23 July
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The Thread: Women and Leadership

In the U.S., why isn’t the percentage of government seats held by women higher?

Canada’s National Post has created an excellent infographic illustrating the data in Save the Children’s State of the World’s Mothers report. Co.Exist’s Ariel Schwartz dug into the report and visualization this morning.

click to enlarge

The data highlights the fact that the U.S. lags behind many other nations when it comes to the percentage of government seats held by women – an issue that has been part of the broader, voracious debate reignited in recent weeks by Anne-Marie Slaughter’s “Why Women Still Can’t Have It All” essay in The Atlantic. In the U.S., only 17% of government seats are held by women. Compare that to Norway, Iceland, Finland, Sweden, and even non-Scandinavian nations like Cuba, Nicaragua, South Africa, and Rwanda (Rwanda incorporates a constitutional quota system), all of which can boast that at least 40% of their government seats are held by women, according to Save the Children’s data.

Why do you think the percentage of government seats held by women is lower in the United States than it is in some other countries – and what can be done to change the ratio? Tell us in the comments section below – we’ll update this post with your responses next week.

Via Fast Company: http://www.fastcompany.com

02 April
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Six Powerful Web Tools For Getting Unusual Things Done, From Audio Editing To File Conversion

The web still hasn’t become its own operating system but, man, parts of it are close. Take these surprisingly powerful and useful app-like websites, for example.

 

Do you remember how web browsers worked in 1998? Even back in the days of dial-up, Microsoft was so worried that your browser might replace your desktop that they nearly tore themselves apart trying to stomp down Netscape. That’s right, Netscape, a web browser that some of you reading this may not even remember. But take a look around the web right now, and it turns out Microsoft was right to be concerned–you’ll be amazed at just how much it’s possible to do, and do surprisingly well, in a browser.

We’re not talking the obvious, if often impressive stuff: email, calendar, and document management from Google, Zoho, and Microsoft itself. These are the sites that will save you hard drive space and clutter, and help you get by without having to shell out for software to just do that one thing you need. And they are definitely worth a bookmark or six.

Multi-track audio editing and recording: Myna

Need to chop together an audio interview, add some music to a talk, or otherwise tweak some audio? If you don’t have a Mac with GarageBand handy, or you’re not quite trained in the ways of Audacity, you can fire up Myna, Aviary’s free multi-track audio editor. Not only can you drop in audio files and make non-destructive edits, but you can record your voice or ambient sound straight from your browser tab. Aviary makes a whole suite of nifty browser-based tools, including some very handy image editors, but you should really check out …

Photoshop-like photo editing: Pixlr

When you need something more than just crop, resize, and save, Pixlr is where you turn. Multiple layers, a big undo/redo memory, unsharp masks, burn and dodge tools, curves and levels, and a big selection of filters are all packed in here, with much more to discover. That would all be so much pipe dream if the app wasn’t so fast-loading and responsive, even compared to its less-ambitious counterparts.

File conversion/Swiss Army knife: Zamzar

It’s 10 minutes until that Big Thing is due, and you just realized: You’ve got it in X format, and it needs to be Y. Sometimes X or Y can be really tricky, like a WordPerfect document (lawyers!), a TIFF image (publishers!), or a Pages package (Mac snobs!). Head to Zamzar, which isn’t particularly pretty or fancy, but does take in files and email them back to you in whatever format you need. You can also download web videos and send big files from Zamzar, just because, well, they figured they’d make it even more useful.

Chat, particularly Skype chat: Imo.im

In the life of every web-adept worker, there comes an encounter with a person, or an entire team, who uses Skype as their main means of chat. Skype may be free, but it’s also a bit hefty and annoying if all you want to do is chat. So sign into Imo.im, which runs chats through its web interface and doesn’t require a separate account. You can also open your GTalk, AIM, MSN, and Facebook chat accounts within the same frame, if you’d like.

Presentations: SlideRocket

Microsoft’s web-based PowerPoint tools are meant as a complement, a view-and-maybe-fix option, for the desktop Office suite. Google Docs’ Presentations and Zoho Show are decent, if you’re aiming for the standard PowerPoint-style presentation. But SlideRocket was built for the web, and its templates and editing tools are good at helping people with lesser design skills (read: this author) look halfway decent. It’s easy to export and download to standard PowerPoint or PDF files, or you can grab SlideRocket’s own presentation tool for a more interactive show. There are free “Lite” accounts that restrict offline access and cut out analytics, but it might not be hard to impress your boss enough to get them to swing for a Pro account.

