Another theory on why Titanic sank?

Thoughts

RMS Titanic

Think it's safe to say the reason why I feel like crap isn't hayfever but a very bad cold. So today I'm wrapped up in a blanket sitting on my computer chair reading and watching stuff. Somehow I got onto this page written by Robert H. Essenhigh on alternative theories to the Titanic sinking (Coal Fire Theory). I went through an art deco and ocean liner design obsession during my teenage years and they still both fascinate me.

I'd heard the sinking theories about how it was a mummy's curse, that it was because she wasn't Christened, that the Olympic was actually the Titanic and White Star sunk it for insurance money, but I'd never heard this theory before to do with an accidental coal fire. It's not an alternative theory as much as it just tries to explain some inconsistencies and holes in the accepted chain of events.

While everyone knows it was a collision with an iceberg that sank the White Star Liner on her maiden voyage, nobody knows why the Titanic was sailing full steam through a known iceberg field at night. Coal’s tendency to ignite and smoulder while stored may provide the answer, says Essenhigh. There are records that there was such a fire in the Titanic’s forward bunker #6.

I'd always thought the speed argument was a bit dodgy because the Olympic class of ships were built specifically for comfort and not speed, and Essenhigh seems to agree, though perhaps with more certainty than I would have put on it:

The crew of the Titanic couldn’t have been trying to break any records […] because according to the published records the Titanic was built for comfort, not speed.

[…] because of a miners strike, there wasn’t originally enough coal on the ship for sailing at full speed and the original plan was to sail at half-speed and take it easy. […] Historical records show that on leaving dock each of the six of Titanic’s coal bunkers were only about half-full with 800 tons of coal.

It turns out that spontaneous coal fires were not that uncommon at the time, and that a fire thought to have been put out could start again during a voyage. If this had occurred on Titanic, what would have the stokers have done?

The standard technique for controlling and eliminating such fires on steamships was to increase the rate at which the coal was being removed from the bunker and put into the steam engine boiler in order to increase the rate of draw-down of the coal pile, Essenhigh explains. When the firemen reached the smoldering fire they would just shovel it into the boiler and the problem was solved.

Of course, all that shoveling makes for a lot of steam, resulting in the need to increase the steaming rate and quicker cruising.

It’s very speculative, Essenhigh admits. But not far fetched. Smoldering fires in piles of coal even today is a common thing, and there are even records from fire control teams at the ports of Southampton and Cherbourg that such a fire was burning onboard the Titanic.

I haven't seen any corroboration so I'm hesitant to believe it as is, but it's still a really interesting theory. Perhaps there's more to all of this than we thought.


Wearing a hat

Thoughts
(-:þ

Generalising about Gen Y generalisations!

Internet

Since I switched to Opera 10 as my primary browser when I got fed up with Firefox's constant crashes and sluggish performance (a topic for a future post) I've started noticing ads again. Need to set up some filters now that I don't have AdBlock Plus any more! Anyway, I saw this advertisement on a news site which redirects to the gargantuanly-titled Australian Interactive Media Industry Association article that's talking 'bout my generation, titled Getting Inside Gen Y.

They’re lifestyle centered, impatient, socially aware and have an intimate relationship with technology. Many businesses are struggling to understand the trendsetting Gen Y’ers and by attending this forum you will get the answers to these questions.

  • they’re such an important demographic group and why businesses need to get used to them
  • you need to look beyond the generalisations
  • they hold the key to the future of media consumption

Look at us, we're so hip and with it we can use The Chat Speak by using Y instead of spelling out the word, which is clever because that's the generation we're talking about! We also want to encourage you to look beyond the generalisations… by making sweeping generalisations about how they're lifestyle centered[sic], impatient, socially aware and have an intimate relationship with technology!

I guess I'm a fringe case, but I'm a generation Y'er and as far as I know I'm not lifestyle centred (what does that even mean?) and am certainly not socially aware, unless Twitter somehow offsets real world social awkwardness in some bizarre way. To be fair I'm probably impatient and have an intimate relationship with technology though.

I get the feeling I won't be attending this conference thingy. Not that I could even if I wanted to anyway, because they're advertising for an event that has already happened! I suppose I could use a time machine.


Gordon Haff on why tech takes time

Software

Gordon Haff's Pervasive Datacentre

Just posed a longish comment on Gordon Haff's latest article for CNET News.com (Technology takes time). As I first said about Gordon's blog back in December 2008 (Gordon Haff’s Pervasive Datacenter review) his blog is one of the few on News.com I have all the time in the world to read.

As I’ve said on my own blog, I always find it a pleasure to read your stories Gordon because you takes the time to really research and hash out ideas for us rather than just making sweeping comments after an otherwise dry news story. It might also be one of the reasons your stories rarely attract the trolls that plague other CNET News.com stories which is a relief beyond comprehension! (though perhaps just as much spam alas).

On the topic in question, it does seem uptake of technology is accelerating, though its still far slower than I think people who spend their entire lives studying and reporting on tech realise. You humbly admit that you’ve “been guilty of this”, but I think its fair to say all of us in this industry have been, and certainly on a plane of hype and reality you definitely fall on the more moderate side!

What I also think is interesting is how so called cloud computing services are changing the paradigm of the software "upgrade". In this case, because software is running on their servers they can be confident everyone is running the latest version of their software. Even with pervasive (pun on your blog’s name!) software updating tools, this simply isn’t possible with client side software. I suppose this is what people advocating thin clients were saying last decade.

