* Posts by John Smith 19

16330 publicly visible posts • joined 10 Jun 2009

Cameron cocks up UK's defences - and betrays Afghan troops

John Smith 19 Gold badge
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@IanPotter

"Very roughly, as in competent and not so likely to throw a frag grenade at the hostage they're are supposed to be rescuing."

Not exactly their finest hour I agree. I'm not sure how much training they do in hostage rescue (except possibly on ships and offshore drilling rigs. Not something you're likely to see around Afghanistan. In the States I think the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team handles major incidents but abroad I think it's a bit more confused). I'd guess it's a little tricky to change gears from the enter-building-kill-everyone-inside to the enter-building-kill-everyone-inside-except-the-hostages without plenty of practice.

Not having any stun grenades seems very surprising. If the operation was specially mounted there should have been enough time to get the right kit, and it's pretty hard to believe the US Navy had run out (too many set off at parties?)

The SBS are little known outside the UK and it was to give people a reference point they might have heard of.

As various countries in Europe from Germany onward (The Munich Olympics shoot out 1972) have learned there *are* worse outcomes than letting terrorists get away. The big one being killing one or more of the hostages you are meant to rescue in the full glare of international media coverage.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
WTF?

Chinooks also good for mine clearing.

Their ground overpressure is more than adequate to detonate anti personnel mines laid near the surface.

This "exciting" new technique has been field tested by the UK in Afghanistan.

Hopefully next time they will have got the soldiers out of the minefield (perhaps by getting the US to send a blackhawk, although a Lynx *should* be big enough for a casualty evac as long as it is only *one* casualty) first.

I'd love to have have seen Paddy Ashdown* in the defense post. I don't know what his position would have been but I doubt he would have swallowed what sounds like a *lot* of senior officer corps BS from all 3 services.

*for those of you less familiar with UK political parties Paddy Ashdown was the Liberal Democrats leader about 3 leaders ago. Prior to that he spent some time in the Navy Special Boat Section, *roughly* equivalent to the US Navy SEAL units. SBS has been helping to apply the royal boot to the rear ends of various ill mannered foreign powers from WWII onward.

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AC@13:59

Bird and Fortune have a history of political satire since the early 1960s and That Was The Week That Was.

The answer to your implied question is "both".

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Boffin

@Rogerborg

"Take some cheap container ships, slap Cruise launchers and helicopters on them, and bingo, there's your useful force projection, far more effective and cheaper than a gin palace frigate."

I think this was referred to during the Falklands as a US Navy project called "Arapaho."

Gosling blows lid off Jobs Java nonsense

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@JonHendry

I didn't know that. That's *is* the sort of item I had in mind.

I've lost count of the number of degree and post grad theses that use this stuff and not having it as an option is likely to dump Mac's as a choice for a lot of (mostly ) American the engineering students.

Weather that's a key market for Apple and weather Matlab would take the hit and do their own JVM is the sort of question that will tell how big a stink Jobby's decision will make.

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Most people don't buy *languages*

They buy the apps *written* in them.

So the question is how many of the Mac's core non Apple supplied apps *are* written in Java?

If the answer is practically none Jobby won't loose any sleep but (suppose) some of the heavy hitters, the one's that *force* people to go with Mac's that's a different story.

BTW the point on secret API's is interesting. The days of "Inside Mac" are over. I think Jobby get's a pretty easy ride on this point. There would be a *lot* more comment (and has been) on MS''s less than open API list.

DARPA orders miracle motor for its flying car

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Boffin

Intersting parameter from FI article

Was the power to weight ratio is 2HP/Lb.

In perspective this is about 2x the best of a high performance motorbike engine. Presumably with a target of similar maintenance and life expectancy.

Challenging but *should* be within the knowledge base of the companies involved.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Happy

@lee harvey osmond

"is a Deltic."

You really are a trainspotter.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Boffin

Read the Fllight Int'l stuff and can mention items on bearings and gearboxes

First FI meant June *2009* so this has been in the works for a bit.

It also mentions the actual *work* is subcontracted to Andrews Aerospace. Previously known for their championing of the *seriously* bonkers liquid Hydrogen driven air liquification and separation technology they seem to have transformed themselves into a jobbing R&D outfit.

