Random thoughts

rbkwp

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BRILLIANT DWs eco-africa

look at the clever 'green pencils'at the end of this show
how about the 2nd item
'rammed earth homes'

or
the green bio-diversity school in Germany
brilliant for the kids
unlike the pesecution of migrant kids in you know wherre/2 countries
EVEYTHING

eco@africa | DW

eco@africa | DW

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true
i was travelling in that era, felt like a king
world was an oyster etc ha

The numbers that made good commercial sense for airline businesses in 1968, though, are no longer in the 747’s favor. One by one, the world’s major carriers have been sending them to the boneyard, and for the first time in almost 50 years, no U.S. carrier flies passengers on a 747. When Delta Air Lines retired the last of its fleet earlier this year, the plane took a cross-country farewell tour, including a stop at the Washington factory where it was manufactured. The 747-8, the largest and most modern 747 variant, has sold only sporadically and production has dwindled to almost nothing—though Boeing is prepping two for duty as the next Air Force One—and the assembly line is bound to go dark soon. The fragmentation of long-distance air routes, along with the unbeatable economics of newer aircraft models, have finally dethroned the “Queen of the Skies.”


At the same time, reports of the plane’s death have been greatly exaggerated. Hundreds remain in service worldwide. British Airways, Lufthansa and Korean Air have dozens apiece, and many more airlines operate 747s as freighters. They’ll be crossing oceans for years to come.

Traveling the World Was Never the Same Once the Boeing 747 Debuted

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Traveling the World Was Never the Same Once the Boeing 747 Debuted | Innovation | Smithsonian
 

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waaah
theyre still havina go at the wasps,actually agree haha
they dont seem to have any purpose,like the killer saudis
esp those Japanese paper wasps dancing on the fences

Good bees, bad wasps?
Wasps are aggressive and useless, people believe. But wasps are just as important as bees for pollinating our crops, say scientists. They're calling for a public relations campaign to overhaul wasps' bad image.







Wasps are the natural enemy of every picnicker. Forget a peaceful meal amidst nature in the last days of summer.

As soon as you unpack your delicious food and well-deserved drink, wasps will close in with their swaying and aggressive flight.

Instead of taking a tiny taste and then moving along, they will feast on your food with a scavenger's sense of entitlement.

Bzzz. Thanks for the picnic, buddy!

Bees, on the other hand, are too busy pollinating flowers and producing honey to even notice your alfresco lunch.

The universally disliked wasp, compared to the cute and friendly bee — this is how most people regard the yellowjackets, researchers have found.

For the study Why we love bees and hate wasps, scientists at the University College of London asked more than 750 members of the public from 46 countries to describe in three words how they feel about wasps, bees, butterflies and flies.

Wasps triggered the most negative emotions. "Sting", "annoying" and "dangerous" were the most common words that came to the participants' minds.

Butterflies received the highest level of positive emotions, closely followed by bees.

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    BUTTERFLIES FLOURISH IN THE SUMMER HEAT — FOR NOW
    Dog days of summer
    Europe has seen record temperatures this summer. A high of 46 degrees Celsius (115 degrees Fahrenheit) was registered in Spain, and in some German cities, temperatures hovered around 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit). While most animals struggle with the heat, there is one notable exception.

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The researchers weren't particularly surprised by the result — but said this view is unfair to wasps, because they are just as ecologically important as bees.

Wasps — huh — what are they good for?

People nursing painful wasp stings often wonder why these devil insects even exist.

And though they make it hard to love them, it's worth taking a closer look at wasps.

Wasps actually play a crucial role in the ecosystem.

Just like bees, wasps are among the most ecologically important organisms for humanity: They pollinate our flowers and food crops.

But beyond bees, wasps also regulate populations of crop pests such as caterpillars and whiteflies, contributing to global food security.

They do this by creepily laying parasitic eggs in the bodies of caterpillars.

A small wasp colony eats up to 3,000 flies, mosquitos and spiders each day, and kills insects that carry human diseases.

"Wasps are a health police, they eat other sick animals and maintain a healthy balance in the ecosystem," Kathrin Klinkusch, spokeswoman at the German Nature Conservation Union (NABU), told DW.


Wasps eat small insects, fruit, nectar — and sometimes your cake. Honeybees, meanwhile, aren't interested in your food

She can, however, understand why people are fonder of bees than wasps.

While honeybees mind their own business collecting pollen, wasps are in search of protein and take it where they find it, including from off your plate.

