Tag Archive for: ‘I’m

I’m a nuclear armageddon survivor: Ask me anything

Press events are usually decadent affairs of food, drink, and well-dressed executives in up-market hotels. Not this one. A small number of journalists including your correspondent were dumped at dusk in a wet field in the Essex countryside, given blue boilersuits and a small knapsack containing bottle-tops and leaflets, and told to await developments. As most press events don’t ask for disclosure of any medical conditions, nor involve signing a waiver against accidents, those developments were unlikely to be pleasant.

But then, it’s rarely pleasant after a nuclear war. In honour of the launch of Fallout 4, set in the aftermath of virtual atomic conflict, we were about to be taken into an ex-government, ex-secret nuclear bunker and trained to survive the apocalypse. Not the zombie kind, which has of late spawned an entire industry of movies, games, and survival books, but the real thing, which hasn’t.

You probably haven’t thought nearly as much about atomic weapons as you have about zombies. That’s odd. Zombies don’t exist, while on the other hand there’s currently a nuke programmed with your postcode sitting in a bunker right now (see “Atomic Weapons: A Consumer’s Guide” later in this story for more details). The real apocalypse could be four minutes away from now. Really.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Watch a woman I’m not related to toss sausages at police here in Framingham

Yes, this happened right here in the town in which I work, and, yes, the sausage-tossing alleged perpetrator and I share the same surname, but, no, we are not related, at least to the best of my knowledge.

Lindsay McNamara, 24, of nearby Ashland, Mass., was charged with disorderly conduct and malicious destruction of property the day after Christmas when it is alleged she tossed sausages – and bacon – at a police officer working behind a glass window at the police station in Framingham, the town in which Network World is headquartered. It made headlines nationwide. Today the local newspaper, the MetroWest Daily News, published video surveillance footage of the incident.

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Network World Paul McNamara

Tim Cook: ‘I’m proud to be gay’

That Apple CEO Tim Cook is gay couldn’t even be call called an open secret because it has been so widely understood and on several occasions reported. Yet Cook himself had never publicly acknowledged his sexual orientation.

Today that changed.

Writing himself – and eloquently — on BloombergBusinessweek:

For years, I’ve been open with many people about my sexual orientation. Plenty of colleagues at Apple know I’m gay, and it doesn’t seem to make a difference in the way they treat me. Of course, I’ve had the good fortune to work at a company that loves creativity and innovation and knows it can only flourish when you embrace people’s differences. Not everyone is so lucky.

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Network World Paul McNamara