a big lead with Republicans identifying with the populist Tea Party movement.

“Among this segment of voters Whitman holds a thirty-point lead, only marginally greater than the twenty-three point lead she holds among those who do not identify a lot with the Tea Party,” the Field Poll report said.

Republicans likely to vote early by mail and those who will vote in precincts also overwhelmingly back Whitman. “It doesn’t seem to matter what cut of Republican voter we get, it still seems to favor Whitman,” DiCamillo said.

WILL AND WALLET TO WIN

Whitman appears to have impressed Republicans with a “will to win” and deep pockets for funding a general election campaign after spending more than $70 million of her own money in her primary effort, DiCamillo said.

He noted Republicans see Whitman as a stronger candidate than Poizner — by 61 percent to 21 percent — in a match-up against Democrat Jerry Brown, California’s current attorney general and a former governor who has his party’s nomination for governor sewn up.

Whitman and Poizner combined have spent more than $110 million — a record amount in primary election in California — to win the Republican nomination to succeed Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, also a Republican, and are inn the home-stretch of their battle blanketing the state with negative advertising.

Poizner charges Whitman with being soft on illegal immigration, an issue that spilled into California from neighboring Arizona where officials recently approved a controversial law cracking down on undocumented migrants. Whitman ads charge Poizner is contrary to his claims a liberal on taxes and spending.

Analysts expect California’s next governor to take office as the most populous U.S. state struggles to emerge from a harsh economic slump caused by the mortgage crisis, housing’s implosion and the widespread loss of household wealth and jobs as financial markets tumbled — and to contend with one of the nation’s most partisan state legislatures.

At 12.6 percent, California’s unemployment rate is one of the worst in the nation and has helped open a $19.1 billion shortfall in the state budget.

Schwarzenegger, in his final term, and the Democrat-led legislature are sharply at odds over how to balance the state’s books. He wants deep spending cuts and no tax increases. Democrats are calling for delaying corporate tax breaks, a tax on oil production and borrowing from state funds. Republican lawmakers whose votes are needed for a budget have ruled out tax increases.

The Field Poll findings are based on a survey from May 27 through June 2 of 511 likely voters in California’s Republican primary election. The survey’s maximum sampling error is plus or minus 4.5 percentage points at a 95 percent confidence level.

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Virtensys Wins `Red Herring Top 100 Europe` Award

MANCHESTER, England & BEAVERTON, Ore.–(Business Wire)–
Virtensys™, Ltd, a leader in next-generation I/O solutions for data centers,
today announced that it has been selected as a Red Herring Top 100 Europe Tech
Startup. The Red Herring Top 100 award recognizes the leading private companies
from Europe, celebrating the startups` innovations and technologies across their
respective industries.

Red Herring`s Top 100 Europe list has become a mark of distinction for
identifying promising new companies and entrepreneurs. Red Herring editors were
among the first to recognize that companies such as Facebook, Twitter, Google,
Yahoo, Skype, Salesforce.com, YouTube, and eBay would change the way we live and
work.

“Choosing the companies with the strongest potential was by no means a small
feat,” said Alex Vieux, publisher and CEO of Red Herring. “After rigorous
contemplation and discussion, we narrowed our list down from hundreds of
candidates from across Europe to the Top 100 Winners. We believe Virtensys
embodies the vision, drive and innovation that define a successful
entrepreneurial venture. Virtensys should be proud of its accomplishment, as the
competition was very strong.”

“We are extremely pleased to be among the top 100 companies recognized by Red
Herring in Europe,” said Ahmet Houssein, president and CEO at Virtensys. “We
announced the general availability of our I/O virtualization switches at the end
of last year, and, since then, we have seen strong demand from OEMs and
end-users. Customers can deploy our switches immediately and in a non-disruptive
way, allowing them to tackle I/O problems in their data centers and dramatically
reduce costs, power consumption and management complexity.”

Red Herring`s editorial staff evaluated the companies on both quantitative and
qualitative criteria, including financial performance, technology innovation,
management quality, strategy, and market penetration. This assessment of
potential is complemented by a review of the track record and standing of
startups relative to their sector peers, allowing Red Herring to see past the
“buzz” and make the list a valuable instrument of discovery and advocacy for the
most promising new business models.

About Virtensys Ltd

Virtensys develops industry-leading, patented PCI Express-based I/O
virtualization technologies for servers and storage platforms, revolutionizing
the way I/O infrastructures are deployed and used in data centers, and
delivering significant improvements in I/O utilization, cost, performance, power
consumption, and management. The deployment of the IOV switches is totally
non-disruptive and dramatically reduces IT complexity and expenses. The company
was founded in December 2005 by leading technologists in the fields of
high-performance switching, networking, and systems design, and is backed by
several premier technology venture capital firms. For more information, visit
www.virtensys.com.

