Tag: environment

  • Links of the week

    Links of the week

    This week, where highlights include playing Android: Netrunner with my friend Tor for four hours straight and carefully positioning a drinking glass between my cat’s bottom and the litter tray in order to catch some pee, I read some news online.

    I don’t even know if I need to explain any more. Everyone has hobbies, right?


    Before everyone started to rely on Mark Zuckerberg, the owner of the Facebook-Instagram-WhatsApp trio, to drip-feed biased news into their online filter bubble, geeks used these things called RSS readers to choose what news they wanted to read themselves.

    Imagine that?! Well, no need to. RSS readers still exist. If you want to subscribe to this blog, you need an RSS reader. Even if you don’t want to subscribe to this blog, you might want to get one anyway. Or not. Do what you want. It’s your life.

    I am using and paying for Feedbin. They recently released some new things.

    A series of three iPhone device mock ups with various screenshots of the Feedbin app shown in each one.

    Feedbin for iOS • Feedbin

    Everyone loves a good app, apparently. Even if the website can do exactly the same. I get it; some apps are good and just feel smoother. Mmm, smooth apps.

    An animation showing the process of marking a news article to "read it later" via a button on the web browser window. On pressing the button, the article then appears in the Feedbin website.

    Save webpages to read later • Feedbin

    Generally, I am saving stuff to Pocket when I want to read it later, but now Feedbin does the same. Huzzah!

    This post is not sponsored by Feedbin. I don’t have any sponsors. I am not popular.


    Before I had my own blog on my own website, I used Tumblr. If you haven’t heard of Tumblr before, it was the LiveJournal of the mid-2010s. If you haven’t heard of LiveJournal, then it was the Geocities of the mid-2010s. Probably.

    Anyway, Tumblr was great because you could have a blog on there and tag it with words, like #cats or #dinosaurs and then literally tens of people could find your post. Sometimes tens of thousands if it was a good post. Sometimes hundreds of thousands.

    I met my French friend Calling Marian through Tumblr and seem to recall a few of the first messages between my now-wife and I were sent through Tumblr. Then Yahoo! bought it and made it worse before selling it to US-mega-corp Verizon who really fucked it all up and I stopped using it.

    The same tumblr logo set against four various background colours.

    Verizon agrees to sell Tumblr to owner of WordPress • axios.com

    Apparently, Verizon are losing money on Tumblr, selling the site at a loss to a good company. WordPress do good work. They make blogs.


    In other news, the UK Advertising Standards Authority introduced some new rules to say “NO!” to gender stereotyping in adverts that broadcast on your TV screens and presumably your YouTube pre-rolls. Good stuff.

    Well, technically they made the rules a long time ago, but they came into action recently and, this week, the ASA threw down that ban-hammer on two companies.

    A picture of an old tv showing static - Photo by Patrick Tomasso on Unsplash

    The Advertising Standards Authority has banned its first ads for “harmful” gender stereotyping • It’s Nice That

    Car brand Volkswagen and soft cheese brand Philadelphia have had their ads banned in their current form for “perpetuating harmful gender stereotypes”.

    One ad implied that men can’t look after children after some lads lost their babies and followed it up by commenting “Let’s not tell mum”. The other advert implied gender-specific job roles by featuring two male astronauts, a group of male athletes, and a woman looking after a baby.

    Call me a snowflake (ha!), but I approve of these new rules.


    Finally, because we live on a planet that we are destroying, here is some relevant environmental news. It’s relevant because we are all going to die when Mother Nature has had enough of our consuming ways and sets off a chain reaction of forest fires, earthquakes, volcanoes… then tsunami come to wipe us out.

    That’s one theory that I just made up. I hope you enjoyed it.

    A ceremony to mark the passing of Okjokull, Iceland’s first glacier lost to climate change. It once covered 16sq km but has melted to a fraction. Photograph: Jeremie Richard

    Iceland holds funeral for first glacier lost to climate change • The Guardian

    Around 100 people walked up a mountain with Iceland’s prime minister to stick a bit of metal on a rock. Funny, but also sad.

    Scientists collect snow samples above the Arctic circle. Photograph: Melanie Bergmann/Alfred-Wegener-Institut/Science Advances

    Microplastics ‘significantly contaminating the air’, scientists warn • The Guardian

    Snow captures particles from the air as it falls and some scientists analysed the snow. It turns out the air is full of bits of plastic.

    I wonder if Leo Baekeland – “The Father of the Plastics Industry” – knew what he was bestowing on the world all those years ago. And I also wonder why governments don’t outlaw plastics as toxic materials the same way asbestos was.


