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Monday, May 28, 2012

A History of the World in 100 Objects:100 Solar-powered lamp and charger

There are around five billion mobile phones in use around the world today

How is this technology changing lives?

Podcast
There are currently 1.6 billion people across the world without access to an electrical grid. In these areas, objects such as this allow people to study, work and socialise outside daylight hours, vastly improving the quality of many lives. Additionally, households using solar energy rather than kerosene lamps are able to avoid the risk of fire and the damage to health that kerosene can cause. Once purchased, this kit costs very little to run, making it a very efficient option for many people living in the world's poorest countries.

100 Solar-powered lamp and charger

A lamp that runs off sunlight. Neil MacGregor, Director of the British Museum, looks at the final object in the series: a solar-powered lamp with a charger that can bring cheap light and power to people around the world with no access to the electric grid. Simple, cheap and clean – is this the revolutionary technology of our future? With contributions from Aloka Sarder, a mother and adult student in West Bengal, and Nick Stern, expert on the economics of climate change.

A History of the World in 100 Objects homepage

The BBC Podcasts

Solar-powered lamp and charger
Solar-powered lamp and charger, made in Shenzhen, Guangdong, China, 2010


This series has been, for me, [Neil MacGregor]an exhilarating journey through two million years of human endeavour, passion and ingenuity. We began in East Africa with a chopping tool - a roughly shaped stone that allowed us to take control of our environment and to change both the way we live and the way we think. And I want to finish with another tool, or more precisely with a bit of technology that's also transforming the way we can live and think - in East Africa where our story began, but also in South Asia and in many other parts of the world. It's a portable solar energy panel that powers a lamp. In fact it's sunshine, captured, harvested and stored, to be taken out and used whenever and wherever we need it.

"Now I can do my lessons till midnight because of solar light. Previously I have [had] to spend lots of time in the ration shop to collect kerosene oil for use [in] lamps at night for my studies. Now I can save my time and money too." (Aloka Sarder)

"Solar energy is at the heart of the new industrial revolution, the low-carbon industrial revolution which is just beginning. It's a revolution which will be enormously important in the history of mankind." (Nick Stern)

Our hundredth object gives to people all over the world - who have until now been off-grid, that is, without access to any mains electricity supply - a quite new level of control over their environment. Solar power, thanks to low-cost lighting, and power kits like the one I've chosen, is changing lives in many parts of the world. And it may yet - who knows? - play a key role in solving the world's energy problems.
I'm standing on the roof of BBC Broadcasting House, and I've got the solar panel and lamp with me - the latest addition to the collection of the British Museum. The lamp is made of plastic, it's got a handle, and it's about the size of a large coffee mug. The solar panel looks like a small silver photograph frame. When this solar panel is exposed to eight hours of bright sun - and today we're lucky, even in London the sun is bright - then the lamp can provide up to one hundred hours of even, white light. At its strongest it can illuminate an entire room - enough to allow a family with no electricity to live in a quite new way - and, once paid for, it depends only on sun.

Photovoltaic panels contain rows of solar cells made from silicon, wired together and then encased in plastic and glass. When exposed to sunlight, the cells generate electricity, which can charge and re-charge a battery. It's largely made of durable plastic, its rechargeable batteries are a recent invention, and its photovoltaic cell depends on the silicon-chip technology which lies behind personal computers and mobile phones. And all this supra-national new technology can now be harnessed, thanks to the energy source that's been with us since the world began. It comes from 93 million miles away . . . it's the sun. Here's Professor Nick Stern of the London School of Economics, known for his work on climate change:

"One of the great advantages of solar energy is that as far as we humans are concerned, it's almost limitless. Why? Because in one hour we get as much energy from the sun on the earth as we use right across the planet in one year. So for us it's virtually unlimited. And further, the cost of accessing that limitless supply of energy is really crashing down. Just in the last couple of years the cost of a solar panel has fallen by about a half."

Although silicon is cheap and sunshine is free, solar panels big enough to generate the gargantuan amounts of electricity that rich countries devour are still prohibitively expensive. The poor are more modest in their demands and so, paradoxically, this technology which is costly for the rich is cheap for the poor. Many of the world's poorest people live in the sunniest latitudes, which is why this new source of modest amounts of energy works so well in South Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and tropical America. There, in a poor household, a small number of volts can make a very big difference.

