Novel Times, Novel Measures

The virtual home of Lawrence S. Grodeska

Eco-Guilt Assauged

I’ve touched down in London and I must say that, after only two days, I am already in love with this city.  More on that when I have some time to upload some photos.  I’ve already taken a few hundred…damn digital cameras.  Right now, though, I need to get something off my chest.  Yep, my eco-guilt over the many tons of carbon being spewed during the many flights I’ll be taking on this trip.

I did some research during my last few days in the states about companies offering carbon credits.  For those not in the know, carbon credits are an “offset” scheme whereby individuals pay companies who fund “green” projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  Mostly alternative energy projects like wind or bio-fuels.  The basic idea is that an individual can make up for their egregious contributions to the current eco-catastrophe of global warming by investing in technologies and practices that fight global warming.  

Like myself, you may see a few problems with this idea.  First and foremost, greenhouse gasses like carbon dioxide and methane are still being emitted by the activities being offset through purchasing carbon credits.  No behavior change is really occurring, hence the core problem is not really being addressed.  Second, how does one calculate the equivalencies between car- or air-miles and the energy created by new wind turbines?  It can be done, but not with any great measure of certainty.  Finally, who knows how much of your dollar is actually being spent by these companies on green technologies, let alone on projects that are implemented successfully? 

Lots of issues with Carbon credits.  But, being a greenie, and never before having ventured in the offset world, I figured this round the world jaunt would be a fine time to start.  I settled on Native Energy who have a few things going for them.  Cred in the industry.  Different projects one can choose to support when purchasing credits.  Ownership by native communities.  All pretty decent stuff.  Once that decision was made, all that was left to do was figure out just how much carbon I would be spewing.  Turns out that, for all of the flights I have currently booked, 19,369.24 miles, 7.85 tons CO2 would be created.  Here’s a neat graphic from their site:

round the world carbon emissions

To offset set this tonnage, I spent $96 (USD) on a 50/50 “blend” of wind & farm methane projects.  Do I feel better?  Maybe.  Is the world a better place?  I suppose.  Is there less carbon dioxide in the atmosphere because of my purchase of carbon credits?  In theory.  That is, if you don’t count all the carbon that was created during my flights in the first place.  Dubious at best, but at least it has helped to raise my awareness and support some worthy efforts to adopt new alternative energy technologies.  And maybe, dear reader. it has helped to raise your awareness, too.

Filed under: Sustainability, The Globe,

Round the World Itinerary

With my imminent departure looming, well, imminently, I figured I would share my itinerary as it stands right now. As usual with this kind of thing, most of these dates and some of these locations are subject to change en route.

11/16/07 – flight from Oakland to Newark, NJ
11/21/07 – flight from New York to London (England)
11/27/07 – flight from London to Bangkok (Thailand)
11/29/07 – bus to Chiang Mai
11/4/07 – boat to Luang Prabang (Laos)
12/10/07 – flight to Siem Reap, bus to Angkor (Cambodia)
12/14/07 – bus to Phenom Penh
12/19/07 – flight to Hanoi (Vietnam)
12/22/07 – flight from Hanoi to Tokyo, bullet train to Kyoto (Japan)
12/28/07 – bullet train to Tokyo
1/3/08 – flight from Tokyo to San Francisco

Whew. I’m already tired. What am I thinking?

Filed under: The Globe

Blog, Take Two

Hard to believe that this here blog is well over three years old.  My numbers aren’t all that high, and posts certainly are not all that regular, but they do pop up now and again, and I still enjoy writing them.  Actually, I’m hoping to start writing a bit more.  I’ve got good reason — in less that a month I’ll be heading out for 7 beautiful weeks abroad.  But I’ll get to that.  First a few comments on the new, improved NovelTimes.com that you see before you.

The observant readers among you may well have noticed a few changes in these parts.  I am very proud to announce the third incarnation of NovelTimes.com!  I’ve been wanting to update a few things for some time, now, and I’ve finally had the chance.  My primary motivation was to be free of the headaches of manually updating my website code every time a new version of MovableType was released, or trying to learn all the new features of the latest release of Gallery.  Both have served me well, but I was ready to embrace the (not-so) new frontier of web services.

After coming across a number of WordPress blogs that not only looked nice, but also had the appearance of standalone websites, I decided to do some research.  When I discovered their CSS Upgrade feature whereby I could use my own CSS to style my page, I was optimistic such a solution could work.  And when I realized the potential of their Domain Mapping feature, I was sold.  With Domain Mapping, I am able to point http requests for my www.noveltimes.com domain to my WordPress blog, and redirect my MX records to Google Apps’ handy domain tools.  The final solution is just what I wanted: a hosted blog that meets my aesthetic requirements, and the most excellent Gmail as my email client.  The  only remaining piece is committing to an online photo-sharing service.  I’ve been doing my due diligence, but Flickr seems the obvious choice, especially considering its close integration with WordPress.