The Virtensys name and logo are trademarks of Virtensys, Ltd. All other
trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

Silicon Valley PR
Georgiana Comsa, 408-435-1500 (U.S.)
georgiana@siliconvalleypr.com
or
Virtensys, Inc.
Robert Napaa, 650-814-4883 (Worldwide)
napaa@virtensys.com
or
Virtensys, Ltd.
Paul Klinkby-Silver, +44 (0)7770 522864 (U.K. and EMEA)
pks@virtensys.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Economy, immigration drive California governor race

California’s dismal economy and fears the nation’s largest population of illegal immigrants are stealing scarce jobs are dominating a suddenly tight race for the Republican nomination for governor.

With a week and a half to go before the primary election, billionaire front-runner Meg Whitman, the former chief executive of eBay Inc, is betting that her focused agenda of creating jobs, cutting government spending and “fixing” education in the most populous state will assure a victory.

But self-described “underdog” candidate Steve Poizner, the insurance commissioner and former Silicon Valley entrepreneur, has seized on illegal immigration as a way to draw a clear line between himself and Whitman.

A surge in support for Poizner earlier in the month has turned what seemed to be inevitable victory for Whitman into a possible come-from-behind win for Poizner.

The victor of the June 8 primary will face off against Jerry Brown, the current attorney general and former governor who has sewn up the Democratic nomination by scaring off major rivals. He has hung back so far, allowing Poizner and Whitman to bloody each other.

Moderate Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is barred by term limits from seeking re-election. His 6 1/2-year tenure has been marked by battles over spending with the Democratic-controlled Legislature as the economy deteriorated.

Whitman has spent about $80 million and Poizner about $25 million, funded mostly by their private bank accounts, in a nasty contest to prove themselves fiscal and social conservatives. The contest left some voters confused.

Jobs was the key theme at dueling rallies by the Republicans on Friday about 3 miles (5 km) apart in Silicon Valley, where each made a fortune before deciding to give politics a try.

Voters described Whitman as “commanding” with a more comprehensive plan and Poizner as “down home” with a clearer focus on immigration.

NO-LONGER-GOLDEN STATE

“Did anyone ever think California would have the third-largest unemployment rate in the country?” Whitman asked workers at a concrete plant.

State unemployment is at a modern high of 12.6 percent, a housing rebound seemed to fade in April, and every day is adding to the state’s $20 billion budget deficit.

“I know we can make the Golden State golden again,” she said, arguing that what was needed was focus rather than trying to “boil the ocean.”

Whitman and Poizner both want to cut spending and taxes, improve education and address illegal immigration, but Poizner told reporters that immigration would be key to the last two weeks of campaigning. Many in the audiences echoed his words.

Poizner has embraced a controversial Arizona law that requires police to determine the immigration status of people they reasonably suspect are in the country illegally. Whitman has opposed it but said she would defend the border.

“She has three major objectives,” Poizner told reporters before his event. “Illegal immigration is not one of them.”

Whitman’s strategy of ignoring immigration did not deter Julie Giannotta, a self-described ultraconservative who left the Whitman rally at a concrete plant feeling hope.

“Amnesty is contrary to job creation,” Giannotta said, and so Whitman must oppose it, she reasoned. “I hope she is the real deal.”

Contractor Erin Lucien, who attended both events, said immigration was top of his mind and he now favored Poizner.

“On a Friday afternoon I should be working, but what’s out there is going to illegal aliens,” he said.

(Editing by Peter Cooney)

eBay removes Anna Nicole Smith’s used lingerie from auction

Melbourne, May 20 (ANI): The sale of late Playboy model Anna Nicole Smith’ used lingerie has been removed by the online auction site eBay.

According to a report on TMZ, Jackie Hatten the sister of Smith””s ex-boyfriend Mark Hatten, put up several lingerie items, including “worn” garters, belts and panties on sale.

But eBay later pulled them back under hygiene rules.

“eBay policy strictly prohibits listing used underwear, Used clothing may be listed on eBay as long as it has been cleaned and the listing clearly states that the clothing is used,” News.com.au quoted a spokesperson as saying.

