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2011-03-21

What’s the Future of Software in a Non-Intel Worl

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 13:19

The rise of servers powered by cell phone chips, with hundreds of them whirring away to solve a problem while using less power, has become almost commonplace in the last few years, but over at Linux Magazine, Editor Douglas Eadline brings up the enormous problems associated with such a vision: namely, the software can’t cut it yet (hat tip to Inside HPC). Eadline writes about May’s Law, the corollary to Moore’s Law, which says the number of transistors on a chip will double every 18 months.

David May postulated that the software efficiency halves every 18 months to compensate for Moore’s Law. Basically, adding faster hardware makes the software more complicated and it doesn’t run as well. It also takes time for it to catch up to hardware gains. Now, as certain high-performance compute gurus or webscale data centers contemplate a wholesale change in architecture inside their data centers by adding ARM-based servers, the issue of software complexity must be addressed. Eadline suggests abstracting the run time environments for such systems. From his article:

    As software progress crawls along, I am convinced that future large-scale HPC applications will include dynamic fault-tolerant runtime systems. The user needs to be lifted away from low-level responsibility so they can focus on the application and not the complexity of the next hardware advance.

This sounds similar to the issues driving the creation and adoption of platforms as a service on top of various clouds, only Eadline is arguing for a run time environment that enables high-performance computing on top of different hardware architectures, be it x86 chips, graphics processors or ARM-based chips. We’ve covered that before, and I still think it has promise. As the needs for performance and power efficiency become more important, figuring out how to get the best hardware on the job without having to rewrite all your code becomes a problem computer science must solve.

Rodyk draugams

2011-02-28

Developing and Maximising our Potential

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 20:53

“You miss one hundred percent of the shots you never take.” (Wayne Gretzky)

I’m not particularly gifted (sigh) but I am pretty driven. I choose to be proactive, focused and disciplined (mostly) because I’m fascinated by what we human beings can achieve when we commit to exploring our potential and when we don’t allow our thinking or emotions to get in the way of our possibilities. In some ways, I guess my drive and determination come (in part) from my lack of inherent ability.

Who knew that being not-very-talented would have an upside?

Growing up, I wasn’t a great athlete, student, musician or a great anything for that matter. I was good at a few things (okay, eating), average at a few more and pretty crap at a whole bunch of things. For all the money my parents spent on years of guitar lessons, I should be frickin’ Carlos Santana, Jimi Hendrix and Slash all rolled into one. If only there had been some musical ability in the mix, I could have been anything.

Based on what I still remember (and can still play), I think my parents invested somewhere in the vicinity of four thousand dollars per chord. Having said that, if you ever need somebody to belt out a horrible acoustic rendition of House of the Rising Sun at your next party, I’m your guy.

What do you mean – “no thanks”?

That hurts.

And if, per chance, something is in need of repair at your house, whatever you do, don’t ask me to fix it. Sure, I may look handy but don’t be fooled; as a repairman, I’m about as useful as an ashtray on a motorbike. Combine my total lack of technical and mechanical aptitude with my enormous-for-no-good-reason ego, my enthusiasm, my unwarranted optimism (about my potential to fix things) and my ineptitude with tools – and I’m sure to create more havoc than harmony at your place. 

The strange thing is, part of me always thinks I’m going to be able to fix whatever it is I’m taking apart – despite my abysmal track record. It’s the one area that I don’t seem to learn in. Maybe it’s my over-developed optimism-gene kicking in. Fortunately, I’ve always had girlfriends with great mechanical aptitude. And large forearms.

Stop it.

Enough about me.

Your Best Life

When it comes to the matter of creating and sustaining our best life (whatever that means to each of us personally), the question we should ask ourselves is not, “how much potential do I have?” but rather, “how much of that potential am I currently using?”

Earlier this year, I published a fantastic letter I received from Mel - one of our readers and part of our community. If you haven’t read it, I suggest you take a peek. Her achievement of creating and maintaining such a significant change in her world is inspirational. She lost 56 kgs (123 lbs) and has kept it off for a year and a half. But more important than the weight-loss (in my opinion), is the fact that she has also created and maintained amazing change on many levels beyond the physical.