    Anyway…

    If you read this post, leave a comment. Say hello. The only comments I get a spam, and they aren’t as uplifting as comments from real people.

    For more links of the week, see previous Links of the Week posts or stay tuned for future updates. You can also read this blog post about cryptocurrency that I recently wrote.

    Bye.

  • Links of the week

    Links of the week

    It’s been a busy week-and-a-bit. I was mostly in the United States of Donald Trump’s America. Now that I am back, here is a quick round-up of some of the things I have noticed online:

    Norwegian Air to Accept Bitcoin Through Exchange Set up By Founder (CoinDesk) — the Norwegian airline of the same name is due to start taking cryptocurrency payments for tickets in future. FWIW, I also accept cryptocurrency.

    Flamethrower drone can shoot a seven-metre long stream of fire (Deezen) — the robots will take us all. You can get a glimpse into that future with this video of a drone that projects a stream of fire. Only a matter of time before drones are used to carry out murder… outside of the military.

    Elon Musk’s Neuralink implant will “merge” humans with AI (Deezen) — computers, meet brain. Brain, meet computers. Elon Musk gets a lot of credit for things that some other clever people have done whilst working for him. Before the end of 2020, they will drill into a human’s skull in some sci-fi symbiotic fantasy. Your mind could quite literally be blown!

    Pretty bird murals by artist Jade Rivera (Booooooom) — as a little intermission from tech, here are some really nice murals of birdies and people by a talented artist.

    Is the Internet bad for the environment? (Our Changing Climate on YouTube) — Our Changing Climate take a dive into what the environmental impact of the internet is, digging into how the internet works and how that contributes to global greenhouse gas emissions.

    Check out all the Links of the Week posts or just do something else. It’s up to you.

    Also; I started playing Harry Potter: Wizards Unite. You know, the Pokémon Go clone set in the Harry Potter universe? If you are playing, give me a shout-out in the comments or on your messaging app of choice.

  • Links of the Week

    Links of the Week

    I have been really bad at up-keep of this blog. But anyway, here we go;

    414 million pieces of plastic found on remote island group in Indian Ocean (The Guardian) — Debris on Cocos (Keeling) Islands was mostly bottles, cutlery, bags and straws, but also included 977,000 shoes, study says.

    A new mosque in Australia shows Islamic architecture going beautifully brutalist (Frameweb) — located in Punchbowl (a dense, diverse suburb of Sydney), this modern mosque looks superb. Designed by local firm Candalepas Associates.

    Pierre Kwenders performs Amours d’Été (YouTube) — Congolese-Canadian artist Pierre Kwenders serves up a silky smooth performance of ‘Amours d’Été’ on Colors.

    Apple’s new typeface is available for use right now (It’s Nice That) — Whilst it’s been seen in the Books apps since late last year, Apple released the font New York for free. It seems like a rehash of the serif typeface of the same name that designer Susan Kare debuted on the Macintosh back in 1983. Looks nice, though.

    Chernobyl (HBO) — If you have a HBO subscription, or the ability to use torrents, check out the TV series Chernobyl – the dramatised story of the 1986 nuclear accident.

    Previously, previously, previously.

  • Ecosia – the search engine that plants trees

    Ecosia – the search engine that plants trees

    I try to use Google products rarely and this includes when searching the web. Over the years, I have jumped between a few alternatives; DuckDuckGo, Bing, and now Ecosia.

    The real jump away from Google was when DuckDuckGo became a viable alternative that vowed to not track your activities around the web in order to make money. They offered something different, new and… better. It opened my eyes to trying new search engine experiences.

    A group photo of 18 smiling and happy people - employees at the company Ecosia - the front three of whom are holding a framed Ecosia company logo.

    Ecosia, based out of Germany, are relatively new kids on the block. Their unique selling-point is that they promise to use the majority of the money they make to plant trees around the world.

    Each month, in the hope of being open and transparent, Ecosia publish their financial reports so you can see exactly how much money they have made and where they spend it. If the reports are to believed, then they give around 80% of their profits to charitable and non-profit organisations around the world that plant trees.

    The search results are based on Bing, so some data is transferred between Microsoft and Ecosia – but they respect the “Do Not Track” option in your browser, if you can work out how to activate that.

    Using something other than Google isn’t for everyone. People seem to trust Google so much that they have an aversion to the alternatives. From what I have seen so far, Ecosia has a good, honest intention and I encourage you to give them a try.

    https://ecosia.org

    Which search engine you use and why? Let me know in the comments.