Green Building Goes Mainstream
From the Wall St. Journal (subscription required).
Labels: environment, global warming, green building, renewable energy
From the Wall St. Journal (subscription required).
Labels: environment, global warming, green building, renewable energy
The Philippines finished in the Top 4. From the Wall St. Journal (subscription required):
Labels: asia, outsourcing, philippines
Led by Steve Pearlstein, over at the Washington Post. Here is Pearlstein's article on healthcare legislation.
Labels: healthcare, pearlstein
From the M.I.T. press office:
A comprehensive new MIT-led study of the potential for geothermal energy within the United States has found that mining the huge amounts of heat that reside as stored thermal energy in the Earth's hard rock crust could supply a substantial portion of the electricity the United States will need in the future, probably at competitive prices and with minimal environmental impact.
Labels: geothermal, renewable energy
From Business Week:
I have my anti-Darwinian metaphor: The CEO is the fraternity brother type who is great to have a drink with. He's a survivor and maybe not all that smart, but he works his way up the ladder in the corporation. And if you're a survivor you never have someone beneath you who's smarter than you. So you eventually work your way to CEO. You have someone a little dumber than you underneath, and eventually we'll have morons running everything...which we're getting closer to.I wonder if the CEO's are also those who instinctively live by the, recently popular, 48 Laws of Power :-)
Labels: 48 Laws, ceo, corporations, governance
I was at mac world for the 3rd straight year, and