Go Mel.

After years of stopping and starting. Of wasting time. Of not reaching her goal. Of living in a body which embarrassed her. Of feeling self-conscious. Of hiding in her house. Of crying. Of avoiding people. Of pretending to be happy. Of shortness of breath. Of poor health. Of chaffing. And of walking to the letterbox in the dark… Mel changed. Massively.  She transformed her body, her thinking, her habits, her behaviours and her life.

Her entire reality.

Now, we could spend hours debating and discussing why it took her so long (to change once and for all) but the pertinent question for this chat is:

Did she always have the potential to create amazing change?

Of course, the answer is yes. She didn’t wake up one day and miraculously possess more potential. No, she woke up one day and started using what had always been there. And to keep using it no matter what. What she didn’t always have was the mindset, the awareness, the discipline or the momentum – but she always had the potential for incredible transformation.

For a range of reasons, there was a time when she was not (genuinely) ready. Not prepared to pay the price. Not willing to get that uncomfortable. Not willing to face her fears. The potential was there but it wasn’t being exploited – kind of like the guy who buys the amazing car and then leaves it in the garage because he’s too scared somebody might scratch it. Or resent his success. Or steal it when he’s not looking.

And when Mel created the right internal environment - when she got to that point – she opened the door to something that was always there: her own personal world of amazing. Her potential.

You and Me?

The amount of inherent potential you and I have is finite but how much of that potential we use is completely optional. Isn’t that great news? Of course, there’s no way of knowing, measuring or quantifying exactly how much potential we each have – or how much of that potential we will typically use in a lifetime (various figures like three percent get thrown around)  - but it’s my belief, observation and experience that most of us don’t use most of what we have.

So the next obvious question is…

What Stops us from Exploring, Developing and Maximising our Potential?

A bunch of things but mostly, it’s a fear thing.

Fear of failure. Of embarrassment. Of being judged. Of the unknown. Of being ridiculed. Of the commitment required. Of the potential pain, discomfort and risk. The day we decide that we’re prepared to deal with those inevitable realities of the human experience, and the day we stop trying to keep everybody except ourselves happy, is the day the transformation begins.

Personally, I’ve spent years making mistakes. Taking risks. Being criticised. Embarrassed. Judged. Labelled. Liked. Disliked. I’m okay with all of it because where there’s discomfort, there’s growth. There’s learning. And in the middle of it all, I found me. Despite many protests, I went to university (for the first time) at thirty-six. After being told that I wouldn’t get a book published, I wrote my first book at thirty-seven. I did my first (regular) TV gig at forty-two. I didn’t know what a blog was at forty-one. I’ve had two failed businesses. In order to build my speaking skills, I did hundreds of presentations for little or no money. For years. Some of them were horrible. I was horrible. My ‘apprenticeship’ into the world of professional speaking was a ten-year journey. I could go on, but I don’t want to bore you. Needless to say, my failures lessons far outweigh my triumphs.

In some ways, the ‘safest’ thing for me to do would be to not share my thoughts, ideas, opinions and beliefs in such a public way. Some people don’t like it. Doing what I do – sharing my philosophies with a large audience – means that I will be criticised, disliked and uncomfortable on a regular basis. That’s okay, I’ll simply choose to live, laugh, love and learn. Because I can.

One of my favourite mentors at university (Dr. Paul Callery) once told me:

“If you don’t want to offend anyone, then say nothing, do nothing and be nothing.”

Smart man.

