Goog need to fix these problems soon or apps will never take off http://ping.fm/WNRO1
08 January 2010
10 April 2007
POWER on...
I Know I have been away for a while, and have had quite a few reminders, but I have had a traumatic few months with my back, and getting back into University, and something had to give. Sorry. I knew if I posted so I would be hounded so I just quietly slipped away, but I am BACK!!!
From the ABC, I have been watching Will for a couple of years, since his first "one off" race in the Indy on the Gold Coast in 2006? I had noticed him before, and thought he had 2 things he needed to survive in world class open-wheeler racing. 1. is talent... DUH. 2. is sex appeal, good looks, or charisma... Sounds kinky, but true! He was rooky of the year last year, after nearly winning his first (and home) GP. Can he do the Aussie double? Marcos can win the rookie title in the NASCAR Busch cup, and Will the CART? Add in Lewis Hamilton (Unfortunately a.... Englishman) in F1, with a 3rd and 2nd in his first 2 races, absolutely unheard of in the last 20-30 years, and the "old guard" in motorsport is in trouble. The V8 Supercars to have Rick, and Todd Kelly, Courtney and others giving the "old" fellows a hurry on.... I am really looking forward to this year for the first time in a long time...
Next week I will get into Nuclear Power and water conservation, so Don't go away!
Congatulations Mate, as a fellow Toowoomba boy, Go Get EM!!!!!
Last Update: Tuesday, April 10, 2007. 2:08pm (AEST)
Power remains composed following Champ Car win
Australian driver Will Power says he is not getting carried away with yesterday's win in the first round of the Champ Car World Series.
The Team Australia driver from Toowoomba, in south-eastern Queensland, started in pole position and dominated the Las Vegas Grand Prix in the United States.
Power says the team has been building steadily towards a victory.
"It felt really good winning but, you know, we've been pretty quick in the off-season in testing and as you know we finished on a high last season, getting a pole in Surfers and getting a podium in Mexico," he said.
"So, you know, the team has stepped it up another notch and got pole position and won the race."
06 February 2007
Big companies shamed for over-packaging
Monday Feb 5 21:15 AEDT
A Victorian green group has dumped on retail giants Coles, Woolworths and a host of manufacturers, alleging they damage the environment by using too much packaging.
Environment Victoria's annual DUMP awards, now in their third year, name and shame the companies the green group says harm the environment with unnecessary and damaging product packaging.
The awards are judged by an independent panel of experts from academia, local government and the community sector, DUMP awards report author Jenny Henty said.
Woolworths/Safeway and Coles jointly won the people's choice award for "needlessly packing fruit and vegetables, particularly organic products, on polystyrene trays and covering them with cling wrap".
Toymaker Fisher Price's Interactv toy won the award for excessive use of material for its "copious" packaging that included a separate recorded advertisement, powered by three batteries, that the company advises should be discarded despite the fact the toy also requires three batteries.
Beverage companies who packaged drinks in plastic or glass bottles that were then covered with non-recyclable printed plastic sleeves won the award for poor recycling design.
The misleading labelling award went to snack manufacturer Smith's for its Stax chips packaging, which Ms Henty said displayed three different and "confusing" disposal messages.
The Seakist Lunch Kit packaging was named "most likely to be littered" because its packaging contained seven small parts that were likely to be thrown away carelessly or dumped in the bin because no recycling instructions were provided.
The "going backwards" award went to Nescafe for its Short Black coffee jar, which would be rejected for recycling because of its smoky colour and its non-recyclable lid and tamper-proof seals.
Ms Henty, Environment Victoria's zero waste campaign director, said the award winners were "the tip of the iceberg" of companies ignoring the food industry's own environmental guidelines.
"Manufacturers would be hard-pressed to come up with worse products for reuse, easy recycling or waste minimisation if they tried," Ms Henty said.
"Australian consumers are trying to do the right thing at the supermarket, such as reusing green bags and embracing recycling, but are not being helped by excessive packaging, poor design and misleading recycling instructions."
Internationally, retail giants including Walmart, Marks and Spencer and Tesco were responding to criticism with action to significantly reduce waste but Australian supermarkets lagged behind badly.
Nature's voice Attenborough to retire
Monday Feb 5 20:36 AEDT
Sir David Attenborough, the voice of the television nature documentary, has announced he is retiring. A sequel to the highly successful BBC series Planet Earth is being planned, but Sir David has indicated he will not narrate the new show, called Life.
"If I go to a network controller and say that I want to make a three-year series, then they'll rightly be concerned about their investment," Sir David, who will be 83 when Life is screened in 2009, told Britain's Times newspaper. "They'd say, 'It's lovely to hear from you, but are you sure you'll be standing by the end?'"
