HP introduces the smartest packaging EVER

You’re not going to hear this from my figurative lips very often, but HP and WalMart have done something that may change the packaging world. How? By not using packaging at all.

These new laptops from HP ship in a messenger bag. When you buy it, you get the laptop pre-packed into the bag with no plastic, no cardboard. Pretty good idea, if you actually use the bag. If you’re not a messenger bag type of person, then wasting an entire laptop bag is probably worse than recycling a cardboard box, but you can always give it away.


New spot for T. Boone


I know, I know… “Another Pickens Plan video, Jimmy?  Really?”

Yes.  Really.  There are a lot of people who say we can cut dependence on oil.  There’s Pickens, Gore, Obama, and even McCain.  They all have plans.

Pickens is the only one putting out regular updates, continuously updating the research, and putting out pithy television ads.  He also understands the power of the internet, and the power of viral marketing.  I, with all of the above, believe that our homes and vehicles can be more efficient and use alternate energies.  Here’s the latest spot from Pickens, and Gore, McCain, and Obama should jump on this whole internet video thing.  It just may take off someday….

If video doesn’t load: video link


ecoWeb Friday: Energized Elections

There’s a lot I like to talk about on this site.  Admittedly, most is not even carpentry-related.  I’m OK with that, if you are.  This week on ecoWeb Friday, I’m going to do something a little different.  I’m just dropping a couple links, and letting you decide.

Why?  Well, I don't want to get politics involved here at the Lounge, because people get mean and I get all worked into a tizzy.  Leaving politics out of it, I want you to check out both candidates energy proposals.  Notice I call them proposals…  the candidates call them "policies", but it ain't a policy until someone is president.  They both need to hold their respective horses.

Check out McCain and Obama energy policies here.


Environmiddlism

Environmiddlism (in-ˈvī-rə(n)-mi-dəl-i-zəm) noun, 2008

A half-assed approach to the advocacy of the preservation, restoration, or improvement of the natural environment. Used especially in relation to climate and pollution.

It’s not a word.  I checked.

I think it should be.

Hey, not everyone is going to Live Like Ed, but we all can do our part.  I am a proud environmiddlist.  The one part of the “green” movement that I really don’t like is that it’s too preachy.  It’s counterproductive sometimes.  People have lives to live and things to do.  We need to change the ways energy is produced, and the ways we consume it, but we don’t have to take 45 second cold “navy showers” or cook in a solar oven to achieve this goal.  We all need to change, but take baby steps, people.  Baby steps.

I recycle, I bike to work, I use CFLs in my house, and I turn them off when I’m not using them.  I take my own bags to the grocery store, and I take all my batteries to Best Buy for recycling instead of tossing them in the trash.  I use a Brita pitcher instead of bottled water, and I donate old clothes so they can be reused instead of filling up a dump somewhere.

I also have 2 computers (Macs, of course…), 4 LCD TVs, a PS2, a PS3, a Wii, a couple of DVD players, a wireless router, several external hard drives, and an Apple TV that run pretty much all the time.  I like long, hot showers once in a while.  I buy DVDs in plastic cases (usually on that trip to Best Buy to recycle batteries),  I still read paper magazines and newspapers sometimes.

Nobody’s perfect.  Many people (including myself) are environmiddlists.  We try to do good for the planet and the climate, but we like our modern conveniences.  I’m planning on rewiring my entertainment center to have a green switch, that will save some power.  I’ve set up a schedule in my calendar to vacuum the coils on my refrigerator, to make it more efficient.  It’s the little things, you know?

There’s nothing wrong with being an environmiddlist.  If we each do a little, we can all do a lot.

Environmiddlism.  Spread the word.


ecoWeb Friday

Every Thursday, give or take, I put up a new website that I think is fun, informative, or otherwise useful. It has to have something to do with ecology, but that’s my only rule. Sometimes it’s conservation, sometimes green building, sometimes eco-clothing. It’s a wide open world. This weeks pick:

Roof RayRoof Ray, What’s Your Solar Potential is a super easy and quick way to do one simple thing: Calculate how much energy you can produce (and money you can save) by puting solar panels on your roof.