Well, that’s probably enough tech talk for now.  Suffice to say that I am in a great position to chronicle my upcoming round-the-world excursion.  Yep, RTW.  Seven weeks.  Somehow or another, my supervisors at StopWaste.Org have agreed to my request for an extended leave to see some sights.  Heck, they’ve been downright supportive, for which I am ever grateful.  This means that two of my fantasy destinations are close at hand:  Angkor Wat and Japan.  My full itinerary looks something like this:

11/16/07 – Oakland to Newark
11/21/07 – New York to London
11/27/07 – London to Bangkok
12/22/07 – Hanoi to Tokyo
01/03/08 – Tokyo to San Francisco

Family in NJ.  Friends in London and Thailand.  A boat trip down the Mighty Mekong River from Thailand to Laos.  Angkor Wat in all its mysterious glory.  Bustling Ho Chi Minh City.  And, of course, the puzzling paradox of ancient temples and futuristic cityscapes of Japan.  I can’t wait.  I’ll be blogging and posting photos as often as I can, so please, join me via hyperspace.  I’d be virtually delighted to share my adventures.

Filed under: Blogging, The Globe

Shades of Cryptonomicon

Is DRM getting you down? Sick and tired of the entertainment industry telling you what you can or can’t download and upload? Do you feel that all information should be free? Well, then, maybe the solution is to buy your own “island”, create your own country and set up a server farm not beholden to the restrictive copyright laws of virutally every nation on the globe.

Yes, this does sound like a rip-off of a core plot line of Cryptonomicon, but the wackos from The Pirate Bay are actually fronting a movement to purchase the  Check out the amazing real estate:

Principality of Sealand

Sound loony? Yep, but it’s also entirely true. Apparently Sealand, otherwise known as HM Fort Roughs and located about 10km off the coast of Suffolk, England in the North Sea, was purchased in 1967 by Paddy Roy Bates with the intention of creating his own sovereign nation. Despite the long-held anarchist/libertarian notion that communities sited in international waters exist outside the purview of other countries, in the case of Sealand, international courts haven’t agreed.

This hasn’t stopped our favorite digital pirates at the ‘Bay, however. Apparently they are pretty keen on recruiting “citizens” to virtually populate their new digital haven:

With the help of all the kopimists on Internets, we want to buy Sealand. Donate money and you will become a citizien. It should be a great place for everybody. With high-speed Internets access, no copyright laws and vip accounts to The Pirate Bay, press officer of ACFI says.

I’m not sure what a kopimist is, but there is a forum where you can partipate in the dicussion about how this new county is going to be run. This might sound kookier than the actual idea of purchasing an old military outpust to form a new country, but is quite fascinating. I’ll leave you with one poster’s idea for the “One Law” that would only be necessary: “The freedoms of others shall not be infringed upon.”

Actually some pretty thought-provoking stuff. Good luck, Pirate Bay!

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Filed under: Technology, The Globe,

A time for relief, a time for reflection

When lives lost in a disaster begin to rack up like a pinball score, devastation thousands of miles distant finally begins to hit home. But far too often, it seems, death tolls – “42 die in skirmish”, “112 perish in crash” – mean so little to so many. Only when a critical point of death is reached is there media coverage and international empathy. Perhaps we have become desensitized to death on smaller scales, maybe larger scales as well. Human history is riddled with terrible tales of major loss of life – genocides, world wars, epidemics. Yet, as technology speeds communication around the globe, we see and hear more of smaller tragedies transpiring everyday. Adding to this atmosphere of death, the same technology enhances the deadliness of modern arsenals and more havoc is wreaked on an ever-expanding population. It is easy to see how we have become so flippant and cavalier about life and death in the 21st century.

The catastrophe in Indonesia, however, rises above the grim white noise underlying our media. With alarming speed, the lives of 100,000 and counting have been washed away, along with the lagging infrastructure of underdeveloped and undervalued countries. Reading the news accounts of the developing situation, I have been hit rather hard and moved to help in my own small way. Yesterday I donated a modest sum to The World Food Programme, administered by the UN. Many more organizations can use our support right now, including those listed at nytimes.com and apple.com. Today I am sharing some of my thoughts.

There is more that we can offer to the people of Indonesia, though – to those who face any tragedy – beyond that of financial support. In times of great human loss, when our hearts are open and minds sensitive to the fleeting flame of life so easily extinguished, let us touch that place of compassion. Let us know our own capacity for compassion and love for those people and places not listed in our address books or holiday lists. In doing so, we can begin to counteract the distressing trends of selective compassion and general disregard.

It is my belief that our culture is facing a crisis of values. Not the loss of a subjective morality of “life” dictated by forlorn and outdated institutions. Rather, the simple, undeniable value of Life – in all its forms and expressions – so greatly diminished in our modern, “civilized” society. Case in point, despite the incredible loss of life, world financial markets have displayed nary a blip in response to the current tsunami-induced crisis in Indonesia. I have even heard reports analyzing the potential consequences of this catastrophe in the insurance sector, reports of thinly-veiled relief that the devastation affected such an undervalued – and hence, underinsured – part of the world.

Let us instead value life over markets, people over institutions, despite the scale or proximity. May the unfortunate circumstances playing out in Indonesia remind us of the tenuous, yet beautiful nature of our time on planet Earth. While it is unlikely that such efforts can prevent another natural disaster of this proportion, they most certainly will help to abate future disasters of the man-made variety.

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Filed under: The Globe

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