Instantly copy tricky little characters: CopyPasteCharacter

Got the keyboard shortcut symbol for trademark (™) memorized? Neat. How about copyright (©), all rights reserved (®), and the upside-down exclamation point (¡)? Didn’t think so. CopyPasteCharacter might not seem impressive, compared to the more server-taxing entries above, but consider what a pain it is to have to search out those characters, either on your laptop or on the web, click them, then press to copy them. On this site, you just click on the symbol you want, and it’s copied to your clipboard. You can even create your own personalized set of oft-copied characters, but try to keep in mind that not everybody thinks ✈ is an acceptable way to tell clients that you’re traveling.

Image: Santiago Cornejo via Shutterstock

Via Fast Company: http://www.fastcompany.com

04 January
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8 Simple Digital Tools for Scanning Documents

This post originally appeared on the American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.

Small business and startup employees are constantly on the go. They need quick, mobile solutions for scanning, storing, organizing and sharing important documents.

Eager to empty that box full of receipts? Looking for an easy and secure way to send signed documents? We’ve found eight apps and tools that seamlessly scan and file your most important documents and keepsakes. Best of all, most of them integrate with proven file hosts Dropbox and Evernote.

What other tools have proved useful when scanning and integrating your own documents.

One of the most universal apps out there, DocScanner works across iOS, Android and Symbian platforms. Just take a photo of a document, receipt or notebook page and email it as a PDF. Integrate with Mobile.me, Dropbox or Evernote.

Price: $4.99


Similar to DocScanner, this iPhone only app scans and sends documents securely by email and integrates information into Evernote, Dropbox and Google Docs.

Price: $6.99


The iPhone app not only can create PDF documents with multiple scans, but also can digitize and improve handwritten notes.

Price: FREE


Use this app to scan business cards, then add them as contacts in your phone and connect with them on LinkedIn.

Price: FREE


CamScanner allows for post-scan image editing and enhancement. You’re also able to search the text within a PDF image. The app also has fax and AirPrint capabilities.

Price: $4.99


This web/mobile app is named for — you guessed it — all the scrap papers you leave in a shoebox, namely, receipts. Shoeboxed transforms scanned receipts or coupons into organized categories or even expense reports.

Price: FREE


SignNow allows you to securely send scanned documents online for signatures. Sign the documents from a web browser, smartphone or tablet. Great for closing a lease deal or sending freelance contracts.

Price: FREE


For anyone still inclined toward paper scanning, try the Doxie scanner, a super portable single document scanner that integrates with many desktop and mobile apps.

Price: $149


Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

19 September
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CTRL + C Your Way to Instant Search Queries & Social Sharing

The Spark of Genius Series highlights a unique feature of startups and is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here.

Name: Click.to

Quick Pitch: Click.to turns copy, pasting and sharing or searching into a single action.

Genius Idea: You’re just one CTRL + C command away from copying content to your favorite app or service.


Select, copy, open application, paste and submit. We repeat these actions on a daily basis any time we want to share links with friends and followers on Facebook or Twitter, query a search engine or ecommerce site, and grab videos or images to send to colleagues via email.

Click.to, an add-on for Windows 7, XP or Vista, packages up all these actions into the CTRL + C command. Once installed, highlight whatever video, text or image content you want to look up, post, share or save, press CTRL + C and select the app icon of your liking.

“Click.to extends the most used short cut in the world: CTRL + C,” explains co-founder Peter Oehler.

Should you want to quickly Google a few words in a text document, Click.to comes to the rescue. Instead of selecting the text, opening a browser and pasting it into Google, you can copy the text and hit the Google button in the Click.to pop-up — voilà, you just CRTL + C’d your way to instant search results. Rinse and repeat.

Click.to works in much the same for sharing content on social networks. Say you want to post a picture to Facebook. “Click.to will start your browser automatically, it will select www.facebook.com, log into your account, choose picture upload and publish it on your wall … with one click,” Oehler explains.

This simple, little convenience could certainly save you a lot of time, especially since Click.to”s quick copy-to third-party service list is quite exhaustive and includes support for Facebook, Google, Google Maps, Gmail, YouTube, Twitter, Flickr, Box.net, Wikipedia, Evernote, Amazon, Pastebin, Outlook, Word, Excel and others. You can even click to convert text into a PDF, and create your own shortcuts for the web services and programs of your choosing.