If you live in the tropics without electricity, your day ends early. Light at night is supplied by candles or by kerosene lamps. Candles are dim and don't last. Kerosene is expensive and gives off toxic fumes. Kerosene lanterns and cooking stoves cause an estimated two million deaths every year, most of them women, because the fumes are especially dangerous in enclosed spaces where most cooking is done, affecting lungs, heart and eyes. Then there is the fire risk. Homes made of wood or other natural materials are highly inflammable, at constant risk from candle flames and kerosene spills.

Photovoltaic solar panels change almost every aspect of this rural domestic existence. Lighting on tap at home means that children, and adults, can study at night, improving their education and therefore their futures. Homes become cleaner and safer, and they become cheaper. Micro-credit schemes allow payments for a solar lamp like this to be spread, so although the initial cost is high, the debt can be paid off quite quickly out of the considerable savings on kerosene - and once the debt is paid, your light is free. Here is Aloka Sarder, mother and adult student from Dayapur village in rural West Bengal, who is using one of the simple lamp kits in her home:

"For last one year I am using the solar lights. It's very useful . . . [more] than the kerosene lamps. Now I can work at night, my children can do their lessons at night. And you know we are living in the storm-prone area. If there is storm, then kerosene lamps . . . not work. In that way solar light works as electric lights for us, and I am happy."



Larger panels can provide power for cookers, fridges, televisions, computers and water pumps, so that many of the defining amenities of towns can now be available to villages. But there's more. Both towns and villages can be set free by solar power, even when there is a mains electricity supply. Here's Nick Stern again:



"One of the great things about solar power is freedom from the grid. In many parts of the world, particularly the developing world and particularly South Asia and Africa, it is extremely unreliable. Also the energy is unreliable from the point of view of interventions by corrupt people. It's all too easy to flick a switch and turn off your energy supply, and then demand payment to put it back on. With solar power you can organise it yourself, you are in control. So it's really empowering, relative to relying on the grid system."



So it's not surprising that in Africa and Asia, on or off grid, the demand for solar panels is enormous - they give independence. Here is Boniface Nyamu, a teacher from a girls' school in Kibera, Kenya - one of the densest urban areas in Africa - where they have been taught how to make solar panels and lamps that they then sell or hire out. It's helping to bring in extra pupils at the school, as well as giving light to the community:



"We were taught how just to make it light. But the students discovered that they can also connect wires, so that it can also charge a mobile phone, an mp3, mp4, and maybe the camera. This panel works in two ways. One, it provides light, that is a torch - it can be used as a torch. And at the same time - during daytime when we don't need light - it can be used to charge mobile phones, and any other rechargeable thing that falls below five volts."



On our lamp there is a charging socket, and beside it is a universally recognised symbol - a mobile phone. Our solar panel could give the 1.6 billion people without access to an electrical grid the power they need to join the global mobile conversation. Putting communities in touch, giving access to information about jobs and markets, and providing the basis for informal and highly effective banking networks, so that local businesses can start up on a shoe-string. A recent study of mobile phone use among the rural poor, commissioned by the World Bank, reported that labourers, farmers, rickshaw drivers, fishermen and shopkeepers - all said that their income gets a real boost when they have access to a mobile phone. As Nick Stern confirms, women especially benefit:



"They can have their own solar panel, and charge people to use it, either for a lamp or a mobile phone. They can do it mostly from their own house. They will need to borrow a bit to buy it, but on the whole micro-finance to women is more reliable. Women seem to pay their bills, pay their credit, a bit more reliably than men. So it has that sense of opportunity and empowerment for women."



This liberating, low-cost, green, clean technology is not only transforming lives in Africa and Asia. It may ultimately help to save the planet, reducing our current dependence on fossil fuels and their contribution to climate change. It's a hope that was expressed years ago by an unexpected prophet of renewable energy: Thomas Edison. In 1931 Edison observed to his friends Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone:



"I'd put my money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power! I hope we don't have to wait until oil and coal run out before we tackle that."



