Tuesday, 20 May 2014

Riders and racers

Last week in Bari, the riders in the Giro d'Italia refused to race at the end of the stage because it was raining too hard. They said it was dangerous.
In 2005 at Donington Park, it rained from start to finish of the Moto GP race. Many riders slid off. The remaining riders picked their way round carefully, trying to find where there were rivers and where they could go fast. Seven laps from the end, Valentino Rossi took off and went fast through all the rivers to win in style.
Yes, it was dangerous, but it was also a chance to show who was the maestro.
Some are racers. Some are just riders.
Jack Brabham keeled over this week. He was a racer, too.

Thursday, 15 May 2014

Shoot the message, not the messenger

Europe appears to have missed the target in its dispute with Google over reputations which some people want to forget.
Google shows you everything there is on whatever you search for. Not everything except what Joe Bloggs wants you to see, or everything some government wants you to see. Everything.
If you are in the everything business, being told to change to become the everything but business is a big deal.
And if Joe Bloggs is upset because something embarrassing is out there, whose responsibility is to sort that out? The government's? Google's or Joe Bloggs'?
Google helps Joe Bloggs to sort out his problem. It shows him where the embarrassing item is. He can ask that website to remove it.
If you tell Google to remove it from its search results, it will still be visible to those who use Bing, or Yahoo or any of the other search engines. Will Europe tell them to show everything but, too?
The simplest solution is to remove the offending item. Then no search engines will find it.
The best person to ask for it to be removed is the person who is offended. 
Bashing big business is not always the best solution.

Wednesday, 14 May 2014

Promises, promises

UKIP and the Tories tell us immigrants and Europe are the cause of all our problems and they will get rid of them. It's nonsense.
Labour tell us they will bring in laws to stop our rents, energy bills and doctors' waiting lists going up. It's nonsense.
Is it any wonder people are losing faith in politics.

Wednesday, 19 March 2014

Me and W.H.Smith

W.H.Smith have been newspaper and magazine wholesalers for many years. Newspapers send their papers to Smith's, Smith's bundle them up with other papers and magazines and deliver them to all the newsagents in their area.
This week, they changed the name of their wholesale business to Connect because they believe newspapers and magazines will make up less than half of their business in the future.
When I left school as a callow 17-year-old in 1962 I started work at W.H.Smith's main office in Newcastle as a management trainee. My job was to copy the number of weekly magazines each shop received from this week's list on to next week's list: 27 Woman's Own, 30 Beano, 25 Hotspur, 15 Angling Times and so on. This was way before computers and photo-copiers.
If I had stayed there, I could have progressed to an alterations clerk, who took changes phoned through from the shops: Stop 3 Beano, add 2 Dandy. Next step was an accounts clerk, who added up the shops' bills, taking the changes into account. After that, who knows? Manager of the W.H.Smith shop in Whitley Bay station maybe.
But I didn't stay. After six months of copying, I was offered a place as a reporter and sub-editor on The Journal sports desk. £8 a week for covering football, speedway and snooker contests, instead of £4 a week for copying lists. 
Nonetheless, Smith's started me off and for that I am grateful.

Friday, 7 March 2014

War and peace

Scotland’s devolved parliament is having a referendum to let people decide whether they want to stay part of the UK, or become independent.
Crimea’s devolved parliament is having a referendum to let people decide whether they want to stay part of the Ukraine or join Russia.
Our government says the Scots’ vote is OK, but the Crimean vote is illegal. Why?

Russia has sent troops to Crimea because the Ukraine government has been overthrown by a mob. It is threatening more of the same. Russia doesn’t like the idea of a mob wanting to overthrow a corrupt government.
The West doesn’t like the idea of mobs in its own backyard, but approves of those who do their overthrowing in the Middle East or Ukraine. It says the mob in Kiev is actually a bunch of freedom fighters. The West is threatening sanctions and boycotts because sending troops is so last year.

And the BBC is running 37 days which shows how we went from balmy peace to world war in just over a month because the people in power kept threatening each other.

Monday, 3 March 2014

Bright sparks

Scientists are getting excited about perovskites:
They are more efficient at generating electricity from sunlight than current photo-electric cells and they are cheaper to produce.
The day is nearer when we will be able to generate our own electricity through the sunlight falling on our windows, rather than relying on the energy companies burning fossil fuel to generate it and deliver it to us over miles of cable.

All we need now is a bright spark to develop fridges and cookers which don’t need 240 volts and 13amps, but can operate on much less. Many of the devices in my flat have transformers to reduce 240 volts to 12 or 19. If we are doing the generating, we can do without these transformers.

Us

Nigel Farage told his Ukippers’ conference that he felt uncomfortable on a train from London Bridge because it was several stations before he heard English spoken in his carriage.
He just doesn’t get it.
London is the wonderful city it is because it is a fantastic mix of people from all over the planet. Different, interesting people. People with different cultures, religions and, yes, languages.
It is not us and them. It’s just us.