Sunday, January 13, 2013

Renzo Piano: 'The Shard will be a sensor of London'

What are the most important things that the Shard does for London?

Bringing attention back to Southwark. I thought this was a good idea from [former mayor] Ken Livingstone, that you balance the energy of the City by putting something strong on the south bank, in the more poor part of the city. If you are driving around, bicycling around, walking around, you have a new orientation point. I receive many messages from people about this: it is a kind of lighthouse in London. It is quite a surprising element, and providing surprise and wonder is not essential, but it is not a bad thing to do.

It will be the first publicly accessible tall building in London. You have others, but they are not as accessible as this. We have been talking about this from the beginning ? making a vertical city, one that does not shut its doors in the evening, that is alive 18 hours a day.

It will change with the weather. I always thought this tower will be a sensor of the city, reflecting the mood. What the Shard does for London is a list of things. I was aware of risks with the project when I took it on, but the best things in life are always a little dangerous.

When people say that it's too prominent, or that it intrudes too much on views of St Paul's Cathedral, do you understand their position?

It's visible, that's for sure. The point is, fundamentally: is this a bad presence or a good presence? I kept saying ? and I keep saying ? that I think the presence of St Paul's in London is great because it is subtle, intelligent, light, but in a completely different way, because centuries ago it was a totally different story. I'm not mad, I'm not saying that the Shard is like St Paul's? forget it; but it's a way to express a presence.

Is this going to be negative, banal, stupid, arrogant, or not? I'm still wondering. But I have the feeling more and more that this building will be part of London very quickly, and it will not be disturbing. It is not just my feeling, it is the feeling of many other people. In some ways I cross my fingers. As an architect, you cannot be so arrogant as to say you are 100% sure about what you do.

Since the Shard was given planning permission a lot of other towers have been approved in London. They may not all be of the same quality. Do you think it is good for London to have these?towers?

I agree that the Shard contributed to opening the door to a gold rush. If you ask me if London should be full of towers, the answer would be: not necessarily. I'm not in favour and not against. But if you make a bad building that is low you don't see it too much. If you make a bad building tall you see it a lot. So there is an obligation to be good.

You don't not write a good book because people will then write bad books on the same topic. But it's a sad destiny: you open doors and then something wrong might happen.

It will cost ?25 to go to the viewing gallery, which seems expensive. Would you like the entrance fee to be cheaper?

I was not happy when I heard that. I put my nose inside this question quite energetically and they explained to me that this kind of thing has this kind of price. Unfortunately, at the London Eye the price is about the same. London is a very expensive city.

There is a lot of distortion, with the idea about the building being for rich people. There will be 5,000 people working in the offices, and there is no reason to think that these people will be very rich. There will be 1,000 people per day going to restaurants at mid-rise, and there are 200 or 300 restaurants at the same price level in London. There will be thousands more visiting the viewing gallery and other parts of the building.

The other idea is that there is something wrong with the money for the Shard coming from Qatar. I never understood this idea, as if there is money that smells, or money that has a perfume. I found it a bit moralistic.

Is it important to you to have designed the tallest building in London and (for a while) in Europe?

Honestly, this is less important. I don't care if someone else does something taller. It happened to be like that.

Is there anything you would change about the Shard?

This is a very, very bad question. When you do something in life you are never totally happy. I'm not going to tell you what I would change ? that would be like a suicide for me. I would probably try to be even more crystalline, a bit more radical.

What are you doing next?

We're doing so many schemes. In Los Angeles we're doing a building for the Academy that gives out the Oscars. In New York we're doing a campus for Columbia University and a fantastic centre for brain research. But we're also doing a little hospital for children in Uganda, paid for with our own money, and a school in Costa Rica. Sometimes you do things that are very visible, sometimes almost invisible.

Do you plan to retire?

I will never stop. In architecture you should live for 150 years, because you have to learn in the first 75 years. At my age, if you are lucky enough to be in good shape it is a magic age.

Do you enjoy revisiting your old buildings?

The Pompidou Centre was a young passion. It is 300 yards from my Paris office, so I go there for lunch at least every month. But I have so many buildings. I don't want to be romantic, but one of the most important things is to have happy buildings? it's like having a family with a lot of children.

You also love sailing: is that an escape from architecture or a continuation of it?

The boat I have now is number six. I built the first one when I was 18, by buying the Daily Mirror ? which had the plan of a little sailing boat inside. I did it in the garage myself. I still designed number six, but I didn't build it myself, with my own hands.

Every year I spend one month just sailing, but I still work when I'm on the boat. You never separate work from leisure. A boat is like a magic world, like a little island.

Oliver Wainwright visits the Shard's 72nd floor open viewing platform Link to this video

The Shard opens to the public on 1 February.

