Barry’s Blog #4

More ironies:  Accident prevention foundation fined for failing to take safety measures The Industrial Foundation for Accident Prevention in India has been penalized  $121,000 for not taking safety measures while training employees. A sudden blast severely burned  6 trainees.  Apparently safety rules were violated in part because IFAP was warned not to conduct the training […]

Read More…

From David Sleet

Editors comment: David recently sent this to some colleagues and I asked if he would permit me to post it as a blog. He agreed. For those of you too young to know, Skinner was a famous (and occasionally controversial, American psychologist perhaps most well known for ‘conditioning’. Sleet wrote: I recently re-read parts of […]

Read More…

Self-driving cars! (No joke… )

Go to this link… I hope it works. Some day this could reduce traffic fatalities by more than seat belts and airbags put together (copy link into your browser) http://www.ted.com/talks/sebastian_thrun_google_s_driverless_car.html?utm_source=newsletter_weekly_2011-04-05&utm_campaign=newsletter_weekly&utm_medium=email […]

Read More…

Airbag Bicycle Helmet?

Well, here’s a twist on the bike helmet. Swedish graduate students have invented an airbag that deploys from a collar to protect the head. The system was designed to meet the demand of bicyclists who object to helmets because they are unstylish or interfere with hair style. Hovding Crash Test Video It is activated, apparently, by accelerometers […]

Read More…

Drunk Pedestrians

David Sleet alerted us to this news item from the Telegraph: Romanian street sign warns drivers of ‘drunk pedestrians.’ The red caution signs show an inebriated person on his knees, clutching a bottle. The text apparent reads “Attention – Drunks.” The signs were erected after a number of collisions between motorists and revelers. Other than […]

Read More…

Karaoke Violence?

I was somewhat surprised to read about karaoke-associated killings in a recent New York Times article. Focusing on incidents in the Philippines, the report detailed the violence (often alcohol fueled) that disputes about air time or song quality might provoke. Most interestingly, it referred to at least half a dozen homicides sparked by a specific […]

Read More…