I’ll finish today’s post with a message I often share with my charges:

I don’t care how young, old, fat, fit, tall, small, genetically gifted, intelligent, qualified, skilled, experienced or inherently talented you are (or aren’t), all I care about (in terms of you creating lasting change in your world), is what you do with what you’ve been given. You can’t change your genetics but you can change how you use them. You can’t change your chronological age but you can change what you do (choices, behaviours, habits) at your age. And in the process, you can lower your biological age. You can’t change other people but you can change how you behave and react around them. You can’t alter your level of natural ability (potential), but you can determine how much of that ability you tap into, exploit and develop. You can’t change your past but you can change the way you let it influence and impact on your present and your future. That is, you don’t need to be limited by, defined by or determined by your history (as many people are). Your history doesn’t necessarily tell you anything about your potential and is often a poor indicator of what’s possible for your future. If you’re like many, then your achievements – or perhaps lack of achievements – are more a reflection of your fear (to take a chance and get uncomfortable) than they are a reflection of your potential.

And finally, don’t allow your self-limiting, over-thinking, fear-influenced mind to stand between you and happiness. You are good enough, talented enough, courageous enough and definitely worth it.

Enjoy your journey.

And your potential.

Rodyk draugams

Google face search to use social network photos

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 20:51

If you are out in public, you are fair game, but how would you like it if a stranger took your picture and then ran a search to find out your name, online aliases and all the information about you via that image? We are very nearly there with automatic face-recognition technology and social media aggregation. Although several companies are exploring that realm, Google recently published a patent in Europe to use facial recognition and social networking combined to give visual search results.

Google Goggles is an image recognition search for mobile phones which allows curious users to take a picture of anything, such as a landmark, and then run a search for info on the item in question.  A user  does not need to type or speak to start the search; instead it’s as easy as opening the app, taking a photo and then waiting for the search results.

Although in December 2009, Google chose not to immediately start using facial recognition technology for Google Goggles visual searches, in August 2010 Google acquired Like.com which is a visual search engine currently used for shopping. Before Like.com assisted online shoppers, it was a visual search site called Riya which used facial recognition technology to search images that users had uploaded and tagged. Way back in 2005, Google almost purchased Riya. So by acquiring Like.com, Google also gained Riya’s technology. Other patent filings have recently become public, suggesting Google has been working all along to apply visual query technology to searching for faces.

Google’s recent patent filing for User Interface for Presenting Search Results for Multiple Regions of a Visual Query suggests that Google’s visual search for smartphones may be evolving. When you snap a photo, it often includes many things like buildings in the background, street signs, or even people. When you query that image, Google may break the photo into all those different pieces and search for each object within the picture — including facial recognition searches.

Another Google patent, Facial Recognition With Social Network Aiding, was recently published in Europe even though it was filed around the time Google bought Like.com. The patent abstract describes facial recognition searches for "one or more likely names" of the people in the image. After this visual query has "potentially" matched one or more personal identifiers for each person, it will scour "communications applications, social networking applications, calendar applications, and collaborative applications" to create a list of possible identities for each person. The patent description also mentions that if the photo is tagged with a person’s name, "that picture might be used in future facial recognition queries to recognize the person."

In regards to privacy, Google has several possible scenarios: to send only one of the "identifiers" to the person searching; to possibly allow only the person identified to make the photo public, or to send a request after a person is positively identified, asking if the image can be a face search result for other people’s visual queries from within their social network.

InformationWeek noted that the inventors listed on the patent application include "David Petrou, Andrew Rabinovich, and Adam Hartwig" who also worked on Google Goggles. It seems as though Google is close to reaching its goal of incorporating facial recognition into visual searches, but Google is certainly not the only company with big plans to utilize facial recognition searches.

The Interpreter suggested other applications like Viewdlw, with mobile facial recognition on the fly, might help "government stalkers." Viewdle allows users to tag and save "faceprints" of people, and "then share the faceprint of them with other Viewdle users so they can recognize that person too!" The photosharing privacy settings are integrated with Facebook privacy settings.

Some people may have no privacy issues with visual searches that use facial recognition, but there are plenty of people concerned about protecting privacy. For instance, when you leave your house and go out and about, do you wear a name tag out in public or at the mall as a constant visual aide for anyone and everyone to identify you? That seems a bit over the top to me, but isn’t that similar to tagging a photo with a person’s name and then that image becoming face search fodder? Wearing a name tag at all times in public is a personal choice, but there isn’t much choice if someone else chooses to tag you in an image.

