Archive for April 29th, 2008

A helpful search for my favorite hard-to-find brew.

(Credit: BeerMenus)

BeerMenus.com, I’ve been dreaming about you at night. And now you’ve jumped into my world. We’re a match made in heaven.

Here’s how it works. Much like a boozier version of Menupages, BeerMenus aggregates bars’ …

Source [The social]

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S&P poised to break out with help from Fed Focus: China, PTR, SNP, LFC, GLD, HES, VMI, TTES, LUFK, XIDE By Michael Ashbaugh, MarketWatch Last Update: 11:48 AM ET Apr 29, 2008 Editor’s Note: This is a free edition of The Technical Indicator, a daily MarketWatch subscriber newsletter. To get this column, including at least eight technical stock picks, every day, […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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SAN FRANCISCO–”It turns out that the Internet has worked pretty well,” industry mainstay Marc Andreessen told an audience at the Web 2.0 Expo here Thursday morning.

Andreessen’s keynote interview with Federated Media chief John Battelle was somewhat of a history lesson into the distant past of the …

Source [The social]

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Annie Leonard, the Story of Stuff

If you’re like most Americans, you’ve a lot of stuff. Jeans, MP3 players, kitchen gadgets, DVDs, shoes, TVs, kids’ toys, T-shirts, cell phones, sports equipment … you know, stuff.

We purchase it all the time, in stores and online. We’re the shopping-ist country on the planet. And our government wants us to shop more to boost the economy — that’s why some of us are getting rebate checks in Might. Stores can’t wait to help us spend that money too.

While we see the shiny, new gadgets in our hands and the growing clutter in our homes, what we don’t see is the series of events that created that stuff and brought it to us. Sustainability expert Annie Leonard has traveled to over 30 countries and looked at factories and dumps. She’s investigated the waste we export back to the Third World.

All this experience lead her to create the short film The Story of Stuff, which she launched on the web in December 2007.

With clever animations and straightforward speak, Leonard makes big economic concepts approachable. She explains how the things we buy in the store are made from often-toxic chemicals and how factories use up natural resources and harm local communities. Leonard even points out that America’s consumer culture is a relatively new phenomenon, created by post-World-War-II economists.

When I interviewed Leonard recently, she admitted that the motion picture happened because, “I realized I was too deep into this that I couldn’t talk about it like normal people speak about it.” Fellow activists challenged her to explain these issues so that they could comprehend her and maybe even so the rest of the world could too.

But Leonard states, “I wasn’t making it to convert anyone, and I wasn’t making it for the general public who was completely new to these ideas. I was making it for my peers who were familiar with these ideas but who didn’t see the connections and the systemic nature of the problems.”

Still, in four months on the Web, the motion picture topped 2.5 million views, and in March, it won the SXSW Interactive Award as an educational resource.

She’s been surprised by the interest the film’s received. Leonard put it on the web, “because we wanted to make it free. We’re not doing it to make money. And we never expected that many people to watch it!”

In response to the buzz, she’s also made DVDs available to those without high-speed net access. “We’ve distributed 6,000 DVDs to Third World countries, to India, China, Russia, Taiwan, and places are using them in their outreach programs,” Leonard notes. “Public schools in the U.S., Native American reservations, churches have all asked for DVDs. We give discounts to anyone who asks.” Sponsors like Ben & Jerry’s have helped her small team support these efforts.

While the film doesn’t prescribe specific actions to solve the problems it exposes, Leonard does advocate that we tackle an area we feel strongly about.

“One of the things I think is so important is rebuilding our sense of communities and a sense of engagement,” Leonard says. “I think our greatest sense of joy in our lives is from coming together around a shared interest, whether it’s a book club or getting a bike lane in your town.”

To encourage this kind of involvement, each section of the motion picture has a tab at the top of the website with a “Learn More” link. For example, click on “Consumption” if you want a sampling of groups dedicated to helping consumers be more sustainable. Or check the full list of recommended resources.

Deeper involvement is key. She’s a little critical of a ‘10 simple steps‘ approach to changing the world. “It’s better to change the structure and system so that the default is the right thing,” Leonard recommends.

“I think the individual actions are totally important, but we shouldn’t confuse that with political actions,” she continues. “We should always choose the least toxic, most socially responsible option possible. But not because that’ll bring about change — it simply brings our day-to-day actions into congruence with our real values.”

The ‘grumpies’ who comment on the movie often say that “they get the problem, they get the personal cost, the cost to happiness, but they don’t know how to unplug from the system,” Leonard explains.

“People express concern that if we reduce our consumption how will it affect our economy?” she adds. “This is a valid concern. If we seriously transform our society, it’ll involve a lot of hard work. We need to be intentional, strategic, and figure it out. Let’s start planning ahead instead of kicking and screaming until the last second.”

In this case, knowledge really is power. “The more we can see the connections between these issues,” she states, “we can be more transformative, instead of tinkering at the margins.”

‘The Story of Stuff’ is making those connections happen. Leonard has received more than 20,000 emails from people all over the world — and the vast majority have been very positive. She may not have set out to change minds, but she’s. One comment was from “an SUV-driving, die-hard Republican who emailed and had just never considered any of this.”

Schools from elementary level through college are using the motion picture. A fourth-grader in the Midwest saw the film and emailed saying it was “awesome” with lots of smileys. An Oxford professor used it his class.

Watch the motion picture, and you may not look at your own stuff the same way again.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Searching forums for specific posts can seriously suck. Most have proprietary search tools that can be unfamiliar or downright difficult to use. Some even require you to fill out a captcha to avoid getting attacked by bots or having its forums infested with spam. Twing is a new service that’s attempting to solve these problems with a search tool that scours hundreds of user forums and lets you search by individual posts or topic thread all in one place.

I found it to do a pretty good job giving me some basic results with simple queries. You can also filter down your results with a myriad of tweaks, right down to what type of forum content you’re looking for, be it audio, video, or images. These filters and special terms can be stacked on top of one another, letting you hone your search a little or a lot depending on how much effort you put in. I found I was able to get a general list of posts that had something to do with what I was searching for with a fairly minimal amount of effort–which is a good thing.

In addition to a search there’s an entire directory of forums listed alphabetically or by interest. This is actually one of the coolest facets of the site, as it will tell you how many posts and users a forum has, along with its growth (presumably within the past 30 days). It’s a great way to see what’s hot, regardless of what forum platform it’s on.

What wasn’t working when I tried out Twing earlier today was a neat little info button that expands below each search result. I’m assuming it gives you a swift overview about the forum the post is in, but it was coming up blank. Presumably when it’s working you can see whether the forum you’re about the view the post on is populated with a large audience and a lot of topics, or just small with good SEO.

Competing forum search tools include: Boardreader, Omgili, and BoardTracker.

Related: Meetro team launches Lefora, free hosted forums

Twing forum search.

Search forums for exactly the post you're looking for with Twing. (click to enlarge)

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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So many massive names, so tiny excitement.

(Credit: Andrew Mager)

SAN FRANCISCO–Inside Facebook blogger Justin Smith had quite an opportunity on his hands. He was moderating a panel called “Comparing Social Platforms,” featuring five representatives of some of the biggest players on the social Web: Dave Morin of Facebook, …

Source [The social]

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