Thursday, April 25, 2024

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Polly wolly doodle all the day

Rather than being frowned upon, doodling should be actively encouraged in meetings because it improves our ability to pay attention, a British psychologist claims. A study that compared how well people remembered details of a...

City slicker future shock

Educated and higher income people of all ages are choosing to live and work in cities, businesses and R&D hubs are driving innovation, and public spaces and cultural institutions are being re-imagined for quality...

Energy efficiency, value not values

For a more current perspective on value in the controversial realm of energy efficiency, Wharton professor Howard Kunreuther, Wharton postdoctoral researcher Dena M. Gromet (lead author) and Duke University professor Richard P. Larrick looked...

Easy as a handshake. Solid as granite.

Then why do so many owners and operators reduce it to simply "signing" a piece of paper rather than a critical gateway to an important prospect/customer relationship? Let's face it. In today's world, 9-to-5 office...

Older Americans on the move

More than 7 million Americans moved between states in 2012, the highest number of long-distance moves in four years, according to new data from the Census Bureau's American Community Survey, its most comprehensive snapshot...

HUD’s racial agenda

Poor people who live in government housing projects tend to find their broader neighborhoods are poor, too. Many of their neighborhoods are segregated. Their schools tend to under-perform. And every bit of this is known,...

Transit-oriented development (TOD) takes the stage

And a number of finalists in 22nd annual National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) Multifamily Pillars of the Industry competition have responded to the end of the romance with the automobile by building communities...

A human being is a deciding being

Like those before me and, perhaps, those beyond my view, I want the whole field advantage. It's a view that assures the tension of new and the vigor of limitless context. But mostly, it...

Change is coming

Coal formed the foundation of American industrialization in the 19th century. Between 1850 and 1900, coal's consumption in America rose from 10 percent to 70 percent. After opening the world's first hydroelectric power plant...

Beat the market performance

Consider what ROI you need to initiate retrofits. With banks paying 1 to 3 percent, and stocks showing 8 percent to 10 percent, what ROIs can you anticipate with water and energy retrofits? During...

The world of smart electric grids and meters: What’s in it for you?

What is smart infrastructure? Electric smart meters and smart grids have critical features not present in typical distribution systems today, which can be put to use to improve service and lower costs for customers. The...

Winning the big data game

Tech insiders whisper about big data as if it is the pandora's box of the future, and everyone wants to be prepared to take advantage of its value. Many are familiar with the basic...

A bright idea

Ashoff manufactures fluorescent lamps with motion sensors. He designed it to replace bulbs in building stairwells which burn around the clock, and found that they slash energy costs for stairwell lighting by 97 percent....

More Americans living in others’ homes

The number of so-called missing households—representing adults who would be owning or renting their own home if household formation had stayed at normal rates since the recession—has increased 4 percent over the past year. There...

Making hay while the sun shines

"The economy appears to be on a path of sustainable growth. U.S. businesses have healthy balance sheets and plenty of liquidity-consumer debt has declined to levels not seen since the early 90s," said AvalonBay...
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