Urban skyfarms

By 2050, states Dr. Dickson Despommier, a professor of environmental sciences and microbiology at Columbia University, the planet’s population will require a new farming area the size of Brazil, which couldn’t possibly be provided based on existing farmable areas… thus the need for new areas from where to obtain food.

Inhabitat reports on ‘skyfarming’, urban skyscrapers that are intensive farms.

ChemNutra imported petfood gluten

On its website, the company responsible for supplying contaminated wheat gluten does not mention its food safety protocol for any of its three suppliers in China, although it immediately quarantined its inventory and cooperated with the FDA. A pdf press release distributed by a media management firm is available that refers to Xuzhou Anying as the supplier.

ChemNutra states that the firm “imports quality ingredients from China to the U.S. for the feed, food and pharma industries.

“We are a professionally managed, American owned company experienced in negotiating, securing and delivering ultra-competitive pricing on high-quality chemicals and ingredients from quality-assured manufacturers in China.

“We bridge the business and cultural gaps…including all regulatory, compliance, import and transportation requirements.”

A news clip at Physorg states:

The Las Vegas-based ChemNutra Co. — a supplier to human and pet food manufacturers — said the recalled wheat gluten had been imported in 25 kg. paper bags that were distributed to three pet food manufacturers and one company that supplies wheat gluten to the pet food industry.

ChemNutra said none of the 792 metric tons of the recalled products was shipped to facilities manufacturing food for human consumption.

Nestle Purina, Del Monte, and Menu Foods seem to be the primary feed compounders. After many days, these firms are not yet reporting any offshore follow-through activity or new import policy recommendations.

The Food and Drug Administration last week blocked wheat gluten imports from the Xuzhou Anying Biologic Technology Development Co.

It seems that ChemNutra is capable of installing adequate safety precautions. Its corporate officers seem to be both legally and operationally adept and familiar with regulatory law and international standards.

Update:
The FDA said that in the past three weeks it has received more than 12,000 consumer complaints, more than twice the number of complaints it usually receives in a year for any product.

Robots move fence automatically

robot fencing
The Dutch company Lely has developed SOLAR-POWERED ROBOTS that move an electric fence to make sure dairy cows evenly graze their pastures.

Two robots each hold its side of the fence, and move very slowly, which maximizes grass growth and prevents manure contamination. The robots have sensors that monitor the angle and speed of the fence, as well as tautness, and communicate with each other via Bluetooth. The complete system costs $30,000. via the Raw Feed: Latest Job Taken By Robots: Cowpoke

  • reduces forage waste
  • increases cows’ harvesting efficiency by 12%
  • saves labor
  • avoids fluctuations in milk production and composition
  • lower feed costs
  • higher milk production from pasture
  • Honor in business

    For the effort and drive that business calls for, there is a greater need for depth and understanding. For the hope of reward, there is a greater need for fulfilment.

    What is it to be honorable in business?

    “To be the kind of person who tries to assure that the hopes of the first meeting are fulfilled by the time of the last meeting.”

    Migrating birds incorrectly blamed


    Wild birds are wrongly getting the blame for spreading avian flu.

    It’s the transport of food & poultry that is the true culprit.

    Read the press release from the British Ornithologists’ Union

    “Human commercial activities, particularly those associated with poultry, are the major factors that have determined global dispersal.”

    [click pic for larger version of incorrect vector assumptions]

    The global network of migration routes seemed to hide the real vectors – without strict health controls – of the exchanges of poultry, the more likely mechanism for disease spread. [link to British Ornithologists’ Union]

    This 2005 story [and at BBC] about spread of bird flu virus among migrating geese and other birds at a wildlife refuge in China are incorrect.

    The scale of change in China

    Shanghai skyline

    In the next 10 years, China is expected to build more than 70 million new homes in what observers are calling an unprecedented housing boom.

    Shanghai is China’s largest and most developed city.

    This year alone, Shanghai will build towers with more living and working space than all the towers in New York City.


    Update:
    Business Week Online: 10 Wonders of the New China
    “China’s current building boom is doing more than sucking up the world’s supply of steel — it’s creating a stage for some of today’s boldest architecture and engineering. Take a tour of the 10 of the most intriguing examples.” via preoccupations

    Join all global power lines

    Buckminster Fuller postage stampExcited to enjoy him, I joined R. Buckminster Fuller and others for dinner during a futurist’s conference I helped organize at the Marin Community College.

