Looking to generate a large splash in Britain?

2010 February 23
Posted by spelzmanns

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Looking to generate a large splash in Britain? Even though most sand and sea loving tourists flock for the continent for that joy of beach, you can find improved spots correct in Britain. Escape the crowds and verify out these best five beaches in Britain.

Cornwall

It really is sung about, written about, and talked about…all with beneficial reason. Cornwall is really a legend, but it is reality, as well. Obtaining a trip to Cornwall is similar to getting a private history tour in naturalist’s playground with priceless vistas to boot. Anyplace alongside this peninsular county features a unique seaside, but maybe the most enjoyable is Watergate Bay, famed for its water sports activities and its kite flying. Hankering for some nearby delicacies? You are in luck. Celeb chef Jamie Oliver has a boutique restaurant up within the hill above the seashore.

Rhossili Seaside, South Wales
Beaches // Beach Blankets
Want to acquire the best of beach-variety in one particular area? Have a go with Rhossili. This seashore location is isolated ample for privacy, but populated enough for enjoyable. If you are in for some adventure, examine out the nearby ancient burial grounds. In the event you consider a stroll around the seashore at low tide, you’ll also get a glimpse in the historic shipwrecks located the following.

Blackpool Pleasure Seashore

Bring the family members to this one particular; they’ll love it. It truly is not only a beach. It is a theme park for the beach front. That means it can be the most effective of both worlds for kids and dad and mom alike. This Lancashire seaside town has superb breezes. Deliver your kite. And do not forget about your camera. The views from Boulevard Seashore are totally stunning.

Holkham

It’s difficult to say which component of this seashore is better-the scintillating sand dunes or the transcendental pine trees. Whatsoever it can be, this beachfront has appeal. It has even enjoyed a tad of fame for getting the film website for several movies. England’s greatest normal reserve surrounds this seaside, so be prepared not to satisfy up with significant crowds. We feel you will appreciate it.

Dungeness Beachfront

This sweet spot in Kent could be the fisherman’s dream. And, yes, we had to put one in here to the anglers. It is not just the sportsperson who will take pleasure in this hideaway. It’s also a place of attractive pebbled beaches and sand swept shores. In the expression, relaxing.

Last minute hotels are pretty easy to uncover along the coast. In the event you have to have a very last minute room, odds are you are going to locate something to suit your taste. Britain’s beaches are unbeatable, and if you get to understand them after, we bet you will be coming back again once again…really quickly.

Roo Sadegi is often a vacation writer based in London’s East End, though he spends significantly of his time travelling close to Europe’s vacation hotspots.

Google Earth has landed for Android 2.1

2010 February 22
Posted by spelzmanns

When the Google Nexus One was announced, there were several cool new features unveiled for the device and Android 2.1: interactive wallpapers, 3D graphics and support for Google Earth. The latter wasn’t available at the time, and there was no date set, but it looks like it’s available on Android Market now.

If you have Android 1.5 or 1.6, don’t bother. Not to burst your bubble, but your device doesn’t have the resources needed to power such an intensive application. Users reporting the app’s availability have all been Nexus One owners, which means this is a 2.1-only app so far. DROID owners will have to wait for the 2.1 update, which seems to be taking longer than most would have wanted or expected.

There’s nothing official yet from the Google blog, but we’ll be sure to keep you updated when the announcement is official.

[via Android Guys]

The Need for Email Backups

2010 February 1

emailbackup

Most modern businesses use email as their primary form of communication.  Billions of them are sent every single day, containing important, confident or even classified information across the ether from point to point.  Once the email has served its purpose it is most often forgotten by the recipient, but not by the business.  Most companies now have to have an email backup strategy that meets the requirements of business, and the law.

Entities like the SEC and FINRA introduced legislation that compels businesses to retain email information for between 3 and 6 years.  The records must be stored safely and securely, and in such a way that specific mails can be retrieved at will in a short amount of time.  There are also The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP), which is a set of rules to aid court procedures by ensuring a paper trail is left by every company in case of litigation.

