Technologies Videos
A Love Lost
from green.tv - technologies on November 19, 2009
Duration: 38
Duration: 38
A lost love. A failed relationship. A video diary of a once beautiful thing.
also in: Air Climate change Highlights Incop15 Land Movies Television People Science Species Story Technologies Water Wwf
Porn on your PC?
from recent posts tagged porn - blip.tv (beta) on November 19, 2009
Duration: 90
Duration: 90
This is actually a video that we made a year ago but never published: http://thompson.blogs.avg.com It shows a rogue antispy operation but with a different pitch. Instead of simply pretending to scan your computer, and then pretending to find spyware, they display porno images that they say they are finding on your computer. In reality, they are downloading them themselves, and then pretending to find them.
also in: Porno Images Hacked Website Adult Content Avg Technologies Highly Illegal Kiddy Porn Linkscanner Rogue Antispy Operation Rogue-spyware Videoblogging
LifeTech - The Power of One
from Metacafe Videos on November 18, 2009
Duration: 136
Duration: 136
LifeTech - The Power of One 1 views | 0 comments Click here to watch the video (02:16) Submitted By: Beakerlifesciences Tags: Life Technologies Categories: People & Stories
also in: Life Technologies People Stories
Audio for "Superfund Redevelopment Initiative (SRI) 10th Anniversary: Celebrating Success," Oct 22, 2009 (Part 1 of 2)
from Hazardous Waste Clean-Up Information (CLU-IN): Internet Seminar Archives on October 22, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
EPA's Superfund Redevelopment Initiative (SRI) celebrates its 10-year Anniversary in 2009! To mark this event, EPA is hosting a diverse series of CLU-IN internet seminars featuring Superfund site reuse success stories. This and successive webinars will present reuse case studies on multi use, renewable energy, ecological reuse, and commercial reuse. To view the slides associated with this audio, please visit http://www.clu-in.org/conf/tio/sri_102209/
also in: Remediation Hazardous Waste Clean-up Monitoring CLU-IN Phytoremediation Bioremediation Sve In situ Thermal desorption Chemical oxidation Hydrofracturing Air sparging SCMT FRTR RTDF Technology Technologies Site characterization Public-private partnerships Consortia Techdirect Innovative Treatment Soil flushing Consulting Brownfields Reach it EPA Technology innovation program TIP Tech trends Ground water currents CBD Commerce business daily Regulatory Vendor Developer TSP Technical support project OSC Chemical treatment Cyanide oxidation Dechlorination Flushing Ex situ Hot air injection Incineration Physical separation Soil vapor extraction Soil washing Solidification Stabilization Solvent extraction Surfactant flushing Thermally enhanced recovery Vitrification Dual-phase extraction Oxidation Permeable reactive barrier Well aeration Halogenated VOC Non-halogenated VOC BTEX VOC VOCs SVOCs PCB PAH Inorganics Metals DNAPL Superfund Soil Groundwater Natural attenuation Science Medicine Natural Sciences
Audio for "Performance-based Environmental Management," Oct 15, 2009 (Part 2 of 2)
from Hazardous Waste Clean-Up Information (CLU-IN): Internet Seminar Archives on October 15, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
Performance-based environmental management (PBEM) is a strategic, goal-oriented methodology that is implemented through effective planning and decision logic to reach a desired end state of site cleanup. The goal of PBEM is to be protective of human health and the environment while efficiently implementing appropriate streamlined cleanup processes. The major components of PBEM include: systematic planning; effective communications; agreement of a land use risk strategy; current conceptual site model; decision logic analysis; remediation process optimization (RPO); ARAR analysis; exit strategy development; and performance-based contracting including environmental insurance. This ITRC training presents an overview of what PBEM is, explains how and when to implement it, and describes the issues that regulators are concerned about throughout PBEM's implementation. Case studies will be presented to illustrate successful PBEM projects. The course is valuable not only because PBEM is being proposed and implemented at many federal and private sites throughout the country, but also because PBEM provides an opportunity to enhance all site remediation. This training is geared to those in the environmental remediation field including Federal, state and local government officials; owners or operators of sites, and consultants. The course will be most beneficial if the participant has taken one of ITRC's remediation process optimization courses. Online archives are available for What is Remediation Process Optimization and How Can It Help Me Identify Opportunities for Enhanced and More Efficient Site Remediation? and for Remediation Process Optimization - Advanced Training. These courses are recommended as pre-requisites, but are not required. The training materials are based on the ITRC RPO Team's Technical Regulatory Guidance Document: Improving Environmental Site Remediation Through Performance-Based Environmental Management (RPO-7, November 2007). To view the slides associated with this audio, please visit http://www.clu-in.org/conf/itrc/pbem_101509/
