Category: News

  • Fuel cell canal boat launched in Amsterdam

    A fuel cell power boat was launched on 9 December to circling in the Amsterdam canals. The Nemo H2 which can transport up to 87 people, is a unique boat specially designed to run on a fuel cell engine, where hydrogen and oxygen combine to generate electricity and water, without creating carbon monoxide.

    Tourists can now take a ‘CO2 Zero Canal Cruise’, for an additional 50 cents, which will fund additional research into carbon-cutting knowledge, added Freek Vermeulen, managing executive of Lovers Boat Company.

    “That’s important in a city like Amsterdam with over 125 canal trips per day,” said Alexander Overdiep project manager.

    If the innovative boat was twice as expensive to construct than a regular diesel canal boat, and has to break at a hydrogen dispensing station for a refill daily, while regular boats require a small amount of gas once a week, however, developers of the plan, which the Dutch government partly paid for, said expenses would decrease as more boats were built and tested, and if an additional hydrogen division infrastructure materialized.

  • Blog Review: Citation Needed

    The blog reviewed here is ‘Citation Needed‘. The author is a neuroscientist who describes himself in the about section in more detail. Incidentally Yarkoni was one of the authors who published a response to Vul et al’s noted paper on fMRI (see review here).

    Appearance and Design

    The blog has a very simple but effective design with a white background throughout (i.e including the articles themselves). The headers and links in the articles are a light green. At the time of writing there were 10 articles on the front page. Having a lot of articles on each screen page is useful in some senses because it means that the reader can quickly and easily scan through multiple articles compared to blogs that display 1 or 2 articles per screen page. On the right hand side of the screen there are category clouds, a blogroll, RSS feeds, archives by month, a calendar and recent comments. There are also aesthetic images in a number of posts which complement the articles.

    Content

    The blog is relatively young having started out with this post in October 2009. Yarkoni’s take on a Nature paper about peer reviewers quality of review declining with increasing age raises a number of interesting points. Firstly although I haven’t seen the methodology of the paper it seems counterintuitive that a reviewer’s reviews would get worse with increasing age. The assumption raised here was that with increasing age come more responsibilities and less time (and enthusiasm is hinted at) can be allocated to the reviewing process. These hypotheses thus suggest that the quality of a review is a function of motivation and time with the role of experience being unclear. The second point was that of qualitative versus quantitative methodology a debate which could extend into an entire book! Yarkoni writes this post on his research using Blogger and Twitter interfaces to acquire large datasets for use in research and this is certainly a very interesting idea. This is a very nice post and appeals to me because i’ve spent a bit of time looking into the original article and the discussion that took place. Essentially Yarkoni reexamines a response he wrote to Vul et al’s paper and discusses effect sizes. He explains this from the beginning and using depression in Clown’s as the focus for his argument helps the reader to the conclusion that effect sizes play a significant role in medical/psychological/social research. I think this is a very useful post for people who are new to this type of research or even those experienced in this. In this post, Yarkoni discusses the issue of publication of negative results and he has set up a website to publish negative studies in psychology. I think this is a great idea and could not only be extended to other areas such as medicine (where journals of negative trials are published) but could also be undertaken as a blog (i.e a blog of negative studies) and one can imagine how a series of such blogs might form a ‘conglomerate’. The file drawer number is a neat concept although as Yarkoni points out it becomes less useful when the findings in the published studies are less robust. This issue of negative studies is a tricky one to deal with but hopefully ideas such as Yarkoni’s can help to raise the standards of ’shared’ scientific knowledge.

    Conclusions

    This blog by Yarkoni is relatively young but already has a number of very interesting articles and Yarkoni tackles important research issues. His writing is often humorous and his personality comes through very strongly in the writing which brings a human face to the very abstract theoretical subjects that are being dealt with. From these posts, Yarkoni appears to be a very accomplished communicator of science and I look forward to following his progress on the many interesting projects he has underway a number of which have benefits for wider communities.

    Twitter

    You can follow ‘The Amazing World of Psychiatry’ Twitter by clicking on this link

    Podcast

    You can listen to this post on Odiogo by clicking on this link (there may be a small delay between publishing of the blog article and the availability of the podcast).

    TAWOP Channel

    You can follow the TAWOP Channel on YouTube by clicking on this link

    Responses

    If you have any comments, you can leave them below or alternatively e-mail [email protected]

    Disclaimer

    The comments made here represent the opinions of the author and do not represent the profession or any body/organisation. The comments made here are not meant as a source of medical advice and those seeking medical advice are advised to consult with their own doctor. The author is not responsible for the contents of any external sites that are linked to in this blog.