Image overhaul

Despite being disliked and even despised, wasps bring huge ecological benefits to our planet, says Seirian Sumner, a researcher at University College of London and author of the study published in Ecological Entomology. She warned that the yellow-black insects are under threat.

"They [wasps] are facing a similar decline to bees — and that is something the world can't afford," wrote Sumner.

Scientists have warned that insects are disappearing at an alarming rate around the world due to industrial agriculture, climate change and habitat loss, among other factors.

Yet the study found it wasn't just wasps' antisocial eating habits that accounted for their bad reputation. Scientists are to blame, too.


People fear the painful sting of wasps, but only 50 percent of the species actually stings

The authors say there has been a lack of public and scientific interest in wasps, arguing that astonishingly little research into wasps has been undertaken.

They looked at 908 scientific research papers about pollinators released since 1980, and only 2.4 percent of them (22 papers) focused on wasps compared to 97.6 percent (886 papers) on bees.

Considering the lack of research and information about wasps, it's no wonder that they have a bad image, say the study authors.

Bees have seen increased level of public interest and support after news of their decline made headlines.

Novels have been written about what our world would look like without bees, beekeeping has become a mainstream hobby and German Chancellor Merkel has called on people to "think about biodiversity and do something good for bees."

Wasps deserve the same kind of appreciation and public support, argue the researchers.

"It would be fantastic if [support for bees] could be mirrored for wasps," wrote Alessandro Cini, biodiversity researcher at University College of London and co-author of the study.

Good bees, bad wasps? | DW | 19.09.2018
 

rbkwp

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good for them, if they are
sort of wish i was more open in the day
pretty sure would have got more ..mmmmm

BEFORE YOU GO

Revierfoto/picture alliance via Getty Images

From the Archive
Onward and Outward
This Old Man
On the author’s ninety-eighth birthday, revisit his reflections on living for nearly a century.

By Roger Angell

Humor from The New Yorker

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This Old Man

 

rbkwp

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shame to see anyone destroy there health/ life these days especially
havent seen a blatant pic like that for ages
glad we finally got around to 'phasing it out'
oiginally thought the jailed population would really revolt, they never did,as meek as lambs.. good for them huh
10 plus years now i think

smokers can hate on me i dont care
that pic disturbs me,hence my random positive ha thought

CQ6ZnipATNN7ast0lQDzmPj3AsfxBHcLkJeCdW-4JVPAcUlbeaGjOPFsvv-MT0AOd9getEuypc0NHWPBUxO81GrKanCVQwVqupEbYTFz0j2xXuyYvtgTEfRrmY6_o7XB3_aQofb6qgqiaydhkdpR=s0-d-e1-ft
 

rbkwp

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feel-good story
Read it and you'll know why this was one of our top stories of the week!
-Malaka Gharib, deputy editor

wish
i looked like her @ 70


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Secrets Of Success From A 102-Year-Old Runner
Man Kaur just earned two golds in the World Masters Athletics Championship in Spain. And she didn't even start running until she was 93!

and,the opposite

quote of the week

"We are dismayed, disarrayed and shocked [by the] brutal action and the cold-blooded loss of our beloved daughters."

- Dr. Mohamed Hussein Aden, director of the University Teaching Hospital in Galkayo, Somalia, on the two young sisters who died after undergoing female genital mutilation in his country.
 

rbkwp

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a saddest happening ever
worth following/reading
Canadas chinook similar treatment, sad

Humans devastated California's chinook salmon. Now they want to save it.



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Humans devastated California's chinook salmon. Now they want to save it.
Public and private actors are working together to reverse the depletion of endangered salmon in California's largest river. One innovation being tried is a man-made underwater shelter for young salmon to hide from predators.

Humans devastated California's chinook salmon. Now they want to save it.


PACKCARD

wonderful story
even i know of that fine automobile from the day
best of luck, modern history
i nealy brought a similar,fraction beyond my financial reach ha
brought a 48 Chevrolet sedan instead

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Abandoned and in decay, one of Detroit's iconic ruins is slowly being revived
Detroit is a city filled with ruins. Among the city’s most iconic ones is the Packard Plant. A Spanish developer in Peru has plans to revive it.

