Technology – Oct 2
Is Windows an energy hog?
A commodity no more: indium tin oxide for LCDs
The Economist on biomimicry
Is Windows an energy hog?
A commodity no more: indium tin oxide for LCDs
The Economist on biomimicry
We paved paradise (parking lots)
Good and bad news on US fuel-economy trends
Hauliers threaten blockades as Brown’s 3 tax rises bring petrol to £1 a litre
New era of tribal living has arrived
In heart of Texas, drumbeat for green (Austin)
To go green, live closer to work, report says
San Francisco takes action on climate change
Birth of EcoDensity backlash in Vancouver
Private industry conference finds much less oil
The end of Las Vegas: why alternative energy sources won’t save us
Kunstler:
America’s new religion
A busy NYC street makes room for bikes
Dutch government takes a stand- against cars, for bikes
Fifteen years of Critical Mass
Folds-mobile
Taking transit: the most effective route to cutting carbon
American commutes get longer
Investment in cycling could save £520m
‘Ban cars in London’ to cut CO2
China to hold first-ever ‘no car day’
China steel mills may face freight premium
Zimbabwe: Minister says walk to save fuel
Post Carbon Cities- planning for energy and climate uncertainty
New York City turning to biodiesel for heat
Green roofs sprouting new adherents
California regulators propose developing energy self-sufficiency by 2020
Zoning the ‘enemy’ of affordable homes
Radical new approach to affordable housing
Parking drives up housing costs
Would you pay to avoid gridlock?
Toll on, Columbia!
Some motorists may be too big for their cars
Bike sharing in Barcelona
Live the good life in a green mansion
Overweight? Blame your ZIP code
Japan: Overcrowded from cradle to grave
Interview with Lisa McCrory and Carl Russell in rural Vermont who teach a variety of skills for sustainable living, including the use of draft animals in raising organic crops.
Purdue researcher Bryan Pijanowski says vast expanses of parking lots help raise urban temperatures and add to water pollution. Parking lots in Tippecanoe County, Indiana, take up more space than 1,000 football fields.
As commutes begin earlier, new daily routines emerge
Fear and loathing at the airport
Gas costs spark high-speed rail Interest