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Livraison rapide à 28$CA  La Terre est désormais notre seul actionnaire  
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Notre Rapport d’avancement de 2025 explore toutes les nouvelles initiatives, parfois amusantes, parfois un peu étranges, que nous mettons en place pour réduire notre impact sur la Terre, notre unique actionnaire.

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Livraison rapide à 22$CA

Livraison rapide à 22$CA

Les commandes sont expédiées dans un délai de 1 à 2 jours ouvrables et arrivent dans un délai de 3 à 5 jours ouvrables.

Les commandes sont emballées et expédiées dans un délai de 2 jours ouvrables. Les commandes passées pendant la fin de semaine ou les jours fériés sont traitées le jour ouvrable suivant.

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La Terre est désormais notre seul actionnaire

La Terre est désormais notre seul actionnaire

Si nous voulons préserver notre planète, sans parler de notre activité, nous devons tous agir dans la mesure de nos moyens. Voici ce que nous pouvons faire.

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Where He Landed

Bonnie Tsui  /  15 juil. 2019  /  Community, Culture

How the child in an old road trip photo from the Patagonia catalog is helping humanity understand Mars.

Rule #1 of a road trip: Vehicle may break down. Rule #2 of a road trip: You may break down along with it.

Near the Ruby Mountains in Nevada, Gordon and Meredith Wiltsie were struggling with wrenches and wire after the muffler came loose on their old International Travelall. As their 4-year-old son, Nick, whacked at rocks with a hammer at the side of the road, Meredith sat down next to the broken-down vehicle and covered her face with a grease-smeared hand. Gordon snapped a photo, which appeared in the Spring 1993 Patagonia catalog. (Just out of the frame was Nick’s older brother, Ben, jumping around on the roof of the wagon.)

“To a certain extent, it’s very emblematic of my upbringing that my mom is having this horrible breakdown and my dad, of course, is breaking out the camera,” Nick, now 30, says with a laugh. “Especially when everything is going wrong.” He describes his parents as perpetual adventurers who met on a ski trip in college and honeymooned in Bangladesh. The peripatetics continued as their family grew, with countless camping and climbing trips to faraway places.

As for Nick, vehicles and rocks are still pretty much his specialty, though his road trips are now exponentially more remote. As a mechanical engineer for the Mars rover program at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, he helps plan the movements of the Curiosity rover. He’s also developing ground control software for the new Mars 2020 rover, which is set to launch next year.

“Basically, I work on how to keep the rovers safe while they’re driving around exploring the surface of Mars,” he says. “One of the things I really like about the job is that if anything goes wrong, it’s often completely novel, and we get to figure out how to solve that problem for the first time. With Curiosity, it was the drill on its robotic arm. It broke about a year and a half ago, and I’ve been involved with how to repair it. How do you work around repairing a robot that is a billion miles away? I love that.”

Rule #3 of a road trip: Embrace the unexpected.

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