Month: July 2010

  • Times Case for Gov Regulation of Google Search Is Weak

     

     

    The New York Times editorial board fretted a bit about the power of Google on Thursday, with an editorial hinting that Google needs to show a government commission how it determines it search results because the company is now too powerful.

    While the Times editorial is dreadfully misguided, it’s right to be skeptical about Google’s size and attempt to make itself a full-fledged stack of technologies, from the pipes to a DNS service to operating systems to a browser to a panolpy of web services including YouTube, Analytics, Maps, Docs, Buzz, Gmail, Picasa, Calendars and Voice. And, of course, there’s search of all kinds and a $25 billion a year advertising service.

    That’s got the Times concerned:

    Still, the potential impact of Googleís algorithm on the Internet economy is such that it is worth exploring ways to ensure that the editorial policy guiding Google’s tweaks is solely intended to improve the quality of the results and not to help Google’s other businesses.

    Some early suggestions for how to accomplish this include having Google explain with some specified level of detail the editorial policy that guides its tweaks. Another would be to give some government commission the power to look at those tweaks.

    Google’s decision to show a Google map — just above a link to Mapquest — when you search on an address isn’t really part of the algorithm on how sites are ranked. That’s a user-interface decision, and one that is made by all the major search engines (indeed, Google wasn’t actually the first to do this).

    Moreover,Google doesn’t directly make any money from Google Maps. Clearly, the map is useful to searchers, who’d much rather see a map than a link to one. While that might be bad for Mapquest’s business, it’s not bad for users — especially since Google Maps is arguably a better tool than Mapquest’s. Mapquest may be losing market share, but there’s still plenty of competition for getting directions.

    Microsoft’s Bing and Yahoo are doing similar things, and are going even beyond that. Search on a music artist on Yahoo and you get an information box, with a bio, a picture and links to songs you can stream. Try searching on a top university on Bing and you’ll get a dense summary of information on the school. While that may reduce the traffic to a band or school’s website, it’s hard to argue that’s anti-competitive or a disservice to users.

    In fact, the whole industry is moving away from what it now dismisses as “10 blue links” — with the goal of providing answers to user queries instead of straight search results.

    Google’s algorithms may be a black box, but that doesn’t make it immune to study. In fact, there’s a whole industry, known as search engine optimization, devoted to figuring out what makes a site rank high in Google. While the secret sauce remains secret, there’s plenty known. Rich content, inbound links from reputable sites, well-formatted pages and urls, and even page speed are all proven factors in ranking high in search results.

    More to the point, Google doesn’t make its money from referring traffic to websites the way that say the shopping search engine TheFind does. It makes money from the ads that surround the so-called organic search results. Think of it as “Come for the free information and check out these offers from our partners.” The better the real results, the more often users will come back in the long run and the more likely that in one of their searches, they decide to click the ads, instead of a link.

    Nearly all the top search sites now return comparably useful results on the large majority of queries — and Yahoo’s own chief scientist suspects what really makes a searcher loyal is getting the obscure answers right.

    That means rigging your algorithm is the worst thing a search engine can do and would be the fastest way to lose users to a competing search engine.

    The only way that Google would seem to directly profit from rigging their search results is if the company decided to readjust search results to give more prominent placement to sites that use its ad systems, such as Doubleclick’s display ads or AdSense for publishers. By driving more traffic to those sites, Google would increase the likelihood of people clicking on their ads, which would ring Google’s register.

    Such a tweak — which wouldn’t be technically difficult for the search engine to make — would be clearly anti-competitive, using its power as a search engine to put it at an advantage in online, third-party advertising. Such a move would quickly bring on armies of regulators and anti-trust lawyers around the world.

    But, I’ve never seen anyone accuse Google of preferring sites that run Google Adsense ads or which use its Doubleclick technology to serve ads. Nor have I seen anyone in the SEO business — which has some very unscrupulous characters — suggest that sites would be rank higher in Google if they used its ad platforms.

    And it’s unlikely, that Google would take such a stupid step, knowing that they’d be found out quickly and investigated. That’s more something one could expects from a desperate, lower profile company than from one capturing some 70 percent of searches in the U.S. and recording 24 percent year-over-year revenue growth. (even if those numbers don’t meet the outsized targets of Wall Street analysts).

    Google’s proposed $700 million acquisition of travel-software company ITA is intriguing, and if I were a site like Kayak or Expedia, I’d be worried, too. Google says it wants the company’s data to make travel searches better.

    It’s not clear how Google would make back the money they’d pay for it, unless they get into the same game that travel-search aggregators do — which is being paid by the sites that sell tickets for sending them good leads. That would be a first for Google and given its size and power, that’s a very dangerous step for it to take — even if the company is hungry to find a way to be less reliant on little text ads as its single source of income.

    But that deal has to go through some very skeptical regulators before being approved, and the travel industry will surely bird-dog Google on any perceived or real unfair practices.

    Which is all a long-winded way of saying the Times editorial board should channel its Google anxiety elsewhere. No one would win if government regulators got access to Google’s algorithms, except maybe Bing. Hell, it’s not even clear if there was an agency that would be qualified to actually understand it, if they saw it.

    And if you still aren’t convinced, try a dose of Search Engine Land’s Danny Sullivan turning the tables on the argument by calling on the government to oversee the New York Times news algorithm.

    Indeed, while I might like to know how and why the Times decides to cover a certain story or not, having the feds oversee that is just as inane as the Times’ call for a Bureau of Search Engine Algorithms.

    Photo: New York Times headquarters Credit:Joe Shlabotnik

    Copyright.Wired.com.2010. All Rights Reserved.

    Read More http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/07/nyt-google-regulation/#ixzz0tu3vyvDP

  • Massey Mine Workers Disabled Safety Monitor in West Virginia

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    Massey Mine Workers Disabled Safety Monitor
    July 15, 2010 Share
    View and comment on NPR.org
    An NPR News investigation has documented a dangerous and potentially illegal act at the Upper Big Branch mine in West Virginia two months before a massive April explosion killed 29 mine workers.
    On Feb. 13, an electrician deliberately disabled a methane gas monitor on a continuous mining machine because the monitor repeatedly shut down the machine.

    Three witnesses say the electrician was ordered by a mine supervisor to "bridge" the automatic shutoff mechanism in the monitor.

    Methane monitors are mounted on the massive, 30-foot-long continuous miners because explosive gas can collect in pockets near the roofs of mines. Methane can be released as the machine cuts into rock and coal. The spinning carbide teeth that do the cutting send sparks flying when they cut into rock. The sparks and the gas are an explosive mix, so the methane monitor is designed to signal a warning and automatically shut down the machine when gas approaches dangerous concentrations.

    "Everybody was getting mad because the continuous miner kept shutting off because there was methane," recalls Ricky Lee Campbell, a 24-year-old coal shuttle driver and roof bolter who witnessed the incident. "So, they shut the section down and the electrician got into the methane detector box and rewired it so we could continue to run coal."

    The continuous miner was working in an entryway about three miles from the location of the deadly explosion in April. Campbell and other mine workers were getting the section ready for mining. The continuous miner was cutting into the roof to make way for a conveyor belt and was cutting into both rock and coal, according to Campbell.

