Since Oct 27, 2009, OWL2 is a W3C recommendation.
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In an article published on Le Monde last Friday, Nov. 13, about Norvegian aquaculture, I read that Norvegian is a very big producer of aquacultured salmons, mostly in the fiords.
Now, this means big money, and big problems. Yes, because salmons have to be fed, so wild fish is caught to feed them, with the proportion of 4 kilos of wild fish to produce 1 kilo of salmon. Onzin. Next, these aquacultured animals end up eating and shitting in the very same space, so the water gets just crap and the bottom ... well just imagine having a huge loo for all the inhabitants of your building, right undernith you... A desert of shit! Salmon sandwich? well, may I have some bread and... cheese perhaps? Madrid 2009, the big shots reunite come up with this rough agenda for future research in linked data:
http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData/MadridBOF/ and here the Top10 items: http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData/MadridBOF/TOP10 Denmark is hosting COP15 later this year, in December. Instead of buying the usual conference gifts for delegates and participants, they used the saving to offer scholarships to study climate change-related subjects in Denmark. Grants cover tuition fees and living. Bravi. Now, next question is: how much do these conference gift cost usually!?
http://scholarship-positions.com/masters-scholarship-in-climate-change-2009-denmark/2009/02/06/ Yes, OK, I know. One person only (out of... how many billions?) doesn't solve anything... I take it as an experiment.
So, this is day 1. As a day one, it was preatty successful: I didn't trow away any piece of plastic at all. Usual life: drinking tap water, carrying around my fabric bag, no visit to the supermarket. Mmmh, hold on, actually I used some yist (to make bread), it was wrapped in a piece of paper,which, as usual, was packed within plastic. Ok something went to the trash, still not bad at all. It was about two years ago, when I've heard for the first time about this big "island" in the Pacific Ocean, formed by plastic trash... got scared, upset and astonished than this is not THE big thing to talk about and do something about. Last week, a friend of mine asked me if I'd had ever heard of it, and if I thougth if it truth or just a hoax. mmh a hoax? I wish! But unfortunately everything shows that it's not... here's one of the very many videos I've found about it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnUjTHB1lvM&feature=fvw What to do then? Well, apparently collecting all that garbage is not an option anymore -- just too much. So, the only "solution" is to at least stop producing trash. So, I decided to make an experiment: would it be possible to stop using plastic here and now -- Rome, September 2009? What necessarily requires plastic use in one's everyday life? Where are the difficulties in living without plastic? Let's see.... ***************************************************************************** Per l'arte essere apartitica significa semplicemente essere del partito dominante. [B.Brecht] |