Wednesday 14 December 2016

Aerospace 16 - airBaltic CS300 First Comercial Flight




The Bombardier C Series CS300 first scheduled commercial flight for Latvian launch carrier, airBaltic, took off from Riga to Amsterdam today (14th December, 2016). This will be the first of many flights for the new, innovative, 130 to 150-seat, CS300, taking place this year with many different airlines, and bodes well for the future.


Bombardier said it will increase the formal specifications for the C Series CS300, as the aircraft’s per seat and trip costs have already proven 2% better than its original brochure values.


“We are thrilled to be flying the first CS300 aircraft – the newest member of the most innovative and technologically advanced family of airliners in the world,” said Martin Gauss, Chief Executive Officer, airBaltic. “With its longer range capabilities, lower fuel burn and reduced noise emissions compared to other airliners in its segment, the CS300 aircraft will enable airBaltic to open new routes and connect people all across Europe, while offering passengers an unparalleled in-flight experience.









Wednesday 7 December 2016

11,000 Views



‘Blazon’ has finally moved to 11,000 viewing figures and, mainly for my own evaluation, it is time to look at the situation.

Instead of starting from the beginning of time that, usually, indicated the popularity of political Posts, I will consider, only, the statistics since the point of 10,000 views.

This places the following Posts, chronologically, into a more suitable position:

  • An Embarrassed Answer Of Silence (29th July, 2016).
  • Question - Nobel Peace Prize (7th October, 2016).
  • Question - Halal Meat (2nd November, 2016).
  • Politics 19 - Donald Trump Isn't The Scary One (13th November, 2016)

Statistics

Google Chrome has been, by far, the most popular Browser at 81% for the period.

Apple MacOS has regained the lead for operating systems at 51% overall. 

Naturally, Canada and the USA have produced predominant viewers with Russia following closely.  Interestingly, many new countries have shown interest, notably;  Poland, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, and Macedonia.  




Sunday 13 November 2016

Politics 19 - Donald Trump Isn’t The Scary One

I feel, strongly, very sad about the repercussions from the U.S. about the election of Donald Trump as President of the U.S., and wanted to write something that must be read, but today, these articles, could not be equalled in their quality.  Thus. I present them to you with thanks.


The free press failed and the Clintons, Bushes and Obamas are finally finished

Conrad Black | November 11, 2016 | Last Updated: Nov 12 2:41 PM ET

There are many who will or should engage in some soul-searching, following the U.S election, in which for the first time in the country’s history, someone came from no background in public office or military command and seized control of a major political party, running against all those who had led it for the last 20 years, then defeated the incumbent party, defeating all the Clintons, Bushes and Obamas together. The Clintons and Bushes and Obamas are finally finished. Their entire era, though it had its moments, has been a worsening disaster as the United States has been in absolute and relative decline. The media have been exposed in their biases, their overwhelming hostility to Donald Trump, as not just irrelevant, but the object of hatred as intense as that which overwhelmed the political elites who failed the nation and imperilled the alliance America founded and led for many decades.

The public’s loathing and distrust of the media is richly deserved and indicative of one of Western society’s greatest failings: the free press has failed. Only the fact that there is no alternative keeps it going. Few people now pay much attention to the common misrepresentation of public issues and people; nor should they. The American media turned itself inside out trying to portray Trump as a misogynist, a racist and an authoritarian populist whipping up mobs and inciting violence. All this was unmitigated rubbish. President Barack Obama strutted about the campaign trail in a last-ditch effort to salvage the Clinton campaign (despite the notorious absence of any affection between the Obamas and the Clintons), and accused Trump of being a sympathizer of the Ku Klux Klan. The president would have his listeners believe that Trump, who has an unblemished record as an equal opportunity employer, approves of thugs surging about in hoods and bedsheets, burning crosses on the lawns of African-Americans, Jews and Roman Catholics (most of whose 30 million voters cast their ballots for Trump).

The media screamed for Trump’s blood when the Clinton campaign released an 11-year-old tape of boorish remarks about women, though what Trump said was the bland and pious reflection of a Baptist minister compared to the normal conversation of Lyndon Johnson, or the actual conduct, while discharging presidential business, of Bill Clinton. It was magnificent watching the Clinton News Network (CNN) robots on autocue scurrying around like asphyxiated roaches as it became clear that Trump would do the impossible and win, and that the public saw through the animosity of the lazy, complacent, boot-licking, myth-making clique of the Washington media, with its liars, defamers, frauds and idiots.