    "I asked them, 'What are you doing?' " Campbell says. "And they told me, 'We're bridging a methane detector. We're bypassing it,' is what they said."

    Witnesses Corroborate Bridging

    Two other witnesses confirm the bridging incident. Both asked not to be named because they fear for their jobs, their families and their futures. Campbell has already been fired by Upper Big Branch owner Massey Energy. He has a whistle-blower claim pending against the company based on other complaints about safety. Massey Energy has called the claim groundless and says Campbell's dismissal was warranted.

    All three witnesses are clear about what happened on that cold and snowy day in February in the Coal River Valley of West Virginia. The electrician was ordered to bridge the monitor by the mine supervisor but he didn’t know how to do it. So the supervisor called to the surface to find someone who could describe the procedure.

    The process took more than an hour, as the electrician dismantled the monitor and used a wire to circumvent the device that disables the mining machine.

    "The electrician said, 'Please don't say nothing,' " Campbell remembers, adding the electrician was afraid he would lose his state certification. "He knew it was dangerous. He knew he shouldn't have been doing it. But when somebody higher up [is] telling you to do something, you're going to do what they say. And he just [did] his job and [did] what they said to do."

    The electrician does not deny the incident happened but declined to be interviewed.

    Misconception Among Miners

    Two of the witnesses say they don't believe excessive methane gas forced the monitor to shut down the mining machine. They believe the monitor was simply malfunctioning, which is a common problem underground.

    The witnesses also repeated a widespread misconception about what is and isn't permissible when monitors malfunction. Clay Mullins, a former Upper Big Branch foreman whose brother Rex died in the April explosion, recounted that belief in an unrelated interview in June.

    "It does say in the law that if you got a methane monitor malfunction, you can bridge it out and you can run that machine for 24 hours," Mullins said. "But the operator has to carry a [hand-held] methane detector, and he has to take [readings] ... every 15 minutes."

    NPR heard this repeatedly during a three-month-long investigation of the Upper Big Branch disaster. But "it's not permitted, and I think it is clearly in violation of the law," says Edward Clair, who retired last year after 22 years as the chief attorney for the Mine Safety and Health Administration.

    The law, Clair says, requires working methane monitors on all mining machines cutting rock and coal. He says there are no exceptions in the law or in mining regulations.

    Hand-held monitors are also no substitute for the methane detectors mounted on mining machines as close to the cutting surface as possible, according to Bruce Dial, a former federal mine safety inspector and trainer. That's because the mining machine is nearly as long as a school bus and mine workers are behind it as it cuts.

    "They are probably 25 to 30 feet back from the face," Dial says. "That means you've got 25 or 30 feet of area that could be building up methane. You could have an explosive atmosphere before you ever know about it 30 feet back."

    In a statement to NPR, the Mine Safety and Health Administration says these actions, if true, "would clearly violate the law and jeopardize the lives and safety of miners."

    "What makes it criminal is that somebody actively defeats the safety protection, and that should be prosecuted," says Clair, the former MSHA solicitor. "You've put production over the safety of your employees."

    'Methane Monitor Is Life And Death'

    Mullins, the former foreman at Upper Big Branch, was more direct in June when asked generically about bridging monitors.

    "That's something I would not tolerate," Mullins said. "Because the methane monitor is life and death. That's a problem you correct right away."

    If a mine has monitors on hand, replacing a malfunctioning monitor might take a couple of hours. The shutdown would be longer if no replacement is available.

    Mullins says he never saw a methane monitor bridged in his eight years at the Upper Big Branch mine. Most of the dozen Upper Big Branch miners NPR spoke with say the same thing. A few, though, say they've seen bridging at the mine, including a rudimentary variation that involves placing a plastic bag over the sniffer on the device.

    The February incident raises an important question as investigators try to determine the cause of the deadly explosion on April 5. Was the monitor bridging incident isolated? Could something similar have happened the morning of April 5 in the vicinity of the blast?

    "It wasn't where the actual explosion occurred in that section of the mine," says former federal inspector Dial. "But it still shows me that the attitude of the company, the attitude of the foreman and whoever else knew about this ... is the attitude that production is the most important."

    Massey Responds

    Massey Energy confirms in a statement from spokesman Jeff Gillenwater that the Feb. 13 incident took place. But Gillenwater writes "the supervisor did not order an electrician to bridge a methane monitor on a continuous miner 'to keep the mining machine from shutting off while operating.' "

    Instead, Gillenwater says, "The methane monitor was bypassed in order to move the miner from the area that did not have roof support to a safer area for repair."

    That is a legitimate reason for bridging a methane monitor. But witnesses insist that the mining machine continued to cut rock, which is not permitted.

    Gillenwater also says "Massey strongly forbids any improper conduct relating to any and all safety devices." And he echoes Stan Suboleski, a Massey board director and former chief operating officer, who told NPR in May that he was astounded at claims company miners disabled methane monitors, "because the company would never condone action like that. We would immediately fire anybody ... if we heard of an action like that occurring. It's just not tolerated in the company."

    Under Investigation

    The FBI has been actively investigating the incident for months. And Ricky Lee Campbell has just received a subpoena to appear before a federal grand jury in Charleston, W.Va., in two weeks. The investigations and the witness accounts have former mine safety and health solicitor Clair thinking this case of monitor tampering is neither benign nor isolated.

    "You can't help thinking," Clair says, "that if you've discovered it one time that it's indicative of an attitude of noncompliance, thumbing your nose at the law, within that company."

    NPR's Frank Langfitt contributed to this report Copyright 2010 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

  • George Steinbrenner and Seinfeld

    Maureen Dowd
    Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

     

    July13, 2010

    Sultan of Swagger

    Big George Steinbrenner could be hard on his employees, especially little George Costanza.

    In the hilarious fictional Yankees world depicted on “Seinfeld,” Steinbrenner once had Costanza hauled off to a mental institution.

    The Yankees owner testified in court that Costanza was a Communist — “as pink as they come, like a big juicy steak.”

    The mercurial billionaire made poor Costanza fetch eggplant calzones and listen to paranoid rants, including one about Babe Ruth: “Nothing more than a fat old man with little girl legs. And here’s something I just found out recently: He wasn’t really a sultan!”

    The Steinbrenner doppelganger — shown only from behind and voiced by the brilliant “Seinfeld” co-creator and Yankees fan, Larry David — even scalped his own tickets.

    “Who else could be a memorable character on a television show without actually appearing on the show?” Jerry Seinfeld told the OnTheRedCarpet blog after hearing that the larger-than-life Steinbrenner had died of a heart attack on Tuesday, the day of the All-Star Game.

    But how did the Yankees owner feel about Big Stein, his oddball yet finally lovable caricature in “Seinfeld”?

    My friend David Sussman called “The Boss” his boss for eight years, working as the Yankees’ general counsel, and for the last five of those, as the team’s chief operating officer as well. He shared the inside-baseball story on Steinbrenner’s relationship with “Seinfeld,” which was, suitably, oddball yet finally lovable.

    In the mid-’90s, NBC contacted Sussman to ask Steinbrenner to do a cameo on an episode and to get his permission to use a Yankees pennant on the wall of Jerry’s apartment. The Boss considered the part demeaning and refused both to appear — “Why would I do that?” he snapped — and to allow the pennant to be used.