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2013/jan/13/renzo-piano-shard-interview-observer

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Phone Home To Turn Up the Heat

After quitting Apple, Tony Fadell, the tech guru behind the iPod, wanted to revolutionize our homes?starting with the humble thermostat.

Douglas Heaven: After you left Apple, you developed a "smart" thermostat. Was that always your plan?
Tony Fadell: Not at all! The plan was to retire with my wife, who also worked for Steve [Jobs], and spend time with our children. We didn't see them because we were working so madly at Apple. We wanted to build a house in Lake Tahoe. I wanted to design the greenest, most connected house that I could. That's when I found out about the thermostat problem. These devices had not seen innovation in 30 years. They were the same as the ones our parents had. I wanted something that was very different.

DH: Your solution was the Nest. Tell me about it
TF: It uses algorithms and sensors to remember the temperatures you like, create a custom schedule for your home, and turn itself down when you are away. And you can use your smartphone, tablet, or computer to control it remotely. We call it the thermostat for the iPhone generation. It has a big dial, not fiddly buttons.

DH: Did Steve Jobs have any input?
TF: I was going to talk to Steve about it. He knew we were working on something, but he didn't know what. When it was time to show him, he said he couldn't do it. Unfortunately, he died just a few weeks later, before he could see it.

DH: Is the Nest just the start of a range of smart-home devices?
TF: Absolutely. But if you look at what we did at Apple after the iPod came out, it took us five years to start thinking about the iPhone and two more years to finally ship it. I would love to make more devices, but our goal is to make the Nest successful first.

DH: Who would have believed the iPod could turn into the iPhone, then the iPad?
TF: Even I wondered how many people would buy an iPad. But you have to be at the right place in the cultural time. We plan a similar trajectory with the Nest, with the ways that emerging behaviors can happen in the home through interconnected devices. You can't start with all of these things at once because people's minds get blown. You start with very simple things, simple concepts, and then you can build on them.

DH: Will people have to continually upgrade their thermostats, as they do with cellphones?
TF: Unlike a cellphone, you're not going to change the NEST every 18 months! They are supposed to hang on your wall for 10 to 15 years. Our goal is to continue to improve it via software, and we have built tons of extra capability into this device to allow that to happen. For example, we have a new update that gives an energy report?it shows how you're doing compared with last month, and even compares you to your neighbors.

DH: Was it your aim to raise awareness of the energy we waste heating our homes?
TF: The Nest starts people thinking about how they're using energy in the home. But it's also a great party trick. You get people whipping out their phones and saying "Check out my Nest at home! Watch, I'm going to freeze my wife!"

This article originally appeared in New Scientist.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=0af38928f2b66a8facabc0ffff567764

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Saturday, January 12, 2013

Dogs kept lost boy in Missouri warm until found (+video)

A lost boy in Missouri was found in the woods near his house more than four hours after he went missing. His two dogs kept the lost boy warm until he was found.?

By Associated Press / January 10, 2013

A lost boy's two dogs laid on him, keeping him warm until a search crew found him in the woods near his Missouri home.

More than four hours after his panicked parents reported their 6-year-old missing from his southwest Missouri home, rescuers found the child huddled in a ditch with his two dogs lying on top of him to keep him warm as temperatures dipped into the low 20s.

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Ryle?Smith, 6, was playing outside of his Seneca home Friday afternoon when he followed his dogs, Baxter and Bella, into the woods and soon became disoriented and lost as darkness fell.

After searching for his son, Ryan?Smith?called authorities for help around 6 p.m., the Joplin Globe reported.

"I was nervous because it was getting dark and some of the area in the woods can be really dangerous," he said. "He was outside with the dogs, and we didn't see or hear from either of them."

Emergency responders from the Joplin, Seneca and Redings Mill fire departments, in addition to the Newton County Sheriff's Office and Newton County Rescue and Recovery team, joined in the search.

"We got into action quickly, and that's what helped us find him," Sheriff Ken Copeland said. "The Highway Patrol chopper was even in the area with infrared to see if they could help. It really was an area-wide search that got him home."

Smith?said his son was checked out at a Joplin hospital and was relatively unscathed, even though he was found without his shoes, cuts on part of his body and holes in his clothes.

Smith?gives the dogs ? Baxter, a large boxer that has been with the family more than 10 years, and Bella, a mixed Labrador, who joined the family over Christmas ? credit for keeping?Ryle?safe.

"They both were incredible in the way that they protected him,"?Smith?said. "They wouldn't have left him for anything. You can't ask for more in a dog than that."

He also said he was extremely thankful for the way so many people in the area sprang into action.