Smith died in 2007 aged 39 following an accidental prescription drug overdose in Florida. (ANI)

World’s Richest Moms

Heather Struck, Forbes.com

Margaret C. Whitman, better known as Meg, has had a storied career. A graduate of Princeton and Harvard Business School, she worked at Procter & Gamble before moving to California with her husband, a neurosurgeon who now works at Stanford Hospital. After successful stints at consulting firm Bain & Co., Disney and Hasbro, she joined eBay, then a small tech firm with 30 employees, as chief executive. In 2004 she debuted on Forbes’ World’s Billionaires List.

It was her own mother, Whitman writes in a book published by Random House this January, titled The Power of Many, who gave her “a bias toward action.” In an interview with ForbesWoman earlier this year, Whitman discussed the relationship, explaining that her mother, who eventually learned Mandarin and visited China 80 times, had taught her that “you don’t have to be perfect to be a leader, but you can’t be timid.”

In Pictures: World’s Richest Moms

In Pictures: Billionaire Celebrities

In Pictures: World’s Richest Women

In Pictures: The Richest People In The World

In Pictures: South Korea’s Richest

Now that bias is leaning toward the governor’s mansion, as Whitman campaigns to replace Republican California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. During her campaign she has highlighted her mother’s adventurous spirit in driving Meg and her two siblings from their home in Long Island on camping trips to California. Today she includes her husband and her two sons as influences in her love of the West Coast. They are sporty California residents, according to her campaign website, and as such are reasons she is so dedicated to the economically ailing state. “If we let California fail, we all fail,” she says. “And we love California too much to let it fail. We have to work together to make it the place of our dreams again.”

For Whitman, motherhood was not a deterrent to her success, but an aid, lending what she now says is inspiration and support during her current political endeavors.

That makes her somewhat unusual. Whitman is one of just 70 billionaire moms in the world, and one of only eight mothers to have created her own billion-dollar fortune. (By contrast, there are 555 self-made billionaires who are fathers). The rest inherited fortunes from fathers or late husbands, including the world’s richest woman and mom, Christy Walton, whose husband John, son of the founder of Wal-Mart Stores, died in 2005 when his private plane crashed in Wyoming.

Some other enterprising moms include Zara’s Rosalia Mera, whose two kids apparently watched her make dressing gowns, just before she and her now-ex husband Amancio Ortega launched the Spanish clothing line. The Gap’s Doris Fisher and Benetton’s Guiliana Benetton also started clothing companies that went global and made their families among the richest in the world.

Joanne (JK) Rowling, author of the Harry Potter book franchise, has told the story of her difficult days in Edinburgh, Scotland, where she had moved with her first child after a painful divorce to be near her sister. Rowling now has two more children with her current husband. The advance from the manuscript for Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (Sorcerer’s Stone in the U.S.), which she wrote in cafes in Edinburgh, paid rent on the meager flat she shared with her first child while they were subsisting on welfare.

Those who inherit opportunity often use it to continue their own ambitious climb. Abigail Johnson, with her father, controls Fidelity Investments. The mutual fund company, the largest in the U.S., was founded by her grandfather. She was promoted to chairman of the board of fixed income and asset allocation funds last year, and is believed by some to be her father’s chosen successor. She has raised two children with her husband.

Asia’s richest woman, Savitri Jindal, the widowed matriarch of OP Jindal Group, a steel and power conglomerate in India, has nine children, more than any woman on the list. While she is non-executive chairman, her four sons have divvied up the business and each run their own independent units. In the meantime she keeps herself busy with politics, having been re-elected in the assembly elections in her home state of Haryana last year.

But being a billionaire mom–or for that matter, the child of a billionaire mom–isn’t always easy.

Liliane Bettencourt, heiress to the L’Oreal cosmetics fortune, and her daughter have reportedly been off speaking terms as a result of Bettencourt’s patronage of a younger companion, an artist her daughter alleges accepted more than a billion dollars in gifts from the heiress. The relationship between Bettencourt and her 56-year-old daughter, Françoise Bettencourt-Meyers, is reflected in an unhappy light amid a legal complaint filed by Bettencourt-Meyers, who is dubious of her mother’s judgment in spending her wealth. Liliane denies all, but has still been ordered to undergo psychological testing before a July trial.

A similarly unfortunate rift happened when Marilyn Carlson Nelson, chief executive of the Minnesota-based hospitality company Carlson Cos., relieved her son from his role as chief operating officer in 2007. Curtis Nelson, who reportedly used controlled substances and was arrested at least once for drunk driving, was terminated for “explosive,” “inconsistent” behavior, derailing the trajectory he may have expected to follow to head the company himself.

Additional reporting by Cristina von Zeppelin.

No bidders for MJ’s portrait

London, May 7 (ANI): Auction of Michael Jackson’s portrait on eBay fell flat when the owner did not receive any bids for it.