Last Sunday, I was a token expositor of a positive view of Trump, though I am no Clinton-basher, on Fareed Zakaria’s television program GPS. Fareed, a pleasant and capable man and a friend of many years, opened with a frenzied recitation of Trump’s status as a sexist, racist, xenophobic and crooked demagogue. What followed for 45 minutes, apart from Zbigniew Brzezinski’s artful debunking of the Obama foreign policy (“engaged but ineffectual”), was a sequence of Clinton-parrots. There was a debate between two pollsters about the breadth of Hillary Clinton’s almost inevitable margin of victory. I politely demurred from all this when my turn came after 50 minutes, and Fareed has generously invited me back this Sunday. But his program wasn’t fair comment or thoughtful information: it was propaganda, less virulent and hateful, certainly, than that of infamous promoters of the big lie in totalitarian states, but almost as lacking in integrity or balance.    

The most powerful mea culpa from the media was from Will Rahn of CBS. He blogged on Thursday against “the unbearable smugness” of the media, including himself:
“We were all tacitly or explicitly #With Her.… Had Hillary Clinton won, there’d be a winking ‘we did it’ feeling in the press — we were brave and saved the republic.… Trump knew what he was doing when he invited his crowds to jeer and hiss reporters covering him. They hate us. And can you blame them? Journalists love mocking Trump supporters.… We diagnose them as racists in the way Dark Age clerics confused medical problems with demonic possession. Journalists at our worst, see ourselves as a priestly caste, we believe we have access to a greater truth.” Instead of humility, Rahn expects the media to be confirmed in their view that Trump and his followers are racist and sexist, “so there must be more racists and sexists than we believed.”
Even Rahn’s mother, the saintly Peggy Noonan, while saluting Trump’s victory and acknowledging the general failure to appreciate the depths of public anger, called upon the country to “help him” because he doesn’t know how to be president. As long as the president does not seriously violate the Constitution, the presidency fits its occupant, not the other way round. George VI stammered something to president Franklin D. Roosevelt when he visited in 1939, and said, “This Goddam stutter!” and Roosevelt said, “What stutter? You are the King and you speak as you speak. I could say ‘this Goddam polio,’ but our peoples support us because we hold our positions legitimately and do our jobs adequately, and having shortcomings themselves, aren’t overly concerned with ours.”

Trump will build on his elegant remarks on election night, and can rally the vast centre of American opinion with a tasteful and magnanimous demeanour and the recruitment of competent people who reflect the diversity of America. He has a clear mandate to reform Obamacare, reform the tax system to provide lower rates for the working and middle classes and less of a free ride for the financial industry, to shrink government, reduce the trade deficit, use workfare programs to reduce unemployment and modernize infrastructure, create a southern border, escalate counter-terrorism, reinvigorate the Western alliance and redefine national security between the trigger-happy interventionism of George W. Bush and the Obama attempt to exchange its friends for its enemies, especially in the Middle East.

All this will get him off to a good start, keep faith with the believers and debrief the brainwashed skeptics, but will leave three vast problems. Standards of information and education have withered. The American people, and most other advanced nationalities, are less well-educated and less well-informed than they were 50 years ago. The teaching and academic professions and the journalists have failed. They have not failed completely, of course, and there are many individual exceptions, but they do not get a passing grade. Government can do something about the schools but can’t really touch academia or the free press without threatening the foundation of free society. There is no obvious solution.

The legal profession is increasingly a cartel in which lawyers as legislators and regulators spew out endless reams of new statutes and rules requiring an ever larger number of lawyers to argue, judge and arbitrate them. Legal costs to society are more egregious and less excusable than medical costs, and produce far less desirable results. The criminal justice system is an unspeakable cesspool. Here government can do something.

Technological progress tends to create unemployment rather than jobs, as life becomes more automatable. This trend is parallel to the pattern of companies like Google, with few employees but immense market capitalization, leaving traditional manufacturers like automakers with the reverse phenomenon: a large number of employees sustained by less well-capitalized companies. No one that I have encountered has any idea about what to do about the trend toward industrial disemployment and the extreme disparities in income that it generates.

Trump will promote rising employment and reduce the shrinkage of the workforce. But it is a long and winding upward trail back to a contented America, and to some extent, all advanced democracies are on the same trail.


It wasn’t misogyny that caused Clinton’s downfall, it was all the baggage she dragged around

Rex Murphy | November 11, 2016 | Last Updated: Nov 12 5:00 PM ET

From the famous “basket of deplorables,” to the legion of grief counsellors now patrolling the stricken campuses of American universities, the presidential campaign, now finally behind us, was a full clothes-line of oddities, delights and curious turns. Here are just a few of the more memorable moments from a campaign that the world will not soon forget — however hard it tries.
Boasting about her expertise in the area, and her unparalleled experience, Madonna promised to give oral sex to any man who voted for Hillary Clinton. The threat did not go unheeded: all over the country, men went into hiding and trembled with dread. Some went so far as to vote for Donald Trump as the only guaranteed prophylactic. In fact, post-election analysis determined that the prospect of a service visit from Madonna, tied with a promise from actress Lena Dunham to leave the country if Hillary Clinton lost, were major motivators for self-respecting male Democrats to come out in support of Trump.