Dictators and governments are already identifying people based upon real names and photos posted in social media. CNN published an interview with examples of when the Internet might help a dictator such as Facebook requiring people to use their real name as opposed to pseudonyms. Another example was after the Iranian protests were over in 2009, the government went through Flickr and collected photos of protesters, published those pictures on government websites and then circled unknown faces in red ink.

Access Now is mostly concerned with Facebook’s policy requiring real, full names and has launched on online petition called, "Unfriend the Dictators." Yet how much easier will it be to identify dissidents when facial recognition software allows a government to conduct face searches and compare photographed faces with their databases or even the millions of photos stored on Facebook or other social networking sites?

I’m not saying all facial recognition visual search technology is bad. It could be cool or it could be a stalkers dream come true. We all have good days and bad days, so the ability to utilize face search could be used accordingly. It could be used for something wonderful like love at first sight and helping track down that stranger first seen in a crowded public place. Or it could be used for some ill-tempered moment like snapping a pic to search and track down that jerk who cut you off in traffic. In the case of dissidents, face searches could be a death a sentence.
 

Rodyk draugams

2011-02-22

Why Does My Car Repair Cost So Much

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 08:45

car-on-lift612.jpg

People ask me all the time how the price of an auto repair is determined, usually phrased something like, "Why does my car repair cost so much?" This is a question worth asking, especially if you’ve been given a repair quote that runs into the hundreds or even thousands of dollars.

There are three main criteria used in pricing any given auto repair. The first is the labor rate, or what the shop charges for the time and expertise that goes into repairing your vehicle. The second is for the parts themselves, and whatever other shop support materials are used in the process of the repair. The third area to consider are the fixed costs or overhead that the repair shop has to cover, but that doesn’t get reflected on your bill.

Understanding Labor Charges

When you see a line item for "labor" on your repair estimate or bill, there are two factors that go into it. The first is the shop’s own per-hour labor rate. The second is "book time."

A shop’s labor rate is the hourly rate it charges for work. The term "book time" refers to the average amount of time it takes to perform a particular automotive repair or maintenance job. This is a number that’s set based on how long it takes a factory mechanic (or "technician," as is the common industry parlance) to do the job, but with a modifier applied in order to establish a more realistic time that a less trained technician might take. It’s the automotive tech’s responsibility to complete the job within that "book time" window, though sometimes repairs take longer or can be performed quicker.

Shop labor rates vary with the geographic area of the country and are competitive within a particular area. Labor rates typically run $80-$150 per hour nationwide.

A shop that specializes in a particular area usually charges higher labor rates for their service than a general service shop. While a specialist may charge more, this type of shop can often wind up being cheaper in the long run. A specialist is more likely to diagnose and repair a problem in laser-like fashion, fixing the vehicle in less time and using fewer new parts. Shops unfamiliar with a type of problem can end up muddling around, wasting the customer’s money on unnecessary parts and long hours of labor just trying to find a solution.

Parts And Supplies

Yes, auto repair shops mark up the price of parts. These guys have to make a profit to stay in business, so typically they will tack on about 30 percent. Keep in mind that this markup also means that reputable shops can provide a warranty for their repairs.

The type of parts used for auto repair directly affects the bottom-line price. Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) parts tend to be the highest priced, followed by aftermarket parts. There are typically two to three tiers of aftermarket parts. Different tiers are defined by quality. I use the top of the line aftermarket parts to raise the chance of a longer lasting, effective auto repair.

Finally, used parts also vary in price depending on the mileage and/or demand of the part. A used part can render an effective repair, depending on its condition.

"Shop support" can be defined as any products or services used to complete the repair. During the course of any auto repair certain stuff gets used, supplies like brake cleaning solution, shop rags, and replacement fluids. There are other ancillary services that you might encounter, like recycling and disposal fees for oil and other fluids. Costs of this nature are often passed onto the consumer.