So P&W R will probably slice a chunk of cash off the top for "Contract management" and hand the rest to Andrews to get on with things.

I agree it did sound *remarkably* like the Voller Wankel concept, which sort of vindicates Voller's view all along.

Wankel's seem to have material issues. IIRC the key enabler for the Mazda engines was the ability to flame spray a layer on the corners of the rotor which was both very hard and very temperature resistant.

State of the art for high speed bearings would be the the foil air bearings used for aircraft aid conditioning (so called air cycle machines). These run to 100k RPM for years with no wear.

No current model flying use ball bearings any more.

The gearbox issue *might* be more of a problem. USAF has sponsored improved tooth design work which might work and roll forming puts the teeth under compressive stress (always a good idea). For *very* high ratio gear down some kind of epicyclic design might be better.

Just a thought.

Top cyber crime cop lied under oath, says judge

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Americans don't quite get the Metroplitan police

It' nearest equivalent would be if there were no FBI but the police for Washington DC ran some specialist units which covered the whole US and were run not by a police authority or some other kind of local government but by the Secretary of the Justice dept.

Put that way the British system does sound a bit screwed up.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Happy

From the LSE lecture description

"In recent years Charlie has been the senior investigation officer on several high profile investigations including serial murder enquiries and international internet and money laundering investigations. Charlie is responsible for the Economic crime portfolio within the Metropolitan police which includes the Fraud squads, Cheque and Plastic Card Unit a"

So if you're an alleged creditcard fraudster/identity thief or serial killer it looks like you can get a fairly sympathetic hearing off Ms McMurdie for a reasonable consideration.

You can bet her behavior will *not* be forgotten by defense barristers and solicitors.

Any one in London, Old Theatre, old LSE building WC2A 2AE Kick off (metaphorically) at 1830Hrs?

US and UK gov cyber defences = big boys' trough-slurp

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Unhappy

Snout

Meet trough.

That is all.

Our Moon is wet and welcoming, says excited NASA

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Coat

NASA Astonauts will have to learn a new language.

Mandarin is the official language but for asking "Can I have egg fried rice and extra crackers with that" they'll need Cantonese.

Mine would be the one with a copy of the Sea Dragon plans in the side pocket.

UK IT projects must pull up socks, says hefty maven

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"public projects....have greater accountability,...."

Really?

Heard much about the public censuring of those running NHS IT (£15Bn and counting)

Identity card scheme? You can bet the vermin who proposed this are still very much in place.

Interception modernisation programme (Yes it's just started but a £12Bn *minimum* budget was the *only* estimate ever issued so you know it's going to rise and I'd suggest the snoop boxes at ISP's will be from BAe's Dettica subsidiary as virtually a done deal virually guarantees cost overruns )

Governments *love* big ideas. That urge to leave your programme in a department "Look at my works and tremble" afflicts all second raters and a few first raters.

A little more naming and shaming would not be unreasonable.

One point that has been made over and *over* again is you don't buy IT to install IT, you buy it to make organisational *change*.

Start with the *change* objective and figure out where and how (if *any*) IT systems (hardware or software) need to be introduced or altered.

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Growing in house skills

Old fashioned idea. Still popular in some places.

EU privacy watchdog pans passenger data plans

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Joke

America. We want *all* this data because..

Uh..

Because we do.

If you were eating in a restaurant and a child behaved in this way......

Gov depts to cut back office, IT spending

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Centralised, de-centralised, government purchase card

It's all about the f"£king contract.

And the skills (or otherwise) of those in "procurement".

Like the 20 000 in the MoD operation.

What a bang up job they have done over the years.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
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Was it the Reg that reports going NATO std at the MoD would save £9Bn?

Or was that £9Bn per year?

Government call it the defense of the nation

Companies doing it call it the defense *business*.

It's a *business* not a right or some sort of obligation that countries have to source *their* needs from hardware *only* their nation's suppliers (and how "British" is BAe? Like BP didn't they drop the British part years ago?)