It’s also true that many media outlets carried their support for Clinton to delusional excess — a blot on journalism that will take a political eon to fade. On the eve of the vote, with the confidence that only self-hypnotizing progressives can bring to a lost cause, the Huffington Post was eagerly boasting that the chances of a Clinton victory were a whopping 98 per cent. Yet after Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey’s many interventions, all the scandals revealed by WikiLeaks, the brewing uproars over the Clinton Foundation and, of course, that pesky email server distraction, putting Clinton’s chances of winning at 98 per cent can only be explained two ways: either the Huffington Post was using the same vote probability software as the North Koreans; or it has given up on being anything resembling a “news” outlet.

Then there was Bernie Sanders. It’s easy to sympathize with the Sanders campaign. After the way the Clintons treated him, it’s easier to understand why he honeymooned in Moscow (seriously). He may want to do that again. Early on, Clinton kidnapped all the Democratic super-delegates. The Democratic National Committee became an unofficial arm of the Clinton campaign. Donna Brazile, interim chairwoman of the DNC and Clinton mole, was feeding the Democratic candidate debate questions that she got from her connections at CNN. And former chairwoman of the DNC, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, was practically running the campaign.
Sanders was campaigning on a shoestring budget, while Clinton was picking up fat cheques from the Hollywood, Silicon Valley and Wall Street elite. The One-percenters adored Clinton, as she was, after all, a member of that fine club herself. Nonetheless, in spite of all the forces openly against him, and secretly undermining him, Sanders “coulda been a contender” — until he declared that he was “sick of your damn emails.” He wasn’t going to talk about them, and he didn’t. It was Oscar Wilde who mourned that “each man kills the thing he loves,” but only the Sanders campaign could find a political application for that sour observation. He gave Clinton a pass, and Trump his best weapon.

We cannot leave this campaign without a reference to its most tiresome phrase — the glass ceiling. Post-election analysis from the feminist camps is caught between trauma and tragedy that the patriarchy has won again, that the last glass ceiling remains unshattered. This is, of course, pure nonsense.  For many, many years, countries far less progressive than the United States have been led by capable women. India, Israel, Ireland, Germany, Britain and many others have proudly elected female leaders. British prime minister Margaret Thatcher has been a role model for girls and women for over half a century now.  Clinton’s defeat should not be taken as proof of a glass ceiling in American politics. The only “ceiling” she met with was the one that bars a really dreadful candidate from beating a slightly less dreadful one. It wasn’t misogyny that caused Clinton’s downfall; it was all the needless baggage that she and her husband were dragging around. Clinton was not a stand-in for all women. Instead, her defeat should be viewed as a signal of how difficult it is for a woman who is the wife of an ex-president to become president herself.

The final element I would like to mention concerns the greatest threat to the planet as we know it: global warming — the cause of causes for Democrats. Did Clinton even mention it? It’s funny how meteorological doomsday matters so little to Democrats during election campaigns, and so much after the votes have been counted. I think there’s a whisper of hope that Trump will not take that path. Implausible as this must be, I don’t think he’s going to impose a carbon tax. The horror!

All in all, this was such a diverting campaign that I will miss it. And whether the result means that the Goths have entered Rome, or the contrary, that they have just now been driven out, is something that will take the mercy of time and the patience of the creator for us to find out.


Enough with the pearl-clutching over Trump’s win, kids will get over it. So should you

Christie Blatchford | November 13, 2016 10:46 AM ET

I once carved a profanity — about the Swedes, for God’s sake, and who doesn’t like Swedes? — in the end boards of an Olympic rink after Team Sweden beat Team Canada, in a shootout for God’s sake, for the gold medal.  I offer this only so you may understand that I know what it is be a sore loser, to give away a piece of your heart to something bigger than yourself.  I get that Clinton supporters, and maybe anyone with half a brain, would be crushed and upset that Donald Trump is about to become the 45th U.S. president.

Were I one of the aforementioned two groups, no doubt I’d feel a bit of the same, though I’d lean more to anger. I understand anger (if not quite as well as I did when I was younger, when my temper was a white-hot thing with a mind of its own). Rage in my view is a perfectly normal response to a kick in the teeth.  What I decidedly do not get is the weeping, gnashing of teeth and pearl-clutching (thanks to John Moore of Newstalk 1010 for the latter) that is going on in the wake of the U.S. election.