The power of the sun seems a good place to end this global history, because solar energy is a dream of the future that echoes the oldest and most universal of human myths, that of the life-giving sun. You could see our solar-powered lamp as an echo of this myth - the heroic fire-stealing Prometheus reduced to the humble role of home help. Just as we bottle summer fruits so that the warmth and nourishment of summer can see us through winter, everybody has dreamed of harvesting the sun to have its light and power available at will. In the very first programme of this history, the Egyptian priest Hornedjitef took with him a scarab, magical symbol of the regenerative sun, to lighten the darkness of the afterlife. I think if he was setting out on that journey now, he would definitely take a solar-powered lamp as back-up.



This hundredth object brings me to the end of this particular history of the world. For me, the series has demonstrated the power of things to connect us to other lives across time and place, and to ensure that all humanity can have a voice in our common story. Above all, I hope it has shown that the notion of the human family is not an empty metaphor, however dysfunctional that family usually is - we all have the same needs and preoccupations, the same fears and hopes. Humanity is one.



It's good to be able to end this series on a note of hope. We began with the noise of a dying star. I want to finish with another cosmic noise from millions of miles away. It's the music created by vibrations in the sun's atmosphere . . . it's the noise of a new day.

Speech Debelle UK Rapper - Hidden Homeless

Speech Debelle on what it is like being homeless

Speech Debelle: My homeless years

Looking back, I really didn't have a clue where all this was leading. I felt rootless, lost and depressed. I didn't have anywhere I wanted to go, nor anywhere I wanted to be.

I got into trouble at school and the more trouble I got into, the more rocky things got between me and my mum. ... started moving from hostel to hostel. There was one day I remember, in another women-only hostel, when I started to re-think my situation.

As a result of the current strain on rental properties, emergency housing in the UK is in short supply.

London rapper Speech Debelle, who was homeless herself for three years, has been speaking to some of Britain's 'hidden' homeless people, who are struggling to find accommodation and employment.

Speech, whose real name is Corynne Elliot, revisits the hostel she stayed in and explains how it inspired her music.

When she was 19, Mercury Prize-winning rap artist Speech Debelle walked out of her family home and became homeless for three years. In this moving documentary, she shows that being homeless isn't just about down and outs sleeping in cardboard boxes, but is a problem which affects more and more young people in Britain today. Speech gets to know four young people from very different backgrounds - all of them sofa surfing or sleeping rough - as they try to find a more permanent roof over their heads. She discovers that councils and charities are struggling to cope with this growing crisis and she investigates the impact on young people's lives.

"2am in my hostel bed, my eyes them red, my belly ain't fed / I got butter but I ain't got bread and I'm smoking on my last cigarette / I ain't got creds I can't make calls / Got no papers I got no jewels / Got debts up to my eyeballs / Christmas soon come and I got no funds but what's Christmas if you ain't at Mum's?"

"Too many vulnerable young people in this country are beginning their adult lives thinking about day-to-day survival rather than their own futures”



Tracks

Fear and Loathing on the Populist Right: Arthur Goldwag

From “Birthers” who claim that President Obama was not born in the United States to those who believe that the Constitution is in danger of being replaced with Sharia law, conspiratorial beliefs have become increasingly common in our public discourse.

His new book is The New Hate: A History of Fear and Loathing on the Populist Right.




The Rise Of The New Hate

Poll: Most Americans Against Bush's Bailout Plan
Poll: Americans against auto bailout

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Lisa Jack's college portrait of Obama.

In 1979, he was an 18-year-old freshman who liked Earth, Wind & Fire and wore silly hats. David Maraniss' new biography reveals how Barry from Honolulu became Barack, president of the United States





















Michele Wallace

To Hell and Back: On The Road with Black Feminism in the 60s & 70s

Michele Wallace Book: Black Macho and the Myth of the Superwoman, the book, Black Macho and the Myth of the Superwoman, went on to include a separate essay on  “Black Macho,” a term that encapsulated the anti-intellectual impulse within Black Power rhetoric. Back in 1979, you probably would have been stunned by this text, and you wouldn’t have been the only one. Wallace’s book led to debate about the role of Black Macho, the relationships between African American men and women and the place African American women held in the fight against racism and sexism.

