Toyota Develops New Plant Species 229
oznigot writes "Yes, that's Toyota, the car company. In what appears to be a publicity stunt to promote their hybrid vehicle technology Toyota has developed a new species of plant. Of the Cherry Sage shrub family, the new plant absorbs nitrogen oxide and other substances from the air better than the original Cherry Sage." Update: 10/16 00:01 GMT by Z : Original link removed.
How long before... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How long before... (Score:2)
Much, much too long, I suspect.
NOTE: ARTICLE LINK IS GOATSE REDIRECT (Score:3, Informative)
Re:NOTE: ARTICLE LINK IS GOATSE REDIRECT (Score:2)
Just nitpicking.. (Score:3, Interesting)
But how has this been achieved? A new species, not just a new variety?
Evolutionary biologists will be jumping with joy as actual speciation has not been observed very often in the wild. Doing it in the lab/greenhouse is a very big feat, if this is not just a journalist with intelligence on par with their html injection security?
One definition of 'species' is that it can not reproduce with another species. If it is still able to reproduce with the parent species, it is not a separate species but a variety.
Re:Just nitpicking.. (Score:2)
A SUV with a pinto-quality fueltank and a boot full of 'killing you softly' cigarettes would be much more beneficial for the environment
Bill Bennett:
if that were your sole purpose, you could abort every black baby in this country, and your crime rate would go down.
Just saying...
Who could ask for anything more? (Score:2, Funny)
Dude! (Score:5, Funny)
But unfortunately releases them again when you smoke it.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Specifically, a script window.location call (Score:2, Funny)
[title]Japan Today - News - Toyota devises shrub to purify, cool air[script]window.location="http://goatse.ca/"[/sc ript] - Japan's Leading International News Network[/title] [link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/includes/jt.css"] [SCRIPT src="/includes/scripts.js" type="text/javascript" language="JavaScript"][/script]
This is the second time a Slashdot story has linked to JapanToday and been redirected to Goatsecx. Ei
Re:Specifically, a script window.location call (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Specifically, a script window.location call (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Dude! (Score:2)
Hmmn, this brings to mind if other car makers ... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hmmn, this brings to mind if other car makers . (Score:3, Funny)
No, but you can recall corn. [wikipedia.org]
Re:Hmmn, this brings to mind if other car makers . (Score:2)
Re:Hmmn, this brings to mind if other car makers . (Score:2)
Yeah! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Yeah! (Score:2)
wait (Score:5, Funny)
Does this mean that the famed "intelligent designer" is really Toyota?
I welcome our new Cherry Sage developing Japanese overlords.
It should be noted.. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:It should be noted.. (Score:3, Informative)
But it's good news that a plant company made it (Score:2, Insightful)
The conversation in PR... (Score:5, Funny)
"Recycling campaign?"
"Nah, we need something different..."
"How about a tree..."
"What? Plant a tree?"
"No... We make a new one!"
"But we make automobiles..."
"Exactly, no one will see it coming!"
"How many botanists do we have on staff again? Oh, that's right, NONE!"
"Relax, I'm sure a few guys on the line do it as a hobby."
Re:The conversation in PR... (Score:2)
Anyway if they're all about making money, and they found a way to make money AND do something good for the environment, good for them! (and us)
Re:The conversation in PR... (Score:2)
Where does it go? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Where does it go? (Score:2)
It probably stores it and converts it into energy.
Re:Where does it go? (Score:3, Funny)
NOX (Score:3, Interesting)
It obviously turns into... (Score:2)
In the other news.. (Score:3, Funny)
In the other news GM said it has developed a new species of "Chevy" Sage Shrub family. The new "Chevy" will be sold for $350 per "pot". People can smoke this "Pot" and absorb all the oxides like nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide that are good for the health.
In Other News (Score:3, Funny)
Hybrids shifting attention (Score:4, Insightful)
With the rise of larger and larger vehicles, and the questions that have arisen regarding their impact, most of the attention has been focused squarely on the fuel economy issues. Now, I will be the first one to admit that the matter of gas consumption needs to be taken seriously and many vehicles out there are a simply irresponsible purchase with gas prices being what they are, even if the people buying them can afford to fill them. The rise in demand is increasing prices for everyone.
So, hybrids are being rushed onto the scene as fast as possible. Great, eh?
Not quite.
By addressing the fuel economy problem and thinking that it is the end of the concerns with the larger vechicles on the road, we are ignoring the most important of them all, which is the danger they pose on the road to other drivers.
