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freedom: the condition of being free; the power to act or speak or think without externally imposed restraints

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I am interested in kung fu, tai chi, and iaido, I am currently trying to get my parents turned eco-friendly which has not worked we were recycling and my parents threw a fit and got rid of recycling after about a month. But I'm not givin up on them...

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Friday, December 22, 2006
water efficent kitchen

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said....Water, necessary to all aspects of life, will soon become a rare element. "Cuisine à l'eau", is a kitchen designed around the use of water in all its different states. The kitchen is built in a linear way, layed out in seven parts. The sink is the central element. On one side, the draining rack resembles a slanted landscape allowing the water to flow into the herb garden. On the other side, the work space is made out of several layers of material displayed at different height levels. The wholes in the stainless steel stove allow the steam to escape. The water is ideal for healthy cooking. The ceiling vent suggests the passage between the gas state and the liquid one. "Cuisine à l'eau" presents a water cycle integrated into your kitchen mixing beauty and praticality.
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rom treehugger.comf

Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Good idea for when those water tables are gone

from: redorbit.com


Turning Pacific Ocean Water into Potable Water

Japanese technology may help Pacific islands meet fresh water demand

KYOTO, Japan (AFP) -- A number of Pacific island nations are eyeing new Japanese technology that can both desalinate sea water for drinking and produce electricity by exploiting the difference in temperatures between the surface of the sea and the depths of the ocean.

The Republic of Palau in western Pacific is working with Saga University in southern Japan to construct a system that can produce enough drinking water to meet the needs of its 20,000 residents, while producing electricity, said Palauan President Tommy Remengesau, Jr.

The concept was highlighted this week at one of the 350 sessions at the Third World Water Forum under way here that has attracted 10,000 participants from around the globe, along with ministers and state heads from more than 150 countries.

The university is preparing to build an experimental power plant off the coast of Palau that brings up cold sea water from deep sea to an evaporator chamber near the ocean surface.

As the water is heated up by the surrounding warm surface water it releases ammonia gas that drives the system's power generator, said Yasuyuki Ikegami, deputy director of the Institute of Ocean Energy at Saga University.

Meanwhile, the heated water would be transferred to a separate low-pressure chamber where it boils at a lower temperature, producing steam, which would be condensed and collected as fresh water for human consumption, leaving salt crystals behind.

One experimental system, which only produces power and no water, is scheduled to be launched off the coast of India this month, Ikegami added.

"It works well especially in the western Pacific, where the temperature difference between the ocean's surface and deep seawater is as much as 24 degrees C (Celsius, 43 degrees Fahrenheit)," Ikegami said.

"It is environmentally sound."

With some financial assistance from the Japanese government, the university was hoping to build the experimental plant in Palau for an estimated 900 million yen (7.5 million dollars), said Haruo Uehara, president of Saga University, although he declined to disclose details of the financing as it is still being negotiated.

Palau was hoping to see the plant built next year, Remengesau added.

"It is a big help for us. When there is rain, we have no problem. But we are hit by the drying effects of El Nino. When there is no rain, where can we get drinking water?" the Palauan president said.

The fresh water produced by the system costs less than one dollar per one cubic meter, once the system is up and running, Uehara said.

"It is no more costly than regular tap water in other countries, including Japan," Uehara said.

The system, while more expensive than ordinary generators, has raised hopes among leaders of other Pacific islands, which are too small to build many dams to catch water and are trying to cut back on their consumption of oil to run power generators.

Allan Marat, deputy prime minister of Papua New Guinea, said Pacific island nations had fallen victim to global warming, adding that he too was interested in the university's system.

"We are in the middle of the largest body of water (on earth). Yet, we are faced with lack of safe potable water," said Robert Woonton, prime minister of the Cook Islands.

He said he wanted to consider setting up Saga University's system in his country.

Other countries in arid zones have also shown interest, including Saudi Arabia, which was sending a delegation to the university, said Uehara.

"We believe this can solve many problems in island countries and other countries with special needs," Uehara said.

Monday, December 18, 2006
Orangutan's gone in 4 to 10 Years!

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting from: news.independant.co.uk

At least 1,000 orang-utans have been killed in fierce forest fires in Indonesia, hastening the species' headlong rush to extinction within the next decade.