Here’s how it works…

  • Type your address (or potential address) into the form.
  • A Google Map satellite image of your house will pop up. Most of the country is covered in pretty good (sometimes scary) detail.
  • Draw a solar array on your roof, by simply clicking the 4 corners of the roof in your satellite image.
  • Drag the red line to match your roof pitch (which way the roof slopes).
  • Click Performance.

What do you get next? You’ll get a graph of how much electricity your solar array can generate, month by month. It uses all sorts of voodoo math, taking into account seasons, compass direction, rotation of the earth, and historical weather patterns. I typed in my address here at Lounge Central in Brooklyn, and if my building put up solar panels, we could generate an average of 2,600 kWh a month. That’s enough to run over 50 refrigerators!

But wait, there’s more. Click Financial Analysis, and you’ll get all sorts of numbers. These include ROI (Return on Investment) numbers, the break-even point (when your savings have paid for the install), tax credits, state rebates, and a generic cost of the solar panels.

To a lot of people, solar seems so expensive to install and get running. It is very expensive. With tools like this available to everyone, we can start to research on our own, and make more intelligent decisions. If your break-even point is 4 or 5 years from now, it may be worth it. If you’re a business, maybe a giant solar array on the roof of the warehouse has a break-even point of 20 years. Every situation is different, so just do the math, or let Roof Ray do it for you.

Check it out. Draw your solar array, and let me know how much energy and money you can save.


We Can Solve It

we can solve it

This is the latest ad for the We Can Solve It campaign.  The "RePower America" campaign is out to inform and educate the people about climate change and what we can do about it.  I'm not going to take a bunch of time here to re-blog everything about WeCanSolveIt, but I encourage everyone to go to the website and look around, sign the petition, and help us get on the way to energy independence. Check the video and a mini-rant after the break.


Confused About Recycling Plastic?

Recycling is easy, right? Sometimes, not so much. Different municipalities take different plastics. Most take some, some take most, and on and on. Here’s a quickie guide to get you started. Contact your city or town to find out which numbers are accepted into the recycling pool. You can also just go to Earth911 to get inormation. Just type in what and where, and Earth 911 will give you info.

In New York City, they accept only #1 and #2 plastics. You can find independent recyclers to take care of the rest, if you are so inclined.


Websites I Love

There are two websites that I use pretty regularly here in the Big Apple. I walk a LOT, and I’ve recently begun biking again, a lot. Google Maps is great for driving directions, but with all the one way streets and time-of-day restrictions here in the city, sometimes you end up walking several blocks out of the way to hit streets going in the right direction.

Of course, when you're walking, or sometimes biking, you don't need to travel in the primary direction of traffic. Ride The City is a Google Maps mash up that allows you to get biking directions. It will emphasize bike routes, streets with dedicated bike lanes, wider streets, and multi-lane side streets. It will avoid tunnels, highways, and no-bikes-allowed bridges and streets. It allows you to pick "Safest Route", "Safe Route", and "Most Direct Route", so you can pick your priorities. I usually do the "Most Direct Route", but if I'm traveling at night or in foul weather, I'll do a safe route.

The other website I've been having fun with is WalkScore. Just type in your address, (or possibly more importantly, where you're thinking of moving) and it will score your location on walkability. It takes into account nearby grocery stores, restaurants, coffee shops, bars, movie theaters, schools, parks, drugstores, libraries, bookstores, hardware stores, and clothing stores that are within walking distance, and scores the location accordingly.

Here at Lounge HQ in Brooklyn, I get a walk score of 100. My parents house in Suburban Washington DC gets a 5. Yep, a 5. You can use this score to determine if this is a good place to live. Scores range from "Car Dependant" (my parents) to "Walkers Paradise" (me). If you want to avoid owning a car, or at least avoid driving one as much as possible, check out WalkScore before you move. It could save a car.