also in: Remediation Hazardous Waste Clean-up Monitoring CLU-IN Phytoremediation Bioremediation Sve In situ Thermal desorption Chemical oxidation Hydrofracturing Air sparging SCMT FRTR RTDF Technology Technologies Site characterization Public-private partnerships Consortia Techdirect Innovative Treatment Soil flushing Consulting Brownfields Reach it EPA Technology innovation program TIP Tech trends Ground water currents CBD Commerce business daily Regulatory Vendor Developer TSP Technical support project OSC Chemical treatment Cyanide oxidation Dechlorination Flushing Ex situ Hot air injection Incineration Physical separation Soil vapor extraction Soil washing Solidification Stabilization Solvent extraction Surfactant flushing Thermally enhanced recovery Vitrification Dual-phase extraction Oxidation Permeable reactive barrier Well aeration Halogenated VOC Non-halogenated VOC BTEX VOC VOCs SVOCs PCB PAH Inorganics Metals DNAPL Superfund Soil Groundwater Natural attenuation Science Medicine Natural Sciences
Audio for "Performance-based Environmental Management," Oct 15, 2009 (Part 1 of 2)
from Hazardous Waste Clean-Up Information (CLU-IN): Internet Seminar Archives on October 15, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
Performance-based environmental management (PBEM) is a strategic, goal-oriented methodology that is implemented through effective planning and decision logic to reach a desired end state of site cleanup. The goal of PBEM is to be protective of human health and the environment while efficiently implementing appropriate streamlined cleanup processes. The major components of PBEM include: systematic planning; effective communications; agreement of a land use risk strategy; current conceptual site model; decision logic analysis; remediation process optimization (RPO); ARAR analysis; exit strategy development; and performance-based contracting including environmental insurance. This ITRC training presents an overview of what PBEM is, explains how and when to implement it, and describes the issues that regulators are concerned about throughout PBEM's implementation. Case studies will be presented to illustrate successful PBEM projects. The course is valuable not only because PBEM is being proposed and implemented at many federal and private sites throughout the country, but also because PBEM provides an opportunity to enhance all site remediation. This training is geared to those in the environmental remediation field including Federal, state and local government officials; owners or operators of sites, and consultants. The course will be most beneficial if the participant has taken one of ITRC's remediation process optimization courses. Online archives are available for What is Remediation Process Optimization and How Can It Help Me Identify Opportunities for Enhanced and More Efficient Site Remediation? and for Remediation Process Optimization - Advanced Training. These courses are recommended as pre-requisites, but are not required. The training materials are based on the ITRC RPO Team's Technical Regulatory Guidance Document: Improving Environmental Site Remediation Through Performance-Based Environmental Management (RPO-7, November 2007). To view the slides associated with this audio, please visit http://www.clu-in.org/conf/itrc/pbem_101509/
also in: Remediation Hazardous Waste Clean-up Monitoring CLU-IN Phytoremediation Bioremediation Sve In situ Thermal desorption Chemical oxidation Hydrofracturing Air sparging SCMT FRTR RTDF Technology Technologies Site characterization Public-private partnerships Consortia Techdirect Innovative Treatment Soil flushing Consulting Brownfields Reach it EPA Technology innovation program TIP Tech trends Ground water currents CBD Commerce business daily Regulatory Vendor Developer TSP Technical support project OSC Chemical treatment Cyanide oxidation Dechlorination Flushing Ex situ Hot air injection Incineration Physical separation Soil vapor extraction Soil washing Solidification Stabilization Solvent extraction Surfactant flushing Thermally enhanced recovery Vitrification Dual-phase extraction Oxidation Permeable reactive barrier Well aeration Halogenated VOC Non-halogenated VOC BTEX VOC VOCs SVOCs PCB PAH Inorganics Metals DNAPL Superfund Soil Groundwater Natural attenuation Science Medicine Natural Sciences
Audio for "Green Remediation: Applying Strategies in the Field - Session 1 of 3," Oct 8, 2009 (Part 2 of 2)
from Hazardous Waste Clean-Up Information (CLU-IN): Internet Seminar Archives on October 08, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
In June 2009, EPA held its annual National Association of Remedial Project Managers meeting in Atlanta, GA, and for the second year in a row, one of our most attended sessions was on Green Remediation (GR). And like last year, we are offering those talks again to an online audience! EPA's definition of GR includes the practice of considering the environmental effects of a remediation strategy (i.e., the remedy selected and the implementation approach) early in the process, and incorporating options to maximize the net environmental benefit of the cleanup action. Since last year, experience has increased and policies are more developed, and this is a chance to share that with an online audience. EPA's Technical Support Project, led by the Engineering Forum, has taken this full-day session and will hold one session per month for 3 months, starting with October 8th. Each session will last no longer than 2 hours. We will start on October 8th, with the following agenda, and then the other two sessions will follow on November 12th and December 15th.Headquarters and Cross-Program PerspectiveRegional Roundtable (Region 4)Case Studies:Lake City Army Ammunition Plant: Solar-powered pumps for ground water treatmentBaird & McGuire Superfund site: Carbon and energy footprints at NPL sites To view the slides associated with this audio, please visit http://www.clu-in.org/conf/tio/greenremediation1_100809/