Scientists dodge Osborne's axe

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Wonder how much of that "world class" research will get turned into a successful UK company?

Turning that research into a business that makes money in the UK will require good ideas, backed up by by VC prepared to *invest* in the UK and give them the kind of management that delivers actual working results, not just a string of research funding applications.

However VC's "OK we found a buyer who wants to pay you (or rather us) 10x what we stumped up for you (which which was 1/5 what you asked for in the first place)" attitude suggests the idea of a something *ever* forming that got as big as GEC (or BAe systems) *before* it got sold off by its backers to someone (probably American) is virtually *zero*.

Raise the cash from a bank? It's often forgotten Frank Whittle did *exactly* that and then could not afford the £5 for the patten renewal. He went to a merchant bank. None of the UK high street lenders have the skills or the nerve for that kind of stuff.

The UK remains culturally crippled by the 19th century attitudes of the landed gentry (and to a certain extent the gentleman scientists who came from its ranks) that

a) We should not foul our pristine offerings to the goddess Science for the crude pursuit of mere money.

b) Trade is so *terribly* vulgar.

Those who've known poverty *rarely* tend to think it romantic.

Unless they're from Yorkshire.

Got to go as the whippet needs a walk.

Osborne details painful cuts for UK

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It seems cutting child supprt from couples with salaries over c42k saved 2.5x expected £1bn

*That* should have happened *decades* ago.

Green light for spooks' net snoop plan

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Data Fetishist civil servants * BAe Systems (owners of Dettica snoop eqpmnt mfgs) equals

Massive invasion of privacy + massive profits

BAe Ceaseless in its efforts to defend shareholder dividends.

£1bn in govt IT projects on slash list

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£1Bn across *300* projects is 3 1/3m each

Are they having a laugh?

Just another 1199Bn to go then

Seriously procurement and contract reform is dull to outsiders but the *reason* why UK is stuck with buying 2 carriers the current government did not want but cannot afford to cancel is in the f£$%king con-tract (A technical term used when entering into a legally binding agreement with BAe).

If this was serious they'd need to look at big ticket items. Dept wide support contracts.

Splitting procurements into sections with *clearly* defined and documented interfaces so smaller developers would have a chance.

In fact a special law to *forbid* governments accepting "Too expensive to cancel" clauses.

BTW Someone mentioned that the UK government has c150 data centres. WTF.

I know different departments run different hardware and of course we want redundancy but *why* that many. It's 1 land mass with fibre optic backbone telecomms.

Unless the speed of light has dropped a *lot* since I last checked It would seem to make sense to co-locate as much of this stuff together as possible. Preferably near to large power sources and a ready supply of cooling water.

I'll guess it'd be difficult to re host some apps (probably the ones built by con-tractors to use their favorite language/hardware combination (with its particular highly non standard extensions) for "performance" but putting more of them into 1 physical space should be within the state of the art. AFAIK in air conditioning bigger is *always* better. The same amount of electricity buys a good bit more cooling with larger systems.

Flames because the idea *seems* good but the results so far seems pretty gutless.

Microsoft's fear of an OpenOffice

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@Scorchio!!

"I don't want MS to die. I don't want Apple to supplant them. I want a more vibrant market, with recognised document standards with which a healthy variety of packages - open source and commercial - are capable of complying."

A beautiful idea which shows the Rev Smith's "Invisible Hand" at work , marred only by one *small* blemish.

Microsoft might *loose*.

What did you think MS's efforts with their bogus international office documents standard was all about?

The prime benefit of having an effective monopoly is to charge people through the nose and the prime decisions companies in such a position make is to work out what will extend their monopoly further or cripple *any* challenges to it.

MS idea of "competition" is any word/excel/powerpoint format you like.

You will pry an increase in *any* one else's share of the office software market from the cold dead hand of Steve Ballmer himself.

But it's still a nice illusion.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Troll

Do not feed

that is all.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Joke

AC@15:11

"We all know when it came down to it, he'd kick 7 shades out of Jobs in a scrap."

Favorite move the (bald) head butt.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Boffin

AC@22:13

"Given that only a small proportion of Spreadsheet users need Macros if Macros is the reason people use Excell Microsoft would be in real trouble."