The fires, the worst in a decade and which reached their peak last month, sent a thick pall of smoke across the region, closing airports and forcing drivers to use headlights at noon. Conservationists believe that many were deliberately lit to make room for plantations to grow palm oil - much of it, ironically, to meet the world's growing demand for environmentally friendly fuel.

Their greatest victim is the orang-utan - Asia's only great ape - which is so endangered that many experts believe that it will become extinct in the wild over the next 10 years. Some 50,000 of them, at most, still survive, and about 5,000 are thought to perish every year as the rainforests on which they depend are felled.

Originally some 300,000 of the apes - championed by Sadie Frost in the ITV series Extinct, which ended last night - lived throughout South-east Asia. But now they survive only in isolated pockets on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. In the past 20 years, 80 per cent of their habitat has been destroyed - and only about 2 per cent of what remains is legally protected in reserves.

"Orang-utans are in catastrophic decline and everything that is being done to protect them is not up to the challenge," said Ian Redmond, chairman of the Ape Alliance, an international coalition of conservation bodies and an adviser to the United Nations Environment Programme. "It is all looking pretty bleak."

The International Fund for Animal Welfare predicts that they will be extinct within 10 years. Other estimates vary either side of that figure. WWF (formerly the World Wildlife Fund) puts it at 20 years, Friends of the Earth at 12, and the Borneo Orang-utan Survival Foundation at just four.

Sunday, December 17, 2006
A Microchip in every person.

This must be read...

by: http://www.rinf.com

Wednesday, December 13th, 2006
A Microchip In Every Person
by:Kevin Haggerty


One day we will all happily be implanted with microchips, and our every move will be monitored. The technology exists; the only barrier is society’s resistance to the loss of privacy
By the time my four-year-old son is swathed in the soft flesh of old age, he will likely find it unremarkable that he and almost everyone he knows will be permanently implanted with a microchip. Automatically tracking his location in real time, it will connect him with databases monitoring and recording his smallest behavioural traits.
Most people anticipate such a prospect with a sense of horrified disbelief, dismissing it as a science-fiction fantasy. The technology, however, already exists. For years humane societies have implanted all the pets that leave their premises with a small identifying microchip. As well, millions of consumer goods are now traced with tiny radio frequency identification chips that allow satellites to reveal their exact location.


A select group of people are already "chipped" with devices that automatically open doors, turn on lights, and perform other low-level miracles. Prominent among such individuals is researcher Kevin Warwick of Reading University in England; Warwick is a leading proponent of the almost limitless potential uses for such chips.


Other users include the patrons of the Baja Beach Club in Barcelona, many of whom have paid about $150 (U.S.) for the privilege of being implanted with an identifying chip that allows them to bypass lengthy club queues and purchase drinks by being scanned. These individuals are the advance guard of an effort to expand the technology as widely as possible.


From this point forward, microchips will become progressively smaller, less invasive, and easier to deploy. Thus, any realistic barrier to the wholesale "chipping" of Western citizens is not technological but cultural. It relies upon the visceral reaction against the prospect of being personally marked as one component in a massive human inventory.


Today we might strongly hold such beliefs, but sensibilities can, and probably will, change. How this remarkable attitudinal transformation is likely to occur is clear to anyone who has paid attention to privacy issues over the past quarter-century. There will be no 3 a.m. knock on the door by storm troopers come to force implants into our bodies. The process will be more subtle and cumulative, couched in the unassailable language of progress and social betterment, and mimicking many of the processes that have contributed to the expansion of closed-circuit television cameras and the corporate market in personal data.


A series of tried and tested strategies will be marshalled to familiarize citizens with the technology. These will be coupled with efforts to pressure tainted social groups and entice the remainder of the population into being chipped.


This, then, is how the next generation will come to be microchipped.


It starts in distant countries. Having tested the technology on guinea pigs, both human and animal, the first widespread use of human implanting will occur in nations at the periphery of the Western world. Such developments are important in their own right, but their international significance pertains to how they familiarize a global audience with the technology and habituate them to the idea that chipping represents a potential future.


An increasing array of hypothetical chipping scenarios will also be depicted in entertainment media, furthering the familiarization process.


