Sponsorised links
October 2009
Amazing Pictures, Pollution in China | ChinaHush
October 14, 2009, the 30th annual awards ceremony of the W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund took place at the Asia Society in New York City. Lu Guang (卢广) from People’s Republic of China won the $30,000 W. Eugene Smith Grant in Humanistic Photography for his documentary project “Pollution in China.”
June 2009
Sponsorised links
May 2009
April 2009
Chris Shiflett: Save the Internet with rev="canonical"
There's a new proposal ("URL shortening that doesn't hurt the Internet") floating around for using rev="canonical" to help put a stop to the URL-shortening madness. It sounds like a pretty good idea, and based on some discussions on IRC this morning, I think a more thorough explanation would be helpful. I'm going to try.
March 2009
Pollution pour iPhone
Pollution informe sur les sources de pollution ainsi que les expositions mesurées. Pollution permet d’en savoir plus sur votre environnement et, en particulier, les polluants et leurs effets.
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
August 2008
July 2008
ariail cartoon 7-8-08 : Robert Ariail
Au moins toute cette autosatisfaction mettre notre Nico national de bonne humeur
June 2008
Le Crawler transporter
Avant d'atteindre l'espace, il faut polluer un peu.Ils atteignent le pad en 7-8 heures et consommant 568 litres de gasoil par heure.
Criirem
Blog du (riirem. A la fois laboratoire de recherche et centre de documentation, l'action de notre association porte sur les effets des ondes électromagnétiques sur le vivant.
Le bureau du (riirem réunit des scientifiques, experts des pollutions de l’environnement. Il est accompagné d'un conseil scientifique, notre "comité des sages" », composé de médecins et d'universitaires reconnus, spécialistes de l’électromagnétisme naturel, biologique et artificiel.
April 2008
ADEME Transports - Car Labelling - Emission de CO2 par type de carburant
Emissions de CO2 par type de carburant
Toxic | Garbage Island | VBS.TV
ABOUT GARBAGE ISLAND
For years we’ve been reading about a patch of garbage the size of Texas floating in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, ingeniously dubbed the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Basically, any trash that gets dumped in the water rides the currents to this one spot and joins an ever-increasing flotilla of crap. For all the breathless accounts of the mess and its impact on the area’s sealife, however, no one seemed to have a picture of the buildup.