Funny. I recall a report that Excell macros is the most used programming language in the *world* (DDJ. Special edition on small languages) , partly because people don't feel as if they are *are* programming.

Unless OO can offer that level of comfort to those people (the sort of people who use spreadsheets to do tricky stuff tend to be the sort of people who can sign cheques in companies but think programming is for nerdy propeller heads) it will *not* have mass market acceptance and remain <10% of market (although there was a time when it was <5%)

I am neither OO-phile or OO-phobe. I use OO and have written some fairly extensive macros in Excell. BTW the looping paradigm Excel tends to encourage seems to be *exactly* the way some parallel functional programming languages seem to operate.

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@Jimmy James

"A Junior Engineer at an ex employer was once directed to move the entire Fortran industrial production package over to (only) one Lotus123 spreadsheet complete with a maze of reference cells and macros."

Respect.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Boffin

Bean counters write and use Excell macros

If *they* don't work that *is* a deal breaker.

Make sure Excel macros run properly and *lots* change.

MoD braced for painful weight-loss surgery next week

John Smith 19 Gold badge
WTF?

Interesting procurement statistic

Israel. £9Bn (or is that $). 400 Procurement staff.

MoD £10Bn. 20 000 procurement staff.

Yes it is *highly* unlikely the IDF will *ever* deploy in anything but conditions in the Middle East (which I suspect *can* be more varied that most people think) but *really* 50x bigger to administer a budget 10% bigger?

John Smith 19 Gold badge
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@Jemma

"mainly because they have nothing important to hit any more? the SA80 still doesnt work more than twice out of three, and the rest of the kit is not up to much.."

Is that 2 out of 3 fired rounds or 2 of 3 weapons. That would seem to be a *staggering* failure rate. About what I have been told HP has for some of its printer cartridges (although the consequences are rather more severe).

"They presided over the period of the hook up with Honda and the still popular R8 cars "

I got the impression the Honda deal (Superplastic forming tech?) was in the works for a long time before they turned up.

"The 'four horsemen of the apocalypse' that followed on after BMW had shredded the business and nicked all the worthwhile IP had little other option than to watch the remains of the company wither - but even then there was some worthy tin coming out of the doors."

You forgot to mention stuff their assorted pension funds with about £20m and behave as "4 Brummies with an overdraft" as IIRC one of them put it. Leaving the Chinese to pick up the pieces.

"A commonality of airframes would be a better idea than trying to keep 3 - 4 different systems running when really their job can be done with one type of aircraft and different fit-outs. true it means you get a plane that needs to be land and carrier capable, which adds complexity to an extent - but its less complexity than the systems required to run, maintain and support two airframe sets and their spare parts which are essentially doing the same job."

The idea that inspired the "Lightweight fighter Programme" of the US in the 1970s. Common aircraft between USAF and Navy. What became the F16 won and has been a major export success. The Navy did not trust the single engine reliability and went with what is the FA 18. the idea is excellent provided you can get over the nursery school mentality of "I want, I want, I want!"

The usual issues seem to be seawater corrosion of certain popular in land based aircraft, tailhooks need to be designed in from the *start* and carrier landings may be up to 20% higher sink rates than land (pitching of the flight deck). All *very* tough to add as retro fits.

"Im still not sure about the navy side of things - it strikes me that all these vaunted 'big ships' with their planes and helicopters and the like - are slow, greedy on fuel, and should it come to a showdown with someone like china pointless anyway since they will be prime targets within the first 30 minutes..."

Despite a 24 hour new cycle political and military things in the real world take *time* to develop (days to weeks) and last a *lot* longer than the news cameras will be around for. Being able to put a large secure base in place (and then move it to somewhere else ) is pretty handy. As for China. A shooting war with them would make *any* carrier fleet irrelevant except possibly the US.

"How about 6 mega submarines? expensive and complex, but possible, Think a vessel with nuclear power but running a breeder reactor so it can manufacture its own fuel. "

A common misconception. Breeders do *not* typically run on their own fuel. They were designed as part of a mixed reactor "fleet"

"think a vessel with separate hangars and systems for maybe 6 F-18 fighters with their assorted load outs and parts etc and a railgun type catapult. think combined gun and missile armament, along with decent sensor suites."

