Category: General news

Managing director of Ebono Institute and major sponsor of The Generator, Geoff Ebbs, is running against Kevin Rudd in the seat of Griffith at the next Federal election. By the expression on their faces in this candid shot it looks like a pretty dull campaign. Read on

  • Capital is the growth constraint for BioSolar

    Capital is the growth constraint for BioSolar

    Leigh Storr at Biosolar
    Leigh Storr talks to The Generator at his office in Woolloongabba

    Young Entrepreneur of the year, Leigh Storr, is pleased to be in the fastest growing sector of the fastest growing industry.

    “The only constraint on our growth, right now, is a lack of investment capital,” he told The Generator.

    “In America investors would be throwing money at a company like BioSolar, in Australia, the financial institutions see rapid growth and call it risk.”

    According to Storr, the secret to his growth is high-quality panels, components and installations and a focus on affordability. He achieves that by providing customers with a payment plan to keep up-front costs down, and rigorous attention to cashflow in his business.

    “Many solar companies are selling incentives and are vulnerable to the whims of government policy. As governments slash incentives, our business has soared.”

    He explains that customers have simply done the numbers on their power bill.

    “If power prices continue to rise at 12.5% p.a. over the next ten years, the average Australian will spend an entire year of their work life, just paying for electricity.”

    BioSolar now employs over 400 people and has invested in a workplace culture that has earned it the nickname ‘Google of the Gabba’. It has a vegan cafe, cinema and gym on premises and an independent yoga studio on-site. The company has a major operational centre in Darra and offices in NSW and Victoria.

    Storr believes the current focus on propping up the fossil fuel industry will cost the Australian economy dearly as other countries shift to cheap, distributed energy and unleash innovation.

    Before the end of the year, BioSolar will be selling low cost battery technology and generators that will allow homes and businesses to be independent of the grid (see Guerilla Disconnection below).

    He points to companies like Google in the USA who are independent of the grid, precisely because they need to guarantee their electricity supply and control their electricity costs.

    CONSUMER PROTECTION BY GUERRILLA DISCONNECTION

    Biosolar offers many incentives to staff
    Biosolar offers many incentives to staff

    The challenge for the electricity industry, recently exposed by Four Corners and The Monthly, is that the cost of the infrastructure for fossil fuel generated electricity is increasing as fewer customers need it. As a result the service charges on your electricity bill have increased much faster than the charges for the electricity itself. Not content with printing false statements blaming these costs on environmental regulation in large red letters on their bills, electricity companies are now lobbying governments to further penalise owners of solar panels with higher connection charges. The price paid for solar generated electricity is already a ridiculously low 4 cents per kilowatt and the amount of electricity that can be supplied to the grid has been capped by export limiters.

    The best protection for consumers, according to BioSolar owner and CEO, Leigh Storr, is to disconnect from the grid altogether.

    He said that consumers can achieve this, by simply notifying their provider of an imminent disconnection date, online. On that date, the consumer throws the switch on the export limiter and the utility records no further use.

    “What are they going to do? Drive around and issue fines for people who have the lights on without being registered to a fossil-fuel-powered generator?”

    He thinks the crunch will come at the end of 2017 when the cost of being connected to the grid will exceed the cost becoming self-sufficient.

  • Small Business Week is the 1st – 6th of September

    Jann Stuckey
    Minister for small business Jann Stuckey

    Minister for Tourism, Major Events, Small Business and the Commonwealth Games, Jann Stuckey MP will officially launch the 2014 Queensland Small Business Week at a business lunch on Tuesday, 2 September at City Hall.

    “2014 Queensland Small Business Week is a chance to celebrate the contribution our 403,000 hard-working, small businesses make to the State economy, and remind Queenslanders of the importance of buying locally,” Ms Stuckey said.

    “The Queensland Government is helping small business to have a big future.”

    To kickstart the week, Minister Stuckey has invited all Queensland businesses to attend or join in, via a live web link, to a panel discussion about how to become a small business tiger.

    Businesses can register to hear international business expert and the head of America’s Harvard Business School, Professor Josh Learner, discuss how local business is performing on the international stage.

    Other Ministerial events include a business breakfast on the Sunshine Coast with one of the most respected CEOs in America, Tom Szasky from Terra Cycle.