    When the show aired a few days later with the pennant on Jerry’s wall, Steinbrenner didn’t say anything.

    A year later, Seinfeld came back with a minor request, Sussman recalled. The star wanted permission to use a Yankees uniform in an episode where George Costanza decides to switch the uniform from polyester to cotton — a disaster once the cotton shrinks.

    Seinfeld had already arranged for the Yankees right fielder Danny Tartabull and manager Buck Showalter to appear on the show.

    Sussman told him that, given the earlier script and the unauthorized use of the pennant, Steinbrenner would never agree. Seinfeld apologized profusely to Sussman and asked for another chance. Couldn’t the lawyer just show The Boss the script? Seinfeld faxed it over to Sussman with the usual Hollywood cover note, ending “Your friend, Jerry.”

    At the end of a long day of business meetings in Tampa, Sussman told Steinbrenner about Seinfeld’s request.

    “Didn’t they screw us last time?” barked The Boss, whose role model was George Patton.

    Sussman conveyed Seinfeld’s apology and told Steinbrenner that “this is an innocuous script that doesn’t involve you.” He explained that Danny and Buck were appearing on the show.

    The owner retorted, “I’ll be the judge of that. Let me see the script.”

    Noticing the sign-off on the cover letter, Steinbrenner, sensitive even to imagined breaches of loyalty, needled his lawyer: “Oh, I can see you and Jerry are becoming close friends.”

    After reading less than a page, Steinbrenner angrily threw down the script. “I thought you said this doesn’t involve me?” he bellowed.

    Sussman tried over and over to reassure him that this script contained no cameo for the owner.

    “Then,” Steinbrenner demanded, “what are all of these references to ‘George’ in the script?”

    Sussman was stunned but tried to explain: “ ‘George’ is George Costanza. He is a character on the show. He is a friend of Seinfeld’s, and he plays the role of one of your employees.”

    Steinbrenner acted incredulous, intoning: “I thought you were smarter than that. Don’t you see? This is how they are trying to get at me. They have named their character after me.”

    All attempts to tell him that the “George” character had been on the show since it started were brushed aside.

    “Here’s what we do,” Steinbrenner declared. “Call your friend Jerry back and tell him he has Mr. Steinbrenner’s permission to use the Yankees uniform but on one condition: He changes the name of the Costanza character. In fact, have him name this character after you, David.”

    Sussman conveyed the good news/bad news message to Seinfeld, who was understandably befuddled. The Boss declined to return Jerry’s phone calls to Tampa.

    The following Friday, Steinbrenner called Sussman to discuss business, and then seemingly casually noted: “Oh, yes, that request from your friend Jerry Seinfeld. I watched that ‘Seinfeld’ show last night. It is a really funny show. And the George character is great. So you tell your friend Jerry he has my permission.”

    And that’s how George and George coexisted happily ever after.


    Copyright . New York Times Company. 2010. All Rights Reserved

  • Tension Builds Between Drivers on Formula 1 Teams. I.E. Team Mates

    Driver rivalry - what else is new

    The 2010 Formula One season certainly is the season of stormy relations between team colleagues, the relation between Red Bull drivers Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel reached its boiling point last weekend after the team decided to take the newly developed front wing of Webber's car and simply bolted it on Vettel's car to replace the one Vettel had damaged during free practice. Webber was furious and even said he regretted signing a new one- year contract with the Red Bull team. Webber did the only thing he could do, he won the British Grand Prix, left the competition including Vettel miles behind him, and during a moment of sweet revenge couldn't help himself shouting over the radio when he crossed the finish line: "Not bad for a number two driver!"

    See large picture
    Mark Webber, winner of the 2010 British GP.

    Earlier this year Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton also had some problems, and at Ferrari (although they deny it) there is also something going on. Fernando Alonso overtook Felipe Massa in the pit lane entrance in China and almost pushed him into the gravel trap, and last weekend Alonso hit Massa from behind and punctured his rear tyre when he didn't get out of his way fast enough, and the pair is rarely seen talking to each other. Rivalry between team mates is as old as the sport itself, and in some cases it resulted in a complete on and off track declaration of war.

    In 1981 Williams drivers Carlos Reutemann and Alan Jones had their problems after Jones won the title in 1980 and became first driver. During the 1981 Brazilian GP Reutemann ignored team orders and went on to win the race, after that their relationship went even more sour. Reutemann later said he wanted 'to bury the hatchet' which led to Jones' classic comment: "Yeah, in your back."

    Ferrari drivers Gilles Villeneuve and Didier Pironi clashed during the San Marino GP in 1982. Pironi seemingly ignored team orders and overtook Villeneuve to take the win, Villeneuve was so upset he left the podium after he had collected his second place trophy, and vowed never to speak to Pironi again. Two weeks later he was killed during the qualification of the Belgium GP, which left Pironi with the eternal burden and stigma of being 'a traitor who killed Villeneuve'. Pironi died in 1987 during a off-shore powerboat accident.

    Nelson Piquet and Nigel Mansell had problems when they drove for Williams, Piquet didn't expect Mansell would be such a strong opponent, but he was, which resulted in a polemic of mutual offences. Piquet went way over the line when he commented Mansell's wife was 'an unattractive woman'. Many still believe this internal struggle cost Williams the title. Alain Prost and Mansell drove for Ferrari in 1990, but again the relationship went sour, Ferrari's internal politics intensified the tension between the two, and there were numerous cases of favoritism when the team gave Prost the best car and aero parts.

    See large picture
    Ayrton Senna leading 1994 San Marino GP prior to his fatal crash.

    Prost and Ayrton Senna drove for McLaren in 1988 and 1989, and this was by far the most famous battle between team mates. In the beginning McLaren pretended there was a healthy rivalry between the two drivers, but it soon became apparent the relationship was anything but healthy. This resulted in the famous crash in 1989 during the Japanese GP, when Prost didn't give Senna enough room at the last chicane, and the pair collided. Prost retired from the race, but Senna managed to get going again with the help of the marshals and won the race, and as he thought at that moment, the championship as well.

    But hours after the race the FIA Stewards concluded Senna had cut off the chicane and disqualified him from the race, which meant Prost won the championship. Senna was furious and accused FIA President Jean-Marie Balestre of corruption and favoritism. Senna returned the favor to Prost in 1990, when he, again during the Japanese GP, ran Prost in his Ferrari off the track right after the start, both drivers ended up in the gravel trap, but this time it was Senna who won the championship.

    And that takes us right back to 2010, there are some similarities between the Prost/Senna feud and the Webber/Vettel and the Hamilton/Button feuds, back in those days many insiders believed it just not such a great idea to have two champions, or champions to be, in one team. It often results in a clash between two big egos, which in the end can cost a team the title. Hopefully that will not happen with Red Bull and McLaren, but both teams will have to make sure the situation as it is now will not escalate

    Copyright. Motorsport Magazine.com 2010. All Rights Reserved

  • Complete Summary of British Grand Prix 2010

    » More British Grand Prix articles

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        2010 British Grand Prix – the complete F1 Fanatic race weekend review

        13 July 2010 by Keith Collantine
        Lewis Hamilton, McLaren, Silverstone, 2010

        Find all the F1 Fanatic British Grand Prix coverage in one place below.

