That's possible, at least that's how I interpret the implications of a visionary on Freakonomics who wants to eliminate food waste by printing food, yes printing food.
(I think he's full of barnyard extract.)
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Thursday, February 03, 2011
The Dirty Little Secrets of Life--Milk
There's all sorts of things we live with by ignoring them; just pass by on the other side of the street. One is milk.
I'm reminded of that by this extension post on milk quality.
Note the emphasis on "clean" in the writeup. The dirty little secret is that some amount of manure gets in the milk. It's inevitable. It's something we don't like to dwell on, something I didn't dwell on even when I was growing up on a dairy farm drinking raw milk and fully aware of the fact; just something we live with by ignoring.
I'm reminded of that by this extension post on milk quality.
Note the emphasis on "clean" in the writeup. The dirty little secret is that some amount of manure gets in the milk. It's inevitable. It's something we don't like to dwell on, something I didn't dwell on even when I was growing up on a dairy farm drinking raw milk and fully aware of the fact; just something we live with by ignoring.
2012, Egypt, Huntsman, and Elections
I wonder whether there isn't an opening for Jon Huntsman, former Republican governor of Utah and currently ambassador to China, and possibly a candidate for the Republican nomination for president in 2012. I think a tacit assumption among the tea leaf readers has been that Iraq and Afghanistan will be quiet enough between now and 2012 that they won't be major issues in the campaign. So the focus has been on the potential candidates and domestic issues. But if Egypt means an unsettled period for our foreign relations, it might be a challenge for Republican candidates. About all most of them could argue is: I've more experience with foreign affairs than Obama did in 2008. That might or might not be true, but it's not a strong argument. Mr. Huntsman seems to be one who has a stronger resume on foreign affairs, which might help.
Wednesday, February 02, 2011
Sidewalks and Paths in Reston II
This is an add-on to my previous post. Took a walk down Freetown yesterday. It's an area of single-family homes on both sides of the road, with a sidewalk on one side. Most of the homeowners had cleared their portion of the sidewalk so I only had to walk in the road a couple places. It gives another perspective on paths and sidewalks.
Presumably, in the beginning there were cities and country. Cities, and only cities, had sidewalks. And sidewalks were on the land of, or bordered the land of, owners of private property. So there was a neat division: owners cleared their walks, the city cleared their streets. Meanwhile in the country the county plowed the roads.
Then we come to the mid-20th century with property developments and planned towns. And road were separated from the private property owners. So you begin to have "orphan sidewalks", where the old rule that the property owner was responsible didn't and couldn't work. And thus you have the pattern of Reston, where Reston Association clears its paths, VDOT clears its streets, and the sidewalks (which may be on Reston property or on VDOT right-of-way, I'm not sure but both are possible) go uncleared.
Presumably, in the beginning there were cities and country. Cities, and only cities, had sidewalks. And sidewalks were on the land of, or bordered the land of, owners of private property. So there was a neat division: owners cleared their walks, the city cleared their streets. Meanwhile in the country the county plowed the roads.
Then we come to the mid-20th century with property developments and planned towns. And road were separated from the private property owners. So you begin to have "orphan sidewalks", where the old rule that the property owner was responsible didn't and couldn't work. And thus you have the pattern of Reston, where Reston Association clears its paths, VDOT clears its streets, and the sidewalks (which may be on Reston property or on VDOT right-of-way, I'm not sure but both are possible) go uncleared.
How To Sell to Americans: Bigger Is Better
So says this Extension piece quoting the Chile Blueberry Committee. Given Starbucks has just enlarged its highend product, I suspect they're right.
Tuesday, February 01, 2011
Grocers More Dissipated Than Hollywood?
So says Temple Grandin, although her basis of comparison is a bit limited.
Grandin attended the recent Golden Globes awards event in Hollywood and found the movie people well-behaved – a sharp contrast from a grocers’ convention she had been to in the 1970s.Interesting speech noted by extension.
"That was a total drunken orgy,” she said.
Why We Need Metrics
From a Federal Computer Week piece on blogging:
"Perhaps it's ironic that many substandard federal blogs slog on forever while one of the best [Navy CIO's] was killed. Drapeau said the weak blogs endure because they do not call attention to themselves.
“Who complains about horrible, obscure movies that they haven't seen?” he asked. “And given that the financial cost of having a bad blog is very low, there's little to stop most bad blogs from persisting.”
Private Company Screws Up; Government Doesn't
Two articles in the NY Times business section:
- Intel screws up a chip, to cost $1 billion.
- bureaucrat at Treasury Department administers the $29 billion TARP (not the $700 billion TARP), cutting costs through good management.
Monday, January 31, 2011
Sidewalks and Paths in Reston
In Robert Simons' original vision of Reston, walkers and cars would be separated; cars would have streets and roads, and walkers paths which went through the woods, instead of sidewalks paralleling the roads. That was the way Reston developed for the first 10-15 years, but then it became apparent that walkers preferred to walk by the side of the road, even when it meant walking on grass or in the mud, rather than following the path. So gradually Reston has added sidewalks to its paths (Colts Neck Road got a sidewalk south of South Lakes Drive just last summer.)
Why the preference? Often the roads are more direct than the paths. And the roads feel safer because you're visible to all. And we're all used to walking by the roads.
Our recent snow storm showed one virtue of Simons' vision: snowplows inevitably throw the snow from the street onto the sidewalk, creating an almost impassible barrier to cross, and a forbidding prospect to walk along. Meanwhile Reston Association is able to send a plow (small Cat, I suspect) down the paths and clear them off quite well, yielding to the weight of snow only when trying to break through the snowplowed-barrier.
Why the preference? Often the roads are more direct than the paths. And the roads feel safer because you're visible to all. And we're all used to walking by the roads.
Our recent snow storm showed one virtue of Simons' vision: snowplows inevitably throw the snow from the street onto the sidewalk, creating an almost impassible barrier to cross, and a forbidding prospect to walk along. Meanwhile Reston Association is able to send a plow (small Cat, I suspect) down the paths and clear them off quite well, yielding to the weight of snow only when trying to break through the snowplowed-barrier.
Sunday, January 30, 2011
I Never Cease to be Amazed
Matt Uebel shares a video from 1994 showing the Today Show rather clueless at the Internet and email. That's just 17 years ago, hardly a generation. Now, today, it seems a player in world politics, as witness Tunisia and Egypt.
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