    There was only one theme, his very famous question used in his “World Game” workshops:

    “How do we make the world work for 100% of humanity in the shortest possible time through spontaneous cooperation without ecological damage or disadvantage to anyone?”

    Walter Cronkite has put his backing behind a proposal to interconnect the electrical energy networks between nations and continents.

    “In today’s terms, we might call this a world wide web of electricity – called the GENI Initiative.

    Bucky saw this possibility decades before the rest of us.”

    via terrawatts

    [click pic to USPS postage stamp info]


    CJ Fearnley maintains an extensive FAQ for Buckminster Fuller based primarily on the history of the discussions, interests, and needs of the readers of the BITNET mailing list Geodesic and its USENET gateway bit.listserv.geodesic and helps direct the Synergetics Collaborative.


    Update:

    Sometimes I think we’re alone.
    Sometimes I think we’re not.
    In either case, the thought is staggering.

    R. Buckminster Fuller
    via A Mindful Life

    Greenhouse gas on the dinner table?

    Jean-Marc Jancovici, whose website on climate change is readable, chartful with well-documented articles, estimates that roughly one-third of carbon emissions are a result of producing our food.

    Plus, agriculture is the main source of the principal non-CO2 greenhouse gases: methane and nitrous oxide.

    The U.S. food system consumes ten times more energy than it produces in food energy.

    There are 52 transport and process stages in one bottle of ketchup.

    Up to 25 percent of car journeys are to get food.

    Manufacturing the packaging (wood, paper, steel, aluminium, plastics) accounts for 70-80 percent of the overall emissions of the food industry.

    Electricity consumption linked to eating (fridges, freezers, dish-washers, stoves and ovens, not to mention small appliances) represent up to 22 percent of all energy consumed at home.

    via culiblog

    From plow to plate

    Fight Global Warming with Your Knife and Fork

    Why fast-food is cheap

    From an interview with Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma:

    “There’s no question that the way we eat is in large part determined by legislation, the Farm Bill in particular.

    There’s a set of rules for the food system, and those rules are written into the Farm Bill. Most of us are unaware of this bill and don’t understand how this whole system works.

    The reason that fast-food is so cheap is in large part because we subsidize the growing of corn and soybeans, which are turned into livestock feed very cheaply, and the former into a very cheap sweetener, in the case of high-fructose corn syrup.

    So we unwittingly made a set of choices, without any of us really being consulted about how we would eat. It’s no accident that this is a fast-food nation. Policy has a lot to do with it. So if you’re going to change the food system, there is a lot that you, the consumer, can do on your own; but in the end, it will be very important to make changes at the national level.

    …I think the people involved don’t want anyone else getting involved. It works really well for them that it’s treated as a parochial piece of legislation only of interest to the senators from Iowa or Nebraska or Illinois.

    Part of it starts with calling it the “Farm Bill.” Nobody thinks that farming is their issue. They think it’s a piece of legislation of interest to farmers.

    It should be called the “Food Bill” because it really is about how we get our food. People aren’t aware of the impact of this piece of legislation. If they were, they would pay more attention, and there would be a larger political debate around it. I’m hoping this year there will be.”

    via Social Design Notes

    Medical professionals are too dirty

    Doctors and nurses wash their hands one-third to one-half as often as necessary.

    Each year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, two million Americans acquire an infection while they are in the hospital.

    Ninety thousand die of that infection.

    “This is, embarrassingly, nothing new:
    In 1847, at the age of twenty-eight, the Viennese obstetrician Ignac Semmelweis famously deduced that, by not washing their hands consistently or well enough, doctors were themselves to blame for childbed fever.”

    Rising infection rates from superresistant bacteria have become the norm around the world.

    Infection-control teams have been created to track down causes and build effective procedures, but staff are not following these new rules.

    No part of human skin is spared from bacteria. Bacterial counts on the hands range from five thousand to five million colony-forming units per square centimeter. The hair, underarms, and groin harbor greater concentrations. On the hands, deep skin crevices trap 10 to 20 percent of the flora, making removal difficult, even with scrubbing, and sterilization impossible. The worst place is under the fingernails.

    Plain soaps do, at best, a middling job of disinfecting.

    Today’s antibacterial soaps contain chemicals such as chlorhexidine to disrupt microbial membranes and proteins.

