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November 30, 2007

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Google aims for renewable energy priced below coal (Reuters)

Filed under: Uncategorized — gates @ 8:43 pm

Furthermore Reuters - Google Inc said on
Tuesday the Web services and online advertising group plans to
spend hundreds of millions of dollars to help drive the cost of
electricity derived from renewable energy below coal prices. Somthing like that eU About Ready To Allow Phone Calls While Flying While the US government has basically decided not to allow mobile phone calls from airplanes due to complaints from people worried about sitting next to people who are too chatty, the EU seems to be taking a more reasonable approach. Recognizing that the technology problems with calling from airplanes have basically been solved, the EU is ready to let airlines decide for themselves how they want to handle the issue. In other words, rather than having the government decree that people shouldn’t suffer sitting next to half a conversation, why not let the market decide? If people are really annoyed by it, then airlines can simply advertise themselves as “mobile-phone free” or set up “mobile-phone free” sections.Did you know that While means the time, effort, or trouble taken in doing something: The project wasn’t worth my while.. This also saved me time energyCo Names John Loyack CEO MSN MoneyCentral - FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - Unregulated energy company EnergyCo, a joint venture of electric utility PNM Resources and Microsoft Corp. founder Bill Gates’ private investment vehicle Cascade Investment LLC, on Monday named John R. Loyack chief executive …Did you know that John means something that has no quantitative value; zero: a score of two to nothing.. There is a old saying korea’s Internet Addiction Bootcamps Mistargeted For years, we’ve pointed out how ridiculous it is for people to be blaming internet addictions for things, when almost every case of “internet addiction” that’s demonstrated that the actual problem was something else, and the internet usage was just a way of “escaping” from those other problems. It didn’t help that many of the big supporters of “internet addiction” happen to be the people (i.e., doctors) who are most likely to profit from such a thing existing. On top of that, reports have shown that so-called “internet addictions” tend not to be particularly harmful, and it makes you wonder what the big deal is. However, more recently, we’re seeing some governments take the “threat” seriously. The NY Times is running an article about a “boot camp” in Korea to help cure kids of internet addiction, incorrectly suggesting it’s the first such camp in the world. Earlier this year, we pointed out that China was opening a summer camp for internet addicts, which followed Chinese attempts to cure internet addiction with electric acupuncture, shock therapy and special halfway houses.

Still, as you read the NY Times piece about the Korean boot camp, you see that the folks running the camp are marking the same assumption: that it’s the internet or computers to blame, and therefore, the solution must be to remove kids from the internet and computers entirely. This is fighting the symptom, not the disease. There’s a reason why people started spending so much time online, and simply taking away access probably won’t change that. The one kid that the article discusses in any detail started spending more time online because he wasn’t very popular in school. Taking away the internet isn’t going to fix that. There’s no doubt that some people can spend way too much time at their computers, and it can potentially damage other parts of their lives — but simply blaming the internet and pulling it away completely seems like a cure that’s not likely to help very much. If the real problems that lead the person to spend so much time online aren’t dealt with, then they will simply manifest themselves in some other manner soon enough. Calling something an internet addiction seems easy enough (and it’s catchy, so it gets headlines), but if people are treating the internet part, rather than the real problems, it’s not doing anyone any good.

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