Oxygen for babies

August 26, 2008 · 1 Comment
Filed under: en, transport, travel 


Oxygen Masks - 3
Originally uploaded by drbrain

There was a story today about a Ryanair flight which lost cabin pressure as a result of which oxygen masks were released.

Fairly standard stuff that doesn’t worry me overly.

However, it made me wonder what to do about babies under two. You see, you can’t book individual seats for them, they have to sit on your lap.

So what do you do if you need oxygen and you only get one mask for your baby and yourself?

I asked in the comments section in the article I linked to above, and somebody relied:

It depends from aircraft to aircraft but all aircraft have 4 masks on certain rows, and therefore on a full flight passengers with babies should be checked into a row which has 4 masks. If in doubt check with check-in staff who should be adequately trained to know the aircraft configuration and also with cabin crew. It is a part of basic safety training that you know which rows have 4 masks, but again I can’t give a general comment on this as every single aircraft type I have operated on has differed in this respect.

However, a different person followed up:

However we flew on a Ryan air 737 over the weekend with our small baby and asked to sit in a row with 4 oxygen masks. The cabin crew didn’t seem to know what we were talking about!

So what do you do if the crew can’t help you and you can’t find a seat with an empty seat next to it?

A vote for oblivion?

August 26, 2008 · 1 Comment
Filed under: en, politics 


Day 115 - Vote
Originally uploaded by jackhynes

I seem consistently to disagree with the majority of libdems: I voted for Chris Huhne twice, not for Ming and not for Clegg, and this time I voted for Rumbles, not Scott. :-(

However, Tavish Scott won easily with 59% of the first priorities.

Something is rotten in the Libdem party. In all these elections, the membership have followed the advice of the great and good, which both demonstrates that the upper echelons prefer continuity to change, and that the majority of members are happy to follow their advice instead of thinking on their own.

The specific reason I didn’t want Scott to become leader is that the Libdems have been performing dismally ever since the last Holyrood election, starting with their disastrous decision to not even enter coalition talks with the SNP, and as far as I know, Scott has been the principal architect of this policy.

To my mind, the best chance for the Libdems in Scotland would be to work constructively with the SNP, and Rumbles seemed to be the one who was closest to recommending this.

Perhaps Scott will surprise me positively, but I have my doubts. I expect the Libdems to become increasingly irrelevant until they find the courage to elect a leader who wants to make a difference.

Y

August 25, 2008 · 2 Comments
Filed under: en, linguistics 


Scrabble Letter Y
Originally uploaded by Leo Reynolds

Perhaps because my native language is Danish, where y is a vowel and (almost) never a consonant, I’ve always regarded the English letter as primarily a vowel that can sometimes act as a consonant.

However, native speakers seem to regard it primarily as a consonant.

When Charlotte moved it with me two years ago, she was six years old and had just started in P2. Back then she hadn’t learnt the names of the letters yet and instead called them (with a Scottish accent) /a, bə, ˈkʌrle kə, də, ɛ, fə, ɡə, hə, ɪ, dʒə, ˈkɪkən kə, lə, mə, nə, ɔ, pə, kwə, rə, sə, tə, ʌ, və, wə, ks, , zə/.

And the daughter of a friend of Phyllis’s parents is called Yvonne /jɪˈvɔn/.

John Wells has also picked up on it twice: In “Yngling”, he spotted he pronunciation /ˈjɪŋlɪŋ/ for yngling (the keelboat), and in “Ylang-Ylang”, he had come across /jəˌlæŋ jəˈlæŋ/ for ylang-ylang.

I wonder whether yttrium is gradually becoming /ˈjɪtriəm/, too. I guess I’ll find out when Marcel starts chemistry next year.

Vingummidrik

August 24, 2008 · Comment
Filed under: da, fooddrink 


Jacques Fruits des Bois Fruit Cider
Originally uploaded by Caro’s Lines

Der var tilbud på to flasker belgisk cider med frugt af mærket Jacques i Sainsbury’s i dag.

Jeg havde set den nævnt i nogle reklamer, og vi besluttede os for at prøve den, så vi købte en flaske rød (”fruits des bois”) og en flaske hvid, og vi drak førstnævnte til aftensmaden.

Jeg véd ikke helt, hvad jeg havde forventet, men i hvert fald en ret voksen smag.

Så jeg fik noget af en overraskelse, da cideren viste sig at smage som flydende vingummi med brus!

Hvis det ikke var, fordi den holder 5,5%, ville den være oplagt at servere til børnefødselsdage.

Periodic table of mixology

August 23, 2008 · 1 Comment
Filed under: en, fooddrink, science 


Periodic table of mixology
Originally uploaded by viralbus

This poster (”The Periodic Table of Mixology”) that I once bought for my sister is hanging outside my parents’ bedroom (click on it for a more readable version).