Aircraft carrying submarines have been tried from the 1920's (some in UK service). In the 50's the US tried one for their "Snark" cruise missile (no pop out wings like the Tomahawks). ICBM's proved better than *anything* at any normal air speed with wings (and still are for strategic defense)

BTW making large watertight doors that *stay* watertight at depth is tricky. IIRC the 1920's subs did not work well. They got something like a car ferry deck filled with water.

Subs with hangar decks filled with water crash dive *fast*. I suspect this is one that's still in Gerry Anderson's bottom drawer.

"Ironically it might save money to spend a lot more at one given time, in order to get savings down the road - but the chances of the government at the moment getting that...?"

Historically the UK MoD seems to prefer saving money short term (c3900m on carrier work) and then spend about £2.5Bn to catch up later.

Possibly one of the groups who have studied investment and development costs the most in the area of big projects has been Reaction Engines Ltd with regard to what it would take to get their Skylon concept into the air. Their side comments on patterns of spending in big (Multi billion dollar) projects buried in their various reports has made interesting reading.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
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@Kevin Reilly

"it seems to work for the Israelis ok."

With some top up funding from the US I think.

I think Canada also tried it.

Not sure how well it worked out.

But the *very* high number of senior staff does need to be cut down. I wonder if you can make military personnel redundant?

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@John Naismith

"anyone remember "thick-film" modules from Plessey, yep they're still around"

Whose Plessey?

BTW I seem to recall that thick film hybrids were (and possibly still are) quite popular for automotive electronics. Mil spec reliability at substantially lower prices (relative to mil grade parts).

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@yet ANother Anonymous coward

"Pity BAe didn't run coal mines - then maggie, and successive Labour and Tory governments could have subsidised them to the tune of a million quid/job."

Well at one time they ran what was left of BL, after Maggies merry men had bunged them a £63m "Sweetner," which was a nice bit of icing on top of what they got when they off loaded it to BMW. Their pitch was they wanted to be like Saab, but they were s£$t at running a car company (it could be argued they are s£$t at running a defense con-tractors but that would imply that running such a company has something to do with making products).

Benoit Mandelbrot, father of fractals, dies at 85

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Boffin

@Frumious Bandersnatch

"Of course the problem was finding the right set of iterated function systems that would be a good approximation of what you wanted to compress and do it in a reasonable amount of time (compared to other lossy compression schemes). "

The best generator seemed to be a graduate student locked in a room. IIRC *all* the classic examples (single pictures, not a single mpg amongst them) were the result of this "algorythm"

"As for getting money to do the research, I think it was probably worthwhile even if it didn't fulfill the initial promise."

I was thinking of a company called Iterated Systems which IIRC made a substantial number of clams for their compression tech. AFAIK they ended up supplying a fairly effective (but *very* resource hungry) asymmetric (heavy processing to compress, relatively easy to decompress) website content management systems.

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Fractal compression did'nt work so well

Still Michael Beasley picked up a shedload of money in the process so all's well that ends well.

Gov axes £35bn Severn Barrage tide-energy scheme

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Boffin

It seems NuLabor chose the *biggest* possible scheme to hand cash to the building industry

Regardless of how well it would work out.

BTW 2 questions for the nucleophiles.

1) Have you included de-commissioning charges in your cost model or does the govt (whoever they are) get the "privilege" of this little task.

2) Any idea of how long a dam can last? The Hoover dam has been around for about 80 years, the Rhone barrage (probably the nearest actual model) has been around roughly 50 years (commissioned IIRC sometime in the early 60s).

What's the *oldest* still running nuclear station in the world? Calder Hall (first UK Nuclear power station in IIRC 1956) can't still be running, can it?That makes it 54 yrs maximum.

ID fraud costs UK £2.7bn a year

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ID Fraudsters go *looking* for people who leave their *correct* details lying around

and *invariably* find them.

Stop filling in details for "free" gifts and promotions (or use a specific PO Box, not your electorial roll address)

Your shredder is your best friend. Use it.

