Monthly Archives: January 2010

Handcrafted Bent Walnut Wine Tote


A finely handcrafted bent walnut wine bottle carrier with durable latigo leather strapping and an attached vintage wool blanket. Designed around the standard 750ml wine bottle, it also has room for a couple of stemless glasses and maybe some snacks. The wool blanket helps to protect the bottle and can be used a picnic blanket. The straps that hold the blanket are removable for use as a conventional bag. Can be purchased without the vintage wool blanket and lower straps. Wine and glasses not included…

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[http://www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=31265780 via www.BornRich.com]

High Tech Pistol

Exhibited at  January’s Shooting Hunting and Outdoor Trade (SHOT) Show in Las Vegas, is this year’s highest-tech gun from German firm Armatix. They have created a semi automatic handgun in .22 calibre with an electronic safety that automatically disables the pistol when it’s not within a few inches of a custom wristwatch. The watch sends a wireless arming signal to the gun which if picked up, lights a green LED on the rear of the gun. Try squeezing the handle without wearing the watch and a red warning light appears. A limited edition version is on sale for about 7,000 Euros and shipping starts next month. Could be a great development for law enforcement officers.

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[http://www.shotshow.org/ via wired.com]

Save China’s Tigers

This superb body painting of three young ladies is by artist Craig Tracy and titled The Last South China Tiger. The project is part of Save China’s Tigers‘ efforts to protect the dwindling numbers of these animals in China, now down to only about 100.

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[Check out the videos and full information on protecting these tigers at http://www.paintedalive.com/homepage/index.html and http://english.savechinastigers.org/ via www.likecool.com]

The White Goat

Check the date – no it’s not April 1st. The White Goat automatically turns used paper into toilet paper. Made by a Japanese company called Oriental, the machine is simplicity itself, you just feed in about 40 sheets of paper, wait for 30 minutes and take out a perfectly made toilet paper roll.

The machine shreds the paper, which is then dissolved in water, thinned out, dried and wound into toilet rolls. Oriental says one roll costs 10 Yen ($0.11) to make, which isn’t bad. And the White Goat can be installed right in your office, too. Oriental also claims that regular usage of the machine can save up to 60 cedar trees annually.

The White Goat stands 1.8m tall and weighs 600kg. It will go on sale in Japan this summer (it’s been in development for years). Price: $100,000.

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[Check out the video at http://www.crunchgear.com/2010/01/29/videos-machine-turns-office-paper-into-toilet-paper/]

$2bn luxury, but you can’t bet

By Brent Zerafa in the UK’s Daily Telegraph

The sport of kings has a new palace and tonight the $2 billion Meydan racetrack in Dubai will be unveiled to the world.

Three former Sydney-trained gallopers, Aichi, Desuetude and Imvula, are set to compete at the opening of the 6.7 million sq m complex, which is being touted by Middle Eastern racing officials as a defining moment in the sport’s global history.

Meydan is a glimpse of the future where unparalleled levels of luxury, customer comfort and racing technology combine to provide the ultimate horse racing experience.

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[Read the full article at http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/racing/b-luxury-but-you-cant-bet/story-e6frey6r-1225824101989]

The remarkable migratory patterns of the Arctic Tern

By Ben Coxworth at Gizmag

It’s official: the Arctic tern has the longest migration of any animal in the world. The Arctic Tern Migration Project recently discovered that the tern flies over 70,000 kilometers (43,496 miles) annually, from its breeding grounds in the Arctic to its winter quarters in the Antarctic. That distance is more than twice what was previously estimated. Over the lifetime of one bird, it travels approximately 2.4 million kilometers, the equivalent of three trips to the moon and back. For a bird that weighs just over 100 grams (3.5 ounces), that’s fairly impressive.

Mapping the route

The data was obtained by placing miniature archival light loggers (Also known as geolocators) on a number of breeding Arctic terns in 2007 – 50 birds in Greenland, and 20 in Iceland. Light logging has been around for over a decade, but until recently the loggers were too heavy to be used on smaller birds. Now, thanks to cutting-edge technology, the loggers are small and light enough to be attached to the terns. The loggers work by recording and storing ambient light intensity, which in turn reveals information on sunrise and sunset. When this data is combined with time recordings, two geographical positions per day can be calculated, which adds up to a record of the entire migration route.

