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  • Those Sneaky Climate Alarmists

    A video came cycling around to me that provided gleeful evidence that the Climate Alarmists use sneaky methods to distort the information and make everyone shake in their boots because the world will end in less than 12 years. This guy, Tony Heller (aka Steven Goddard), even went so far as to create a tool to find the best point in any trend graph for best (mis)representing data.
    As with many such reports, I would always like to find myself wrong, and to discover that I’ve become a Climate Alarmist for nothing. All that lost sleep, spending time developing business ideas and models that are both sustainable, politically viable, and profitable.
    Sadly, Heller is simply a fraud. He used his own tool to make fun of activists, and to distract people from facts. Here is a great video by Mallan Baker that takes on a couple of Heller’s debunk graphs to debunks the junk.
    Why is Heller talking Continental US and pointing at specific US cities when we are talking GLOBAL warming. The US had some wicked hot years during the Dust Bowl, for example.

    Wikipedia can be the best overview source for highly active and rapidly updated pages like these: Global Warming, Climate Change, Sustainability in general, and Climate Change Denial.
    By now you know that everyone knows that there’s global warming. Thermometers tend not to lie.
    But I keep finding people who have been convinced that warming is not very much, or that it is a natural cycle to earth, or that humans are only responsible for a fraction of the warming we are experiencing.
    Even the oil companies now acknowledge that there’s global warming, but their business model is not conducive to any of the logical approaches to deal with the issue aggressively. In fact, according to internal documents, the oil companies have know for half a century that global warming was a byproduct of their product and hidden this from the public in order to protect their business-as-usual profits.

    With current technology, we can easily measure the energy that comes from the sun, and the amount that is reflected back into space. All evidence shows global warming is happening, and at an accelerating pace. You can use lots of good data sources related to land, ocean, air, ice coverage, etc. Statistically, solar flares, volcanoes, El Nino and other major factors can be isolated; warming can easily be primarily attributed to human factors.

    We don’t have time to debunk the deniers, people and lobbyists who are paid by deep fossil interests. We need to go about becoming more sustainable, like as if our collective lives depend on it. Business-as-usual (oil, gas, coal) is unsustainable. Being unsustainable is something that must change, sooner or later. Being unsustainable has a way of becoming more and more expensive, and coming to an ungraceful end.

    Fortunately, we will actually save money (i.e., more profits) from doing smart and sustainable things. Solar and Wind are now far cheaper than fossil fuels in most locations (even when combined with battery). Renewable energy is especially cheaper when considering all the externality costs of fossil fuels (pollution, health, national security).

    Energy efficiency offers a perpetuity of savings. The greenest gallon of gas is the one never pumped, refined, shipped and burned. The greenest electricity is the negawatt. We also like Teleworking, the greenest commute is zero-distance which consumes no time.

    Let’s all start with those things that can be done immediately (within weeks or a few months) and those that offer a perpetuity of savings. We need to start putting the magic of compounding to our advantage, not toward more non-sustainable practices.

    < * Notes & References * >
    Wikipedia is a great source on Climate Change. Start with the Global Warming Book.
    An excellent source for fact/fiction/myth is: SkepticalScience.com (I’ve never seen anything there that was not supported with sources and provable with current data.)

    The log entry for Baker video:
    A few days ago, noted Climate Change commentator Tony Heller released a
    new video with some killer facts that completely exposes the conspiracy
    over climate change.

    Or does it?

    Let’s discuss.

    The Mallen Baker Show is aimed at all people who see themselves as
    change makers, with commentary on issues and change movements with a
    particular focus on climate change and environment, social issues, free
    speech and corporate social responsibility.
    References in this video:
    Tony Heller’s original video
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8455K…
    The National Climate Assessment Report
    https://nca2018.globalchange.gov/down…
    Extreme heat and cold graphs
    https://www.epa.gov/climate-indicator…
    Wildfires analysis
    https://andthentheresphysics.wordpres…
    Interview with Dr Ottmar Endenhofer, IPCC (in German)
    https://www.nzz.ch/klimapolitik_verte…

    Integrated sea ice graph
    https://web.archive.org/web/201905241…
    Piecing together the arctic sea ice history
    https://www.carbonbrief.org/guest-pos…

