Month: May 2008
‘Zen Driving’ and other pointers to save gas
From NPR:
Oil company Exxon-Mobil released their first quarter earnings report Thursday, showing steep profits amid soaring costs. With gas prices hovering around $4-a-gallon, we ask our listeners for their money-saving tips. (link) Then we do some fact-checking with Jon Linkov, managing editor of autos at Consumer Reports. Filling up in the morning will only help you save one tenth of one percent, he says, so focus on more significant gas-savers, like the following:
1.) Check your tire pressure once a week.
2.) Keep your car well-maintained.
3.) Don’t carry extra weight in the trunk.
4.) If you are in really bad bumper-to-bumper traffic, turn the car off.
5.) Once you really break 55 mph, you are hurting your fuel economy, so try to slow down.
Gas prices expected to drop after strike ends
As our economy continues to be based more and more more on a global level, its important to realize what happens in Nigeria may not stay in Nigeria.
A recent strike in Nigeria as caused Exxon to completely shut-down production there, hurting the balance between supply and demand world-wide. But now it looks like the striking workers requests may have been solved and oil production can continue.
Also, recent attacks on oil refineries have also led to a reduction in overall oil production.
Continue reading Gas prices expected to drop after strike ends
Switch off that television
This video is making it’s rounds around the Interweb. I’ve seen it on 3 or 4 sites now but saw it first on Thomas’ blog a day or two ago. Everyone’s had some great opinions on it. I personally like Thomas’ best – maybe cause we’re looking at things in a similar way.
I’ll try not to steal his thunder. Watch the video and then read his post for sure. But here are just a couple highlights:
From the video:
Media that’s targeted at you but doesn’t include you may not be worth sitting still for.
Thomas writes:
The way Clay expresses it is basically… the new media (blogging/wikipedia/youtube etc) = consuming + producing + sharing > this is a shift from the old media that only expects you to consume.
People are watching less television and are doing something… making something happen… like just now as I create this post. It reminds me of the old Why don’t you? motto :: Why Don’t You Just Switch Off Your Television Set and Go and Do Something Less Boring Instead? :: kind of ironic, I know… but its real… and its now!
I have some great friends who chose not to purchase a TV for the first couple years of their marriage. They only had a small Commodore monitor hooked up to a VCR for watching movies. They finally gave in though when Tim needed his Texas Rangers fix and probably didn’t help that their girls were getting older – but I wonder how different our lives would be if we all stopped simply consuming television on a daily basis….
