Posts Tagged ‘New England Patriots’

Sky Vegetables making urban gardens in NYC, Brockton

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

The New York Times reports on the trend of vertical gardening, and other methods of growing your own food in the confines of Manhattan.

One of the companies the times talks to is Needham-based Sky Vegetables. Sky Vegetables sells systems for growing vegetables on urban rooftops. The full system includes wind turbines, solar panels, rainwater harvesters, greenhouses and composting bins. The Times story says the company wants to build rooftop farms on hospitals, schools and food banks.


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Closer to home, Sky Vegetables is working on what it calls the state’s first commercial rooftop hydroponics farm in Brockton. The company won zoning approval last week to build the farm on the roof of an abandoned shoe factory in Brockton (above).

Sky Vegetables was founded by Keith Agoada, a University of Wisconsin Madison alum and a former marketing intern for the Patriots.

Patriots-Colts: Where’s your No-Punt Offense now, Time Magazine?

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Time listed its 50 Greatest inventions of 2009 last week. No. 33 was the No-Punt Offense, the brainchild of a Little Rock, Ark. high school coach named Kevin Kelley.

According to a recent Sports Illustrated story, Kelley doesn’t believe in punting — he doesn’t think it makes sense statistically. His team, Pulaski Academy, doesn’t have a punter or a kicker. The team hasn’t punted since 2007. Pulaski won the state championship last year, and is currently tied for first place.

You can nitpick whether or not the strategy is an invention, but Kelley is doing something right. Last night, obviously, things didn’t work out quite as well for the Pats against the Colts.

Above, watch Pulaski in action — fourth-and-long situations, onside kicks, and other things that are not punts. After the jump, watch Patriots coach Bill Belichick’s less scientific explanation for the controversial decision: “I thought we could get a yard.” (more…)

Tauntr would have made yesterday’s Patriots game even worse

Monday, September 21st, 2009

BBJ staff writer Lisa van Der Pool talks to NECN about Boston-based Tauntr, a social network where users can mock and berate friends with different sports-team allegiances, and which landed $1.1 million in angel funding last week. The service, thankfully for Pats-loving nerds, doesn’t launch until next month. The Globe’s wince-inducing video caption “Brady: Lack of touchdowns ‘unacceptable,’” seems like it was made for something like Tauntr, if not the Onion.

This fall/winter should be a good time to launch a sports-themed invective technology, at least locally, with the Sox closing in on the wild card, the Bruins playing at Fenway, and Rasheed Wallace playing for the Celtics. 

Tauntr shares the local sports social networking niche with Boston-based Trumedia Networks, which recently expanded beyond its Sawxheads, Patsheads, Celtsheads and Blackandgoldheads to target a national sports audience. Trumedia has developed an embeddable applet called Slugfest, which lets sports fans argue via widget on sites like Boston.com.

Verizon vs. rock ‘n roll before Patriots vs. Bills at Gillette Stadium

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

By Rodney Brown

Rodney BrownSo you’re set up to show off your tech product to the press and public at one of the greatest venues in New England — Patriot Place at Gillette Stadium — before the season opening game of the New England Patriots. Crowds are milling all about you in the plaza right in front of The Hall and interacting with your street team crew by the handfuls. What could possibly go wrong?

How about a deafeningly loud sound check by a rock band?

Lansdowne

Lansdowne
Photo by Rodney Brown

That was what the folks from Verizon had to face yesterday at the house the Krafts’ built, when the Boston band Lansdowne fired up their grinding emo-esque guitars on a balcony next to the CBS Scene restaurant — across the vast echoing canyon that is the main plaza of Patriot Place from Verizon’s leather couch-enabled, 60-inch flat screen-displaying FiOS booth.

In between power chords and mic checks, Phil Santoro, head of media relations for Verizon in New England, said, “We just found out about the band two hours ago.”

While Lansdowne tweaked its sound levels — seemingly trying to figure out how to both get more volume and more clarity — Santoro shouted out the schedule for the press demo of the latest FiOS features to the assembled reporters and bloggers. When Lansdowne finally appeared to get the perfect balance of deafness and sound quality, Santoro said, “OK, we’ve got until 5:15, which is when the band actually starts playing.” (more…)

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