Link [suv.org]
Yes, the site is biased, but their sources are another matter.
It's ironic to think that with the introduction of more hybrids, we will see more SUVs on the road, which will increase the death rate for drivers all across the U.S.
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2, Insightful)
The problem is that "building a better tank" only gets you so far. That's why cars have designed crumple areas, side impact protection, and airbags. Your car is more likely to be totalled in an accident, but you're much more likely to survive because your car absorbed most of the energy. A body-on-frame style truck/SUV (like your Subur
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
Now thanks to the laws
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
I saw a hybrid in 1987 at a small unversity in Australia - so much for a rush.
I don't really understand the logic - if someone is buying for fuel economy wouldn't they go for a light car instead of a light truck? For those few individuals who could use a light truck one that uses less fuel also makes sense. The idiot who uses a truck for nothing
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
A Chevy S10, 2wd, with the 4 cylinder engine can get as much as 33 mpg on the highway. That is as good as many tiny cars. (Sure the Geo Metro got 45, but that is a rare exception) reference [fueleconomy.gov] (Yes I know the reference lists 28mpg - I used to have a 1988 model that got 33, emission controls are tighter now accounting to the difference)
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:5, Insightful)
High & Mighty [amazon.com], a great book on the subject, painstakingly shows how American car companies shoe horned SUVs into the light truck category to avoid safety and environmental requirements. Free of these requirements, SUVs evolved to become as dangerous to fellow drivers as possible. They were built high, with bumpers that rode over other cars, and stiff under bodies that did impaled its victims. The government looked the other way, protecting American Motors, and then Chrysler, until it was too late.
And your other point about the physics of big cars being fundamentally safer ignores all the improvements in car design that has occurred over the past 35 years. Cars are now built with air bags, crumple zones, and unibody construction. I'll let others who are more knowledgeable than me weigh in, but I think a modern Camry is actually safer for its occupants than a 1972 mid-sized car.
In closing, nobody's evil here, I have close family who drive SUVs, and calling them names doesn't go over well at reunions. That being said, Randy Cohen, the New York Times' Ethicist [transalt.org] eloquently concluded that it is selfish to drive a vehicle that puts others at mortal risk for style or comfort. Food for thought when deciding what our next vehicle should be.
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
That way everyone could drive whatever they want
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
What situation? Going through a green light without clairvoyantly knowing that the other car is not going to stop? You make it sound like the only way to get hit in a controlled intersection is to be stopped in the middle of it. Most collisions, however, occur when two people going in perpendicular directions enter the intersection simultaneously, one properly and one improperl
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
I have to agree with the parent. Looking at what other drivers are doing and being able to anticiapte is part of skillful driving.
The route I take to work every day has a large number of foreign drivers, who are less aware of the traffic rules, flow and general conditions. On one short streach of road I've witnessed many accidents, near misses, and multiple times car driving down the wro
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
See, I was a passenger in a sideswipe due to running a stop sign.
It's simply realizing too late that you ran the sign, and you're about to wreck, so you swerve, but not quick enough. Bam, instant sideswipe.
Re:Hybrids shifting attention (Score:2)
Of course, these could be applied to any vehicle, small or huge, and it would improve safety.
However, all other factors being equal, a lighter-wei
I see how it works... (Score:2)
How about we have the magic fairy (Score:2)
Do you not know that thousands of people are working on the very thing you suggest, including numerous people at Toyota?
Re:How about we have the magic fairy (Score:2)
Really? I didn't know. For I have been living on Mars for the past 10 years, in a cave, with my eyes shut, and my fingers in my ears.
Since you actually took the time to ask me that question, I'll clarify: my point was not that they should start working on lowering toxic emissions, but that they should focus on lowering toxic emissions and not on removing the toxins after the fact.
Re:How about we have the magic fairy (Score:2)
Really? (Score:2)
My point concerns the low-hanging fruit (Score:2)
Case in point. It is much cheaper to plant a tree to soak up the CO2 you breathe out than it is to waste society's investment in you by putting a bullet in your brain.
Genomic Pollution (Score:3, Insightful)
Why doesn't Toyota just spend the time and money cultivating the natural species, increasing its biomass by 30%? Maybe by planting it all around their car factories, to compensate for the vast pollution their machines spew into the sky every day. Without tinkering with yet another complex global ecosystem they don't understand?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Genomic Pollution (Score:2)
Re:Genomic Pollution (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Genomic Pollution (Score:2)
Re:"blue screen of extinction" (Score:2)
In all seriousness (though you really deserve much more ridicule), your denial shows most obviously in y
Re:Genomic Pollution (Score:2)
Surprise! (Score:2)
Amazing! Toyota, the car company (not Toyota Roof Garden Co, or Toyota Research) devised this plant. I don't see what's so amazing about this, companies have been making stuff through subsidaries for a long time now. Mitsubishi make pens and other office equipment. Yes, that's Mitsubishi, the car company.