        Below are all 44 articles covering the race weekend including reports on every session, team-by-team breakdowns of the race weekend and extensive analysis of the Grand Prix.

        Race results and reaction

        British Grand Prix review – Webber storms to victory as it all goes wrong for Vettel at the start

        British Grand Prix result – Webber shares the Silverstone podium with Hamilton and Rosberg

        Full championship points after Silverstone – Hamilton increases lead as Webber moves back in front of Vettel

        Alonso’s race ruined after Kubica pass – Alonso was handed a penalty for going off the track and gaining an advantage

        “Lewis didn’t mean to give me puncture” – Vettel not bitter after first-lap puncture

        Webber unhappy over wing decision – Webber told the world’s media if he thought he’d have to give up superior parts to Vettel he’d not have signed for another season at Red Bull

        Michael wants Silverstone bumps eased – Williams’ technical director criticised the bumps but praised the other changes to Silverstone

        Alonso: we’ll catch Red Bull in Germany – Alonso also explained why he asked race engineer Andrea Stella to stop giving him radio messages during the race

        Race analysis

        Who was the best driver of the British Grand Prix weekend? (Poll) – Compare and rate the drivers

        Was new Silverstone a success? (Poll) – What did you think of the changes to the home of the British Grand Prix?

        Rate the race: British Grand Prix – Share your verdict on the race

        British Grand Prix facts and stats – Ferrari suffer worst race finish since 1978

        British Grand Prix analysis – How Button went from 14th to fourth

        British Grand Prix fastest laps – Fernando Alonso set the fastest lap of the race after his late pit stop

        Detailed analysis of every team and driver in the British Grand Prix

        McLaren: Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton
        Mercedes: Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher
        Red Bull: Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber
        Ferrari: Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa
        Williams: Rubens Barrichello and Nico Hülkenberg
        Renault: Robert Kubica and Vitaly Petrov
        Force India: Adrian Sutil and Vitantonio Liuzzi
        Toro Rosso: Sebastien Buemi and Jaime Alguersuari
        Lotus: Jarno Trulli and Heikki Koalainen
        HRT: Karun Chandhok and Sakon Yamamoto
        Sauber: Kamui Kobayashi and Pedro de la Rosa
        Virgin: Timo Glock and Heikki Kovalainen

        Qualifying

        British Grand Prix qualifying – Vettel on pole as Red Bull dominate at Silverstone

        Should Webber have got Red Bull’s new front wing instead of Vettel? – Controversy after qualifying as it emerged Red Bull’s last new front wing had been taken off Webber’s car and put on Vettel’s

        British Grand Prix grid – Red Bull’s fifth front row lockout of 2010

        Liuzzi demoted to 20th after penalty – The Force India driver held up Nico Hülkenberg during Q2

        British Grand Prix pre-race analysis – Button facing a challenge from 14th

        Practice

        Sakon Yamamoto to replace Bruno Senna at HRT at Silverstone – A surprise driver change on the eve of the race

        Vettel fastest at new Silverstone – Drivers got to grips with the revised track

        Red Bull on top again at Silverstone – Alonso showed Ferrari’s pace in second practice

        British GP practice interactive data – McLaren hoped to find more performance from their new exhaust package but ultimately decided to abandon it

        Vettel fastest after front wing scare – That front wing failure was the seed for a much greater drama

        Live blogs

        How we saw the British Grand Prix as it unfolded:

        British Grand Prix Practice 1 Live Blog
        British Grand Prix Practice 2 Live Blog
        British Grand Prix Practice 3 Live Blog
        British Grand Prix Qualifying Live Blog
        British Grand Prix Live Blog

        How can we improve our coverage?

        What would you like to see more of in F1 Fanatic’s Grand Prix coverage? How can we make it better? Please post your suggestions in the comments.

        Find coverage of every race this season here: F1 2010 Season

        Read more: 2010 British Grand Prix | 2010 F1 race reports | 2010 F1 season | Articles in full

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      • An Artificial Heart Its Makers Say Could Be a Standard Replacement

        Carmat

        Testing Carmat’s total artificial heart, which would completely replace a diseased human heart.

        Carmat

        A model of the Carmat heart. Tests on humans are expected to begin by the end of 2011.

         

        July 13, 2010

        An Artificial Heart Its Makers Say Could Be a Standard Replacement

        PARIS — It is a long-held dream: an artificial heart to replace one that is damaged or diseased. Now, a French company says that it has the technology to make the implantation of it a standard surgical procedure.

        Carmat, a medical start-up backed by the European Aeronautic Defense and Space company, is in the final stages of preclinical testing of its total artificial heart for patients with end-stage heart failure. The company hopes to start human testing in France by the end of next year and to bring the technology to the market in Europe in 2013, Marcello Conviti, Carmat’s chief executive, said in a telephone interview.

        Carmat has been financed by Truffle Capital, a venture capital firm, which holds almost 32 percent of the equity. EADS holds almost 30 percent. Carmat has also received 33 million euros ($41 million) in subsidies from a French government innovation fund.

        The company sold a 22.15 percent stake to investors on June 15, raising 15.5 million euros and giving it a market value of 71.3 million euros. On Tuesday, the shares began trading in Paris on the NYSE Alternext market for small euro zone companies, closing at 22.10 euros ($27.90), up 18 percent from their initial public offering price of 18.75 euros.

        While the sales pitch may make for a compelling story, as with any start-up, there is no guarantee that the enterprise will succeed. The company posted a net loss of 4.7 million euros for the 18 months through December 2009.

        The device, made of both synthetic and animal tissue, is driven by two miniature electric motors. Implanted in the patient’s chest after the diseased heart is removed, it uses information gleaned from sensors to mimic the activity of the natural organ. It is operated by a microcontroller and powered by electromagnetic induction through the skin or through a plug implanted behind the patient’s ear.

        Carmat estimates its device will cost $176,000 to $226,000. When all expenses are considered, including hospital and surgical expenses, it says it will cost just over $315,000, about the same as a transplant.

        The device was developed over 15 years by a team that included Alain F. Carpentier, the French surgeon-scientist who, along with Albert Starr, received the 2007 Albert Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research. The Lasker Foundation, which is based in New York, praised their work in the development of artificial heart valves, saying they had “prolonged and enhanced the lives of millions of people with heart disease.”

        In the November 2009 bulletin of the Académie Nationale de Médecine, Dr. Carpentier wrote that, instead of picking up from older models of artificial hearts built on animal research, the developers of the new device had sought to use the tools of the digital revolution, namely computer-assisted design, hemodynamic modeling, regulation algorithms and simulations.

        The French company is not the first to make total artificial hearts, which are meant to completely replace damaged and diseased organs.

        SynCardia, based in Tucson, currently makes the only approved temporary artificial heart, having continued development of the groundbreaking Jarvik-7, which Dr. William C. DeVries implanted in a retired dentist named Barney B. Clark in 1982. Its device, powered by a small air compressor that can be carried in a backpack, has been implanted in more than 800 patients as a bridge before transplant.

