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Sunday, May 23rd, 2010 04:25 pm GMT +8

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Australian Budget for science, research and innovation

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Where has the all the money gone? Here are the published figures from all the science, research and innovation tables in the Australian Government’s 2010-2011 budget. These tables list the money spent in each sector and each of the Grant programs going back to FY 2002. The Budget forecasts for 2010 and 2011 are also listed.

Programs like Commercialisation Australia have a 2010 budget of $15m and a 2011 budget of $31.9m.

The total budget for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research in 2011 is $6.15b, (2002 budget was $3.04b).

http://www.innovation.gov.au/General/Corporate/Documents/Budget%202010-11/2010-11ScienceResearchandInnovationBudgetTables11May.pdf

Support for “Everybody Draw Muhammad Day”

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The “Everybody Draw Muhammad Day” was yesterday, May 20.

In the words of Jean Luc- Picard,

“We’ve made too many compromises already, too many retreats. They invade our space and we fall back. They assimilate entire worlds and we fall back. Not again. The line must be drawn here! This far, no farther!”

Picard goes on to say that he will make the Borg pay, but that is not what I want. Rather, I want to stand and defend free speech. No religion (Islam included) is above question, criticism, critique, or examination. People the world over need to be reminded that the freedom of speech most certainly includes the freedom to offend.

However, the position of the Muslim community, even moderates, seems to be that Islam is a religion of peace, and if you say that it isn’t, we will kill you. In the words of Sam Harris at the Huffington Post (Losing Our Spines to Save Our Necks)

Muslims appear to be far more concerned about perceived slights to their religion than about the atrocities committed daily in its name. Our accommodation of this psychopathic skewing of priorities has, more and more, taken the form of craven and blinkered acquiescence. 

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Our capitulations in the face of these threats have had what is often called “a chilling effect” on our exercise of free speech. 

To paraphrase another writer (Mark Goldblatt’s post titled The Poet Versus the Prophet), we (and our Representatives in Government and Media) have failed. We are not walking the walk of our forebears, that gave us the freedoms we take for granted. We have failed to put ourselves on the line in order to defend the principles of free thought and free expression. Not just Christian principles, but the ideas of freedom of expression and belief, of tolerance — the very principles that are at the heart of the difference between the Judeo-Christian West and Islam.

Get a 25GB Dropbox-Style Sync Space from Microsoft SkyDrive

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Microsoft’s SkyDrive offers 25GB of free space in the cloud to everyone. However, the standard product requires that you to use Microsoft’s own products to access it. Now, The Download Squad shows how to open up your SkyDrive 25GB using an Office 2010 trial copy. It is not exactly a two-step process, but it’s detailed in full at the Download Squad post. When you’re done, you get a 25GB space on your system that’s instantly synced with the cloud, accessible from the web, and can be accessed from multiple (Windows) computers. Neat stuff.

It does have the downside that files have to meet a particular Sky Drive criteria that they can not be larger than 50MB. To get around this, have a look at SDExplorer tool (windows XP and later), which integrates Microsoft SkyDrive into Windows.


SDExplorer in Windows Explorer

Once installed, there’s not much to see with SDExplorer, it simply does what it promises. Provide your login credentials for your SkyDrive account and the drive that appears in My Computer—seen above—is linked to your online storage. You can interact with it like any other drive.

The two biggest differences between the free version and the Pro version (apart from the price) are:
* the Pro version lets you open directly files from the SDExplorer drive
* the Pro version does away with the SKyDrive limitation of 50MB per file.