  • Eco Tech: Copenhagen’s Tivoli Amusement Park to get power from an offshore wind turbine

    tivoli amusement park

    Eco Factor: Renewable energy to power Tivoli Amusement Park.

    With the UN Climate Change Conference already in full swing in Copenhagen, the city is setting an example in sustainable technologies with its famous amusement park, Tivoli, announcing efforts to go carbon neutral. The park has already made strong efforts at recycling and energy efficiency, and is now looking for ways to go carbon neutral.

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  • Questions concerning Boeing’s big split, small tail fin

    How did strike slow production?

    Editor, The Times:

    In the article “Boeing to duplicate local work for 787” [page one, Dec. 8], Boeing again is implying that the 57-day strike last year by union employees was to blame for the 2½-year delay in production.

    I’m curious to know how the strike, which happened a year ago, could have caused the 1½-year delay that preceded the strike. Was it a retroactive thing? Did the strike cause the foreign suppliers to put the wrong fasteners on the first production plane? Did the strike cause management to make the decision to roll out the first plane knowing it was only the shell of the plane in order to save face for their first deadline of July 8, 2007?

    I think Boeing management needs to stop hiding behind the easy out of the union being the cause of all things that have gone wrong with the 787 production, and look at their role in this.

    — Tamara Martinello, Everett

    Who will follow Boeing south?

    On Dec. 8 The Times proclaimed the news that Boeing’s 787 production line in Charleston would not depend on supplies from Washington.

    Therefore, Boeing guaranteed that the 787 production would not be held hostage to the Washington unions and their propensity to strike.

    To survive, Boeing has to remain competitive in the world.

    Now, the Democratic Legislature and governor will increase Washington taxes to maintain their unsustainable spending, plus continue imposing onerous regulations as demanded by the all-powerful special-interest groups, unions, environmentalists, etc.

    So, the state’s productive businesses, working citizens and retirees will follow Boeing to the south where there are jobs and governments that cater to the people and not to special-interest groups.

    — Don Wilbur, University Place

    Machinists should be the least of company’s problems

    Let me get this straight, Boeing loses a refueling tanker contract in which it is the only bidder and an employee goes to jail. Boeing designs a new plane with serious structural flaws. Boeing subcontracts work for most of the new plane but virtually all of this work is delayed and substandard.

    Yet, all Boeing can do is blame the Machinists union for its problems?

    My father was a Boeing machinist for 38 years. During that time, the company experienced several long and expensive work stoppages due to labor problems. These disputes were eventually settled and Boeing went on to dominate the commercial airplane market.

    The only thing Boeing is known for now is crummy designs, crummy planning and decision making, and crummy executives and their scandals.

    It seems to me that the Machinists are the least of Boeing’s problems.

    — Clayton R. Brownell, Kent

  • Eco Architecture: Upcycled shipping container COP 15 Pavilion by MAPT Architects

    cop 15_1

    Eco Factor: Demonstration project for containerized housing.

    Danish architecture firm MAPT has unveiled a stunning COP 15 pavilion that has been entirely constructed from recycled materials including shipping containers, to coincide with the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. In addition to old shipping containers, the pavilion also reuses other surplus products from the wood and wind-turbine industries.

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  • Car crash risk if you’re well controlled…

    Article from the Guardian

    Car crash risk for people with well-controlled diabetes

    It is a discussion of a Canadian study, and assumes no knowledge of diabetes. They summarise the main findings

    Quote:

    Drivers with diabetes who’d been in a traffic accident were much more likely to have HbA1c levels at the lower end of the range recorded. The average HbA1c level for those who’d had an accident was 7.4, compared with 7.9 for people not in an accident. The researchers said that the increased risk of lower HbA1c might account for about one third of the 57 accidents in the study.


    The Guardian article also contains an explanation of the possible limitations of the study.

    Here is the pubmed abstract

    Reminded me of a conversation I had with a colleague about what I had to do to remain safe while driving (which is a right pain in the wotsit), and she told me about her insulin dependent friend who has hypo-unawareness, and quite often drives while she has a hypo, and only corrects it when she gets home, which is kinda scary.

  • Check Pet Toy Safety Online

    PetMD recently recommended HealthyStuff.org for checking up on pet toy safety. So, I decided to give them a try.

    At Healthy Stuff, you can check ratings for lots of products, not just for pets. The site rates pet chew and tug toys, tennis balls and pet beds as low, medium or high.

