boats – Techdirt (original) (raw)

DailyDirt: Traveling Fast Via Waterways

from the urls-we-dig-up dept

An enormous amount of cargo travels by boat, and historically, sea transport has been the largest carrier of freight. However, traveling over water isn’t a very speedy mode of transportation (typically <20 mph), but there are some possible ways to go faster (though they don’t come cheap). Here are just a few examples of sea-going ships that would definitely beat a slow boat to China.

If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post via StumbleUpon.

Filed Under: boats, cargo, ekranoplan, ground effect, hydrofoil, ships, submarines, supercavitation, transportation, wing in ground
Companies: boeing

DailyDirt: My Robot Lies Over The Ocean…

from the urls-we-dig-up dept

Autonomous robots are popping up everywhere. Some can fly, and some can drive. Others can swim across the ocean. Considering that there are still a lot of places in the oceans not yet explored, fish-like robots could gather amazing amounts of data and help us keep an eye on 70% of the Earth’s (water-covered) surface. Here are just a few projects that are working on ocean-faring bots.

If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post.

Filed Under: autonomous, boats, fish, fishpi, locomotion, mimicry, raspberry pi, robots, sea gliders

UK Couple Pressure McDonalds To Remove Their Boat From TV Ad

from the you-sure-showed-them dept

In the continuing saga of people thinking they have a right to what other people see, a British couple has pressured McDonalds into removing their boat from its TV commercials. Adweek dug up the ad itself, which you can see below, along with a still image of the boat from the ad:

As you can see, the boat is way off in the background. And the boat is seen for a grand total of 3 seconds. Yet, the couple got very upset:

“We didn’t see the advert ourselves at first, but lots of people kept saying to us: ‘Oh, we saw the Badger on the McDonald’s advert.’ It was quite irritating, especially as we are not fond of fast food and the Badger has a beautiful galley where we cook everything from scratch. We even make our own bread,” said Gloria Parsons, 63, who owns the boat with her husband Alan, 72.

“Then one night we were watching something and the advert was on every break, right across about two hours of the programme. Lots of people were very excited to see the Badger on screen, but we weren’t. She is very precious and very special to us, and we felt upset that this large corporation would just ride roughshod over our feelings. It wouldn’t be acceptable to go into someone’s garden and just take a shot of their house, so why use the Badger?

A radio station heard about them being upset and called McDonald’s, who agreed to re-edit the commercial without the boat and issued an apology. Of course, in the end, the joke may be on the couple, as their efforts have brought a ton of attention to the original ad and just by judging from the comments on YouTube, people really like the commercial.

Filed Under: advertisement, boats, property rights
Companies: mcdonald's