also in: Remediation Hazardous Waste Clean-up Monitoring CLU-IN Phytoremediation Bioremediation Sve In situ Thermal desorption Chemical oxidation Hydrofracturing Air sparging SCMT FRTR RTDF Technology Technologies Site characterization Public-private partnerships Consortia Techdirect Innovative Treatment Soil flushing Consulting Brownfields Reach it EPA Technology innovation program TIP Tech trends Ground water currents CBD Commerce business daily Regulatory Vendor Developer TSP Technical support project OSC Chemical treatment Cyanide oxidation Dechlorination Flushing Ex situ Hot air injection Incineration Physical separation Soil vapor extraction Soil washing Solidification Stabilization Solvent extraction Surfactant flushing Thermally enhanced recovery Vitrification Dual-phase extraction Oxidation Permeable reactive barrier Well aeration Halogenated VOC Non-halogenated VOC BTEX VOC VOCs SVOCs PCB PAH Inorganics Metals DNAPL Superfund Soil Groundwater Natural attenuation Science Medicine Natural Sciences
Audio for "Green Remediation: Applying Strategies in the Field - Session 1 of 3," Oct 8, 2009 (Part 1 of 2)
from Hazardous Waste Clean-Up Information (CLU-IN): Internet Seminar Archives on October 08, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
In June 2009, EPA held its annual National Association of Remedial Project Managers meeting in Atlanta, GA, and for the second year in a row, one of our most attended sessions was on Green Remediation (GR). And like last year, we are offering those talks again to an online audience! EPA's definition of GR includes the practice of considering the environmental effects of a remediation strategy (i.e., the remedy selected and the implementation approach) early in the process, and incorporating options to maximize the net environmental benefit of the cleanup action. Since last year, experience has increased and policies are more developed, and this is a chance to share that with an online audience. EPA's Technical Support Project, led by the Engineering Forum, has taken this full-day session and will hold one session per month for 3 months, starting with October 8th. Each session will last no longer than 2 hours. We will start on October 8th, with the following agenda, and then the other two sessions will follow on November 12th and December 15th.Headquarters and Cross-Program PerspectiveRegional Roundtable (Region 4)Case Studies:Lake City Army Ammunition Plant: Solar-powered pumps for ground water treatmentBaird & McGuire Superfund site: Carbon and energy footprints at NPL sites To view the slides associated with this audio, please visit http://www.clu-in.org/conf/tio/greenremediation1_100809/
also in: Remediation Hazardous Waste Clean-up Monitoring CLU-IN Phytoremediation Bioremediation Sve In situ Thermal desorption Chemical oxidation Hydrofracturing Air sparging SCMT FRTR RTDF Technology Technologies Site characterization Public-private partnerships Consortia Techdirect Innovative Treatment Soil flushing Consulting Brownfields Reach it EPA Technology innovation program TIP Tech trends Ground water currents CBD Commerce business daily Regulatory Vendor Developer TSP Technical support project OSC Chemical treatment Cyanide oxidation Dechlorination Flushing Ex situ Hot air injection Incineration Physical separation Soil vapor extraction Soil washing Solidification Stabilization Solvent extraction Surfactant flushing Thermally enhanced recovery Vitrification Dual-phase extraction Oxidation Permeable reactive barrier Well aeration Halogenated VOC Non-halogenated VOC BTEX VOC VOCs SVOCs PCB PAH Inorganics Metals DNAPL Superfund Soil Groundwater Natural attenuation Science Medicine Natural Sciences
Audio for "LNAPL Characterization and Recoverability - Improved Analysis," Jun 23, 2009 (Part 2 of 2)
from Hazardous Waste Clean-Up Information (CLU-IN): Internet Seminar Archives on June 23, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
Light non-aqueous phase liquids (LNAPLs) are organic liquids such as gasoline, diesel, and other petroleum hydrocarbon products that are immiscible with water and less dense than water. LNAPLs are important because they are present in the subsurface at thousands of remediation sites across the country, and are frequently the focus of assessment and remediation efforts. A sound LNAPL understanding is necessary to effectively characterize and assess LNAPL conditions and potential risks, as well as to evaluate potential remedial technologies or alternatives. Unfortunately, many environmental professionals have a faulty understanding of LNAPL conditions based on outdated paradigms. The ITRC LNAPLs Team is providing Internet-based training to improve the general understanding of LNAPLs. Better understanding leads to better decision