    Even with the right soap, however, proper hand washing requires a strict procedure. First, you must remove your watch, rings, and other jewelry (which are notorious for trapping bacteria). Next, you wet your hands in warm tap water. Dispense the soap and lather all surfaces, including the lower one-third of the arms, for the full duration recommended by the manufacturer (usually fifteen to thirty seconds). Rinse off for thirty full seconds. Dry completely with a clean, disposable towel. Then use the towel to turn the tap of. Repeat after any new contact with a patient.

    Almost no one adheres to this procedure. It seems impossible.

    Less irritating than soap, alcohol rinses and gels have been in use in Europe for almost two decades but for some reason only recently caught on in the United States.

    They take far less time to use — only about fifteen seconds or so to rub a gel over the hands and fingers and let it air-dry.

    Update on manufacturing transplants

    British scientists are reporting that within 10 years an entirely new heart could be produced from stem cells – a major step towards growing entire organs for transplant.

    Doctors could be using artificially grown heart components in transplants such as valves within three years. [story]

    Ethanol emissions no better than gas

    Flying in the face of current policy, there’s finally been an emissions study of blended fuel.

    The head of Environment Canada’s toxic emissions research was quoted as saying,

    “Looking at tailpipe emissions,
    from a greenhouse gas perspective,
    there really isn’t much difference between ethanol and gasoline.”

    The study found no statistical difference between the greenhouse gas emissions of regular unleaded fuel and 10 per cent ethanol blended fuel. Although the study found a reduction in carbon monoxide, a pollutant that forms smog, emissions of some other gases, such as hydrocarbons, actually increased under certain conditions.

    Others are responding by pointing out that the issue is more than just tailpipe emissions. It’s between the tailpipe and the whole cycle. [story]

    The final purpose of a patent

    LaserFX neon spiralThomas Jefferson said:

    “…receives light without darkening me…”

    If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself, but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of everyone, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it. Its peculiar character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it.

    He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me. That ideas should freely spread from one to another over the globe, for moral and mutual instruction of man, and improvement of his condition, seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently designed by nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all space, without lessening their density at any point, and like the air in which we breath, move, and have our physical being, incapable of confinement or exclusive appropriation. Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a subject of property.

    Dogs and quiet trees

    Lucky Springer SpanielI have learned to raise my dog
    into his best of breeding
    and the pinnacle of his name.

    Herald men have known this.
    Becoming my friend honors this creature
    thus he learns more than I can teach.

    Along with me is he.
    Where he is, must I.

    Whispering works.
    And hands always.
    And barking.
    And warm.
    And new.
    And fun.
    And me.

    More than what I give, better is
    when he’s giving all he knows
    and best when he’s inventing more
    to revel in his joy.
    Sharing.


    Who Communicates?
    Rudyard Kipling observed
    “six honest serving men of learning and intellect:
    what, where, who, when, how, and why.”

    Dogs, parrots, elephants, and even pigeons have been documented communicating what, where, who, and arguably, how. But they all lack the other two servants, when and why, which is the reason Dr. Fox stops short of recommending a dog’s interaction with its master as an intellectual dialogue. Dogs can be taught to tell who precisely how and where to throw what stick for them to catch. But no dog can communicate why she prefers that stick over another one. Beyond the when, of right now, no dog has ever asked a person to feed it tomorrow. Even the dogged quality of unconditional love, as exemplary an expression of loyalty as exists on Earth, can be explained as an instinctual allegiance to a pack leader transferred to a human master. The science of interspecies communication is in its infancy and saddled with more controversy than it probably deserves.

    via 2003 hypergognition

    World’s largest crystals

    Mexico's crystal cave
    “The largest natural crystals on Earth have been discovered in two caves within a silver and zinc mine near Naica, in Chihuahua, Mexico,” a Discovery News article reprinted here tells us.

    “Reaching lengths of over 20 feet, the clear, faceted crystals are composed of selenite, a crystalline form of the mineral gypsum.”

    via Pruned

    Using used bottles

    Spout for recycled bottles
    I thought this was innovative.

    As I thought about it though, I realized that I admired the invention because it was not only ingenious but frugal. Then it struck me that if being frugal, it wasn’t necessary.

    But it is innovative.

    A young Swiss designer had won a special Merit Award for its unique design and utility. About $6 at Perpetual Kid

    How to be a great audience

    Seth Godin posits,

    It’s easy to fall into the trap of believing that information is just delivered to you. That rock stars and violinists and speakers and preachers and teachers and tour guides get paid to perform and the product is the product. But it’s not true. Great audiences get more.

