Sunday, April 12, 2015

Reach For The Sky


This article is cross-posted from Photographworks.me

kew-gardens

I took these photos with my iPhone. I also took my Fuji, but the photos are still on the SD card.

When I first read about cameras with built-in wifi that enables you to wirelessly transfer the images to computer, I thought it was a gimmick. But the truth is that in a world of convenience, everything that is even a little bit less convenient becomes a chore.

So, back to the tale of a week in London.

We spent a week there and we were blessed with good weather so we spent a day at Kew Gardens. The magnolias were in bloom and they were staggeringly beautiful.

We also visited the Wildfowl and Wetland Centre at Barnes, just four miles from the centre of London - with hundreds of wildfowl - ducks, geese, waders...

And we went to the Wildlife Photography Exhibition and to an exhibition on Greek sculpture. And to some other things like sitting out at the South Bank Centre and watching the world go by.

It was a full week and just what we needed to dust away some cobwebs.

Kew

The photo above is from near the entrance/exit to Kew and I thought it would look nice with the magnolia framing the little building.

I am not sure what the building is, probably a little folly or gazebo in classical style, built to look cute - which it does.

magnolia

white-magnolia

The next shot is a pink magnolia, also at Kew. We were all ooh-ing and aah-ing over it and you can see someone admiring it. And you can see how huge the flowers are.

And then there's a close-up of another magnolia - a white one that was deep into the gardens. We passed it as we were stalking a green woodpecker that was flitting low and pecking on the ground.

Kew Gardens covers 300 acres (120 hectares) which is big for London and maybe for anywhere in the UK. I'll keep my voice low because I am sure there are developers licking their lips at the prospect of all that land if it were ever to become available for development.

And Now For Some Urban Reality

heron-tower

This is Heron Tower. I've photographed it before and it always makes me raise my camera/phone. It, and other even more massive buildings now surround the city of London (the financial district of London), are like invaders from another planet (think Tom Cruise in War Of The Worlds).

There are lots of churches in the financial district and they are dwarfed by buildings like the Lloyds building. Here's a shot of it (it's the building on the left) and as you can see, it is an inside-out building like the Pompidou Centre in Paris. All the pipework is on the outside for easy maintenance.

lloyds-building


No Courgettes

I saw this van in the next photo when I was on my way early one morning to catch the inflow of people going to work in the morning across one of the London bridges. Those photos are on my Fuji - so watch out for an article about those.

no-courgettes

I like the meeting of ideas on the van. If you are not from the UK then you may not be familiar with the fact that lots of shops have signs along the lines of 'No cash kept on these premises overnight.' And the leading supermarkets in the UK do home deliveries. You shop on line and they deliver.

They have cute messages on their delivery vans, like 'Freshly clicked'.

So this van in the photo has married the two ideas to produce this 'No courgettes kept in this van overnight.'

osborne-house

And here is a period building - Osborne House - also in the financial heart of London. I wonder whether there is any relation to George Osborne, the Chancellor of the Exchequer?

the-pickle

And then a shot showing the building that is colloquially known by Londoners as the gherkin (which is why Tamara and I call it the pickle.)

It was occupied by the Lord Mayor and the City Of London council - or something along those lines - and is now insurance offices or something.

The gherkin was built after the Baltic Exchange was blown up by the IRA in the 1970s. On this visit to London I happened to go into a church near here. I like to see what they look like inside - many of them being very old.

The one I visited was St Botolphs Without Bishopsgate, and there was a leaflet inside that described how it survived the Great Fire Of London without damage. And how it survived the Second World War with just a couple of windows blown out. But it didn't survive the blast from the Baltic Exchange bombing and lost its windows and its roof completely.

Finally, the last photo is the Shard on the south bank of the Thames - more about that when I I process the Fuji photos.

the-shard

Friday, March 6, 2015

Carousel Dropbox

In my innocence I clicked on the Carousel icon in Dropbox. Who knew that would activate Carousel?

I don't and didn't want it activated: I was just taking a look at what it is.

I asked Support how to deactivate it and they explained that I needed to go Carousel and then log out. That, according to Support would deactivate Carousel and it would stay inactive as long as I didn't click on a link to Carousel in Dropbox or visit carousel.dropbox.com.

What a journey around the houses.

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

How Many Psychological Triggers Can You Pull

"Smart, experienced travelers need the right bag for every trip, which could happen at any moment.

If you pack light, you're always ready for a road trip, long weekend out of town, or short business trip.

Just grab your bag and go.

For these trips, you need a bag with just enough space that won't weigh you down.

Scroll down to find out why the Tortuga Air is the perfect carry on backpack for short trips."

