Lots of lack of warm, not a lumen of solar activity, loads
of atmospheric movement and little skywater at the Castle this morn, been a bit
busy; my Crimbo pressy to me arrived yestermorn-a nice new windows 7 (I can’t
be bothered with the new touchy feely 7+1) laptop with stuff like a dual core
processor, 8gbs of ram, 16” hi-def led
screen, 320gbs hard drive, DVD re-writer, an sd card slot, usb 3 thingies, hi-def
do-da TV attachment, tea maker, oven and grill.
The transfer from the old one went surprisingly well and all
my bits have been installed almost to my satisfaction, the only bugbear is that
the knobs and whistles on the keyboard are in different places which makes
typing a bit time consuming, but I will persevere.
It seems that more than 5,000 confidential patient records
are being lost by the NHS every day, official statistics showed that at least
1.8 million sensitive papers went missing throughout the health service in just
12 months.
Among the breaches included data security records dumped in
public bins and electronic records found for sale on an internet auction site.
Other security lapses involved details of terminally ill
patients being faxed to the wrong number, patient records being stolen and
posted on to the internet and unsecured laptops being stolen from homes of
staff members.
The Information Commissioner, Christopher Graham, has levied
fines totalling almost £1 million on NHS bodies over the past six months; among
those fined include Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Foundation (£325,000
over 69,000 patient records) and Belfast Health and Social Care Trust (£225,000
over 100,000 confidential paper records) and Central London Community
Healthcare NHS Trust (£90,000 over 59 records).
The worst breach involved a CD containing 1.6 million
patient records, including personal details, belonging to Eastern and Coastal
Kent PCT.
The CD was lost when a filing cabinet went missing during an
office move. The trust was not fined, but signed an undertaking with the ICO
not to repeat the error.
Nick Pickles, of privacy campaign group Big Brother Watch,
told the newspaper
"There is a real risk that if the NHS doesn't sort out
how it looks after patients' details people will stop sharing information with
their doctor and that could be extremely dangerous for care."
No shit-wonder if he is related to Eric?
Sung Wook Paek, an MIT graduate student who won the 2012
Move an Asteroid Technical Paper Competition, sponsored by the United Nations'
Space Generation Advisory Council reckons that the answer to the asteroid
threat is to fire two volleys of paintballs at the space rock.
And for his test scenario, he focused on asteroid Apophis
which was the biggest extraterrestrial threat to Earth. In 2004, initial
observations suggested an uncomfortably high statistical probability that it
may hit Earth in 2029. Fortunately for us, by 2006 further observations refined
the asteroid's orbit and a 2029 impact could be ruled out. But there's another
impact possibility in 2036, albeit a very, very small one.
By Paek's reckoning, around five tons of white paint powder could be encased
in pellets and, through two separate volleys, the majority of Apophis' surface
can be covered which will change the asteroids path (release the first volley
of paintballs. It would then wait for the asteroid to spin on its axis 180
degrees and release a second volley. The entire surface would then be covered
by a thin layer of paint approximately five-micrometers thick, as light from
the sun hits an object, a minuscule amount of pressure is applied -- each
individual photon exerts a small amount of momentum to the object's surface. If
the object is dark (i.e. if the object's albedo is low), more photons are
absorbed; if it's light (i.e. the albedo is high), more photons are reflected.
By changing the albedo of an asteroid like Apophis, it's theoretically possible
to change how sunlight interacts with it. The greater the brightness, the
greater the reflected light, the greater number of photons reflected, the
greater the solar radiation pressure.) And twenty years or so later the asteroid is no longer a threat.
I do like a barmy scientist...
It seems that Adolf may have the last laugh; Raccoons introduced by the
Nazis have officially occupied Germany after experts admitted they are there to
stay.
The German Hunting Federation says the animals, introduced by Luftwaffe
chief Hermann Goering, will never be ousted.
