Monday, October 30, 2006

black is back!


a logical step, but nice! real nice! interface is completely software driven! the black box can become whatever product you need (almost) and looks a touch like another well know consumer electronics design, but this does not detract from the concept ans oh so appropriate! from BENQ. find info on this link seen on 77

Monday, October 23, 2006

brave enough to walk the green path?

A good article from doorsofperception, if you have any intrest in sustainability (and if you don't, you should!)

My long walk home
I chose a bad place to read George Monbiot’s new book Heat - the transit lounge of Bangkok’s new Suvarnabhumi Airport. I already knew that flying is an indefensible way to travel because of its contribution to global warming. But I’ve comforted myself over the years with the idea that what environmentalists call a ‘soft landing’ could be achieved if people like me cut down our flights a wee bit every year.

'Heat' destroys my alibi. Long-haul flights produce 110 grams of carbon dioxide per passenger kilometre. According to Monbiot's numbers, a single passenger flying to New York and back produces roughly 1.2 tonnes of carbon dioxide. This is about the same as each of us will be entitled to emit in a whole year once a 90 per cent cut in emissions is made.

Monbiot says that a 90 per cent cut is needed by 2030 if the biosphere is to remain habitable for you and me. He arrives at this sobering figure as follows. By 2030, the total capacity of the biosphere to absorb carbon – its carbon sink - will be reduced from today’s 4 billion tonnes, to 2.7 billion. By then, world population is likely to be 8.2 billion. By dividing the total carbon sink by the number of people – and spreading the load equally – Monbiot arrives at an average cut in the rich countries of 90 percent per person.

In the case of my flying behaviour, it's probably more than that. A single passenger going from the UK to Beijing and back in business class, as I am doing, emits probably four times as much carbon dioxide as someone going to New York and back in coach. I am probably using up four years’ of my personal carbon allowance in 2030 within one single week.

And that’s just if I count my time in the air. Just sitting still reading Monbiot's book was also wasteful. Suvarnabhumi is a vast forest of concrete pillars and structural decks. Outside, endless acres of concrete apron spread into the far distance. It all looked very nice and modern until I read, in Chapter 10 of Heat, that the manufacture of cement emits a ton of carbon dioxide for each ton actually made and used.

I don’t know how many million tons of the stuff were used in Bangkok’s new airport. Many. I would not be surprised if my use of that airport - for a few hours, just sitting there, on this one trip - used up another few weeks of my annual carbon ration.

A 90 per cent cut in emissions requires not only that growth in aviation stops, but that most of the planes which are flying today be grounded. We need to cut the number of flights by 87 per cent to meet Monbiot's target.

And he is adamant that this means me, personally - not someone else, out there. “Writing, reading, debate and dissent – of themselves – change nothing” he concludes, pitilessly. “They are of value only if they inspire action. Progress now depends on the exercise of fewer opportunities. If you fly, you destroy peoples lives”.

I’m still in Beijing as I write this. It’s going to be a long walk home.

George Monbiot. Heat: How To Stop The Planet Burning. London, Penguin Books. 2006

found on doorsofperception.com

defensive tactics at a cost


good article on the strategey behind the xbox from microsoft and how much money they loose but don't care!? just to kick sony's ass! click here for link seen on business week

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

dove Evolution

doves shows how our perception and expectations are influenced! check the add on you tube seen on core77

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Monday, October 09, 2006