My father had told me about him now only playing with biodegradable tees. Having stopped golfing for a couple of years, I really was far away in regards to new technology or the eco world and golf.

I bought him a box for Christmas, and bought one for myself recently. I have always been a big fan of the wooden tees, white. But I was ready to change my old habits and enter the world of biodegradable tees!

So I tried the Zero Friction performance tees (Me trying the tees in the video above!), 2 3/4 inches, white. And let me tell you all about it. Except for the fact that they are biodegradable and allow nearly no friction with the ball, I only have negative comments about them:

- too flexible, very hard to keep in shape and to insert in the ground
- the top where you put your ball in is not soft at all and I was almost cutting my finger every time I was trying to tee my ball
- did not see any improved distance

Overall, it was taking me too long to tee my balls, once done, my fingers were hurting and I could see my ball was not stable at all.

So let’s look for smaller, stronger and softer biodegradable tees. It must exist! As soon as I get to try them, I will update this post.

The Fertile Tees

“The worlds first biodegradable and organic golf tee made from fertilizer.” It’s good for the golf courses, good for the earth and great to play, as it is super light according to their website. And it’s cheap too and can be bought in bulk. I absolutely cannot wait to try this one. Per their website, they also say that this tee will disintegrate within way less time than other biodegradable tees (for which it usually take about 9 months).

Bamboo Golf Tees

“Fibers run vertically from head to toe making bamboo tees much more robust and tougher when whacked, offering the player greater consistency and reliability.” They will last longer than wooden tees and they are made of bamboos which as you know grow so fast and so easily, not a problem. And of course they are also biodegradable.

UPDATE: I tried them on this Monday, May 19th and I must say I was a little disappointed. Every two holes they would break, while I was playing with a driver, not even an iron. And it had rained a lot the day before so the ground was not dry at all. If I have to change my tees every two holes, this to me is a waste of money and most importantly an environmental waste. Nevertheless I would like to thank the company who graciously sent me this bag of tees for me to review and I hope my feedback can help them improve their product.

Evolve Golf

They make the epoch™ tee similar to the Zero Friction ones, but they seem way less hurtful for the fingers. Now the question is do they bend or not. I will try them and let you know.

UPDATE: So I tried them early this morning and they are great. They are soft, strong and super stable.

They are also launching a new tee this year, vireo™ made from recycled material. Still biodegradable. Love it. Looks so smoooooth.

Ecoty

I got these this morning at the Golf du Medoc (my Club from when I lived in France) and I will try them shortly and update with my feedback. It is a FRENCH brand and the tees are made in the USA. They seem pretty solid and they disintegrate within 8 to 10 months. I also shot them an email to see where you can find them on-line. They look like this below (beige color, not white):

Stinger

More biodegradable tees allowing less friction with the ball, as all the ones presented above.

Apiona®

“Apiona® EnviroTee™ is mainly made from natural renewable polymers and based on aliphatic polyesters such as corn starch and Poly Lactic Acid, which are fully biodegradable, environmentally safe and one of the most abundant resources of the world. [...] Apiona® EnviroTee™ disintegrates into carbon dioxide and water according to the composting conditions.

That’s all!


This post follows a previous post I Want a Solar Watch. After some disappointing research, I had promised I would come back with more… so here we go.

In the beginning, I wanted a good looking fierce watch that runs on solar power. After having seen what is being proposed to me, I now have to extend my research to all watches that do not run on batteries.

Note that I will not mention brands such as Seiko, Swatch or Orient, and others which are great but not what I am esthetically looking for.

Runs on Air

The UR-202 by Urwerk is the world’s first watch featuring a winding system regulated by compressing air utilizing miniature turbines. Its predecessor can be found around $40,000 so I am afraid to guess how much this one costs.

Kinetic or Automatic

I found one to my taste: the Bell & Ross 01-92. Still too expensive for me, between $3,000 and $8,000.

Ventura has nice Automatic watches. I could not find their official website, only a reseller. Their prices are way too high.

I also liked the Ceramic Player shown below from Nixon at $1,400, automatic and has a self-winding mechanism. In the same collection, Elite, note the Capital Automatic and Zillamatic.

Vestal and its Fathom watch are closer to my budget at $336. Although it does look a little too classic.

Water powered

While there are many water powered clocks, I could not find one water powered watch… If you know about one, even still in prototype mode, feel free to share.