"More to the point perhaps, I had no inkling at 18 that I would still be explaining 26 years later why or how I, as a black woman, became a feminist. The necessity of doing so is all the more aggravating as I have come to realize in the past decade that my feminist ethics and my racial pride are no more than the tip of the iceberg so far as my identity goes."

In a 2009 post on Wallace’s blog, she explained the circumstances behind the publishing of the excerpt and book. 

Ms. Blog: Black History Month: The Myth of the Black Superwoman, Revisited

Criticism of the book came from all fronts, as Calvin Hernton writes in “The Sexual Mountain and Black Women Writers” in the Black American Literature Forum:

Wallace was right–the book has survived the criticism and remains a landmark black feminist text. Her discussion of the Superwoman has developed into an ongoing critique of the “Strong Black Woman” (SBW) archetype. During this month devoted to Black history, this text deserves rereading.

 

Friday, May 18, 2012

Donna Summer, The Queen Of Disco, Dies At 63





Donna Summer - ? Feel Love



Like the King of Pop or the Queen of Soul, Donna Summer was bestowed a title fitting of musical royalty — the Queen of Disco.

"Her records sound as good today as they ever did. That she has never been inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame is a total disgrace especially when I see the second-rate talent that has been inducted," he said. "She is a great friend to me and to the Elton John AIDS Foundation and I will miss her greatly."

Summer, real name LaDonna Adrian Gaines, was born in 1948 in Boston. She was raised on gospel music and became the soloist in her church choir by age 10.

"I like the Moody Blues, the Beatles and the Rolling Stones as well as Aretha Franklin, Dionne Warwick, the Supremes and Temptations," she said. "I didn't know many white kids who didn't know the Supremes; I don't know many black kids who don't know the Moody Blues."  her All Music biography.

Ms. Summer's suicide attempt came at the end of two years of extraordinary success. Her first major disco hit was the overtly sexual 17-minute song ''Love to Love You Baby,'' from the album of the same title, released in 1975. The song, she said, was an effort to imitate the breathy voice and style of Marilyn Monroe. With Mr. Moroder producing and Mr. Bogart, who ran Casablanca Records, guiding her, Ms. Summer released two more albums in 1976, ''A Love Trilogy'' and ''The Four Seasons of Love,'' which solidified her disco and pop audience

Her latest double-disk CD set, The Journey: The Very Best of Donna Summer, was just released. She's also penned a new autobiography, Ordinary Girl: The Journey.
Donna Summer obituary
PHOTOS: Donna Summer | 1948 - 2012

Samples from some of Donna Summer's biggest hit songs:

Friday, May 11, 2012

J. Max Bond Jr., Architect

J. Max Bond Jr. was long the most influential African-American architect in New York and one of a few black architects of national prominence. He died at 73 on Feb. 18, 2009.
Mr. Bond had been the partner in charge of the museum portion of the National September 11 Memorial and Museum at the World Trade Center. His firm,Davis Brody Bond Aedas, is also the associate architect for the memorial.
Mr. Bond led the Architects Renewal Committee of Harlem before founding the firm Bond Ryder & Associates in 1970, with Donald P. Ryder. Foremost among its projects were the Martin Luther King Jr.Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta, which includes Dr. King's tomb; the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem; and the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute in Alabama.



BLOCKS; Unheard Voices on Planning New Trade Center

Mr. Bond also questioned the premise of new skyscrapers. ''There's a macho thing that keeps coming out: we should build a building that tall to show them,'' he said. ''Not everyone shares that sensibility. It's a particularly male, Western sensibility.

''I'm not saying people of color are wiser. But women, people of color, gays, immigrants have all had to look at themselves. They have experienced the underside of society in a much more profound way.

''Architecture inevitably involves all the larger issues of society.''

 Architectural Record
At the time of his death, Bond was overseeing the museum component of the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. Davis also notes that Bond was particularly excited about a forthcoming submission in the Smithsonian’s competition to design the National Museum of African American History and Culture, calling the project “the culmination of everything he had done professionally.”