The portrait is a 50in by 40 in painting by Australian artist Brett-Livingstone Strong of Jackson wearing a red velvet jacket and clutching a journal.

Originally bought by businessman Hiromichi Saeki for 1.4 million pounds in 1990, it was acquired by a toy inventor, Marty Abrams in 1992 as payment on a debt, reports The Scotsman.

Abrams had anticipated it fetching more than 3 million dollars in the auction, which had a minimum starting bid of 2.75 million dollars. (ANI)

Madonna cancels auction of her journals on eBay

London, May 6 (ANI): Madonna has cancelled the sale of journals written by her on eBay.

The Material Girl star sent her representatives to take her journals off the auction after an unknown man alleged that he had placed 12 personal tomes allegedly written by Madonna between 1988 and 1992 on the website, and was hoping to earn millions of pounds for the possessions, reports The Daily Star.

The eBay user claims that he bought the journals and other personal items that include the superstar’s photos, for just 100 pounds in a blind auction from a storage facility in Chatsworth, California.

Madonna’s representatives however, insisted that ‘they’ were the rightful owners of the periodicals and convinced the auctioneers to take them off the website, according to TMZ.com.

A spokesperson for the auction website has confirmed the cancellation after the singer”s reps contacted them to make a claim.

However, the unnamed seller is still reportedly insisting the items belong to him. (ANI)

Oz woman puts struggling poet husband up for sale on eBay!

Melbourne, April 24 (ANI): It has emerged that an Ivanhoe woman has put her struggling poet husband “up for sale” on eBay.

Sonya Semmens decided to offer up the chance to become patron for her husband, Cameron, 35, to give him much-needed financial support after son Spencer’s birth.

For 25,000 dollars, the buyer will get one year’s patronage of Semmens, a book of poetry dedicated to him or her, a complete set of Semmens’ catalogue of works and acknowledgement of their support at performances.

“Cameron Semmens, Ivanhoe performance poet who has dedicated his life to the wit and wisdom of well-crafted words, and brought meaningful entertainment and thoughtful inspiration to thousands of Australians for more than 20 years,” the eBay product description read.

“For the right patron, he’s a good investment,” the Herald Sun quoted Sonya as saying.

“Without patronage there would have been no Beethoven, no Michelangelo, no Shakespeare,” she stated.

On Semmens’ website, he sums up the pleasures and sorrows of his art/poetry life, quoting English poet Robert Graves.

“There’s no money in poetry, but then there’s no poetry in money either,” he wrote. (ANI)

Gaudy Jacko portrait for sale

An over-the-top portrait of Michael Jackson is up for auction online.

The 127 by 102-centimetre painting by Aussie artist Brett-Livingstone Strong is being offered on eBay.

Titled The Book, it is reportedly the only painting for which the King of Pop posed. It depicts Jackson in a red velvet jacket, clutching a journal at his Neverland ranch.

“I’ve had it an awful long time,” said toy inventor Marty Abrams, who acquired the painting with partner John Gentilly in 1992 from Japanese businessman Hiromichi Saeki as payment on a debt owed to them.

“With the positive response to his music and the movie about him after his death, we thought it was a good time to sell it and for the world to see it.”

For over 17 years, Abrams kept the painting in storage in a New Jersey warehouse.

It was briefly on display at the Dancy-Power Automotive showroom in Harlem after Jackson’s death last June.

The painting, which also features the fairy character Tinkerbell hovering in the background, is currently hanging inside Abrams’s home in Kings Point, New York.

Abrams said the painting was appraised by Belgo Fine Art Appraisal and Restoration at $US5.3 million ($5.72 million) in 2000.

He hopes it will fetch more than $US3 million in the auction, which is scheduled to end April 17.

U.S. appeals court rules for eBay in Tiffany spat

(Reuters) – EBay Inc did not engage in trademark infringement and dilution by selling counterfeit Tiffany & Co goods on its website, a U.S. appeals court ruled on Thursday, but it ordered further review of the jeweler’s claim of false advertising.

Technology | Media

Tiffany and other luxury brands have long argued that counterfeit merchandise bearing their names is sold on eBay. The Web commerce company, which does not itself put the goods up for sale, says it has spent millions of dollars to track down counterfeiters and remove such listings.

The case was seen as a major challenge in the United States to the freedom of Web companies from eBay to Google Inc, which claim that they are merely hosting services, and any trademark infringement lies with others, not them. Google won a major trademark victory in the European Union over similar claims last month.

Tiffany said it would consider an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court and that the decision “leaves in place a prior ruling which allows eBay to profit from counterfeit sales.”

