blog (August, 2007)

4415 Euclid recycles

Cleveland Midtown Innovation Center finally has a City recycling dumpster. :)

It was over a year ago that John McGovern referred me to Cassandra Moore, (Project Director for the City of Cleveland's Division of Waste Collection,) to request a city recycling dumpster in my workspace parking lot.

Our building owners and management were open and enthusiastic, (thanks, Michael Fleming, Heartland Developers, 4415 Euclid LLC.) Being publicly accessible 24/7 by Euclid and Chester made our location an easy sell to the City, we just had to wait on the new containers to arrive and be painted. A year of predictions, postponement, recontacting.

I've been collecting recyclables in the CleveMed kitchen for a few years -- in cardboard boxes from the water jugs we'd buy -- and toting them to City dumpsters every couple weeks. Until I'd drive my car to work, the filled boxes would stack to form a wall next to my cube, and the heap in the kitchen would tend toward constant overflow, pissing off the germ-paranoid.

Great, then, to return from California this week and find that our dumpster had finally arrived, and that the company switched from gallon jug shipments to a tap-water purifier.

An opportunity for us to collect more materials. Get some real bins, better publicize, and (hopefully) have the cleaning crew take the recyclables out with the trash. That's less crushing, stacking, and transporting for me.

I've added this to the Cleveland Recycling Locations Map (about).

4415 Euclid Recyces

Aug 30, 2007 - 18:30
Categories: cleveland, eco, work
Comments: [2]

how I read, online/offline

I've noticed more than a few people that don't usually read magazines in real life like to read them on aeroplanes. (I won't make broad, sweeping generalizations about most being women.)

Maybe it's because the content is bite-size chunky, and they fit well in the seat pocket?

Even if the subject is non-trashy, though, magazines themselves are trashy. Or at best, recycley, which is preceded in preference by reducey.

(I still read books, but) I don't read the newspaper or magazines; I read from the web. I'm not iPhone hip, though, and still rock the off-line, often. I used to print out web-reads for off-line consumption, but I've made another step in paper-less. (The soapbox I'm standing on is 100% post-consumer recycled cardboard.).

My new-school/old-school combo is an aged Palm Pilot with Google Reader and del.icio.us, and Plucker.

Here's my online/offline web-reading strategy:

  1. Browse the blogs and news feeds I read with Google Reader.
  2. Kick stuff that looks interesting off to a new (Firefox) tab -- using keystroke ff with the Google Reader Quick Links Greasemonkey script (or Better GReader Firefox add-on.)
  3. Mark everything else as Read (keystroke A,) close Google Reader, and sift through the opened tabs.
  4. Consume what I have time for, and tag longer items for later in del.icio.us as to_read. Using the del.icio.us Bookmarks extension, keystroke CTRL-D (CMD-D) then typing the tag name does it all.
  5. Use Plucker to grab all of the pages at 1-link depth from my del.icio.us/to_read list, and convert them to a Palm-readable format.
  6. Sync the Palm
  7. Read tagged items at leisure, on- or off-line.

No trees, no inks, no waste, no shipping!

No big glossy pictures, either, (yet.)

Aug 16, 2007 - 14:39
Categories: eco, media, travel, web
Comments: [7]

STFU and buy something

STFU and buy something

and support your local clearcutting operation!

Aug 04, 2007 - 05:17
Comments: [2]

three link thurs: 2007-08-02

Stuff (Paul Graham)
Every thing you own takes energy away from you. Some give more than they take. Those are the only things worth having.
Time as Chimera (How to Save the World)
When we measure our accomplishments, the progress of our lives, in terms of clock time, what happens when we find that that measure is a chimera (="a fanciful mental illusion")?
An Incomplete Manifesto for Growth (Bruce Mau Design)
4. Love your experiments (as you would an ugly child).
27. Read only left-hand pages.
29. Think with your mind. Forget technology.
39. Coffee breaks, cab rides, green rooms.

Aug 02, 2007 - 05:36
Categories: philosophy
Comments: [2]

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