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Trasantiago in Chile .

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With global warming and climate change making headlines on a practically daily basis, we’re all becoming more aware of the need to conserve energy. In general the more energy we use, the more of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide we emit into the atmosphere. The more CO2 we emit, according to scientists, the more we contribute to the global warming phenomenon.
Faced with a global problem it’s easy to be dismissive of the seemingly trivial changes we can all make as individuals. But it’s important to realise that even the smallest change can have a significant impact if enough people make it.

Ways you can save energy on the way to work

  • Walk or cycle: the obvious one – but not practical for everyone. If it works for you, try cycling or walking at least part of the way into work. You’ll save money, reduce your carbon emissions and stay fit… so its a win, win, win scenario. Even taking the stairs instead of the lift will save some energy.
  • Use public transport: one person travelling in a car is one of the least efficient ways you can travel to work. If you live in the city, and public transport is a viable option, try to use it whenever you can.
  • Drive efficiently: When you do have to drive, accelerate and break gently. Anticipate the road ahead and avoid sudden changes of speed which increase fuel consumption, wasting energy and money.

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Home Work

Image by fras1977 via Flickr

Imagine waking up in the morning and not facing the horror of the daily commute. Imagine sauntering into work after a leisurely breakfast at home with your family. Imagine at the end of the working day simply shutting down your PC and being home in no time at all.

No road rage, no traffic gridlock, no hassle….

It sounds like a dream, doesn’t it? But according to estimates it’s already a reality for more than 60,000 Irish people around the country – at least for part of their working week. Every year more Irish employers are realising the productivity, cost and lifestyle benefits associated with letting their employees work from home.

Information and communications technology today makes the option of e-working from home more affordable and accessible than ever. With a computer and a broadband Internet connection you can often work from home just as effectively as you could at the office – sometimes even more so, because you avoid the myriad distractions typical of an office environment. A lot of work can even be done off-line, then e-mailed to clients or colleagues over a standard dial-up connection, and you’d be amazed at how many jobs are suitable for home working, at least for part of the time.

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Take a look at the non-fiction shelves of your local bookshop and you’ll find them groaning under the weight of countless self-help manuals. There are books that claim to help you find your inner anything. All you have to do is part with your hard-earned cash, make the author a smidgen richer, and invest a bit of your valuable time to be smarter, wiser, richer, happier, more attractive, better at your job… or whatever else you want.
Self help books are sweeping the world. Millions are printed every year, claiming to do everything from helping you into that “size zero” to catapulting your career into the stratosphere. The hub of this phenomenon is, of course, the United States, where, according to research company Marketdata the self help industry is set to be worth a staggering US$11 billion by 2008.

The idea of self-help books is nothing new. They’ve been around since the mid to late 1800s, when famous titles included William Maher’s “On the Road to Riches” (1874) and Edwin T Freedley’s “The Secret of Success in Life” (1876). But today they’ve gone stratospheric, and it seems we’re not just buying them, we’re also buying into them.

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