The court signaled that eBay met its responsibilities in its partnership with brand holders, said Sally Abel, an attorney who chairs Fenwick & West’s trademark group and was not a party in the case.

“It’s a win for e-commerce,” said Abel, adding that the ruling helps define “the need for the online marketplace to have rules and to protect trademark rights up to a point — but only up to that point.”

A panel of judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit in New York heard oral arguments in the dispute last year over Tiffany’s claims, which dated back to 2004.

“It is true that eBay did not itself sell counterfeit Tiffany goods; only the fraudulent vendors did, and that is in part why we conclude that eBay did not infringe Tiffany’s mark,” the appeals court opinion said. “But eBay did affirmatively advertise the goods sold through its site as Tiffany merchandise.”

Tiffany accused eBay of false advertising because its website touted Tiffany goods, but many of them were actually counterfeit. The appeals court disagreed with the finding of the district court that eBay’s ads were not likely to confuse consumers.

“The law requires us to hold eBay accountable for the words that it chose insofar as they misled or confused consumers,” read the appeals court ruling.

EBay said in a statement that the ruling validated its anti-counterfeiting measures and that it was confident that it would beat the false advertising claim. It criticized the use of courts to settle these issues, saying “we continue to support cooperation, rather than litigation.”

BATTLING FRAUD

The opinion was published more than two years after a week-long bench trial before U.S. District Judge Richard Sullivan in late 2007. He ruled in July 2008 that eBay was not liable for trademark infringement by allowing fake Tiffany goods to be sold on the website by individuals. Tiffany then appealed to the higher court.

The appeals court ruling noted that eBay and others have “a strong incentive to minimize the counterfeit goods sold on their websites.” Tiffany argued that if eBay were not held liable except when infringing items are brought to its attention, it will have no incentive to stop the sale of counterfeits.

In its arguments to the court, eBay said it spent as much as $20 million per year to battle fraud on its website, including buyer protection programs and employees who focus exclusively on anti-infringement issues.

Tiffany shares closed up 1.6 percent to $48.25 on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday afternoon. EBay fell 1.47 percent to $26.57 on Nasdaq.

The case is Tiffany & Co v eBay Inc, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit in New York, No. 08-3947.

(Reporting by Grant McCool and Alexandria Sage; Additional reporting by Phil Wahba; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn; Gerald E. McCormick and Carol Bishopric)

U.S. appeals court rules for eBay in Tiffany spat

(Reuters) – EBay Inc did not engage in trademark infringement and dilution by selling counterfeit Tiffany & Co goods on its website, a U.S. appeals court ruled on Thursday, but it ordered further review of the jeweler’s claim of false advertising.

Technology | Media

Tiffany and other luxury brands have long argued that counterfeit merchandise bearing their names is sold on eBay. The Web commerce company, which does not itself put the goods up for sale, says it has spent millions of dollars to track down counterfeiters and remove such listings.

The case was seen as a major challenge in the United States to the freedom of Web companies from eBay to Google Inc, which claim that they are merely hosting services, and any trademark infringement lies with others, not them. Google won a major trademark victory in the European Union over similar claims last month.

Tiffany said it would consider an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court and that the decision “leaves in place a prior ruling which allows eBay to profit from counterfeit sales.”

The court signaled that eBay met its responsibilities in its partnership with brand holders, said Sally Abel, an attorney who chairs Fenwick & West’s trademark group and was not a party in the case.

“It’s a win for e-commerce,” said Abel, adding that the ruling helps define “the need for the online marketplace to have rules and to protect trademark rights up to a point — but only up to that point.”

A panel of judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit in New York heard oral arguments in the dispute last year over Tiffany’s claims, which dated back to 2004.

“It is true that eBay did not itself sell counterfeit Tiffany goods; only the fraudulent vendors did, and that is in part why we conclude that eBay did not infringe Tiffany’s mark,” the appeals court opinion said. “But eBay did affirmatively advertise the goods sold through its site as Tiffany merchandise.”

Tiffany accused eBay of false advertising because its website touted Tiffany goods, but many of them were actually counterfeit. The appeals court disagreed with the finding of the district court that eBay’s ads were not likely to confuse consumers.

“The law requires us to hold eBay accountable for the words that it chose insofar as they misled or confused consumers,” read the appeals court ruling.

EBay said in a statement that the ruling validated its anti-counterfeiting measures and that it was confident that it would beat the false advertising claim. It criticized the use of courts to settle these issues, saying “we continue to support cooperation, rather than litigation.”

