
Mark asks…
What is your opinion on the use of web information in answers here, why is this thought of as solicitation?
Why is this though of as solicitation:
delicious bookmarks ID: TradeSkillsLLC view 100 per page then the web2.0 or Tactical or matthewtripp tag’s.
SHARE!
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and electric bike/triketruck 4 way neighborhood watch cam DVR WiMax HDTV whitespace Wi-Fi 35 frames/s blind eye cops Logistics delivery elderly demographics meals tricycle bamboo trailer neighborhood fruit tree 10 years water footprint rain harvest nature.org climate change
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iTunesU PDF audiobook conversion function nextup.com get more RAM pricewatch.com. I WILL TWEAK COMP OR TUTOR OR RAKE LEAVES FOR FOOD CALL NOW. TRANSPARENCY.ORG accurate precision ADHD isn’t real ClimateChange isn’t real PSY 101
like a semantic media compass use this with the wheel of Buddhist terms poster to laminate pages for a beanbag game lifehacker DOT com /5072354/block-posters-makes-a-large-poster-from-any-image
Trade all Skills freely + openly to share how to knowledge. Workplace training videos specific task skills for easier performance posted to video site or howto site. Lifehacker.com run 8 antispyware simultaneously
What life energy word abacus measures the semantic web seed ?
www.lifehack.org rotating composter climate control 4ft coldframe uses each butter/sour cream tub once to grow 1native plant terraforming wildlife habitat 87% earth life biomass=ocean humanism. Culture of Collaboration $ panic room massage cheap laser hair removal time saved fire suppression retrofit
iTunesU PDF audiobook conversion function nextup.com get more RAM pricewatch.com. I WILL TWEAK COMP OR TUTOR OR RAKE LEAVES FOR FOOD CALL NOW. TRANSPARENCY.ORG accurate precision ADHD isn’t real ClimateChange isn’t real PSY 101
like a semantic media compass use this with the wheel of Buddhist terms poster to laminate pages for a beanbag game lifehacker . com /5072354/block-posters-makes-a-large-poster-from-any-image
Trade all Skills freely + openly to share how to knowledge. Workplace training videos specific task skills for easier performance posted to video site or howto site. Lifehacker = 8 antispyware simultaneously
What life energy word abacus measures the semantic web seed?
adminsta answers:
My opinion is that web information is ok. Answers encourages people to use Yahoo Search or Wiki. Your mention of lifehack.org does not seem like solicitation..

Robert asks…
Can You Please Listen To This And Check If I Got All of The Words Right?
Can you please listen to this and check if I got all of the words right? I would GREATLY appreciate it! ![]()
Here’s the link:
http://hw.libsyn.com/p/f/b/a/fba1ca1423562977/Episode_7_PooPower.mp3?sid=1e286a4f1cb007634ec9283065ab0ad7&l_sid=30059&l_eid=&l_mid=2450569
Here are the words that I got. (I typed this all up myself and I’m pretty sure that I missed some words and that I heard some words incorrectly, PLEASE correct as much as you can!)
Jonathon Colton: Greetings Earthlings, Jonathon Colton here, Popular Science Magazines contributing tribudor and you are listening to episode seven of the PopSide podcast from the moon. Podcast that brings you the stories behind the stories that are right in front of you provided you are reading the magazine. You know, here in lunar base one, I don’t think a lot about recycling. Mainly because, well, I’m the only one here, also there’s no atmosphere and nothing can live on the harsh and terrible environment that is the surface of the moon. So as a result, behind lunar base one, there’s this huge 10 foot high pile of fruit streak gum wrappers and empty Yoohoo cans. Ehh, who cares? If you live on earth, with other people and animals and things, different story. So, I have noticed on the internet that everybody is talking about this new program in San Francisco where they’re going to collect dog poo and turn it into power. Everybody is talking about it because, as we all know, nothing is funnier than poop. And in this process they collect the dog poop with some sort of biodegradable bag; they’re still working on that aspect of it. They put it into a methane digester, which is just a container with a lot of bacteria that eat the poo and create methane and then they convert that methane to natural gas and later liquefy the natural gas or they can burn it in a turbine and generate electricity. Pretty cool story, so I called up Robert Reed with Norcallaway systems; the company responsible for this program. And I asked him, snickeringly, if we could talk about the poo power story and he very quickly pointed out that this is actually just one small part of the effort in San Francisco to reduce their output to landfills to zero by the year 2020. It’s a very admirable goal but, of course, not quite as interesting as poop, so I tried to steer it back in that direction.