In the West, chips will first be implanted in members of stigmatized groups. Pedophiles are the leading candidate for this distinction, although it could start with terrorists, drug dealers, or whatever happens to be that year’s most vilified criminals. Short-lived promises will be made that the technology will only be used on the "worst of the worst." In fact, the wholesale chipping of incarcerated individuals will quickly ensue, encompassing people on probation and on parole.


Even accused individuals will be tagged, a measure justified on the grounds that it would stop them from fleeing justice. Many prisoners will welcome this development, since only chipped inmates will be eligible for parole, weekend release, or community sentences. From the prison system will emerge an evocative vocabulary distinguishing chippers from non-chippers.


Although the chips will be justified as a way to reduce fraud and other crimes, criminals will almost immediately develop techniques to simulate other people’s chip codes and manipulate their data.


The comparatively small size of the incarcerated population, however, means that prisons would be simply a brief stopover on a longer voyage. Commercial success is contingent on making serious inroads into tagging the larger population of law-abiding citizens. Other stigmatized groups will therefore be targeted. This will undoubtedly entail monitoring welfare recipients, a move justified to reduce fraud, enhance efficiency, and ensure that the poor do not receive "undeserved" benefits.


Once e-commerce is sufficiently advanced, welfare recipients will receive their benefits as electronic vouchers stored on their microchips, a policy that will be tinged with a sense of righteousness, as it will help ensure that clients can only purchase government-approved goods from select merchants, reducing the always disconcerting prospect that poor people might use their limited funds to purchase alcohol or tobacco.


Civil libertarians will try to foster a debate on these developments. Their attempts to prohibit chipping will be handicapped by the inherent difficulty in animating public sympathy for criminals and welfare recipients — groups that many citizens are only too happy to see subjected to tighter regulation. Indeed, the lesser public concern for such groups is an inherent part of the unarticulated rationale for why coerced chipping will be disproportionately directed at the stigmatized.


The official privacy arm of the government will now take up the issue. Mandated to determine the legality of such initiatives, privacy commissioners and Senate Committees will produce a forest of reports presented at an archipelago of international conferences. Hampered by lengthy research and publication timelines, their findings will be delivered long after the widespread adoption of chipping is effectively a fait accompli. The research conclusions on the effectiveness of such technologies will be mixed and open to interpretation.


Officials will vociferously reassure the chipping industry that they do not oppose chipping itself, which has fast become a growing commercial sector. Instead, they are simply seeking to ensure that the technology is used fairly and that data on the chips is not misused. New policies will be drafted.


What might Hitler, Mao or Milosevic have accomplished if their citizens were chipped, coded, and remotely monitored?
Employers will start to expect implants as a condition of getting a job. The U.S. military will lead the way, requiring chips for all soldiers as a means to enhance battlefield command and control — and to identify human remains. From cooks to commandos, every one of the more than one million U.S. military personnel will see microchips replace their dog tags.


Following quickly behind will be the massive security sector. Security guards, police officers, and correctional workers will all be expected to have a chip. Individuals with sensitive jobs will find themselves in the same position.


The first signs of this stage are already apparent. In 2004, the Mexican attorney general’s office started implanting employees to restrict access to secure areas. The category of "sensitive occupation" will be expansive to the point that anyone with a job that requires keys, a password, security clearance, or identification badge will have those replaced by a chip.


Judges hearing cases on the constitutionality of these measures will conclude that chipping policies are within legal limits. The thin veneer of "voluntariness" coating many of these programs will allow the judiciary to maintain that individuals are not being coerced into using the technology.


In situations where the chips are clearly forced on people, the judgments will deem them to be undeniable infringements of the right to privacy. However, they will then invoke the nebulous and historically shifting standard of "reasonableness" to pronounce coerced chipping a reasonable infringement on privacy rights in a context of demands for governmental efficiency and the pressing need to enhance security in light of the still ongoing wars on terror, drugs, and crime.


At this juncture, an unfortunately common tragedy of modern life will occur: A small child, likely a photogenic toddler, will be murdered or horrifically abused. It will happen in one of the media capitals of the Western world, thereby ensuring non-stop breathless coverage. Chip manufactures will recognize this as the opportunity they have been anticipating for years. With their technology now largely bug-free, familiar to most citizens and comparatively inexpensive, manufacturers will partner with the police to launch a high-profile campaign encouraging parents to implant their children "to ensure your own peace of mind."


