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Tiger Baby Boom Brings Hope for Big Cat in India

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bengal-tiger-w-cub_pilibhit_reserve-mayankkatiyar.jpgFinally, there is some good news from the jungles of nine nature reserves in India where a tiger census revealed a baby boom, of sorts.

Government conservationists tallied a birth total of 117 tiger cubs over the past 15 months, a favorable development in a country where an unusually high number of tiger deaths occurred last year.

(READ More in DNA India)

China Green Energy Growth Outpacing Coal

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wind-turbine-rainbow.jpgThough coal still provides the majority of China’s power, there’s good news about a greener future: New official Chinese records show that the nation’s renewable energy capacity is now growing faster than its coal plants.

Through the end of 2009 180 GW of new power capacity was under construction. Renewables outpaced coal by some 16 GW. All told, low-carbon energy sources (hydro, nuclear, and renewables) will account for 26% of China’s power capacity, by the end of 2010.

(READ More in Treehugger)

J.K. Rowling Might Write More Harry Potter Books

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harry-potter.jpegJ.K. Rowling celebrated Easter at the White House, reading to some kids and answering questions about the future of Harry Potter.

According to the The Washington Post, Rowling said she doesn’t have explicit plans to write another Harry Potter tome, but she certainly hasn’t ruled out the idea. “Maybe 10 years from now,” she said.

(READ the story in ABC News)

HELP! Healthy Thinking in Times of Trouble

Help-Healthy Thinking-Gisele Guenard

Help-Healthy Thinking-Gisele GuenardMany of the world’s greatest inventions and innovations came about in times of crisis.

Sometimes it takes a wake-up call… an illness, or perhaps an injury, to make us change habits and practices that could be damaging our health.  It is a conscious thought-action process to do so. It is difficult to change long-standing habits, but oh, so worth it.

People often refuse to ask for help. We can even delay reaching out and seeking help until it is too late, until greater harm has come to us, or our families.  The ability to accept and when necessary to seek out, and accept the help of others is critical in times of crisis.

Violin Prodigy Plays for Haiti (Video)

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Florida violinist violin-prodigy-charityworker.jpg Kahane is a brilliant musician at only eight-years-old. She has performed at charity events in the past, but when she heard the devastating earthquake in Haiti had destroyed a music school and crushed the violinist who’d founded it, she wanted to help. She started writing letters to famous violinists asking for money to rebuild the school and instruments to fill it.

WATCH the video below, or at CBS News YouTube page

Inkjet-like Device Sprays Skin Cells Right Over Burns

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skin-burns-spraygun.jpgInspired by a standard office inkjet printer, U.S. researchers have rigged up a device that can spray skin cells directly onto burn victims, quickly protecting and healing their wounds as an alternative to skin grafts.

A laser can take a reading of the wound’s size and shape so that a layer of healing skin cells can be precisely applied, said the team at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

(READ story at Reuters)

10 Cities Where The Economy Is Growing Faster Than Before The Recession

Austin skyline

austin-skyline.jpgOne barometer of the economic health of American cities is the total value of the goods and services produced in a metropolitan area.

According to the Brookings Institution report, many dynamic cities have already exceeded economic output levels seen before the recession.

Of the 100 largest metropolitan areas, 28 of them regained their pre-recession levels at the end of 2009, posting new highs in output.

10 Cities Where The Economy Is Growing Faster Than Before The Recession

Austin skyline

austin-skyline.jpgOne barometer of the economic health of American cities is the total value of the goods and services produced in a metropolitan area.

According to the Brookings Institution report, many dynamic cities have already exceeded economic output levels seen before the recession.

Of the 100 largest metropolitan areas, 28 of them regained their pre-recession levels at the end of 2009, posting new highs in output.

Green Roof of UK School First to Be Designated As Nature Preserve

green roof on Sharrow school in the UK

green-roof-sharrow-school-uk.jpgA green roof at a UK primary school in Sheffield is the first to be designated as a nature reserve after a rare bird took up residence there.

A network of green roofs on new and regenerated buildings in the Yorkshire city has lured back a protected bird – the black redstart, which has also become a high-profile indicator of green roof success in London.

The citywide program of “green roof safaris” showcase the merits of topping buildings with grass, tenacious plants and even groves of birch trees and a pond.

The Sharrow school’s green roof design provided value through its control of stormwater, noise, heat and pollution. A happy by-product was its value to local wildlife. 

Green Roof of UK School First to Be Designated As Nature Preserve

green roof on Sharrow school in the UK

green-roof-sharrow-school-uk.jpgA green roof at a UK primary school in Sheffield is the first to be designated as a nature reserve after a rare bird took up residence there.

A network of green roofs on new and regenerated buildings in the Yorkshire city has lured back a protected bird – the black redstart, which has also become a high-profile indicator of green roof success in London.

The citywide program of “green roof safaris” showcase the merits of topping buildings with grass, tenacious plants and even groves of birch trees and a pond.

The Sharrow school’s green roof design provided value through its control of stormwater, noise, heat and pollution. A happy by-product was its value to local wildlife. 

Clean Tech Investments Soaring in 2010

sliver panel

sliver-panel.jpgWorldwide, investors put $1.9 billion into clean tech startups in the first three months of 2010. That is an 83% increase from the same quarter last year and a 29% increase from the fourth quarter of 2009. Additionally, the number of deals hit a record high.

Electric car-related startups and solar technology startups received the most investment. The results come from a survey of investments made in 180 companies from North America, Europe, Israel, India, and China.