Best of all, perhaps, is that Click.to works system-wide. So what’s the catch? Click.to is PC-only for the time being. A Mac-compatible version is said to be in the works.

Click.to, released in early July, is a product from Axonic Informationssysteme GmbH, a Germany-based startup.


Series Supported by Microsoft BizSpark


Microsoft BizSpark

The Spark of Genius Series highlights a unique feature of startups and is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark, a startup program that gives you three-year access to the latest Microsoft development tools, as well as connecting you to a nationwide network of investors and incubators. There are no upfront costs, so if your business is privately owned, less than three years old, and generates less than U.S.$1 million in annual revenue, you can sign up today.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

12 September
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5 Android Apps to Turn Your Phone Into a Mobile Document Scanner

CamScanner is a breeze to use, and you can test out the free version via the Market link above. Snap a photo of your document and pull up the cropping tool. The app will auto-detect the edges of the paper, but the slick drag-and-snap guides will help you fine tune the dimensions.

The processing enhancements are smart, and will compensate for low light and bad focus reasonably well. Though the app generates a cropped and toned image, it will also hang onto the original photo — handy, in case you accidentally cropped your boss’ name off the letterhead.

The app has built-in integration with Google Docs, Box.net and Dropbox, but for the less fancy among you, it’s easy to pipe scanned docs straight into email.

The main issue we encountered was with PDF creation. The original image is stored as a JPEG, but the option to convert it to a PDF simply opened the phone’s default PDF viewer. The file is viewable, but we found no apparent way to save or share.

The paid version promises to make things easier in this department, but you should see how the free version performs on your device before purchasing.

Price: Free / $4.99 for full license and features

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

06 February
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Twitter Counter Acquires Popular Twitter Stats Provider Twitaholic

Twitter statistics provider Twitter Counter has acquired its competitor Twitaholic for an undisclosed sum, the company announced.

From the early days of Twitter, Twitterholic (later renamed to Twitaholic because of Twitter’s trademark on the term “twitter”) was the place to go if you wanted to see how you rank against other Twitter users when it comes to number of followers and other factors.

Amsterdam-based Twitter Counter came later, but obviously had a better financial plan and backing. The company claims it’s profitable with more than $500,000 in revenue in 2010, and it managed to acquire the older service, which now makes it the definitive authority on Twitter user stats.

Twitter Counter plans to continue to build on Twitaholic’s features and user base and improve its main source of profitability, a premium service that lets customers compare more Twitter accounts and enables them to export stats to Excel, download branded PDF reports and more, depending on the plan.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

01 January
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HOW TO: Use Amazon’s New Kindle Lending Feature

Amazon has rolled out its long-awaited lending feature for its Kindle ecosystem of devices and apps. Users can loan out supported titles once for a period of 14 days.

Very similar in execution to the LendMe feature built in to the competing Barnes & Noble Nook platform, borrowers can access books from the Kindle apps for Mac, PC, iOS, AndroidAndroidAndroid, BlackBerry, Windows Phone 7 and of course, the Kindle itself.

Amazon has a pretty comprehensive page set up explaining the Kindle loan process, but we’ve put together our own guide to help users get started.


Loans Are Initiated on the Web


The first thing to understand about the Kindle loan process is that all of the management aspects take place in the web browser. While we imagine that Amazon will release future software updates for its devices and various apps to make it possible to lend out a book from within a device, users need to use the web browser as of right now.

Fortunately, Amazon has made this process pretty simple. Not every Kindle book supports the lending feature; it is up to publishers and rights holders to determine what books can be loaned out or not. To find out if a Kindle book is lendable, just look at the product details section of any Kindle book page.

Underneath the ASIN code is a label titled “Lending.” Lendable books are marked “Enabled” and that means users can safely lend away their e-books.

For Kindle books users have already purchased, a yellow indicator will appear at the top of the product page with the words “Loan this book to anyone you choose.” As long as a user is logged in to his or her Amazon.com account, this heading should appear on every eligible Kindle book already in the user’s collection. Clicking the “Loan this book” link will initiate the lending process.