Special deals will be offered. Implants will be free, providing the family registers for monitoring services. Loving but unnerved parents will be reassured by the ability to integrate tagging with other functions on their PDA so they can see their child any time from any place.


Paralleling these developments will be initiatives that employ the logic of convenience to entice the increasingly small group of holdouts to embrace the now common practice of being tagged. At first, such convenience tagging will be reserved for the highest echelon of Western society, allowing the elite to move unencumbered through the physical and informational corridors of power. Such practices will spread more widely as the benefits of being chipped become more prosaic. Chipped individuals will, for example, move more rapidly through customs.


Indeed, it will ultimately become a condition of using mass-transit systems that officials be allowed to monitor your chip. Companies will offer discounts to individuals who pay by using funds stored on their embedded chip, on the small-print condition that the merchant can access large swaths of their personal data. These "discounts" are effectively punitive pricing schemes, charging unchipped individuals more as a way to encourage them to submit to monitoring. Corporations will seek out the personal data in hopes of producing ever more fine-grained customer profiles for marketing purposes, and to sell to other institutions.


By this point all major organizations will be looking for opportunities to capitalize on the possibilities inherent in an almost universally chipped population. The uses of chips proliferate, as do the types of discounts. Each new generation of household technology becomes configured to operate by interacting with a person’s chip.


Finding a computer or appliance that will run though old-fashioned "hands-on"’ interactions becomes progressively more difficult and costly. Patients in hospitals and community care will be routinely chipped, allowing medical staff — or, more accurately, remote computers — to monitor their biological systems in real time.


Eager to reduce the health costs associated with a largely docile citizenry, authorities will provide tax incentives to individuals who exercise regularly. Personal chips will be remotely monitored to ensure that their heart rate is consistent with an exercise regime.


By now, the actual process of "chipping" for many individuals will simply involve activating certain functions of their existing chip. Any prospect of removing the chip will become increasingly untenable, as having a chip will be a precondition for engaging in the main dynamics of modern life, such as shopping, voting, and driving.


The remaining holdouts will grow increasingly weary of Luddite jokes and subtle accusations that they have something to hide. Exasperated at repeatedly watching neighbours bypass them in "chipped" lines while they remain subject to the delays, inconveniences, and costs reserved for the unchipped, they too will choose the path of least resistance and get an implant.


In one generation, then, the cultural distaste many might see as an innate reaction to the prospect of having our bodies marked like those of an inmate in a concentration camp will likely fade.


In the coming years some of the most powerful institutional actors in society will start to align themselves to entice, coerce, and occasionally compel the next generation to get an implant.


Now, therefore, is the time to contemplate the unprecedented dangers of this scenario. The most serious of these concern how even comparatively stable modern societies will, in times of fear, embrace treacherous promises. How would the prejudices of a Joe McCarthy, J. Edgar Hoover, or of southern Klansmen — all of whom were deeply integrated into the American political establishment — have manifest themselves in such a world? What might Hitler, Mao or Milosevic have accomplished if their citizens were chipped, coded, and remotely monitored?


Choirs of testimonials will soon start to sing the virtues of implants. Calm reassurances will be forthcoming about democratic traditions, the rule of law, and privacy rights. History, unfortunately, shows that things can go disastrously wrong, and that this happens with disconcerting regularity. Little in the way of international agreements, legality, or democratic sensibilities has proved capable of thwarting single-minded ruthlessness.


"It can’t happen here" has become the whispered swan song of the disappeared. Best to contemplate these dystopian potentials before we proffer the tender forearms of our sons and daughters. While we cannot anticipate all of the positive advantages that might be derived from this technology, the negative prospects are almost too terrifying to contemplate.
The VeriChip:
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting 1,000 people worldwide have been implanted so far....

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from:treehugger.com

The Camper Lotus, designed as "a personal commuter" for China in 2012. Seats 2, is rechargeable and is balanced by gyroscope technology. "With zero emissions, it offers a means of helping to achieve cleaner air. For comfort, it offers customisable personal space both inside and out. Its small footprint allows easy parking, and it is rechargeable with household electricity. Lotus may be customised and retailed both online and in showrooms. Short-term leasing options on parts such as external polycarbonate panels may be ideal so customers are able to enjoy updated looks, and old parts can be properly recycled.