    Tom brings a wealth of business knowledge, with Terra Cycle referred to as the ‘coolest little start-up in America’ and the ‘Google of garbage’.

    A full list of events in, and around Brisbane, is on the Queensland Government business and industry portal at www.business.qld.gov.au/smallbusinessweek.

    Last year, more than 4500 businesses participated in 91 events across the State. This year there will be an estimated 120 events.

    Small businesses are defined as those employing less than 20 people. There are approximately 403,000 small businesses in Queensland, representing over 95 per cent of all businesses.

    To register to host or attend an event, visit the 2014 Queensland Small Business Week website www.business.qld.gov.au/smallbusinessweek.

     

  • BitCoin settles in West End

    Bitcoin imageBitcoin is promising to be the alternative payment method for retail shopping and online web sites.  Used the World over, Bitcoin is gaining momentum, acceptance and the attention of government regulators.

    Bitcoin suffers from technical complexity but the savings are enormous.

    With Bitcoin your money is stored on a plastic debit card which you can access at Bitcoin ATM’s, EFTPOS machines in shops and online shopping web sites – Just like your debit/credit cards in your wallet.

    The great news about Bitcoin and other alternative currencies is they use cryptology to secure your money instead of centralised controls. Bitcoin and alternative coins such as BankCoin are unregulated.

    Bitcoins where initially mined using high speed computer graphics cards and sold on currency trading exchanges for a few dollars each.  Today you can buy/sell 0.10000001 of a Bitcoin for about $66.  Bitcoins have eight decimal places unlike cash which has only two.

    Diamond Circle moved from the Brisbane city to West End to be part of this revolution.

    The company provides the hardware, software and service backup solutions to support peer to peer money transfer in and out of personal Bitcoin Wallets to their customers the World over.

    Diamond Circle is forging a reputation in the emerging field of Bitcoins. It was recently awarded one of Gartner’s ten Cool Company awards.

    The product that brought the company to Gartner’s attention is the NFC tags that function as Bitcoin “wallets – either hung from keychain or attached to a phone. The company has been given a vote of confidence, with Gartner recommending that “IT leaders” in finance who are investigating Bitcoins should look into trialing the product.

    Since alternative coins are relatively new, Diamond Circle offers free introductory information sessions on accepting alternative currencies with confidence. FOr more information about these sessions, head on over to diamondcircle.net and register your interest.

  • Wearable computing still misses the point

    The day it gets real is the day we throw out our phone writes Geoff Ebbs
    Wearable computingDespite headlines such as ‘Riding the Wearable Boom’ and the enthusiastic release of products like Salesforce Wear, ‘a complete eco-system for the enterprise’, the pundits are generally underwhelmed by the latest wave of wearable computing products.
    More importantly, the ordinary punter – that’s you and I dear reader – are not lining up at the g-Store buying google glasses in bulk. In fact, Network World’s Frederick Paul writes that Google Glass has set back wearable computing for ten years.
    The Samsung Wearable Tech range, featuring the latest in digital watches going by the low key label, Samsung Gear, has barely even registered in mainstream consciousness.
    Part of the problem is that no-one really knows what we want this stuff for – we are not driving the demand for new technology, the tech-companies are looking for ways to drive us.
    Our phones currently do everything we want and more: we use only a minute fraction of their curent capability. Marketing and publishing agencies are really only beginning to lumber into gear to harness the ability of personal networked computing devices that know more about us than we know about ourselves.
    In 1991 I wrote in PC User magazine “Computer companies are actively seeking the ideal size for the the laptop computer – which always seems to be smaller than the current crop of computing devices. The constraint, though, is screen size. Interestingly, the phone is becoming the tool of the bosses and the laptop the tool of the worker.”
    I’m not claiming to have predicted the impact of the iPhone a decade before its appearance but it is instructive to note Bob Metcalfe’s observation that “the future is already here, it is just unevenly distributed.” The point is that by looking around us we can already see the future. Screens are becoming ubiquitous. We have them on our car mirrors, an increasing number of digital devices and in all sorts of public spaces.

