From BBC News - Technology:
Marc Cieslak joins the Bridgestone Eco Rally from Brighton to London, which showcases the latest in environmentally friendly car manufacturing.
Watch the video
From BBC News - Technology:
Marc Cieslak joins the Bridgestone Eco Rally from Brighton to London, which showcases the latest in environmentally friendly car manufacturing.
Watch the video
Lean systems save money and boost quality and efficiency, but an expert in Quality Digest cautions that some redundancy is essential. He cites acute shortages and supply chain disruptions caused by flight cancellations resulting from Iceland's volcanic activity. He calls for duplication of supplier
Good news on two fronts: The oil gusher in the Gulf of Mexico is temporarily capped and the relief wells are nearly completed. If we are lucky this will be the beginning of the end. And green energy is growing in the U.S. and Europe more than most people are probably aware of. Who needs oil and coal? This is from PlanetArk. If we keep this up we won’t need offshore oil or any other kind of oil for fuel in a few years.
More than half of all new electricity capacity added in the United States and Europe last year was from renewable power such as wind and solar, a body backed by the International Energy Agency and the UN reported.
Last year was also a record year for the amount of new green power added to the grid, partly a result of shifting deployment and manufacture to emerging economies including Brazil, India and China, from flagging developed countries.
“In 2009, China produced 40 percent of the world’s solar PV supply, 30 percent of the world’s wind turbines, up from 10 percent in 2007,” REN21, or the Renewable Energy Policy Network for the 21st Century, said in a report on Thursday.
REN21, launched in 2005, is supported by the International Energy Agency (IEA), which advises 28 industrialized countries — and by the United Nations Environment Programme.
Of an extra 80 gigawatts (GW) of new renewable power capacity added worldwide, China added 37 GW, more than any other country, said the study, titled “Renewables 2010, Global Status Report.”
Despite the impact of the financial crisis and lower oil prices, renewable capacity grew at rates close to those in previous years, including solar photovoltaic (PV) power at 53 percent and wind power at 32 percent, the report said.
Grid-connected solar PV power had grown by an average of 60 percent every year for the past decade, increasing 100-fold since 2000.
That boom has been largely on the back of support in European countries, where a recent pullback following recession has raised investor jitters. But the wind and solar sectors were still poised for a record year in 2010, operators and investors say.
While China is making great strides in renewable energy deployment, its carbon emissions also accelerated in 2009 — placing it further ahead as the world’s top emitter of the main greenhouse gas blamed for climate change.
I've been accused of tweeting too much more than once, but I've finally discovered the perfect excuse: I'm going to claim that someone is turning my every tweet into a cookie like this and donating it to a starving child. More »
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The Flickr iPhone app has received a nice update: It now supports iOS 4 multitasking as well as HD video uploads from the iPhone 4. More »
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When actress Kyra Sedgwick visited Tom Cruise's house, she couldn't help but notice a strange, unmarked button on a mantle in his library. For whatever reason, she also couldn't resist pushing it. As a result, she soon heard police sirens. More »
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First they gave us a high-res tour of Mars — now Microsoft has made the largest and clearest night-sky map ever. It's a terapixel image: 1,000,000,000,000 pixels. More »
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Mark Millar and John Romita Jr. asked a simple question in their 2008 comic book (and 2010 movie) Kick-Ass: Why don't fanboys actually suit up and try their hand at being superheroes? More »
We've seen teasing photos of the Boxee Box and we touched it at CES 2010, but now there's a video of the final product as it will sold by D-Link in November. Yes, it's gorgeous. [BI] More »
Owning fine dinnerware is one of the hallmarks of being an adult. And I can think of nothing finer than this ceramic (oooh!) Master Shake cup. He's $15, though currently sold out. [AdultSwim via That'sNerdalicious] More »
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Google Maps Navigation is a wonderful turn-by-turn navigation app for Android. Only problem? It's only available in the US and UK. Thankfully, Skobbler is bringing their own free turn-by-turn navigation to the rest of the world. More »
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