The morning after, the airwaves were full of earnest news anchors interviewing psychologists and the like on the best way to break the terrible news to the frightened children of America and Canada.
This, I figured, was simply more evidence of what CBS News writer Will Rahn this week described as the “unbearable smugness” of the press, wherein most journalists, cut from the same #WithHer cloth and with a “shamefully limited understanding of the country,” treated Trump supporters as backward yobs and believe that it is our continuing duty not to fix ourselves, but to reeducate them about the dangerous thing they wrought with their votes.  Part of that, of course, is accepting as gospel the tearful assertions from parents that their kids were shattered by the Trump victory.
Still, on another level, fair enough.

I am not a parent, and perhaps my not inconsiderable observation of other people’s youngsters has mistakenly led me to see them as akin to rubber balls, in that they are resilient little devils who can take pretty much whatever life throws at them so long as they have at least one reasonably sane adult in their lives.  But over the next post-election days the theme endured and spread such that Friday, on the front page of the arts section of another national Canadian newspaper, over a big picture of Trump, there was a headline which read, “Mommy, why does he look so happy? And why do you look so sad?”  The story told the woeful tale of a privileged white woman (dutifully, she self-identified) and her husband who on the morning after, determined they had best raise the difficult subject before their son went off to school for the day.  The poor wee devil (too young to declare his own privilege, his mommy did it for him by noting that he was at the time “on the sofa, naked and wrapped in a sheepskin,” as the offspring of a certain type of privileged whites regularly are) was then subjected to an angsty discussion while, en famille, they watched Trump’s victory speech.
Daddy kicked it all off by saying, “A bad and crazy man has been elected the leader of the free world,” whereupon the wee boy asked, “If he’s a bad man, why is he saying nice things?” and Mommy replied, “Because he’s a very happy bad man.”  The little bugger is four years old. Are you freaking kidding me? How better to raise a delicate cabbage than worry a toddler with such horse manure?  It wasn’t confined to the households of the self-consciously precious, either.

Is it churlish to point out that in those days, 18-year-olds were fighting a war and dying in unspeakable numbers in Europe, not crying on the shoulders of paid soothers about an election result?


On the page below that piece was the story of an Ottawa woman who on election night had prepared for a #WithHer victory party and found herself with blue-frosted cupcakes sprinkled with glass candy, guests in tears, and someone who “literally broke out in hives” at the news.  (Perhaps the woman was using “literally” the way people do now, meaning the precise opposite. But I sense she was not.)

On campuses across the States, there were “cry-ins” (Cornell University), tests and lectures cancelled or made optional out of deference to the feelings of the traumatized (University of Michigan, Columbia University, Yale University) and safe spaces, some “with staff on hand to listen and provide support” to the desolate (University of Wisconsin at Madison) and some with Play-Doh and colouring books on offer (University of Michigan).

Good grief.

The Mommy-why-do-you-look-so-sad piece and its companion ran in the Canadian paper on Remembrance Day.  Is it churlish to point out that in those days, 18-year-olds were fighting a war and dying in unspeakable numbers in Europe, not crying on the shoulders of paid soothers about an election result?


All of which is to say, Donald Trump isn’t the scary one.

(Thanks to Conrad, Rex, and Christie, and National Post for the publication)



Wednesday 2 November 2016

Question - Halal Meat



This is not a religious Post … not even a political one.

Really, there is, now, not much left to write about, but that was until I started to cook dinner.

The other day, the weather was cold enough to register within a single digit, but the sun was shining and I had an urge to visit the Superstore to restock my pantry in preparation for the oncoming winter.  This meant buying two of everything … and cashing in my PC Points (Customer loyalty points).

Incidentally, if you were considering a visit here, I now have more than twice as much chocolate ice cream than normal.

But I digest, because the subject deals with a surprise.  You see, I bought two packs of my favourite lamb chops.  Cutting open the Canadian plastic wrap revealed an additional plastic wrap marked Australian Lamb inside.  This didn’t seem unusual but, when washing the wrapping prior to throwing away, I noticed a small label facing inwards towards the meat.  In other words, it could not be read until both wrappings were removed.  It said:

          SOU 26971
          16284
     Authorised By Supreme Islamic
     Council of Halal Meat in Australia

Surely, as I mentioned earlier, this isn’t intended to be a religious Post, but I am sufficiently disturbed to post it here.


I hope that you will be equally concerned to comment.


Friday 7 October 2016

Question - Nobel Peace Prize



When I think about the Nobel Peace Prize, the names of the following recipients are foremost in my mind:
  •   Tenzin Gyatso
  •   Aung San Suu Kyi
  •   Nelson Mandela
  •   Médecins Sans Frontières

I could suggest that few would argue the qualification of these people.  Nevertheless, there are recipients that have been, and remain controversial, such as:
  •   Yasser Arafat
  •   Al Gore
  •   Barack Obama
Yasser Arafat shared the prize with Shimon Peres, but are the Palestinians, today, more well-off?  Al Gore is known as an environmentalist, but has he changed anything (We may still play golf on Christmas Day)?  And Barack Obama is, perhaps, the reason for ‘Trumpism’?

