As I work on polishing up the draft of the “flower chapter” of my manuscript, the main focus of which is the “greenification” of Okinawa Island after WWII, I can’t help but notice current greenification projects. Some of the most interesting are in Tokyo, particularly in and around the Ginza district. This is where the three-year-old Ginza Honey Bee Project (Japanese home page here) is located atop the Paper & Pulp Building, home of 300,000 bees in dozens of hives. Bees are struggling in the countryside, possibly from pesticides, so it’s ironic that an urban environment like Tokyo is actually healthier for them. There are key flora in Hibiya Park and around the Imperial Palace which they pollinate and produce fair amounts of honey that is now being marketed as a specialty item at Matsuya (where it’s used in a special cake) and in a cocktail in a high-end bar. Such a cool idea to use rooftop space to keep bees that pollinate green areas around the city. Read more about the Ginza Honey Bee Project and other green projects — like the Ginza Farm and Hakutsuru Sake’s Rooftop Rice Garden — in Tokyo at Tokyo Green Space. I really wish I could get a copy of the GHBP’s poster:
Archive for January 12th, 2010
Ginza Greenery
Tuesday, January 12th, 2010Chrome is getting shinier
Tuesday, January 12th, 2010After a week with the latest Chrome for Mac Beta as my primary browser I might have to revise the earlier post about Google vs. Apple. Maybe this is a full frontal assault that Google is launching upon Apple (and Microsoft — yikes! a two-front war!). Before I upgraded (or sidegraded) to the latest developer’s channel build a couple days ago I’d say that Chrome Beta for Mac was very good, perhaps quicker than Safari, but not necessarily a browser that would bury Safari. After discovering quite by accident last night that the latest dev channel build for Mac supports extensions I am much more enthusiastic about Chrome. Even in this beta/developer’s phase Chrome with extensions rocks despite some glitches. I had FUN sorting through and trying out dozens of extensions and then settling on a dozen or so very useful ones: like gmail checker plus, evernote clicker, google voice checker, google calendar popup, mini maps, wikipedia, feedly (news reader organizer), facebook popup, LastPass (password vault/auto-login), xmarks for Chrome (sync bookmarks across machines and browsers), AdBlock, facebook adblock, fittr flickr, flash block, etc.. Here’s a screenshot of my new collection of extension buttons on Chrome:
It’s been less than 24 hours with Chrome + extensions and I’m already sold. There are still some small rough edges, but I’ve had no major issues with any of the sites I’ve browsed, including banking, credit card sites. One problem, however, is that I’m getting inexplicable sluggishness that seems to occur with only certain kinds of pages, such as the WordPress posting interface. Not sure whether it’s the page and/or conflict with extensions. Still, I really like Chrome and can’t wait until the final Mac version.
I can see where the Google Chrome OS project might be headed from this browser. Google’s concept is that the we live so much on the web so why not make it our OS? With a suite of web apps and cool cloud-widgets, who needs a full-fledged OS on one’s machine?
Get the developer’s channel build for your machine here.