Robert Reed: Yeah, for 10 years we’ve been collecting poop straps separately from restaurants and people’s homes, from city homes, and turning it into a compost which is then applied to veneers and farms and we’ve been doing so well with that program that we’ve now started taking some of the degradable material from the food scraps and the degradable material including pet waste and sending it elsewhere, sending it to conversion technology that potentially produces methane which is then used to create energy.
Jonathon Colton: It’s obvious why, well, you know, obviously when I called you I was looking at the poo angle and its obvious why, you know, journalists get excited by this is because it becomes sort of a funny headline you could write sort of a cute article about it. Do you every find this sort of annoying? I mean here you are doing this wonderful forward thinking and earth saving process and people just call you up wanting to talk about poop. Does that ever get annoying to you?
Robert Reed: You know, not really. We have enjoyed the story where we‘ve enjoyed the interest and support. I’ve worked myself as a journalist for over 10 years with dealing with these papers. I’ve been in north Callaway now for 11 years and I’ve never seen anything like the public reaction we’ve received about this program; people call every week to offer, you know, “is there a way I could help? I support you guys.” San Francisco residents were saying “I would like to be a recycling captain for the dog poo waste energy program. There’s a park near my house, could you please position a container near my house? I would keep an eye on that and if there are any plastic bags in there or if it got tipped over I would help ride the cart or I’d call you or if it needed to be serviced a little more frequently, I would let you know. I’d be glad to.”
Jonathon Colton: Why do you that is? The people are so excited about it?
Robert Reed: Well, I think people love their pets. I think every other person in San Francisco seems to be a pet owner. I think that San Francisco does very much engage, embrace the recycling programs that we do here and the city’s commitment to divert more and more waste away from the landfills and it’s like everything else in life; it takes a little effort, but once you get the enthusiasm for it, once you start to see the success, you buy in and it becomes second nature, it’s just a natural thing.
Jonathon Colton: It’s a very worthy program and a very worthy goal. One last question; would you say that you are a cat person or a dog person?
Robert Reed: I like what one of my friends do, I like that unconditional love you get from friendly dogs. I’m a Springer spaniel or a Labrador.
Jonathon Colton: Gotcha. So that probably explains why you’re going after the dog waste first, right? A little species discrimination.
Robert Reed: Well, it’s very interesting. Cats are trickier than dogs. They tend to have more viruses, their waste tends to be a little more challenging to manage, and then the cats are around the house where in San Francisco, its very typical for a person to get up in the morning, grab the chronicle which is the paper record here, take the plastic bag off it, grab the leash and a cup of coffee in the thermos coffee mug and go for a walk in the local park. You know, and the dog does his/her business in the park they reach down for that plastic bag, tie it in a knot and toss it in the public litter can there at the park so it seems more natural to us to have that not be a plastic bag but have that be a bag that w
that would work in the digester if we can never get this program far enough down the line then we can probably pick the dogs up and take them for a ride, like the old days on the fire trucks, give them a ride on the garbage truck that’s running on liquefied natural gas made from the dog’s droppings that we could afford .
Jonathon Colton: Haha, exactly. So there you have it… poop. Haha. I shouldn’t make fun; it’s actually a great program, I think San Francisco is a great city for doing it and I think Robert Reed is a great man for doing his duty. Hehe.. Anyway, lockdown, we’re out of time here I have to wrap up the show, thanks for listening for Popular Science Magazine and I’m Jonathan Colton and its cold and lonely here on the moon.
adminsta answers:
I didn’t bother to read it all because I actually have a life outside of aswering questions, unlike some people on this site
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