For users who have lots of Kindle books, the easiest option is probably to go to the Manage Your Kindle page and scroll down to the bottom where it says “Your Orders.” Clicking on the plus sign next to a title will show you order details and also, if the book is eligible, a “Loan this book” sign.


Loans Are Sent via E-mail


Clicking on the “Loan this book” button or hyperlink will take users to a page that completes the loan process.

Lenders will need to provide the recipient’s e-mail address and name and if they want, they can also include a personal message.

Recipients will then get an e-mail from Amazon.com offering a link to accept the lended title. If the user already has a Kindle device, he or she can even choose where to send the title via Whispernet.

Borrowers have seven days from the date of the first e-mail to choose to accept a loan. Once accepted, the book is readable for 14 days.


While on Loan, Books Are Not Accessible to the Owner


Amazon issues the same restriction as Barnes & Noble when it comes to book lending: Once a book is on loan, it is not accessible to the owner. Trying to read a book will show a “This title can not be downloaded because it is on loan” message.

We’ll be honest, we find this practice sort of annoying. After all, the copy is digital, so what does it matter if the owner and borrower can access the title at the same time? Still, from a digital rights perspective, this probably makes copyright holders feel more secure — and truthfully, it isn’t like we can still read our physical books when we loan copies to our friends.

Amazon does have a nice feature in its “Manage My Kindle” section that allows borrowers to remove a lent title from their collection. If this is done before the 14 day loan period, reading rights return to the owner. Borrowers can still pull up the lended title in their archives, but will be alerted when the loan period has ended and given a link to purchase the book.


Notes for International Users


Right now, only users in the United States can lend books to other users. However, if the intended recipient is in another country, as long as the book is accessible in their region, those users can still receive the book.

Much like the music industry, the world of e-books still has different rules and agreements with regard to international availability. Some companies, like Kobo, focus on making all titles accessible in all regions, but the biggest publishers generally have different agreements in different areas.

We hope Amazon will work on bringing the lending feature to international users in the near future.


You Can Only Lend Once


Yet another feature Amazon has borrowed from Barnes & Noble is the fact that once a book has been loaned out once, it cannot be loaned again. To us, this is much more annoying than not being able to read a book while it is on loan.

While I could understand placing a limit on the number of times a title could be lent out (off the top of my head, five seems acceptable), I really don’t see how limiting the number of times a title can be loaned out does anything to deter piracy (if that is the aim). It’s not like there aren’t programs that can break Amazon’s DRM scheme and convert e-books into ePub or PDF.

Still, the ability to lend titles — even with its current implementation — is a great boost to the Amazon ecosystem. Amazon’s strategy of getting its apps on as many devices as possible is one of the most compelling parts of its platform. Yes, the other e-book sellers have by and large followed suit, but Amazon’s ubiquity in the e-commerce space gives it the sort of power that few other services can counter.

As someone who has already become addicted to the ability to gift Kindle books to my friends and colleagues, I can see myself embracing this new feature in full force.

What do you think about the new Kindle lending feature?

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

28 October
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Mercedes Dreams of Rickshaws and Cars Knit by Robots

This year’s Los Angeles Auto Show Design Challenge tackles a heavy question: How do you build a lightweight car that doesn’t compromise safety, styling or performance?

Mercedes-Benz’s answer to that question involves a high-end rickshaw, a Smart knit by lovable robot grandmothers and a sedan grown from seeds. We swear these are concepts from Mercedes, not Citroën.

For the first time in its 7-year history, the Design Challenge expanded its reach beyond Southern California and invited Mercedes-Benz design studios from Japan and Germany to participate in the annual competition. As thanks for the invite, Mercedes brought concepts that stick out amidst relatively staid designs from General Motors, Honda and Nissan like Hammer Pants at the Highland Games.

This year’s rules stipulate that entries must weigh less than 1,000 pounds (1,500 with passengers). They’ll be judged by “artistic beauty, comfort, uniqueness of design, roadworthiness, sustainability, performance and user-friendliness of the vehicle.” We’re sure our commenters will weigh in on whether some of these avant-garde designs meet these criteria.

From Mercedes-Benz Research and Development Japan’s Advanced Design Center comes the Maybach DRS “Den-Riki-Sha” electric rickshaw. It’s more like a Rick-Segway, however, with a self-balancing electric drivetrain, albeit one that’s connected to a yet-to-be-developed intelligent transit infrastructure.