    As always we only need to look at the sci-fi films to see how this will be integrated. As we move past these screens they will become part of our personal network experience. Our interface with the network then, will be ubiquitous. What this does not explain is what will be our connection. And that is where the digital watch comes in. The watch

    The digital watch will evolve to become the nerve centre of our personal computing node, in the same way that our phone is now. It will be complemented by a range of input and output devices that allow us to speak to the network and see what is available. In the house, that might be our TV or fridge mounted screen, in the car that will be our hands free microphone and the screen attached to our review mirror.

    The watch, like the spectacles, have evolved four centuries to become an integral extension of the human body. When the digital glasses get good enough, we will have our own personal screen on our faces with a microphone built into the frame. At that point, the phone in our pocket will be largely redundant.
    There is one thing that the phone has introduced to the networked experience that needs to be taken into account and that is the touch screen. The direct, visceral experience of gesturing directly onto the output device is a fundamental change in the way that we interact with the computer. Another thing that the sci-fi imagery shows us is that the three D hologram is a much more powerful interface than the touch screen. The next development in that direction is the evolution of the stylus pen as a gesturing device that allows us to point to elements in the image made visible by our digital glasses. That completes the picture, regardless of whether it is a current 2D image, or a more futuristic 3D hologram.

     

  • The war everyone watched while doing nothing

    Israel withdrew all their soldiers from Gaza 5 August for a 72-hour ceasefire. Tomorrow we will find out if this ceasefire will last longer than 72 hours, or if IDF will re-enter Gaza for another onslaught.

    This war is a bit of weird one
    Firstly, the word conflict does not fully describe the situation in Gaza at the moment. Using the word conflict removes the idea of violence, unlike the word war. If you look at the number of people injured and killed (see below), conflict does not sound right. It is a good word if you want to be diplomatic, but if you want to be honest and descriptive, war is a better word for what has been going on between Gaza and Israel the last few weeks.

    With that said, as a whole this is a conflict, but what has been going on the last few weeks can not be called anything else but a war. If you are still uneasy about using the word war, at least refer to it as an armed conflict to at least recognise that violence is present.

    Secondly, this war has divided people around the world. Leaders from various countries have urged Israel to stop. Yet there has been no effective intervention enacted to prevent the killing of civilians. The idea of Responsibility to Protect (R2P) seems to have been ignored. Even when UN-operated schools in Gaza have been fired upon by IDF, all UN dared to do was to tell Israel that it was unacceptable.

    An issue no-one wants to touch
    The general conflict, to use the word more correctly, that has been going on for decades between Gaza and Israel is so sensitive that if you side with Gaza you will be labelled an anti-Semite and a Hamas supporter; and if you side with Israel you support genocide of Palestinians and hate Arabs.

    A discourse that seems to only exist within the realm of, either you are against us or with us, on both sides.

    Internationally it then becomes acceptable to only give vocal support — yet still risky. Enacting on the idea of R2P becomes too difficult for any country to handle due to the the contentious nature of the conflict, that you can only side with one or the other.

    Which frankly hurts everyone, not only Palestinians and Israelis, but also the international community.

    This is why UN and other nations have been only wagging their fingers during this war. Telling Israel enough is enough, and that killing civilians is a bit naughty. Like a parent telling their kid to stop behaving badly or else there will be consequences, without following through. It sounds like they are doing something, but in reality they just sit there on the sideline, doing nothing.

    McDonald’s end wars
    Journalist Thomas Friedman famously said, “no two countries that both had McDonald’s had fought a war against each other since each got its McDonald’s.” Known as the Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention.

    Maybe this is the— without a doubt a bit far-fetched —solution that will end the ongoing conflict between Gaza and Israel. That McDonald’s opens its first restaurant in Gaza.

    I appreciate that this idea sounds somewhat silly, but to be honest, I do not see UN intervening to enact the idea of R2P. As the saying goes, extreme situations call for extreme measures. And I think we have reached a point where we need to try something to end this conflict, instead of doing nothing.

    The 29 day war according to UNRWA
    – 1,777 Palestinians killed.
    – 9,370 injured.
    – 270,000 Palestinians have been forced to seek refuge in 90 of the UN-operated schools in Gaza.
    – 95 buildings operated by UN in Gaza have been attacked by IDF.
    – The most recent attack on a UN-operated school, IDF was informed 33 times civilians had sought refuge there.
    – 830,000 Palestinians are dependent on food rations from UN.

