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1 points·by chaisquared·2 jaar geleden·0 comments

Researchers taking on fraudulent science

analystnews.org
124 points·by chaisquared·2 jaar geleden·85 comments

Miles4Migrants flew 43K refugees with donated air miles, but it's now at risk

analystnews.org
2 points·by chaisquared·3 jaar geleden·0 comments

When It Comes to Transportation Problems, All Roads Lead Back to Cars

nextcity.org
3 points·by chaisquared·3 jaar geleden·1 comments

Virtual Power Plants Offer a Climate-Forward Response to Hot Summers

nextcity.org
2 points·by chaisquared·3 jaar geleden·0 comments

Talking to one of Hiroshima’s last living survivors on the 78th anniversary

analystnews.org
31 points·by chaisquared·3 jaar geleden·2 comments

AI is helping solve the problem of crop diseases, and helping curb global hunger

analystnews.org
1 points·by chaisquared·3 jaar geleden·0 comments

Why do so many cities have punitive homeless policies?

nextcity.org
5 points·by chaisquared·3 jaar geleden·1 comments

The Drivers Cooperative: New York’s driver-owned ride-hailing app

nextcity.org
294 points·by chaisquared·3 jaar geleden·131 comments

Dead Electric Car Batteries Find a Second Life Powering Cities

nextcity.org
4 points·by chaisquared·3 jaar geleden·2 comments

Can the four-day workweek reset our relationship with work?

analystnews.org
1 points·by chaisquared·3 jaar geleden·0 comments

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chaisquared
·3 jaar geleden·discuss
From Houston's director of transportation:

"Our predecessors designed roads for the worst six or so hours of the day — and the business as usual approach continues this practice even now. During the other 18 or so hours, however, the roads have excess capacity, which leads to people speeding, which in turn leads to a high number of crashes. It is dangerous, and wasteful, similar to how big-box retailers build surface parking lots for Black Friday shopping, and for the rest of the year these lots are virtually empty."
chaisquared
·3 jaar geleden·discuss
There was a study earlier this summer that found that seven out of eight bags of kale sampled from U.S. grocery stores contains high levels of PFAS. Yes, even in organic kale - in fact, the levels were even higher in the organic produce.

"The group tested kale because it 'wanted to look at an archetypal healthy vegetable' that was high in protein, which PFAS compounds bind to. The source of the contamination is unclear, but Verkerk said he suspected tainted water was probably to blame, though it was also possible the kale was grown in fields where sludge was spread."