Keeping The Lights On

What’s not often passed onto the consumer are the costs of running a shop, which in this modern age, can be pricy. Regardless of size, a shop has expenses that have to be paid by the work generated. There are the obvious ones, like the rent, electricity, heat and other utilites.

But there are also substantial costs for equipment and technology. In order to work on today’s cars a shop must have state-of-the-art scanners, diagnostic software, and lab scopes to analyze vehicular datastreams in an effort to extract critical information for accurate vehicle repair. Without such info, techs cannot deliver accurate repairs. Other equipment such as vehicle lifts, floor jacks, lubrication equipment and the likes are necessary to operate a shop efficiently and effectively.

Good trained service personnel costs money, period. Usually techs are classified as "A", "B", or "C" techs, and the more high-grade techs in a shop, the more it costs to pay them. In order to attract a high-grade technician these days, shops have to pay a good hourly rate or weekly salary. In addition, health insurance and other benefits such as a company car often go into the package to attract the class "A" technician.

These technicians have to go to school on a regular basis to keep up with new automotive technology. Without this training, techs cannot repair vehicles in the "book time" allotted for a particular service operation. (Not to mention the occasional "headache" job that comes along that every tech in town has had his/her hands on without success.) A repair shop usually pays for this training.

Many shops carry their own parts inventory. Given the number of different years, makes, and models of vehicles on the road, this inventory must be broad. Sitting on this inventory is not cheap.

As you can see, there’s a lot more that goes into auto repair pricing than parts and labor.

Rodyk draugams

看电影学英语:《山楂树之恋》

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 08:43

Under the Hawthorn Tree is adapted from the love story of the same name which has been a hit on the internet since 2007. The film follows Jingqiu, a girl whose family has been under close scrutiny since her father was labeled a rightist, and Laosan, a boy with a promising future from a well-to-do family. As a director born in the 1950s, Zhang Yimou lived through the Cultural Revolution and when he read the novel, he found no problem in identifying with the writer.
       
Facing the pros and cons from moviegoers, Zhang Yimou’s attitude was relaxed. He didn’t have any expectations about what the film would make in ticket sales. As he said, different people have a different understanding of pure love, and what he can do is to give his own interpretation by the film.
 
《山楂树之恋》是根据07年以来在网上轰动一时的同名小说改编而成的。
Under the Hawthorn Tree is adapted from the love story of the same name which has been a hit on the internet since 2007.
hawthorn tree  山楂树
be adapted from 改编
a hit 成功而风靡一时的事物。

她很纯洁(天真)。
She is naive.

剧中男一号老三则是军区司令员的儿子,家庭背景相对比较好,本人呢也比较有前途。
Laosan is a boy with a promising future from a well-to-do family.

Promising 有希望的,有前途的
He is a promising artist.
他是一位有前途的艺术家。

Well-to-do 小康的,富裕的
近义词:Prosperous; affluent; well-off 富裕的;富有的;有钱的

作为一个出生在20世纪五十年代的导演,张艺谋经历过文化大革命。
As a director born in the 1950s, Zhang Yimou lived through the Cultural Revolution.

文化大革命 the Cultural Revolution

 

Rodyk draugams

Christian Louboutin for Marchesa Fall 2011

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 08:40

First, I’d like to apologize for the lack of updates this week. Megs and I both have managed to come down with some sort of very fashionable flu during the busiest week in American fashion, and with Vlad flitting around Manhattan to take some beautiful photos of the festivities, it’s been all we can do to just keep the Mothership updated over at PurseBlog. But! Our apology comes with some beautiful photos of Christian Louboutin for Marchesa Fall 2011, so we hope you’ll be convinced to accept it.