    Great audiences not only get more energy and more insight and more focused answers to their questions, they also get better jobs and find better relationships. Because the skills and the attitude are exactly the same.

    Frank ZappaI remember my first rock concert.
    Frank Zappa stared at me from the stage.
    Singled out and embarassed, I
    instantly froze my dancing and hooting. But he said loudly into his mike,

    “Hey!

    There’s different ways of showing your appreciation than just sitting there clapping.

    I get so damn sick of clapping.

    Use your imagination.

    Can’t you guys think of something better than clapping; Like this guy?”

    Link to Zappa Family Trust
    at http://www.zappa.com/

    New method for watering lawns & gardens

    Accurain irrigation animation
    AccuRain is a new and economical water-efficient garden irrigation solution.

    Less cost than traditional automatic lawn sprinklers or drip irrigation systems.

    Does the the work of many sprinklers or emitters.

    One head can water 15 different zones of almost any size or shape, each with their own unique watering requirements.

    Just point the stream of water where you want it; tell AccuRain how much and how often, and it does the rest.

    Water anywhere in a 60-foot (18 m) diameter circle.

    (posted on Goodwood blog too)

    Inactivate E.coli bacteria?

    AllAboutFeed.net

    Medicinal Peas

    German Biotech company Novoplant plans to carry out field trials with newly developed medicinal peas, that can be used as raw material in animal feed.

    The peas are modified with a gene to produce proteins that can inactivate E. coli bacteria. This feature will be an addition to the animals own immunity and help animals to better withstand diseases, according to Novoplant. The first crops are expected to be available in 2010.

    Because we cannot [in Europe] use antibiotics in feed anymore, such modified crops may be an alternative.

    News from new hearings

    A man held in US custody for five years – in secret CIA prisons but now in Guantanamo Bay – has told a military hearing he was tortured into confessing a role in the bombing of the USS Cole in 2000.

    “I just said those things to make the people happy,” the transcript read.

    “They were very happy when I told them those things.”

    Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, 41, said he had faced years of torture after his arrest in 2002, a Pentagon transcript from the closed-door hearing reveals.

    “It happened during interviews. One time they tortured me one way, and another time they tortured me in a different way.”

    at the BBC


    Background Update:
    :: Out2Lunch :: Into the Lake of Fire ::: “Atlantic City by the cold grey sea | I hear a voice crying, ‘Daddy,’ I always think it’s for me, | But it’s only the silence in the buttermilk hills that call. | Every new messenger brings evil report | ‘Bout armies on the march and time that is short | And famines and earthquakes and hatred written upon walls.

    “The first thing that strikes the lay student of military commissions is the enormous power vested in the US deputy secretary of defence, Paul Wolfowitz, who is the commissions’ ‘appointing authority’. The judges – seven in a capital case – are appointed by Wolfowitz.

    “Any judge can be substituted up to the moment of verdict, by Wolfowitz, US Deputy Secretary of Defence.”

    Nikon Universcale

    Nikon’s Universcale puts the entire universe into proportion, from the smallest particle to the largest measurements of space. From the femtometer to the light year, Universcale spans 40 magnitudes of measurement into a single cosmic web app.

    Webware.com says

    Every few months, I come across something on the web that completely blows my mind.

    It’s really amazing when you zoom all the way out into stars and galaxies and realize that every time you go a magnitude higher, everything you saw before, from the flea to Mount Everest, is contained in this tiny little grid in the lower-left side of the screen. Of course, the Carl Sagan-should-be-narrating-this planetarium music helps.

    If you have a few minutes and want to feel really, really small (or really, really large, or really, really disoriented), check out Universcale. It will eat up your afternoon and enlighten you as to the true size and scope of the cosmos.


    Update:
    http://jersey.uoregon.edu/vlab/
    Scout Report began to follow this physics instructional applet site in 1997.

    Multimedia instructional tools for the physical sciences are rather in vogue these days, and a number of universities and colleges have developed creative resources in this area. One such set of resources happens to be the Physics Applets collection, created by staff members at the University of Oregon’s physics department. The interactive applets are divided into four sections, including mechanics, thermodynamics, astrophysics, and energy & environment. In total, there are over thirty different applets, and they include those that illustrate the concepts of potential energy, Kepler’s Third Law, and atomic emission.

    Who first coined, “rather in vogue”?


    Update:
    Consider the entire Universe at the University of Tennessee