As for the comment about Optus, they’re my telephone company for my iPhone in Australia and they’re pretty terrible! I’m studying here but grew up in Singapore where they really have mobile phone networks figured out, as cvaldes1831 said.


A Twitter picture is worth…

Internet

If I rewarded daily tweets that I enjoyed with some sort of fictitious honour, today's Rubenerd Tweet of the Day would goes to GreenITers for this message even my sister thought was clever. I like it!

A picture is worth more than 140 characters […]

It's not often the description of the reward itself is longer than the recipient's work. Unless I suppose its a visual representation of something, in this case a picture. Hey, come to think of it that's a fantastic segue, in hindsight I should have put that first!

In other news, I almost always misspell "segue", "hindsight", and more humorously "misspell".


The Greens aren’t as… Green any more

Thoughts

It seems with each passing year since 2007 things have happened that have made me less optimistic and more cynical about the world. In an attempt to find the good in it, I've attributed this slide in my opinion of humanity to simply growing up and becoming more realistic. Well, another thing has happened -__-.

If you recall, Senator Conroy wants to filter the internets here in Australia to protect children from pornography, free speech and all that. Leaving aside the dubious justifications, even if it was a noble cause such a national filter simply would not work.

From a press release by Scott Ludlam, a Greens senator from Western Australia:

The Australian Greens today reiterated their strong concerns over the Government’s internet filter plan.

“The Greens position on the Government’s proposed internet filtering plan remains the same – we have serious concerns over the viability of the scheme being put forward by Communications Minister Conroy,” said Australian Greens communications spokesperson Senator Scott Ludlam.

So far so good.

“Dr Hamilton has, in the past, outlined his support for any system designed to prevent children accessing pornography online – a sentiment that the Australian Greens fully support.

Whoa, wait a minute. Are you saying Dr Hamilton, the person the Greens is backing for a contested seat, actually supports the idea for a filter?

No Filter, No Censorship, No Clean Feed, No Great Firewall of Australia

To put this post in context, I registered to vote in Australia as soon as I was living back here again and was eligible and had an address here again. I've voted for The Greens in one national election and one South Australia state election. Why?

  • I inherited my mum’s hippy green save the earth and all its creatures attitude
  • I intensely dislike the conservative coalition
  • The ALP has slipped a bit too far to the right and is in the pockets of big polluters
  • The Democrats, the small third party designed to "keep the bastards honest" in the own words is no longer effective at all
  • I admire Senator Bob Brown (pictured above with the Dalai Llama) and support all but a few of The Greens positions

All those positions are just fine and peachy, but the primary reason was that The Greens were the more honourable, upstanding and honest party I could vote for. Granted the bar is set painfully low which means such a comparison is essentially meaningless, but there you go.

Anyway it seems the Greens have finally decided a gamble to win another seat is worth sacrificing some of their principals by welcoming into their ranks a person such as Dr Hamilton. In other words, The Greens have just made a move the ALP and the coalition would have.

They're probably still the lesser evil in Aussie politics, but if they were a bright green pear before, they now have a large blemish on their side. It's disillusioning, if inevitable. :P


Links for 2009-10-24

Internet

Links shared from del.icio.us today:

(categories: startrek hardware usb funny memory)

"Magnum is a pure python HTTP server that is fast and efficient with resources. It is ideal for serving dynamic python-generated pages."
(categories: software programming web python webserver framework)

"The DivIDE Plus Hard Disk Interface provides a standard ATA (IDE) interface to allow any Sinclair ZX Spectrum (including the +2A, +2B, +3 and clones, including the Timex TC2048) to connect to an industry standard hard disk drive, CD ROM drive or Compact Flash (CF) memory card (up to 2GB)."
(categories: hardware retro sinclair storage)

(categories: news anime 2009 forums)

(categories: figures anime shiningwind)


Pointless hayfever rambling to feel better

Thoughts

So I've come down with such a severe case of hayfever now that Spring has finally Sprung that I think I was making more noise this morning than the constructon workers across the street. Every time I sneezed in the loungeroom I think I broke a window, quite an achievement when you consider our small house here only has glass doors and no windows.

With this in mind, I figured I needed to write another one of my rambling nonsensical blog posts that not only don't have any point but are so utterly meaningless Rupert Murdoch wants to publish it in an Aussie newspaper and charge people online to see it.

The question is, what should I discuss here, or should I be discussing anything here at all considering I have homework and work to do, not to mention the fact I have over fifty (yes!) draft posts that haven't been finished yet. I mean, one glance at the quality of this blog and you could be forgiven for thinking those draft posts must be pretty awful if they don't even reach the minumum bar set so low here that I tripped over it while running to the tissue box. What?

Speaking of boxes, my spam inbox this morning had 486 messages in it, all it would need would be for my primary inbox to have 80486 messages in it for it to be even more 90s retro. At the rate of pileup I don't think I'm that far off that!

Is it called Southeast Asia or South East Asia or South-East Asia? And what's the point of ASEAN, has it achieved anything at all?

And finally, as I was walking to the Boatdeck Cafe this morning to have a cup of coffee and sit in a comfy chair to help make myself feel better, I trumpeted a sneeze so loudly a dog someone was walking started barking.


Sudoku for 2009-10-24

Annexe

This originally appeared on the Annexe, back when I recorded daily puzzles.

Sudoku puzzle for 2009-10-24


Tetravex for 2009-10-24

Annexe

This originally appeared on the Annexe, back when I recorded daily puzzles.

Sudoku puzzle for 2009-10-24