The Volk at Mercedes-Benz Advanced Advanced Design Germany might have been inspired by the theme of some trendy Berlin club for their Smart 454 design. The car is made of carbon fiber literally knit by “incredibly high-tech robots that look as friendly and cuddly as our grandmothers.” We imagine that cold, industrial robots only seem lifelike if your grandmother is Lucille Bluth.

Even Mercedes’ American designers offered a bizarre creation. The Biome concept is grown from two seeds that are genetically engineered to customer specifications. Cars are nurtured at Mercedes-Benz Nurseries until the two seeds grow into a seamlessly integrated interior and exterior. Even among the far-out ideas from Mercedes, this one is especially fanciful.

Though they’re highly advanced designs, the compressed-air cars from Honda and Volvo, the polyhedral 3-D lattice mono-formed frame of the Cadillac Aera, the ultralight Mazda MX-0 or the combination organic-synthetic exteriors that encapsulate concepts from Nissan and Calty Design Research seem tame compared with the oddball lightweights from Mercedes.

Judging ends Nov. 18. We’ll keep you posted.

Photos: L.A. Auto Show Design Challenge

The Smart 454, as knit by Nana.

It’s aliiiiive! The Benz Biome is grown, not built.

The Cadillac Aera: art and science, and a flexible pressurized polymer skin.

The Calty Design Research Nori (for Toyota) combines carbon fiber with seaweed (nori).

Honda says its Air concept highlights the “pow(air) of dreams.”

The Mazda MX-0 sheds pounds by replacing multiple components with simplified ones.

The Nissan IV has a biopolymer frame grown from ivy and reinforced with spider silk.

Volvo’s Air Motion concept is propelled by compressed air.

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

17 September
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6 BlackBerry Apps to Cure iPhone Envy

iPhone Envy ImageWe’ve all run into someone with a new iPhone. And we’ve all learned to expect the inevitable “watch this” moment involved in this encounter.

Whether they identify the background music with Shazam , pull up a fancy screen saver, or fire up a classic PC game, it’s easy for even the most loyal BlackBerry owner to feel a slight pang of jealousy while witnessing these demonstrations. The iPhone is so shiny, so trendy, and it does so many cool tricks.

It’s better to cope with these feelings than to admit them. There’s no need to give up your BlackBerry. The following six iPhone tricks can be accomplished by BlackBerry Apps (and by the way, Shazam makes a BlackBerry appTvider , too).


1. Cute Bubble Text Messages


crunchSMS changes BlackBerry text messages to an iPhone-like speech bubble format. All you need to do is block incoming text messages from your regular inbox, and you can use the app as an alternative.


2. Doodling


Doodle Buddy lets iPhone and iPad users finger paint all over their touch screens, drop in stamps, and even collaborate with friends over the Internet.

Doodle allows owners of the touch-screen BlackBerry Storm do the same thing for $0.99. Similarly, Make a Mess has fewer features but doesn’t charge. BlackBerry enthusiasts who prefer navigation via ball don’t need to feel left out, either. SketchIt allows them to make Etch A Sketch drawings using the scroll ball or keypad.


3. Photoshop


Adobe makes an app for the iPhone that crops, rotates, changes the color of, and draws on photos. There’s even a Soft Focus feature. Sadly this awesome app has no BlackBerry sister, but the unbranded BlackBerry version, imgEdit, accomplishes just as many editing tasks. Plus it a has “a special Warhol effect.”


4. Doppler Radar


There’s something about the weather that turns us all into geeks. The iPhone has widgets and apps specifically designed to supply live radar maps to wannabe weathermen. While there isn’t a specific radar map app available for BlackBerry users, the “maps” feature of the Weather Channel’s free app is more than adequate for backing up amateur forecasts.


5. InstaPaper


Often cited as one of the coolest apps for the iPhone, InstaPaper sends articles you find on the web directly to your phone so that you can read them later, even if your phone is offline. It turns out that the BlackBerry can do that, too. Save Web Page adds a “save PDF” option to your phone’s browser. Saved pages can be read without connecting to the Internet.


6. Remote Control Capability


iPhone users can purchase an accessory that plugs into the USB port and allows them to use their iPhone as a TV remote. The problem with this is that it changes the “where is the remote?” question to a “where is my USB accessory?” question. BlackBerry’s version of a home theater remote control, however, is a box that sits near entertainment equipment rather than connecting to a phone. The AV Shadow can use one phone to control your television, TiVo, DVD player, and satellite box. You can even use your BlackBerry to control Apple products like iPods.

