Add to Google! Add to My Yahoo! Subscribe with Bloglines Pluck Add to NewsGator

October 2007

Astounding loss of Arctic sea ice

25

October

Here’s new NASA satellite video showing the astounding loss of Arctic sea ice.

The 2007 Arctic summer sea ice has reached the lowest extent of perennial ice cover on record - nearly 25% less than the previous low set in 2005.

The area of the perennial ice has been steadily decreasing since the satellite record began in 1979, at a rate of about 10% per decade. But the 2007 minimum, reached on September 14, is far below the previous record made in 2005 and is about 38% lower than the climatological average. Such a dramatic loss has implications for ecology, climate and industry.



Falsely accused woman freed after 70 years

21

October

I think stories like this tend to scare me more than anything. How awful.
“Seventy years locked up in institutions hardly seems to be a punishment that befits the crime of stealing half-a-crown.

However, it is just such a fate that befell Jean Gambell when at the age of 15, in 1937, she was falsely accused of stealing 2s 6d (12.5p) from the doctor’s surgery where she worked as a cleaner.

She was sectioned under the 1890 Lunacy Act and even though the money was later found, she has been moved from mental institution to mental institution. More recently, she went into a care home and has been lost to her family, who thought she was dead.
advertisement

But last month, by chance, her brother stumbled across correspondence which led to the discovery of her existence and the family was reunited.

Her brother David Gambell, 63, who still lives in his mother’s old home in Wirral, Merseyside, received a questionnaire addressed to his mother from Macclesfield Mews Care Home.

“I thought it was just a survey for old people and I was about to throw it away when I saw Jean’s name pencilled in on one corner,” he said yesterday.

“I couldn’t believe it. I suddenly realised that my sister was still alive. I rang the care home straight away and they confirmed that our sister was there.” He and his brother Alan, who had last seen their sister as small children when she was allowed to visit home with two wardens as guards, travelled to the Macclesfield home.

They were told by staff that their 85-year-old sister was deaf, could only communicate in writing and was very unlikely to remember them.

“A little old lady on walking sticks came in,” said Alan. “She looked at us and cried out: ‘Alan…David’. Then she put her arms around us. It was very emotional.

“I am sure that what has kept her going all these years was the challenge of proving to the authorities that she had a family. The trouble was, nobody would listen to her.”

The brothers spent much of their childhood in orphanages because their parents were so poor. They said that they had later discovered that their father had tried for years to get Jean freed after she was put in Cranage Hall mental hospital in Macclesfield for being “of feeble mind”, but was unsuccessful because her records had been mislaid.

She spent years, lost in a maze of institutions and care homes, trying to convince people in authority that she had a family. But nobody would believe her.

Macclesfield Social Services are now conducting an inquiry into Miss Gambell’s incarceration.”


Ubuntu Studio 7.10

20

October

Ubuntu Studio

Out of all of the official Ubuntu derivatives, the version that’s received the least amount of attention during the 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon) development cycle looks to have been Ubuntu Studio. If you missed out on our Ubuntu Studio 7.04 coverage, where this multimedia distribution had debuted, this is a Linux distribution targeted for the multimedia folks. Whether you’re into audio, video, or graphics editing, Ubuntu Studio ships with a large set of multimedia tools backed by an Ubuntu-quality GNOME desktop.


“Artificial life” created as scientist makes sythetic chromosome

07

October

things

Craig Venter, a DNA researcher that had a part in deciphering the human genome, has stuck together 580,000 base pairs of genetic code to create an entirely new and alien chromosome. Based around the Mycoplasma genitalium bacterium (pictured in all its primordial glory), the new chromosome is then implanted into a living cell and renamed as Mycoplasma laboratorium - don’t you just love science jokes? The new “life form” is reliant on the host cell for replication and metabolism so it’s not exactly entirely synthetic, but as the DNA is different, it is effectively an artificial form of life. Sounds like the human race’s really doomed now: ultimately, all we’re doing is setting the robots up with a tag team.


Next Page »

Recent Comments
  • Josef Nankivell: Hi Diptesh, You will need to use Dijkstra's Algorithm to find the shortest path/value when...
  • Diptesh: The above code is good. But i'm tryin to find several alternative paths using stored procedure, with data...
  • kiv: Hi ac adapter! Sounds like a good idea initially, I will look in to this further. Thanks for your comment!
  • kiv: Hi osman, The methods of scrolling on the Viewty change depending one what you are doing. > In the main...
  • ac adapter: What about simply wiping the key (i.e., unmounting the encrypted volume) when the machine is about to get...

Blog Stats

So far I've written 48,853 words in 110 posts. 27 comments have been posted, with a total of 891 words.