    You actually want a low rating, which means that there’s low or no levels of toxic materials present. For example, I found that the Play N Squeak “Twice the Mice” toy has a high rating, mainly due to lead in the tail feathers. Yikes. I don’t know about your kitty, but mine goes after feather mice tails like they’re the real thing. A Coleman dog bed also received a high rating for lead.

    pet-coleman-bed-lead

    One thing I really like about Healthy Stuff is the ease of search. You can search by brand name, type, level of concern, or the product name. You may also use the “Test My Stuff” feature to nominate your favorite new pet toy or bed for testing.

    Should you really be concerned about pet toys being toxic? Yes. Sadly, there aren’t any government standards for dangerous chemicals in pet products. That’s a bit amazing considering children also play with these toys. Healthy Stuff urges you to take action to get standards put in place.

    (Image via Healthy Stuff)

    Post from: Blisstree

    Check Pet Toy Safety Online

  • Ageism sends BBC presenter to China . . .

    BBC News presenter Susan Osman, 51, claims that she has been forced to move to Beijing to escape the corporation’s ingrained “culture of ageism”.
    to take over a leading programme in China.

    Osman has worked in broadcasting for 28 years, presenting bulletins on BBC World and reporting for ITN News. She fronted the Bristol-based Points West on BBC One for 14 years, but now has been hired to take over a leading programme in China.

    She says that her age has become an insurmountable barrier in Britain, and has accepted a job hosting a prime-time breakfast show on China Radio International and is moving to Beijing.

    Ms Osman said: “There seems to be a culture of ageism in broadcasting in this country, and it particularly affects women.” She attended a series of auditions for BBC jobs and been told she was “marvellous”. But she was consistently overlooked, without explanation.

    She says that British women face ageism in broadcasting when they reached their 40s, but that their longevity is an asset in Asia. “In China they revere experience,” she said. “The older you are the better. I got the impression that my future boss actually wanted me to be older when I finally told him my age during the interview.”

    She added: “I’ve had so many female colleagues who have dropped out in their early forties, which is a shame because an older woman can bring wisdom and empathy. There don’t seem to be many places for older women in broadcasting in this country.”

    A BBC spokesman said: “Broadcasting, especially presenting, is an extremely competitive industry and the nature of it is such that many broadcasters are freelance artists on contracts of specific durations,” he said. “Ageism has nothing to do with it.”

    The BBC was involved in an ageism row when Arlene Phillips, 66, was replaced as a judge on Strictly Come Dancing by Alesha Dixon, 31, a decision criticised by a government minister.

  • Oral Lesions OUCH

    O.K., so I’m n mega-steroids (1st dose 24 hours ago) and antibiotics (2 week regimine began 1 week ago) and suddenly tonight I’ve broken out in cold sores all over mouth and tongue and down throat, yikes, is this a new pain in the **** I wasn’t expecting. Can I do anything about this?
  • Eco Tech: 338 wind turbines to power one of the largest wind farms in the world

    wind farm

    Eco Factor: Wind farm expected to generate 845MW of renewable power.

    GE Energy has announced that the company will be supply 338 wind turbines to Caithness Energy, which will be used to drive one of the largest wind farms in the world located in Oregon at Shepherds Flat. GE Energy will also be servicing these units for a period of 10 years.

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  • Eco Homes: MDU shipping container home is surprisingly wide and comfortable

    mdu_1

    Eco Factor: Mobile home built using 40-foot shipping containers.

    All those who have any experience in either living or constructing shipping container homes, know that the limiting factor is not the length but the width, which makes the home look cramped, cold and rectangular. However, the Mobile Dwelling Unit or simply MDU is different – it’s wide, comfortable and elegant on the inside.

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  • Parks and Recreation is the shiznit

    via gq.com

    I know a lot of people saw Parks and Recreation’s freshman season and wrote it off, but the hubby and I actually liked its quirkiness, at the same time acknowledging it needed to improve. Well, we were rewarded when Parks and Rec’s second season started (from the cold open of the first episode, even!), and it seems that a lot more people are starting to get on board with this hilarious show. Glad to see that NBC isn’t messing this up like they did with so many other shows. :P If you’re not yet watching Parks and Rec, please catch up with it on NBC’s video-on-demand site, or Hulu. Love it! :)

  • Eco Gadgets: eva2o trusts age-old practices to keep food fresh without using electricity

    eva2o_1

    Eco Factor: Concept fruit cooler relies on water evaporation.

    While refrigerators have replaced traditional means to keep fruits and veggies fresh, the rise in demand for appliances that conserve energy has tempted industrial designers to go through some history books and bring devices that were long lost and forgotten into the 21st century.

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  • Blood Sugar Under Control!

