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Monday, September 21, 2009

Plugged-In Age Feeds a Hunger for Electricity

Jad Mouawad and Kate Galbraith

With two laptop-loving children and a Jack Russell terrier hemmed in by an electric fence, Peter Troast figured his household used a lot of power. Just how much did not really hit him until the night the family turned off the overhead lights at their home in Maine and began hunting gadgets that glowed in the dark.

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Monday, July 6, 2009

Audi Tries to Create an Online Pro-Diesel Movement

Kimberly Chou

For Audi’s latest advertising campaign, the automaker says it’s promoting a cause, not just its cars. With a motto of “Diesel: It’s no longer a dirty word,” the “Truth in Diesel” campaign aims to convince consumers that diesel is the greenest solution, said Scott Keogh, Audi of America’s chief marketing officer.

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Friday, June 19, 2009

Dell Challenges Apple’s Greenness

Andrew LaVallee

Apple is now calling its MacBook laptops “the world’s greenest lineup of notebooks” instead of “the world’s greenest family of notebooks” in response to a recommendation by the Better Business Bureau’s advertising division.

The division came to the recommendation after rival computer maker Dell challenged Apple’s MacBook marketing, which refers, among other things, to the devices’ energy usage, packaging and recyclable components.

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Thursday, June 4, 2009

Prius Takes Over Dictionary.com’s Home Page

Kimberly Chou

To advertise its third-generation Prius hybrid, Toyota is playing a bit of word association with potential customers.

With help from advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi, the car maker is working with Dictionary.com for ads targeted to the definitions of words such as “sustainability,” “green” and “moonroof.” Those keyword-based ads launched last week, but Prius also took over the online dictionary’s home page Wednesday and Thursday, with another two-day takeover planned for July. Dictionary.com has also included Prius ads in its word-of-the-day emails, which reach 1.3 million subscribers.

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Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Cisco Diversifies Again as Chambers Discusses Rivals

Ben Worthen

Cisco on Monday announced an initiative to sell high-tech gear to utilities, a market the company says could be a $20 billion-a-year market by 2014.

Political junkies may have heard the term “smart grid,” which is one of the areas that the Obama administration has targeted with its stimulus package. The government is committing billions to facilitate building a next-generation electrical grid that’s more energy efficient.

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Thursday, July 3, 2008

Can High-Tech Giants Revolutionize Solar Market?

Therese Poletti

As companies like Intel Corp., IBM Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. have made moves in the solar power space, many have wondered if these high-tech heavyweights could use either their manufacturing or intellectual muscle to push down costs and thereby lower the price of solar power. Perhaps eventually, but not quite so fast.

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Friday, March 28, 2008

15 Algae Start-Ups Bringing Pond Scum to Fuel Tanks

Katie Fehrenbacher

If corn-based biofuels are the Britney Spears of the cleantech world (a fallen star but still all over the place), fuel made from algae is the next great “American Idol” winner (major potential in the pipeline). And despite the fact that algae-to-biofuel start-ups have been taking their sweet time bringing a pond-scum fuel product to market, some inroads have been made recently–GreenFuel is building its first plant, PetroSun starts producing at their farm on April 1, and big-oil Chevron and Shell have made some early bets as well.

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OLPC Keyboards Literally Being Ripped Apart

Nilay Patel

You’d think that with a name like “One Laptop Per Child,” NickNeg and company would have stress-tested their laptop with some actual children, but it looks like everyone’s favorite green machine just isn’t up to the toddler challenge–OLPC owners are reporting that the laptop’s rubberized keyboard is easily destroyed by inquisitive kids, who are peeling the keys off like so many scratch’n’sniff stickers.

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Friday, January 25, 2008

Ideas–and Green Ones Too–That Take Flight at Davos

Spencer Swartz

Who says the World Economic Forum at Davos is just a lot of hot air? Sure, the occasional blind tastings hosted by well-known wine writers like Jancis Robinson and dinners by California cuisine doyenne Alice Waters happen. But serious work gets done too, and in keeping with the forum’s quest to make the world a better and cleaner place. Shai Agassi, the former executive at German software giant SAP AG, can attest. The idea behind his green company’s lofty plan to shake up how cars are driven–without gasoline–came from a serendipitous exchange of chats at Davos three years ago. “It’s origins were here back in 2005 from some conversations. The idea matured in 2006,” he says.

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