It seems it might have been more popular about 20 years ago. I found in fact people who bought it from Edmund Scientific’s for instance, but could not find it on their new website. Here more people talk about their knowledge of water powered watches. But nothing for today. Ebay also does not return any results.

Good news is Samsung is working on water-powered cell phones which might come out by 2010. So the water-powered technology for watches might come back soon on the market.

USB powered

I found a couple of brands and models (edge, xonix, Mr. Gadget, ) up to 4GB, but my favorite stays this one… but wait, it’s not out yet and might never be… There are in fact a couple of USB watch prototypes or concepts and so my winer is the iRiver, photo below. It also does MP3.

That’s all. Still unsure what I will get for myself. I might go towards one of the Nixon Automatics.


Photo by Cara Reynolds

So one of my other projects for 2008 is to start playing golf again. I used to play when I was younger, roughly from 10 yo to around 17 yo, that’s when I went to college. I had reached a 12 handicap, mostly from 10 to 16, after that I am not sure but I think I was not really motivated anymore.

After I entered college, I played a couple of times a year and until I got in the States, where I play about 1 time per year. Since golf is about training and confidence… Well anyway. I have now decided I will go down to a 5 handicap by the end of the year. I am playing the qualifying round of a national women amateur competition in May in NJ so I need to practice, hence this post and what I’ve found.

I actually cannot believe I have been living in NYC for about 3 years and the only place I had played was the Dyker Beach golf course located in south Brooklyn, not too far from Brighton beach.

Below, I will review what can be accessed by subway. We all can rent a car but if you are looking to play a couple of times per week, it can get expensive.

One thing you should know is you can get a New York resident ID that will allow you to play cheaper in most golfs of NY State. The card costs $6 and you can get it at any golf (bring a proof of address and an ID/or picture).

Manhattan (driving ranges)

I often wish I am given the project to dedicate and develop a part Central Park to a golf eden.

Chelsea Piers:

PROS:

  • You can get good deals on the balls if you come off-peak hours. Good if you are a student or like to get up early.
  • You can buy $ cards for balls and use them whenever you want (for instance: $50 for 323 off-peak balls and 197 peak time balls).
  • Hours: open from 6:30 AM till 12 AM

CONS:

  • Quite annoying to get there: located on the Piers (West manhattan), between 18th and 19th Streets.
  • It gets busy and you usually have to wait to play, even if you come at 11pm (they give you a number and you wait till it’s you turn).
  • The driving cages are on 3 different floors so don’t be scared of heights…

Randall’s Island: Currently closed, management has changed and they are waiting for the City’s green light. Will update when open.

So for Randall’s, it is hard to give a judgment as we only went there once and the place was closed. Actually we went twice and the first time we could sneak in when the second time, they had closed the open gate. Once this opens, I will go and update the below pros and cons.

PROS:

  • Awesome view of the Triboro bridge, try to go when the sun is going down
  • Although it was free for us, it seems the prices were cheap (from the board we could see)
  • easy to get there from the Upper East Side / East Harlem neighborhoods

CONS:

  • TBD

Bronx

Mosholu Golf Course

They only have a nine hole, which is very small (par 34). There is no par 5 throughout the course. The greens are very slow and easy to deal with. The course us pretty flat. The green fee is quite cheap, $15 for 9 holes (with the NY resident card) and the carts are also $15 (per person). But the course us is so small that you really don’t need a cart. Most golfers carry their bag. It is also easy to get there. Take the 6 train to the last stop, then there is a short 5 min walk to the golf. Ask directions at the MTA station if you are not sure once you get there.

Below, me at Mosholu! :)

Brooklyn

Dyker Beach Golf Course

I played this one about 2/3 years ago, with some people I had met through work. I barely remember it. I will have to go there again to re-explore. The quality of the course might also have changed since then so I will not comment on it. To get there, take the R train to 86th street stop.

For more golf courses around the city, go here. I will add more to this post as I explore more.

To be continued… Feel free to share your experience on these courses or others.


A year ago, Cara had asked me to build a crazy website to display her photography. I finally recently put myself to it, one of my 2008 resolutions. Well she made it one of my 2008 projects :)

Her expectations were high and I had a lot of work ahead. Finally, after 512 reviews (!!) the version 1.0 launched a few hours ago and I am super happy. It just feels so great to finish a project. Of course there will be additions and changes to this version but come on, our windows in the apartment are wide open, I am wearing a long shorts and summer is right at the door. I am double super happy!

