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...selection from the Harvard University Dining Services (HUDS) menu—oatmeal and orange juice for breakfast; pizza, milk and quinoa for lunch, and manicotti and baked chicken breast with a Boston cream pie for dinner—received a mixture of smiling and frowning “emoticons” from the site. The index draws a pyramid based on the proportions from the food groups that were eaten that day. In this case, it more closely resembled a barbell than a pyramid...

Author: By Jonathan P. Abel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Nutrition Expert Analyzes Harvard Dining Hall Fare | 9/23/2003 | See Source »

...answer to the question "Got milk?" is getting complicated. Milk consumption is going up among people of all ages, and producers are capitalizing on this by launching new formulations and flavors that go way beyond traditional chocolate and strawberry. Promised Land Dairy offers a grownup caramel Dulce de Leche, along with rich vanilla, amaretto, strawberry, banana, peach and seasonal flavors like blueberry. Kreider Farms in Pennsylvania makes a fruity Strawberry Banana and Orange Cream milk (which tastes just like a melted Creamsicle, in a good way). One of Ronnybrook Farm Dairy's best-selling products is its coffee-flavored milk...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: This Moo's For You | 9/22/2003 | See Source »

...planes were theirs, not Germany's. Today new RFID applications are fueling a quiet business revolution that promises to speed up inventory and payment systems--and change our lives. Soon the family refrigerator may read the RFID tags of its contents, then alert you to fetch another carton of milk, toss an out-of-date product or cut back on cholesterol consumption. In Italy an appliance maker has designed a washer that can read RFID-tagged garments and process them accordingly. "It's going to be huge for industry," predicts futurist Paul Saffo. "RFID will start to arrive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The See-It-All Chip | 9/22/2003 | See Source »

...unit told software developer Savi Technology of California that taking inventory, normally a two-or three-day job, was completed in just 22 minutes--highly convenient when you're under fire. (The system also proved handy one night for hungry soldiers, who used the RFID reader to hunt down milk for their cereal.) In all, RFID technology helps the military track 300,000 containers in 40 countries every...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The See-It-All Chip | 9/22/2003 | See Source »

...serves as a front door, they give Rangina their work, for which she pays from the ngo's funds. (They are sold through a loose network of friends and family back in the U.S.) "It has changed our lives," marvels Ghotair. "We can get clothes for our children and milk powder for the babies." She points to one of her sisters. "She has six daughters, and her husband used to say, 'I have no help because we have no sons.' Now that the girls are earning, he says, 'I don't need any sons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Long-Distance Friendship | 9/22/2003 | See Source »

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