It follows a spate of complaints by householders of racoons breaking
into houses in search of food and shelter in the cold weather.
Federation spokesman Danaiel Hoffman said: "The raccoon is firmly
established in Germany, this has to be accepted."
And Magnus Wessel, head of conservation at Friends of the Earth Germany,
agreed: "Limiting their numbers is pretty much all that can be done."
Raccoons, which German pest controllers say now number in the millions,
often choose to live under houses as they feel safe from predators and can
steal food from bins.
As the cold conditions hit, a couple arrived back from holiday to find
one of the animals had climbed down the chimney and eaten all the food in their
cupboards in Spessart, Hesse.
A raccoon chased off a cat after breaking in through its flap, eating a
packet of biscuits and ripping up a cushion for a nest at a home in
Kaiserslautern.
Goering ordered the release of a breeding pair of raccoons when he was
the Third Reich's chief forester in 1934, to give hunters something to shoot.
More got out in 1945 when an Allied bomb hit a farm where they were
being reared for their pelts.
Nearly
as bad as a right wing lunatic trying to wipe out half of the European population...
Police
in hot pursuit of a speeding cyclist in Poland were shocked when they finally
caught up with him riding completely naked and wearing his pants on his head.
Traffic
police moved to arrest the rider after he set off a speed camera in Bialy Bor,
northern Poland.
The
cyclist, Piotr Chmielewski - then fully clothed - had been flagged for
exceeding the 30mph (48km/h) speed limit in place.
But
by the time traffic police had caught up with the cyclist they found him
completely naked apart from his underwear, which he was wearing on his head.
Local
police spokesman Waldemar Lada said: 'He was fined twice - once for speeding
and again for indecent exposure.'
Wonder
if alcohol had anything to do with it?
The
Japanese have come up with the latest sports accessory. The Super Great
Toiler Keeper is part mechanical loo and part goalie, able to take on the
country’s soccer elite.
The
toilet uses motion-detecting cameras to calculate the flight of the ball, pivot
on its axis, and fire a small ball from the bowl to parry the incoming soccer
ball.
The
toilet goalie is the unlikely result of two Japanese companies with similar
names and vastly different products, joining forces.
Toilet
maker Toto and sports lottery agent Toto pitched their collaboration as an
environmentally friendly project.
Flushed with success?
And finally:
Toblerone chocolate has been named
and shamed with an award for dodgy goods and services for claiming its 400-gram
bar has 16 serves when there are only 15 segments.
According to the 7th annual Shonky awards "We measured the actual number of mountains in the bars versus the recommended or serving size written on the packet,'' Choice spokesperson Ingrid Just said of Toblerone.
Other goods and services deemed sneaky and unscrupulous by Choice include so-called Nano technology aimed at protecting iPhones, The Samsung SW70SP 7kg front loader washing machine, Ticketek and Ticketmaster, Cabcharge, homeopathy treatments for restless and irritable kids, and travel services.
Don't you just hate that-should be a law against it...
According to the 7th annual Shonky awards "We measured the actual number of mountains in the bars versus the recommended or serving size written on the packet,'' Choice spokesperson Ingrid Just said of Toblerone.
Other goods and services deemed sneaky and unscrupulous by Choice include so-called Nano technology aimed at protecting iPhones, The Samsung SW70SP 7kg front loader washing machine, Ticketek and Ticketmaster, Cabcharge, homeopathy treatments for restless and irritable kids, and travel services.
Don't you just hate that-should be a law against it...
And today’s thought:
Just can’t be bothered with the
politics of it.
Angus
2 comments:
For various technical reasons I upgraded to Windows 7 a few months ago. I like it even more that I did XP ;-)
This is my second windows 7 laptop CherryPie, I must grudgingly admit that it is very good-stable, not prone to crashes or problems, it is also very easy to transfer all your files and settings to the new one, but you do have to install the programmes you use on the new one first.
I found that XP was a bit of a pain:)
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