“Architecture inevitably involves all the larger issues of society”.
 J. Max Bond, Jr. 














The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, in Alabama, is one of Bond’s many notable projects.

A New Historical Fiction by Leonard Pitts, Jr.

"I so love this story!  Mr. Pitts has done it again. The man crafts a novel as well as the great storytellers of our time. "Freeman" captured my attention from the very first sentence and my heart throughout. Sam and Tilda will stay with me for a very long time. I can't let them go."  --- Reviewed by Sybil Wilkes, co-host of the Tom Joyner Morning Show, a nationally syndicated radio program heard in over 115 markets with an audience of more than eight million.


In 2004, Pitts was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for commentary. He was also a finalist for the Pulitzer in 1992. In 1997, Pitts took first place for commentary in division four (newspapers with a circulation of over 300,000) in the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors' Ninth Annual Writing Awards competition.  His recent columns on the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin by George Zimmerman have garnered much attention from his peers and readers alike.  Click here to read the archive of columns by Leonard Pitts Jr.   



Freeman

Book Summary

    Shortly after the Confederates surrender, a runaway slave leaves the safety of Philadelphia in search of his wife who he left in Mississippi 15 years earlier, but who has been taken by gunpoint to Arkansas by her former landowner. Original.  Excerpt

'Freeman': A Liberated Slave In Search Of Family

"To me, it's such a fascinating and little known fact that all of these African-Americans newly freed slaves went to such lengths to reconstitute their marriages and reconstitute their families," he says.


"In terms of the emotional aspect of it, if I've been owned all of my life and I'm 20, 30, 40 years old, I have to define for myself intellectually and emotionally what freedom means, and what I can now do," Pitts says.


NABJ Journal the Journalist of the Year, page 10

“I always knew I was a writer. It was not a matter of deciding, it was a matter of accepting what I already was."



“His columns speak to those silenced by poverty, violence and discrimination.” ... Pitts, ...writes a twice-weekly column for The Miami Herald

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Toni Morrison

After a four-decade career that has helped change the conversation about race and gender in America, Toni Morrison still has plenty left to say. READ MORE >>

Among the awards received by the 81-year-old writer from Lorain, Ohio, are the 1988 Pulitzer Prize, and, in 1993, she was the first black woman to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature. Moreover, the breathless veneration put forth by her fans—who include Barack Obama and Oprah Winfrey—might indicate that Morrison is too mired in the establishment for her novels to provoke or critique. All of these assumptions are dead wrong. The author’s journey through the literary landscape has always been one of defiance. Ever since her first novel, The Bluest Eye, was published in 1970, when the then 39-year-old Morrison was a single mother living in Queens raising two boys and working as a senior editor at Random House, her fiction has remained both unflinchingly visceral and almost biblical in proportion. Her language can be spare, but every color, description, and emotional or collective massacre has a haunting resonance.



Monday, May 7, 2012

HippoCampus


HippoCampus is a project of the Monterey Institute for Technology and Education (MITE). The goal of HippoCampus is to provide high-quality, multimedia content on general education subjects to high school and college students free of charge.           

Friday, May 4, 2012

ExxonMobil: A 'Private Empire' On The World Stage

In Private Empire, Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Steve Coll investigates how ExxonMobil has used its money and power to wield significant influence in Washington, D.C., particularly during the Bush administration.  In Private Empire, investigative journalist Steve Coll explains how ExxonMobil has used its money and power to wield significant influence in Washington, D.C., concerning issues like climate change.
ExxonMobil A Private Empire on the World Stage
Book: Private Empire ExxonMobil and American Power by Steve Coll

Book Summary
An investigation into the secretive corporation traces the period between the Exxon Valdez accident and the Deepwater Horizion spill to profile chief executives Lee Raymond and Rex Tillerson as well as the company's role in violent international incidents.
Also by Steve Coll
Ghost Wars
The Bin Ladens
The institute is now led by President Steve Coll The New America Foundation

 

 

Afgha.com - News - Afghanistan | Independent news and information about Afghanistan

Afgha.com - News - Afghanistan | Independent news and information about Afghanistan

Former head of Afghan intelligence Amrullah Saleh

"Our policy was always to have a good and friendly realtions with everyone. But we never have accepted being oppressed and we will never accept it."

