Silicon Valley-Technology, Art, Green & Sustainability

Silicon Valley-Technology, Art, Green & Sustainability SVTAGS hosts events, creates film & educational info. to support industries, people & places that are involved in Technology, Art, Green & Sustainability.

The SVTAGS TV Show focuses on what is happening in Silicon Valley and beyond with regard to technology, art, green and sustainability. We cover stories on home and commercial buildings, wineries, farming, clean-tech, art, transportation and other topics that touch our lives on a weekly show. SVTAGS.org also is producing educational events, how to events for the DIY folks, and tours of interesting

places that relate to our topics! We are producing events, films, the Website and more to promote the ideas/knowledge around Tech, Art, Green and Sustainability. You an watch the show on Monday's at 7:00pm on the CreaTV San Jose Comcast Channel 30 at 7:00pm, or at that same time streaming on www.creatvsj.org. We also air on Los Gatos, California KCAT on Sunday's at 6:00pm and other stations locally, with thirty other markets coming soon. For events please check the Meetup group: http://www.meetup.com/Tech-Art-Green-and-Sustainability/

We are always looking to foster growth in the fields of "Tech, Art, Green and Sustainability," so please contact us today for partnership, internships and sponsorship opportunities!

04/06/2026

About a month ago, we got to test drive the Broncos and see the VW's and under a sheet with something else they'd be doing and here it is! EV motors in your old Porsche, Kindred is doing that!

We have a new show airing tonigh on Comcast San Jose Ch  #30 at 7pm PST.In tonights new Svtags.org new episode our guest...
12/23/2025

We have a new show airing tonigh on Comcast San Jose Ch #30 at 7pm PST.

In tonights new Svtags.org new episode our guests Herbie J. Pilato and Kristian Madsen both producers of different types: one's a podcaster and one has been in the entertainment and television industry a very long time.

Herbie J (as he likes to be called) started off, wanting to be an actor, and he became a "Page" at one of the most famous broadcast companies, (which is a very sought role because it's entry into the entertainment industry). He's a book author, of many books, and now also a producer.

Kris Madsen, also known as Kristian Random, has a podcast and a background of radio broadcast. He took a break from radio broadcast and started again with a new podcast with a business partner that told him it would be “easier” with all the technology available on your phone now.

Join Heather Durham Executive Producer of SVTAGS.org in exploring these two gentlemen’s very interesting and different careers!
https://www.facebook.com/heather.durham1/posts/pfbid029GuAvcGDLQPtgix8DNyRJtLkRzoMQQ1owm9bKctnzZzUBQUDjwNiAVFBcyACd3bFl

Go to CreaTV San Jose and hit watch on their website www.creatvsj.org at the top of the page, the hit ch #30 to watch at 7pm if you do not get Comcast San Jose.

Love this!
12/20/2025

Love this!

San Jose del Cabo in Mexico has the most amazing Thursday night Art walks!
12/16/2025

San Jose del Cabo in Mexico has the most amazing Thursday night Art walks!

Yep, it all starts with kindness, animals, and others... teach kids good lessons they'll become good people! This is an ...
11/15/2025

Yep, it all starts with kindness, animals, and others... teach kids good lessons they'll become good people!

This is an amazing story about the real life person that "Mary had a little lamb," story (rather poem)was written about and became a song!

