By Hank Green

EcoGeek is here to keep you informed of the latest technologies that make our lives better while ensuring that we don't spoil the Earth at the same time. Here are 10 technologies that I can't wait for, and that I think we'll see to varying degrees in 2008.
Cellulosic ethanol
Corn ethanol really isn't a very good idea, but cellulosic ethanol is looking at a bright future. With huge bursts of funding from federal subsidies and billionaire entrepreneurs like Vinod Khosla, we should expect advances on several fronts in 2008.
Techniques for producing the fuel from waste inexpensively will continue to emerge. And America's first cellulosic production plants will come online, while the benchmarks required by the recent U.S. energy bill will spur investment in a new round of plants that will come online sometime after 2008.
LEDs
America's love affair with incandescent lights is over. Especially considering that they will be mostly illegal by 2012. 2008 should be a year where Philips and GE start producing ultra-efficient LED lights in earnest.
Already the technology is more efficient, longer-lasting and more user-friendly than CFLs or incandescents.
The obstacle, it seems, is price. But Americans are getting used to the idea that paying more now will save you money in the long run.
And as LEDs are a bit more approachable than CFLs, I think we'll see a good adoption rate for LED bulbs. They'll start showing up on shelves in Wal-Marts and Home Depots in mid 2008.
No one killed the electric car
2008 will be the year the electric vehicle (EV) comes back to life. Tesla will make its first sales, the Chevy Volt
production design will be released, and the first GM E-Flex drive
trains will be driving around in Chevy Malibu bodies.
Ford will begin marketing (though not selling) it's plug-in Escape and GM will begin selling the plug-in Saturn Vue. Smaller producers like Aptera and Phoenix will sell their EVs as well.
CDs will die
Physical media are on the way
out. Everyone realizes that there's no good reason to have a CD
instead of an MP3; they're more expensive and less convenient.
And while other media (include books and movies) are going to have a longer road to obsolescence, everyone, including record companies and musicians, agree that CDs have gone the way of the 8 track.
The Kindle will light a very small fire
Speaking of obsolete physical objects, book readers will continue to
advance in 2008, led by the Kindle. Though uglier, bulkier, and more expensive than the Sony Reader, the Kindle is better marketed and more convenient than any other ebook reader ever.
Solar really will be cheap
We've been hearing for years that solar is going to be as cheap as
coal. And while that prediction won't come true in 2008, solar will
become extremely cheap.
Nanosolar and Heliovolt's printable solar cells will sell like hotcakes to large buyers, leaving you and me on a long waiting list for personal panels.
There will be 30 stories about cars running on water
And each and every one of them will be erroneous.
Small cars will win
While it's great that major car companies are creating cars like the
Fit, the Mini and the Aveo, it's my opinion that they are completely
underestimating the desire for small vehicles in American driveways.
Which is why I think that the Loremo and the Aptera
will be widely acclaimed in the U.S.
Honda will continue selling every Fit it can build, but it will take entrants from outside the establishment to show how interested people are in less substantial cars.
Additionally, the Aptera and the Loremo both will establish themselves as early favorites for the automotive X-Prize which will begin in early 2008.
You do not appear to have Yahoo! Messenger installed. Click here to download and install it.
California company may market EVs like cell phones: Give away the hardware, charge for the service.
A strong economy would help the clean tech revolution get a foothold. And a weak economy will hurt it.
If all the roofs in the world were white, according to a new study, the effects of global warming would be significantly reduced.
Choose cleaner, greener Halloween treats to give away this year.
Spray cans no longer contain CFCs, but does that mean they're safe for the environment?
Use this interactive map to find people giving away free stuff, or who will take yours off your hands.