Tuesday, 29 November 2011

Marmite spill sparks biohazard threat

flood of yeast extract has blocked the M1 motorway in South Yorkshire after a truck containing the Marmite ingredient crashed and spilled its load.
The road is still closed this morning, according to the latest traffic information, as cleanup workers scoop 23.2 tonnes of the gloopy brown stuff off the road surface.

South Yorkshire police said that the truck overturned after a collision with a motor caravan at 2215 GMT yesterday. The driver was taken to hospital, but it is understood his injuries are not serious.

The dumped yeast extract was described as "waste" by the BBC, so is highly unlikely to now end up in Marmite jars.

Left uncleaned, the vitamin-rich syrup, packed with denatured yeast cells, could cause a minor biohazard as it is highly nutritious to bacteria cultures. Yeast extract is a key element in lysogeny broths.

Obviously it would block the road too. Police have said it should be cleared from 1000 GMT today, though.

Friday, 18 November 2011

Kids demand Apple kit for Xmas

You grown-ups may not give a fig for fruit-flavoured products, but it's clear youngsters love Apple. Respected US market research firm Nielsen asked a playground full of 6- to 12-year-olds what they want for Christmas, and Apple kit took the top three places on the list.
The most desired item by far is the iPad. Some 44 per cent of the 3000 US kids questioned in October expressed an interest in obtaining one.
In second place, named by 30 per cent of those surveyed, was the iPod Touch. The iPhone came third, picked by 27 per cent of nippers.
The good news for Android fans: other tablet computers came in joint fourth place, selected by 25 per cent of sprogs. Ditto a computer and a Nintendo 3DS.
Handheld consoles? The poor old PlayStation Portable was the least desired item, named by only ten per cent of kids. So was the PlayStation Move.
The Wii was only one percentage point ahead, chosen by 11 per cent. The Xbox 360 was wanted by 16 per cent, though Kinect was desired by 23 per cent of those questioned. Some 17 per cent of kids said they want a PS3.
E-book readers are not popular - 17 per cent want one. Only 19 per cent want a non-Apple smartphone.
Nielsen also asked older kids aged 13 and up, and they favour the iPad too. Around 24 per cent said they want one, while 18 per cent said they want a computer, 18 per cent an e-book reader, 17 per cent a TV and 17 per cent a non-Apple tablet.
Games consoles rate even less highly, but it's important to bear in mind that many of them - and those in the 6-12 group too - already own them.
Equally, a low score does not equate to 'everyone has one' - it's also a sign that the device and/or brand isn't seen as being desirable.

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

London to get another £60m of CCTV surveillance

Transport for London (TfL) has invited companies to join a framework agreement worth up to £60m for the supply of CCTV equipment to a range of public sector organisations in the capital and beyond.
A notice in the Official Journal of the European Union says that the equipment will be supplied to TfL and the other Greater London Authority bodies, including the Metropolitan Police. London boroughs, Network Rail, train operating companies, the Highways Agency and the Ministry of Justice will also be able to use the framework.

The deal, valued at between £20m and £60m, will be divided into six lots covering camera lenses; camera fixings and fixtures; control equipment; cable and accessories; cabinets and storage; and monitors and fixtures. Although the four-year contract will include the provision of warranties, it will not include installation or the ongoing maintenance of equipment. "The value reflects the importance of CCTV to the capital, for both emergency services and transport operators, but also the procurement power of TfL to bring these numerous bodies together," said Josh Hewer, transport analyst at Kable.

This article was originally published at Guardian Government Computing.