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...bottles entered Russia - earning just 5% of the usual weekly revenues from imports. And apparently the database is flawed as well. The usais cannot support more than 10 users at the same time - it simply shuts down, writes the Moscow daily Kommersant. "Today, I can't offer imported alcohol, tomorrow I won't be able to offer domestic vodka," says Nefedova. "The supplies will dry up." The government seems to know it has a problem. Just three days after the July 1 deadline expired, Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov, faced with bare wine shelves and rapidly dwindling revenues, was forced...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Without Tears — and Now Without Booze | 7/16/2006 | See Source »

...replaced with cleaner fuels, we must somehow make it part of the solution." Germana Canzi, a senior climate and energy campaigner for Friends of the Earth, says: "We are supporting ccs as an option to bridge the gap between the fossil fuels of today and the cleaner fuels of tomorrow." There are obstacles that will likely mean we won't see too many full-scale coal-fired plants with ccs technology soon. Building a supercritical, 1,000-MW coal-fired plant with ccs technology from the ground up could cost around $2 billion - about 30% more than the price...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Coal's Bright Future | 7/16/2006 | See Source »

...goodbye. A new generation of work-space design promises to tear down those padded walls. Office architects are envisioning improved cubicles-- newbicles?--that feel private yet collegial, personal yet interchangeable, smaller yet somehow more spacious. Employing advanced materials, tomorrow's technology and the fruits of sociological research, designers are fitting the future workplace to workers who are increasingly mobile and global. Meanwhile, bosses are demanding rent-saving, productivity- boosting solutions to convince us that cubicles are cool. It might even work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Redrawing the Cube | 7/9/2006 | See Source »

...yearning and the rage of the contemporary, embodied in some poor sad sack of a character who's mad as hell and just can't get no satisfaction. Every once in a while a novel comes along that makes everything else feel dated, that feels as current as tomorrow's e-mail, that gives readers the story of their own secret ineffable desperation with such immediacy that it induces spontaneous mass recognition as the Voice. Every once in a while--but not lately...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who's the Voice of this Generation? | 7/2/2006 | See Source »

...Things happen in Berkeley that are seen as being quirky," Bates tells TIME. "But what we know is, those ideas that percolate in Berkeley today end up being conventional wisdom in the rest of the country tomorrow." Berkeley, after all, was the first city to start curbside recycling, ban Styrofoam and desegregate its public schools without a court order. Berkeley also took the lead in calling for municipalities to divest from South Africa during the apartheid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will the Berkeley Impeachment Resolution Catch On? | 6/30/2006 | See Source »

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