Today’s Solutions: December 22, 2025

Total number of posts: 23557

Floating greenhouses: The answ

Floating greenhouses: The answer to food shortages in cities

German designer Phillipp Hutfless has come up with a 42 square–foot greenhouse barge that could serve as make–shift answer to food shortages experienced by overpopulated coastal cities around the world. In countries like Japan and Singapore where there is a shortage of arable land for food Read More...

Eat fatty fish once a week to

Eat fatty fish once a week to stay mentally sharp

Researchers at Tufts University have found that regular fish consumption contributes to mental health, and that most people don’t eat enough fish. Scientists recommend eating 8 ounces of fish once a week, and to stay away from the fish that is most often consumed—canned Read More...

Recycled cell phones to end il

Recycled cell phones to end illegal logging in rainforests

Rainforest Connection, currently looking for backing on Kick Starter, developed a way to convert used cell phones into illegal logging detectors. The way it works is a cell phone is connected to a bunch of solar panel, powered on, and then attached high up in a tree. When the phone picks up sounds Read More...

Optimism decreases risk of hea

Optimism decreases risk of heart attacks

A new study published in Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics has connected optimism and the reduced likelihood of having a heart attack. People with Type D personalities, a personality type often associated with pessimism, are more likely to develop coronary artery disease, being optimistic can reduce Read More...

More vitamin D = healthier blo

More vitamin D = healthier blood pressure

Good news for sun worshippers and anyone concerned about their blood pressure: a powerful new genetic analysis has found a causal link between higher vitamin D levels and lower blood pressure. Many previous studies have reported an “association” between vitamin D deficiency and high blood Read More...

Social media is making us smar

Social media is making us smarter

Clive Thompson likes to observe young people while they’re typing a Tweet on their phones. In the New York metro, for instance, or on a park bench. He noticed the Tweet-typing goes in a set pattern. First someone types a few words. Then they erase them. That’s followed by a few more new words, Read More...

It’s never too late to start

It’s never too late to start leading a healthy life (and prevent disease)

An unhealthy youth doesn’t have to lead to heart disease later in life. It’s never too late to start incorporating healthy life choices into your everyday habits. A new study published in Circulation found that people that waited until their late 30s or 40s to start leading a healthy life still Read More...

Skyscraper farms: the future o

Skyscraper farms: the future of urban food production

Cities like Singapore and Kyoto in Japan already grow vegetables in indoor hyper–efficient vertical gardens. A new vertical farm designed by Aprilli Design Studio takes the vertical gardens to the next level– creating skyscrapers but instead of having floors with offices, they have floors that Read More...

Country’s that do good for t

Country’s that do good for the world are more successful

Countries that think and act globally are more successful than countries that participate less in the global community. That’s the message of a study by  policy advisor Simon Anholt who has worked with countries around the world from the Netherlands to Botswana, from Jamaica to Malaysia. The Read More...

A look underwater that very fe

A look underwater that very few ever see

Deep sea photographer Richard Salas’ latest book on underwater sea life, Luminous Sea, shows the ocean’s beauty that many of us never get to see. Salas’ labor of love is meant to educate people about the deep oceans and how important and fragile they are. Click here for an Intelligent Read More...