        Abiomed, a company based in Danvers, Mass., makes a self-contained total artificial heart, the electrical-powered AbioCor. The United States Food and Drug Administration has designated the AbioCor as a “humanitarian use device,” meaning its use is restricted to people who are ineligible for transplants and would otherwise be facing imminent death.

        Others are in development. In the United States, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, a unit of the National Institutes of Health, is supporting efforts by two separate groups, one led by Dr. O. H. Frazier of the Texas Heart Institute in Houston, the other by Dr. Leonard A. R. Golding of the Cleveland Clinic.

        Another device is being developed by scientists at the Helmholtz-Institute for Biomedical Engineering at the University of Aachen in Germany.

        “There’s definitely a major need for a permanent, total artificial heart,” Laman A. Gray Jr., the University of Louisville professor of surgery who implanted the first AbioCor heart in 2001, said.

        Citing World Health Organization data that shows heart disease is the world’s leading cause of death, Mr. Conviti, the Carmat chief executive, estimated the potential market at “a minimum” of 100,000 patients a year in the United States and Europe. However, he said cost constraints meant it was unlikely that more than one-tenth of those patients would actually receive an artificial heart.

        Lawrence K. Altman contributed reporting from New York.


        Copyright. New York Times Company. 2010. All Rights Reserved

         

      • Social Networking Takes Flight

        Ruby Washington/The New York Times

        Virgin America also offers seat-to-seat messaging via video screens installed on seat backs.

         

        July 12, 2010

        Social Networking Takes Flight

        On a flight from Newark to the West Coast not long ago, Jeff Jarvis, author of the book “What Would Google Do?” fell into a conversation with a fellow passenger familiar with his work. But it was not a face-to-face chat. Rather, it started as an exchange of Twitter posts at the boarding gate.

        When the plane landed, Mr. Jarvis recalled, the conversation resumed. “It was as if someone had recognized you and come up to say, ‘hello,’ on the flight.” He said it reminded him of the days when passengers could socialize in airborne lounges, “except now it’s happening digitally.”

        The mobile phone and laptop are not just tools to stay in touch with the office or home anymore. As Mr. Jarvis can attest, a growing number of frequent fliers are using their mobile devices to create an informal travelers’ community in airports and aloft.

        Airlines and social media providers are scrambling to catch up. Airlines are beefing up their presence on networking channels, and travelers’ groups like FlyerTalk.com have created new applications that allow members to find one another while on the road. Business travelers can use these services to share cabs to the airport, swap advice or locate colleagues in the same city. As Mr. Jarvis puts it, “finding a like-minded person to travel with lessens the chance of getting stuck next to some talkative bozo” on a long flight.

        Increasing availability of Wi-Fi at airports and on planes has made the travel networking possible. A survey of 84 of the world’s largest airports by the Airports Council International earlier this year found that 96 percent offered Wi-Fi connections, and 73 percent had connections throughout their terminals. About 45 percent offer the service free; the rest charge an average of about $8 an hour.

        More than 10 airlines in North America, including American, Delta and Southwest, are wiring their planes for Internet access, and major foreign airlines like Lufthansa are introducing new technology that will let customers connect on transoceanic flights. In-flight calls are still forbidden on most flights, although several airlines, including Emirates, have been testing calling on shorter trips.

        As many as 1,200 commercial airliners in the United States will have Wi-Fi capability by the end of the year, according to Chris Babb, senior product manager of in-flight entertainment for Delta Air Lines. “It’s a much different world than it was a year ago,” he said, noting that on a recent flight he exchanged e-mail messages with several colleagues who were in the air at the same time.

        And Virgin America, which has wired its entire 28-plane fleet for the Internet, said about half of its passengers brought their laptops with them and 17 to 20 percent were online at any given time. On longer flights, about a third of passengers go online. Like airports, most airlines charge a fee for the service, usually ranging from $5 to $13.

        Some airline passengers may mourn the loss of their last remaining refuge from e-mail intrusions. But the benefits of staying connected became clear several months ago during the eruption of the Icelandic volcano that grounded thousands of European flights. Facebook and Twitter set up sites for stranded travelers, who swapped ideas and offered rides to ferry terminals, and Twitter had its own thread. Based on anecdotal reports, the sites helped in getting information out quickly.

        For those with time at an airport, FlyerTalk.com has an “itineraries” feature that allows travelers to post their coming flights in the hope that other “flier talkers,” as they call themselves, may be heading the same way.

        Lufthansa said it consulted with FlyerTalk members in developing its own product to help customers tap into social networking from any location. The application works on iPhones and this fall will be available on BlackBerrys. A built-in GPS allows users to find fellow fliers who might be nearby. It also has a taxi-sharing feature that travelers can activate upon landing.

        Users must already be members of the airlines’ loyalty program, and Lufthansa said it had added privacy controls for those who preferred to travel incognito. FlyerTalk’s president, Gary Leff, said that while some members had welcomed the service, others were skeptical. “Some of us just like to keep to ourselves” on the road, he said.

        For those who want to connect, few airlines can match Virgin America for mingling opportunities. In addition to its Internet service, it offers seat-to-seat messaging via its seatback video screens. It has also teamed up with match.com to create a party atmosphere on specific flights (reportedly at least one couple who met this way became engaged). But there is also the potential for spurned advances and hurt feelings.

        “Seat-to-seat chatting could lead to a negative form of social networking,” said Jeanne Martinet, a social commentator who writes the missmingle.com blog. “What if someone spots another passenger doing something annoying?” she asked. In the past, that person might have simply suffered in silence. Now, Ms. Martinet said, “It would be tempting to message them, ‘Can’t you get your big feet out of the aisle?’ ”

        Porter Gale, Virgin’s vice president of marketing, said there were safeguards against abuse and that a passenger could simply turn off the messaging function. And she said that offering Wi-Fi access had benefits for the airline, like the ability to resolve a customer’s problem before a flight lands.

        A passenger once sent an e-mail message to the airline from his seat, saying that he was not pleased with the sandwich he had just eaten, she said. A customer service representative on the ground sent a message back to the plane, and shortly thereafter, she said, the passenger was served an acceptable substitute.

        This can work against the airline, too, as Virgin discovered when a New York-bound flight was diverted and some passengers sent out messages venting their annoyance with the delay.


        Copyright. New York Times Company. 2010. All Rights Reserved

      • Long Live the Queen, or Whatever

         

        by Jamie Johnson

        460-queen-1972.jpgQueen Elizabeth of England doesn’t exert quite the same gravitation force as she did in the 1970s. Photo credit: Conde Nast Archive.

        Every Tuesday on VF.com, filmmaker Jamie Johnson offers a glimpse into the secret lives of the super-rich.

        Queen Elizabeth II was greeted with surprisingly little fanfare last week when she travelled to Manhattan for her first official visit to the city in more than 30 years. Though a number of formal ceremonies were held in her honor around town, most members of New York’s upper-class society seemed content to ignore her presence altogether. Not even the most devoted of Anglophiles, proud descendents of patrician families who for generations have been modeling themselves on English aristocrats, could muster much enthusiasm.

        Decades ago, during Her Majesty’s previous visits to Manhattan, she was given a proper hero’s welcome by the local elite. The Queen was the undisputed toast of the town, courted and feted by anyone lucky enough to be granted an audience with her. As the world’s leading representative of royal status and breeding, she had an irresistible appeal to affluent city residents who were looking to shore up their Brahmin-caste credentials.