 

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Rodyk draugams

看电影学英语:《山楂树之恋》

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 08:39

Under the Hawthorn Tree is adapted from the love story of the same name which has been a hit on the internet since 2007. The film follows Jingqiu, a girl whose family has been under close scrutiny since her father was labeled a rightist, and Laosan, a boy with a promising future from a well-to-do family. As a director born in the 1950s, Zhang Yimou lived through the Cultural Revolution and when he read the novel, he found no problem in identifying with the writer.
       
Facing the pros and cons from moviegoers, Zhang Yimou’s attitude was relaxed. He didn’t have any expectations about what the film would make in ticket sales. As he said, different people have a different understanding of pure love, and what he can do is to give his own interpretation by the film.
 
《山楂树之恋》是根据07年以来在网上轰动一时的同名小说改编而成的。
Under the Hawthorn Tree is adapted from the love story of the same name which has been a hit on the internet since 2007.
hawthorn tree  山楂树
be adapted from 改编
a hit 成功而风靡一时的事物。

她很纯洁(天真)。
She is naive.

剧中男一号老三则是军区司令员的儿子,家庭背景相对比较好,本人呢也比较有前途。
Laosan is a boy with a promising future from a well-to-do family.

Promising 有希望的,有前途的
He is a promising artist.
他是一位有前途的艺术家。

Well-to-do 小康的,富裕的
近义词:Prosperous; affluent; well-off 富裕的;富有的;有钱的

作为一个出生在20世纪五十年代的导演,张艺谋经历过文化大革命。
As a director born in the 1950s, Zhang Yimou lived through the Cultural Revolution.

文化大革命 the Cultural Revolution

 

Rodyk draugams

看电影学英语:《山楂树之恋》

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 08:37

Under the Hawthorn Tree is adapted from the love story of the same name which has been a hit on the internet since 2007. The film follows Jingqiu, a girl whose family has been under close scrutiny since her father was labeled a rightist, and Laosan, a boy with a promising future from a well-to-do family. As a director born in the 1950s, Zhang Yimou lived through the Cultural Revolution and when he read the novel, he found no problem in identifying with the writer.
       
Facing the pros and cons from moviegoers, Zhang Yimou’s attitude was relaxed. He didn’t have any expectations about what the film would make in ticket sales. As he said, different people have a different understanding of pure love, and what he can do is to give his own interpretation by the film.
 
《山楂树之恋》是根据07年以来在网上轰动一时的同名小说改编而成的。
Under the Hawthorn Tree is adapted from the love story of the same name which has been a hit on the internet since 2007.
hawthorn tree  山楂树
be adapted from 改编
a hit 成功而风靡一时的事物。

她很纯洁(天真)。
She is naive.

剧中男一号老三则是军区司令员的儿子,家庭背景相对比较好,本人呢也比较有前途。
Laosan is a boy with a promising future from a well-to-do family.

Promising 有希望的,有前途的
He is a promising artist.
他是一位有前途的艺术家。

Well-to-do 小康的,富裕的
近义词:Prosperous; affluent; well-off 富裕的;富有的;有钱的

作为一个出生在20世纪五十年代的导演,张艺谋经历过文化大革命。
As a director born in the 1950s, Zhang Yimou lived through the Cultural Revolution.

文化大革命 the Cultural Revolution

 

Rodyk draugams

2011-02-14

Girl, 18, dies after first kiss from rare heart co

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 08:32

kiss_heart_disease.jpg

A shy teenager collapsed and died minutes after she and a boyfriend kissed for the first time, an inquest heard yesterday.

Keen sportswoman Jemma Benjamin, 18, shared the romantic moment with fellow university student Daniel Ross on their way to his flat.

But after they went inside Miss Benjamin slumped on to the sofa and began to drift in and out of consciousness.

She suffered from the rare cardiac condition SADS, or Sudden Adult Death Syndrome, which kills about 500 people in Britain each year, the inquest was told.

Mr Ross, 21, tried to revive her before paramedics arrived, but nothing could have been done, the inquest heard.

He told police that he and Miss Benjamin had been friends for three months, but the evening she died was the first time they had kissed.
He said: ‘It was not a sexual relationship. We saw each other a couple of times a week.

