Tag Archives: trees

MTV Launches Music Meter Artist-Ranking Service

New chart will track the popularity of new acts via social media buzz. By Gil Kaufman The MTV Music Meter Photo: MTV If you just went by the traditional music charts, you’d think that Susan Boyle is the hottest things since Willow Smith. But in many senses, you’d be wrong. On blogs, Twitter, YouTube and other social media sites, you’re not likely to see people posting viral spoofs of Boyle’s videos (does she even have any?) or tweeting about her latest red-carpet appearance (does she make any?). But with the launch of Music Meter on Tuesday (December 14), MTV is aiming to provide a new chart that gauges which artists are truly capturing the imagination of wired fans right now. Instead of relying solely on conventional metrics such as CD sales or radio play, the Music Meter ranks the top 100 artists based on their social media buzz, streams on video sites, and radio and sales data, providing a real-time portrait of up-and-coming and talked-about artists. Each listed artist is featured in a widget-like box with a drop-down menu that offers links to preview and purchase songs, as well as tabs with videos, photos, tweets, news stories and a bio. There’s also a “similar” button that will help users find other artists they might like based on those that have ranked on the chart. “We have a long history at MTV of locking arms with artists in the beginning of their careers and providing them with an opportunity to grow their audience base,” says MTV spokesperson Kurt Patat. “And you have lots of chances to discover music by Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber, so when we were thinking about what we wanted the Music Meter to be, we thought of it as a discovery tool people can come to and find new music.” Unlike the recently launched “Ultimate Chart,” a similar digital-media-fueled site from analytics company Big Champagne, or Billboard magazine’s new “Social 50” tally, which ranks the most-active artists on social-networking sites, MTV’s Music Meter isn’t topped by such usual suspects as Rihanna, the Black Eyed Peas and Bieber. So, despite their viral strength, you won’t find many of those chart kings and queens at the top of the Music Meter (though you can search for them if you want and get all the same details). Instead, it’s an eclectic mix of acts known and lesser known — country, pop, hip-hop and world music — whose sounds people are digging at this moment. On Tuesday (December 14) morning, the list was topped by “Cooler Than Me” singer Mike Posner , followed by hard rockers My Darkest Days , country singer Easton Corbin , rapper Waka Flocka Flame , new wave revivalists Neon Trees , country gal Sunny Sweeney , R&B singer Jazmine Sullivan , reality-TV singer Jackie Evancho , superduo x and San Francisco indie rockers Girls. Further down the chart you will find everyone from up-and-coming rockers the Ready Set (#12) and singer-songwriter Matt White (#19) to rapper Yelawolf (#14) and Romanian singer Edward Maya (#27). And that’s the point, according to Patat. If the big stars were included, Music Meter would hardly change from day to day. This way, music fans can get exposed to a universe of acts that they may have never heard of or seen before and expand their horizons. The website will officially launch in March, but the beta site is up now. Patat says it’s the first of several exciting music products MTV plans to roll out over the next year. “MTV has played the role of curator for a long time and with so much music out there and everyone having access to thousands of songs, sometimes it’s hard to know what to listen to,” he explains. “So we’re giving you what the world is saying is cool and allowing you to discover much more from there.” What’s your opinion on MTV’s Music Meter chart? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Originally posted here:
MTV Launches Music Meter Artist-Ranking Service

Micro-Architecture: An Eco-Hut That Would Turn Lincoln Himself Green

Images Courtesy of Yeta Here at TreeHugger, we love architecture and design that makes outdoor life more enjoyable, especially when it keeps things simple. And here’s a great example of exactly that, from Italian architect Flavio Galvagni and the firm Lab Zero : Yeta, the wooden micro-architectural structure that shows us just how far log cabins have come since the time of honest Abe…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read more:
Micro-Architecture: An Eco-Hut That Would Turn Lincoln Himself Green