        How times have changed. I can think of two explanations for last week’s low-key reception. For one, the English royal family simply doesn’t have the power that it used to. Elizabeth II’s last major visits to Manhattan were made in the 1950s and 70s, when being an actual monarch, even a monarch whose sovereignty was largely symbolic, still carried real meaning. The rise in international wealth from globalization, as well as some of the highly publicized scandals that have plagued the Queen’s heirs, appear to have undercut the authority of the crown. Of equal importance, however, is the fact that American bluebloods, especially those native to New York, no longer feel so inferior to English nobility. The once desperate impulse to host highborn descendents of the British imperial line is not so desperate anymore.

        Anglophilia probably reached its height in this country in the period following the Civil War, when wealth created from the rapid expansion of industry finally provided rich Americans with enough cash to rival their Western European counterparts. It was then that Americans began to adopt customs previously reserved only for the British upper crust. Among these affections were the creation of vast country estates with giant houses, the embrace of sports such as foxhunting, and the proliferation of boarding schools to prepare a population of students to inhabit a newly minted old-world hierarchy. Many of today’s prominent New England schools came into being during this wave of applied tradition.

        Convention also dictated that whenever British aristocrats travelled to American cities, particularly New York, leaders of society made certain that all festivities revolved around these prominent guests. Honorary balls marked the occasion, and invitations were ostentatiously issued to all of the finest homes in the city. Ward McAllister, the great social arbiter of the Gilded Age, who famously devised the exclusive list of the richest and most socially revered New Yorkers of the era, known widely as the Astor 400, describes in his memoirs the many lavish parties he attended to celebrate English grandees. His sycophantic tone remains a telling sign of the awe which foreign nobility inspired.

        In the 21st century, old-fashioned worship of the British aristocracy plays a sharply reduced role in the American social landscape. Domestic rich have gained greater self-assurance, developing over the generations an affluent culture with a confident style all its own. They’ve been rich enough long enough not to have to look to others for guidance about extravagant living.

        That isn’t to say exactly that European titles mean nothing to Americans. Many are still captivated by and drawn to the impressive legacy of the long-established gentry across the pond. Just consider the resident of Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood who was busted recently for pretending to be a Hapsburg prince. For quite a while New Yorkers were pleased to share his company and admire his elevated status. In truth, it turns out he’s just a dodgy guy from Michigan with a substantial record of dubious activities. At least nobody threw a grand ball for him, as once might well have happened in the past.

         

        Copyright. Vanity Fair.2010. All Rights Reserved

      • America Builds an Aristocracy

         

        July 9, 2010

        America Builds an Aristocracy

        Boston

        AMERICANS have always assumed that wealth comes and goes. A poor person can work hard, become rich and pass his money on to his children and grandchildren. But then, if those descendants do not manage it wisely, they may lose it. “Shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations,” the saying goes, and it conforms to our preference for meritocracy over aristocracy.

        This assumption is now being undermined, however, through the increasing use of so-called dynasty trusts. These estate-planning instruments enable affluent people to provide their heirs with money and property largely free from taxes and immune to the claims of creditors. And rather than benefit only children and grandchildren, dynasty trusts provide for generations in perpetuity — truly creating an American aristocracy.

        Congress is feeling pressure to deal with taxes on inherited wealth, which have fallen to zero this year thanks to lawmakers’ inaction. In the process, it should address the more pernicious problem of dynasty trusts.

        This type of trust is new because until very recently most states had a “rule against perpetuities,” which limited the term of any family trust to about 90 years, after which time the family members would own the property outright. This rule derived from the idea that property is best controlled by the living.

        In the mid-1990s, however, many states repealed the perpetuities rule, and now any wealthy American can set property aside for his heirs forever, simply by hiring a trustee from one of these states.

        What caused state legislatures to abandon a rule that had existed since the late 1600s? Banking industry lobbyists persuaded them that it would be a lucrative move because it would bring business to their states. But it was Congress that set the stage nearly 25 years ago.

        In 1986, Congress instituted the generation-skipping transfer tax. This closed a loophole in the estate tax by ensuring that property would be subject to tax as it passed through each generation, even if it would otherwise have avoided estate taxes because it was held in trust. (It prevented “generation skipping.”) However, in enacting this tax, Congress gave each taxpayer a $1 million exemption, which was raised over the years to $3.5 million.

        Naturally, estate planners began to create trusts that could take advantage of the exemption, and avoid taxes for the term of the trust. The term, however, was limited by the rule against perpetuities.

        Bankers then realized that if they could persuade their state legislatures to repeal that rule (as well as state income taxes on trusts), they could attract business. And in more than a dozen states the banking lobbyists were successful. The rule against perpetuities was repealed, and dynasty trusts — tax-exempt trusts that could benefit generation after generation of heirs — were born.

        This did generate business. One study found that nearly $100 billion in trust funds moved to states that repealed their rule against perpetuities.

        Dynasty trusts can grow much larger than the $3.5 million exemption amount would suggest. A couple can, for example, put $7 million (their two $3.5 million exemptions) into a life insurance policy owned by the trust. They apply their exemption at the start, and the trust is forever free from taxes — even when, after the death of the second spouse, the life insurance policy pays off at $100 million. Alternatively, a trust can use the $7 million as seed money for a profitable business that the trust then owns.

        An ordinary trust dissipates as money is distributed to the beneficiaries. But a dynasty trust can avoid this by discouraging outright distributions and instead encouraging trustees to buy, for the use of the beneficiaries, things like houses, artwork, airplanes and even businesses. Because the trust retains ownership, the assets can pass tax-free and creditor-proof to the next generation.

        Beneficiaries don’t pay taxes on the use of this property. In contrast, a worker whose employer provides housing or other benefits is taxed on those benefits.

        But tax breaks are not the only special advantages that dynasty trusts provide. Even more troubling, they commonly include a “spendthrift clause,” which provides that trust assets cannot be reached by a beneficiary’s creditors. If a beneficiary causes a car accident, for example, the victim cannot be compensated with assets from the trust, even if they are the driver’s only resources. So beneficiaries are free to behave as recklessly as they like, knowing that their money is forever protected for themselves and their heirs.

        Surprisingly, dynasty trusts can also be bad for the beneficiaries themselves. Many wealthy people agree with Andrew Carnegie and Warren Buffett that it is not in their children’s best interest for them to be given so much wealth that they don’t need to work. Dynasty trusts rob future parents of the ability to decide this for their children, because the ancestor creating the trust is the one who determines how much wealth each generation of his descendants will receive.

        What can be done to eliminate these trusts? A state-level solution is unlikely, since all 50 states would need to act in unison. But Congress could fix the problem by limiting the generation-skipping-transfer exemption to trusts that last no longer than two generations. After that, beneficiaries of a trust should be subject to tax, like everyone else. Then America would not have to face the uncontrollable growth of a new aristocracy.

        Ray D. Madoff, a professor at Boston College Law School, is the author of “Immortality and the Law: The Rising Power of the American Dead.”