Not having an email backup or archiving solution can leave a company exposed to prosecution themselves for non-compliance.  The term Archive or Email Compliance was termed to cover this need to preserve and store email communications to satisfy this legislation.

The backlash from the public was so severe when they learned about those high profile fraud cases that the government and the regulatory bodies had to act.  They couldn’t do nothing as public confidence in our businesses and institutions disappeared.  In response, a raft of legislation was passed that made sure there was enough evidence to quickly follow the path left by illegal dealing by companies and their employees.  It would either prevent crime as the paper trail being left would be incriminating, or provide enough evidence to prosecute one when it was discovered.

Many companies already had an email backup routine as part of a larger disaster recovery process, but soon found this to be inadequate.  Extra outlay and considerable time and effort was needed in order to ensure an organization was in compliance with the new rules.  So while the legislation was provided to assist business, it added a lot of extra burden on them to support it.  Some chose to take care of things in-house, while others couldn’t afford it.

This gave rise to outsourced solutions like Software as a Service and companies like Archive Compliance.  They took over the email archiving and compliance duties from their customers and ensured that companies were covered if they received an E-discovery request.  This allowed smaller organizations to remain within the law but prevented the need for a massive outlay of money and materiel.

A new industry was born out of necessity, one that is thriving and growing daily.  Offering a valuable service to clients by ensuring they remain within the law and compliant without having to set up a complete new email archiving system.

Academics fight rise of creationism at universities

2010 January 28
Posted by spelzmanns

A growing number of science students on British campuses and in sixth form colleges are challenging the theory of evolution and arguing that Darwin was wrong. Some are being failed in university exams because they quote sayings from the Bible or Qur’an as scientific fact and at one sixth form college in London most biology students are now thought to be creationists.

Earlier this month Muslim medical students in London distributed leaflets that dismissed Darwin’s theories as false. Evangelical Christian students are also increasingly vocal in challenging the notion of evolution.

In the United States there is growing pressure to teach creationism or “intelligent design” in science classes, despite legal rulings against it. Now similar trends in this country have prompted the Royal Society, Britain’s leading scientific academy, to confront the issue head on with a talk entitled Why Creationism is Wrong. The award-winning geneticist and author Steve Jones will deliver the lecture and challenge creationists, Christian and Islamic, to argue their case rationally at the society’s event in April.

“There is an insidious and growing problem,” said Professor Jones, of University College London. “It’s a step back from rationality. They (the creationists) don’t have a problem with science, they have a problem with argument. And irrationality is a very infectious disease as we see from the United States.”

Professor David Read, vice-president and biological sciences secretary of the Royal Society, said that they felt it was essential to address the issue now: “We have asked Steve Jones to deliver his lecture on creationism and evolution because there continues to be controversy over how evolution and other aspects of science are taught in some UK schools, colleges and universities. Our education system should provide access to the knowledge and understanding gained through the scientific method of experiment and observation, such as the theory of evolution through natural selection, and should withstand attempts to withhold or misrepresent this knowledge in order to promote particular beliefs, religious or otherwise.”

Leaflets questioning Darwinism were circulated among students at the Guys Hospital site of King’s College London this month as part of the Islam Awareness Week, organised by the college’s Islamic Society. One member of staff at Guys said that he found it deeply worrying that Darwin was being dismissed by people who would soon be practising as doctors.

The leaflets are produced by the Al-Nasr Trust, a Slough-based charity set up in 1992 with the aim of improving the understanding of Islam. The passage quoted from the Qur’an states: “And God has created every animal from water. Of them there are some that creep on their bellies, some that walk on two legs and some that walk on four. God creates what he wills for verily God has power over all things.”

A 21-year-old medical student and member of the Islamic Society, who did not want to be named, said that the Qur’an was clear that man had been created and had not evolved as Darwin suggests. “There is no scientific evidence for it [Darwin's Origin of Species]. It’s only a theory. Man is the wonder of God’s creation.”