Ahmad Shaah Massoud


Former head of Afghan intelligence Amrullah Saleh was fired earlier this year because of his opposition to the Karzai administration's efforts to negotiate with the Taliban. He says a Taliban-friendly government would mean Afghan rights are "violated fundamentally."

Mr. SALEH: Whether the international community remains in Afghanistan or abandons us, I have to be able to defend my honor. I am not anti-Taliban because U.S. is anti-Taliban. I was fighting this war long before the United States started this. If General Petraeus decides tomorrow to leave and Taliban are at the gates of Kabul, yes, he can leave. I can't leave. As I said, I'm not anti-peace, but I'm anti-Talibanization of Afghanistan. So we were fighting the Taliban before NATO, and if we see our history, our life, our principles are compromised in a deal with Taliban, we will fight again.

NPR Transcripts

Saleh started out as a teenage mujahaddin, fighting the Soviets. And he became an intelligence aide to the legendary Panshiri fighter Ahmed Shah Massoud. It was the peace jirga that ended Saleh's time as Karzai's intelligence chief. Saleh and the country's top police official resigned after the rocket attack, though Saleh maintains his resignation involved much more. Sitting cross-legged in a sunny room, overlooking his apple orchard, Amrullah Saleh says he couldn't take what he saw as the Karzai government going soft on the Taliban.

Welcome to Kids Empowerment Academy where kids learn to be confident!

Welcome to Kids Empowerment Academy where kids learn to be confident!

Kids Empowerment Academy is a communication school for children ages 6-17. We provide specialized instruction that develops a solid set of interpersonal and presentation skills. Our focus is to help children overcome shyness and prevent them from developing public speaking anxiety.

Why choose Kid Power Academy?

In today’s busy world kids need a special place where they can learn, practice and develop the leadership skills needed for a successful life. We provide this opportunity! Our kids build confidence in their ideas and themselves during our “learn as you lead” program. Our experience driven method literally transforms shy kids into confident kids as they eagerly exchange ideas as: Entrepreneurs, Senators, Authors and more!

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Top Universities Expand Free Online Classes - Harvard and MIT



Harvard and MIT are moving ambitiously into online education, jointly offering free classes to anyone in the world who wants to take them. The courses will include video lessons, quizzes and instant feedback. Online instruction has had a mixed track record, but the universities hope evolving technology will make it a powerful new tool to expand educational opportunities worldwide.

Harvard and MIT are investing $60 million into a joint venture called edX. Its mission is to provide interactive university classes online for free to anyone in the world. It's the latest move by top universities to expand their intellectual reach through the Internet. And as NPR's Steve Henn reports, some are calling this effort transformational.


Udacity

SEBASTIAN THRUN: I really want to reinvent universities for the future, and I really want to understand how can we use digital media in the best possible way to enhance the learning experience.











Video streaming by Ustream

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Stop-and-Frisk Campaign: About the Issue and Activists on Trial for Arrests During NYPD Protest

The NYPD’s stop-and-frisk practices raise serious concerns over racial profiling, illegal stops and privacy rights. The Department’s own reports on its stop-and-frisk activity confirm what many people in communities of color across the city have long known: The police are stopping hundreds of thousands of law abiding New Yorkers every year, and the vast majority are black and Latino.

An analysis by the NYCLU revealed that more than 4 million innocent New Yorkers were subjected to police stops and street interrogations from 2004 through 2011, and that black and Latino communities continue to be the overwhelming target of these tactics. Nearly nine out of 10 stopped-and-frisked New Yorkers have been completely innocent, according to the NYPD’s own reports

Nearly two dozen demonstrators arrested last year while protesting the New York Police Department's stop-and-frisk policy have gone on trial.

Some 22 people arrested in October outside a Harlem police station appeared in court Monday. Two accepted offers to get their cases dismissed by staying out of trouble for six months.

The demonstrators, who include ministers, local activists and Princeton University scholar and civil rights advocate Cornel West, lined three rows of courtroom seats in one of the biggest group trials of protesters in the city in recent years. Supporters waited in line for spots.