(READ More from Reuters)

Unemployed Friends: Jobless Find Support Online

elderly-ext-with-laptop.jpgUnemployment can be lonely. “It’s isolating to be at home while most of the rest of the world is working,” said Jennifer Hong, a mother of three in South Carolina. So she did something about it.

“I’ve been unemployed for two years. I couldn’t find a forum or a place for people like myself to discuss unemployment issues so I created one,” said Hong, who launched www.unemployed-friends.com last July.

Hong said the site gets about 5,000 unique visitors a day and that there are 200 to 300 members online at any given time. People write in the forum not only about the frustrations of the jobless life, but also about what’s going on in Washington, D.C. with extensions of unemployment benefits — and how they can get involved.

(READ More from Huffington Post)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

US Special Forces Apologize For Afghan Civilian Deaths With Sheep

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soldier-uk-meets-kabul-man.jpgABC News- In the dusty Afghan village where U.S. troops killed two pregnant women and three other innocent civilians in February, a remarkable scene played out this week between an aggrieved father and the most senior special operations officer in the United States military.

Vice Admiral William McRaven — the commander of Joint Special Operations Command — showed up with two sheep, and in the cultural understanding of the region, surrendered himself.

He didn’t literally surrender. But he didn’t have to. In the code followed by the southeastern Afghan family so devastated by the February incident, offering two sheep is the equivalent of begging for forgiveness.

And the father — who has lost two sons, two daughters and one grandchild — accepted McRaven’s apology.

Shell Oil Pays to Treat City Sewage and Buy it Back

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sewage_plant-cclic-rjgalindo.jpgA British Columbia city is overcoming a water problem by getting the oil and gas industry to pay for its daily sewage treatment.

Dawson Creek, in the heart of the province’s booming oil and gas sector, had a great plan for reusing its wastewater — they just didn’t have the $10-million they needed. But when they put out a request for proposals, Shell Oil said they would pay for the whole thing.

The town will become the first in North America to be equipped to sell its sewage for reuse in the gas industry. The new wastewater treatment plant will upgrade the quality of about 400,000 cubic meters of sewage every day to a standard that makes the water useable by industry.

(READ the news in Toronto’s Globe and Mail)

Solar Aircraft Takes Flight; Next Step, Around the World Voyage

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solar-impulse-plane.jpgA solar-powered airplane designed to fly day and night without fuel or emissions successfully made its first test flight above the Swiss countryside on Wednesday.

The Solar Impulse, which has 12,000 solar cells built into its wings, is a prototype for an aircraft intended to fly around the world without fuel in 2012.

It took six years to build the carbon fiber aircraft, which has the wingspan of an Airbus A340 but weighs only as much as a mid-size car (1,600 kg).

(READ the story in Reuters)

U.S. Retailers Post Record Sales in March – Best in a Decade

shoppers in Fredricksburg, VA

shoppers-fredricksburg.jpgThe nation’s retailers reported their strongest monthly sales growth in a decade on Thursday, with robust gains in virtually every category of merchandise and every type of store.

The industry collectively posted a 9.1 percent sales increase at stores open at least a year, according to Thomson Reuters. That was the strongest result since the group began tracking the figures in 2000.

Analysts had lofty expectations for March, but the results released Thursday handily beat the 6.3 percent increase they had predicted.

(READ the report in the New York Times)

Gaming For Social Good: New Site for Social Gaming Promotes Activism

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armchair-revolutionary.jpgImagine if the tens of millions who give time and money to tending their Farmville game on Facebook were instead working for social change. After six years in production, the non-profit Website, Armchair Revolutionary launched its new game-building infrastructure that combines social gaming and social activism in support of worldchanging technologies, like solar kits for poor people.

Armchair Revolutionary is a social gaming concept that’s based on real life social needs. Token investments of $0.99 fund charities and in some cases are invested in for-profit startups in exchange for an equity position.

The games incorporate new technologies/ideas like location-based software, embedded sensor networks, augmented reality, micro-transactions, virtual goods, and more.

(READ More at Gamasutra.com)

 

 

Phonesourcing: Bringing Call Centers Back to the U.S.

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office-workersm.jpgAs the U.S. economy slowly rebounds, companies are increasingly relying on a decentralized workforce of home-based call centers — in America. The old mantra: route service calls overseas to cut costs in half. The new idea: bring call centers back home, but not to bulky, brick-and-mortar phone banks. Use hourly workers sitting in home offices, managed on someone else’s payroll.

Projections show the number of U.S. home-based call agents growing at an annual clip of 20% between 2009 and 2012, from about 50,000 to more than 80,000. That’s much faster than the growth rate for calling centers in India (4%) and the Philippines (9%), though foreign outsourcing remains a more popular and cheaper corporate option.

(READ more in Time magazine)

British Army Dog Sniffs Out Bomb Factory (Video)

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bomb-sniffinguk-dog.jpgChocolat, a belgian shepherd, is being hailed as a hero in his first year as a bomb-sniffing dog for the British military after his nose led soldiers to a Taliban bomb-making factory, saving the lives of soldiers in Afghanistan.

Handlers say a year ago the dog wouldn’t even sit when prompted.

WATCH the video below, or at MSNBC

Greenbutts Cigarette Filters Sprout Flowers When Planted

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cig-butts-go-green.pngGood News Network doesn’t condone smoking cigarettes, of course, but we recognize that millions of people are addicted, and trillions of cigarette butts end up littering our sidewalks, roadways, and waterways. Greenbutts LLC chose to tackle the problem with a 100 percent biodegradable cigarette filter — that even sprouts into green grass or blooming flowers when contacting dirt.

(READ More in GizMag.com)