BATTLING FRAUD

The opinion was published more than two years after a week-long bench trial before U.S. District Judge Richard Sullivan in late 2007. He ruled in July 2008 that eBay was not liable for trademark infringement by allowing fake Tiffany goods to be sold on the website by individuals. Tiffany then appealed to the higher court.

The appeals court ruling noted that eBay and others have “a strong incentive to minimize the counterfeit goods sold on their websites.” Tiffany argued that if eBay were not held liable except when infringing items are brought to its attention, it will have no incentive to stop the sale of counterfeits.

In its arguments to the court, eBay said it spent as much as $20 million per year to battle fraud on its website, including buyer protection programs and employees who focus exclusively on anti-infringement issues.

Tiffany shares closed up 1.6 percent to $48.25 on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday afternoon. EBay fell 1.47 percent to $26.57 on Nasdaq.

The case is Tiffany & Co v eBay Inc, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit in New York, No. 08-3947.

(Reporting by Grant McCool and Alexandria Sage; Additional reporting by Phil Wahba; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn; Gerald E. McCormick and Carol Bishopric)

”Rape simulator” game becomes Internet sensation amid calls for censorship

Sydney, March 31 (ANI): A “rape simulator” video game is fast becoming a rage across the Internet, causing internet censors to raise demands of blocking websites that host the game.

RapeLay, which allows a player’s virtual avatar to stalk and rape young girls, has come under fire from various quarters.

Players get points for following girls on commuter trains, raping virgins and their mothers, and then forcing them to have abortions.

Amazon and eBay have already taken off RapeLay from their websites, but its Yokohama-based maker Illusion said the game was in line with Japanese laws.

“These games are quite vile and for victims out there it”s quite distressing to come across these games or even just be aware that they exist and there”s a culture of rape tolerance and acceptance,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted sexual assault victims” rights advocate, Nina Funnell as saying.

Karen Willis, executive officer of the NSW Rape Crisis Centre, said: “While I don”t think that playing games causes people to go out and do things, what it can do for those who may already have that preclusion is further break down social barriers to them taking that action.” (ANI)

‘Fat lady’ yet to sing in Braddon

There is tight tussle for the last seat in the north-west Tasmanian electorate of Braddon.

Sitting Liberal member Brett Whiteley is neck and neck with Greens candidate Paul O’Halloran.

The Deputy Liberal Leader Jeremy Rockliff picked up the highest amount of votes for his party, with first-time candidate Adam Brooks outpolling Mr Whiteley who is the Opposition’s Health spokesman.

Mr Whiteley has not given up hope that he will be re-elected.

“The fat lady hasn’t sung yet, by a fair stretch yet,” he said.

“This is my fourth election and I know full well, having competed in the first election, that the preferences in the Hare-Clark System in this Tasmanian parliament, it’s like a visit to side show alley.

“It’s up and down and all around but I’m quietly confident that we will win three seats.”

Mr O’Halloran is remaining optimistic he will pick up the seat and says it will be anxious wait for the final tally.

The former deputy premier Bryan Green topped the polls, with Brenton Best picking up Labor’s second and only other seat in Braddon.

Mr Green is disappointed Labor could not hold on to three seats in the north-west electorate.

“I’m pleased with the result personally but disappointed we couldn’t achieve three seats here in Braddon,” he said.

Mr Brooks was shocked with the result.

“Very, very happy with the result I want to thank everyone who thought I could add value to Parliament,” he said.

“I think I’ll bring business experience which obviously I have.”

He has dismissed Labor criticism that he bought his way into parliament.

Mr Brooks has admitted to spending over $100,000 on his election campaign but says Labor should look at its own spending.

“You can’t actually buy a seat in parliament, it’s not on eBay or in the Trading Post and I find it laughable that they’ve spent $600 million of taxpayers money in pre-election promises and yet they criticise how I spend my personal money.”

The final result may not known for another week.

‘Bloom or bust’ moment for NRI’s green power technology

WASHINGTON: Hot air or cool energy? Hope or hype? Boom or bust? Savior or Segway? Hours before the official launch of a compact, new power plant-in-a-box that promises to change the world’s energy paradigm, speculation is rife over whether the so-called Bloom Box will live up to its billing.

Bloom Energy’s principal scientist-CEO K.R.Sridhar has been incommunicado for the last 72 hours since CBS’ 60 minutes first broadcast a story about his breakthrough technology, but experts and analysts, bloggers and twitterati, geeks and gearheads, have taken apart the little information now in public domain to see if the promise of the holy grail of energy – cheap, clean power – is true.