making. Additionally, this training provides a necessary technical foundation to foster effective use of the forthcoming ITRC LNAPLs Team Technical Regulatory Guidance Document: Evaluating LNAPL Remedial Technologies for Achieving Project Goals (to be published in 2009). This training course is relevant for new and veteran regulators, environmental consultants, and technically-inclined site owners and public stakeholders. The training course is divided into two parts: Part 1: An Improved Understanding of LNAPL Behavior in the Subsurface - State of Science vs. State of Practice Part 2: LNAPL Characterization and Recoverability - Improved Analysis In Part 2 of the training course, instructors address LNAPL characterization and site conceptual model development as well as LNAPL recovery evaluation and remedial considerations. Specifically, Part 2 discusses key LNAPL and site data, when and why those data may be important, and how to get those data. Part 2 also discusses how to evaluate LNAPL recoverability. To view the slides associated with this audio, please visit http://www.clu-in.org/conf/itrc/LNAPLcr_062309/
also in: Remediation Hazardous Waste Clean-up Monitoring CLU-IN Phytoremediation Bioremediation Sve In situ Thermal desorption Chemical oxidation Hydrofracturing Air sparging SCMT FRTR RTDF Technology Technologies Site characterization Public-private partnerships Consortia Techdirect Innovative Treatment Soil flushing Consulting Brownfields Reach it EPA Technology innovation program TIP Tech trends Ground water currents CBD Commerce business daily Regulatory Vendor Developer TSP Technical support project OSC Chemical treatment Cyanide oxidation Dechlorination Flushing Ex situ Hot air injection Incineration Physical separation Soil vapor extraction Soil washing Solidification Stabilization Solvent extraction Surfactant flushing Thermally enhanced recovery Vitrification Dual-phase extraction Oxidation Permeable reactive barrier Well aeration Halogenated VOC Non-halogenated VOC BTEX VOC VOCs SVOCs PCB PAH Inorganics Metals DNAPL Superfund Soil Groundwater Natural attenuation Science Medicine Natural Sciences
Audio for "LNAPL Characterization and Recoverability - Improved Analysis," Jun 23, 2009 (Part 1 of 2)
from Hazardous Waste Clean-Up Information (CLU-IN): Internet Seminar Archives on June 23, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
Light non-aqueous phase liquids (LNAPLs) are organic liquids such as gasoline, diesel, and other petroleum hydrocarbon products that are immiscible with water and less dense than water. LNAPLs are important because they are present in the subsurface at thousands of remediation sites across the country, and are frequently the focus of assessment and remediation efforts. A sound LNAPL understanding is necessary to effectively characterize and assess LNAPL conditions and potential risks, as well as to evaluate potential remedial technologies or alternatives. Unfortunately, many environmental professionals have a faulty understanding of LNAPL conditions based on outdated paradigms. The ITRC LNAPLs Team is providing Internet-based training to improve the general understanding of LNAPLs. Better understanding leads to better decision making. Additionally, this training provides a necessary technical foundation to foster effective use of the forthcoming ITRC LNAPLs Team Technical Regulatory Guidance Document: Evaluating LNAPL Remedial Technologies for Achieving Project Goals (to be published in 2009). This training course is relevant for new and veteran regulators, environmental consultants, and technically-inclined site owners and public stakeholders. The training course is divided into two parts: Part 1: An Improved Understanding of LNAPL Behavior in the Subsurface - State of Science vs. State of Practice Part 2: LNAPL Characterization and Recoverability - Improved Analysis In Part 2 of the training course, instructors address LNAPL characterization and site conceptual model development as well as LNAPL recovery evaluation and remedial considerations. Specifically, Part 2 discusses key LNAPL and site data, when and why those data may be important, and how to get those data. Part 2 also discusses how to evaluate LNAPL recoverability. To view the slides associated with this audio, please visit http://www.clu-in.org/conf/itrc/LNAPLcr_062309/
also in: Remediation Hazardous Waste Clean-up Monitoring CLU-IN Phytoremediation Bioremediation Sve In situ Thermal desorption Chemical oxidation Hydrofracturing Air sparging SCMT FRTR RTDF Technology Technologies Site characterization Public-private partnerships Consortia Techdirect Innovative Treatment Soil flushing Consulting Brownfields Reach it EPA Technology innovation program TIP Tech trends Ground water currents CBD Commerce business daily Regulatory Vendor Developer TSP Technical support project OSC Chemical treatment Cyanide oxidation Dechlorination Flushing Ex situ Hot air injection Incineration Physical separation Soil vapor extraction Soil washing Solidification Stabilization Solvent extraction Surfactant flushing Thermally enhanced recovery Vitrification Dual-phase extraction Oxidation Permeable reactive barrier Well aeration Halogenated VOC Non-halogenated VOC BTEX VOC VOCs SVOCs PCB PAH Inorganics Metals DNAPL Superfund Soil Groundwater Natural attenuation Science Medicine Natural Sciences