Go to carareynolds.com; you can use your keypad to move around, and there are many not obvious links. Actually all of the links to her photographs are not easy to find, so enjoy the hunt! Also, as a side note, the photo gallery is powered by Triworks.

If you have any comments, please share as this project will always improve.

Now I have all the time to finish my other projects: Art-Fag.org, the revamp of FrenchDontEatFrogs.com and a certain solar bag. :P

Stay tuned…


Ok so last week, I decided I want a solar watch. Since then, I have been dreaming about it. I want a modern, slick, minimalist and uncommon watch, powered by sunlight. You would think… well I was thinking it was going to be easy to find the product of my dreams.

First of all, how does a solar watch work?

[...] sunlight and artificial light are absorbed by a solar panel behind the crystal. The dial is either on a layer above or actually on the solar panel. This solar panel converts the light into electrical energy to power the watch. The watch will usually store energy in a rechargeable cell to power itself during the night or when covered such as by a person’s sleeve. Citizen’s watches use lithium-ion rechargeable cell to store sufficient energy to power the watch for several months/years of darkness. However, this figure assumes that the watch enters a power-saving mode during which the seconds hand stops until the watch is re-exposed to light.”

Source: Wikipedia

According to different sources, Solar watches were also very popular in the 80s with models for kids. If you are interested in vintage solar powered watches, you can check this link here. And if you want to learn the history of the solar wristwatches since the 70s, click here.

From what I have seen every solar watch uses lithium batteries, rechargeable for life. “Because watch batteries contain a small amount of mercury, [...] solar watch[es] [are] a green and non-toxic choice.” (Source: CBS News)

There are two main players in the solar watches market: Citizen and Casio.

All the Citizen watches are solar powered (eco-drive program) and when fully charged, can last for 180 days without being re-charged. Not a fan of their design especially as I don’t want to spend $795. My top budget is $200 and what Citizen has to offer at this price does not fit my aesthetics.

Casio offers the Casio Shock in several designs; very sporty look, not what I am looking for either.

Back to my search. There are many different watches available on the market, which incorporate the functions of a MP3 or 4 player, or of a USB device; HP is also working on a super cool communication watch device. But I am only looking for a simple solar watch.

Here are my solar watches findings:

Solar Scrolling Watch-HS4023U
1. Healthy Sky Limited sells solar powered watches. You should be able to purchase on their site by emailing them. I sent them an email to know how much was this watch but haven’t received any response yet. Will update this entry when I do.
2. Timex, Oceanus, Pulsar and Junghans also make Casio and Citizen style like watches, but I am not looking for this style of watches.
3. Here you can find more solar watches. You can get a great wholesale price: 20 for only $97!! ;)

4. At Deal Extreme, I found this very inexpensive watch: $8.37. I cannot believe the price, mostly justified because it is not a metallic watch, but who cares. The design is still not what I am looking for. They also have other models around the same price.
5. The National Geographic Aviator II Watch, priced at $160.
6. The Prada, only available in Europe and not out yet will be sold at €1500
Braille Watch 8. I also found a Solar Powered Braille Watch (shown left) which looks really great and was designed by a certain Jeonjun Cho. Also, a Solar Spy Watch Camera but could not find any retailer for neither of them. So if you happen to know how much they cost and where to find them, please share the info!!

That’s it. Unfortunately, no real solar watch to my taste so if you know some, share it. The one I will probably go with for now is the #4 from Deal Extreme. I wish solar watches would be like this, this or this. But it is not reality yet… :(

On this note, I will do a new search on other eco green watches, non solar powered.

Good night!


Last night, I was picking up a few groceries at the Fine Fair supermarket at 106th and 3rd: cheese, organic milk, and some beers. Cara and I are not a big beer drinkers so my plan was to get a pack of Mike’s Lemonade and some Coronas…

Before heading to the register, I noticed some organic beers: Peak Organic. We know that “by 2009, the European and US organic food and drinks market will be worth at least $49.2bn” (Source: Food Science Central). Organic alcohol, hum why not. Are alcohol companies also embracing the organic revolution? According to many sources, the Organic Beverages market has increased of 13% from 2006 to 2007.