Abandoned and in decay, one of Detroit's iconic ruins is slowly being revived
 

rbkwp

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funny
been working on othe tactics the last couple of yeas haha

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Bombardier beetles live pretty tranquil lives, thanks to their ability to produce and shoot jets of boiling, noxious liquid at their attackers. Humans have defense mechanisms, too, though they aren’t as effective. When we get advice that’s contrary to the way we’ve chosen to live our lives, we tend to get defensive. This is merely the brain taking advantage of our natural disposition toward comfort, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. This becomes a problem when the advice we’re getting is good: “Hey, maybe try exercising, like, ever” or, “Maybe it’s a little early in the day for a Long Island Iced Tea” can be tough to hear. The authors behind new research on how to conquer defensiveness say it’s a tactic worth trying.

Try This Tactic

Self-affirmation enhances performance, makes us receptive to our mistakes

Self-affirmation has been found to reduce defensiveness (and also stress and anxiety for that matter). Most tasks designed to prime you for self-affirmation present you with list of values and have you rank them. (It also helps to then write about them or explain why.) This process theoretically makes us more receptive to negative feedback and more sensitive to our mistakes. My gut says it explains why people get so much satisfaction from internet personality quizzes — particularly if they post about it or meditate on the results.

Self-affirmation enhances performance, makes us receptive to our mistakes
 

rbkwp

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i am obviously far removed from being successful
but
friday arvos have been a lifetimes success,always loved them, end of working week etc

12 things successful people do every Friday afternoon

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Read more at 12 things successful people do every Friday afternoon


12 things successful people do every Friday afternoon


RATS SHAPE CORAL REEFS

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How rats shape coral reefs


speaking of

smile
i am sure he/she would have been dancing more gracefullu than any human
esp om e

MDMA Makes Octopuses More Social
They’re feeling it. Although wildly different from humans, the cephalopods apparently respond to the drug in a very similar way. After exposing seven octopuses to ecstasy, sc

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They’re feeling it. Although wildly different from humans, the cephalopods apparently respond to the drug in a very similar way. After exposing seven octopuses to ecstasy, scientists from Johns Hopkins University found they became more social — leading the researchers to realize the creatures process mood-controlling seratonin the same way as humans despite their brains having completely different architecture. “We weren’t expecting … quite so much overlap,” said the study’s co-author, who also reported anecdotally that one MDMA-dosed octopus did flips and another appeared to be doing “water ballet.”

MDMA Makes Octopuses More Social - September 21, 2018


 

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interesting reads


FYI

keep in mind
we have two countries that specialize in the ill treatment of children
funny
how they note 'western do-gooders'

The business of voluntourism: do western do-gooders actually do harm?

A holiday helping out in an orphanage can be a rewarding experience. But voluntourism supports a system that is breaking up families

by Tina Rosenberg

Who is volunteerism for? It’s now hugely popular for those living in wealthy countries to visit poorer ones—often specifically to offer help, playing with orphaned children or building community structures. But volunteerism has become a for-profit activity, Tina Rosenburg reports for the Guardian, and often does local communities more harm than good.

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The business of voluntourism: do western do-gooders actually do harm?


Danielle Kunitz and Gillian Brockell/The Washington Post


What do we owe her now?
By Elizabeth Bruenig in Arlington, Tex.
Videos by Gillian Brockell

Updated Sept. 21, 2018

About that night. For the Washington Post, Elizabeth Bruenig dissects the story of a rape accusation that shook her hometown in 2006, leaving the victim ostracized and traumatized. Twelve years later, an allegation that shares many characteristics of the event that Bruenig describes has become a matter of national importance.

Opinion | She reported her rape. Her hometown turned against her. Can justice ever be served?
 

rbkwp

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less flatulence preferable apparently
NZ DAIRY anyway,so we are told

CAN WE HAVE HAPPY COWS AND A CLEAN CLIMATE?

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FREE-RANGE BARNS REDUCE STRESS ON ANIMALS, BUT THEY CAN RELEASE NEARLY 50 PERCENT MORE AMMONIA INTO THE ENVIRONMENT THAN CONTAINED BARNS, WHERE COWS ARE CONFINED.

Can We Have Happy Cows and a Clean Climate?
 

rbkwp

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bhave,or else


Pigs are seen standing in a pen at a farm near Brussels, Belgium, on Sept. asty true18.aughty n

its
always our fault
we are notoriously dang nasty naughty bad

Puppies are making people sick — and it’s people’s faul

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Antibiotic-resistant bacteria that have infected more than 100 people and that have been linked to pet store puppies appear to have spread at least in part because healthy dogs were given antibiotics — a decision that all but surely fosteredantibiotic resistance.

Puppies are making people sick — and it’s people’s fault