Both of these websites are a mash-up of a good idea and Google Maps. Google has a ton of websites out there that let users download an API (Application Programming Interface) and use Google's data to present information in different ways. For more information on mash ups and APIs and what-not, check out Programmable Web


Plastic or Paper? L.A. says Neither.

The debate between plastic or paper bags is still fundamentally undecided.

Plastic is better because it uses less energy, resources, and no trees to produce them. They can also be reused as trash bags, doggie pick-up bags, or lunch sacs. But, they are generally not recyclable and require vast amounts of petroleum products (read: oil) to produce.

Paper bags, on the other hand, also require tons of resources, including dozens of trees and thousands of gallons fresh water to create a batch of bags. The good news is these bags are recyclable and compostable.

While we may not know for sure which is least bad (I won't say "better" because "better" would be a reusable canvas shopping bag), Los Angeles is bypassing the argument all together and banning plastic bags.

According to the L.A. Times, the Los Angeles City Council has passed a measure that will ban plastic shopping bags from groceries and delis by 2010, with a caveat.

The law will only pass if the state doesn't pass a separate law forcing vendors to charge 25 cents per bag. The 25 cents per bag law is not looking like it's going to pass, so the council put in this stop-gap.

The new law is intended not to gather a 25 cent tax on wasteful plastic bags, but to reduce them. With stores like Trader Joe's and Ikea offering reusable shopping bags for under a buck, there's no reason to pay a quarter for a disposable one. Go reusable, and keep a few in your trunk, if you drive, or in your front closet if you're a mass-transit person like me.

Reuse a bag. It can save a tree, or a barrel of oil. If we each do a little, we can all do a lot.


How not to use a wind generator

So, with all the hype about T. Boone Pickens' wind and natural gas energy plan, it’s only natural some people are going to find new and creative ways to harness the potential of the 250 ft. tall wind generators going up all over the wind corridor in the midwest.

Some are good, and some are just plain fun. Don’t try this at home.


Texas Oil Man Winds Up Wind

Texas Oil Man T. Boone Pickens has a plan. It is aptly named PickensPlan (catchy, huh?) The plan is a way to reduce our dependency on foreign oil by harnessing wind. Here’s the Cliff’s Notes

  • The U.S. has the most pronounced wind corridor in the world, providing endless, free, natural fuel to power wind turbines.
  • The wind turbines will produce over 20% of the nation's electrical power.
  • Currently, natural gas provides over 20% of the nation's electrical power.
  • Take the natural gas that's being saved by wind, and put it into transportation.
  • Oil needs for transportation will go down 38% by transferring the natural gas from power to transportation.
  • Our foreign oil costs will drop over $300 billion annually. Within 10 years.
  • The technology is there. Wind turbines exist. Natural Gas vehicles exist. no more inventing is needed, just production
              <p>
                <p style="text-align: center;">
                  This is no "Inconvenient Truth" in terms of production value, but it is interesting. Check out the video:<br />

Hey Mr. Green

A compilation of Bob’s column. Basically a “Dear Abby” for environmentalism.

When is the right time to replace an old refrigerator? Is it okay to knit a sweater with acrylic yarn? Is it more environmentally correct to buy beer in bottles or cans? For the last several years, Bob Schildgen’s popular “Hey Mr. Green” column has tackled real-world questions from real people. Readers trust his answers, which are backed by Sierra Club’s research, but they also enjoy his realism and irreverent humor. This book distills the best of the column into one enormously useful and entertaining resource. It’s organized by subject — household issues, food and drink, transportation, reuse and recycling, and “big picture” environmental questions — making it easy to find answers to common questions. Whether puzzling over the intricacies of product life cycles or taking a reader to task for blasting his air conditioner, Hey Mr. Green is an indispensable, opinionated, and authoritative guide to minding one’s environmental footprint.


Living Like Ed

A committed environmentalist for more than thirty years, Ed Begley, Jr., has always tried to “live simply so others may simply live.” Now, as more and more of us are looking for ways to reduce our impact on the planet and live a better, greener life, Ed shares his experiences on what works, what doesn’t–and what will save you money!

