(via How Winglets Work - Graphic - NYTimes.com)

(via How Winglets Work - Graphic - NYTimes.com)

(via How Winglets Work - Graphic - NYTimes.com)

Airlines are adopting ‘winglets’ at the end of wings and tails, in an effort to increase flight — and ultimately fuel —efficiencies. Winglets can cut fuel use by as much as 5%.

Airlines have also experimented with other weight reduction practices, like lighter paper in in-flight magazines, and replacing flight manuals with tablets.

Next we’ll see ticketing passengers by weight, since 1/3 of the cost of a flight is fuel.

More Posts from Ronbowlens and Others

11 years ago

freeskiermagazine:

@JoffreyPV boosting huge @MammothUnbound this spring. See the video, now live on freeskier.com courtesy of @girosnow. #Freeskier #Skiing #GiroSnow (at Mammoth Unbound)

ronbowlens - Ron's Blog
11 years ago

http://player.theplatform.com/p/2E2eJC/embeddedoffsite_prod?guid=n_lw_5gay_131209

Lawrence O’Donnell talks with Michael Griffin, a teacher fired after planning to marry his partner. That partner, Vincent Giannetto, also joins them.

11 years ago

E.T. UFO Worldwide Disclosure Movement - Steven Greer MD MUFON 2013 (Hidden Truth)

UFO Update – Featured videos:

http://www.mufonsymposium.org/speaker/steven-m-greer-md/ http://www.sirius.neverendinglight.com/ http://www.siriusdisclosure.com “Disclosure: Newest Evidence…

View Post

11 years ago

The role everyone has is simply coming out and telling their story to their family and their friends and their colleagues. There are so many examples every day

Kenneth Mehlman is awesome


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11 years ago

Washington State tears off GMO label bill

Washington state experienced an expensive fight over the labeling of genetically modified foods or GMOs. The bill in question would have mandated that all foods containing GMOs are labeled clearly for consumers, including cereals, soft drinks chips and many other items. The bill was ultimately voted down by Washington voters by a 10 point margin.

The for labeling campaign calling for greater consumer transparency through labels of all products containing GMOs. The against labeling side claimed that labeling GMO foods would create an increased cost to consumers. The opposing side had a lot of large financial backers including the Grocery Manufacturers Association which represents big food corporations such as Campbell Foods, General Mills, Hillshire Brands, and PepsiCo. Together they raised contributed $1 million dollars to oppose the bill. Other donations against the bill came from big agricultural companies such as DuPont, Monsanto and Bayer CropScience. Their contributions totaled around $11 million. So now that the bill didn't pass and GMOs are not labeled we should ask ourselves, how much of our food is GMO and does this make a difference? If we look at the GMOs crops grown today, around 95% of U.S. commodity crops are GMO. This includes 94$ of sugar beets, 90% of soybeans, and 88% of cotton and feed corn. Papaya are an interesting case that demonstrates the benefits of GMOs. In the 1980s basically all papaya was wiped out of Hawaii due to a ringspot virus. Today papaya's grow again on the islands due to virus resistant GMO crops. In the actual stores GMO foods include basically any processed foods with sugar. For the most part non-processed foods are not GMO, for example tomatoes, potatoes, wheat and rice are not GMO in the U.S. Now there is a lot of talk about GMO foods being unhealthy. This for all intents and purposes is not true. If we look at sugar as a general example, by the time it is processed and put into your food the sugar has no chemical difference between non-GMO sugar. There are also claims that crops that are genetically modified with other animals DNA are some how bad for us. The idea that DNA is somehow owned by one animal or another is also absurd. DNA and RNA create the language or code that define life. Essentially all living things have this code and share similar parts of it. Taking code from a fish to create corn with protein may sound weird but it is just a length of code. Humans may share 99% of our DNA with apes but we also share 30% of our DNA with a potatoes. I think GMOs are a amazing step forward for science, being able to make crops resist viruses and grow more effectively with less water has huge agricultural advantages.


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gmo
11 years ago
VIDEO: Retailers’ Fear Of ‘Showrooming’ Fades

VIDEO: Retailers’ Fear of ‘Showrooming’ Fades

Best Buy is running television ads that tout its stores as “the ultimate holiday showroom,”…

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11 years ago
Check Out This Graphic To See How Your Loans Could Be Forgiven:

Check out this graphic to see how your loans could be forgiven:

  H/T US Pirg


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