He did not feel that a belief in evolution was necessary to study medicine although he added that, if writing about it was necessary for passing an exam, he would do so. “We want to become doctors and dentists, we want to pass our exams.” He added that God had not created mankind literally in six days. “It’s not six earth days,” he said, it could refer to several thousands of years but it had been an act of creation and not evolution.

At another London campus some students have been failed because they have presented creationism as fact. They have been told by their examiners that, while they are entitled to explain both sides of the debate, they cannot present the Bible or Qur’an as scientifically factual if they want to pass exams.

David Rosevear of the Portsmouth-based Creation Science Movement, which supports the idea of creationism, said that there was an increasing interest in the subject among students. “I’ve got no problem with an all-powerful God producing everything in six days,” he said. He said it was an early example of the six-day week. Students taking exams on the subject should not be dogmatic one way or the other. “I tell them – answer the question, it’s no good saying it [creationism] is a fact any more than saying evolution is a fact.”

A former lecturer in organic chemistry at Portsmouth polytechnic (now university) and ICI research scientist, Dr Rosevear said he had been invited to expound his theories at many colleges and had addressed the Cafe Scientifique, a student science society, at St Andrews university, Fife. “The students clearly came expecting to have a laugh but they found there was much more to it. Our attitude is – teach evolution but mention creationism and let students decide for themselves.”

Most of the next generation of medical and science students could well be creationists, according to a biology teacher at a leading London sixth-form college. “The vast majority of my students now believe in creationism,” she said, “and these are thinking young people who are able and articulate and not at the dim end at all. They have extensive booklets on creationism which they put in my pigeon-hole … it’s a bit like the southern states of America.” Many of them came from Muslim, Pentecostal or Baptist family backgrounds, she said, and were intending to become pharmacists, doctors, geneticists and neuro-scientists.

Backstory

The doctrine of creationism holds that the origins of humanity and the Earth are recent and divine as related in the book of Genesis. Strict creationists believe Adam and Eve are the mother and father of humanity and God created the Earth in six days. Support for creationism in the UK has traditionally lacked real vigour but in the US a recent poll found 45% of Americans believed God created life some time in the past 10,000 years. Recently American creationists suffered a setback when Ohio’s board of education threw out a model biology lesson plan which gave credence to creationism. Not all creationists believe in a strict six-day creation. Current scientific research suggests the universe is 13bn years old and humans are descended from ape-like creatures.

Moving Home. Getting Ready for the Movers

2010 January 28
Tags: ,
Posted by spelzmanns


Every time we move house, we swear it will be for the last time but it never is. Whether you’re buying or renting, moving home is one of those itches we simply can’t scratch until we actually up sticks and move somewhere else. New Year is a busy time for movers in Naples, real estate agents advise it’s one of the busier times of year, whatever the financial climate.

I have always moved myself, until I got married that is. Then things got complicated, we bought more furniture, and cushions, and all of a sudden there was an awful lot to move. This time round we got movers in to do it for us. While it was an extra expense on top of the new house and all the other costs, it was the best money we spent. Being able to hand it all off to someone else to take care of while we concentrated on the details was the best feeling ever.

Preparing for the movers is an art form. While you might think to leave everything for them, doing much of it yourself will lower the cost, and make sure everything goes smoothly.

Label all the boxes clearly. Pick a spot on each box and put the label in the same place on every one. Number them sequentially so you know that each one has arrived, and none are missing. It also pays to label them fragile or this way up if there are breakable things inside.

Move your prized possessions yourself. The TV, a piece of art, PC, whatever. If you value it highly, move it yourself. Then you know it will get there in one piece and you won’t have to spend weeks trying to get compensation from the movers. Most movers aren’t animals, but they are more interested with getting the job done that being over-careful. Even well packed items can get damaged, and accidents can happen.

