Thursday, November 5, 2009
Coping With Climate Change: Which Societies Will Do Best?
by Gaia Vince
November 2, 2009
Yale Environment 360
As the world warms, how different societies fare in dealing with rising seas and changing weather patterns will have as much to do with political, social, and economic factors as with a changing climate.
Click on Title above for full article
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Souped-Up Hubble Makes A Comeback
by Nell Greenfieldboyce
All Things Considered
National Public Radio
September 9, 2009
...."We are giddy with the quality of the data that we have with this new telescope," says Heidi Hammel, senior research scientist at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo.
"You can already see remarkable differences between what we're seeing now and what we saw with the prior instrumentation," says David Leckrone, senior project scientist for Hubble at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland...
Click on Title above for full article
Labels:
Hubble images,
Hubble repair,
NASA,
Space Science Institute
Saturday, August 15, 2009
How to Behave: New Rules for Highly Evolved Humans
Wired Magazine
July 2009
Wait Before Revealing TV Spoilers
If Your Call Drops, Call Back
Don't Google-Stalk Before a First Date
Ask a Basterd: Am I a Jerk if I Dump Our Sucky Rock Band Bassist?
Don't Blog or Tweet Anything With More Than Half a Million Hits
Delete Unwanted Posts From Your Facebook Wall
Meet Online Friends in the Real World ...
and many more ~ Click on Title above to read in full
Monday, July 6, 2009
Creating comics for the Middle East
Monday, June 8, 2009
People’s Economic Summit
By Betsey Piette
New York
Workers World
Published Jun 7, 2009
Gathering under a banner stating, “Another World is Urgently Needed—But We Must Fight for It!” more than 200 community, labor, youth, immigrant rights, housing, health care and social justice activists met on May 31 in Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza for the People’s Economic Summit.
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Major Victory for Ivory Coast's Rainforests as Oil Palm Successfully Resisted
Rainforest Portal
Finally the oil palm scourge threatening primary rainforests and life giving ecosystems worldwide faces a setback as local protests are again successfully supported internationally by Ecological Internet, Rainforest Rescue and others.
Labels:
climate change,
oil palm,
rainforest,
wilderness
Sunday, April 19, 2009
We Can't Be Trapped by History
Peter Richards, Inter Press Service
President Barack Obama had promised that his administration would be different. His, he said, would be a listening, caring one, even though like previous United States leaders, he came to the Fifth Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago bearing gifts - no doubt hoping for support for his new initiatives...
Labels:
Chavez,
Cuba,
Eduardo Galeano,
Obama,
Ortega,
partnership,
Summit of the Americas
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Article on Null Physics from Wikibin
The Null Physics theory is a cosmological model developed as an alternative to current models such as the Big Bang theory and Steady State theory. Unlike other theories, Null Physics begins by deriving why the universe exists in order to eliminate the numerous numbers of constants that are necessary in order to support other cosmology theories. The Null Physics theory’s primary assertion is that the universe has always been in existence; therefore, the universe never had an origin.
This theory has recently been released and is under review by a number of members of the scientific community...
http://wikibin.org/articles/null-physics.html
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Chill Your Power Bill
by Carl Pope
Sierra Magazine
March/April 2009
Retrofitting America could jump-start our economy...
...Quite simply, we need to rebuild America. We need to retrofit our entire housing stock, and in a hurry. Economically it makes sense. Most older buildings could halve their energy consumption with improvements that pay for themselves. Homeowners and small-business owners ought to be able to call a toll-free number to arrange for an energy audit and the necessary retrofit work. Their utility bills would decrease, and half the savings could go to repaying their loans. GreenSaver, a nonprofit in Toronto, has embraced this concept and is already making money; Berkeley, California, is letting citizens who install solar power systems pay for them over 20 years through their property taxes.
Happily, this prescription is no longer being promoted solely by the Sierra Club and a handful of progressive cities and states: President Barack Obama himself has embraced the vision described here. His first economic recovery package emphasized retrofitting public buildings--it's easy and fast. This will jump-start the green building industry by requiring worker training and new factories to make energy-efficient windows, insulation, furnaces, and air conditioners. Local and state governments will see their operating costs plummet (utility bills are often their second-biggest expense after salaries) and could repay the loans with the savings.
And once we finish with public buildings, we will have the infrastructure in place to rebuild the rest of the country. Every year the federal government gives out $5 billion to help poor people pay their utility bills; why not spend $100 billion, once, to insulate and retrofit homes to slash power bills permanently? (continued)
http://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/200903/create.aspx
Monday, February 23, 2009
Great Stuff Obama Will Help You Buy!
The stimulus bill has finally been passed and signed into law—and now it's time to help put the thing into action. Which shouldn't be tough to do: tucked into the thousands of pages of confounding language, there are tons of fantastic new tax credits you can get simply for buying great green stuff. Here's what our government's blowout sale's got in the catalog...
http://www.treehugger.com/galleries/2009/02/stimulus-tax-credit-guide-obama.php
NASA Satellite To Track Carbon Dioxide Globally
by Richard Harris
February 23, 2009
National Public Radio
NASA plans to launch a satellite on Tuesday that will help measure carbon dioxide on a global basis. Carbon dioxide is the single most important gas involved in global warming, so understanding where it comes from — and where it goes — is essential...
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=101024326
Labels:
carbon dioxide,
NASA,
OCO,
satellite
Friday, February 13, 2009
Pucker Up! What Science Is Finding About Why We Kiss
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