        Copyright. New York Times Company. 2010 All Rights Reserved
         

         

         

      • In BP’s Record, a History of Boldness and Costly Blunders

        Thunder Horse, 2005 The 15-story oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico pitched in rough seas in the wake of Hurricane Dennis, tilting dangerously

         

        July 12, 2010

        In BP’s Record, a History of Boldness and Costly Blunders

        This article was reported by Sarah Lyall, Clifford Krauss and Jad Mouawad and written by Ms. Lyall.

        Hurricane Dennis had already come and gone on July 11, 2005, when a passing ship spotted a shocking sight in the Gulf of Mexico: Thunder Horse, BP’s hulking $1 billion oil platform, was listing precariously to one side, looking for all the world as if it were about to sink.

        Towering 15 stories above the water’s surface, Thunder Horse was meant to be the company’s crowning glory, the embodiment of its bold gamble to outpace its competitors in finding and exploiting the vast reserves of oil beneath the waters of the gulf.

        Instead, the rig, which was supposed to produce about 20 percent of the gulf’s oil output, became a symbol of BP’s hubris. A valve installed backward had caused the vessel to flood during the hurricane, jeopardizing the project before any oil had even been pumped. Other problems, discovered later, included a welding job so shoddy that it left underwater pipelines brittle and full of cracks.

        “It could have been catastrophic,” said Gordon A. Aaker Jr., a senior engineering consultant on the project. “You would have lost a lot of oil a mile down before you would have even known. It could have been a helluva spill — much like the Deepwater Horizon.”

        The problems at Thunder Horse were not an anomaly, but a warning that BP was taking too many risks and cutting corners in pursuit of growth and profits, according to analysts, competitors and former employees. Despite a catalog of crises and near misses in recent years, BP has been chronically unable or unwilling to learn from its mistakes, an examination of its record shows.

        “They were very arrogant and proud and in denial,” said Steve Arendt, a safety specialist who assisted the panel appointed by BP to investigate the company’s refineries after a deadly 2005 explosion at its Texas City, Tex., facility. “It is possible they were fooled by their success.”

        Indeed, there was a great deal of success to admire. In little more than a decade, BP grew from a middleweight into the industry’s second-largest company, behind only Exxon Mobil, with soaring profits, fat dividends and a share price to match.

        From its base in London, the company struck bold deals in politically volatile areas like Angola and Azerbaijan and pushed technology to the limit in the remotest reaches of Alaska and the deepest waters of the Gulf of Mexico — “the tough stuff that others cannot or choose not to do,” as its chief executive, Tony Hayward, once put it.

        The company also led an industry wave of cost-cutting and consolidation. It took over American competitors like Amoco and Atlantic Richfield and eliminated tens of thousands of jobs in several rounds, streamlining management but forcing the company to rely more heavily on outside contractors.

        For a long time, BP’s strategy seemed to pay off. But on April 20, the nightmare situation occurred: the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded, killing 11 workers and sending millions of gallons of oil gushing from BP’s Macondo well like so much black poison.

        Although the accident is still under investigation, preliminary findings by Congressional investigators indicate that BP made a series of decisions that compounded the chances of disaster.

        BP declined to make Mr. Hayward or other executives available for this article. But in an interview last month, Robert Dudley, the BP board member now in charge of the gulf spill response, denied that the accident reflected a corporate disregard for safety.

        “I think we will find that this was an incredibly complicated set of events with individual decisions and equipment failures that led to a very complicated industrial accident,” he said.

        BP is hardly the only oil company that has taken on difficult projects with a shaky safety net. But the company’s attitude toward risk stands in contrast to that of its competitors, most notably Exxon Mobil, whose searing experience with the Exxon Valdez spill in 1989 spurred a wholesale change in its approach to safety.

        “You can have the best intentions in the world, you can have the best equipment in the world, but it’s a combination of intentions, equipment and judgment that keeps accidents out of the workplace,” said Joseph H. Bryant, who ran BP’s operations in Angola from 2000 to 2004 and who is now chief executive of Cobalt International Energy. “If you are going to ask people to innovate, you’d better make sure that they know that any risks they take are manageable.”

        A Focus on the Basics

        When Tony Hayward became BP’s chief executive in May 2007, he promised to get the company back to basics.

        One of his first moves was to remove the modern art adorning the company’s swanky London headquarters, including an endless video of gently waving corn projected onto one wall. In its place went prosaic photographs of BP service stations, platforms and pipelines.

        A plain-spoken geologist and longtime company man, Mr. Hayward dispensed with the limousine used by his socially prominent predecessor, John Browne, and closed the concierge desk in the lobby that had helped employees with dry cleaning and theater tickets.

        “BP makes its money by someone, somewhere, every day putting on boots, coveralls, a hard hat and glasses, and going out and turning valves,” Mr. Hayward said in a speech at Stanford Business School last year. “And we’d sort of lost track of that.”

        Mr. Hayward also pledged to fix the safety problems that contributed to the downfall of his predecessor. Though the company would continue doing the “tough stuff,” he declared, it would make safety its “No. 1 priority.”

        In the realm of personal safety, Mr. Hayward expanded on Mr. Browne’s initiatives. Visitors today see signs at company offices exhorting workers not to walk and carry hot coffee at the same time, to stick to marked walkways in parking lots and to grasp banisters while climbing the stairs. Employees with company cars must take defensive driving courses.

        Mr. Hayward also set up a new companywide management system to evaluate risks, standardize safety practices and improve decision-making.

        In a memorandum to employees on Friday, he noted that before Deepwater Horizon, the company’s safety record had been improving. “This accident has been a terrible exception to that trend and we must learn the lessons from it,” he wrote. “But at the same time, it does not invalidate all the hard work you have put in to improve our safety standards around the world. Safety is our first priority. It will remain so.”

        But American regulators and some members of Congress say that despite such talk, the company continues its risky behavior.

        “The way safety is measured is generally around worker injuries and days away from work, and that measure of safety is irrelevant when you are looking at the likelihood that a facility like an oil refinery could explode,” said David Michaels, assistant secretary of labor for occupational safety and health. “This is comparable to saying that an airline is safe because the pilots and mechanics haven’t been injured.”

        A Story Begun in Persia

        BP was born in 1908 when a rich Englishman named William Knox D’Arcy struck oil in Iran and formed the Anglo-Persian Oil Company. Treating the locals as little more than imperial subjects, the company, partly owned by the British government, expanded across the region, its fortunes intertwined with those of the British Empire.

        But as oil-rich countries around the world began nationalizing their oil fields, British Petroleum, as it later became known, was forced to retreat and find new strategies along with the rest of the industry.

        In 1995, the British government sold the last of its stake in the company and the charismatic Mr. Browne took over.

        A highly visible supporter of the Royal Opera House, the National Gallery and Prime Minister Tony Blair, Mr. Browne transformed the company into a global behemoth, boldly acquiring properties around the world and rechristening it BP.

        Unlike some of his more cautious competitors, Mr. Browne ignored small projects and went after the riskiest, most expensive and potentially most lucrative ventures — “elephants,” in industry jargon. Under him, BP’s share price more than doubled and its cash dividend tripled, making it a darling of investors.

        But even as he became the toast of Britain’s business world and was made a knight and member of the House of Lords, Mr. Browne was ruthlessly slashing costs. He outsourced many operations and fired tens of thousands of employees, including many engineers.