  • Potatoes and Patents

    Patents, Potatoes and Pomegranates 
    “I remember thinking- there cannot be anything clever in delivering beans…”  That was the reaction of Lucy Wojcik in 2014 being interviewed for the job of IP attorney at Ocado, an online supermarket company in the United Kingdom.
    It does furrow eyebrows when considering the part, if any, IP would play in a company that grows vegetables and fruits and then distributes them as meals, but now Ms Wojcik has a decidedly different view, https://patentstrategy.managingip.com/Articles/110?from=daily.  As she came to find out even in the supermarket business, “… as soon as you have problems that need solutions and engineers, you are generating IP.”
    The Ocado and its emphasis on IP serves as today’s model of how to maintain a competitive presence today and tomorrow.  With very few exceptions, a company today needs a strong R&D/IP culture to survive.  It must be an integral of the conduct of business, a primary consideration in company strategic planning.  It should be the source of new, competitive products and services as well as the mechanisms for protecting those products from competitive inroads.  A comprehensive tour de force for the “how to” is Perpetual Innovation™ A guide to Strategic Planning. Patent Commercialization and Enduring Competitive Advantage by Hall & Hinkelman available at Amazon and Lulu.
    Perpetual innovation™ Patent Guide & Patent Primer: http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/SBPlan
  • Renewable energy of Wind and Solar no longer needs subsidies

    Nice Bloomberg article here. Renewable of Wind and Solar are now cheaper than coal, oil, gas, nuclear. No big need for subsidies to make them competitive.
    But, there’s also no need, quite the contrary given the externality costs, for subsidizing fossil fuels!
    Nice article with great graphics show the fall in price for wind and solar.

  • That soda will kill ya!

    Sodas will kill you, it seems. Sugar, hfcs, or artificial sweerners, all will shorten your life.!
    This massive study in Europe followed almost a half million people for an average of 16 years, analyzing death rates. Drinking two or more sodas was correlated to many types of fatal illnesses.

    Other studies have shown links to cancers and other ails.

    Doctors recommend water instead.

    Meanwhile, drinking a glass of beer or wine increases your life and (generally) improves your heath.

    https://www.webmd.com/diet/news/20190903/once-again-soda-tied-to-higher-risk-of-early-death

  • Yeti, cool ideas and lots of patents

    Yeti has a rather cool new cooler out, the Hopper(r) M30 uses a magnetic seal. Although it might be a bit gimmicky, it should work much better than the heavy (klunky) zippers. They say that it is nearly leak proof. GearJunky does a nice review of the M30. For $299.99 at high quality sporting goods stores like Dicks, you too can have one.

    Yeti is a $2.5B market cap company, up about 70% from its IPO. It is hard to maintain a premium brand in an era of knock-offs. But Yeti is and continues to do so.  I got in on the IPO, sold half at a good profit, and held on through the couple rough patches for a consumer product like this. They came out early for better (sane-er?) gun controls, and had NRA members making a spectacle (viral videos) of throwing Yeti coolers in the dump. (That was an ugly couple days for the stock.)

    In Sept. 2019, Yeti has just introduced a major line of coolers for “everyday bags” adventures and the Urban crawler: Crossroads(tm) backpacks and totes! Press release at Reuters. Big purse or a backpack. Not sure if it will replace your Prada, but it should keep your beer in the office cold. (Maybe that’s one reason why Yeti stock popped about 8% on 9/4.)

    “We already offer premium bags designed to excel in harsh outdoor conditions. But even the world’s most extreme adventurers need something durable and comfortable to keep them organized during their daily commute,” says YETI CEO, Matt Reintjes. “Our Crossroads bags offer YETI’s signature durability and performance, but are designed for your everyday adventure.” 

    Yeti is a premium brand with a premium price, and everybody likes to do knock offs. Trademarks are helpful. A big patent portfolio is one way to keep the knock-offs at bay. Here’s Yeti’s patent page by product.

    PatentBuddy summarizes Yeti patents:

    YETI COOLERS LLC AUSTIN, TX
    257 active patents, with 34 applications.
    Updated 9/5/2019.