Monday, October 12, 2015

Antibodies

Antibodies in the neighborhood are like antibodies in the human body, says this community development leader.

"We look at our grass roots leaders as antibodies. They are indigenous to the body, they are closest to the source of disease. If you strengthen the body's immune system, the body will heal itself.


"What government does when there is a problem is to sort of do a transplant instead of looking for the remedy which is closest to the problem."


When they go into low-income, high crime, drug-infested neighborhoods, they ask questions that professionals "never ask" of poor people: who is raising children that have not succumbed to those lures? When they find those people, they "apply miracle-grow" in the form of training and technical assistance. They "grow remedies" indigenous to these neighborhoods by reaching out to grass roots leaders who are in the midst of it all.


Find out how the pizza delivery solution worked in a New Jersey city (at about 1:45 in the video)


(cont'd tomorrow)



Friday, October 9, 2015

Rockefeller

Could anything good come from great wealth? It depends on the values of the one who creates great wealth.

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Energy user

(cont'd)

"Conventional wisdom" has said that we in the U.S. may expect lower energy demand in the next few decades, since millennials prefer small living spaces and, for transport, bikes or high-mpg vehicles. 

But their direction now appears to be moving toward SUV's and suburban houses. So CW is changing to recognize that energy demand will stay high.

Where those millennials plan to live is significant to those who predict and plan for energy demand. That's because "the buildings where we live, work and vacation consume almost 40 percent of the nation’s energy–about twice that of all the cars on the road. This single fact explains why so much digital tech and public policy is preoccupied with “smart buildings” to save energy. " (For a look at a smart building, go here.)

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

New normal

Most millennials (66%) plan to live in a house in the suburbs - not a small apartment in the heart of the city. Do they drive an electric vehicle (EV) or hybrid to save energy? No, "their preferred car is not a Prius or Tesla, but station wagons and SUVs."

The data seem to say that the millennial generation's new normal is looking a lot like their boomer parents' old normal according to this author.

For decades the "baby boomer"generation (now age 51-69) dominated the American economy because of its great numbers. But this year the "millennials" generation (age 18-34) will outnumber them.  And they seem to want to live much like the boomers, which means energy demand will not go down.

The next generation is getting started on the most productive - and energy-using - years of their lives.

(cont'd tomorrow)

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Arch gone

Destruction continues under Islamic State (IS). It's confirmed "that the Arch of Triumph, a jewel in the exquisite collection of ruins in the oasis city [of Palmyra, Syria], ha[s] been blown up."
photo: cnn.com

According to the chief of antiquities in Palmyra, "It's as though there is a curse that has befallen this city and I expect only news that will shock us. If the city remains in their hands the city is doomed . . 


"It is now wanton destruction ... their acts of vengeance are no longer ideologically driven because they are now blowing up buildings with no religious meaning."
"Palmyra was one of the most important cultural centres of the ancient world, according to cultural agency UNESCO, which has described it as the crossroads of several civilizations."

Monday, October 5, 2015

Civil

"Civil discourse" is conversation or discussion for the purpose of understanding an issue. A participant in this discussion will not attack the other participants' good judgement or moral worth, their motives or intelligence. It's necessary to treat them courteously and respectfully, or else the focus gets dragged off the point and onto personal feelings.

I just read an article on climate change whose author identifies his opinions but also gives respect to people who see the subject differently.

I say "well done" to this Scientific American blogger - who believes in climate change but who also says, "Not all those who doubt the scientific consensus on climate change are ideologues or idiots."

Friday, October 2, 2015

Model X

Maybe you already know . . Tesla's new crossover Model X was revealed this week. It has distinctives - of course it does.

It's an all-electric SUV that can seat up to seven "and all their gear." It's easy to get your babies into the middle row of seats because of the rear "falcon wing" doors that open vertically, but require only a foot of room on each side of the vehicle to do it.


It can accelerate from zero to 60 MPH is 3.2 seconds, "stupidly fast for any car, let alone an SUV." It has a panoramic windshield, and the front trunk is big enough for two golf bags.

Like the Model S, the other model Tesla makes, it can be charged at home or gratis at Tesla charging stations, and its range between charging is about 250 miles.

It's expensive - over $130,000. But 20,000 folks got their order in early. If you put yours in now, you may get it in 2016.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

"Soul mate"

There's no such thing, according to Eric Metaxas. You know the idea, "there's just one perfect person for me and we'll have a perfect marriage or relationship without hardly trying because we're perfect for each other." Something like that.

His argument is realistic - no matter who you marry, compromise and self-sacrificial love will be required.

"As J. R. R. Tolkien once wrote to his son, “No man, however truly he loved his betrothed and bride as a young man, has lived faithful to her as a wife in mind and body without deliberate conscious exercise of the will, without self-denial."

