Popular Logistics

Systems thinking on the biohumanosphere.

Skip to content
  • About Popular Logistics
    • Speakers Bureau & Consultants
  • Gear & Skills
  • Geography: Navigation, Map Reading, Compasses, WayFinding
  • Jonathan Soroko, 1958-2013
  • Pie Register – Forgot Password
  • Pie Register – Login
  • Pie Register – Profile
  • Pie Register – Registration
  • Planning and risk assessment
    • LEGO and other construction toys for modeling
  • Reference
    • Communications Standards and Technologies
    • Reference: Communications
  • Sandtables and other types of physical models
  • Some of our resourceful friends
  • Tools

Inhabitat: Ireland bans incandescents

Ireland bans incandescent bulbs, via Inhabitat

.

This entry was posted in GreenTechnology on December 14, 2007 by Jon.

Post navigation

← Glasgow Wood Recycling Project New York Times: Study Finds Carcinogens near Canadian Oil Sands project →

Why We Blog

Systems thinking on energy and environmental policy, public health, terrorism, social networks and risk. We believe these issues are all inextricably linked.

Our Favicon

Our "favicon," the small image which generally appears in the browser address bar or on tabs for a given site, is the International Code of Signals (ICS) flag which stands for both the letter "K" (KILO in the NATO alphabet), and for the message "I wish to communicate with you." Kilo - 'Communicate with me!'The same messages can be communicated by signalling the letter "K" in Morse code via signal lamp. (While a proper signal lamp may be ideal, a flashlight, probably best employing red LEDs, will certainly fit the bill).

RFCafe.com Edited by Kirk Blattenberger

Encyclopedic and accessible information about all matters electrical, electronic, and wireless.

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Banner Image by Randa Clay

Our banner image was designed by the always-amazing, never-satisfied-with-her-own-work Randa Clay. Her work can also been seen and read at Solutions for WP, HomeSchool Hacks, and elsewhere.
Proudly powered by WordPress