Technology

CFLs Aren't Always the Bright, Shining Solution

Submitted by BenJervey on Friday, January 11, 2008.

Over the holidays I gave my father a bit of grief about the lighting in my parents' home. Now I wasn't chewing them out for holding on to old, inefficient incandescents. Quite the opposite--I was annoyed that my father (something of an environmentalist in his own right for a lot longer than I've been around) insisted on using the same early-model CFLs that he bought years back and provide awful light. My argument was that these early, crummy bulbs turn anyone who sees them off to the potential of energy efficient lighting.

Green-tech predictions in '08

Submitted by Anonymous on Wednesday, January 2, 2008.

Thanks to the business community 'going green' may last longer than a fading fad. They get it, but our politicians are lagging behind. Read this interesting article from InfoWorld and find out how the business community is picking up the slack.

Sustainable IT | InfoWorld | IT leaders share green-tech predictions for 2008 | December 20, 2007 03
http://weblog.infoworld.com/sustainableit/archives...
IT leaders share green-tech predictions for 2008• Unisys pushes green envelope with datacenter expansion• Congress misses chance to seed essential green-energy growth• Green ventures in Silicon Valley, Mass. ...

Charge it on the go

Forget the car, charge your iPod as you book it down the beach on the barefoot express. Plug your car charger into your tote, put your bag towards the sun, and you’re ready to go. You don’t have to worry about sitting too far from the outlet when you’re running on solar. The bags are made locally in the US by a company that swears by sustainability, so we think they’re really cool. We also think the bags are a great excuse to ditch your car while simultaneously repurposing your car chargers.

OMG-- We Need Ideas!

There are prizes, and then there’s the $25 million prize being offered by the world’s most freewheelin’ C.E.O., Virgin–founder Sir Richard Branson. Branson, he of the airline and music fortune, is promising to pony up this princely sum to anyone who can figure out how the heck to “scrub” carbon dioxide out of the Earth’s atmosphere. As the world’s brightest minds start jockeying to win the “Virgin Earth Challenge,” expect to see plans for some tripped-out sky vacuums and carbon-absorbing concoctions. (As you can see, we won’t be banking any of the twenty-five mil.)

There are prizes, and then there’s the $25 million prize being offered by the world’s most freewheelin’ C.E.O., Virgin–founder Sir Richard Branson. Branson, he of the airline and music fortune, is promising to pony up this princely sum to anyone who can figure out how the heck to “scrub” carbon dioxide out of the Earth’s atmosphere. As the world’s brightest minds start jockeying to win the “Virgin Earth Challenge,” expect to see plans for some tripped-out sky vacuums and carbon-absorbing concoctions. (As you can see, we won’t be banking any of the twenty-five mil.)

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