    Went to the doctors on Tuesday and got my results back today. My A1C is 6.6%! YEAAAAAAAA! I’m doing a lot better than I was when I first started out. I’m having a bit of a problem with the weight loss though. I’m having a problem with this because I’m not wanting to walk to much. I’ve had problems with kidney infections now for quite a while. I have one about every other month. My kidneys constantly hurt and it gets worse if I stand/walk for too long. So, the weight I lost came back. If my kidneys don’t stop hurting after this round of antibiotics they want me to make another appointment to come back in so they can do more tests to try and figure out what is going on. It has been a while since I’ve posted on here and just thought I would share my excitment of my A1C with everyone. Will give an update on the kidney situation when I find out more. Take care everyone!
  • Eco Cars: Myers Motors makes NMG2 available for pre-order

    nmg 2

    Eco Factor: Two-seat all-electric trike.

    Myers Motors showcased it all-electric two-seat trike, the NMG2, which is a face-lifted version of the NMG Sparrow, in October, and is already preparing to take pre-orders with some attractive discounts as well. The company is planning to deduct the car’s base price of $29,995 by $5000 if a thousand people drop $250 on a pre-order.

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  • Eco Tech: Solar-powered GREENS provides renewable energy to marines on battlefield

    greens

    Eco Factor: Portable solar generator provides 300W of continuous power.

    The Office of Naval Research has developed the GREENS or the Ground Renewable Expeditionary ENergy System, which allows the marines to generate 300W of continuous power using sunshine. The suitcase-based system carries a stackable 1600W solar array combined with rechargeable batteries to yield up to 300W of power.

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  • If Your Grandchild Has Weird Hair Color

    When I wrote a post several months ago, about kids having weird hair color and styles, with and without approval of their parents, one grandmother asked what she should do because her daughter styled the grandchild’s and her own hair in unusual colors and styles.

    Weird hair image: sxc.hu

    Weird hair image: sxc.hu

    Generally these are phases that young adults, teens and youngsters go through.  Much has to do with the movies, tv, and current styles they see in magazines and on the Internet.  So much of this goes in cycles.

    I’ve noticed this year, in my work with youngsters and teens, that hair colors and styles are getting more normal for the most part.  Youngsters, who may have unusual hair styles (with parental consent or design, when very small) often discontinue these when they’re older.  Whether this is from peer pressure or their own decision not to be so different, I don’t know.  Probably some of both.  Other times they will try something different if their friends are for awhile.

    There isn’t much as a grandparent one can do except express your opinion in a diplomatic manner, compliment when you see something you like, make suggestions if you have the relationship where you can, and wait for this cycle to pass. 

    What do you think?  What has been your experience?

    Post from: Blisstree

    If Your Grandchild Has Weird Hair Color

  • Fresco of John Hawkwood

    Florence, Italy | Unusual Monuments

    A British interloper is memorialized in the Italian sanctuary of the Duomo, in Florence. The inscription under the huge fresco reads (translated), “John Hawkwood, British knight, most prudent leader of his age, and most expert in the art of war”.

    In May of 1364, he led some 10,000 men and 3000 horses and surrounded the walls of Florence in a month-long siege during which they burned surrounding farmlands and homes. Finally, his men were paid a fortune to leave. In July of that year he set out again against Florence, but suffered his first major defeat. This was the beginning of a path that led to being the hero of Florence.

    The condottiero John Hawkwood was a veteran of the Hundred Years War, and a ruthless mercenary leader who commanded private armies of thousands, attacking cities in Italy on behalf of the highest bidder. He was known for his cunning and (relative) restraint. In the company of men even more bloodthirsty than him, he seemed a better businessman than most, often extracting enormous ransoms from cities under siege rather than going through the bother of sacking them.

    Of course, in order to wield that kind of threatening power, you need a really deadly reputation, which he also had in spades.

    Hawkwood rose to power during the lawless years of plague and corruption in Italy in the middle of the 14th century, famously called “the calamitous century” by scholar Barbara Tuchman. Not a country, but a hodge-podge of kingdoms, independent republics, and wealthy walled city states, there was endless bickering and grabs for land and power between them. With the pope up north in Avignon, whatever ability the Holy Roman Empire had to control events in the center of the peninsula disappeared. Enter the mercenaries.

    The Hundred Years War started between France and England as a fight over the crown in 1328 came to a pause in 1360 due to a truce. It seemed the war had finally ended (it actually dragged on well into the next century). Out of work, thousands of English soldiers headed home, but others chose to stay and go into business for themselves.

