Beijing Scrambles to Avert Disaster

With the economic picture in China looking cloudier by the day, party leaders in Beijing appear to be getting a bit desperate. The FT reported today that Beijing has ordered Chinese banks to roll over government loans to local governments for up to four years. These loans, given to local governments at the height of […]

Greek Austerity Endangered by Enraged Public

Over the past few months, European leaders have begun to question the commitment of Greek politicians to the painful austerity programs that have massive numbers of Greeks taking to the streets. Lately, it seems their fears may have been misplaced. A vote yesterday over proposed cuts passed the chamber, and both major parties took a […]

A Conversation with Namik Tan

The embassy of Turkey is located at 2525 Massachusetts Avenue in the core of a region of Northwest DC known as Embassy Row. The compound’s bright and lively architecture stands in stark contrast to the gray block structures across the street, representing the Indian, Japanese, and South Korean embassies. The compound is accessed through a […]

Surveillance Drone, Maiden Flight

I’ve promised to write about the surveillance drone that I’ve been building over the past couple of months. I have always wanted to have my own drone that could send back a live video feed. This is partly inspired by products like the AeroVironment RQ-11 Raven, which is currently in use by the US military, […]

Week in Review

In case you missed it, the next two installments of the Beyond the Blue essay were posted this past week. Part three dealt with the disruptive promise of infostructure, and part four with the painful but necessary changes we’re all likely to experience in the near future as a result of these disruptions.As Syria continued its […]

A Blog Evolves

As those of you who’ve been with me from the beginning know, Via Meadia is an experiment and a work in progress.  I didn’t know how to blog when I started – and one of the things that attracted me to the form was that nobody else did either.I don’t mean there aren’t some excellent […]

Bin Laden Gave Up on Jihad

The big news today: according to family members, by the end of his life Osama bin Laden was telling his family to “Go to Europe and America and get a good education.”What? The great Islamic umma, center of global culture and light of the world has no universities where the children of the Great Jihadi […]

The Brown Revolution Needs Help

An earlier post drew attention to falling gasoline consumption as a potential harbinger of bad economic news, but there is a flip side to the issue. As Blake Clayton, a new energy blogger at the Council on Foreign Relations, a former Mead haunt, explains, falling domestic demand combined with a surge in foreign consumption and […]

Bloodletting in Brazil

It’s been a rough week for Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff. Last week, reports surfaced that the man in charge of Brazil’s mint had his hand in the till.  The FT reports: The government is investigating allegations that the head of the national mint… was taking kickbacks from the institution’s suppliers… Denucci was being investigated by […]

Green Innovator Meets The Patent System

Last October, Via Meadia highlighted a new product from the man who brought us the iPod: the Nest learning thermostat. It was a great example of innovative design and engineering lighting the way forward for a greener future. And it showed how iconoclastic American startups can continue to revolutionize previously stagnant markets by bringing technology to […]

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