‘We were going to go to a bar for some food and went back to my house for a credit card which I had forgotten.
‘We were talking and ended up kissing by the front door.

‘We went into the kitchen and then the living room and Jemma sat down on the sofa.’

Mr Ross said Miss Benjamin’s eyelids suddenly ‘began to droop’ and her mouth started to froth before she collapsed at his student flat in Pontypridd, South Wales.

He said: ‘I rang her mother to see if she had epilepsy. She fell in and out of consciousness.’ After dialling 999 Mr Ross was given instructions in administering CPR over the phone, but was unable to revive the teenager.

She was dead on arrival at hospital and is believed to have died in the flat. Miss Benjamin had been studying sports science at the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff, and had hoped to travel the world teaching English and sport.

THE KILLER WITH NO OBVIOUS CAUSEOne in 20 cases of sudden cardiac death has no obvious cause and this is termed Sudden Arrhythmic Death syndrome.

It is caused by a disturbance in the heart’s rhythm but affects the electrical functioning of the organ rather than the structure.

This is why it can only be detected in life not after death.

The electrical fault is caused by defects in the DNA, which may be inherited.

Her father Dale, 38, said he had believed she and Mr Ross were ‘just friends’. He added: ‘Jemma was very shy and timid.’ She was athletic and sporty but was ‘stressed’ about forthcoming exams in sports science, the hearing was told.

Her mother, Charlotte Garwood, 37, said the long-distance swimmer and hockey player was ‘a picture of health one minute and taken away from me the next’.

‘I am not able to put into words how much I miss her,’ she said.

A post-mortem examination could find no medical reason for Miss Benjamin’s death in April 2009. She had no history of cardiac problems, the hearing was also told.
Miss Benjamin’s parents, who are divorced, have criticised the ambulance response time.

The inquest was told it took 22 minutes for the crew to arrive and the service had to be alerted twice before responding.

The 999 dispatcher and crew, who were carrying out equipment checks, had ‘underestimated the urgency of her situation’, an investigation led by area ambulance officer Anthony Windas found.
But a medical report read to the inquest in Aberdare said the chances of surviving SADS were very low, and it was unlikely the timing of the crew’s arrival would have had any influence on the tragic outcome.
Glamorgan coroner Peter Maddox recorded a narrative verdict.

After the hearing, builder Mr Benjamin, 38, of Llantwit Fardre, South Wales, said: ‘We were shocked and devastated that such a fit girl as Jemma should have died.
‘She had targets in life and plenty of ambitions. She had so many friends and she’ll be sadly missed.
‘There’s so many things I could say about her – she was a beautiful daughter and a lovely person.’

Rodyk draugams

Dr. Dre to Perform at Grammy Awards

Tema: Be temos — nikilowtion @ 08:30

Dr.Dre_grammy.jpg

This year’s Grammy line-up just keeps getting better. Today it was announced that Dr. Dre will be performing at the event alongside Eminem, who is up for 10 awards this year. This will be Dre’s first performance on live television in a decade, so perhaps it’s only fitting that he’ll be rapping alongside his protege.

That isn’t to say that Dre hasn’t been busy over the past 10 years. Following the success of his 1999 album, 2001, Doc decided to focus on production—co-producing Eminem’s milestone The Marshall Mathers LP, and manning the boards for everyone from Gwen Stefani to 50 Cent. He’s also been working on what is supposed to be his long-awaited final album, Detox, and helped launch a high performance brand of headphones, Beats By Dr. Dre, back in 2008.

However, that won’t be the only all-star collaboration this weekend as rock legend (and 10-time Grammy award and lifetime achievement winner) Bob Dylan will join nominee Mumford & Songs, as well as the Avett Brothers , for “a salute to acoustic music.” Unlike Dre, Dylan has continued to consistently release new music over his five-decade long career, with his 34th studio album, Christmas In The Heart, released in 2009.
 

Rodyk draugams

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