If you have the time, or the energy, pile your boxes up either in a central place, or easy to get to places. That way the movers can load much quicker. Make sure anything labeled fragile is separate from the other boxes, so they should be loaded last.

If you can, disassemble your own furniture the day before. That will save time and money. Your moving quote will be much lower if you do all the preparation yourself. While it might be more work for you, it means the move will be completed much quicker and you’ll have some money left over for some celebratory champagne.

Keep any animals out of the way. If you have a dog or cat running around, someone is going to get hurt, and nobody wants that. Have them stay with friends, family or in a kennel or cattery for the day. It lets you worry about the move instead of them. Alternatively, clear a room and shut them in with some food and water until everyone is out.

Moving is a stressful business, and we can definitely recommend getting movers in to do the donkey work for you. By being prepared to prepare everything it shouldn’t cost as much as you fear, and things are much more likely to go smoothly if you’re in control.

Hilarious Ad About Cougars

2010 January 19
Posted by spelzmanns

Limbaugh Owns Some HuffPost Goons

2010 January 19
Posted by spelzmanns

AP IMPACT: With lead use barred, tests reveal toxic cadmium in children’s jewelry from China

2010 January 11
Posted by spelzmanns

Sun Jan 10, 7:30 PM

By Justin Pritchard, The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES – Barred from using lead in children’s jewelry because of its toxicity, some Chinese manufacturers have been substituting the more dangerous heavy metal cadmium in sparkling charm bracelets and shiny pendants being sold throughout the United States, an Associated Press investigation shows.

The most contaminated piece analyzed in lab testing performed for the AP contained a startling 91 per cent cadmium by weight. The cadmium content of other contaminated trinkets, all purchased at national and regional chains or franchises, tested at 89 per cent, 86 per cent and 84 per cent by weight. The testing also showed that some items easily shed the heavy metal, raising additional concerns about the levels of exposure to children.

A spokesman for the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, which regulates children’s products, said Sunday that the agency “is opening an investigation” and “will take action as quickly as possible to protect the safety of children.”

Cadmium is a known carcinogen. Like lead, it can hinder brain development in the very young, according to recent research.

Children don’t have to swallow an item to be exposed – they can get persistent, low-level doses by regularly sucking or biting jewelry with a high cadmium content.

To gauge cadmium’s prevalence in children’s jewelry, the AP organized lab testing of 103 items bought in New York, Ohio, Texas and California. All but one were purchased in November or December.

The results: 12 per cent of the pieces of jewelry contained at least 10 per cent cadmium.

Some of the most troubling test results were for bracelet charms sold at Walmart, at the jewelry chain Claire’s and at a dollar store. High amounts of cadmium also were detected in “The Princess and The Frog” movie-themed pendants.

“There’s nothing positive that you can say about this metal. It’s a poison,” said Bruce A. Fowler, a cadmium specialist and toxicologist with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. On the CDC’s priority list of 275 most hazardous substances in the environment, cadmium ranks No. 7.

Jewelry industry veterans in China say cadmium has been used in domestic products there for years. Zinc, the metal most cited as a replacement for lead in imported jewelry being sold in the United States, is a much safer and nontoxic alternative. But the jewelry tests conducted for AP, along with test findings showing a growing presence of cadmium in other children’s products, demonstrate that the safety threat from cadmium is being exported.

A patchwork of federal consumer protection regulations does nothing to keep these nuggets of cadmium from U.S. store shelves. If the products were painted toys, they would face a recall. If they were industrial garbage, they could qualify as hazardous waste. But since there are no cadmium restrictions on jewelry, such items are sold legally.

The CPSC has cracked down on the dangers posed by lead and products known to have killed children, such as cribs, it has never recalled an item for cadmium – even though it has received scattered complaints based on private test results for at least the past two years.

There is no definitive explanation for why children’s jewelry manufacturers, virtually all from China in the items tested, are turning to cadmium. But a reasonable double whammy looms: With lead heavily regulated under the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008, factories scrambled for substitutes, just as cadmium prices plummeted.