Sir David joined the BBC as a Cambridge natural sciences graduate in 1952.
He intends to retire after completing his latest series, called Life in Cold Blood, about reptiles and amphibians, which he said would complete my survey of all the major animal groups.
Possible successors include Bill Oddie, the co-creator of the 1970s and 80s comedy series, The Goodies, who has become an accomplished television presenter with his own documentaries focusing on birds. Sir David said he had also been impressed by the work of zoologist Charlotte Uhlenbroek. Alastair Fothergill, Sir David's collaborator in the BBC's Natural History Unit, is the insiders' tip, according to The Times. Fothergill caused a stir in Australia when he branded the late Steve Irwin a showman more interested in stardom than the animal kingdom.
His comments came shortly after Irwin was killed when a stingray barb pierced his chest while filming a program last September.
Water trade would prevent restrictions: scientists
Water trade would prevent restrictions: scientists
Three of Australia's leading water scientists want a water trading system to be introduced for metropolitan users.
They say it should be similar to one used by river irrigators.
Scientists from the CSIRO, Land and Water Australia and the University of Adelaide have put their name to the proposal.
They say their plan would prevent the need for water restrictions by allowing those who reduce their water use to sell water to big users.
The University of Adelaide's Professor Mike Young says the cost of water would increase by up to 700 per cent under the proposal but some people could make a profit from their water savings.
"People are telling us that it's very hard to cope with urban water restrictions and there's an alternative way of doing it, which is to have a system where we give all Australians a choice as to how much water we use and if they can afford it can trade to solve their problem and escape water restrictions," he said.
02 February 2007
Climate report fails to highlight extent of global warming, Flannery says
ABC-Online -Climate report fails to highlight extent of global warming, Flannery says
The Australian of the Year, scientist Tim Flannery, says a new report on climate change grossly underestimates the speed at which global warming is effecting the planet.
The report from the United Nations Climate Panel will officially be released in Paris tonight and is expected to find that it is very likely humans are responsible for climate change.
But Professor Tim Flannery says the report's findings are conservative and the real impact of global warming will be felt much sooner.
"The actual trajectory we've seen in the arctic over the last two years if you follow that, that implies that the arctic ice cap will be gone in the next five to 15 years," he said.
"This is an ice cap that's been around for 3 million years."
It is expected to forecast catastrophic consequences from the increase in global temperatures this century.
Professor Flannery says the consequences could last for 1,000 years.
"There's a 10 per cent chance of truly catastrophic rises in temperatures, so we're looking there at 6 degrees (Celsius) or so, that would be a disaster for all life on earth," he said.
"We will lose somewhere between two out of every 10 and six out of every 10 species living on the planet, at that level of warming."
Posted by RacefanPat at 3:10 pm
Labels: climate change, global warming, Ozone layer, Polotics, Rainfall, Sea Levels, water
31 January 2007
Break in eastern drought expected within months
Can It Be True?
The ABC ran this story today on their on-line service. If true it will save a lot of political consternation in the comming years/months and weeks as the South-east corner of Queensland gets to critically low water levels. The only question is, will it be in the right areas to fill those desperatly dry catchments?Climatologists are optimistic about a break in the drought across eastern Australia over the next couple of months.
A National Climate Centre report says the drought-producing El Nino event is weakening.
It says a switch to average or wetter-than-average rainfall patterns is likely in late summer or autumn.
The prediction is backed by computer modelling.
Sea temperatures have been cooling over the equatorial Pacific since early December, pointing to the end of the current El Nino weather pattern.
The climate centre says the recent southerly extension of tropical moisture to produce heavy rain through parts of the Northern Territory, South Australia and Queensland is a further sign that patterns are turning.
Posted by RacefanPat at 8:28 pm
Labels: climate change, global warming, Links, Rainfall, water
30 January 2007
PM considers funding for Qld waste water pipe
I have been watching this story and wondering when the Queensland Government would get around to the paperwork.
In the past few days here in QLD, Australia, we have huge tracts of land in the West and North that have been in drought for up to 10 years (Thanks to global warming and climate change)? that are now under water! Many flooded areas have not even had rain!
Secondly the Federal Government is going to take over management of the whole Murray Darling river basin. This watershed covers about 2/3 of all the Eastern states, and drains from as far north as Central QLD all the way through to South Australia. (Everything west of the Great Dividing Range!!) There are huge envioronmental problems in the South, and wastage of water , but it has been a political minefield due to the involvement of 6 different states and territories.
Thirdly, The Queensland State government had abandoned a referendum about whether re-cycled water should be used in drinking supplies. With the entire SE corner of the state within 12-18 months of running out of water, and opinion Polls (Supposedly) running 75% in favor, they are just going to do it.
