Friday, December 17, 2010

U.S. Video Game Consoles Yearly Consume As Much Electricity As San Diego (Yearly)

U.S. Video Game Consoles Yearly Consume As Much Electricity As San Diego (Yearly): "console-electricity.jpg

That background is the same color as my bathroom, no lie.

According to a recent study, the 63 million PS3, XBox and Wii video game consoles in the US consume as much energy (EXCLUDING the required television) yearly as the entire city of San Diego. Is that a lot? I have no idea. I know a zillion is a lot.

EPRI [Electric Power Research Institute] said if the heaviest gamer plays about six hours a day over a year -- a figure found by Nielsen Co. in 2006 -- then his Wii would consume 29 kilowatt-hours, his Playstation 178 kWh, and his Xbox 360 184 kWh. A plasma TV, by comparison, averages 242 kWh a year.


That makes gaming a formidable energy user. U.S. homes have about 63 million video game consoles, and together they use about as much energy as San Diego does in a year, according to a 2008 study by the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Much of the energy use isn't even from playing video games, according to NRDC -- it's from the idling that goes on after the gamer has left the room. The group said idling uses about as much energy as playing.

If gamers turned off their systems when they finished playing, and if manufacturers made systems that turned themselves off when inactive, consumers would save $1 billion a year in utility bills, NRDC said.


Interesting, so Wii's use next to no energy compared to Playstations and Xbox's. No wonder they're so weak. Blah blah blah I have an eye appointment at 3:15 and then I'm off to get drunk for the night and kill some f***ing big-ass sharks with my bare body. WHO'S COMING WITH ME?!

Video Gamers Use as Much Energy as San Diego [scientificamerican]

Thanks to Melissa, who has a zero-carbon footprint because she steals all her power from neighbors. God you're green."

Thursday, December 16, 2010

I cried

A Touch of Heaven in a Food Court: "An interesting example of freedom of expression took place in a food court in a Welland, Ontario mall recently. I was glad to see that this group could organize this kind of demonstration without facing tasers, tear gas, assault dogs, or Richard Dawkins. Guess it's still a free country (OK, that country happens to be Canada). On the other hand, this was on private property--hope they had an OK from the mall owners to do this. Since the music over the loudspeakers was part of the event, that must be the case. Nice.

Organized 'pranks' of this uplifting nature may, of course, get out of hand and be done in inappropriate, offensive ways, so watch it. But you're welcome to sing that beautifully around me almost anytime, anywhere. Just knock first.


Some of the story is at the Vancouver Sun. The group is Chorus Niagara.
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Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Pillow Remote Control

Pillow Remote Control: "


Pillow Remote Control

A universal remote control embedded in a pillow. It has easy to click fabric buttons and a smart shutdown feature. If you still manage to lose this remote, your house needs some major cleaning.





Related posts:

  1. Concept: Stimuli 3.0

  2. Gravitonus WorkStation

  3. V1 Flagship Chair



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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Impactful Advertisements for Organizations

Impactful Advertisements for Organizations: "

As we’ve covered in a few previous roundups, advertisements for public service groups can be particularly effective when aimed against a specific issue.  In this post, we’ll look at advertisements that aren’t necessarily public service oriented, but instead, were created for a specific organization with a specific message.  Whether it is a public service organization, or a museum trying to get people interested in cultural heritage, these organizations know how to make an advertisement.


Enjoy these posters. :)















































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