Monday, August 2, 2010

Some Trend Updates From The World Future Society.

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Some Trend Updates From The World Future Society

Dear Friends:

The letter which follows came to me from the World Future Society. As always, I must advise you in advance that I do not agree with everything said here, and that I cannot and do not certify or guarantee the accuracy or viability of any of the forecast data or qualitative inferences. Having said this, the information from the WFS is always thought-provoking and worth reading. --DC
----------------
FUTURIST UPDATE   
News and Previews from the World Future Society 
August 2010 (Vol. 11, No. 8) 
 
Read online: http://www.wfs.org/futuristupdate.htm 
 
Receiving a pass-along copy or haven't joined WFS yet? Check out our 
special membership offer. http://www.wfs.org/forecasts 
     
Pass this newsletter along! FUTURIST UPDATE may be freely shared if   
forwarded in its entirety. 
 
In This Issue: 
* Entrepreneurship Stalls 
* Cloaking with Glass and Ceramics 
* Highest Atmospheric Carbon in 800,000 Years 
* Songbirds May Carry Avian Flu 
* Click of the Month: GoodGuide 
* What's Hot @WFS.ORG: Back from the Future 
 
 
======================== 
ENTREPRENEURSHIP STALLS 
======================== 
 
Business start-up activity plummeted in the first half of 2010 in the   
United States, reports the global outplacement firm Challenger, Gray &   
Christmas. Just 3.7% of job seekers started their own business,   
compared with an average of 9.6% in the last two quarters of 2009. (The   
highest start-up rate of job seekers was 21.5%, recorded in the first   
half of 1989.) 
 
"Would-be entrepreneurs were either scooped up by employers or scared   
off by fragile economic conditions, a tight lending market, and   
uncertainty over the sustainability of the recovery," according to the   
firm. 
 
The slowdown in entrepreneurship may indicate that economic recovery is   
particularly weak and the U.S. economy may slip back into recession.   
"Start-up activity is at its lowest just as a recession hits," says CEO   
John A. Challenger. "In the months immediately following the end of the   
recession, when unemployment is at its highest and hiring is virtually   
nonexistent, we see a spike in job seekers starting a business." 
 
SOURCE: Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. http://www.challengergray.com 
 
 
================================== 
CLOAKING WITH GLASS AND CERAMICS 
================================== 
 
Using a type of glass that does not conduct electricity, researchers at   
Michigan Tech and Penn State report discovering a way to capture and   
route rays of visible light around objects, rendering the objects   
invisible. 
 
Previous attempts to build an "invisibility cloak" have used metals and   
wires. In the research by Michigan Tech engineer Elena Semouchkina and   
colleagues, tiny glass metamaterials were arranged in a cylinder shape   
that produced the magnetic resonance required to bend light waves   
around an object. These resonators are artificial materials with   
properties that do not exist in nature, born of the marriage between   
materials science and electrical engineering. 
 
The researchers are experimenting with other materials, such as ceramic   
resonators, and with other frequencies, such as microwave. The goal is   
to find applications that work at visible light frequencies, says   
Semouchkina. 
 
SOURCE: Michigan Technological University 
http://www.mtu.edu/news/stories/2010/july/story29391.html 
    
 
=============================================== 
HIGHEST ATMOSPHERIC CARBON IN 800,000 YEARS 
=============================================== 
 
The choice to curb--or not to curb--carbon emissions in the near term   
will affect populations across the globe for centuries to come, says a   
new report from the National Research Council. The amount of carbon in   
the atmosphere is currently higher than at any point in the last   
800,000 years. 
 
CO2 doesn't displace easily. The amount could triple by the end of the   
century depending on the sorts of emissions reductions choices   
individuals and policy makers enact today. Even if emissions stabilize,   
CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere would continue to increase as the   
amount in the air already exceeds what the earth can absorb. 
 
The report details how small changes in temperature would change   
rainfall patterns and water availability: Rain in the North American   
southwest and the Mediterranean would decrease by as much as 10%, and   
crop yields could decrease by 15% for every one degree (Celsius) of   
warming according to the report. 
 
SOURCE: National Research Council 
http://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?RecordID=12877 
 
Read the report, "Climate Stabilization Targets: Emissions,   
Concentrations, and Impacts Over Decades to Millennia," online at   
http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=12877 
 
 
=============================== 
SONGBIRDS MAY CARRY AVIAN FLU 
=============================== 
 
The migratory patterns of birds can give scientists data on future   
avian flu outbreaks. Analyzing more than 225 species of songbirds and   
perching birds, researchers found that 22 varieties are carriers of   
low-pathogenicity avian influenza, meaning they carry a strain of the   
bug that isn't dangerous enough to kill the bird but could mutate into   
something more lethal. The research supported by the National Science   
Foundation was recently published in the journal BMC Infectious   
Diseases. 
 
Avian influenza or bird flu is most commonly associated with poultry   
and water fowl like chicken and ducks, but perching and songbirds--also   
called passerines--typically share the same habitats and may be more   
effective transmitters of the disease. 
 
By mapping such factors as a location's minimum temperature, date of   
spring thaw, and particularly the amount of land that's been converted   
into cropland, researchers hope to predict increases of avian flu   
cases. "Agricultural activity reduces the amount of natural habitat   
available to avian migrants," says Trevon Fuller, lead author of the   
paper and a biologist at the Center for Tropical Research at UCLA. When   
birds have less habitat, they crowd together more, which helps   
communicable diseases spread faster. 
 
SOURCE: National Science Foundation, 
http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=117236&org=NSF&from=news 
 
 
================================ 
CLICK OF THE MONTH: GOODGUIDE 
http://www.goodguide.com/ 
================================ 
 
Is that shampoo really good for the environment? Are these organic   
cereals really good for me? What does it really mean when a product   
says it's "natural" or "organic" or "environmentally friendly"?   
Consumers have more choices than ever for conscientious consumption,   
but with few standards there may be much confusion about the true   
impacts of our daily purchases. 
 
GoodGuide offers ratings and "best and worst product reviews" of more   
than 65,000 products based on such factors as whether the item is   
tested on animals, is fragrance-free, reduces water consumption, or   
contributes to global warming. 
 
"About 33% of all new food products launched in 2008 claimed to be   
'natural,' according to Dara O'Rourke, University of California,   
Berkeley, environmental policy professor and founder of the GoodGuide   
Web site," writes business futurist Erica Orange of Weiner, Edrich,   
Brown, Inc., in the September-October 2010 issue of THE FUTURIST.   
GoodGuide's goal is to help consumers interpret such vague terms. 
 
To make it even easier for shoppers to compare products on the shelves,   
GoodGuide also now offers an iPhone application.  
---------------
Faithfully Yours,
Douglas Castle
 
Douglas Castle
Join my TNNWC Group, LLC collaborative business community (GICBC) at no cost by clicking on http://bit.ly/JoinTNNWC.

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