Definition of “Organic”: Involving the use of fertilizers or pesticides that are strictly of animal or vegetable origin. Raised or conducted without the use of drugs, hormones, or synthetic chemicals.
Source: Answers.com

I am from France, and from 14 years old to my 18 years and a half birthday, I was living in Bordeaux; the best wine region in the whole world. Pardon my chauvinism… So what about these awesome wines I know? Are they organic, or grown with pesticides and other disgusting chemicals? Let’s look at Château Margaux, one of the finest wines in the world.

According to their website, until the 80s, they were in fact using chemicals, but starting from that time, they decided to change things around and to care about the environment.

“After a number of years of patient work and calculated risks, we have come back to a stable situation in which all these populations live together and self-regulate, without it almost ever being necessary for us to intervene, and if we do so, then an environmentally-friendly solution is used. Nature is indulgent, provided we show it a little respect …”
Source: Chateau-Margaux.com

When looking at organic viticulture, there are 3 ways of going about it. I am going to translate and paraphrase from a French website:

The Reasoned Viticulture
The Objective is to limit interventions by choosing the right time, limiting used molecules to the most ecologic ones and to reduce doses. Here, you can use any product available on the market.

The Organic Viticulture
No chemical molecule can be used. The objective is to push for a balance between the different diseases and insects from the vineyard.

The Biodynamic Viticulture
In addition to the notions related to organic viticulture, the idea is to boost the vineyard helping it to resist by itself to outside aggressions (diseases, insects, etc) through natural products used at homeopathic doses, such as nettle or horsetail, while choosing the right time for each action made on the vineyard.

For more information on organic wines, you can check The Organic Wine Journal.

I hope by now you are getting thirsty for some organic alcohols. So let’s go have a good time, drink healthy beverages and protect our little planet. Below, some ideas for you to get local organic beverages. Hum I said local? Chateau Margaux was an horrible example in regards to carbon footprint. We are very limited with alcohols: Beers, Spirit and especially Wines and Champagnes. I will never find a local Chateau Margaux like wine in New York… as it involves not only the making techniques, the age of the vineyard but also the ground and weather :(

Organic Beers

Organic Spirits / Liquors

And if you happen to be in the Bay Area, you can try Elixir, a green bar serving only organic cocktails.


Yesterday, Cara and I were shopping at Whole Foods Market (Union Square) and in the Yogurt section, Siggi’s Skyr neat packaging completely caught my attention. I aesthetically loved it and figured it had to be good… Looked at the characteristics, “All Natural, Milk from grass fed cows, No aspartame, No sucralose, No gelatin, No artificial colorings, No preservatives, No high fructose corn syrup, No rBGH, Milk produced without the use of recombinant bovine growth hormones”. Non only the packaging was neat, but the yogurt itself was too. Brought home two of them, blueberry flavored and we ate them tonight. One thing I had not noticed at the time of purchase is the very smart packaging.

Well let’s take a first step back. In order to optimize the recycling process, you should completely separate elements from each other. For instance, if you are recycling a pet food can, you want to separate the aluminum part from the paper part.

Now, let’s take a second step back. Yes I am moon-walking!! :P A couple of months ago, after we moved into this apartment, I became quickly frustrated with the recycling downstairs. There was 4 or 5 recycling bins but you could not know which was what. So we decided to make some small signs to differentiate them (see pic below), hoping our neighbors would follow our guidelines. They did and now, no more morning headaches such as “Ok i see more aluminum here, this must be the aluminum bin… uh wait, i see a plastic bottle and some newspapers… no!!”; and the recycling is just more efficient.

By Cara Reynolds

Let’s go back to Siggi’s Skyr. I was talking about smart packaging, in fact, when you look closer, there is a vertical sleeve on the paper packaging of the yogurt. You can pull this sleeve and HOP, the paper is disassembled from the plastic yogurt cup. Now you have the aluminum lid, the paper packaging and the plastic cup (see picture below). Easy to recycle! Love it.

skyr1.jpg

Siggi’s is also made in the state of New York and uses local farms. Therefore, low carbon footprint for New Yorkers. That’s another positive thing about it.

