Looking for Bloggers

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Jul 032006
 

846768755_m.gifMetroblogging Austin is looking for Austinites to contribute to this site!

Metblogs is the worlds largest network of city based blogs with over 700 authors covering almost 50 cities in 15 countries. We’re looking for people who are enthusiastic about Austin. Want to share how cool you think it is to live in Hyde Park? Or Tarrytown? Or Southeast Austin (yeah, baby!)? Can’t stand what we’re posting and think you can do better? Here’s your chance.

Share your favorite hobbies, places, and events. Bitch about the local city government. Show other cities around the world why Austin kicks butt! We only have three rules:

  1. Your posts must relate in some way, shape or form to Austin
  2. We need you to post at least 2-3 times a week
  3. See the first two

Join the global community of bloggers who love their cities and want to share them with the local community and the rest of the world.

 Posted by on July 3, 2006 at 11:32 am

Watchdog

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Jul 032006
 

Helen Thomas, a member of the White House press corps since the Kennedy administration, will be in town on Thursday to promote her new book, Watchdogs of Democracy? : The Waning Washington Press Corps and How It Has Failed the Public. She’ll be a guest of Writers’ League of Texas at the Austin Marriot (701 E. 11th) at 7pm. Admission is a $5 suggested donation to the Writers’ League.

Thomas was recently on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart promoting the book and was featured in a short skit as part of Stephen Colbert’s roast of G.W. Bush earlier this year at the White House Correspondents dinner (that starts at the 16:50 mark of the video). She’s been a thorn the side of many White House press secretaries and recently drove Tony Snow to make a few exasperatedly stupid comments. The Statesman had a short interview with her in Sunday’s paper.

 Posted by on July 3, 2006 at 10:14 am

Competition for the tooth fairy

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Jun 282006
 

You’ve heard of cord blood banks? They operate on the idea that the blood from your child’s umbilical cord can be used later to treat diseases like leukemia, sickle cell and metabolic problems among others. The problem is that it’s generally expensive and the likelihood that you’ll actually need it is difficult to predict. Costs range from $600-$2000 for the initial deposit in a private bank and then there’s a yearly storage fee that hovers around $100. The probability that you’ll need it can be anywhere from 1:1,000 to 1:200,000, depending on who you ask. It’s free to donate to a public cord bank, but there you’re not assured that you’d have access to the blood that you deposited.

Now, apparently, there’s a new cheaper option and it’s based here in Austin. BioEden can take your child’s baby teeth and extract stem cells from them that can be used to treat diseases. The cost is somewhat cheaper and for those of us that have kids that were too old or decided to delay the decision, we’ve got another option. I’ve inexplicably been saving my son’s baby teeth as he’s lost them. They’re sitting in a plastic baggie in the top drawer of my dresser. Honestly, I don’t know why I’m saving them. I don’t think I’m shelling out the money on the outside chance that they’ll help later though, especially since we don’t have a history of the types of things it might help. I wonder how long you can keep the teeth and still harvest the cells? I guess you’re SOL once the tooth is out and you haven’t put it in their special ToothSaver solution with ice packs?

Update (2006.07.17): The Statesman wrote a story about this today.

 Posted by on June 28, 2006 at 12:26 pm
Jun 272006
 
 Posted by on June 27, 2006 at 11:17 am
Jun 262006
 

For those that are living under a rock, there’s legislation winding its way through both the House and Senate that could potentially change how we interact with the Internet. The issue is commonly referred to as “network neutrality” or “net neutrality”. You can find a lot of information at Save The Internet.

The current and most pressing action is happening in the Senate Commerce Committee. Our own Kay Bailey Hutchison is a member of this committee and will have a say in where this issue heads out of the committee. If you support Net Neutrality, then you want to contact Sen. Hutchison via phone, fax or e-mail and let her know that you’d like her to support the Snowe/Dorgan amendment (S. 2917).

Here’s her contact information:

DC Office – 202-224-5922; 202-224-0776 (FAX)
Austin Office – 512-916-5834; 512-916-5839 (FAX)

You need to contact her office in the next few days as it’s expected to be taken up either tomorrow or Wednesday.

If you’d like to read more on the issue, here are several articles:

 Posted by on June 26, 2006 at 5:07 pm
Jun 212006
 
 Posted by on June 21, 2006 at 11:17 am