That law set a new, stringent standard for lead in children’s products: Only the very smallest amount is permissible – no more than 0.03 per cent of the total content. The statute has led manufacturers to drastically reduce lead in toys and jewelry.

The law also contained the first explicit regulation of cadmium, though the standards are significantly less strict than lead and apply only to painted toys, not jewelry.

To determine how much cadmium a child could be exposed to, items are bathed in a solution that mimics stomach acid to see how much of the toxin would leach out after being swallowed.

The jewelry testing for AP was conducted by chemistry professor Jeff Weidenhamer of Ashland University in Ohio, who over the past few years has provided the CPSC with results showing high lead content in products that were later recalled. His lab work for AP assessed how much cadmium was in each item. Overall, 12 of the 103 items each contained at least 10 per cent cadmium. Two others contained lower amounts, while the other 89 were clean.

Ten of the items with the highest cadmium content were then run through the stomach acid test to see how much would escape. Although that test is used only in regulation of toys, AP used it to see what hazard an item could pose because unlike the regulations, a child’s body doesn’t distinguish between cadmium leached from jewelry and cadmium leached from a toy.

“Clearly it seems like for a metal as toxic as cadmium, somebody ought to be watching out to make sure there aren’t high levels in items that could end up in the hands of kids,” said Weidenhamer.

The CPSC reacted swiftly to the AP story. Agency spokesman Scott Wolfson said: “CPSC will open an investigation into the products tested by Professor Weindenhamer, who we have worked closely with before.” He said CPSC would study Weidenhamer’s results, attempt to buy the contaminated products content and “take appropriate action as quickly as possible.”

Weidenhamer’s test results include:

-Three flip flop bracelet charms sold at Walmart contained between 84 and 86 per cent cadmium. The charms fared the worst of any item on the stomach acid test; one shed more cadmium in 24 hours than what World Health Organization guidelines deem a safe exposure over 60 weeks for a 33-pound child.

The bracelet was purchased in August 2008. The company that imported them, Florida-based Sulyn Industries, stopped selling the item to Wal-Mart Corp. in November 2008, the firm’s president said. Wal-Mart would not comment on whether the charms are still on store shelves, or how many have been sold.

Sulyn’s president, Harry Dickens, said the charms were subjected to testing standards imposed by both Wal-Mart and federal regulation – but were not tested for cadmium.

In separate written statements, Dickens and Wal-Mart said they consider safety a very high priority. “We consistently seek to sell only those products that meet safety and regulatory standards,” Wal-Mart said. “Currently there is no required cadmium standard for children’s jewelry.”

As was the case with every importer or retailer that responded to AP’s request for comment on the tests, neither Sulyn nor Wal-Mart would address whether the results concerned them or if the products should be recalled.

-Four charms from two “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” bracelets sold at a Dollar N More store in Rochester, N.Y., were measured at between 82 and 91 per cent cadmium. The charms also fared poorly on the stomach acid test. Two other charms from the same bracelets were subjected to a leaching test which recreates how much cadmium would be released in a landfill and ultimately contaminate groundwater. Based on those results, if the charms were waste from manufacturing, they would have had to be specially handled and disposed of under U.S. environmental law. The company that imported the Rudolph charms, Buy-Rite Designs, Inc. of Freehold, N.J., has gone out of business.

-Two charms on a “Best Friends” bracelet bought at Claire’s, a jewelry chain with nearly 3,000 stores in North America and Europe, consisted of 89 and 91 per cent cadmium. The charms also leached alarming amounts in the simulated stomach test. Informed of the results, Claire’s issued a statement pointing out that children’s jewelry is not required to pass a cadmium leaching test.

“Claire’s has its products tested by independent accredited third-party laboratories approved by the Consumer Product Safety Commission in compliance with the commission’s standards, and has passing test results for the bracelet using these standards,” the statement said. Those standards scrutinize lead content, not cadmium.