Now at this time, I was still seeing Siggi’s as just another healthy yogurt. It is actually quite unique. Below the words of Siggi (the CEO of The Icelandic Milk and Skyr Corporation), taken from the inside part of the yogurt paper packaging:

quite a bit of protein: Skyr is strained yogurt made from cow’s mil. It’s been a staple of the Icelandic diet for more than 1,000 years. Traditionally, skyr is made from skim milk after the cream has been floated off to make butter. So it’s fat free. Like milk, regular yogurt is mostly water-but wit skyr, that water is strained away. In other words, one cup of siggi’s skyr requires three times more milk than a regular cup of yogurt. What remains is a protein-rich yogurt with live active cultures.
no so much sugar: our plain skyr has no added sugar, and our flavored varieties are primarily sweetened with all-natural agave syrup. Agave is a low-glycemic sweetener. This means you digest its sugars slowly, giving you a more balanced energy instead of a wild sugar rush. I would also like to add that we absolutely do not use any artificial sweeteners like aspartame; I shudder at the mere though.
we work with nice farmers: We source our milk from family farms in New York State where the cows are not injected with any kind of growth hormone and graze freely when weather permits. We do not use any artificial preservatives or thickeners.” Siggi, CEO of The Icelandic Milk and Skyr Corporation

Now that you know what it is all about, you must inquire about the taste. Well, our feelings were mixed. This is an heavy yogurt and you might want to eat it as a breakfast instead of just a yogurt in the flow of a complete meal. As we talk, Cara is making her first homemade yogurts with her new yogurt machine so we will probably not have any new opportunity for a taste of Siggi’s. I highly recommend it and I wish Yop, by Yoplait, my all times favorite yogurt, was as natural and as green as Siggi’s.


I was previously talking about Nokia’s environmental strategy. One of the aspects I over looked was their recycling program.

In 2006, the CTIA-The Wireless Association® created a national recycling campaign the Wireless…The New RecyclableTM. In 2008, CTIA is now requesting the EPA (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) and other agencies to partner and create a new movement: Recycle Your Cell Phone. It’s An Easy Call. Logically, the goal of this campaign is to “increase public awareness of cell phone recycling and donation opportunities, with the ultimate goal of increasing the nation’s cell phone recycling rate”.

What can we do with wireless recycling? Most manufacturers and carriers propose a recycling program thanks to the CTIA initiative (such as Nokia, as seen in my previous article).

The following websites propose recycling and charity donations programs: Collective Good, Charitable Recycling, or GRC Wireless Recycling. But my favorite one is ReCellular. It was founded in 1991 and has, since then, partnered with the CTIA and the largest industry players to create a multi-program: ReCellular allows you to buy, sell and donate used cell phones.

Their purchasing and reselling programs are available for businesses only. Their donation program allows you to either create a donation program within your company or simply donate your phone / company phones to one of their partners. Here is the process.

First, as they say, you need to prepare your phone for recycling. I know this sounds maybe obvious for some of you, but just in case:

  1. “Terminate your service,
  2. Clear the phone’s memory of contacts and other stored personal information by utilizing the Cell Phone Data Eraser here,
  3. Remove your phone’s SIM card, if it has one. Phones that operate on GSM networks use SIM cards. If you are not sure if your phone uses a SIM card or if you need assistance removing your SIM card, contact your wireless provider”

Then just go here and look at the different charities ReCellular is partnering with. You can choose to donate your phone to the think-food organization, the Victory Junction Gang or many others. Once your choice is made (and again, there are other websites proposed above that will offer more organizations to donate to, so don’t feel restrained), just go to this page, enter your zip code, the program chosen and find the closest drop off location. If you don’t select any program, the search will just give you the 5 closest drop off programs.

Leaving the donation world, another national organization is RBRC and its Call2RecycleTM program. They will take any battery or cellphone and make recycling easy if you’d rather have your phone completely de-constructed and reborn in… a pretty orange traffic cone.

Cara also talks about Call2RecycleTM here in a more detailed manner ;)

I personally never had to recycle my phone. During my first year in New York, I lost my phone about 5 or 6 times. I had 1 Nokia 3220, 1 T-609 looking Samsung, followed by 4 T-809. My dad got me my first 809 so I just could not tell him I had lost it. I had to keep buying the same model… I still have it but now I am ready for a change. Can’t wait to recycle it!!


[This post was published this morning but tonight I come home and poof! Thank you WordPress, my post has disappeared... so it is not as complete as it used to be. Need to move on :) ]

Nokia has been focusing its research on green products, from handset development to shipping, use and End-Of-Life practices.

“Every journey starts with a small step. On the journey to save our planet, each step is vital. We are taking steps and so can you.”

