Loma Mar is located in San Mateo County, California. On this city guide, you will find all kinds of helpful information about hotels, real estate, careers and much more.
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CROWNE PLAZA CABANA PALO ALTO
Hotel rate starting at just $98 at
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Click to view a comprehensive list of local Loma Mar hotels and lodging to make your stay a great one.
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THE INN AT SARATOGA
Hotel rate starting at just $189 at
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COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT PALO ALTO
Hotel rate starting at just $119 at
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Wed
16
May
The International Gem & Jewelry Show San Mateo
The International Gem and Jewelry Show is an event that will aim to showcase diverse range of gems, minerals and jewelry item…
Thu
17
May
The International Gem & Jewelry Show San Mateo
The International Gem and Jewelry Show is an event that will aim to showcase diverse range of gems, minerals and jewelry item…
Fri
18
May
The International Gem & Jewelry Show San Mateo
The International Gem and Jewelry Show is an event that will aim to showcase diverse range of gems, minerals and jewelry item…
A train struck and killed a person on the Caltrain tracks in San Jose Wednesday morning, according to the transit agency.
The person was hit by northbound train No. 217 south of the Tamien station. A bus bridge has been set up between the Tamien and Diridon stations.
San Jose police said the incident was reported at 7:10 a.m. near Monterey Road and Southside Drive.
The pedestrian was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.
Wed, 16 May 2012 10:03:22 -0700
Hundreds of marijuana plants were discovered by Richmond firefighters early Wednesday as they extinguished a one-alarm warehouse fire, authorities said.
Richmond Police Lt. Bisa French told KTVU that firefighters responded at 3:30 a.m. to a call by the night security person of an electrical fire in a warehouse located at 6th and Ohio.
“She (the security person) smelled and saw the smoke coming out of the door,” French said. “Our fire department responded and discovered a large marijuana grow of hundreds of plants, possibly over 1,000.”
French said the plants were in rows in numerous stages of growth in several rooms. There was also an elaborate electrical and lighting systems powering the operation.
“This is one of the largest operations I have seen in Richmond,” French said. “There’s numerous rooms each with hundreds of plants. “
“This is a large scale operation that has been going on for some time,” she added. “There’s different rooms with stages of different grow of plants and also a room where they take off the buds off the plants and get rid of the stems. There’s different areas for different things in this warehouse.”
The fire caused damage throughout the warehouse, particularly smoke damage, authorities said. French said the security was sleeping when one her dogs awoke her with its whining.
“When she opened the door, she was overcome by the fumes from the fire,” she said.
French also said the security guard was aware that there were marijuana plants being grown in the warehouse and was cooperating with police in contacting the owner.
She said the owner as well as the security guard could face charges.
Wed, 16 May 2012 08:30:52 -0700
Two Greenpeace protestors were arrested at the Apple headquarters in Cupertino this morning after sealing themselves in a giant pod to draw attention to claims that the company uses dirty energy to support its cloud services.
Santa Clara County sheriff's deputies responded to trespassing reports from Apple employees around 8 a.m., and arrived to find two women in their early 20s who had barricaded themselves inside the device, which was painted white with an apple logo, according to sheriff's spokesman Sgt. Jose Cardoza.
Sheriff's deputies then teamed up with Apple maintenance employees and members of the Santa Clara County Fire Department to get the women out of the pod using electric saws. There were other protestors around who were dressed as iPhones with screens displaying messages of support for the Greenpeace campaign, but they were on the public sidewalk, Cardoza said.
According to David Pomerantz, a spokesperson for Greenpeace, the two protestors are Elizabeth Donahue, 21, of Montana and Brandy Palm of Sacramento.
Donahue and Palm had reportedly attached themselves to each other and the pod using a large metal rod, and did not cooperate with requests by Apple employees or sheriff's deputies to leave the pod and vacate the property, sheriff's officials said.
"Both of them are activists who are really passionate about fighting coal and climate change," Pomerantz said.
According to a statement by Greenpeace, the protest follows the release of their report "How Clean is Your Cloud," which evaluated 14 Internet technology companies' network service clouds.
Greenpeace says that unlike some companies, such as Google and Yahoo, Apple is using mostly nuclear and coal generated energy to power its cloud.
Specifically, Greenpeace alleges, Apple gets its cloud's power from a company called Duke Energy, which gets their coal by mountain-top mining, a technique that Pomerantz said not only destroyed mountains but also contaminates streams, with significant negative impact on local communities.
Duke Energy itself seems to acknowledge the dark side of coal, naming "Reducing our reliance on mountaintop coal" as one of its goals in the "Environmental Footprint" section of its 2011/2012 Sustainability Report.
But Apple said in a statement that Greenpeace got the numbers wrong -- that its data center in Maiden, N.C. will use 20 megawatts at full capacity, not the 100 megawatts that Greenpeace reported.
In comparison, the report tallied Facebook's San Jose cloud facility at a capacity of 5 megawatts, 23.8 percent of which is powered by coal.
Apple also said that soon more than 60 percent of its on-site power will come from a new solar farm and fuel cell, which they said would be, "the largest of their kind in the country," adding that the project would, "make Maiden the greenest data center ever built," joined by a 100 percent renewable energy powered facility in Oregon in 2013.
Pomerantz contested that based on Apple documents for facility back-up generators, Greenpeace believes that the company will soon expand to use the full 100 megawatts.
"We're concerned about a company that brands itself as so innovative ... still using something as anachronistic as coal," said Greenpeace spokesperson Keiller MacDuff.
According to Greenpeace, the dome from which the protestors were pulled was an 8-foot-tall, 10-foot-wide survival device that was used years ago in the Arctic in protests against oil drilling in that region.
In an appropriately tech-related twist, Palm was actually blogging from inside the pod this morning. "I want Apple to use their influence to power the iCloud I use every day with clean energy," she said.
The two protesters were arrested around 10 a.m., about 30 minutes before the survival pod was towed off of the Apple premises.
Wed, 16 May 2012 00:00:17 -0700
News Source: MedleyStory
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Loma Mar Apartments
There are 108 apartments found in and near the Loma Mar area.
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