        Tom Kirchmaier, a lecturer in strategy at the Manchester Business School, said that Mr. Browne tried to run BP like a financial company, rotating managers into new jobs with tough profit targets and then moving them before they had to deal with the consequences. The troubled Texas City refinery, for example, had five managers in six years.

        Mr. Browne, now advising Britain’s coalition government on its cost-cutting campaign, declined to comment for this article. In his new autobiography, “Beyond Business,” he said, “I transformed a company, challenged a sector, and prompted political and business leaders to change.”

        Mr. Browne resigned under pressure in 2007, his reputation tarnished by a lie he told in court papers about his relationship with a male companion.

        However, Mr. Browne’s fall from grace really began on March 23, 2005, when 15 people died and more than 170 were injured in America’s worst industrial accident in a generation: a huge fire and explosion at Texas City.

        A Troubled Workplace

        Acquired by BP in the Amoco purchase, the Texas City plant was America’s second-largest refinery, turning 460,000 barrels of crude oil a day into gasoline. But the facility, built in 1934, was poorly maintained and long starved of capital investment.

        “We have never seen a site where the notion ‘I could die today’ was so real,” the Telos Group, a consulting firm hired to examine conditions at the plant, said in a report two months before the accident.

        The explosion occurred when a 170-foot tower was being filled with liquid hydrocarbons. Because of poor communication among several workers who had been on 12-hour shifts for more than a month straight, no one noticed that the tower was filled too high.

        A 20-foot geyser of unstable chemicals shot into the sky, and the vapor ignited when a contractor, trying to get away, repeatedly tried to start the engine on his stalling pickup truck.

        The subsequent investigations were scathing. The explosion was “caused by organizational and safety deficiencies at all levels of BP,” the United States Chemical Safety Board concluded in one report.

        The government ultimately found more than 300 safety violations, and BP agreed to pay a then record $21 million in fines.

        A year later, there was a new calamity: 267,000 gallons of oil leaked from BP’s network of pipelines in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska.

        It was the worst spill ever on the North Slope, and once again, the cause was preventable. Investigators found widespread corrosion in several miles of under-maintained and poorly inspected pipes. BP eventually paid more than $20 million in fines and restitution.

        While these two accidents drew most public attention, serious problems were also brewing offshore, at BP’s Thunder Horse platform.

        Mr. Aaker, the engineering consultant who worked on it, said BP’s bosses rushed construction of the intricately designed vessel, moving it to the gulf before it was ready to “demonstrate to their shareholders that the project was on time and on schedule.”

        Once the rig was at sea, several hundred people at a time frantically worked to complete it, sleeping in cramped, chaotic conditions on board a temporary encampment of ships.

        “It was like having the plumbers, the electricians and the bricklayers come to a construction site at the same time as they are laying the concrete,” said Mr. Aaker, who is now assisting the House Energy and Commerce Committee in its investigation of Deepwater Horizon. “This was not methodical.”

        Nor was it safe.

        The near sinking of Thunder Horse in 2005 was caused by a shockingly simple mistake: a check valve had been installed backward, and that caused water to flood into, rather than out of, the rig when it heated up during the hurricane.

        After costly repairs to fix that damage, BP discovered a more significant problem: rudimentary mistakes in the welding of pipes in the underwater manifold, which connects dozens of wells and helps carry the oil back to the platform, had caused dangerous cracks and breaks.

        Had the well been active, the damaged pipes would have caused a major oil spill. As it was, the company had to remotely rip out, retrieve and fix dozens of complex and heavy pieces of equipment lying on the sea floor, some weighing more than 400 tons.

        Altogether, the blunders cost BP and its minority partner, Exxon Mobil, hundreds of millions of dollars in repairs and set back production, today at 300,000 barrels of oil and oil equivalents a day, by three years.

        Although the Deepwater Horizon accident involved an exploration rig, not a production platform, a similar carelessness and disregard for safety was evident in BP’s decisions there, according to preliminary findings by the House Energy and Commerce Committee. “In effect, it appears that BP repeatedly chose risky procedures in order to reduce costs and save time and made minimal efforts to contain the added risk,” wrote Henry A. Waxman, the committee chairman, and Bart Stupak, chairman of its subcommittee on oversight and investigations.

        BP took a different sort of risk in Russia, forming a 50-50 joint venture in 2003 with that nation’s unpredictable oligarchs to gain access to the vast resources beneath the Siberian taiga.

        The deal, which accounted for about one-quarter of BP’s global oil reserves, nearly collapsed in 2008, when the Russian government sought tighter control over its energy sector. After a nasty public fight, BP was forced to hand over operational control of the venture to its Russian partners, although it continues to reap vast profits from it.

        BP stepped into another tricky political situation last year, when Iraq offered foreign companies $2 a barrel to help it increase production from its oil fields, which had suffered from years of war and neglect. BP’s competitors blanched at the low price, but Mr. Hayward teamed up with a Chinese state-owned company and accepted the deal.

        The chairman of a rival company was so enraged that he called Mr. Hayward and demanded: “Tony, have you gone mad?” BP’s move forced other companies to agree to similar terms. As one analyst noted, it was “disastrous to profitability” for the industry.

        Old Habits Die Hard

        Time and again, BP has insisted that it has learned how to balance risk and safety, efficiency and profit. Yet the evidence suggests that fundamental change has been elusive.

        Revisiting Texas City in 2009, inspectors from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration found more than 700 safety violations and proposed a record fine of $87.4 million — topping the earlier record set by BP in the 2005 accident. Most of the penalties, the agency said, were because BP had failed to live up to the previous settlement fully.

        In March of this year, OSHA found 62 violations at BP’s Ohio refinery, proposing $3 million more in penalties.

        “Senior management told us they are very serious about safety, but we observed that they haven’t translated their words into safe working procedures and practices, and they have difficulty applying the lessons learned from refinery to refinery or even from within refineries,” said Mr. Michaels, the OSHA administrator.

        BP is contesting OSHA’s allegations, saying it has made substantial improvements at both facilities.

        Accidents have also continued to plague BP’s pipelines in Alaska. Most recently, on May 25, a power failure led to a leak that overwhelmed a storage tank and spilled about 200,000 gallons of oil — the third-largest spill on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System.

        Mr. Dudley, the BP executive overseeing the gulf response, said it was unfair to blame cultural failings at BP for the string of accidents.

        “Everyone realized we had to operate safely and reliably, particularly in the U.S., to restore a reputation that was damaged by the accident at Texas City,” he said. “So I don’t accept, and have not witnessed, this cutting of corners and the sacrifice of safety to drive results.”

        Mr. Waxman, whose committee is investigating the Deepwater Horizon accident, has a very different view. When Mr. Hayward testified a month ago, the representative upbraided him: “There is a complete contradiction between BP’s words and deeds. You were brought in to make safety the top priority of BP. But under your leadership, BP has taken the most extreme risks.”

        “BP cut corner after corner to save a million dollars here and a few hours there,” Mr. Waxman said. “And now the whole Gulf Coast is paying the price.”

        Julia Werdigier contributed reporting.


        Copyright. New York Times Company. 2010 All Rights Reserved