Brazilian Trees Implanted with Microchips For Forest Management

Photo: Taunting Panda According to a story on Reuters , trees throughout the Amazon rainforest will be equipped with microchips to gather data in the event they are illegally cut down. Now when a tree falls in the forest and there’s no one there to hear it, we’ll still know its story…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

See more here:
Brazilian Trees Implanted with Microchips For Forest Management

Ultra Rare Albino Redwoods Are an Everwhite Mystery (Pics)

Photo via KQED video While they might look like flocked Christmas trees, these albino redwoods are anything but. The very rare “ghost trees” lack chlorophyll, the necessary chemical that makes plants green and helps them convert sunlight to food. So, the trees feed off energy from a host redwood. There are as few as perhaps 25 albino redwoods around the world, and eight in the Henry Cowell Redwood State Park in Northern California. Check out a video from KQED explaining how these albino trees function. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Follow this link:
Ultra Rare Albino Redwoods Are an Everwhite Mystery (Pics)

Thousands of Trees Killed by New York Tornadoes

# The New York Times September 17, 2010 Thousands of Trees Killed by New York Tornadoes By N. R. KLEINFIELD and ELISSA GOOTMAN As National Weather Service officials declared Friday that two tornadoes had indeed swept into New York City on Thursday, some tree-lined streets in Brooklyn and Queens looked – at least from the air – like Lego masterpieces that angry children had done their best to sweep aside. Some were more than a century old but still sturdy and doing their jobs. Many others were young and willowy, just getting going. Some of them were inscrutable; no one truly knew them or how they got there. But others felt like old friends. They were wonderful for their blissful shade, to climb, to simply stare at and admire. They were the most visible evidence of the fleeting but brutal storm that barged through New York City on Thursday evening: the ravaged trees. There was a beloved scarlet oak that had stood forever in a farm family’s cemetery in Queens. There was a Callery pear that parrots preferred on a street in Brooklyn. Trees that had stories to them that were now prematurely finished. The tragedy of the storm, which meteorologists said Friday included two tornadoes, was Aline Levakis, 30, from Mechanicsburg, Pa., the sole person to die, when a tree, as it happened, hit her car on the Grand Central Parkway in Queens. Buildings and houses were severely damaged, thousands of customers lost electricity and many commuters were inconvenienced. But destroyed were thousands of trees — trees torn out of sidewalks, others flung 30 or 40 feet through the air, still others shorn of branches, cracked in two. On Friday, as the city plowed ahead in the painstaking process of cleaning up the wreckage and repairing damage, it was still too early to tabulate a reliable tree death count. The city has over 100 species and more than five million trees, some as old as 250. Clearly the loss was great. Adrian Benepe, the city’s parks commissioner, estimated that as many as 2,000 of the 650,000 street trees had been killed or else so crippled that they would have to be cut down. Mr. Benepe said hundreds of the two million trees in the parks were killed or damaged beyond hope. Hundreds more lost limbs. Storms periodically batter the city’s trees. A freak storm in August of last year toppled about 500 trees in Central Park. The storm on Thursday left Manhattan and the Bronx virtually unscathed but was merciless in the other boroughs. “It’s hard to compare to previous storms,” Mr. Benepe said, “but given the brevity of the storm, the extent of the damage seems unparalleled.” As workers began carving up the trees and trucking them away, they found decimated oaks, Norway maples, catalpas, and more and more. Mr. Benepe said the older, larger trees, like the maples, oaks and London planes that were planted along city streets, suffered worst. They have a lot of leaf surface that catches the wind, and they are inflexible. Many Callery pears, with their showy white blossoms, also went. Although smaller, they are weak-wooded. The storm wiped out a dozen or so willow trees lining Willow Lake and Meadow Lake in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens. Some of them fell into the lakes. On the blocks around Juniper Valley Park in Middle Village, Queens, hundreds of elderly elms, oaks and maples succumbed. Youngsters — 7 to 10 years old — were yanked out like matchsticks and whipped through the area. Robert Holden, president of the Juniper Park Civic Association, walked around the bruised neighborhood on Friday snapping pictures of fallen timber. One majestic tree, regarded as the neighborhood’s treasure, was an immense scarlet oak in the Pullis Farm Cemetery, an early American farm family burial ground. It was believed to be more than 110 years old. It was a beauty, just about perfectly symmetrical. “When you touched the tree, you felt like you were touching a part of the 19th century,” Mr. Holden said. The storm tore it down, ending its long life in a blink. “This hit me the hardest,” Mr. Holden said. “Some people said can we pick it up and put it back? But you can’t.” In All Faiths Cemetery in Middle Village stood another cherished tree, a towering live oak thought to be 180 years old. It was about 90 feet tall. After the storm, all that remained was the bottom 12 feet. “It was a cool-looking tree,” said Daniel C. Austin Jr., the cemetery’s vice president. “It had these beautiful arms. Every time we drove by it, we used to talk about it.” Grief was palpable in Forest Hills Gardens, a private nest of Tudor and Georgian homes in Queens that is one of the city’s greenest neighborhoods, home to hundreds of trees. It was only recently that the residents’ association planted 70 more — maples, oaks and London planes. These newcomers, so much life left in them, bore the brunt of the storm. Edward and Vera Ward, who live just outside the enclave, stroll through the neighborhood every day, drawn by the serenity and welcoming shade of the tall trees. On Friday, Mr. Ward, 58, was snapping pictures of men sawing a supine tree into bits. “It’s like a part of me is gone,” he said, and his eyes welled up. An elderly man was mourning a maple tree that he had planted outside his house on Dartmouth Street when he was a teenager. It grew as he grew. It was one more that the storm took. In Park Slope, Brooklyn, a Callery pear tree stands across the street from the house of Nick Lerman, 27, a Brooklyn College student. Almost two-thirds of its canopy had been ripped off. “I’m looking at maybe 37 percent of a tree,” Mr. Lerman said. “Now it kind of looks like a bald guy with half a tonsure.” He said parrots shuttled back and forth from the tree to the one across from it. He said he hoped that the tree would live, that the parrots would still have it. Reuben Slater had his own tree-loss story. He is 13 and lives in Park Slope. When he walks to school, he passes a massive ash tree with a trunk that gives way to branches that form a V. When he was younger, he thought of it as the tree of life. The storm carved off half the V. The tree is expected to survive, but to no longer resemble its old self. That saddens Reuben. He sees a tree “with a broken arm.” He snatched a small branch off the ground. He said he would keep it in his room. “I’m going to name it Pablo,” he said. “I’ve always loved that name.” Fernanda Santos and Rebecca White contributed reporting. http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2010/09/18/nyregion/TREES/TREES-articleInlin… added by: EthicalVegan