Tolkien goes on in the letter to say, "When the glamour wears off, or merely works a bit thin, they think they have made a mistake, and that the real soul-mate is still to find."

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

CO2 & $

Turns out that CO2 can be more useful than just keeping life going on earth :)

Startup business Novomer is "converting pollution into sustainable polymers and chemicals."

Joule feeds it to bacteria that make diesel fuel.

Skyonic makes baking soda and other products from it.

Apparently, it has lots of potential. And we seem to have plenty of it.

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Prisoner

Negotiations between Iran and the U.S. have come and gone, but Saeed Abedini's wife (Nagmeh) says that he is worse off in Iran than ever, after three years in prison there. Stun gun strikes, solitary confinement, attacks from staff and inmates, there's more of it.


photo: worldmag.com

After meeting with the American ambassador to the U.N, Samantha Power, Nagmeh Abedini summed it up this way:

"She said they really thought Iran was acting in good faith with the nuclear deal and would release the Americans,” she said. “Their strategy was hoping. My strategy was from day one they should have said, ‘Release the Americans, and then we'll talk.’”

Monday, September 28, 2015

Women have

More than half (52%) of all professional, management and "related positions" are held by women, not by men. 

And it may surprise you that "Women have overtaken men and now control more than half of all U.S. wealth and will likely take an even bigger piece of the pie in coming years"

Therefore . . what? What do these two statistical facts tell us? I'm open to your thoughts about it.

from http://www.businessinsider.com

Friday, September 25, 2015

Connected

(cont'd)

"The Edge" is said to be the most sustainable and connected building in the world. Here are more ways it may be the "smartest building in the world:"

LED panels illuminate and "are also packed with sensors—motion, light, temperature, humidity, infrared—creating a “digital ceiling” that wires the building like synapses in a brain." They "require such a trickle of electricity they can be powered using the same cables that carry data for the Internet."


All work spaces are less than 23 feet from a window, so daylight dominates. Solar panels on the south and the roof create most of the power that the building uses, and that includes the charging of phones and of electric cars in the garage.

"During summer months, the building pumps warm water more than 400 feet deep in the aquifer beneath the building, where it sits, insulated, until winter, when it's sucked back out for heating. The system developed for the Edge is the most efficient aquifer thermal energy storage in the world, according to Robert van Alphen, OVG's project manager for the Edge."

One more good video about The Edge with a few more details is here.

Thursday, September 24, 2015

The Edge

"The Edge" is a 15-story office building in Amsterdam designed by  a London architect, and it's called the "smartest building in the world."



So . . how is this a smart building? In many ways. For example, in the sense that you can customize the building to your needs like this:

"A day at the Edge in Amsterdam starts with a smartphone app . .  From the minute you wake up, you’re connected. The app checks your schedule, and the building recognizes your car when you arrive and directs you to a parking spot.

"Then the app finds you a desk. Because at the Edge, you don’t have one. No one does. Work spaces are based on your schedule: sitting desk, standing desk, work booth, meeting room, balcony seat, or “concentration room.” Wherever you go, the app knows your preferences for light and temperature, and it tweaks the environment accordingly."

(cont'd tomorrow)

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

911 tower

"Starchitect" Bjarke Ingels has designed the last tower that will, as he puts it, "frame" the eight blocks of  the 911 memorial.

The building will look like a column of seven offset blocks, providing an outdoor terrace or hanging garden for each block. He pictures the blocks housing different sorts of companies, more creative than financial. Its core tenants will be media companies.


Ingels, just 40 years old, moved to New York City from his native Denmark five years ago and is very much in demand. His firm is also co-designer of Google's new headquarters near San Francisco Bay.

Charlie Rose interviews the animated and well-spoken Bjarke Ingels here.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

WeAreFilms

(cont'd)

Alex and Aaron started making films together as kids and it just hasn't stopped. They got "better equipment" and kept learning, started a website.

They have some advice for dreamers who can identify  - "Don't think that just because you don't have the best equipment that you can't make something beautiful or touching. . . Find others who are equally as passionate about filmmaking as you are and make videos together on weekends. That's what we would do. Eventually you find a core group of people that you love working with and ideally you get to hire those people to work with you in the future whenever you have paid gigs."



Both brothers having homophilia, they've enjoyed donating their time and skills to filming summer camp memories for children with the condition.

"Shooting a music video is one of our favorite things to do. There's just something magical about creating an image that a song will be remembered by."

Monday, September 21, 2015

Film makers

"The film industry has a reputation for being cutthroat, backstabbing, and grueling. It’s true – especially in NYC. But it doesn’t have to be that way. And we don’t have to be that way."

That's Aaron Craig who works with his brother in film making. They are good at it and they love it (so often this way, that you love doing what you are gifted to do).