With almost 10 billion customers, Nokia certainly can help make a difference in educating their users, producing energy efficient products in many ways and more.

“Our continuous goal is to set the industry benchmark in environmental performance and seamlessly integrate environmental aspects into our strategic and operative activities. Caring for the environment is everybody’s business.”
Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, President and CEO Nokia Corporation

Educating customers and helping them do the right thing

Power Consumption

“Nokia has set the target to reduce the average no-load consumption of its chargers by 50%, and the no-load consumption of its best-in-class chargers to close to zero, by 2010″. No-load consumption is evidently when your charger is plugged in the power outlet with no phone on the other end. Nokia is also pushing its customers to think about un-plugging their chargers when not in use.

In fact, in 2007, Nokia has launched the first devices with “reminder alerts for consumers to unplug chargers once the battery is recharged”. Nokia has estimated this could save enough electricity to power 85,000 homes a year.

Recycling devices and packaging

Nokia is pushing its customers to recycle their old phones. If you are a Nokia user, click here to find the closest drop off location. Most likely if your phone is pretty new, you should have found a prepaid envelop inside the packaging of your phone. If so, use it to ship your device.

Look below to see how a recycled phone will be broken apart and all its pieces used towards:

device-recycling.jpg

Producing Energy Efficient Products

“We feel that today´s business leaders must look beyond economic progress and take responsibility for sustainable development. To be able to meet stakeholder expectations and leverage the opportunities of strong environmental performance, much greater transparency and reporting of sustainability issues will be expected.”
Kirsi Sormunen, Vice President of Environmental Affairs - Nokia Corporation

I love this graph below. Basically it shows each step, from the production of a mobile phone to its consumption bt the consumers and how much waste, non-eco substances, water, energy is used and could potentially be saved. We looked above at the Use and at the EOL (End-Of-Life) practices. We are now going to look at all what’s happening before the product gets into the customers’ hands.

The Making of

The first Nokia building to receive the LEED green certification was in White Plains, NY. For every new building, Nokia is seeking this level of sustainability. This can hopefully help in setting new standards for the industry.

“Management Systems (EMS) at Nokia production sites are ISO 14001 compliant”. Nokia works on the following factors: Energy consumption, Water Consumption, Air emissions, Non-Eco Substances, Waste management and Packaging. Nokia also requires its suppliers to respect a set of guidelines.
Nokia should reduce its overall energy consumption of 6% by 2012 and plans to increase its use of green electricity from 25% to 50% by 2010.

Clean and Recyclable Materials

“The main focus areas during the product planning and design phases are the products’ material substance contents and material and energy efficiency. We continuously analyze the materials used in our products with the aim of reducing the amount of hazardous and harmful substances by utilizing other types of materials, technologies, and solutions.”
Anssi Vanjoki, Executive Vice President and General Manager of Multimedia - Nokia Corporation

Nokia has banned a list of substances that are not environmentally friendly and stopped using this list in the technology they produce. More info here.

Smaller products for smaller packaging, fewer shipping trucks

Nokia has considerably be reducing the amount of material used for their packagings. Smaller phones, smaller packagings, more packages on each truck and therefore less truck on the road.

packagings.jpg

More green stuff Nokia is working on

The Nokia Eco Sensor Concept. A personal assistant to “monitor your health, environment, and local weather”, powered in part by solar energy.

I want to see more companies that try not only to produce green goods, but also work on increasing the public awereness and its education about green matters.


    Art-Fag.com is now going to be incorporated by me. No more accountant. I got myself a book and I learned everything I needed to know. Now the website is ready but the incorporation on hold as I am working on a smaller important project which should terminate soon. Hopefully.

    Cara and I watched the Al Gore movie, An Inconvenient Truth, and we were horrified. This inspired her to start a new blog: A Day After An Inconvenient Truth. She writes a post per day about environmental subjects and we have started to act green since then. No more plastic bags, no more unused electronic on, no more junk food, etc. It is great.

    Her writing now gives me the desire to learn more, greenify ourselves and educate the people around us. I was reading a little last night and it made me realize something: while our ancestors used to know everything about hunting, we the generation Y and Z (and the babies of the generation X ;*) will now survive through the knowledge of our energy consumption details.

    So anyway, point is I might write from time to time an hopefully we will ping pong or emulate each other and learn from it.


