Weed watch: Globe column backs vaporizing

Photo: CC/Chuck Coker

Photo: CC/Chuck Coker

Globe columnist Judy Foreman has a fine piece on medical marijuana, and says, if she need to use the stuff, she’d vaporize:

Vaporizing vs. smoking: The push now among proponents of medical marijuana is toward inhaling the vapor, not smoking. Vaporizing is a safe and effective way of getting THC, the active ingredient, into the bloodstream and does not result in inhalation of toxic carbon monoxide, as smoking does, according to a study by Abrams published in 2007 in Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.

via The pros and cons of medical marijuana – The Boston Globe.

Vaporizing is healthier than smoking. But, as I noted in a previous post, there is no free lunch: One study (and there have been far too few studies, altogether) found that vaporizing releases toxic gases.

Also, I am concerned about the quality of vaporizers on the market. These are effectively unregulated medical devices, made with parts that–when heated–may expose users to even more crap.

ThinkGeek tribbles will give you no trouble

These furry, quivering, cooing, critters are a “must bring” for the opening of the new Trek movie in May.

Here’s a bit I wrote for the Boston Globe this week:

I’ve seen the trailer for J.J. Abrams’s upcoming “Star Trek” prequel about 30 times. I’ve picked through the high-definition video, checking the battle scenes against the starship-size reference charts in my office, and confirming that the license plate on the Kirk family car is from Iowa.

Sadly, I have seen no mention that Finnegan, Kirk’s tormentor at Star Fleet Academy, will be in the new movie. The original series’ famed tribbles, those cooing guinea pigs that love grain and hate Klingons, are rumored to be in the new “Star Trek” picture, however.

via Sharp images, not looks, in ‘cinema’ headset – The Boston Globe.

Cheap 3D printing from Philips

From my Boston Globe column today.. (link, excerpt, below) — mb

Shapeways offers cheap 3D printing – The Boston Globe
If you’ve ever thought you could design a better Troll or toaster (move over, Michael Graves), here’s your chance to prove it.

Shapeways.com is a new, low-cost 3D printing service that will turn your idea into a polycarbonate or acrylic objet in 10 business days.

Boston drivers: Fill-up at ten cents per gallon

Converted: This tank, in the trunk of a converted green grease car, holds waste vegetable oil. (Photo: Ben Falk, from the Green Grease Monkey website.)

by Mark Baard

As gas prices pass four bucks per gallon, green grease has never looked so good.

And with more entrepreneurs entering the Boston biodiesel and waste vegetable oil market, prices for the stuff are plummeting.

“The grease wars have begun in earnest,” Green Grease Monkey Patrick Keaney told me in an email this week.

The Boston Globe’s Robert Gavin today reports that premium is already way over four bucks, “while diesel hit a whopping $4.72 a gallon in Massachusetts.”

But if you own a car converted to run on waste vegetable oil (WVO), you can fill your tank (the plastic one in your trunk, that is), for as little as ten cents per gallon.

“I can’t keep the stuff on site,” Keaney said of his own, filtered, WVO product. “It’s crazy.”

Keaney is selling WVO, which he gathers from local restaurant kitchens, for $1.50 per gallon.

Now New Hampshire companies are coming to Boston, “offering $0.10/gal. for
grease!” said Keaney. “And some guy on Craigslist is offering $0.20.”

If you already drive a diesel, the Green Greasemonkeys and Boston Biofuels are offering B100 (100 percent biodiesel) at a very reasonable $4.00 per gallon.

You can pour biodiesel straight into the tank of your diesel car — no conversion necessary.

Spring is a good time to take a chance on WVO or biodiesel. The warm weather means you won’t have too warm up your tank in the morning. (WVO and biodiesel can gel at low temperatures, one reason WVO cars have a switch that toggles between the veggie oil and diesel tanks. Continue reading

Why just help a neighbor…

…when you can take his money, too?

Zilok.com, a new service launched today, is not only a stupid idea for anyone who owns a home (granted, it might help apartment dwellers in a pinch), it is a depressing sign of hard economic times.

The service suggests that — instead of sharing your lightly-used weed whacker with a neighbor, for example — you can charge him for it.

The car safety seat pictured here, for example, is available for rent in the San Francisco State University area for eight bucks per day, which makes no economic sense whatsoever.

Zilok also says (natch) that you will be doing right by the environment, because your customers will be buying less stuff. (One reason: By renting everything, and never owning anything, they will stay poor.)

No Boston-area items were available for rent as of noon today. — mb

Zilok Official USA Launch!
Keep it local and be a green hero
By simply renting things you aren’t using to people in your area, you cut down on conspicuous consumption and encourage the reuse of everyday household items and electronics. With Zilok you help save on the natural resources needed to produce more stuff.

“Inspired by conservation and green movements in Europe, Zilok is the fun way to tackle over-consumption while expanding everyone’s access to the things they want and need—whether that is a scooter or Wii, a ratchet set or a tuxedo” offered Gary Cige, Cofounder and CEO of Zilok.

