Anyone found the Sue Gray report?Thought for the Day
Anyone found the Sue Gray report?Thought for the Day
There is a good article in the Guardian, which indicates that this is not about the ships at all. Its about the land they are on and their status as Freeport's. What a State gives a State can take away, so the UK State could simply rescind the Freeport Status of these properties owned by P&O.But you cannot get rid of hundreds in one go without breaking the law (possibly criminal as well as civil) - which potentially asks whether the redundancy itself is legal.
This is an interesting take on cards in Russia:Surely this tweet has to be a joke?
"The Russian bank Tinkoff said it can't issue new cards because it has run out of plastic. This is not a joke "
https://www.reddit.com/r/CloseTheSky2022/comments/tg9cus
Hardly surprising and probably deliberate, since it neatly fits their propaganda that they are friends of Ukraine, rescuing the Ukrainians from Western sourced Nazi infiltration with a "special operation"!And the three Russians arrived wearing Blue and Yellow suits!
Well done! Wow, given the wholesale discarding of paperwork that goes in in many companies, you're lucky they even had mimeographed shees! I still regret throwing away so many old motherboards, cards, monitors, RAM, hard drives and laptops etc.etc. etc. about 10 years ago (four wheelie bins full), and the ones I threw away about 10 years before that (even more wheelie bins full), because they were all still functional and would have been useful for people with very old systems. Much that I threw away would be extremely difficult to source working examples of now. I even threw away a couple of "Useless" (to me at the time) but functional PCs and laptops which are now increasing in value. I have been too ruthless in my downsizing of the old computer and parts heap... Old computers can work for far longer than modern ones: someone I know still uses a Commodore PET to do his accounts (local garage). My old Sinclair ZX81 still runs my central heating system.Funny you should say that. About a decade ago, My College was donated a Narrow wave tank apparatus ... Based on a 80286 processor and customised driving software, .along with ancient ADC Cards . Bluntly we got a big van load of piece parts. How much was it worth?.... Absolutely no idea but modern versions would be into the millions. It had been dismantled and was rusting away in another University . Anyway, I took on to get the Electronics working, and we successfully got the software over to an early model Pentium ... We needed that generation because it was PC AT cards. Although the company who originally designed the technology is still in existence, this model was in their pre history and they had no remaining product knowledge, except a few mimographed sheets. Anyway all recommissioned and a new generation of Ph.D students are designing ocean energy renewable energy.
The Stirling Engine at last makes a comeback!
Lviv to Calais, 1788 km.This doesn't look like it will be a short war - I wonder how long it will be befoe Ukrainians drown trying to cross the channel?
The local dry cleaners, ran and maybe still does run, its system with a Amstrad 6128. The conveyor belt with all the clothes hangers has each location numbered. When a jacket is entered, it is given the number of its location and the client a little slip. Then when you come back. The number is entered into the keyboard and the rail trundles around until the code matches.. Now they used it the last time we got stuff dry-clean ed ..which is a few years ago.. On one level its very simple ..just an up counter with a reset switch ..it only rotates one way. On the other its a brilliant use of cheap technology.Well done! Wow, given the wholesale discarding of paperwork that goes in in many companies, you're lucky they even had mimeographed shees! I still regret throwing away so many old motherboards, cards, monitors, RAM, hard drives and laptops etc.etc. etc. about 10 years ago (four wheelie bins full), and the ones I threw away about 10 years before that (even more wheelie bins full), because they were all still functional and would have been useful for people with very old systems. Much that I threw away would be extremely difficult to source working examples of now. I even threw away a couple of "Useless" (to me at the time) but functional PCs and laptops which are now increasing in value. I have been too ruthless in my downsizing of the old computer and parts heap... Old computers can work for far longer than modern ones: someone I know still uses a Commodore PET to do his accounts (local garage). My old Sinclair ZX81 still runs my central heating system.
I'm fairly sure I still have the thermal paper printer for the Ti calculators in my attic. Unfortunately, the calculator gave up some years ago.And in my attic a real live working Ti59 Programmable Calculator from ,1978... But I just tend to use a simulation of it on my phone and PC nowadays.
Yes the Android emulator is first rate. I use it on a number of phones and now the tablet . I bought a number of different calculators for Android over the years, but I just always go back to it.I'm fairly sure I still have the thermal paper printer for the Ti calculators in my attic. Unfortunately, the calculator gave up some years ago.
I had a look at the Android Ti emulator and it looks very good.
Great use of an Amstrad! The Minisport looks innovative, very neat small useful package. This chap revived his, used an IDE to CF converter:The local dry cleaners, ran and maybe still does run, its system with a Amstrad 6128. The conveyor belt with all the clothes hangers has each location numbered. When a jacket is entered, it is given the number of its location and the client a little slip. Then when you come back. The number is entered into the keyboard and the rail trundles around until the code matches.. Now they used it the last time we got stuff dry-clean ed ..which is a few years ago.. On one level its very simple ..just an up counter with a reset switch ..it only rotates one way. On the other its a brilliant use of cheap technology.
Somewhere in my shed, I have a Zenith minisport .. look it up. A really miniature PC complete with monochrome LcD. And CP/M. And in my attic a real live working Ti59 Programmable Calculator from ,1978... But I just tend to use a simulation of it on my phone and PC nowadays.
Some of the early PCs I used to see in use, and sometimes use myself, had a motherboard design fault. If you plugged in the keyboard after it was powered up, the board would fail and need to be replaced. (Can't remember if the same happened with mice - or not.)Great use of an Amstrad! The Minisport looks innovative, very neat small useful package. This chap revived his, used an IDE to CF converter:
https://www.reddit.com/r/vintagecomputing/comments/cya5kx
I've always been a fan of TI's programmable graphing calcs, your working Ti59 has got to be very rare by now.
Between end of April and end of May latest, maybe cease fire before.When do you think the war in Ukraine will be over?
I'm not sure about the war in Ukraine per se, but the 'war against Putin' will keep on going until another entity is created to replace the current Emmanuel Goldstein figure we currently have.When do you think the war in Ukraine will be over?