So the polititions in our end of the world must be in election mode... I don't care, at least they are MOVING!
The following is from ABC On-Line (Again!!)
The Prime Minister's office says the Queensland Government's request for $408 million to help fund a waste water pipeline will be given "due consideration".The 200-kilometre pipeline will take recycled water from Brisbane to Wivenhoe Dam and power stations.
For months, the State Government has been criticising the Commonwealth for failing to provide any money for the project.
But incoming federal Environment and Water Minister Malcolm Turnbull has blamed Queensland for the delay, saying it has not provided the necessary paperwork.
A spokesman for the Prime Minister has confirmed a 52-page application for funding has now been received and is being examined.
Fluoridation
Meanwhile, Queensland Premier Peter Beattie says fluoridation has not been considered in the State Government's water plans for the south-east of the state.
The Government is building a dam, a desalination plant and pipelines to link-up communities in the south-east to one big water grid.
Residents will be forced to accept recycled drinking supplies if there is no major rain, with treated waste water to start flowing into the region's dams at the end of next year.
But Mr Beattie says there are no plans at this stage to go beyond the incentives the Government offers to councils to voluntarily fluoridate water.
"We've been encouraging councils and at this moment that's our policy," he said.
"There's no change unless all the councils come to us and ask for fluoridation, we'd leave it as it is.
"We're not going to mandate it as part of this recycled drinking water program."
29 January 2007
Mr Beattie says the drought is so bad that there is no choice but to introduce recycled water. [File photo]
Queensland Premier Peter Beattie says other Australian cities will one day follow his state's lead and drink recycled water.
Mr Beattie had promised to give south-east Queenslanders a vote on adding recycled water to drinking supplies as normal practice.
They were heading to the polls in March but Mr Beattie has now scrapped the $10 million plebiscite.
He says the drought is so bad, there is no other choice.
"We're not God, we couldn't make it rain," he said.
New South Wales Premier Morris Iemma and South Australian Premier Mike Rann today ruled out the use of recycled effluent in homes for the immediate future.
But Mr Beattie says he believes other cities will face the same predicament.
"People are going to have to make the same decision in Sydney and Melbourne, whether they like it or not," he said.
Recycled water will not be available in Queensland until late 2008, when a pipeline is built.
State Opposition Leader Bruce Flegg says the race is now on "as to whether we run out of water first or they get the infrastructure built first".
Dr Flegg says it is shaping up as a photo finish
Water restrictions to remain despite recycled supplies
ABC ONLINE - Last Update: Monday, January 29, 2007. 9:04am (AEDT)
The Queensland Government has warned water restrictions in the south-east of the state could be in place for another 10 years, even with the introduction of recycled supplies.
With the plebiscite on recycled drinking water scrapped and if current low rainfall trends continue, the Government will start pumping recycled water into the region's dams late next year.
The Opposition says the plebiscite was a farce and it is pleased it has been abandoned, as are many mayors.
Greg Hoffman from the Local Government Association says polls were showing 75 per cent of residents were planning to vote yes anyway.
"The plebiscite would have been redundant really," he said.
Even when the recycled water comes on line, Infrastructure Minister Anna Bligh warns that does not necessarily mean restrictions can be lifted.
"[There] could possibly be emergency circumstances for some five or six years after we start putting this water into the dam," she said.
Ms Bligh says without decent rain, it could take 10 years before the dams are back up to 40 per cent capacity.
Treatment process 'rigorous'
Meanwhile, Premier Peter Beattie has warned against any "scare-mongering" over recycled water, insisting it is safe to drink.
Mr Beattie says recycled water poses no health risks and is consumed in cities like London and Washington.
Ms Bligh says the treatment process is rigorous.
"The technology that will be used to treat this water is a combination of what's called microfiltration and ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis," she said.
"The water will go through six or seven steps of treatment before it goes into the dam and then, like all the other water in the dam, will go through further treatment before it comes through our taps."
Also, the State Opposition is predicting the race to introduce recycled water before drinking supplies run out will go down to the wire.
Liberal leader Bruce Flegg says it is a precarious situation.
"We have here a race that's coming down the line as a photo finish as to whether we run out of water or get some piece of infrastructure finished on time," he said.
But Ms Bligh says construction is moving as quickly as possible.
Food exports
Farmers have rejected suggestions that using recycled water could harm south-east Queensland's food export industry.
Developer and former Toowoomba mayor Clive Berghofer says Japanese buyers will not import product that has been washed in recycled water.
Mark Panitz, from the peak horticulture group Growcom, has dismissed the argument and says the claims are not helpful.
"Some particular buyers may be sensitive, but that's why food safety systems are in place, so we can guarantee our consumers and our buyers - wherever they are around the world - that our product is really pure and very safe," he said.