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File:Skyhook shipback.jpg
Size of this preview: 509 × 599 pixels
Full resolution? (695 × 818 pixels, file size: 280 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
File:Airborne wind generator-en.svgAirborne_wind_generator-en.svg? SVG file, nominally 720 × 720 pixels, file size: 46 KBThis image rendered as PNG in other sizes: 200px, 500px, 1000px, 2000px.[edit] SummaryDescription Airborne wind generator-en.svgEnglish: Helium or hydrogen inflated airborne wind generator. Unit is 17 m by 9 m.
via File:Airborne wind generator-en.svg – Wikimedia Commons.
This open-source tech, constructed with bicycle parts, is designed so that it can be constructed for under $100 USD.
Link to Cory Doctorow’s piece, Wheelchair for the developing world: cheap, rugged and easy to maintain, on BoingBoing.
The Core77 Article: Case Study: Leveraged Freedom Chair, by Amos Winter and Jake Child.
Architect Kate Orff:
sees the oyster as an agent of urban change. Bundled into beds and sunk into city rivers, oysters slurp up pollution and make legendarily dirty waters clean — thus driving even more innovation in “oyster-tecture.” Orff shares her vision for an urban landscape that links nature and humanity for mutual benefit.
Video here: Kate Orff: Reviving New York’s rivers with oysters (TEDTalks)
Kate Orff is, among other things, Director of The Urban Landscape Lab.
Reflective Apparel Factory makes OSHA/ANSI compliant clothing, has what look like pretty competitive prices – and takes the trouble to explain most of the OSHA/ANSI standards on its website. We’re not sure whether the rules apply – but here in New York, I’ve had a number of conversations about the failure of delivered-food restaurants to give their delivery workes (usually on bicycles, or mopeds) reflective clothing and fit the vehicles and foodcontaners with Reflexite or Scotchlite. My guess is that those workers don’t have a lot of bargaining power to spare.
Back to RAF – as we try to provide more information about responder gear characteristics, performance, and pricing, we’ll have more to say. But Reflective Apparel Factory seems a good resource. They’ll sell single units, don’t engage in the dodge of declining to post prices – a practice, which while legal, should give purchasers pause – and the prices seem quite reasonable, and the range of garments and sizes pretty good. Certainly worth a look for anyone planning a CERT or SAR team.
By AL BAKER on The CityRoom blog at NYTimes.com:
The first known cases of cholera in New York since the outbreak of the disease in Haiti last year were confirmed on Saturday by city officials.A commercial laboratory notified health officials on Friday that three New Yorkers had developed diarrhea and dehydration, classic symptoms of the disease, after returning from a wedding on Jan. 22 and 23 in the Dominican Republic, where the government has been trying to prevent the disease from spreading from neighboring Haiti.The three who contracted cholera were adults who returned to the city within days of the wedding.None were hospitalized. Continue reading
From reuseit.com, here are some Fast Facts on Plastic Bags:
We’re talking about, we suspect, two main uses: bags used in the transportation of goods – and bags used to transport “waste,” including the garbage bags themselves, discarded shopping bags – and sometimes shopping bags re-used as garbage bags.
Tara Lohan, in The Great Plastic Bag Plague, (On Alternet, 2007), cites industry sources for the proposition that American retailers spend $4 billion/year on plastic bags – adding, of course, to the cost of goods – without reflecting their full environmental cost. Lohan cites other sources for the proposition that 12 million barrels of oil are used , annually, to produce plastic bags used in the United States. The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates that average daily use of petroleum products in the United States – the world’s largest consumer – is 18,771,000 barrels/day. Assuming we’re not in a leap year – 1/365th is .0027 (rounded) of our energy consumption. Put another way, slightly over one-quarter of one percent (0.27%). And 12 million barrels would be about two-thirds of that. Thought of another way – 18 million barrels per day – 365 days per year – 6.5 billion (6,570,000,000). So plastic bags amount to 0.18% of our petroleum consumption. 1 component of 6,570 equal components. So what difference does it make if you accept a plastic bag, or bring your own reusable bag?
