Blogging has created havoc to computer literates... It has given lots of people chances, to evaluate or assess things whether relevant or irrelevant. Regardless if blogs were created rubbish... it allowed all of us to express ourselves.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

DLS - Canlubang, will be joining a prestigious marketing communication competition, to challenge themselves for the innovated society we will be part of. Luck? I say its destiny.

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Solar Powered Computers

Indian Government has been extending efforts to educate their citizens.

With the use of Sun they can and they will educate more Indians in the mountain tops.

If Indians can why can't we?


Sun is the god and Earth is the goddess?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3623864.stm

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

How did Filipinos arrived with hair as secondary solution in the Guimaras Oil Spill?
Using hair against the spill cropped up at a news conference, when a member of the environmental group Greenpeace pointed to an experiment in the United States that found human hair useful in cleaning up oil.

As the story goes, Alabama hairdresser Phil McCrory was watching coverage of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska. Noticing that an otter's fur was saturated with oil, he wonder if hair could help clean up oil.

He collected five pounds of hair from his shop, stuffed it in a pair of his wife's pantyhose, tied the feet together into a ring and put it in his son's wading pool with some oil. With some scientists' help, McCrory learned that hair doesn't exactly soak up the oil, but that oil clings to thousands of tiny scales on hair shafts.

He applied for a patent on the idea in 1993, and got it in 1995.

NASA engineers did some tests in 1998, showing that hair would indeed help clean up oil.

However, marine biologist Rex Sadaba of the University of the Philippines wasn't sold on using hair or even chicken feathers. He says materials like straw may be better since hair takes time to degrade, does not really absorb oil and may not be hygienic.

"I also don't agree with using feathers, because it stinks when it rots, and that will cause additional problems," he said.

Coast Guard Commander Harold Jarder said food and beverage giant San Miguel Corp. sent a ton of chicken feathers to Guimaras and was willing to provide more, but officials have stopped receiving them.

"It's difficult to handle," he said. "And the workers are complaining because of the stench."

Monday, September 04, 2006

Pyramid Scheme

Pyramid Scheme

This type of business has been growing exponentially in our society. Though, many are already informed about the hoaxes it produces, it seems that Filipinos really wants to make more money without asking anything.

It has created lots of fraudulent accounts that involved not millions but billions of money.

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Some things

Are we really helping those affected families and reefs in Guimaras by giving our hair to them...?

Even if we are able to produce millions of tons of hair... is it enought to make Guimarans smile again, and reefs flow again with the mangroves?