Now, the latest recipient is, the President of Colombia, Juan Manuel Santos who, admittedly, has worked diligently for peace with the FARC.  Nevertheless, Colombians have voted against the peace process.  Thus, is it premature for the Peace Prize be awarded for less than ‘peace’?

It seems to me that the Nobel Foundation is, very much, a political organization.  Your opinion will be considered valuable.




Thursday 22 September 2016

Politics 18 - Human Rights



Imagine a street where a culturally diverse number of families live.

One day, the head of one family, Justin, says to his family that they must respect everyone’s cultural beliefs.  “We have been close friends with Theresa’s family and Barack’s family for many years, and my beliefs are quite similar.” he says, “So, I don’t mind if you wish them to be your friends”.

He continues, “I am uncertain about the families of Vladimir and Jingping and, although I shall display cautious friendship when we meet, I don’t mind if you make friends with them”.  Then, his wife Rona (Bear with me) exclaimed, “We should not be friends with Jingping’s family because of his human rights behavior, especially his use of corporal (capital) punishment”.


Therefore, the children of the next generation are confused.  Should they listen to the head of the house … or his wife?


Thursday 15 September 2016

Education 14 - Linguistics of Foreign Language Teaching



Teaching foreign languages may be considered by some as the prerogative of bilingual teachers.  This assumes (a) bilingualism, and (b) teacher training, but one important qualification is usually forgotten … linguistics.


     Bilingualism - Although a bilingual teacher should be able to teach reading and writing, listening and speaking must be the prerogative of the native language teacher.  This principle is also known for its importance with translators.

     Teacher Training - Knowledge of the subject is, of course, essential, but formal teacher training is crucial.  Registration at teaching colleges should center on graduates of major subjects, with concentration on teaching philosophies and practise.


Thus, from experience, one observes new teachers presenting themselves in front of classes with a teacher trainer hovering, necessarily, in the background.  Difficulties occur when a foreign language is the subject to be taught.  For example, a British teacher teaching English to British students would be a straight forward matter, but the same teacher teaching French to the same students will need additional qualifications and experience.  Equally, a Chinese teacher using English to teach Chinese to Bangladeshi students, a common example, will require even greater experience.


Linguistics, in these, and similar scenarios, is often ignored.  A common problem seen with learning a foreign language is accurate pronunciation in speaking and listening.  British students in London will have some difficulty if taught by a teacher from Edinburgh, and, obviously, Bangladeshi students will have even greater difficulty learning Chinese from a teacher using English as an implement (Even though English is an official language of the country).


Teachers of foreign languages are often unaware of linguistic principles and sometimes use their intuition towards success.  Others, usually, those without training, unfortunately, may develop unfair thoughts about their student's ability.  The answer is both interesting and simple, and therefore, enjoyable.


Linguistics teaches us that our speech varies enormously because of the distances that we live away from each other.  Over long periods of time, we create different words and phrases for the same thing.  Physically, our vocal cords adapt differently, such that one ethnic group is unable to make the ‘th’ sound, and another group will pronounce an ‘f’ as a ‘v’, etc.  Such detail includes those who may have many different words for one item, for example, the word ‘ice’ by the Inuit people, or the absence of the word ‘please' in the Chinese language. 


Such knowledge becomes enjoyable for most of us when it is realized that to overcome these problems we must study, not only the history and culture of the people, but the history and culture of the language.  In fact it is our duty to the students to diligently make this study.  Then, when you, next, face the student with an arm raised to ask the question, “Why are the words ‘meet’ and ‘meat’ spelt differently, but pronounced the same?” you could discuss Germanic origins, etc.  It is probable that listening to William Shakespeare would, then, be enjoyed.  



Sunday 28 August 2016

The Agnostic's Prayer



Insofar as I may be heard by anything, which may or may not care what I say, I ask, if it matters, that you be forgiven for anything you may have done or failed to do which requires forgiveness. 

Conversely, if not forgiveness but something else may be required to insure any possible benefit for which you may be eligible after the destruction of your body, I ask that this, whatever it may be, be granted or withheld, as the case may be, in such a manner as to insure your receiving said benefit. 

I ask this in my capacity as your elected intermediary between yourself and that which may not be yourself, but which may have an interest in the matter of your receiving as much as it is possible for you to receive of this thing, and which may in some way be influenced by this ceremony. 

Amen.
Roger Zelazny


Friday 29 July 2016

An Embarrassed Answer of Silence



The conundrum regarding the sound made by a falling tree in a forest, made me suddenly wonder about this question, 'If an invisibility cloak were invented (It is said that experiments exist) and made available to you, how would you use it (Assuming total secrecy)?'

