Tag Archives: Culture

Blue Jeans Hold Secret To Making Better Solar Cells

Photo via lifecreations Researchers at Cornell University have found a seemingly simple solution to creating more efficient solar cells. It turns out that particular molecules found in blue jeans and some ink dyes can be used in a process for assembling a structure called “covalent organic framework” or COF, which can help create cheaper, flexible solar cells. While organic materials haven’t proven very easy to use so far for creating solar cells, the researchers are finding that these molecules found in every-day materials might be just w… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Blue Jeans Hold Secret To Making Better Solar Cells

Are Blue Bikelanes Better than Black?

Spacing A recent study in the UK, reported in the Guardian, showed that drivers give less room to cyclists when there is a bike lane than when there isn’t. Graduate student Ciaran Meyers attached a special camera to his bike and found that motorists gave him an extra 18.1 cm (7.12 inches) when there was no marked cycle lane than they did when there was a lane. Transport engineer John Parkin explains w… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Are Blue Bikelanes Better than Black?

Tesla Motors Expands IPO to 13.3m shares, Could Raise $226m

Photo: Michael Graham Richard A Quarter Billion of Cash Money for Tesla Electric car maker Tesla Motors had its initial public offering (IPO) today and ended up selling 13.3 million shares of common stock, 20% more than first expected, at a price of $17, also higher than the expected range of $14-16. This should mean an infusion of about $226 million for Tesla, a much needed cash pile that will no doubt mostly be used to invest in the company’s second electric car, the

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Tesla Motors Expands IPO to 13.3m shares, Could Raise $226m

Shocking: Industrial Fishing Like You’ve Never Seen it Before (Video)

“Seeing death on this scale has quite an impact on the team.” About 5 minutes into the video above, a film crew dives in the South Pacific waters and films for what is probably the first time ever (that’s what they claim, anyway) the inside of a giga… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Shocking: Industrial Fishing Like You’ve Never Seen it Before (Video)

OMG, NRDC Sues FDA to Make NFG BPA DOA

Bisphenol A has been used to line cans since the ’50s. But seriously, the Natural Resources Defense Council is tired of waiting for the Food and Drug Administration to deal with Bisphenol A, a possibly endocrine-disrupting chemical. They have filed a lawsuit against the FDA for “its failure to act on a petition to ban the use of Bisphenol A (BPA) in food packaging, food containers, and other materials likely to come into contact with food. ” The NRDC petitioned the FDA in October, 2008, but they have failed to take any action on their request…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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OMG, NRDC Sues FDA to Make NFG BPA DOA

Pedal-Powered Submarine Uses Strida Bike Parts

Image via BornRich I’d have to say, I’m not so sure I would. Not that the Scubster might fail, but that my legs would before I could resurface. Minh-Lôc Truong and Stéphane Rousson, a team of French designers and engineers, are apparently more sure of themselves than me as they’re currently building a pedal-powered personal wet sub, and will be entering in next year’s International Submarine Race . So far, it’s more than just hype, having successfully completed its… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Pedal-Powered Submarine Uses Strida Bike Parts