Caught in the act

Funny picture of the day – Caught in the act added by: susuru

Taylor Swift Flashed Back To High School For Best Female Video-Nominated ‘Fifteen’

‘I really wanted this video to kind of be an evolution for Taylor,’ director Roman White explains. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Matt Elias Taylor Swift in her music video for “Fifteen” Photo: Big Machine The dreamy landscape of her “Fifteen” video had Taylor Swift recalling her high school days, when she thought she was in love with that guy she was dating and she didn’t know what would become of her life. And when she worked on the Best Female Video-nominated clip last year with “You Belong With Me” director Roman White, he wanted to capture the essence of the song without getting too literal. “Well, I think I really wanted this video to kind of be an evolution for Taylor,” White said. “I mean, obviously it’s a high school song, but the last thing I wanted to do was shoot it in a high school. So I wanted to try something different, and I actually said to her, ‘I don’t think we should shoot in a high school.’ And I don’t think she wanted to either.” So how do you shoot a video about high school without actually staging it in a high school? “I kind of came up with this idea like, let’s take the literal meaning of this song and watch it evolve in front of us … almost as a memory in your head,” he said. “And create this world, so you walk in on this desolate desert and you start to sing about all these great memories you have … of everything you love [blooming] around you, and so we literally grew this garden around her.” But White decided to keep it a bit strange as well. “But also we added these surreal elements that came from the memory,” he said. “It’s kind of this cross between this surreal garden and this memory [and] she’s at the heart of this memory.” About the only thing in the video that wasn’t created on a computer was Swift herself. “The rain was all digitally created. All the trees, all the flowers, everything was created by mouse, everything was created by computers,” he explained. “The trees, the leaves, the rain, everything, the clouds. We had prop pieces of the desks and stuff … so even things we had actual props of we re-created in 3-D [on the computer].” The 27th annual MTV Video Music Awards will be broadcast live from the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on Sunday, September 12, at 9 p.m. ET. Fans can go to VMA.MTV.com (or text VMA to 97979 if they are Verizon subscribers) to vote for the winners in general categories, including Best New Artist, from now through September 12. Related Videos Frame By Frame: Taylor Swift’s Video For ‘Fifteen’ Related Photos Lady Gaga Leads The 2010 VMA Nominees Related Artists Taylor Swift