Naturally, the question related to a falling tree causes a good deal of amusement and, often, silence.  Some would claim conjecture, and others may suggest installing a simple audio recording device. 

Nevertheless, when there is silence in answer to the question, I wonder why.  Psychologically, there could be a case for embarrassment.  After all, it seems such a simple question, and one wouldn't wish to look foolish.

The question (above) of an invisibility cloak, is a conditional clause preceded by the word 'if', and the promise of secrecy.  Therefore, there should be unreserved answers, unaffected by embarrassment, but there is often silence to this question.

I would like to propose the same question to you, and wonder if your silence will (itself) be the answer ... and why?

This, surely, is an opportunity to express your long-held dream, perhaps becoming the next king or president ... but not a moment to consider creeping up behind me and shouting, 'Boo!'





Monday 25 July 2016

Aerospace 16 - Solar Impulse 2



Solar Impulse 2 Over Abu Dhabi


Solar Impulse 2 (Si2), the solar-powered aircraft, piloted by Bertrand Piccard (Who replaced Andre Borschberg in Cairo) arrived in Abu Dhabi tonight after completing a circumnavigation journey around the Earth.

Bertrand Piccard
          Starting last year, Si2 travelled without incident until leaving China, at which time the batteries overheated and necessitated a landing in Japan.  This caused a delay for battery replacement etc. which, unfortunately, closed a convenient weather-window for crossing the Pacific Ocean.

Andre Borschberg
The flight recommenced earlier this year, crossing the Pacific Ocean, North America, and the Atlantic Ocean.  Arriving in Spain last week, preparations were made to complete the flight over the Mediterranean Sea, with a stop in Cairo.

A number of records were broken during the flight, the most impressive being the longest non-stop flight of five days (From Nagoya to Hawaii), not to mention the first solar-powered flight around the globe.

We must congratulate the team who made this historic flight possible and, now, wonder what comes next.  Nevertheless, the sense of a great accomplishment is diminished when the aircraft stops every couple of days for approximately two weeks while waiting for ideal meteorological conditions.

Personally, it seems that the aircraft has proven that, with a few modifications, it could accomplish a non-stop circumnavigation journey … sponsors willing.


Two distinguished Adventurers




Friday 15 July 2016

Aerospace 15 - SWISS CS100 First Flight


The Bombardier C Series first scheduled commercial flight with SWISS airline took off from Zurich to Paris today (15th July 2016).  This will be the first of many flights for the new, innovative, CS100 taking place this year with many different airlines, and bodes well for the future.



Bombardier CS100


Thursday 7 July 2016

Quotation - "Give me books ...."



John Keats

1795 (London)  -  1821 (Rome)




"Give me books, 
fruit, French wine, 
fine weather, 
and a little music ..."



Thursday 9 June 2016

10,000 Views



My not-so-popular ‘Blazon’ has finally moved into five viewing figures and it is time to evaluate the situation.

Starting from the beginning of time, politics seems to dominate, although not deliberately, and the most popular Post dealt with using a percentage to develop fair salaries (Percentage Formula - August, 2013).  I have temporarily removed this article in an attempt to allow other articles to surface into view.  This places Travel 5 - South East Asia (Bangladesh) of August, 2012, into a more suitable position.

Statistics

Google Chrome has been, by far, the most popular Browser at 40% overall the whole period and, today, increasing to 81% for the month.

Microsoft Windows OS, originally, had a slight lead over Apple Macintosh OS by 47% and 36% respectively, but this lead has been definitely eroded over the years to 22% (Windows) and 67% (Macintosh).

Naturally, Canada and the USA have produced predominant viewers with Russia following closely (My personal letter to Mr. Putin may have had an affect.  Ha!).  Interestingly, many other countries have shown interest, notably;  China (of course). Australia, Netherlands, Germany, Poland, Brazil, and Sweden (Surprisingly, countries in the Middle East were not represented).  

It is hard to imagine six viewing figures, therefore a change of direction may be required (To quote Lao-tse) but that is probably in another life.



Tuesday 31 May 2016

WHY are CHILDREN still DROWNING?


Today, a very hot, less than perfect day for cycling, nevertheless found me riding along the Thames River parkway, finally stopping at Tim’s for refreshment.  Not being a home recipient of newspapers, I still find it comforting to sit down with one as a companion for my iced coffee and chocolate croissant.

It was the turn of the National/Financial Post today, and the front page headline was, “WHY are CHILDREN still DROWNING” (Their quirky use of Caps, not mine).

The text pointed out the latest sad loss of hundreds of drowned migrants in the Mediterranean Sea, accompanied by a photo of another dead young boy.  Focussing on the question, “WHY ?” I continued to read about the little effort being made by the overworked U.N. High Commission for Refugees.

