How to Deal with Death Online the Right Way

online death etiquette

What are the best ways to deal with a deceased love one online?

Your friends and family are going to die. Probably later, but maybe sooner. That much is certain. Another certainty is that, when it happens, we’ll all still be using some form of social media. Here’s how to grieve digitally, with dignity.

As much as Facebook is the sprawling, glowing, inexorable way we connect with each other these days—around the clock—death just doesn’t really belong there. Facebook is designed specifically to make you feel proud about yourself. Timeline is a monument to your joys and achievements, no matter how superficial and beer-soaked they may have been. It’s a place toshare your glee—share it all over everyone’s faces, whether they like it or not…

Continue reading… “How to Deal with Death Online the Right Way”

0

‘Noah’ capsule – Japan’s answer to the next tsunami

noahs ark 1

“Noah” capsule

When the tsunami alarm sounds and water quickly begins to rise you can escape in the “Noah” spherical earthquake and tsunami shelter. The 1.2 meter (4 feet) diameter tsunami survival capsules were designed by Japan’s Cosmo Power as floating emergency shelters capable of holding up to four adults.

 

Continue reading… “‘Noah’ capsule – Japan’s answer to the next tsunami”

0

Transparent BubbleTree – A Tent That Gives Camper A Great View of the Night Sky

bubbletent

Bubble tent

For those who are planning to unwind among nature during the holiday season, French designer Pierre Stephane Dumas has designed a series of luxury tents “BubbleTree” for a fun-filled camping experience. The inflatable bubble tents are decked out with wardrobes, sofas and electric lights for a comfortable stay.And, the series feature CristalBubble, a completely transparent tent for the exhibitionists, while “Cocooning” is the version for those who seek privacy. Continue reading… “Transparent BubbleTree – A Tent That Gives Camper A Great View of the Night Sky”

0

Fallout Shelters of the Cold War Era Making a Comeback

doomsday

A 1955 photo shows the interior of an H-bomb steel shelter at an unknown location.

Jason Hodge, father of four children from Barstow, Calif., says he’s “not paranoid” but he is concerned, and that’s why he bought space in what might be labeled a doomsday shelter.  Hodge bought into the first of a proposed nationwide group of 20 fortified, underground shelters — the Vivos shelter network — that are intended to protect those inside for up to a year from catastrophes such as a nuclear attack, killer asteroids or tsunamis, according to the project’s developers.

 

Continue reading… “Fallout Shelters of the Cold War Era Making a Comeback”

0

Congressional Fallout Shelter

 

fallout shelter 765432

The Secret Bunkers under the Greenbriar Resort

From the 1958 until 1992, the Greenbriar Resort in White Sulfur Springs, West Virginia sat on top of a secret. Underneath was a huge fallout shelter designed to accommodate members of the US Congress and their aides in case of a nuclear attack.

The 18 dormitories could sleep 60 people each on metal bunk beds. Each had a shower, toilets, and small lounge…

  Continue reading… “Congressional Fallout Shelter”

0

Congress’s Groovy, Formerly Secret Fallout Shelter

congressional-fallout-shelter-at-the-greenbrier-resort_9390_large_slideshow

Enter the shelter here…

Atlas Obscura takes us on a tour of the US Congress’s secret fallout shelter, built in the fifties so that Congresscritters and their aides (but not their families) could survive a nuclear holocaust. Its location — beneath Greenbrier Resort in White Sulphur Springs, WV — was outed by the WashPo in 1992, it has since been superseded by an even s33ktr1ter shelter with even groovier wallpaper to take into the next world…

Continue reading… “Congress’s Groovy, Formerly Secret Fallout Shelter”

