Amazon to Use Drones to Deliver

“Amazon.com is testing delivering packages using drones, CEO Jeff Bezos said on the CBS TV news show 60 Minutes Sunday.

The idea would be to deliver packages as quickly as possible using the small, unmanned aircraft, through a service the company is calling Prime Air, the CEO said.”

Saw this on 60 Minutes last night.  Count me among those who think madness has struck.  Really?  Little whirley drones darting through human traffic to drop something you must have 30 minutes after ordering it!

 

Gold Rush in Peruvian Amazon: Mercury Laced Rivers and Three Dead

Puerto Maldonado has been for some years the stepping off point for eco-tourists to the Peruvian Amazon, pushing aside Iquitos in the north east,  as the top draw.  Just a short air trip from Cuzco, several tour companies take small groups to well maintained jungle lodges along tributaries of the Amazon.  Along with spotting crocodiles and herons, small rafts and flat-bottomed boats can be seen with barefoot and bare chested men and children dredging up river mud, churning it through home-made solutions including mercury, and discharging the slurry back into the river.  They are prospecting for gold.  We saw several boats and the ragged camps behind them on a trip in 2010

As the price of gold has skyrocketed in recent years so have the hopes of the Peruvian poor. (Ghana, Indonesia and elsewhere as well.)  Thousands have descended into the jungles and staked claims along the banks to make a living, if not a fortune.  The work is dangerous to the health of the prospectors: mercury quickly attacks the nervous system through the skin.  Traces are likely to attach to family members, even if they don’t handle the slurry.  It is certainly bad for the fish, fowl and other critters whose home is being poisoned.  It doesn’t take much.  0.002 mg/L is the maximum safe limit according to the EPA.

The government, aware of the dangers, has been trying to stop the flow of the desperate — unfortunately  not at the source, in the poverty of the cities and villages, but where they come bursting out, Puerto Maldonado and the river banks nearby.  Raids, arrests and threats of more have thrown the prospectors into a frenzy and thousands are now fighting back.  Puerto Maldonado is a mini-war zone.

…at least 12,500 miners had attempted to seize public buildings, markets and the airport in the city, said Madre de Dios regional president Jose Luis Aguirre. He told a reporter: “The situation is untenable. You can hear gunshots throughout the entire city.”

.. police made 62 arrests and that nine officers were among the injured. By afternoon, 500 police reinforcements had arrived to bolster a badly outnumbered contingent of 700 officers.

Police said they prevented rioters from seizing the bus station and airport of the largely dirt-street capital of about 37,000 residents. But to the west, miners took control of a key bridge, blocking the transoceanic highway that links the highland city of Cuzco and Peru’s coast to Brazil.

It’s a bad situation all around, with no immediate solution.  The prospectors are despoiling an important part of the national and world heritage, and more likely to ruin than to improve themselves.  The government has no plans in place large enough to provide hope where it is most needed and is left with an armed response that will certainly lead to more than the three reported dead as of today.  The income to the town from tourism is choked off until some way out is arrived at.

 

Not Buying Amazon

Although Amazon, the enormous on-line retailer, has said it will begin collecting sales taxes and returning them to the state of purchase, thereby moving off my absolutely-do-not shop here list, it remains on my only-use-in-an-emergency box.

Quite simply, it is a threat to all the small retail outlets we need for a vibrant economic and inter-related community. It is by its size, and it is by its practices.  Lately it has offered to undercut the price of any book anywhere if the shopper will provide proof — easy enough these days with cameras and bar-code scanners.

Stephanie Clifford in the NY Times Business Section on January 16 takes stock of this threat and what some are doing to counter it.

Harold Pollack used to spend $1,000 a year on Amazon, but this fall started buying from small online retailers instead. The prices are higher, but Dr. Pollack says he now has a clear conscience.

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Giant e-commerce companies like Amazon are acting increasingly like their big-box brethren as they extinguish small competitors with discounted prices, free shipping and easy-to-use apps. Big online retailers had a 19 percent jump in revenue over the holidays versus 2010, while at smaller online retailers growth was just 7 percent.

The little sites are fighting back with some tactics of their own, like preventing price comparisons or offering freebies that an anonymous large site can’t. And in a new twist, they are also exploiting the sympathies of shoppers like Dr. Pollack by encouraging customers to think of them as the digital version of a mom-and-pop shop facing off against Walmart: If you can’t shop close to home, at least shop small.

I recommend the article to you.

I encourage you to shop locally whenever possible, and to shop at alternatives to Amazon, Barnes and Noble and the like.

I have my wish-lists at Powell’s in Portland, at Alibris and ABEBooks.  I’ve had experience with all of them.  Never had a failed delivery.  All the — mostly used– books are in good condition.  No reason at all not to have an account and look there first.  Amazon does do one think none other others do, and that’s offer some pages to skim through before purchase.  Google Books does that with many, and anyway, reading the Table of Contents and a random page or two does not obligate you to buy.

Give these others a try.  You’ll feel better

Amazon Drought – Again

“One of the most important tributaries of the Amazon river has fallen to its lowest level in over a century, following a fierce drought that has isolated tens of thousands of rainforest inhabitants and raised concerns about the possible impact of climate change on the region.

“The drought currently affecting swaths of north and west Amazonia has been described as the one of the worst in the last 40 years, with the Rio Negro or Black river, which flows into the world-famous Rio Amazonas, reportedly hitting its lowest levels since records began in 1902 on Sunday.

In 24 hours the level of the Rio Negro near Manaus in Brazil dropped 6cm to 13.63 metres, a historic low.One of the most important tributaries of the Amazon river has fallen to its lowest level in over a century, following a fierce drought that has isolated tens of thousands of rainforest inhabitants and raised concerns about the possible impact of climate change on the region.

The drought currently affecting swaths of north and west Amazonia has been described as the one of the worst in the last 40 years, with the Rio Negro or Black river, which flows into the world-famous Rio Amazonas, reportedly hitting its lowest levels since records began in 1902 on Sunday.

In 24 hours the level of the Rio Negro near Manaus in Brazil dropped 6cm to 13.63 metres, a historic low. …

The problem has been particularly intense up river from state capital Manaus towards the border with Peru and Colombia. But the area around the city has also been badly hit. In Iranduba, 15 miles from Manaus, authorities are reportedly planning to hack a small road through the rainforest in order to reconnect their community with the outside world.

“In my whole life I have never seen a drought like this one,” 50-year-old river-dweller Manoel Alves Pereira told the local A Critica newspaper.

Guardian.UK

Drought in the Amazon

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Manaus, capital of the state of Amazonas, and the entire eastern region of the state are suffering the worst drought in more than a century. A government scientist who calls it an “atypical” drought says it is chiefly caused by warmer ocean temperatures.

Scientist Carlos Nobre, of the National Institute of Space Research (INPE), said, “When it comes to the Rio Negro, in Manaus, this drought has no parallel in the last 103 years. That is, since 1902, when the level of the Rio Negro began to be measured,” he said.

In the eastern part of the region, this is the worst drought in the last 50 or 60 years, he estimates. The governor of Amazonas state has declared a crisis due to the drought. Environmental News Service