Disclosure: BlackBerry is a Mashable Sponsor


Image courtesy of iStockphoto , PeskyMonkey

By Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

02 August
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DOT Turns Underused Waterways Into Marine Highways

A new priority of the US Department of Transportation is an age-old idea: transport freight by ship for as long as possible. The DOT is proposing designated shipping channels known as Marine Highways, and one may be leading to a port near you.

If you’ve purchased any household goods in the US recently, they probably took a familiar path from the factory to the store where you bought them: to North America on a massive cargo ship, from the ship to a railway, and finally from the rail yard to your local retailer by truck. In many cases, freight is carried solely by truck along interstate highways.

Unfortunately, such a system is far from efficient. It clogs our highways with multiple trucks headed in the same direction and brings pollution into our cities near freight terminals.

That’s why the Maritime Administration (MARAD) has proposed a system of Marine Highways where ships would transit goods within the United States. Along designated corridors, ships could provide safe, environmentally friendly and reasonably quick freight transit among a network of well-situated ports.

A New Old Idea

According to MARAD Administrator Dave Matsuda, the US is catching up with the rest of the world when it comes to Marine Highways. Also known as short sea shipping, coastal trade or coastal shipping, the rivers and seas of Europe and Asia are filled with small container vessels carrying cargo within a continent.

“This is an idea that’s been around for awhile,” Matsuda said. “The Europeans do it, and other folks do it. For about ten years now people have been kicking the idea around in the maritime community. It’s to the point that it’s been joked about that the Marine Highway conference has become a cottage industry.”

When we caught up with him, Matsuda had just been sworn in as MARAD Administrator. Earlier this month, he announced an initial $7 million (PDF) in grant funding for Marine Highways projects that would primarily strengthen existing projects and proposals.

Some short sea shipping operations are already moving freight in the US, and Matsuda wants to help them expand.  “These are the experts, these are people who have started up new markets in the past,” he said. “They know the industry, they know the people and the operations.”

Matsuda is clear about engaging existing operators. “The government’s role here is really to help promote these and get them up and running,” he said. “We can talk to local transportation planners and say, ‘Hey, here are some of the federal programs that help.’ There’s a limited amount of federal dollars to put towards buying cranes or barges or fixing up a port or something that we need to have up and running.”

Some projects are economic no-brainers, such as moving overweight or hazardous materials, where the cost of obtaining road permits would be cost prohibitive for truck shipments. In most cases, however, in order for a project to make sense and for shippers to make money MARAD must identify corridors with strong two-way traffic so that empty ships don’t ply the waters.

A good example of such a project is a proposed Green Trade Corridor in California, a project funded by $30 million of TIGER funds that connects the inland agricultural areas and the Port of Oakland via a Marine Highway.

Currently, goods from Asia come into the port of Oakland and are trucked across the state while agricultural products are trucked in the opposite direction. “It’s a tax on commuters, and it adds to the congestion, beats up the bridges and raises the cost of maintaining infrastructure,” said Matsuda. “It’s not just getting the trucks off the road, but also putting people to work in some of these areas that are really devastated.”

A Marine Highway would move some of that traffic onto barges and guarantee two-way traffic for the company operating the barges.

A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats, Trains and Trucks

A project that promises to put people to work shouldn’t put others out of work. Marine Highways will change rather than replace rail and truck shipments, so they seem to have gained support from groups that represent competing modes of transit.

“Marine and rail freight have coexisted since the 1830s when the rail industry began, said Holly Arthur, a spokesperson for the Association of American Railroads. “While shipping via water can be seen as competition, it also is a significant customer segment for railroads.”

According to Arthur, intermodal transport — the movement of shipping containers by multiple methods, such as from ship to rail — represents 21 percent of rail revenue in the US, a figure that is continuing to grow. If boat traffic increases, the rail industry stands to benefit.

Boats can’t usually pull up to a factory loading dock or back into the parking lot of your local big box store, so trucks are safe, too. “At the end of the day, your shipment winds up at a port, so it has to go on a truck,” said Matsuda. In addition, boats tend to travel more slowly than trucks (though they usually don’t have to stop overnight for rest). Often, short sea shipping services run on a weekly schedule and, said Matsuda, “Its hard to sell a weekly service when you’re dealing with folks who need things a little more quickly.”

