Archive for May, 2006

Staying in bed all day…

It’s 4PM as I begin to write this, and I’ve slept almost all day! I got up to have some breakfast (at 11 o’clock) this morning, and then went back to bed. I don’t think I’ve done a better impression of a lazy student in all my life. It’s a hoot! But then the problem is that when you do want to do something, there’s nobody around because one doesn’t tend to sleep in big groups: you’re kind of on your own or with just one other! Not a big collective activity.

But anyway. So odd. I just wanted to note it!

Taking it Easy Online

I don’t know why this site was so painfully slow yesterday, if it loaded at all. In consolation, there was nothing I could do because I couldn’t get it to load either! It’s just got to be one of those things; the internets is weird. Sorry!

The Greatest Podcasts Out There

I’ve found the website of a really cool guy who’s, embarrassingly enough, basically the same age as me. He seems to have a lot going on compared to my meagre attempts and activity! Anyway, his website hosts a load of basically what are now being called v-casts, or video podcasts, where he talks, to camera about life in general and stuff that’s going on.

rewfio.com

I found his stuff through Flickr, not realising he was remotely interesting, so didn’t think anything of it when I saw his photos, but then returned to them, in another roundabout way a few days later and was compelled to see who this guy was whose images I’d inadvertently been following. Anyway, a lot of his content talks about being a Christian, about his sexuality at a Christian college in the US. These are interesting because all conflict is interesting, and seeing how he resolves these clashes of personal life is really touching. Furthermore, they’re funny. I was just watching one ‘v-cast’ and an alarm sounds in the background. At first I wasn’t sure whether it was something he’d put onto the film or not, but it can’t have been because as the screen fades to black he declares, with raised eyebrow and a laugh, ‘Guess that’s a tornado!’.

We never find out any more about the tornado, but this is what’s so funny about it: it’s calm and reflective without giving too much away, without giving himself away.

I would say that being a gay Christian has probably made me more spiritual and a better Christian than I ever was before because I’ve had to deal, to struggle, with all this stuff being thrown at me by all these people. These ideas, ‘this is wrong, this is right, reject this, reject that’, and it’s so close to the identity of who you are and it’s so intense: for such an extended period of time it’s not something you can just put away and say ‘Aww, I’ll deal with it later’, it’s an everyday part of your life. That struggle has definitely enhanced my spiritual life. Not to say that I’m not frustrated right now, but any frustration I have just lies with myself.

Ace content, easy to watch, with fun (if unattributed - who is it?! - music).

Look him up.

RocketKid: Rewfio.com

Twelve & Twelve365

Issey Miyake, the fashion designer, has lent his name to a new watch which is to be made by Seiko Japan. Exhibited in this year’s BaselWorld watch and Jewellery show, the design is fascinating because it’s so different to all the other simplistic watches on the market. It attempts to be minimalist while at the same time still giving an accurate indication of the time, rather that leaving the owner to make a guess at which hour the hands are pointing to. The face is designed by Naota Fukasawa, and comes in a brushed steel, or matt black metal finish over a white face. The third option is black metal with a light blue glass face. The ‘Twelve’ lineup detailed. Fukasawa, formerly of the innovative design lab IDEO, has also designed for MUJI and B&B Italia. His minimalist style is obvious in the watch. It doesn’t look like the watch is available at this time, as it was only exhibited in March, but expect pricing to be around £160, or $300, as converted from the 33,600 Yen list price.

Issey Miyake Twelve Watch
Issey Miyake Twelve365 Watch

Issey Miyake Watches
Seiko Announcement of the Twelve365

50ft wave strikes Santander-bound ferry

A wall of water, thought to be as high as 50ft, smashed into the side of one Brittany Ferries’ largest vessels, exploding windows and flooding cabins far above the waterline. The ship encountered awful weather conditions as it entered the Bay of Biscay and had to turn into the French port of Roscoff for emergency repairs, offering alternative travel arrangements and compensation to affected customers.

From The Times:

“We knew conditions were getting bad the night before when the magician had to cancel his act because his table kept sliding off the stage.” She said that they were given another cabin on the eighth deck.