This much is known: Sridhar, a former NASA advisor, has devised a fuel cell contraption that combines oxygen and fossil fuel (like natural gas) to create electricity. The contraption can be the size of a loaf of bread (which can power a single home) or it can be scaled to the size of a refrigerator (to power, say, a large office building). It can be installed in your garage or back yard, independent of the larger transmission grid.

There are questions and doubts aplenty, most notably about the costs, and Bloom Energy has promised to answer them at the formal launch at its client eBay’s headquarters in Silicon Valley on Wednesday at an event where California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is expected. But even Bloom buffs are warning against over-expectation, suggesting it is still a work in progress.

This is because while fuel cell technology is not new — it has been around for decades — and no company had managed to scale down the costs and scale up production to make it viable. Not even giants like General Electric and Siemens, two companies that are closely watching Bloom bloom. Conspiracy theorists are already suggesting the Bloom hype is aimed at selling the technology to the biggies; some are even worrying for Sridhar’s life.The company’s name, incidentally, was coined by Sridhar’s nine-year old son.

The 49-year-old mechanical engineer from Madras has been at the technology for eight years, in course of which he has managed to get Silicon Valley’s famed venture capitalists pony up nearly $ 400 million in funding, mainly from the storied firm of Kleiner Perkins, where another Indian geek, Sun Microsystems’ co-founded Vinod Khosla, is a general partner. Khosla has taken a back seat on the Bloom story, but it is being driven by his colleague John Doerr, prime investor in such successes as Netscape, Amazon, and Google, and an occasional lemon like Segway, an auto module that was expected to revolutionize transport but is now used by tour companies, on campuses, and by police.

Sridhar’s technology centers round a floppy-disk sized ceramic tile coated with a secret “sauce” (both propriety technologies) that are stacked together into bread-loaf sized boxes which in-turn can be scaled up to the size of a refrigerator. When fossil fuels like natural gas or renewable like bio-gas are fed into this Bloom Box, it combines with oxygen to create a chemical reaction that produces electricity, with no need for power lines from an outside source. Several such boxes are working in Google, eBay and other well-known US firms to much acclaim and minimum problems.

So what’s the big deal, since the Bloom Box still needs fuel – and why not use the fuel directly to product electricity as is traditionally done? Well, simply put, the Bloom Box produces more bang (electricity) for the buck (fuel). The precise numbers haven’t been provided, but roughly, the Bloom Box is said to produce double the amount of electricity the same fuel can produce by traditional methods. Plus there is savings in terms of real estate and infrastructure.

According to eBay CEO John Donohoe, the company uses five Bloom Boxes that run on landfill waste-based bio-gas and generate more power than the company’s 3,000 solar panels. A four-unit box, using natural gas, has been powering a Google data center for 18 months. Ball-park calculations indicate that a 30,000-square-foot office building would use four of these boxes, each costing between $ 700,000 to $ 800,000. The unknown factors include how much fuel it uses, wear and tear, and maintenance.

But such is the excitement over the technology that even skeptics are willing it to succeed. “I’m skeptical. I’m hopeful but I’m skeptical,” Michael Kanellos, Editor of GreenTechEnergy, told 60 Minutes. “‘Cause people have tried fuel cells for since the 1830s. And they’re great ideas, right? You know, producing energy at an instant. But they’re not easy. They’re like the divas of industrial equipment. The little plates inside have to work not just for an hour or a day, but they have to work for 30 years, nonstop. And then the box has to be cheap to make.”

Sridhar reckons it will be another five to ten years before the Bloom Box can be sized to residential requirements to cost around $ 3000. But that’s just the capital cost and doesn’t factor in the fuel input. By then, says Kanellos, giants like GE and Siemens will be in on to the game. The Bloom Box that may be in your basement, says Kanellos (who gives it a 20 per cent chance of the technology gaining ground) might well have a GE sticker on it.

Some other skeptics have been even harsher. Amid raging debates on tech sites and blogs, one skeptic scoffed at the Bloom Box claims, asking if it could run on pixie dust and unicorn droppings. “I think whoever the PR flak was who got this on 60 minutes deserves a Maserati for a bonus. This is the biggest ass-kiss I’ve seen on a network in a loooong time,” another sneered.

Has the global recession resulted in more NRIs coming back to India?

‘Bloom or bust’ moment for NRI’s green power technology

WASHINGTON: Hot air or cool energy? Hope or hype? Boom or bust? Savior or Segway? Hours before the official launch of a compact, new power plant-in-a-box that promises to change the world’s energy paradigm, speculation is rife over whether the so-called Bloom Box will live up to its billing.