The nursery rhyme you sang as a child was based on a real 9-year-old girl who saved a dying lamb—and accidentally made history. "Mary had a little lamb, little lamb, little lamb..."You probably sang it in kindergarten. Maybe you sang it to your own children. But did you know Mary was real? And so was her lamb? This is the true story behind one of the most famous nursery rhymes in history. In March 1815, on a cold morning in Sterling, Massachusetts, nine-year-old Mary Sawyer was helping her father with chores in the barn. They discovered that one of their ewes had given birth to twin lambs overnight—but something was wrong. One lamb was healthy and nursing. The other had been rejected by its mother and was lying in the straw, barely breathing, too weak to even stand. Without its mother's care and milk, the tiny creature was dying of cold and hunger. Mary's heart broke at the sight. "Can I take it inside?" she begged her father. Her father shook his head. "No, Mary. It's almost dead anyway. Even if we try, it probably won't survive. "But Mary couldn't bear to watch the lamb die. She pleaded with her father until he finally relented—though he made it clear he thought it was hopeless. When they returned to the house, Mary's mother agreed to let her try. Mary wrapped the freezing lamb in an old garment and held it close to the fireplace, cradling it in her arms through the long night. She didn't know if it would make it to morning. The lamb was so weak it couldn't even swallow at first. But Mary refused to give up. By morning, against all odds, the lamb was standing. Over the next few days, with Mary's constant care—feeding it milk, keeping it warm, nursing it back to strength—the little creature recovered completely. And then something magical happened. The lamb, whom Mary had saved from death, became utterly devoted to her. It recognized her voice. It came running when she called. And everywhere that Mary went, the lamb truly was "sure to go. "One morning before school, Mary called out to her lamb as she was leaving. The lamb came trotting over immediately. Mary's mischievous older brother, Nat, grinned and said, "Let's take the lamb to school with us! "Mary hesitated—she knew it was against the rules—but the idea was too tempting. She agreed. She tried to smuggle the lamb into the one-room Redstone School by hiding it in a basket under her desk, hoping it would stay quiet. For a while, her plan worked. The lamb nestled silently beneath her seat as the lesson began. Then Mary was called to the front of the classroom to recite her lesson. As she stood and began to read aloud, the lamb suddenly bleated loudly and leaped out from under her desk, following Mary to the front of the room. The classroom erupted. The students burst into laughter at the sight of a fluffy white lamb wandering the aisles, bleating and looking for Mary. Even the teacher, Polly Kimball, "laughed outright"—though she gently told Mary that the lamb would have to go home. Mary, embarrassed but smiling, led her lamb outside to wait in a shed until school ended. She thought that would be the end of it—a funny story to tell at dinner. But someone else was watching. Among the visitors at the school that day was a young man named John Roulstone, a college-bound student staying with his uncle, the local minister. He was charmed by the sight of Mary's devoted lamb following her into school. The next day, John rode his horse across the fields to the little schoolhouse and handed Mary a slip of paper. On it, he'd written three simple stanzas:*"Mary had a little lamb,
Its fleece was white as snow,
And everywhere that Mary went,
The lamb was sure to go. It followed her to school one day,
That was against the rule.
It made the children laugh and play,
To see a lamb at school..."*Mary treasured that piece of paper. She kept it for years, along with the memory of the lamb she'd saved. The lamb lived to be four years old, bearing three lambs of her own before she was accidentally killed by a cow in the barn. Mary's mother saved some of the lamb's wool and knitted stockings for Mary, which she treasured for the rest of her life. But the story doesn't end there. In 1830, a well-known writer and editor named Sarah Josepha Hale published a collection called Poems for Our Children. Among them was a poem called "Mary's Lamb"—the same verses John Roulstone had written, plus three additional stanzas with a moral lesson about kindness to animals. The poem spread like wildfire. It was reprinted in schoolbooks across America. Children everywhere began singing it. By the 1850s, it was one of the most famous children's poems in the country. But here's where it gets even more remarkable: In 1877, nearly sixty years after Mary saved that lamb, inventor Thomas Edison was testing his brand-new phonograph—the first machine ever capable of recording and playing back sound. He needed something to recite to test if it worked. He chose "Mary Had a Little Lamb. "Edison's voice reciting those words became the first audio recording in human history. The poem that began with a nine-year-old girl's compassion became the first sound ever captured by technology. As for Mary herself, she lived a long, quiet life. She married, raised a family, and rarely talked about the famous poem until she was an elderly woman. In 1876, at age 70, Mary finally came forward to share her story publicly when she donated the stockings her mother had made from her lamb's wool to help raise money to save Boston's Old South Meeting House. She sold autographed cards tied with yarn from those stockings, telling the world: "I am the Mary. This is my lamb's wool. "People were astonished. The woman behind the nursery rhyme was real—and she was still alive. Mary Sawyer died in 1889 at age 83. Today, a statue of her little lamb stands in Sterling, Massachusetts, commemorating the day a nine-year-old girl's compassion for a dying animal created one of the most enduring stories in children's literature. The lesson of "Mary Had a Little Lamb" isn't just about a pet following its owner. It's about what happened before that—about a little girl who refused to let a helpless creature die, who fought for its life when everyone else had given up, who showed that kindness and determination can create miracles. Mary saved her lamb. And in return, that lamb gave her immortality. The next time you hear someone sing "Mary had a little lamb," remember: it wasn't just a nursery rhyme. It was a true story about a real girl who taught us that compassion matters, that small acts of kindness ripple through time, and that sometimes the gentlest hearts change the world. Mary Sawyer: 1806-1889
The girl who saved a lamb—and created a legend.

It's always good to reuse and reclaim things. This looks like a really great sale this week.... architectural and constr...
11/09/2025

It's always good to reuse and reclaim things. This looks like a really great sale this week.... architectural and construction stuff yes please!

Did you vote yesterday?Since we're on a public access television station, we normally don't get political, but I'm super...
11/06/2025

Did you vote yesterday?
Since we're on a public access television station, we normally don't get political, but I'm super happy that many of my friends, colleagues and family members got out and vote yesterday.

As an independent journalist producing a TV show in Silicon Valley, that's been airing on 20 public stations here in the Bay Area ...also having grown up in the Bay Area with a diverse community.... we believe in change and that it's important to flow with time, and inevitable change that'll come.

Usually, I talk about technology and how it change with technology is good... however, I cannot believe some of the things that's happened recently, including our first amendment right for free speech seems to be stifled now ...

About a week ago I read that a journalist had come from another country to do a talk in San Francisco... They were boarding an airplane to Miami to do the same talk there. ICE detain them the man and deported him.

I've been to Russia once on a trip in in 2014 ... sadly I'll probably never get a chance to go there again because of what happened here last week has been happening in Russia for many years to journalist. They get arrested and put in jail because the government there says that their traders and that their spies, etc., etc.

Again, I just can't believe that this is happening here in the United States of America ... if you're physically are able -get out to vote when it's time to. Volunteer at the polls or do what you can so that you're right to be heard is out there!

Every organization is looking for volunteers right now, including the League of Women Voters and other group groups.

A gold star to anybody who got out and voted yesterday congratulations on doing your part👌✌️👍

Remembering 9/11... blessings to all the families and survivors of the tragedy that happened 24 years ago today.
09/11/2025

Remembering 9/11... blessings to all the families and survivors of the tragedy that happened 24 years ago today.

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