    These highly trained military men, their horses, their equipment, and their assorted hangers-on began to form their own private armies, known as “free companies”, and went looking for work. Hawkwood first formed the Great Company, then later took over the White Company from another mercenary (basis for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s book The White Company), and moved down into Italy. Over the years he fought against the pope, and for the pope, against the powerful Visconti of Milan, and then for them, eventually marrying a Visconti daughter. Finally he started moving around cities in Tuscany, and was employed by Pisa against their nearby enemy: Florence.

    For twenty years after his 1364 siege of Florence and subsequent defeat he followed the money from city to city, finally coming into the employ of Florence in 1390. He died there 1394 and was regarded as a Florentine hero. Even before he died, the city was hatching plans for a grand statue to honor him, in the tradition of the Ancient Roman equestrian statues, then very much in vogue. Amidst dithering and plan changes, a first fresco was painted in the (still domeless) Duomo, while the statue plans were sorted out. By 1436 it seems all plans had been scrapped, and the well known painter Paolo Uccello was brought in to give the fresco a proper overhaul.

    Uccello was best known for his detailed gothic style, and an obsession with perspective, so it is strange to note that when looking at the fresco the statue appears to be in line with the viewers eyeline, while the base of the horse statue is seen from slightly below. Uccello was asked to repaint his first version of the fresco, possibly to reduce the military stance of the first draft into a more parade-like stance, or possibly to adjust the perspective to make less of the horse’s anatomy visible in the church.

    The minimal coloring of the painting and the deathly pallor of the rider have led some to speculate that Hawkwood is here intended to be an allegory of Death, the fourth horseman mounted on his pale horse.

    After his death, Richard II of England requested that his body be returned to England, but it is uncertain that it ever happened. He may still be interred in an unmarked spot under the floor of the Duomo, his original resting place.

    If he was returned to England, he is most likely interred near the small carved memorial arch on the wall in the church in his hometown, St. Peters in Sible Hedingham, England.

    Also in the Duomo is another, very similar painting of another condotierro, Niccolo da Tolentino, also by Uccello.

  • Transformers: War for Cybertron revealed

    Gametrailers has released the debut trailer of the latest Transformers game developed by High Moon Studios. Transformers: War for Cybertron is a brand new game set in the home planet of the Autobots and Decepticons prior to

  • Meet the Arabic Blogosphere: Read The Comment Section


    The purpose of this post is two-fold: 1) To share my keynote presentation about blogging strategy, 2) Help connect the Arabic bloggers with my Western business readers and community.

    I’m in amazing Doha, in the nation of Qatar, who’s sponsored my travel to speak at the ictQATAR and my friends at ForumOne event about blogging.  Qatar wants to reach out and connect with the world, I’m excited to be one of those who can help bridge.

    Blogging conferences in the US were popular a few years ago –and have given way to Facebook conferences, and now Twitter or last week’s “Real Time” focus at LeWeb. The Middle East has been evolving quickly in the blogosphere, and this is a real focus for individuals, organizations, institutions, and governments to connect with others, and let their voice to be heard.m Embedded above, you’ll find my presentation, which has international examples of bloggers.  It has a section with data (sourced cited) and then I talk about where I see blogging headed into the next era. The purpose of this event is to educate local bloggers on how to most effectively use blogging tools to connect and reach to the outside world, so I’ll give a hand, and try to connect the community right here on this blog.

    Arabic Bloggers, Kindly Leave A Comment
    In the spirit of community, in this case, global community, at the end of my keynote, I’m suggesting that the attendees leave a comment on this post, to shout out to the world, leave a URL, and a few sentences on what they focus on.

    Web Strategy Community, Please Welcome Them
    My hope is that these Arabic bloggers will not only connect with each other, but also connect with my readers in the business world.  If you’re a regular reader of the Web Strategy blog –please welcome them, surf their blogs, and share about yourself if you’ve similar interests.  We recently installed Disqus so we have threaded conversations –making it easier to keep track of multiple discussions.   Be sure to return to this post in the future, in order to see how the conversation developers over time.

    To me, success for this project is to see at least two people connecting with each other in which they can develop a meaningful relationship for understanding, business, or friendship.   Blogs, a simple technology, that can bridge people around the world.

    Update: It’s a few hours after the conference, and I’ve had time to reflect, and connect with other bloggers that attended. I’m told this was the first time bloggers were able to get together in Qatar, and some met for the very first time face to face. It was an privilege to be part of this historical event, which was organized and sponsored by ictQatar, ForumOne, and the many bloggers who attended. Really an honor, I hope to return in the coming months, this is one of the highlights in my career, and a milestone for the social web. Also, do see their latest blog, which was launched at the event, both in Arabic and English. The Gulf Times featured the event on the front page (pic).