    PHOTOS BY CARA REYNOLDS

    The check you are looking at was sent to my accountant on the 7th of November. This symbolizes the official beginning of the ART FAG adventure. YEAH!!

    Today, as I write, ART FAG is being filled in! (This is my Birthday too!)

    I started to work on Art Fag in beginning of 2007. I drafted some documents, found a developer in China and kicked it off quite abruptly. The developing team started to work on Art Fag in June 2007. It’s now been a couple of months and I must say that until I sat down a month ago to re-write the specs, as I would write them for a client or employer, I did not have much hold of the project. Naturally, it took one month for the dev team to get what I was asking when, before these new highly detailed specs, we were moving at a turtle rhythm.

    This week I reviewed the new simplified Art Fag (see my “Vision of Simplicity” blog entry). This is the first round of reviews for the new version. After these comments are implemented, Art Fag should come OUT pretty quickly.

    I cannot wait to learn more from this experience.

    Off to recycling!


    When coming up with a new product, I have always been taught simplicity is key. I thought I knew already what it was all about. But I really had now idea.

    I saw the light this Thursday at work while working on WAP project with other colleagues. I now understand what striping down a product to its core features means. I took my Friday off to rewrite my set of specs and shape a clean business plan.

    I am very excited and I can’t wait to see the new Art Fag up and running!


    I haven’t wrote anything in a very very long time. The summer, my last move (3rd in 7 months) or my new project might have made me lose my focus.
    But I am now back on track. I have missed writing about non-sense and things.

    As I am getting closer to my 24th birthday, I realize I just cannot let the time slide like that. My dream and objective is to accomplish successfully my personal projects and probably create my company by Q1 2008. In the meantime, i am also looking to work for people whose aim is to change and improve the world: Governments, Non-Profits, etc.


    This is a test

    02Aug07

    This is great. Word 2007 rules. I can automatically upload my post from Word.

    I can change my font very EASILY.

    And I can write very BIG. But still in COLOR.


    Bamn!

    25Dec06

    photo-0095.jpgClick on the pics to enlarge them.

    Ok so. the other day i was talking with a German friend about this place Bamn! Located on 8th street (LES, NYC), this store is pretty unusual looking for the area. Colorful and clean. Serving food 24/7, it works the same as a soda machine: insert your coins and you will get the food.

    So H. and I were debating about wether or not there was people actually feeding the machine continously or if the store was left alone all day long until its reaprovisioning.
    So i did my little investigation. No, not really… I was just passing by.

    photo-0093.jpg

    As you can see on the pictures, there are indeed people behind, cooking.

    The reason why i was not totally sure about it is because in Reims, France, couple of feet away from the train station (gare), there is a giant automatic machine which serves food. But no one is behind. I tried to find some pictures of it. But could not find any. Nevertheless, if by any chance you are visiting this part of France, which i am not advising you to do at all, you might want to check this place out. [since it is located in a  street that does not have any name, i pull number + street. that s the closer i could get from the place. so from the point, go down the street then on the right (west), there is a reclangle with little arrows, this is the access to the small parking and the train station. If you take the last right to this rectangle, you should see it on your left. wow! so confusing. email me if you can find it...!!].

    But really between you and me, Reims, except for the Cathedral, is the perfect place to stay and/or become depressed. If you really enjoy depression, this is the perfect place. And i did at some point like that city for this grey weather, the cold, the plain and sad landscapes, and abandonned factories when on my way to the golf (i was there for my first 2 years of college).

    photo-0094.jpg

    When i was arriving at the station, usually late at night, i remember i used to buy a strawberry YOP and walk home to Hincmar street. Under the bridge. I remember. Sometimes also if my favorite sandwich store would be opened, i would get the best sandwich ever: fondue cheese, potatoes, dry ham (serrano, or any other type of ham…). So simple but SO f*cking good. I cant believe there is no single real sandwicherie in New yOrk City. It’s crazy.



    Ok. I had written this post a while ago. it s badly written, but i need to get rid of it and post it.
    Thanks to you Mathieu N. for making me see the movie.

    So to you fat lazy americans, i highly recommend this movie. I doubt it will be distributed in the USA though. They usually only bring sucky movies they re sure will make a lot of money. Well not always. But they seriously most of the time forget to bring the most ‘french’ movies. Yeah and im also sick of french people not respecting the french movie industry. Anyway…

    You will probably be able to get this movie on DVD. If you cant, then go to Amazon.