They work with excellence and passion, like other good film makers. They also aim to do it without being cutthroat and backstabbing.

That's a "good work" - in whatever it is that you do, to do it well and do it with integrity that honors God. 

(cont'd tomorrow)

Friday, September 18, 2015

Tesla class

(cont'd)

CEO Elon Musk "just wants to focus on making the world’s best car, and the $70,000 Model S, by all rights, can claim that prize." They burned through $1.5 billion in the last twelve months, but investors seem to have confidence that Tesla can become everything their CEO wants to accomplish so the funding keeps coming in.

What does he look for when he hires?  Elon doesn’t settle for good or very good. He wants the best. So he asks job candidates what kinds of complex problems they’ve solved before and he wants details.”

We always probe deeply into achievement on the résumé,” says Musk. “Success has many parents, so we look to find out who really did it. I don’t care if they graduated from university or even high school.”

When a new CIO was hired, his first task was to build all the software to run the company - from scratch - in three months - at 1/5 the cost. "When Vijayan told him such a task wasn’t possible, Musk simply stated, with a Steve Jobs-like confidence: “Let me know what you need from my side to make this happen.” Says Vijayan, “He doesn’t accept constraints as ‘givens’ the way most people do.”

According to their "vice president of engineering: “We take leaps of faith that are like jumping out of an airplane and designing and building the parachute on the way down.”

Thursday, September 17, 2015

World class

Tesla Motors just keeps making headlines. Read this to see why Forbes places Tesla at the top of its list of "world's most innovative companies" :

"It goes from 0-60 in under three seconds in “ludicrous” mode, the fastest of any four-door production car on the planet, and is also the safest car in its class. When it collides with the crash-test machine, the crash-test machine breaks. You can order it online and have it delivered to your door, get software updates beamed wirelessly and receive maintenance alerts before bad stuff happens. Plus, it’s beautiful. The door handles reach out to be opened as you approach, then fold flat for better aerodynamics. 

"Don’t believe us: Consumer Reports called it the best overall car on the market for the past two years."

"The first thing you notice when you step onto Tesla Motors TSLA +3.44% production floor are the robots. Eight-foot-tall bright-red bots that look like Transformers, huddling over each Model S sedan as it makes its way through the factory in Fremont, Ca . ." (click on the photo to see it bigger)

Btw . .  no, Tesla does not pay me to report on their cars all the time. I'm just kind of fascinated.

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Not just CA

Australia is suffering too. Right now cattle ranchers in terrible drought conditions are "enjoying the bad times - because we know the catastrophic times are still coming." They cull their herds and take down mulgo trees to feed the cattle.

The drought has been happening over years. The video below came out 6 months ago.

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Free talk #2

(cont'd)

Free speech means that a person has the 1) right to say what he thinks should be said, but it also includes the 2) right of others to hear the dissenting view or the inconvenient fact (as the late Christopher Hitchens, famous atheist, said).

The first right is a matter of equal justice before the law, that one has the same right as others do to say what he thinks important. That right is also a matter of respect for the rationality and desires of all people since they too are created in God's image (not only the people who agree with me).

The second right honors truth. It is possible, even though we have good reason to think what we think, that we are wrong. We must allow for this. Under this concept, the dissenter must be allowed to bring to the discussion what we have so far rejected or neglected - because it could be a part of the truth that we missed.

And we want our decisions in society and in personal life to be based on truth, on what really is - not on a fantasy of what we'd like to pretend is true.

Monday, September 14, 2015

Free talk #1

Should we in America be free to say what we want to, what we believe? Yes, the Constitution's First Amendment guarantees that right to us. The government may not stop you from speaking. But there are pockets where free speech is not welcome.

Those pockets are the very place you'd expect free speech to be defended:  university and college campuses. Over half of them now restrict speech they don't like, and the U.S. Dept. of Education may make restricted speech mandatory in all higher education.



But why?

(cont'd tomorrow)

Friday, September 11, 2015

911

I remember September 11, 2001 ~


Here's the gist of a conversation I had with my niece Bethany and our friend Adam 3 weeks ago in NY when it was time to either go to the 911 memorial or eliminate it from our trip:

Me - I'm indifferent about visiting Ground Zero, but I don't know why, since it's so important.
Adam - It just mechanically lists the data & events with grief for the deaths.
Me - Maybe they're trying not to be political.
Bethany - There's nothing about 911 that isn't political!!
Me - That's it! That's the reason - I get the impression that the memorial is only data, no meaning.

Since I still have not been there, I wonder - are no value statements are made at the memorial? It will be a priority next time for me, but if you have been there and have an opinion, I welcome it.

Go here for the stories of four men who survived being on high floors in the two towers.