-Pendants from four “The Princess and The Frog” necklaces bought at Walmart ranged between 25 and 35 per cent cadmium, though none failed the stomach acid test nor the landfill leaching test. The Walt Disney Co., which produced the popular animated movie, said in a statement that test results provided by the manufacturer, Rhode Island-based FAF Inc., showed the item complied with all applicable safety standards.

An official at FAF’s headquarters did not respond to multiple requests for comment when informed of Weidenhamer’s results; a woman at the company’s office in southern China who would not give her name said FAF products “might naturally contain some very small amounts of cadmium. We measure it in parts per million because the content is so small, for instance one part per million.” However, the tests conducted for AP showed the pendants contained between 246,000 and 346,000 parts per million of cadmium.

“It comes down to the following: Cadmium causes cancer. How much cadmium do you want your child eating?” said Michael R. Harbut, a doctor who has treated adult victims of cadmium poisoning and is director of the environmental cancer program at the Karmanos Cancer Institute in Detroit. “In my view, the answer should be none.”

Xu Hongli, a cadmium specialist with the Beijing office of Asian Metal Ltd., a market research and consultancy firm, said test results showing high cadmium levels in some Chinese-made metal jewelry did not surprise her. Using cadmium alloys has been “a relatively common practice” among manufacturers in the eastern cities of Yiwu and Qingdao and the southern province of Sichuan, Xu said.

“Some of their products contain 90 per cent cadmium or higher,” she acknowledged. “Usually, though, they are more careful with export products.”

She said she thought that manufacturers were becoming aware of cadmium’s dangers, and are using it less, “But it will still take a while for them to completely shift away from using it.”

The CPSC has received dozens of incident reports of cadmium in products over the past few years, said Gib Mullan, the agency’s director of compliance and field operations. Though the CPSC has authority to go after a product deemed a public danger under the Federal Hazardous Substances Act – the law used in lead-related recalls several years ago – there have been no enforcement actions.

“We are a small agency so we can’t do everything we think would be a good idea. We have to try to pick our spots,” Mullan said. At most, the agency can investigate 10 per cent of the tens of thousands of reports filed by the public each year, he said.

With the help of an outside firm, the CPSC has started a scientific literature review of cadmium and other heavy metals, including how the substances fare in leaching tests, according to spokesman Wolfson. “If there has a been a shift in manufacturing to the use of cadmium, CPSC will take appropriate action.”

Meanwhile, the CPSC’s Mullan cites “a trend upward” in cadmium reports the agency has received – and private-sector testing AP reviewed shows cadmium is showing up more frequently.

Two outfits that analyze more than a thousand children’s products each year checked their data at AP’s request. Both said their findings of cadmium above 300 parts per million in an item – the current federal limit for lead – increased from about 0.5 per cent of tests in 2007 to about 2.2 per cent of tests in 2009. Those tests were conducted using a technology called XRF, a handheld gun that bounces X-rays off an item to estimate how much lead, cadmium or other elements it contains. While the results are not as exact as lab testing, the CPSC regularly uses XRF in its product screening.

Much of the increase found by the Michigan-based HealthyStuff.org came in toys with polyvinyl chloride plastic, according to Jeff Gearhart, the group’s research director. Both lead and cadmium can be used to fortify PVC against the sun’s rays. Data collected by a Washington-based company called Essco Safety Check led its president, Seth Goldberg, to suspect that substitution of cadmium for lead partly explains the increase he’s seen.

Rick Locker, general counsel for the Toy Industry Association of America, and Sheila A. Millar, a lawyer representing the Fashion Jewelry Trade Association, said their industries make products that are safe and insisted cadmium is not widely used.

Millar said jewelry makers often opt for zinc these days. “While FJTA can only speak to the experience of its members,” Millar wrote in an email, “widespread substitution of cadmium is not something they see.”

My first post!

2010 January 11
Posted by spelzmanns

Welcome to Blog.com.

This is your first post, produced automatically by Blog.com. You should edit or delete it, and then start blogging!