
Recycling a very old idea: sails for boats!
Quote:
Half way through the trip, as the ship reached the trade winds near the Azores, the computer-controlled kite was unfurled. SkySails hasn’t finished doing all the calculations yet, but estimates fuel savings of 10–15% during the time the kite was flying, as the ship cruised at top speed using less engine power. That is a saving of about US$1,000 to $1,500 in fuel costs per day.
link: Ship kites in to port
As I dump some of my archived articles onto this blog, I will put a lot of stuff that is old , but still very interesting.
Case in point: an Economist article about the Shan State of Burma operating under Chinese warlords control.

Quote:
Remote and once dirt-poor Mongla has been reborn as a tourist destination, a process that started in 1989, when Myanmar’s army reached a ceasefire and autonomy deal with the Shan. The local warlord, a Shan Chinese named Sai Leun (also known as Lin Mingxian), built Mongla with an unorthodox mixture of opium profits and technical aid from China’s neighbouring province of Yunnan.
Around 350,000 Chinese tourists visit every year to gamble, frequent the massage parlours, and perhaps take in a Thai transvestite show. Lin Mingxian, as he was born, has clearly come a long way from his days as a Red Guard during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s. Mongla’s authorities earned $9.6m from tourism in 2002—and it is entirely possible that they concealed some of their income.
But is it still Myanmar? Apart from the fluttering of Myanmar’s flag by the side of government buildings, there is little to suggest any connection with the rest of the country. Myanmar’s kyat are scorned; only Chinese yuan are acceptable. The street signs, the language, and most government employees are Chinese, though many are ethnic Chinese born in Shan state, as well as Yunnanese immigrants.
Opium poppies used to flourish openly in the hills around Mongla, but in 1997 Sai Leun declared his fief an “opium-free zone”. Chinese advisers were brought in to develop alternative crops, and Sai Leun promoted his new image as an anti-drugs campaigner—he is chairman of the Mongla Action Committee on Narcotics—by opening an opium museum to educate people about the evils of drugs. It strangely neglects to mention that until 2000, the name Lin Mingxian featured prominently on America’s most-wanted list for major heroin traffickers.
link: Chinese Colonization of Shan State, Burma
What’s something that most people don’t know, pro or con, about the pharmaceutical business, whether from an R&D, economic, or political perspective?
Answers from Dr. Stuart Apfel, Zola P. Horovitz, Dr. Harlan Krumholz, Ray Moynihan, and Dr. Cyril Wolf.
link: (freakonomics blog at the NYT)
Quote:
In February of 1985, Ugo Vetere, the mayor of Rome, and Chedly Klibi, the mayor of Carthage, signed a symbolic treaty “officially” ending the Third Punic War (which had been supposedly extended by the lack of a peace treaty for more than 2100 years).
link: And not a moment too soon
Quote:
The “Gulabi Gang” (Pink Gang) uses sticks (lathis) and cricket bats to “teach erring men a lesson.” In one instance, they chased a woman’s abusive, alcoholic husband into a sugarcane field and sorely thrashed him. They also go after corrupt government officials. Last year, they stormed a police station after cops refused to register the case of a low-caste man simply because of his social standing.
link: India’s pink posse hunts down bad guys
Now I haven’t taken this video, but this is the same thing I saw and participated in last night. Insanity.
If Osama’s Only 6 Degrees Away, Why Can’t We Find Him?
The famous 6 degrees of separation theory fades under scrutiny.
link
6-degrees of separation seems to fail in 2 cases:
1. people don’t believe they are connected and so don’t try various winning routes.
2. high resistance of people connected to the person you want to connect to.

Old story. Canadian troops are having issues with Taliban fighters hiding in 10-foot Afghan marijuana plants
link
“A couple of brown plants on the edges of some of those (forests) did catch on fire. But a section of soldiers that was downwind from that had some ill effects and decided that was probably not the right course of action,” Hillier said dryly.
One soldier told him later: “Sir, three years ago before I joined the army, I never thought I’d say ‘That damn marijuana.’”
Dr Susan Brownell full interview here on misconceptions about Olympics and China.
[via: Danwei]
Latest Comments
RSS