In a country where the majority of freight travels along Marine Highways, Matsuda envisions some long-haul truckers working instead in freight yards or in regional distribution, while others remain on the roads with cargo that can’t wait for a slower-moving boat. If estimates of 70 percent growth in the freight industry over the next ten years are accurate, trucks will always be in high demand.

According to Matsuda, the US DOT chose to refer to the project as Marine Highways rather than short sea shipping because the network of waterways would often be parallel to an existing interstate highway. “We wanted to draw a parallel with the interstate system, if you can draw a highway on a map, that you can draw a waterway along the map — maybe M-95 — and it’ll get you to the same place,” he said.

Hazardous materials on tankers in the port of Zeebrugge, Belgium

One kind of freight that Matsuda thinks is best suited for the water is hazardous material. “With hazardous materials, we only see an upside for getting them out of populated areas,” he said. While a lot of bulk hazmat cargo is shipped, that which fits into a container is still largely transported on packed highways. “Anything we can get off the highway is obviously a benefit, if it makes sense to do,” he said. “It’s less gas per mile, but it also helps the people on the roads.”

Better for the Environment

In addition to transporting hazardous materials outside of populated areas, a clear advantage of short sea shipping is the reduced environmental impact of moving freight on ships.

According to Carrie Denning, a researcher at the Environmental Defense Fund who coauthored the report The Good Haul: Freight Innovations for the 21st Century, a shipping company that moves containers by sea between Port Manatee, FL and Brownsville, TX already saves 70,000 gallons of fuel on each one-way voyage compared to a comparable truck journey.

Those fuel savings translate into fewer emissions in population centers. “One way to reduce pollution emissions in some regions will be to substitute multiple truck trips with single barge trips via coastal shipping routes that meet robust environmental performance standards,” she said.

Even with the obvious fuel savings, Denning says that a Marine Highway could still pose serious environmental consequences. Ports themselves are notorious for high levels of emissions from machinery used to move freight. To truly be environmentally responsible, ports along a Marine Highway would have to implement solutions such as electric forklifts and yard trucks — many of which are already in place at the Port of Los Angeles.

Additionally, highways would have to be designated clear of environmentally sensitive areas. “Coastal shipping is not a panacea,” she said. “Depending on the highway route, there could be serious ramifications for marine life if dredging is required, if migratory patterns are disrupted, or if additional infrastructure is needed that interferes with certain marine ecosystems.”

RoRo Your Boat

A RoRo in Zeebrugge

A centerpiece of the European short sea shipping industry is a small freighter known as a RoRo, short for “roll on, roll off.” While larger ships require cranes to lift containers onboard, RoRos pull straight up to a dock where trucks can drive onboard and unload freight containers. Because they’re smaller, they don’t require channels as deep as larger ships, and can minimize the need for dredging.

“The ship literally pulls up, lays down a ramp and the trucks drive on and off it,” said Matsuda. “From an operating standpoint, you don’t need cranes, you don’t need to pay the skilled workers — but you need people to drive the trucks on and off the ship.”

Rather than investing in the installation of cranes and other equipment at small ports, Matsuda says that RoRos could follow what he calls the “Southwest Airlines model,” after the carrier that started off flying into secondary airports. Smaller RoRos could bypass major ports and travel through shallower waterways to inland cities.

Matsuda just saw such a system in action at the Port of Rotterdam in the Netherlands. “It is just incredible to see these relatively small, long, thin, self-propelled ships that can carry 20 or 30 containers that kind of zip around in this massive port after the giant container ship has been offloaded,” he said. “They go up the rivers into Europe or around the coast to other ports.”

Would such a system be possible in the US? There may not be a choice. With roadways in major cities already crammed with freight traffic and the demand for freight ever increasing, putting freight on the water may be the most sensible solution for companies that need to move goods from here to there. Matsuda says a political climate that’s focused on creating jobs and helping the environment also will support the cause.

“Where there are corridors, the federal government will help focus attention and investments to get those services up and running,” he said. “This is something that we think is going to go a long way.”

Photos:

Flickr/wirralwater. A RoRo ship in St. Petersburg

Flickr/electropod. Hazardous cargo in Zeebrugge, Belgium

Flickr/electropod. A RoRo in Zeebrugge, Belgium

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

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