For rent in China: White people

Beijing, China (CNN) — In China, white people can be rented. For a day, a weekend, a week, up to even a month or two, Chinese companies are willing to pay high prices for fair-faced foreigners to join them as fake employees or business partners. Some call it “White Guy Window Dressing.” To others, it's known as the “White Guy in a Tie” events, “The Token White Guy Gig,” or, simply, a “Face Job.” And it is, essentially, all about the age-old Chinese concept of face. To have a few foreigners hanging around means a company has prestige, money and the increasingly crucial connections — real or not — to businesses abroad. “Face, we say in China, is more important than life itself,” said Zhang Haihua, author of “Think Like Chinese.” “Because Western countries are so developed, people think they are more well off, so people think that if a company can hire foreigners, it must have a lot of money and have very important connections overseas. So when they really want to impress someone, they may roll out a foreigner.” Or rent one. Last year, Jonathan Zatkin, an American actor who lives in Beijing, posed as the vice president of an Italian jewelry company that had, allegedly, been in a partnership with a Chinese jewelry chain for a decade. When is being foreign a career advantage? Zatkin was paid 2,000 yuan (about $300) to fly, along with a couple of Russian models, to a small city in the central province of Henan where he delivered a speech for the grand opening ceremony of a jewelry store there. “I was up on stage with the mayor of the town, and I made a speech about how wonderful it was to work with the company for 10 years and how we were so proud of all of the work they had done for us in China,” Zatkin said. “They put up a big bandstand and the whole town was there and some other local muckety-mucks.” The requirements for these jobs are simple. 1. Be white. 2. Do not speak any Chinese, or really speak at all, unless asked. 3. Pretend like you just got off of an airplane yesterday. Those who go for such gigs tend to be unemployed actors or models, part-time English teachers or other expats looking to earn a few extra bucks. Often they are jobs at a second- or third-tier city, where the presence of pale-faced foreigners is needed to impress local officials, secure a contract or simply to fulfill a claim of being international. “Occasionally companies want a foreign face to go to meetings and conferences or to go to dinners and lunches and smile at the clients and shake people's hands,” read an ad posted by a company called Rent A Laowai (Chinese for “foreigner”) on the online classified site thebeijinger.com. It continued: “There are job opportunities for girls who are pretty and for men who can look good in a suit.” People like Brad Smith. When Smith — the nom de plume of the Beijing-based American actor — answered CNN's phone call on a recent morning, he was standing outside a meeting room at a Ramada Inn in Hangzhou, a city about 100 miles outside of Shanghai. Today's job: Pretend to be an architect from New York and give design plans for a new museum to local officials. “They have not told me what my name is today. I think it is Lawrence or something,” said Smith — unlike some jobs, no fake business cards were given to hand out. Earlier that morning he went over his script with his Chinese “business partners” at a Kentucky Fried Chicken. “It says, 'Good morning distinguished leaders. It is my privilege to participate in this program',” said Smith, who asked that his real name not be used for fear it could jeopardize future jobs. If Smith is asked a question, he is told to pretend to answer as his “translator” pretends to understand. Occasionally, these jobs can go awry. Smith said 18 months ago Beijing police showed up at his apartment after a financial company he worked at for a couple of months in Xi'an, a city in western China, allegedly swindled millions of yuan out of clients. “That company said I was the guy in charge,” he said. “I didn't even remember the company's name. After that, I decided I was never going to use my passport again with these fake companies. The small gigs are much less dangerous.” Sometimes companies will hire Caucasians simply to sit in the office a few hours a day near the window where clients and customers can see them. White women are also a hot commodity, sometimes to pose as phony foreign girlfriends, or, in the case of Vicky Mohieddeen, to pretend to be an oil tycoon. Mohieddeen, who is Scottish, took a job in 2008 to attend what she describes as some sort of “oil drilling conference” in Shandong province for 300 yuan ($44). Several busloads of foreigners, with nationalities ranging from Pakistani to Nigerian, were trucked to the event, she said. They were greeted by brass bands and feted with a sumptuous dinner. “I was like, 'Yeah, we have a lot of oil in Scotland.' I didn't know what to say. It was a bit nerve-racking. We were guests of honor of the vice mayor. We were put in a nice hotel. It was quite fancy.” For Mohieddeen, who had just arrived in Beijing at the time, the experience, albeit bizarre, was an introduction to a side of China most foreigners will never see. “It is part of what China is all about, you know,” Mohieddeen said. “There is quite an elaborate fantasy world going on here where if everyone buys into it, it does not matter if it is the truth. Those kinds of experiences give me a fuller understanding of the way the culture works.” added by: eden49

Balancing the Weights of Poverty and Population

Image credit: SlapBcn /Flickr The 21st century began on an inspiring note: The United Nations set a goal of reducing the share of the world’s population living in extreme poverty by half by 2015. By early 2007 the world looked to be on track to meet this goal, but as the economic crisis unfolds and the outlook darkens, the world will have to intensify its poverty reduction effort…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Balancing the Weights of Poverty and Population

Fossilized Gadgets Leave Evidence of Our Consumerism to Future Generations

Images via Gajitz When it comes to gadgets, what legacy are we leaving to Earth’s inhabitants countless generations into the future? Artist Christopher Locke has imagined that perhaps the things that have become attached to us as if they were part of our bodies may become fossilized relics that future civilizations will uncover with curiosity. Even if the device itself isn’t capable of doing so (though plastic and metal are pretty much eternal), he is ensuring that they’ll live on by creating them in concrete. From floppy disks to game controllers… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Fossilized Gadgets Leave Evidence of Our Consumerism to Future Generations

7 Awesome Solar-Powered Vehicles

Credit: Global Green Challenge The sun is shining. Hot weather makes gas expand . Gas emissions contribute to global warming. Dontcha wish there was a better way, like cars that ran on solar power ? There is, although they’re experimental and in the development and gee-whiz stages. Who knows if solar cars will ever take off ( maybe sola… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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7 Awesome Solar-Powered Vehicles