Whoah!  I said to myself, firstly, they are just migrants until a second country, after some examination, awards some of them refugee status.

Jumping onto my bike I tried to rush home (Yes, John, I still rely on 20-inch wheels), rudely awoke my computer from ‘Sleep’ and googled ‘National Post’.  Unbelievably, following an exhaustive search, the article in question could not be found.  

Newspaper - dominant front page news.  Webpage - nothing ... nowhere.

I assumed that they were avoiding unwelcome ‘comments’.  This was quite annoying because I wanted to answer the, apparently, difficult but, in fact, easy question.

The obvious answer is, of course, SEND THEM BACK.

Thousands more prospective migrants are waiting in North Africa to travel to the gold-paved sidewalks of Europe.  They know that it is possible because no one returns to tell them otherwise.


Any more questions?

Monday 23 May 2016

Aerospace 14 - The Right Profit Metric


ⓒ Bombardier, Montreal, May 2016

It's useful to know what Boeing and Airbus wouldn't tell you.
What’s the Right Profit Metric? 
Cost Per Passenger.
Traditionally, the airline industry has concentrated on a cost-per-seat strategy because it was the only way to extract margin.  As a result of the lower cost-per-seat pursuit, many airlines were driven toward purchasing larger single-aisle aircraft.

But one size does not fit all.


On many routes, seats were flying for free.  Empty seats.  And if not free, the seats were on sale. And as everyone knows, sales procure low yields.  Consequently, a large part of the secondary market was dropped, or even ignored.


On the other hand, medium-haul markets are reaching a certain level of saturation.So where is the next level of growth?  What’s the best way to stimulate traffic and increase the number of passengers travelling through hubs?  Secondary and tertiary markets are the key.  In other words, it’s time to go deeper in the regions.


What really matters when looking for high yields at low risk is simple: the cost per passenger on board.


Right-Sized for Opening New Markets


Free from design constraints, the Bombardier C Series 5-abreast platform was developed specifically for the 100 -150 passenger market.  It is not a stretch, nor a shrink of a legacy program.  It’s the right aircraft at the right time.


A Low Risk Solution


With a 25 to 35% lower cost per passenger on board, the Bombardier C Series aircraft are the ideal complements to the larger A320/A321 and 737-800/737-900. The C Series family provides the freedom to think differently about network planning. Which means, airlines have a new way to grow and focus on the next opportunity for expansion.


Increase Your Yields


Entering into service in July of this year, the Bombardier C Series is the right tool to help you be the first to grow these new markets profitably. Now, you can return to these once deserted markets with the right sized aircraft and start increasing your yields.


Be the first to serve those markets where there is no competition, but plenty of opportunity.

Grateful thanks to Bombardier for producing this article.

Sunday 1 May 2016

Politics 18 - Syria


The U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov continue a laborious series of discussions regarding Syria but, here, it is worth considering the game of 'chess' being played by Russia.  The Kurds and Turkey are well established on the game board although not in the forefront.  The future of Turkey in Europe is very weak (One could suggest, humorously, that the future of all countries in Europe is quite weak) but Russia's desire for a strong arm extending down to the Mediterranean, requires tokens of friendship towards Turkey and thus, temporarily, Syria, while ignoring the Kurds.  The EU should never imagine Turkey as a part of Europe.  For such an extended influence it would be wise to remember the over-extended Roman Empire ... advice, obviously, equally applicable to Russia.

A complicated scenario, but who are the chess masters?


Thursday 28 April 2016

Aerospace 13 - Bombardier-Delta Air Lines Firm Order

Bombardier received a major boost Thursday from Delta Air Lines, which has placed a firm order for 75 CS100 aircraft with options for an additional 50 more in what would be the largest order for the Montreal company's troubled CSeries passenger jet program.
Based on the list price, the firm order is valued at approximately US$5.6 billion, Bombardier said. Delivery of the aircraft to Delta, one of the largest airlines in the world, is expected to begin in 2018.
"This is a big win,'' Bombardier CEO Alain Bellemare said during a conference call.
Bombardier (TSX:BBD.B) has been at the centre of political controversy in recent months and it's banking on the success of its CSeries planes to revive its flagging fortunes.
bombardier delta air lines cseries jet
Alain Bellemare, left, president and CEO of Bombardier Inc., and Ed Bastian, right, CEO of Delta Air Lines, shake hands in front of a Delta-branded Bombardier C-Series jet in Mirabel, Que., on Thursday. (Photo: Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

Saturday 5 March 2016

Quotation - "If you shed tears ...."

Rabindranath Tagore  (1861 - 1941)

Nobel Prize for Literature, 1913



"If you shed tears
when you miss the sun,
you also miss the stars."


