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Wednesday, November 2, 2011


Visual Graphics Design Assessment #1

Monday, September 26, 2011


1.    Identify  the  example products given which became more popular to consumer using brand name or symbol.
2.    Determine also the packaging materials and types of packaging.
3.    Get at least eight (8) correct answer from the provided questions.
4.    You have 30 minutes to complete this test.


Product Name
Name or Symbol
Packaging Materials
Packaging Type
Popularity
(Local or International)
Nike Shoes
Carton
Carton packaging
International
Jollibee Chicken Joy






Coca-cola Softdrinks






Dickies Jeans






Dunkin Donuts








Activity for Visual Graphics Design Class

Tuesday, September 20, 2011


Accomplish the instruction below. After you have complete this activity, inform your teacher so that you can proceed with your assessment.
1.    Research on the following:
      a.    Different types of packaging
      b.    Different types of packaging materials.

2. Using your research document as reference, fill in the answer on the table below. You may refer to item no. 1 as example. You need to get at least eight (8) correct answer


No.
Sample of Products
Packaging materials Used
Types of Packaging
1
Electronic gadgets
Carton
Carton Packaging
2



3



4



5



Reduction of household waste urged

Sunday, May 29, 2011

A waste and pollution watchdog urged Metro Manila households to reduce their garbage size that oftentimes clog waterways to help ease flood risk, especially during the rainy season.

“By cutting our waste size and safely managing our discards, we avoid turning our streets and rivers into dumping sites and flood ponds after heavy rains,” EcoWaste Coalition president Roy Alvarez said.

EcoWaste suggested to Metro Manila households to reduce their waste size, shun littering and dumping, and to separate their discards at source for reusing, recycling, and composting.

According to Environmental Management Bureau (EMB) Director Juan Miguel Cuna, 30,000 tons or 5,000 truckloads of garbage are generated in the country every day. Of this, only half are collected, he noted.

In Metro Manila alone, the daily garbage generation is at 8,000 tons per day or 1,400 truckloads.
Cuna said, 70 percent of Metro Manila’s waste are collected, but the remaining 30 percent are uncollected ending up in canals, vacant lots, street corners, market places, creeks and rivers, or into the sea.

EcoWaste reminded the public to recall the “epic floods” of tropical cyclone “Ondoy” to fulfill our environmental responsibility to minimize the effects of nature’s wrath.

“Environmental discipline is necessary to keep our waterways garbage-free,” Alvarez said.

Citing a data from the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA), EcoWaste said among the most flood risk areas in Metro Manila are Sampaloc, and Rizal Avenue corner R. Papa in Manila; Makati Diversion Channel along South Superhighway, and Buendia Avenue in Makati City.

Also considered as flood-prone areas are Maysilo Circle, Boni Avenue, Panaderos Street, Kalentong Street, Acacia Lane and Shaw Boulevard, all in Mandaluyong City; Barangay Salapan and Bagong Bato in San Juan City; and Barangays Imelda, Damayang Lagi, Tatalon and Talayan in Quezon City.

Aside from enforcing the salient provisions of the Republic Act (RA) 9003 or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act, the group also urged local government units to rehabilitate drainage facilities in their respective areas that had been heavily silted or have collapsed in the course of time.

“A systematic rehabilitation of our aging drainage system will go a long way in reducing destruction to life and property caused by flood woes,” EcoWaste said.

Climate change bringing infection, hunger, illness

Friday, May 13, 2011

Climate change threatens far more than our environment. It's already led to the spread of infectious diseases and respiratory ailments across the globe and contributed to thousands of deaths through heat waves and other extreme weather events. It's even fueled recent revolts in the Middle East and North Africa.

That's according to Dan Ferber and Dr. Paul Epstein, the authors of a new book, Changing Planet, Changing Health: How the Climate Crisis Threatens Our Health and What We Can Do about It (University of California Press, April 2011).
The health of all humans is directly tied to how we, as communities, nations, and a global population, respond to the growing climate threat, says Ferber, a science journalist and Epstein, Associate Director of the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School.