[ From an ad for the Tortuga Carry-on Backpack Air ]

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Giveaway Tools

After looking at an article on InsightScope about contest giveaways, I just read the FAQs for one of the tools, which is KingSumo Giveaway and I see that as at the time the FAQs were prepared, the tool doesn't integrate with Mailchimp. Instead you have to download a CSV and upload.

Also, there is a warning that the tool may not be compatible with Facebook's terms in the future.

Finally, there is a long, convoluted way you have to deal with duplicate content, which is described in the FAQs as follows:

I’m concerned about duplicate pages for SEO We don’t create new pages, just add a parameter to your URLS. Google just sees the original page and URL structure. What we recommend if Google results are important is to run the tool, then once it looks like a winner I’d change the Title to the winner and the original URL. Remove the other titles. We are working on a fix to make this easier.

Advanced users:

Utilize the parameter tools in Google’s Webmaster Tools and set the Headline plugin’s unique parameter as “Representative URL.” You’ll find this in Webmaster Tools under “Crawl > URL Parameters.” More details on the setting URL parameters can be found at this Google support document. Make sure you have canonical URLs setup on your WordPress website. Many SEO plugin tools will have this available out of the box, with the popular tool being Yoast’s WordPress SEO Plugin. More details on canonical URLs usage scenarios can be found at the Google documentation here.

So I asked KingSumo:

1. Does Giveaways integrate with Mailchimp marketing service?

2. Is Giveaways compliant with Facebook’s terms of service as of now, March 2015?

3. Any updates on a fix to make dealing with duplicate pages for SEO easier?

I'll update this when I hear back.

Saturday, February 28, 2015

Cytokines and Myalgic Encephalitis

A study led by Dr. Mady Hornig director of translational research at the Center for Infection and Immunity and associate professor of epidemiology at Columbia's Mailman School on cytokines and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) is reported in Science Advances

ME is also known as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

The study was received for publication 19 November 2014, and accepted for publication 6 February 2015.

We report here distinct alterations in plasma immune signatures early in the course of ME/CFS (n = 52) relative to healthy controls (n = 348) that are not present in subjects with longer duration of illness (n = 246). Analyses based on disease duration revealed that early ME/CFS cases had a prominent activation of both pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines as well as dissociation of intercytokine regulatory networks. We found a stronger correlation of cytokine alterations with illness duration than with measures of illness severity, suggesting that the immunopathology of ME/CFS is not static. These findings have critical implications for discovery of interventional strategies and early diagnosis of ME/CFS.

The progress in the conduct of the study was reported on April 22, 2014 in Pheonix Rising, a site that supports patients with ME.

Dr. W. Ian Lipkin, director of the Center for Infection and Immunity and professor of neurology and pathology at Columbia’s Mailman School, is reported as saying:

This study delivers what has eluded us for so long: unequivocal evidence of immunological dysfunction in ME/CFS and diagnostic biomarkers for disease.

As the headlines in the popular press are reporting, this study provides robust’ evidence that ME is a physical illness.

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Foundation Framework - WordPress

I read an article in WP Tavern on WordPress themes based on the Foundation Framework. The article is from November 2013 and I followed a link through to the Swiss theme maker for one of the themes and I saw a notice on the home page that said 'We discontinue development of the required+ Foundation theme – here is why.'
tl;dr; We switched to _s and a custom grid system and therefore don’t use Zurb Foundation anymore. The docs will stay available until 2015, feel free to fork the project on Github. It’s been quite the journey and we learned a lot maintaining the required+ Foundation theme and it’s assets. We are grateful for all the people helping and using required+ Foundation as their WordPress base theme. Instead of releasing a version that we don’t use internally, we finally decided to discontinue required+ Foundation. This decision wasn’t easy and we tried to free some time for the project, but had to realise that it’s best to discontinue the project instead of letting you wait in limbo any longer. Thanks again for the support and understanding – Silvan & the required+ team
One of the commenters asked "I am curious as to why you switched to _s and a custom grid. What was not working for you with Foundation?" and the reply was "We ended up kicking out more and more styles and javascripts shipped with Foundation for most of our WP projects. _s gives us the the headstart needed and is now available as a SASS version too." ______________ In a free world, that is always the risk - that something the appears to be a good foundation upon which to build will peter out and be left siting on a disused track overgrown with weeds.

Mosul Libraries

The Independent newspaper reports today
Isis militants have reportedly ransacked Mosul library, burning over a hundred thousand rare manuscripts and documents spanning centuries of human learning. Initial reports said approximately 8,000 books were destroyed by the extremist group. However, AL RAI’s chief international correspondent Elijah J. Magnier told The Independent that a Mosul library official believes as many as 112, 709 manuscripts and books, some of which were registered on a UNESCO rarities list, are among those lost.
I'm going to follow this story and see how it develops.

Gussied Up

The origin of "gussied up" is unclear, but it probably stems from the American and Australian slang term "gussie," a nic...