Tuesday 1 March 2016

POLL - (Not Religion or Politics) Facebook?

Dear Friends;  unfortunately, the last Poll added to this Blog appears to indicate a reluctance to discuss either religion or politics.  Sadly, asking Friends if they Like (To use Facebook terms) any particular subject, using little detail, seems to cause a misunderstanding.

Way back, in the age of dragons (it seems) I explained that it is my view that every subject can not escape being associated with either religion or politics.  Thus, my last Poll not only mentioned "religion" but also implied politics.  Wow, wash your keyboards!

Therefore, now, I must struggle with an explanation.  Obviously, it is not sufficient to state that everything relates to these two taboo subjects, but sustained discussion needs some controversy.  Permit me to give some examples:
  • Inoffensive Question 1 - Should Pets Be Allowed Within The Home?  Do we not create laws that require dogs to be licensed, and laws banning the possession of wild animals?  Could that be discussed without becoming political?
  • Inoffensive Question 2 - Is Yoga And Meditation Useful For Health?  Will someone mention the spiritual aspects of these two innocuous pastimes, and introduce religious comments?
I wonder if it is probable that some of you prefer to keep your controversial views to yourselves.  To that, I can only remind you, once again, that you may make comments anonymously (Concealed from everyone, including myself). 

Please look at the right sidebar for the new POLL ... and, also, comment below, if you wish.


Tuesday 16 February 2016

Bizarre Occasion 3 - Uncomfortably Freezing

Yesterday, as my Canadian friends know, the temperature (with windchill) was -30℃ (That's minus) and there was no incentive to go outside.  In fact, the radio was telling listeners not to go out, because, apparently, 30 seconds in this temperature may cause frostbite (That could just be a rumour).

The bizarre aspect of this chat was an observation from my window, as I watched the main road traffic fighting the terrible snow conditions.  To my amazement, I saw a tiny e-scooter zipping along at, seemingly, 30km/hr.  There was no windscreen which, I assume, took his temperature to -40℃ and I can only imagine that he ended up in hospital.

Can that be regarded as sufficiently 'bizarre'?


Monday 1 February 2016

POLL - Should Religious Schools Receive Public Funding?

I would like to draw your attention to a poll that I have placed in the side bar to the right of this Blog.

The question is;  Should religious schools receive public funding?

Please note that this post is totally anonymous, i.e., by clicking on a related button, your identity can not be discovered, not even by myself.

Later, the Poll may be used for further discussion.  


Sunday 17 January 2016

Politics 17 - A New Leader


We should not allow this day to pass without a brief comment on the Republic Of China’s Presidential Election, in Taiwan. 

The win by Tsai Ing-wen, the pro-independence opposition leader, is quite significant, which is evident by the apparent lack of attention by the Communist Party of China on the mainland, and the consequential absence of much comment in Chinese media. 

Mme. Tsai said she would establish "consistent, predictable and sustainable" relations with China and not be provocative, to ensure the status quo.  But a study of those ambiguous words within Roget’s Thesaurus may raise a few academic eyebrows.

However, she added that she would defend Taiwan's interests and its sovereignty (One must be cautiously reminded that the PRC has not renounced the use of force to ensure eventual unification with the island). 

Even though only one day has passed, my keen interest in the matter is why I write here, and patience must prevail.  But I hope to hear of its importance to you. 



Saturday 16 January 2016

Quotation - The World Suffers ....


Napoleon Bonaparte


(1769 — 1821)

"The world suffers a lot.
Not because of the violence of bad people,
but because of the silence of good people."



Friday 1 January 2016


NEW YEAR'S WISH

Nothing Personal

That Islamic authorities who publish the Qu'ran sincerely realize that a new twenty-first century edition is urgently required, and is edited to remove all forms of hatred and terrorism, becoming a book of peace and love ... published and taught only in the official language/s of the country of its' use.


أن السلطات الإسلامية الذي نشر القرآن يدرك بصدق ما هو مطلوب جديدة طبعة القرن الحادي والعشرين على وجه السرعة، أن يتم تحرير لإزالة كافة أشكال الكراهية والإرهاب، وأصبح كتاب السلام والمحبة ... نشرت وتدرس فقط في اللغة / ث الرسمي للبلاد من "استخدامه.


'ann alssulutat al'iislamiat aldhy nushir alquran yudrik bisidq ma hu matlub jadidat tbet alqarn alhadi waleishrin ealaa wajh alssareati, 'an yatimm tahrir li'iizalat kaft 'ashkal alkirahiat wal'iirhab , wa'asbah kitab alssalam walmahabba ... nasharat w tadrus faqat fi alllughat / th alrrasmi lilbilad min " aistikhdamih .