In WW II ((One of the ways in which the Allies gradually wore down the Axis was by depriving it of – no surprise, we hope – petroleum. Richard Overy, in Why The Allies Won, contends that Allies’ gradual degradation of Axis energy supplies made a great contribution to the eventual Allied Victory.)) , three million soldiers retook the continent (the invasion of Western Europe, sometimes referred to as Operation Overlord) during and after D-Day. Each soldier’s contribution amounted to 0.12% One in three million – without counting the various Resistance groups, support troops and civilians in the United Kingdom and the United States. Total U.S. troop count: 16.5 million. The Philippines suffered over 50,000 military deaths alone. (For total WW II casualties, see Wikipedia entry of that name).
So – the aggregate of many small, coordinated contributions is dramatic. Get a reusable shopping bag, and use it. In future posts, we hope to point out some good deals on reusable bags, and revisit the principle of aggregating small acts. For an always-brilliant take on individual action about energy, particularly heating, check out Ellen Honigstock’s ToePrint Project.
And:
Our earlier post, International Herald Tribune: Ireland rids itself of a plastic nuisance – Ireland’s early success with a small tax on disposable bags.
Are there connections between burning fossil fuels and cyclones in Australia? We have burned so much coal, oil, and natural gas the last 150 years that the concentration of atmospheric Carbon Dioxide has increased by about 40% – from about 270 PPM to about 390 PPM, from about 2.5 trillion tons to 3.67 trillion tons. (Click here or here).
From Meraiah Foley’s “Australians Take Cover as Cyclone Lashes Coast,” posted on The New York Times:
SYDNEY, Australia — One of the most powerful cyclones ever to strike Australia ripped dozens houses from their foundations, uprooted trees and shredded millions of dollars worth of sugar and banana crops when it slammed into Queensland’s northeastern coast in the predawn hours on Thursday. Continue reading
At approximately 1600 EST (2100 UTC) a suspicious package was found near the baggage claim at Washington Dulles International Airport in Virginia, United States, leading to the closure of around half of the terminal. Police later determined that the package was harmless and reopened the affected areas of the airport. Parts of the airport had been closed for two hours before being reopened.
Officials from the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority said a canine unit was attracted to an unattended piece of baggage near the baggage claim. They did not disclose what the package contained, but an official said the package did not look similar to other suspicious packages sent to Maryland state government buildings earlier today.
Due to the package, four baggage claims and a United Airlines ticket counter were temporarily vacated. Flights continued to operate at the airport during the investigation
Safety issues with New York’s most highly trained unit, the Emergency Services Unit, which has the NYPD’s heavy-weapons, hostage-rescue, and counter-sniper functions, among others. Of course, it’s also the most heavily armed, perhaps the only officers with regular access to long guns and automatic weapons. Thus, Gawker’s report, Elite NYPD Unit Having Gun Safety Issues, is particularly disturbing.
From Jeff Neumann’s piece in Gawker:
Just last week, an ESU officer shot and killed a Bronx man, Alberto Colon while they were searching for his son, an alleged drug dealer. The officer who shot him was trying to turn the flashlight on his weapon on. But that’s not the only big time screw up. According to a report in the the Daily News:
A member of the ESU sniper team safeguarding the tree-lighting center at the tourist magnet accidentally let loose a rifle round on Nov. 30. It happened about 90 minutes after the ceremony, as the sniper teams were pulling out. The round hit a building and was found a block and a half away.
Four days earlier, an ESU detective getting out of his vehicle to respond to a report of a barricaded gunman accidentally fired a shotgun in Harlem. The blast went through an apartment window on W. 136th St.
As in the Rockefeller Center incident, no one was injured.