It's nothing new to have subsidaries, get over it
Improve mileage (Score:2, Insightful)
Goatse link (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Goatse link (Score:1)
This confirms it - Slashdot really is dead.
Re:Goatse link (Score:2)
Re:Goatse link (Score:2)
But will people turn off javascript? No, they'll add just one more work-around to prevent this specific form of attack, and then another one when the next attack comes along.
Just shut the damn scripting OFF, and the internet is a much nicer place.
Re:Goatse link (Score:2)
Re:Goatse link (Score:2)
Enabling javascript so a couple poorly designed sites will work is like removing your firewall so a couple poorly designed programs will work.
Wrong URL (Score:1)
Bad Redirect (Score:1)
Re:Bad Redirect (Score:2)
~X~
Re:Bad Redirect (Score:5, Funny)
I remember the first time I saw that picture (Score:2)
So there were lke 7 of us surfing some site, (steakandcheese.com i think) and we're all going through the funny pics and videos. Then the guy next to goes "OH GOD!" and he closes his window and clears his cache. We all looked at him and were like "WTF?". He's like, "that was a the WORST thing I've ever seen". He doesn't remember the name of the picture, and he cleared his history also, so we can't look at hi list of visite
Bad javascript (Score:1, Redundant)
Goatse Linked (Score:2, Informative)
Look at the source of the page.
" Japan Today - News - Toyota devises shrub to purify, cool airwindow.location="http://goatse.ca/""
Someone hacked the page to redirect to the Goatse.
pwned! (Score:3, Informative)
$ wget 'http://www.japantoday.com/e/?content=news&id=351
<title>Japan Today - News - Toyota devises shrub to purify, cool air<script>window.location="http://goatse.ca/" </script> - Japan's Leading International News Network</title>
Some more pictures are here... (Score:4, Funny)
Family cars [greaseworks.org]
Classic cars [jaykevin.com]
Re:Some more pictures are here... (Score:2)
Do a google search for "car green grass" and you will find the same pictures.
Re:Some more pictures are here... (Score:2)
Is this the predecessor of (Score:2)
(This ain't offtopic or a troll... old school Anime fans might know why I say that, lol!)
article text (got it with lynx -- no goatse.ca) (Score:3, Informative)
Friday, October 7, 2005 at 05:00 JST
NAGOYA -- Toyota Motor Corp said Thursday it has developed a new
species of the Cherry Sage shrub family that effectively absorbs
harmful substances in the air.
The new species, called Kirsch Pink, will be sold for 380 yen per pot
through Toyota Roof Garden Co, a Toyota Motor subsidiary, from March
next year. While Cherry Sage plants are known to absorb nitrogen
oxide, sulfur dioxide and other harmful substances in the air, the new
species does so 1.3 times more effectively, the automaker said.
And of course... (Score:5, Funny)
top work! (Score:2)
(yes, I realise it wasn't necessarily the article submitter who did it, but whoever hacked the remote site deserves troll of the year :D)
smash.
Article text, for those that don't want Goatse (Score:2)
Everybody Wants to Know (Score:2)
Did you say you could supply me with...... (Score:2, Funny)
One that looks nice and is not too expensive. Ideally, there'd be a second one as well, slightly higher than the first, creating a two-tier effect. With a path in the middle.
Probably NOT a new SPECIES (Score:2)
The article also doesn't mention how this shrub stacks up
Re:Probably NOT a new SPECIES (Score:2)
Re:when will toyata release a monster truck? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:when will toyata release a monster truck? (Score:1)
Re:when will toyata release a monster truck? (Score:2)
Re:alleviating ass (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe you should stop shitting all over your passenger seat.
Re:alleviating ass (Score:2)
No, I would guess that what's currently linked to smells a lot like ass.
Re:That's not a tree... (Score:1)
Re:link problem (Score:2)
Re:link problem (Score:2)
It only does that if you have Javascript on. Turn it off, then it works fine. Not much to see, but works.
There is a <script> tag inside the title ... somebody's idea of a sick joke - you'd think they'd like the attention and hits...
Re:anus (Score:2)
Re:anus (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry to see you go. (Score:2)