Ferber and Epstein spoke with Reuters Health Thursday about how malaria, Lyme disease, and cholera, as well as food shortages and malnutrition, are all becoming increased risks with steadily rising temperatures. (See the live blog from the discussion here: http://bit.ly/lJnshE)

While getting out of the corner humanity has backed itself into will take a worldwide effort, they say that effort may be led by a surprising player: industry.

"Changing finance is a critical part of ... rewriting the rules" on climate management, Epstein said.
For the financial industry, there's a lot at stake, Epstein continued.

"With the uptake in extreme events -- particularly as it's affecting food security globally and food prices -- we're going to see a renewed interest on the part of the investors and insurers in the stability of society," he said. Already, "the financial industry has at times in the last several decades been acutely aware of the dangers and risks of climate change."

Many threats, one cause
Climate change is hitting human health -- and political and social stability -- from all sides, Epstein and Ferber said. On a daily basis many of those impacts are hidden from view -- until you take a step back.

Even slight increases in temperature -- a couple of degrees -- can broaden the habitat of pests that cause infectious diseases, from malaria in Kenya to Lyme disease in Maine, they said.

And the claim that regions saturated with infectious disease will just shift, rather than expand, isn't helpful because it misses other key points, Epstein said.

For example, in parts of Honduras it's gotten too hot for malaria-carrying mosquitoes to thrive. "But it's been so dry and hot that the people have moved as well, and they've moved into the northern area, into the forest, where there's plenty of malaria," he explained.

Pests also target wildlife, wiping out forests and increasing the risk of fires, such as in the Rockies and Cascades, where it used to be too cool for those pests to venture to high altitudes.

Another result of a changing climate: heat and carbon dioxide magnify the effects of asthma and allergies, particularly in cities where more and more children are developing respiratory problems.

And a combination of heat waves -- such as the one that killed thousands of Russians last summer -- and droughts not only causes immediate local health crises but also threatens global public health by destroying crops and driving up food prices, the authors said.

Food availability may be the most pressing issue of all.

"Our food, our air, our water, these are the issues that really underlie our public health," Epstein said. "These are the life support systems. These are the ones that ultimately are most critical and most sensitive to climate instability."

An unstable climate, Epstein explained, is directly linked to social and political unrest. "I think we're looking at increasing damages and social disruption from the climate instability and extremes," he said. "The earth itself can go to a new equilibrium, but we need to back off. We're pushing it hard."

A chance for industry
But it's not all bad news, and Ferber pointed out there is reason to be hopeful that we might be at a turning point in terms of accepting and addressing climate change -- a shift that could be driven by economics.
Some companies, he explained, have already figured out ways to profit and grow by switching to climate-friendly policies.

For example, Ferber said, the re-insurance company Swiss Re realized that it could insure wind farms at a lower premium than oil rigs, because entire wind farms aren't likely to be felled in a disaster.

"That benefited the company, and it also benefited the wind farm developers," Ferber said. "This kind of creative thinking in the financial world can lead to win-win solutions."

He gave Stonyfield Farm as an example of another company that has figured out how to turn environmental protection into a business strategy, such as by using microbes to ferment some of its dairy waste -- erasing the costs of shipping it away to be treated elsewhere. Stonyfield's yogurt revenue now tops Kraft's, the authors said.

A new direction

As industry players start to realize that coal-fired power plants, for example, might not be a good investment, Ferber said, communities can also take steps to make their streets, businesses, and homes more climate-healthy. Planting trees, installing bike lanes and green roofs, and funding projects to help residents green their homes are all feasible steps that together could make a concrete difference, he suggested.

And the evidence shows that we're running out of time to start taking these steps.

Epstein said that humans need to dramatically decrease fossil fuel and wood burning "in order to give the climate a chance to re-stabilize at a level that would be viable" for environmental and human health.

"People across this country are realizing that we have a real problem on our hands," Ferber said. "I am actually optimistic that more and more people are starting to deal with that reality and say, 'what solutions can we come up with to deal with this problem?'"

Source: Inquirer.net