Headsets getting some cachet

From my Boston Globe column last week: Smaller, better-looking video eyewear (for watching vids, checking in on your Second Life, etc.),

Headsets getting some cachet – The Boston Globe
By Mark Baard
May 12, 2008

digital eyewear
Digital eyewear is slowly becoming suitable for public viewing. In other words, headsets such as the Myvu Crystal are slim and colorful enough that they might be taken for a pair of over-the-top Gaultier frames instead of an assistive device.
more stories like this

The ear buds hanging from the arms of the Crystal are a dead giveaway that something “smart” is going on behind those shades.

Like the original, less sexy looking Myvu models, the Crystal (about $300 at myvu.com, starting next week) creates a single image you can see inside the translucent lenses.

Blogging kills

Bloggers’ hearts are giving out under the strain of chasing stuff that’s already been reported.

In other words, geezer journos are playing a game meant for young people.

I turned 41 on April 1. So imagine the pang I felt in my chest when I read that tech blogger Om Malik nearly croaked at the same age last December. (Malik’s WordPress avatar has him chomping on a cigar. I am a former cigar and pipe smoker myself.)

And just yesterday, I ran into a friend, a veteran newspaper editor, who sees–somewhat perversely–an “opening” for himself as a blogger.

Here’s what my friend said: Young journalists are not interested in blogging. They are after the trends. They want to write the “big picture” stories. That’s where he steps in (hand to heart, staggering, with a nitroglycerin tablet under his tongue.) He can break stories as a blogger!

In Web World of 24/7 Stress, Writers Blog Till They Drop – New York Times
Two weeks ago in North Lauderdale, Fla., funeral services were held for Russell Shaw, a prolific blogger on technology subjects who died at 60 of a heart attack. In December, another tech blogger, Marc Orchant, died at 50 of a massive coronary. A third, Om Malik, 41, survived a heart attack in December.

Other bloggers complain of weight loss or gain, sleep disorders, exhaustion and other maladies born of the nonstop strain of producing for a news and information cycle that is as always-on as the Internet.

To be sure, there is no official diagnosis of death by blogging, and the premature demise of two people obviously does not qualify as an epidemic. There is also no certainty that the stress of the work contributed to their deaths. But friends and family of the deceased, and fellow information workers, say those deaths have them thinking about the dangers of their work style.

Boston Police back off warrantless searches

“Police are like vampires,” a Black Panther leader tells the Globe.

Boston’s poor African Americans are rejecting the Boston Police Department’s offer to search their homes for guns, warrant-free.

Startled by the rebuke, the police are scaling back the unconstitutional scheme.
Universal Hub takes the Boston Globe to task for reporting the New Black Panther Party’s opposition to the BPD’s Safe Homes plan, without noting its militant platform. (Images: From the New Black Panther website.)

Boston Police surprised some black people dont like the idea of warrantless searches | Universal Hub
Boston Police surprised some black people dont like the idea of warrantless searches
By adamg – Tue, 03/25/2008 – 7:57am.

So the department has postponed its Safe Homes program again.

Request for the Globe: You mention in the story you interviewed the local leader of the New Black Panther Party twice. Can we hope that this means youll be doing a story on the party for those of us who didnt even know it existed, especially given that part of the partys platform is to organize armed “Black Peoples Militias” and to stop blacks from “snitching” and cooperating with police? See Point 7 in the partys 10-point platform.

"Hoax" prompts cops to terrorize straphangers

T rider makes false tip, prompting cops to bully a Cambridge man and his visiting friend. Commuters are put on hold.

istock_000005043107xsmall.jpg
(“Terrorist”: In the mass transportation system, everyone is a suspect.)

A hoaxer told police last week that two men wearing fatigues, and talking about drugs and guns, were headed for Logan Airport, according to one of the men targeted by the search.

State police, including one apparent smart-ass, detained the men for half an hour, after surrounding a train with bomb-sniffing dogs.

It took a while to find the men, who were not wearing fatigues, and had not been discussing illegal activity after all.

Almost unbelievably, the Boston transit police chief said he is grateful for the “tip,” because the department prides itself on erring on the side of caution.

A tip from a passenger and a manhunt that followed disrupted the Ts Red Line for about 13 minutes during rush hour Thursday morning, as police surrounded a train with bomb-sniffing dogs. It also forced Watchorn to miss a business trip to Buffalo while he was being questioned by State Police.

“The most disturbing thing about it was the apparent randomness of it,” Watchorn, 50, said. He said he wonders how easy it would be to subject others to what he considers hoaxes and to disrupt the transit system, based on an unsubstantiated tip.

Massachusetts police have repeatedly thrown the city into turmoil over science projects and ad campaigns in recent years.

The Boston Globe wanted to reach the hoaxer, but police would not reveal her identity.

Cheerleader tryouts bumping hard news?

UniversalHub blogger Brett knocks the Globe’s coverage of a local firefighter’s bust for weed possession, and says newsworthy images, such as mugshots, are taking a backseat to prettier pictures at Boston.com.

I’m not sure the stakes at so high on this particular story (the pot one), but I plan to share Brett’s observations with my journalism students on the other side of spring break.

Like Brett, I’ve been marveling (in a purely detached, analytical way) at the sexed-up photo galleries at Boston.com, from the cheerleader tryouts, below, to party shots like this.

Pats hold cheerleader auditions – Boston.com
Alanna Hicks, of Weymouth, stretched her arms and legs along with the other 300 aspirants. Judges will pare the field to 75 for a final tryout.
Essdras M Suarez / Globe Staff