This is – let’s be clear – not about “bad cops.” It’s about cops working too much overtime, and an appallingly low ratio of training time to field time. The police officers need more basic firearms handling and usage. Less practice results in worse outcomes. It’s that simple. We appreciate Gawker’s coverage – excellent overall – but the remark about a cop being overweight is unfair. Consider the training that a U.S. infantry soldier receives – months or years – before being considered, say, for the Rangers – much less the Special Forces, SEALs or that more elite unit whose name we’re not to say aloud.
Put in PopLog/ also DSB – for scientificeidence
50 Open Source Applications for Sci-Tech Education
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January 25, 2011
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Cynthia Harvey
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Open Source: Chemistry
14. Kalzium
Kalzium describes itself as “your digital replacement for the periodic table on paper.” It displays information from the periodic table in a variety of ways, and it offers a molecular weight calculator, 3D molecule editor, an equation solver for stoichiometric problems and more. (Note that in order to use Kalzium on Windows, you’ll need KDE for Windows.) Operating System: Windows, Linux.
15. Jmol
Java-based Jmol gives you a 3D view of molecules with features for chemicals, crystals, materials and biomolecules. In addition to the downloadable version, it’s also available as a Web app or in a development tool kit. Operating System: OS Independent.
via 50 Open Source Applications for Sci-Tech Education — Datamation.com.
But would it work, say for Egypt currently?
Online Television – anyTV v2.59
Watch local TV, world TV, live TV, satellite TV from countries all over the world in different languages on your PC with anyTV — not just at home, but at the office, work, or wireless. Watch 2630+ online TV, 6910+ video clips. Listen to 4750+ online radio.
Using anyTV means you can watch numerous of international […]
SU Egypt 1 20 21 43 12 12 00
from
http://www.iaru.org/statsum00.html
and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio_operator
The videotape and law enforcement officers of the Pima County Sheriff’s Department said Judge John Roll saved Ron Barber’s life after both were shot in Tuscon, January 8, 2011. Judge Roll had been appointed by George H. W. Bush in 1991. Barber is an aide to Representative Giffords.
Video Shows Chief US District Judge Roll Protecting Giffords Aide as Suspect Fired 32 Bullets, by Martha Neil of The ABA Journal (online edition).
Cameras rolled as suspect Jared Loughner allegedly fired all 31 bullets in the magazine of his Glock, plus another round that was already in the chamber, at a supermarket in Tucson, Ariz., on Jan. 8. The videotape indicates that Chief Arizona U.S. District Judge John Roll died a hero during the shootings, according to the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. At the outset of the melee, unidentified sources who have seen the video told the Washington Post, Loughner walked straight up to congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and shot her above the left eye from about two or three feet away. Within moments, Loughner also allegedly shot Roll, who had tried to take cover under a table. As Roll did so, he sought to protect the congresswoman’s aide, Ron Barber, pushing Barber to the ground and getting on top of him … Continue reading
Tim Kane, “a senior fellow in research and policy at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and a former Air Force intelligence officer,” writes Why Our Best Officers Are Leaving in the current issue of The Atlantic, also available online. This should be a concern, we think, regardless of what one thinks of particular military policies – the officer corps is, among other things, a bulwark against a military coup d’etat. Here’s an excerpt:
John Nagl still hesitates when he talks about his decision to leave the Army. A former Rhodes Scholar and tank-battalion operations officer in Iraq, Nagl helped General David Petraeus write the Army’s new counterinsurgency field manual, which is credited with bringing Iraq’s insurgency under control. But despite the considerable influence Nagl had in the Army, and despite his reputation as a skilled leader, he retired in 2008 having not yet reached the rank of full colonel. Today, Nagl still has the same short haircut he had 24 years ago when we met as cadets—me an Air Force Academy doolie (or freshman), him a visiting West Pointer—but now he presides over a Washington think tank. The funny thing is, even as a civilian, he can’t stop talking about the Army—“our Army”—as if he never left. He won’t say it outright, but it’s clear to me, and to many of his former colleagues, that the Army fumbled badly in letting him go. His sudden resignation has been haunting me, and it punctuates an exodus that has been publicly ignored for too long.