    The 29 day war according to IDF
    – 900 of the killed are combatants linked to Hamas or other terrorist organisations.
    – IDF has targets 4,800 attacked.
    – Hamas has launched over 3,000 rockets into Israel.
    – 64 IDF soldiers have been killed, including 3 civilians.
    – IDF dispute the number of civilian casualties reported by UNRWA, claiming it is much lower.

    Rwanda Genocide all over again
    The ongoing conflict between Gaza and Israel is akin to turn into a what happened in Rwanda 1994. Where the international community failed to properly enact R2P. Something we might witness again if nothing is done. The ball is in UN’s court, but unfortunately it is just lying there, untouched, hoping it will go away. Of course, by not going forward with R2P it becomes difficult to blame anyone for doing anything wrong. So by doing nothing, it is easy to pretend no-one will be at fault if the Gaza-Israel conflict escalates further than we have witnessed the last few weeks.

    Sources: Aftenposten / UNRWA / The Times of Israel

    Feature photo by: Asad Al Saftawy, via Farah Baker

  • Supermoon Vs Meteor Shower This Week

    Shower story
    This is the best ‘SuperMoon’ in ages joined in the night sky buy the annual Perseids meteor shower

    Get ready for a ‘supermoon’ on Monday 11 August. The supermoon is a rare sight that doesn’t happen very often but when it does you’ll want to make sure you’re outside of your house and ready to check out just how breathtakingly beautiful it looks in the night sky.

    A ‘Super Moon’ occurs at the time in the moon’s orbit when it’s closest to Earth. Not only will the moon be full, it will also look slightly larger and much brighter when rising early evening . If you’re going fishing watch for ‘King Tides.’ This will be the closest full moon of 2014!

    Now, this week’s coming Supermoon will face off against everyone’s favourite meteor shower, the Perseids, and the outcome could be spectacular. People are already seeing fireballs which peaks overnight on August 12th and early dawn August 13. Look eastward anytime after midnight from any part of Australia.

    Generally, this is a good shower for beginners with estimates of dozens of meteors per hour. As with all showers, the best time for viewing will be from around 3am until an hour before sunrise.

    Download the ‘Fireballs in the Sky’ app now. Developers have created an easy to use app for iOS and Android users. As well as reporting detailed meteor sightings, the app also keeps you up to date with the latest images, news and announcements from the Desert Fireball Network project. www.fireballsinthesky.com.au

    Meteor showers originate from leftover fragments of comets and asteroids. Comets that travel through the sun leave dust behind, and when the Earth passes through that debris, those remnants clash with the atmosphere, disintegrate, and generate colourful, sparkling streaks.

    I bet you didn’t know space rocks, or meteorites, could burn. Well, they can and they do! Police, emergency services and radio stations always get phone calls from people thinking they were distress flares being shot into the sky or returning space junk that might hit their house.

    The rocks often appear as green lights as they burn heading towards earth. They come in at between 30 and 60 kilometres a second. Just think about that! No wonder they burn, the friction sets them ablaze and we see them streak across the night sky. Don’t forget the name, they’re called ‘fireballs,’ not meteors which are much smaller.

    What exactly are meteor showers? Well, they’re basically the tail ends of comets. As comets orbit the Sun, they shed an icy, dusty debris stream along the comet’s orbit. If Earth travels through this stream, we will see a meteor shower.

    Meteorites look pretty when they fall but you know, there’s money in space rocks. Many stony iron meteorites contain extremely valuable Platinum group metals with grades 10 to 20 times higher than available here on Earth!

    The resources of the solar system are essentially infinite, and they’re just waiting for us to use. Heck, we just found an exoplanet that may be half diamond but for now it’s back down to earth. Want some free stuff? Head on over to my website www.davidreneke.com and download a whole range of fact sheets and free e-books on astronomy.

    David Reneke is an astronomy writer, lecturer, broadcaster and media personality. Get David’s free astronomy newsletter and a free 323 page e-book called ‘The Complete Idiots Guide To Astronomy. Visit the webpage: www.davidreneke.com