Thursday, September 10, 2015

"Trees" #2

(cont'd)

Those big man-made "trees" in Singapore are made to be a useful part of the park ecology. They have solar panels to generate power, they catch rain water and moderate the tropical heat.

The huge "trunks" are made of concrete and steel, while the "branches" are big wire rods. That walkway is seven stories above ground.

At night there's a light and sound show. They expect the finished project is to be a national landmark and attraction magnet for tourism.


Wednesday, September 9, 2015

"Trees" #1

When we visited Singapore in 2006, we found the city/nation/island to be beautiful, clean, orderly. Possibly we could now add the words innovative and fanciful to the description.

Two months ago the big landscaping and parks project, Gardens by the Bay, opened to the public. It includes 18 man-made "trees" up to 150 feet tall. The "trunks" of these trees have solar technology and vertical gardens. Paths have been built between them.

theguardian.com

(cont'd)

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Moral persons

(cont'd)

It's hard to believe that people would claim something so nonsensical as legal personhood for chimpanzees, though they are being consistent with their worldview which says that there's nothing special about human beings (you have to wonder how they can deny the specialness of humans).

William Wilberforce was one of the founders of the SPCA. As a Christian, he appealed to humans' moral responsibility to kindly care for animals - and this was consistent with his worldview that humans are accountable persons who can choose to do what's morally right.

Sometimes you hear that Christians have no business "moralizing," that they should keep their values to themselves, that God's standards are not for the world at large but just for believers. I have to disagree. God's standards for behavior are light in the darkness of a confusing world.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Personhood

Are chimpanzees people too? There's a movement that seeks legal "personhood" for chimps and other animals based on their view that humans have no transcendent value over other animals.  They call it "species-ism", discrimination that favors humans against animals.

But humans are different. One thing that distinguishes humans is their moral responsibility to treat animals kindly. The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the oldest charity of its kind, was founded in 1824 for this purpose - we demand kindness from persons but not from animals.

That's the basic foundation of a recent decision by the New York court. They "refused to hear an appeal seeking to create chimp personhood."

The court says that animals cannot "be held legally accountable for their action," as persons can. 

(cont'd tomorrow)

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Influence

All of us are consumers of our own culture. Some people's minds are fed nothing but conventional, mainstream, politically correct education and entertainment. But conventional opinion may be good, it may be true - or it may be neither good nor true.

Author Hugh Whelchel asks, "Have Christians Lost the Ability to Be in the World but Not of it?" For about a century, he says, the church has been absorbing more than influencing culture. 

The world would like us to conform, to just "take their word for it." They can be rough and judgmental - but the Bible says not to blindly conform to culture:

"Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect."

Uber future

Just in case you're thinking of driving for Uber:  a study has shown that Uber drivers make around $19 per hour while traditional cabbies make about $12.90 per hour. (The study was done by a Princeton economist who advises Hillary Clinton.)

Clinton says that Uber drivers make so little that they drive down the income of cabbies (er . . what?) and presidential candidate Sanders just wants Uber to be highly regulated. If the California law suits against it are successful, Uber will incur the cost of treating their drivers like employees, which would include insurance and expenses. I've no doubt that consumers will pay more if that happens.

It's been a success with both drivers and consumers so far. Is Uber the evolved version of the taxicab business? Maybe it's on the right side of history.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

High supply

(cont'd)

A barrel of oil costs far less all over the world now than it did just a couple of years ago, resulting in global benefits (yesterday's post).  But why did that happen?

There's more than one thing contributing to it, but the first event was this - oil industry innovation.  New fracking technology enabled American companies to extract oil from rock at lower cost. Therefore, much more oil came on the global market. 

With bigger supply, the worldwide price began to fall. Normally when oil prices fall, Middle Eastern oil producers slow down their production to reduce the worldwide supply until prices come back up. This time they did not slow down. So worldwide supply stayed high, oil prices stayed low.

When people (not just Americans) have ordered, lawful freedom, they can come up with ideas that make things better, that create wealth for themselves and for society.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Half price

The price that the world had to pay for a barrel of oil last year was cut in half. That drop resulted in people all over the world paying less for the energy they need for heating, cooling, driving, cooking, wherever oil is used for power.

"[Since] the world burns 34 billion barrels of oil every year, a $10 fall in the price of oil shifts $340 billion from oil producers to consumers. [And] the $60 price decline since last August will redistribute more than $2 trillion [60 x 34 million) annually to oil consumers, providing a bigger income boost than the combined US and Chinese fiscal stimulus in 2009."

That's just the benefit to consumers, to households. Beyond consumers, businesses are also cutting their costs because of declining oil prices. That will lead to worldwide economic growth, which supports improved standards of living.

And all this happened . . how?

(cont'd tomorrow)