Bloom Energy’s principal scientist-CEO K.R.Sridhar has been incommunicado for the last 72 hours since CBS’ 60 minutes first broadcast a story about his breakthrough technology, but experts and analysts, bloggers and twitterati, geeks and gearheads, have taken apart the little information now in public domain to see if the promise of the holy grail of energy – cheap, clean power – is true.

This much is known: Sridhar, a former NASA advisor, has devised a fuel cell contraption that combines oxygen and fossil fuel (like natural gas) to create electricity. The contraption can be the size of a loaf of bread (which can power a single home) or it can be scaled to the size of a refrigerator (to power, say, a large office building). It can be installed in your garage or back yard, independent of the larger transmission grid.

There are questions and doubts aplenty, most notably about the costs, and Bloom Energy has promised to answer them at the formal launch at its client eBay’s headquarters in Silicon Valley on Wednesday at an event where California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is expected. But even Bloom buffs are warning against over-expectation, suggesting it is still a work in progress.

This is because while fuel cell technology is not new — it has been around for decades — and no company had managed to scale down the costs and scale up production to make it viable. Not even giants like General Electric and Siemens, two companies that are closely watching Bloom bloom. Conspiracy theorists are already suggesting the Bloom hype is aimed at selling the technology to the biggies; some are even worrying for Sridhar’s life.The company’s name, incidentally, was coined by Sridhar’s nine-year old son.

The 49-year-old mechanical engineer from Madras has been at the technology for eight years, in course of which he has managed to get Silicon Valley’s famed venture capitalists pony up nearly $ 400 million in funding, mainly from the storied firm of Kleiner Perkins, where another Indian geek, Sun Microsystems’ co-founded Vinod Khosla, is a general partner. Khosla has taken a back seat on the Bloom story, but it is being driven by his colleague John Doerr, prime investor in such successes as Netscape, Amazon, and Google, and an occasional lemon like Segway, an auto module that was expected to revolutionize transport but is now used by tour companies, on campuses, and by police.

Sridhar’s technology centers round a floppy-disk sized ceramic tile coated with a secret “sauce” (both propriety technologies) that are stacked together into bread-loaf sized boxes which in-turn can be scaled up to the size of a refrigerator. When fossil fuels like natural gas or renewable like bio-gas are fed into this Bloom Box, it combines with oxygen to create a chemical reaction that produces electricity, with no need for power lines from an outside source. Several such boxes are working in Google, eBay and other well-known US firms to much acclaim and minimum problems.

So what’s the big deal, since the Bloom Box still needs fuel – and why not use the fuel directly to product electricity as is traditionally done? Well, simply put, the Bloom Box produces more bang (electricity) for the buck (fuel). The precise numbers haven’t been provided, but roughly, the Bloom Box is said to produce double the amount of electricity the same fuel can produce by traditional methods. Plus there is savings in terms of real estate and infrastructure.

According to eBay CEO John Donohoe, the company uses five Bloom Boxes that run on landfill waste-based bio-gas and generate more power than the company’s 3,000 solar panels. A four-unit box, using natural gas, has been powering a Google data center for 18 months. Ball-park calculations indicate that a 30,000-square-foot office building would use four of these boxes, each costing between $ 700,000 to $ 800,000. The unknown factors include how much fuel it uses, wear and tear, and maintenance.

But such is the excitement over the technology that even skeptics are willing it to succeed. “I’m skeptical. I’m hopeful but I’m skeptical,” Michael Kanellos, Editor of GreenTechEnergy, told 60 Minutes. “‘Cause people have tried fuel cells for since the 1830s. And they’re great ideas, right? You know, producing energy at an instant. But they’re not easy. They’re like the divas of industrial equipment. The little plates inside have to work not just for an hour or a day, but they have to work for 30 years, nonstop. And then the box has to be cheap to make.”

Sridhar reckons it will be another five to ten years before the Bloom Box can be sized to residential requirements to cost around $ 3000. But that’s just the capital cost and doesn’t factor in the fuel input. By then, says Kanellos, giants like GE and Siemens will be in on to the game. The Bloom Box that may be in your basement, says Kanellos (who gives it a 20 per cent chance of the technology gaining ground) might well have a GE sticker on it.

Some other skeptics have been even harsher. Amid raging debates on tech sites and blogs, one skeptic scoffed at the Bloom Box claims, asking if it could run on pixie dust and unicorn droppings. “I think whoever the PR flak was who got this on 60 minutes deserves a Maserati for a bonus. This is the biggest ass-kiss I’ve seen on a network in a loooong time,” another sneered.

Has the global recession resulted in more NRIs coming back to India?