These are tips for environmentally friendly living that anyone–whether you own or rent, live in a private home or a condo–can try to make a positive change for the environment. From quick fixes to bigger commitments and long-term strategies, Ed will help you make changes in every part of your life.

And if you think living green has to mean compromising on aesthetics or comfort, fear not; Ed’s wife, Rachelle, insists on style–with a conscience. In Living Like Ed, his environmentalism and her design savvy combine to create a guide to going green that keeps the chic in eco-chic.

From recycling more materials than you ever thought possible to composting without raising a stink to buying an electric car, Living Like Ed is packed with ideas–from obvious to ingenious–that will help you live green, live responsibly, live well. Like Ed.

Buy on Amazon 🛒


Building Green

The best-selling and highly regarded reference to sustainable construction gets an update! It’s refreshed with a completely revised introduction, a bright new cover, and extensive online resource tie-ins.

This groundbreaking book doesn’t just tell you about “green” house-building techniques: it actually shows you, with more than 1,200 step-by-step photographs that follow the actual erection of an alternative building from site selection to final-touch interior details. Readers will get a clear sense of the real world challenges as Snell and Callahan create a lovely country cottage using four methods: straw bale, cob, cordwood, and modified stick-frame.

Along with sidebars throughout, there’s a thorough discussion of the fundamentals of building construction, alternative approaches, and designing a beautiful yet environmentally responsible home. Building Green was the first book of its kind—and it remains heads and shoulders above other titles in this field.

Buy on Amazon 🛒


Green Remodeling

Green Remodeling is a comprehensive guide. It first points out the advantages of remodeling. Buildings are responsible for 40% of worldwide energy flow and material use; so how you remodel can make a difference. Upgrading furnaces, cabinets and toilets means less fossil fuel pollution, reduced resource depletion, and fewer health risks. Green remodeling is more energy-efficient, more resource-conserving, healthier for occupants and more affordable to create, operate and maintain.

The book then discusses simple green renovation solutions for homeowners, focusing on key aspects of the building including foundations, framing, plumbing, windows, heating and finishes. Room by room, it outlines the intricate connections that make the house work as a system. For example, how new windows may affect the structure and mechanical systems of the rooms below, the health of the family, and the future of old-growth forests. Then, in an easy-to-read format complete with checklists, personal stories, expert insights and an extensive resource list, it covers easy ways to save energy, conserve natural resources, and protect the health of loved ones. Addressing all climates, this is a perfect resource for conventional homeowners, as well as architects and remodeling contractors.

Buy on Amazon 🛒


Wake Up And Smell The Planet

We all have our morning routines, whether it’s making coffee, walking the dog, feeding the kids, a shower and a shave, the office commute, or some combination thereof. And at each of these morning moments - in fact, at any given time throughout the day – we’re making choices. What to eat, what to wear, how to dispose of dog poop or diapers, how to travel from point A to point B, where to have a post-work cocktail, and on, and on - this compact and resourceful handbook takes a look at how to simplify and “green” our daily choices, from the moment we get up in the morning, until we finally lay our heads down at night.

Buy on Amazon 🛒


The World Without Us

Fascinating take on what would happen to the world if all the humans disappeared tomorrow.

Buy on Amazon 🛒


SMART Cars Finally Shipping

The Smart company has been promising a new car for a while, and it is finally being delivered. The 40 mpg smart fortwo car is shipping, after a year of waiting.


Freeze! Or I’ll Scoot!

According to a recent article, NYPD is going greener. The 36,000 member police department is switching from motorcycles to scooters.

Because scooters project power and authority.


It's Easy Being Green

Surveys find that over 80 percent of Americans agree with the goals of the environmental movement. Sadly, most Americans admit to doing little more than basic recycling when it comes to acting on that disposition. What is the reason for this great divide between environmental sentiment in this country and individual actions? Author and environmental consultant Crissy Trask seeks to answer this question-and solve the disparity-with a new book that makes it easy to be an environmentalist, no matter how busy or hectic your lifestyle. This is a day to day guide with simple, practical suggestions that anyone can put into action.

Buy on Amazon 🛒