Read the original:
Taylor Swift Flashed Back To High School For Best Female Video-Nominated ‘Fifteen’

10 Most Bizarre Things Available for Rent

10 Most Bizarre Things Available for Rent added by: poojam

Cloning Has Terrible Trade-Offs

Plants that clone themselves to live for eons may be cheating death, but at a terrible price, say researchers who have studied seemingly immortal aspen trees in British Columbia. Like many other plants, an aspen can reproduce sexually or by growing clones of itself from lateral roots — sometimes creating large stands of trees of more than 100 acres that are essentially the same tree grown over and over again. Some aspens may have used this tactic to survive up to a million years, according to some estimates. But the longer an aspen depends on cloning to survive, the worse it is at sexual reproduction, says California State University, San Diego biologist Dilara Ally, who discovered this trade-off in male aspens while doing her doctoral work at the University of British Columbia. The advantages of reproducing by cloning are easy to spot — you can just keep spreading a genetically identical plant without expending the energy for flowers, seeds and getting the seeds dispersed. “They don't have to go to the trouble that we do (to reproduce),” explained Ally, whose paper on the matter, co-authored by Kermit Ritland and Sarah Otto, appears in this week's issue of the journal PLoS Biology. There are some big disadvantages to cloning as well, however. Perhaps the biggest disadvantage is mutations, or genetic errors, that gradually and steadily build up in the genetic material of the plants' cells. “The longer you clone yourself the more mutations you build up,” Ally explained. By counting the accumulated mutations of more than 700 trees belonging to 20 different male aspen clones via what are called genetic microsatellite markers, Ally and her colleagues were able to use them as a sort of clock to gauge the age of the original tree that started all the cloning. They then compared the ages of the clones to different measures of the trees' fertility. They found that long-lived aspen clones do indeed suffer reduced sexual fitness with age. In other words, even seemingly eternal trees like aspens are still subject to the harsh realities of natural selection, sooner or later. “Plants cannot escape,” said plant aging researcher Deborah Roach of the University of Virginia. “Selection can't create the perfect organism.” But the new study is also important in another way, Roach told Discovery News. “This is a big leap in terms of looking at whole organisms as opposed to the plant part,” said Roach. A lot of previous work focused on leaves, for instance, she said, rather than how an entire tree ages. Now aging in plants like aspens can be used as a model for other organisms, Roach said. added by: Almibry

Great Trees of Toronto as Photographed by Vince Pietropaolo

Images from sidespacegallery : American Elm Everyone has their favourite tree; one that they pass en route to work or school or in the neighbour’s front yard. Toronto has its own fair share and they are immortalized in a new exhibition: Vincenzo Pietropoalo’s Toronto Tree Portraits . In an interesting twist, local celebrities and artists were asked to chose and describe their favourites which were then lovingly photographed. A musician loved a willow tree on a stranger’s garden, seen from a passing streetcar. Sh… Read the full story on TreeHugger

See the article here:
Great Trees of Toronto as Photographed by Vince Pietropaolo