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  • ASD-STAN (AeroSpace & Defence Standards organization)

    ASD-STAN (AeroSpace & Defence Standards organization)

    The ASD-STANdards organisation, based in Brussels, were running an outdated website which was hosting a document sales system with over 12,000 standards documents, as well as a customised document creation process.

    Brian was commissioned to Project Manage the provision of a new website that could be easily managed by the customer, rather than rely on expensive external management.

    The new web site was built with WordPress with Easy Digital Downloads being the primary plugin. Website design was provided by local firm RedGraphic.

    Elyse Truchon, Sales & Services Manager @ ASD-STAN said,
    “Brian is reliable and resourceful, geared at problem-solving. A very good listener, he also anticipates his clients’ needs”.

  • Ever wanted a Hoverboard, Marty?

    Ever wanted a Hoverboard, Marty?

    The world’s first, real, Hoverboard (runs on a conductive metal surface) is revealed here:
    https://theridechannel.com/features/2014/11/tony-hawk-rides-hoverboard

  • Tips for Training your Brain as you grow older

    Tips for Training your Brain as you grow older

    I recently got forwarded a link to a copy of an interesting document on Brain Training for older people sponsored by Citrix company GoToMeeting from the Center for Brain Health at the University of Texas at Dallas. As I’m one of its targets, I thought it deserved a wider audience.

    Here’s the direct link to the PDF:
    https://www.gotomeeting.com/online/dam/pdf/en/resources/wp/Chapman-GoToMeeting-Train-Your-Brain-Whitepaper.pdf

  • Why?

    Why?

    So, what do we say when confronted with Radicalism, Extremism and its ilk?

    I’d normally point in the direction of Education, particularly when, for example, religious fundamentalism arises in the developing world.

    I’m not surprised that when the only education available is from, say, an Islamic Madrassar, with their limited curricula and emphasis on doctrinaire content, that the output is ill-educated, indoctrinated pupils. That some/many of these go on to act out extremist acts in the name of their religion can be firmly linked to that limited education, surely?

    But the fact is that western/developed nations are fostering the growth of increasing numbers of “radicalised”, “fundamentalist”, “extremists”. And we cannot blame the lack of a reasonable education on the inculcation of these people.

    So what is it that makes them susceptible to the barmy notions of the crazy clerics? And this isn’t restricted to Islamists. We have the same thing going on with the ultra-Zionist Jews, extremist Buddhist monks, Hindu fundamentalism as well as militant Christian groups like the Maronites in Lebanon and the protestant/catholic civil war in Ireland.

    There is a whole raft of other “minority” religions that have various similar levels of indoctrination. The Branch Davidians, the Jonestown People’s Temple and the Heaven’s Gate group all created their moments in horrible history.

    And although not given to promoting genocide there are plenty of groups who are on edge of acceptability. Scientology has been a contentious body from its outset. It was used to practicing recruitment on the High Streets of many towns, and to its critics “preying on the weak and vulnerable” to become members in times of need and uncertainty. For me, that has echoes in the radicalisation occurring in Islam, albeit on a much wider scale and with far more horrendous outcomes for our society.

    Why is it that certain of us (i.e. Human Beings) are susceptible to this sort of approach? Are we all vulnerable to it given certain emotional conditions? What is it about the human-psyche that abandons rational thought and starts buying this nonsense “hook-line-and-sinker”?

    Because most of the nonsense spouted by these religious and quasi-religious bodies is as plausible as the myth of Santa Claus bringing the presents.

    And tell me different when these groups stop calling for and carrying out murder in their name. Where are we, as a race, when we are able to justify killing others, for not thinking the right thoughts or for holding belief in the wrong schism?

  • Why the Rosetta Mission was worth €1.4bn

    Why the Rosetta Mission was worth €1.4bn

    (for Ian Moore)

    I have found the success of the Rosetta Mission properly inspiring, but I know many who have been cynical about the purpose and cost of the mission.

    Can those two perspectives be reconciled? Was the cost justified, especially in the times of austerity that we are enduring?

    I guess we might address the latter point first: We should put aside, the current (and hopefully) transient financial fix we are in. Due largely to the failure of the crooked worldwide banking system, this was neither apparent nor predictable 20 or so years ago when the mission was being planned and funding was being approved.

    That funding has cost each European citizen about €3.50/£2.90 over the period 1996-2015. That’s less than €0.20 (16p) a year.

    And what did we get for that money? (Apart from Ian’s “expensive answer is to put a washing machine on a comet?”)

    We (and that we equals the human race) got to do something quite extraordinary that will answer some fundamental questions about the creation of the universe.

    Those scientists devised a plan that found, orbited and landed a hugely sophisticated piece of equipment on a tiny object some 500,000 km (300,000 miles) away travelling at 18 km/s (40,000 mph).

    That object is a likely remnant of the birth of the solar system. Comets may be the source of terrestrial water or more… We don’t know for sure and want to find out as much as we can. It’s the core of science; to discover.

    By this bold and ambitious experiment we stand a chance of finding out new and important information and knowledge.

    Is this pursuit to better our understanding not worth the cost of a pint of beer over 20 years? We might compare and contrast the cost of say, a different rocket science: 161 Cruise missiles @ $1.4m each, launched by the US/UK at the outset of the Libyan intervention (i.e. nearly quarter of a $billion in just a few weeks).

    I wonder whether the citizens of the newly united kingdoms of Castille & Aragon were unhappy when Queen Isabella funded the voyages of Columbus?

    Sources: BBC, ESA and Center for Public Integrity
    Main image courtesy ESA

  • Using WordPress

    Using WordPress

     

    For many years, I avoided WordPress. Every time I’d try an embark on a WordPress site, I encountered something designed with a completely different mind-set to my own. To me it was entirely counter-intuitive: I just didn’t get it. So I left it alone.

    More recently I have been involved in projects where WordPress has been the client’s preferred option, and I have therefore been forced to revisit the platform and reappraise.

    So what’s changed in the last couple of years? Well, first of all, the management page seems to be be more logical and although the learning curve is steep, I have not felt as though I was on an alien planet and (unlike Uhuru) wasn’t able to speak their language.

    Later, I’ll return here with more on WordPress concepts, posts, pages and themes and how to get your head around building a good looking site…