    This story is… well let me briefly tell you the plot first, then i ll tell you why you should see it. Sounds good? Ok. Lise (aka Lili), a 19 yo girl is coming back from vacation. She lives at her parent’s house, with her twin brother (Loic). But Loic isn’t home. According to her parents, Loic came back from his climbing trip, then had a harsh fight with his father before leaving. He’s been gone for 5 days now.

    You should see this movie because… it is rare that a french movie paints the suburban life like it actually really is, where we can understand what we are afraid of becoming like. What the routine is.

    Racism, pride, elitism, is it better to know the truth, our need for power and control, doctors here, how living in Paris or in the suburb in not always as sexy and romantic people usually see it. How this city can really get depressing. Also touches disease a little bit. Enough actually to understand how it is to see someone falling being too weak to help him/her.

    I know, bad argumentation, so you will have to trust me on this one :p


    I have recived about a hundred mails from you guys, asking about me, am i still alive? Well my neighbors left the building, and therefore cancelled their wireless internet… So these days, i dont know how, but i DO manage to live with no internet connection @ home. It’s crazy. The good thing is now i get to not open my computer outside from work. Except for music and DVDs. I dont even feel like doing animations anymore. It’s really relaxing and making me do more things outside. You should try it!

    ok i have a couple of posts lined up. just need to find the time while at the office to write them…

    peace…



    “good combines the confidence and forward-looking perspective of Wired, the gravity and credibility of The Economist, the writing prowess of The New Yorker, the clear and worldly design of Colors, the wit and humor of The Daily Show, and the gritty texture of Rolling Stone and Vice.”

    Above is how they describe themselves in their media kit. Im so mad i discovered this new magazine only yesterday (missed their launch party on the 21st of sept :) )…

    So what’s so special about GOOD?? Well… 3 major things to me:

    1. When you subscribe -only $20 per year for 6 issues-, the whole amount is redistributed to the organization of your choice (well dont ask me what i think about giving to organizations acting as corporations. all this waste of money and how little in the end is given. im more of a do it urself. but anyway, that s good: they make companies finance their spreading of GOOD ideas)
    2. the content is good: art, ethical companies and people, politics, pts of views…
    3. good design, good photographs, good colors

    …and bonus: few ads.

    Ok. that’s it so now GO GET IT.


    Do i believe in love at first sight? Yes. Definitively.

    I just thought i would talk about my ex company. SCANBUY specializes in barcode decoding through a camera phone. Barcodes can be 1D (found on retail products) or 2D (like the one below) and gives you access to wide range of info: prices, media content, trailers, ringtones, wap pages, …

    Pretty soon, instead of having to type manually to reach somewhere (yeah it’s a drag), or buy a product, you will only have to roll your cell phone over the code and **SLITCH** (yeah, slitch), the code will be catched by your camera phone and processed to give you the right result. Why pretty soon? This product is already alive and counts a few hundreds of users; but the problem is, few phones currently support the application.

    You can check SCANBUY Shopper’s blog and website. New application launched on June 7th allowing you to compare prices from different retailers, get reviews by just entering the barcode number of the product. Yes, this application does not physically decode the barcode because we (scanbuy) wanted the concept to become popular first and then allow the people who can afford a supported handset to play with the decoding.

    The other product is SCANBUY Media. Same idea except each code is linked to a URL or several URLs (let’s not get into the widgets freezing the screen and allowing multichoice). You can go get the application and/or create your OWN code here; once you have it on your phone, decode my personal EZcode containing intimate and secret information. I love MY code. LOOK at it NOW! It seems as if someone was taking a nap. But i am sure you can find other things in it. Feel free to share what you SEE with me ;)


    Imagiin is a new service that is about to be launched in France. The scope is simple: you watch ads and in return you get ‘points’ that will allow you to buy products at specific retailers (for now, partners are french retailers such as FNAC.com, equivalent of BestBuy).

    “Avec imagiin® c’est vous le maître” : the idea underneath is one of choice marketing. Brands want to discuss with consumers who are ‘ready’ and have the time to receive the information.

    I cant wait to see this idea adapted to mobile phones. When the New York subway gets the carriers’ network (expected 2007), we can all make money riding the subway.

    You can find out more by checking their blog out. Some of it is in english.