The data retrieval process

While light loggers are much lighter and cheaper than conventional satellite transmitters, they don’t transmit their data, so the only way it can be retrieved is by recapturing each bird and removing the device. Fortunately for this study, terns will often nest at the same location two years in a row. As it turned out in 2008, the researchers were able to retrieve ten loggers in Greenland, and one in Iceland. Some of the tagged birds couldn’t be recaptured, and others presumably shifted colonies or simply skipped that breeding season altogether.

Some interesting surprises

The southern autumn migration was found to be longer in both time and distance, due to the birds’ stopping for approximately 25 days at an open-ocean “hot-spot” near the North Atlantic Ridge. The site is in an area where cold, highly-productive northern water meets warmer, less-productive southern water. From there, most of the birds followed the coast of West Africa, although some chose to go along the coast of South America. When they headed back north in the spring, they were found to take a much faster route, spending as little time as possible in the tropic and temperate zones. This makes sense, as warmer waters are less productive, and would therefor provide the terns with less food. They were also found to follow the prevailing wind systems, instead of taking a more direct but more strenuous route north.

All in all, pretty fascinating stuff. “This study on seabird migration has given us an incredibly detailed insight into how long-distance migrants behave at times of the year when it’s normally impossible for us to follow them” said Carsten Egavang, of the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources.

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[See graphics and photos at http://www.gizmag.com/arctic-tern-migration-project/13956/]

iPad v. Kindle

How does theiPad compare with the current reigning ebook king, the Kindle?

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[http://www.crunchgear.com/2010/01/27/the-ipad-vs-the-kindle-spec-for-spec/]

Valentino Rossi becomes the world’s hottest property on 2 and 4 wheels

Valentino Rossi (center)

It is interesting to note that the three biggest stories in Formula One right now concern a driver who competed in 2010 but not in 2009 (the Michael Schumacher comeback), a driver who competed in 2009 but not 2010 (Raikkonen loses his drive and goes WRC) and a driver who has never competed in F1 and quite possibly never will – Valentino Rossi. Indeed, Rossi has only ever driven an F1 car six times, but his status as one of motorcycling’s all-time greats and one of the most popular and media-savvy sportspeople of all time make the possibility an incredibly enticing prospect. For Ferrari, Rossi brings a global army of fans and the possibility of a rare Italian driver-car title combination that hasn’t happened since Alberto Ascari in 1953, despite 15 drivers titles and 16 constructors titles for the marque since then. This week Rossi tested in a Ferrari F1 car again, and was so fast that the possibility might now be approaching a probability.

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[Read the full article at http://www.gizmag.com/valentino-rossi-becomes-the-worlds-hottest-property-on-2-and-4-wheels/13959/]

Apple unveils iPad, bets on new device class

Apple Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs holds the new " iPad". Credit: REUTERS/Kimberly White

From Reuters

Apple Inc CEO Steve Jobs took the wraps off the highly anticipated “iPad” tablet and pitched it at a surprisingly low price, aiming to bridge the gap between smartphones and laptops.

Jobs, who returned to the helm last year after a much-scrutinized liver transplant, took the stage at a packed theater on Wednesday and showed off a sleek, half-inch thick tablet computer with a 9.7-inch touchscreen.

The iPad can run movies, games and a gamut of applications. And taking on e-readers like Amazon’s Kindle, Apple announced a digital bookstore called iBooks that will let users buy from publishers including Pearson Plc’s Penguin, News Corp’s HarperCollins, and Hachette Book Group.

“What once occupied half your living room can now be dropped in a bag,” said Outsell Inc analyst Ned May. “It’s pulling together a variety of needs (in) a universal entertainment device.”

The iPad will sell from late March for as low as $499 for 16 gigabytes of storage. An extra $130 is needed to equip it with third-generation wireless capability.