The Times: Wall of water strikes giant ferry

French Legislators Dislike Public Input

Screw democracy! The IHT is running a story today that makes me wonder where the French ideas of equality and liberty have gone. In a debates about new copyright laws, in which the Senate wanted to make its classicly-French mark on European copyright law, the legislators ran into unprecendented lobbying, emails and contact from members of the public. Surely that would make you think again about your proposals, but the story goes on to quote Michel Charasse, ‘a senator since 1981′:

“Rarely in parliamentary life have those elected by the nation - deputies and senators - been subjected to so many letters, e-mails, menaces and pressures,” Charasse, said during the debate, to resounding applause from his colleagues. “I would ask the Senate staff to rigorously clean the corridors of the lobbyists from all sides who jump on us as soon as we leave the hall.”

Clear the corridors?! What, so they could get out without having to encounter the rif-raf of the public! I’m embarrassed for the French public that they have such disgraceful politicians as this!
IHT: In Paris, ‘iPod law’ unleashes lobbyists

Life Saving Reading: CPR Technique

Did you know that the guidelines on CPR technique have changed? The bodies that develop the procedures and techniques that two thirds of all cardiac arrest patients will receive, altered their advice on how ‘we’ should carry out Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation. According to the American Heart Association, only 1-2% of those in New York city who experience Ventricular Fibrillation survive. With bystanders doing nothing, people are literally left on the street without CPR or Defibrillators, to die. In Seattle, in contrast, around 30% of those affected survive (link to data). It’s those of us who are with out friends or just walking around on the street, that happen to stop and wonder what’s happening, that make the difference. These new guidelines were created at the International Consensus Conference in Dallas, Texas in January 2005. The new guidelines are agreed with the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR).

The main new focus is on giving effective and unhalted chest compressions to accompany one second ventilations (breaths) that produce notable rise in the chest.

The compression to ventilation ratio is now agreed at 30 compressions to two breaths. 30 to 2. This is what I always ‘forget’ when I’m trying to remember my technique.

Techniques like raising the chin with two fingers to open the airway, using a finger to clear the airways, and a noted dissatisfaction with finding a pulse using the carotid artery, largely because many people find it hard to find. Instead we should look for signs of circulation like colour returning to fingernails when squeezed, coughing or breathing: these are the new consensus though, “Even if the victim takes occasional gasps, rescuers should suspect that cardiac arrest has occurred and should start CPR.”

See the new guidlines on response to cardiac arrest from the AHA (with full scientific information) or just the changes and current procedure from the ‘Currents’ Winter ‘05-’06 Journal.

The University of Washington Medical School has a great page on the three main steps for CPR illustrated with moving diagrams. Whatever you do, learn how to do save the lives of your friends. Even if they can’t, you’ll thank yourself for knowing how.

New Orleans Mayoral Candidates answer… candidly

Last question: There’s another flood. You are in a rescue boat. You arrive at a rooftop to find Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie. There’s only room for one in the boat. Who do you take?

Landrieu: They both get left.

Nagin: I give them the boat and get on the roof and wait for the helicopter.

Nola.com: The 60-Second Interview: Special Election Edition

Written up and wiped out

I’ve just finished all my essays. I say that I’ve finished them and that’s true. However, one of them is still with my dad, where his wonderous digital red pen is scrawling notes all over it. In the past week I’ve written 12,000 words of researched, referenced prose. I’m completely emotionally drained as a result: going from one topic to the next with only a couple of hours in between really confused my short-term memory.

I have to hand everything in by five o’clock and it takes me a good 30 minutes (in rain, as it is now) to walk into my department. My dad hasn’t sent me a copy back yet and once he does I still have to read over his comments and try and rectify the all-too-apparent flaws that he reveals. That’ll take some time.

It’s funny how, even though I’ve been working for the last week on these pieces, everything still comes down to the last hour. My friend was in the University’s main lending Library today and said that you’d never recognise it because of the noise, ‘like a zoo’ was her text-message description to me. I’ve avoided the library, having already taken all of my books out, so that I don’t have to be distracted by all the people milling around, trying to be quiet and failing.

So the essays are done. Now: exams!

More than half?

Second essay done, the third one is about two-thirds done. I’m getting there eventually!