As its name implies, it’s presenting cocktails in a format similar to the periodic table of elements.

When I first saw it, I thought it was great. However, the more I study it, the more annoyed I get.

The real periodic table is systematic, but the only feature resembling a system here is having tequila-based drinks in the first columns, vodka-based ones in the next ones, and so on.

As far as I can see, nothing else is systematic. Column 1 is not different from column 2 in any systematic fashion, and the rows don’t display any regular differences at all.

Somebody should redo this properly.

First of all, I think a higher number should imply a stronger drink. That is, cocktail number 1 should be almost non-alcoholic, number 2 should be slightly stronger, and so on.

Second, there should be similarities both horizontally and vertically. I wouldn’t necessarily order it by spirit, but perhaps rather by appeareance or taste.

It won’t be easy, I realise, but surely it would be a worthwhile research project for some inebriated chemistry students…?

Either bad or mad

August 21, 2008 · 1 Comment
Filed under: en, health, politics 


IMG_5078
Originally uploaded by Patrick Denker

There’s an important article in The Times today about how to deal with pædophiles.

It basically argues that we normally either punish criminals and then let them get back to normal life afterwards (even though we know they might reoffend), or we decide they’re ill and offer them treatment (possibly for the rest of their lives) instead.

However, we seem to want to do both when it comes to pædophiles: First we punish them, and we then stigmatise them for the rest of their lives because they’re sick.

I had never thought about this before, but I think it’s true.

When it comes to deciding whether to opt for bad or mad, I think we should split the group into two.

An 18-year-old who had consensual sex with a 14-year-old is not a pædophile in my book, and if we think it’s not OK, it’s definitely a crime, not an illness, and when he’s completed his punishment, he should be free to live a normal life afterwards.

On the other hand, middle-aged men raping small kids are in a very different category. It makes much better sense to try to cure them of their urges in high-security psychiatric hospitals and only release them back into society when (or if) the psychiatrists think they have been cured.

The reality of the long tail

August 21, 2008 · Comment
Filed under: en, media 


Long-tailed Tit
Originally uploaded by Sergey Yeliseev

There’s an article in Slate discussing whether the long tail is as long as has been thought. Please do read it.

I think there might be a lot of truth in this, and I think it’s got to do with knowledge: In order to buy an obscure book or film, you first need to know it exists. It simply is not very likely anybody will pay money for a random song from iTunes that nobody has recommended to them.

Because of this, I think the size of the long tail is depending on online communities. If people mainly get their information from TV and other mainstream media, they’re going to buy items from the head, not the long tail.

Only if many people get a lot of their information from blogs or Facebook groups or other specialised contexts is it likely that the tail gets really long.

Maths and languages

August 20, 2008 · Comment
Filed under: education, en 


Mathematics
Originally uploaded by Robert Scarth

There was an article in a recent issue of The Economist arguing that it’s better to do maths or languages at high school rather than more specialised subjects such as economics:

Few economics faculties demand that applicants produce an economics A-level, and most pupils who study the subject at school do not pursue it further. Second, the curve-shifting brand of economics taught in schools is qualitatively different from the complex modelling required at university. Economics is not like foreign languages (also, and more regrettably, in decline in secondary schools): there is no particular reason to learn it young, when time could perhaps be better spent acquiring general mathematical skills.

I couldn’t agree more. When I started studying computer science at school, my problem was not that I hadn’t done computing at high school but that I hadn’t done enough maths. Similarly, biology (at least in Aarhus) often turns down applicants who’s specialised in biology in high school rather than the more fundamental skills of chemistry etc.

I tend to think there is too much choice in secondary schools these days. It’d be much better teaching all students copious amounts of maths, chemistry, grammar, modern languages (to a fluent level!), history and other fundamental disciplines.

British surnames

August 19, 2008 · Comment
Filed under: culture, en 

The distribution of the surname Gautier in Great Britain in 1998.

The distribution of the surname Gautier in Great Britain in 1998.

Some time ago, I blogged about surname distributions in Germany.

Now I’ve found one for Great Britain.

Unfortunately, there are too few Widmanns to show up, but there are more than a hundred Gautiers, it seems. :-)

Surname equality

August 19, 2008 · Comment
Filed under: culture, en 


O Donnell 1 Norton
Originally uploaded by jane_lyons2000

There’s an article in The Independent today about a guy who’s taken his wife’s surname.

Although this practice is not that common in Denmark, I think the UK is quite a bit behind Denmark in this regard. I definitely find it utterly bizarre that anybody would assume that a wife had taken her husband’s surname without asking her.

I also think Mr. Myddelton (né Dyer) should go to the European Court of Human Rights to get his £34 back – surely that’s a clear case of sex discrimination if a woman in the same situation wouldn’t have to pay!

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