UK promises 'transformative' cyber security programme

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Joke

So at least a couple more years plots for "Spooks"

Nice one HMG

Espionage app updated for Windows phones

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Perhaps his *point* was

Windows (and I suspect) Android *allow* this behavior to happen.

Apps that install silently and leave *no* trace on running program and process lists.

How is this *not* a faulty design?

Before anyone gets *too* overboard on his demo let's keep in mind it does need *physical* access to the phone (SD card insertion).

But of course you have to ask if this is what "amateur" developers (of phone compromising software) can deliver what are the "pros" capable of?

And what will be found on a closer look at Android's API?

Spending Review? Why not axe the Information Commissioner?

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The Interception Commision

is *not* there to help people who think they have been unlawfully intercepted.

He's there to tell the general public (In *very* general terms) what a good job those who are allowed to intercept communications are doing an excellent job.

You could eliminate him completely and not notice the effect (except in the bottom line).

Climate change apocalypse NOW

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@Rogerborg

You might also look into something called the "Life" channel which is being shown in UK (and apparently South African) schools. www.thelifechannel.com

A chunk of their programming seems to come from the UK Dept of Education but also from "Commercial companies who want people to hear about their social response ability programmes"

I don't know why but for some reason the phrase "Creepier than creep Eric Schmidt" popped into my head.

Germans develop sleepy-driver car 'warning' system

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I was a little concerned...

That if I wrote "When I read about bombing along the autobahn my first thought was 'If only Messerschmidt still made cars' " I might be thought a pit un-PC.

Shouldn't have worried.

Bonfire of the quangos begins

John Smith 19 Gold badge
Boffin

On the database thing

Presumably the relevant fields of the database could be set up to wake up the web server and when they change and have the web server rebuild and re-cache its pages.

Seriously do *any* of these pages need *any* sort of real-time updated fields? No of TV license fee dodgers prosecuted?

'Squeeze green oil from North Sea by squirting CO2 in' - prof

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Headmaster

@Tim Worstall

"BP wanted to try this, stripping the H out of natural gas, burning the H at Peterhead and pumping the CO2 down old oil fields to bring up the last of the oil"

Stripping the "H" out of natural gas? Burning Hydrogen gives you water. They wanted to inject steam into the wells? If you meant C AFAIK most of it is bound into a complex mix of compounds with H and some other elements. They call it crude oil.

"One Geo. Brown decided against this."

A Minister in a Labor government of the 1970s?

This has been around a *long* time if so.

Yes I am being picky. Your post might be interesting or complete pish.

I can't decide which.

John Smith 19 Gold badge
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If the CEO of Yahoo! was the "Chief Yahoo!"....

I think you can see where I'm going with this.

Philip Green discovers ugly truth of government incompetence

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It's the contract, stupid

And as long as those in Govt are considerably less skilled (if they have *any* skills) at writing one the fail is guaranteed.

Cameron to spend £1bn+ on cyber security

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So the Interception Modernization Programme & "Mastering the Internet" are fully funded

That should make all Britons feel *so* secure.

Quango bonfire torches websites

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AC@15:03

"to get rid of ie6 use by h m government"

I think most people would say "God I hope it works."

CEOP chief accuses UK.gov of putting kids at risk

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Remeber fat cats never go without cream for long.

I'd say the world will hear from him again, but it's *still* hearing from him now.

He'll find a nice little earner *somewhere*.

The people who kick started this with claims of CP being a *billion* dollar business deserve let's say a good talking too.

Branson 'spaceship' successfully falls off mothership

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Boffin

Note it's biggest benefit.

Incremental testing.

When the first *paying* passenger gets on board this *exact* vehicle will probably have been tested 10s, if not *100s* of times using *exactly* the same hardware in a design in which *every* engine can be safely shut down if there is a problem.

You may disagree with the launch and say it's not orbital (it's not by a *very* long way. That does not absolutely rule out the idea it could *become* orbital) but this pattern (an incrementally testable architecture with abort across the *whole* range) is the way *all* future human carrying space launch systems *should* be developed.