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[Read the full article at http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE60Q0BY20100127?type=technologyNews?feedType=nl&feedName=ustechnology]

Paying Zero for Public Services

By Fumiko Nagano

Imagine that you are an old lady from a poor household in a town in the outskirts of Chennai city, India. All you have wanted desperately for the last year and a half is to get a title in your name for the land you own, called patta. You need this land title to serve as a collateral for a bank loan you have been hoping to borrow to finance your granddaughter’s college education. But there has been a problem: the Revenue Department official responsible for giving out the patta has been asking you to pay a little fee for this service. That’s right, a bribe. But you are poor (you are officially assessed to be below the poverty line) and you do not have the money he wants. And the most absurd part about the scenario you find yourself in is that this is a public service that should be rendered to you free of charge in the first place. What would you do? You might conclude, as you have done for the last 1-1/2 years, that there isn’t much you can do…but wait, you just heard about a local NGO by the name of 5th Pillar and it just happened to give you a powerful ally: a zero rupee note.

In Doha last month, CommGAP learned about the work of 5th Pillar, which has a unique initiative to mobilize citizens to fight corruption. In India, petty corruption is pervasive – people often face situations where they are asked to pay bribes for public services that should be provided free. 5th Pillar distributes zero rupee notes in the hopes that ordinary Indians can use these notes as a means to protest demands for bribes by public officials. I recently spoke with Vijay Anand, 5th Pillar’s president, to learn more about this fascinating initiative.

According to Anand, the idea was first conceived by an Indian physics professor at the University of Maryland, who, in his travels around India, realized how widespread bribery was and wanted to do something about it. He came up with the idea of printing zero-denomination notes and handing them out to officials whenever he was asked for kickbacks as a way to show his resistance. Anand took this idea further: to print them en masse, widely publicize them, and give them out to the Indian people. He thought these notes would be a way to get people to show their disapproval of public service delivery dependent on bribes. The notes did just that. The first batch of 25,000 notes were met with such demand that 5th Pillar has ended up distributing one million zero-rupee notes to date since it began this initiative. Along the way, the organization has collected many stories from people using them to successfully resist engaging in bribery.

One such story was our earlier case about the old lady and her troubles with the Revenue Department official over a land title. Fed up with requests for bribes and equipped with a zero rupee note, the old lady handed the note to the official. He was stunned. Remarkably, the official stood up from his seat, offered her a chair, offered her tea and gave her the title she had been seeking for the last year and a half to obtain without success. Had the zero rupee note reached the old lady sooner, her granddaughter could have started college on schedule and avoided the consequence of delaying her education for two years. In another experience, a corrupt official in a district in Tamil Nadu was so frightened on seeing the zero rupee note that he returned all the bribe money he had collected for establishing a new electricity connection back to the no longer compliant citizen.

Anand explained that a number of factors contribute to the success of the zero rupee notes in fighting corruption in India. First, bribery is a crime in India punishable with jail time. Corrupt officials seldom encounter resistance by ordinary people that they become scared when people have the courage to show their zero rupee notes, effectively making a strong statement condemning bribery. In addition, officials want to keep their jobs and are fearful about setting off disciplinary proceedings, not to mention risking going to jail. More importantly, Anand believes that the success of the notes lies in the willingness of the people to use them. People are willing to stand up against the practice that has become so commonplace because they are no longer afraid: first, they have nothing to lose, and secondly, they know that this initiative is being backed up by an organization—that is, they are not alone in this fight.

This last point—people knowing that they are not alone in the fight—seems to be the biggest hurdle when it comes to transforming norms vis-à-vis corruption. For people to speak up against corruption that has become institutionalized within society, they must know that there are others who are just as fed up and frustrated with the system. Once they realize that they are not alone, they also realize that this battle is not unbeatable. Then, a path opens up—a path that can pave the way for relatively simple ideas like the zero rupee notes to turn into a powerful social statement against petty corruption.

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[http://blogs.worldbank.org/publicsphere/paying-zero-public-services and http://india.5thpillar.org/ZRN]