0

Report: The Number of Homeless Dropped 2% in 2009

5 homeless 765

Homeless people still struggling to survive

The recession continued to take its toll as more families with children became homeless for the second straight year, a U.S. government report shows.
The number of families in homeless shelters increased 7% to 170,129 from fiscal year 2008 through fiscal year 2009, a report released today by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development found. At the same time, the overall number of homeless people in shelters fell 2% to 1.56 million.
“As the nation’s housing and job markets show encouraging signs of recovery, there are still far too many families who are on the brink of becoming homeless or have fallen into our shelter system,” Secretary Shaun Donovan said in a statement.
The annual report counted the homeless in two ways. The first was a census in cities and counties, where volunteers fanned out one night during the last week in January to count those living on streets and in shelters. That count found 643,000 people were homeless. The chronically homeless dropped 10% from 2008 to 111,000.
That decline stems from more local and federal efforts to find the chronically homeless permanent housing and social services, said Nan Roman of the National Alliance to End Homelessness.
The second method of counting involved a year-long study of shelter data in 334 communities. It found more families in shelters rented or lived with family before becoming homeless. Families also are staying longer in shelters, from 30 days in 2008 to 36 in 2009.
A 2008 study by the Alliance found 800,000 families were living with extended family, friends or other people because of the economy.
“Probably those are the families that were becoming homeless in 2009,” Roman said.
Dennis Culhane, a University of Pennsylvania professor who studies homelessness and is one of the researchers of the report, said he expects homelessness to drop in 2010, reflecting in part the $1.5 billion in federal stimulus money spent by communities to prevent homelessness.
In New York City, the report found that 30% of homeless families in 2009 were first-time homeless.
Family homelessness declined this year as the city gave more rent subsidies and helped parents find jobs, said Seth Diamond, commissioner of the city’s Department of Homeless Services. There were 8,348 homeless families in city shelters in May, down 7% from October, he said.

The recession continued to take its toll as more families with children became homeless for the second straight year, a U.S. government report shows.

The number of families in homeless shelters increased 7% to 170,129 from fiscal year 2008 through fiscal year 2009, a report released today by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development found. At the same time, the overall number of homeless people in shelters fell 2% to 1.56 million.

Continue reading… “Report: The Number of Homeless Dropped 2% in 2009”

0

Container Trucks Recycled Into Mobile Homes

tanker apartment 1111

Whether the trucks were transporting oil, milk or some other sort of liquid, designer Aristide Antonas has conjured up a world where we would recycle the containers into apartments. The gallery below shows a post-apocalyptic world where we remain mobile. (Pics)

As Antonas says, these keg apartments:

“…can be detached from their cars and can form more stable units for a certain period. A big circular window can be introduced in the vehicle’s cylinder towards the car’s side with the use of an enforced circular frame. This will give the form of a window open to the driver’s section or to any chosen view if the keg stops in a particular way.

Continue reading… “Container Trucks Recycled Into Mobile Homes”

0

Mobile Homeless Shelter

homeless travel trailer 12344

A forward thinking design for homeless folks.

Phil Elkins’ has created other devices in the past, but recently he turned his attention to creating a portable shelter for the homeless. The result weighs 225 pounds and has a tiny bed, kitchen, and bathroom:

Elkins wanted his design construction to be a simple, light weight, water tight insulated box on wheels, built with an area for displaying and selling handmade wares.[…]

The roof acts as a rain catcher. When it starts raining, a valve is turned to stop the flow of water to the collection tank to allow debris to be flushed from the roof. After a minute of this cleaning process, the valve can be turned back on and collect free water. When the tank is full, it has an overflow feature which allows excess water to drain to the ground. (Pics)

Continue reading… “Mobile Homeless Shelter”

0

Australian Retirement Village Is Exclusively for Cats

cats homeleigh-retirement-village

Such a fine place for old pussies to hang out!
Homeleigh retirement village is a perfect place to spend the twilight years, with staff to clean and cook, a garden and immaculate quarters. But forget about signing up – unless you are a cat.

Inside a fully functional house next to Keysborough Animal Shelter in outer Melbourne, the only residents are twelve aged felines.

A shelter staff member visits every morning and night to feed the moggies and human visitors pop in to spend a few hours.

0