The Anonymous Widower

It’s Now The Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

As this sign at Stratford station shows, the Olympic Park has now been given its name for posterity.

It's Now The Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

It’s Now The Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

The web site has an unusual URL of noordinarypark.co.uk.  Let’s hope it lives up to the name.

June 13, 2013 Posted by | Sport, World | | Leave a comment

A Multi-Currency Toilet

On my trip this morning I needed a pit-stop and as I had to surface at Green Park station to find of the maps, I used the excellent toilets there.

A Multi-Currency Toilet

A Multi-Currency Toilet

Note how the entrance gate sensibly accepts both pounds and euros. They’ve even put the instructions in a selection of languages.

A Multi-LingualToilet

A Multi-LingualToilet

We need to do more things like this, to make London as tourism-friendly as possible.

June 13, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 2 Comments

Tiles At South Kensington Station

The tiles at South Kensington station seem to be being cleaned and repaired.

Tiles At South Kensington Station

Tiles At South Kensington Station

The station is one of those that needs serious refurbishment and various proposals have been made.

Considering the station’s important location, with respect to the museums and Albertopolis, upgrading can’t come too soon!

June 13, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

Underground Maps By Lego

Five Underground maps have been made in Lego.

They are at South Kensington (1927), Green Park (1968), Piccadilly(1933), Kings Cross (Future) and Stratford 2013) stations.

The only map, that was difficult to find was the one at Stratford, which was at the Eastfield entrance to the station.  It was also the only one inside the ticket barriers.

The map at Kings Cross is the first in an Underground station to show Crossrail integrated with the Underground.

June 13, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 3 Comments

A Visit To The World’s Best Therapist

I had a bit of a shock this morning, as the news said that somebody I might know had died in tragic circumstances.

So I decided that I needed to explore some parts of the London Underground. I intended to have breakfast at Leon in Kings Cross station and then I intended to see if I could find the Underground maps in Lego.

I then visited all the maps before I finished up at Stratford, from where I took the Overground home.

As I often do, I met some interesting people, including a young lady accompanied by her charming baby, who with her partner had taken a train all the way back from Istanbul and soon were going to Denmark overland. Where do I find a lady of a compatible age to myself, who likes trains, architecture and football?  Especially, to accompany me to Odessa to see the Potemkin Steps, watch England in Kiev and then come home via Warsaw and Berlin.

i certainly felt a lot better, as I say down to watch the cricket.  But I still don’t know if I knew the person, who died.

June 13, 2013 Posted by | Health, Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

The End Of The Beginning

Last night, I went to the  celebration party of the Libel Reform Campaign at the FreeWord Centre in Farringdon. For a start, I liked the board outside the venue.

Free Word Of The Day

Free Word Of The Day

Ostensibly it was to celebrate the passing into law of the Defamation Act of 2013.

But there is still work to do. They gave out a flyer last night, which stated these loose ends to be tied.

  • We need clarity that the new statutory public interest defence will not lead to the importation of the problems of the Reynolds defence.
  • We are still awaiting new court procedures which must provide for early strike out of trivial claims along with the Government’s plans for costs protection.
  • We need the regulations and procedures to accompany section 5 on internet publication to deliver an effective defence.
  • The Northern Ireland Assembly has failed to adopt the Defamation Act.

My support has only been moral and financial in a small way. But if you read this blog you will find many stories where libel has been inappropriately used to suppress views or information.

As the post yesterday about Nespresso showed, big companies and powerful individuals, are not slow to use the law to protect their interests.

Hopefully though, the Defamation Act 2013 will have removed one of their most effective weapons, the inappropriate and threatening use of the law of libel.

We are in for some interesting times, as the lawyers of the powerful, search for new ways to suppress the truth.

But perhaps the biggest lesson of last night, was that a well-organised campaign, with the support of decent and right-thinking individuals, acting in the public interest, can successfully drive from conception to execution, by using the Internet and the media, and motivating the general public to push their legislators hard.

Similar tactics were used by the Lighter Later campaign, but sadly that well-run campaign I supported, was killed by the dinosaurs in Parliament. The difference was probably that, the Libel Reform Campaign had the backing of all three political parties.

The trouble is that some groups may use similar tactics and methods to stop projects and ideas, that most believe should be implemented. Two that come to mind are the cancer database announced yesterday and HS2.

If I was to propose a campaign, it would be one to make the UK fully metric. That will never happen.

June 13, 2013 Posted by | World | , , | 1 Comment

C Would Have Been Very Happy Tonight!

C did many divorces and in quite a few, she was acting for a wife, whose husband had hidden most of their joint assets in companies, overseas or other inaccessible places. After those cases, she generally came home angry.

But now after the case in this BBC story, things should be different.

And rightly so!

June 12, 2013 Posted by | News | , | Leave a comment

A Take On Bankers Worth Reading

This blog post on bankers is worth reading.  Two of my least-favourite politicians get the treatment with no holds barred.

Read it! If I paraphrased it, I’d reduce the quality of the criticism.

June 12, 2013 Posted by | Business, Finance & Investment | , , , | Leave a comment

Nespresso Is The Apple Of Coffee

Not my statement, but something that was hinted at in an article in The Times.

I don’t drink much coffee and I always wondered about Nespresso, with its expensive advertising. If it was that good, why don’t I see more machines in peoples’ houses.

It looks like they’ve got a marketing philosophy based on a cheap machine and expensively-packaged coffee.

I tend to avoid machines in the kitchen, as you have to wash them up and except for my cooker, microwave and fridge, I only use three pieces of electrical equipment; a kettle, a toaster and a Kenwood chopper, which was heavily promoted by Delia. I do have a dishwasher, but I don’t use it, as it was wrecked by the tenants, who lived here before I bought the house. It just doesn’t get anything clean, whereas my Mark One hand and a gammy one, perform the task well.

So when I see that Nespresso, a subsidiary of Nestle are involved in a legal spat with Mondelez,  who in my book are still called Kraft, as I do here on Reuters, I know that there can only be one winner, the lawyers. And the poor old consumer will pay for it all in higher prices. So Nespresso is a product to avoid!

Incidentally, both companies are on my avoid lists, as they don’t in my book publish full and detailed information on gluten about their products.  I also don’t like Nestle’s stand on powdered milk for babies and who would buy anything from the company that made its name with sliced cheese. Other companies in my avoid group are Mars and in fact any company, where you can’t find the gluten-free information easily on their web site, or if you’re in the shop, on the packaging.

June 12, 2013 Posted by | Business, Food | , | 2 Comments

Good Project Management At Heathrow

It may be something that doesn’t affect many of us, but airport runways need to be rebuilt every so often.

This report on the BBC this morning about resurfacing the Southern Runway at Heathrow, shows how good project management helps difficult jobs to be done, with the least disturbance to anyone.

I liked the bit about using models to educate the workforce before the project was started.

Let’s hope the rest of the project goes as well as the eighty metres they did in the night of the report.

June 12, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | 2 Comments