"It amazes me how quick everyone came out to look for my son," he said. "An hour after word got out, you couldn't get anywhere close to the driveway. I still haven't got to meet the men who actually found?Ryle, but I just want them to know how thankful we are."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/5mhNs9P43ac/Dogs-kept-lost-boy-in-Missouri-warm-until-found-video

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Corning Gorilla Glass 3 - a CES first look

Android Central @ CES

When it comes to chemically-hardened glass, we smartphone types are definitely fans. When it comes to making our glass-fronted smartphones more durable, Corning has always been at the forefront, and their latest revelation in the form of Gorilla Glass 3 will prove to be even more of a protective force between our LCDs and the harsh world we live in.

We dropped in on Corning to check out its new Gorilla Glass 3, and in its demonstrations it lived up to the pre-show announcement hype. Gorilla Glass 3 is tougher in all forms when compared to its competition and even its predecessor in the form of Gorilla Glass 2. It can withstand greater impact force, is harder to scratch, and can stand up to forces that are capable of denting equally-thick steel. It's tough stuff, folks.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/Bdu01H6gLuM/story01.htm

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Friday, January 11, 2013

Asteroid Apophis Just Got Bigger

That orbital perturbation is random & would simply not be predictable.

Not exactly. It's passing by earth again in another 15 years or so -- and its orbit has to pass through a very small space in order for Earth's gravity to alter it just that tiny smidge so that over the following 15 years, that few thousands of a degree change due to gravitational pull will close that 22,364 mile gap. It has to be spot on -- if the vector is even slightly off, it'll either get slingshot out of the solar system (or into one of the outer planets), or into the Sun.

While you're right that the energy required to move the asteroid into a collision path is low, it has to be the precise amount, and at the precise vector. A random preturbation has a very low chance of being at both the correct energy level, and at the correct vector. And even many such random preturbations still wouldn't alter the orbit enough that if we looked for it on its next approach in a very narrow region of the sky, we couldn't find it. Which means we'll know its coming, and we'll have several years' warning to take action. I just hope they can clone Bruce Willis before then.

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/6UendPPwJ4M/story01.htm

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Flu season has Boston declaring health emergency

Four-year-old Gabriella Diaz sits as registered nurse Charlene Luxcin, right, administers a flu shot at the Whittier Street Health Center in Boston, Mass., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013. Boston declared a public health emergency Wednesday as the city tried to deal with a harsh flu season and the state reported 18 flu-related deaths so far. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Four-year-old Gabriella Diaz sits as registered nurse Charlene Luxcin, right, administers a flu shot at the Whittier Street Health Center in Boston, Mass., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013. Boston declared a public health emergency Wednesday as the city tried to deal with a harsh flu season and the state reported 18 flu-related deaths so far. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

A vial of flu vaccine at the Whittier Street Health Center in Boston, Mass., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013. Boston declared a public health emergency Wednesday as the city tried to deal with a harsh flu season and the state reported 18 flu-related deaths so far. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Registered nurse Charlene Luxcin administers a flu shot to a patient at the Whittier Street Health Center in Boston, Mass., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013. Boston declared a public health emergency Wednesday as the city tried to deal with a harsh flu season and the state reported 18 flu-related deaths so far. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Vials of flu vaccine are displayed at the Whittier Street Health Center in Boston, Mass., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013. Boston declared a public health emergency Wednesday as the city tried to deal with a harsh flu season and the state reported 18 flu-related deaths so far. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

(AP) ? Boston declared a public health emergency Wednesday as flu season struck in earnest and the state reported 18 flu-related deaths so far.

The city is working with health care centers to offer free flu vaccines and hopes to set up places where people can get vaccinated. The city said there have been four flu-related deaths, all elderly residents, since the unofficial start of the flu season Oct. 1.

"The best thing you can do to protect yourself and your family is to get the flu shot," said Boston Mayor Thomas Menino.

The city was experiencing its worst flu season since at least 2009, Menino said, with about 700 confirmed cases of the flu, compared with 70 all of last season.

Massachusetts was one of 29 states reporting high levels of "influenza-like illness," according to the most recent weekly flu advisory issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC said the proportion of people visiting health care providers with flu-like symptoms climbed from 2.8 percent to 5.6 percent in four weeks. By contrast, the rate peaked at only 2.2 percent during the relatively mild 2011-12 flu season.

The estimated rate of flu-related hospitalizations in the U.S. was 8.1 per 100,000 people, which is high for this time of year, according to Dr. Joe Bresee, chief of the epidemiology and prevention branch of the CDC's influenza division.

Barbara Ferrer, director of the Boston public health commission, said the emergency was declared in part to get residents' attention. She said that the 700 confirmed cases represent only those reported to the city and that thousands of other people may be ill.

Boston hospitals had counted about 1,500 emergency room visits since December by people with flu-like symptoms. Menino said people with symptoms shouldn't go to work or school.

LaKeisha Davis, 23, was at the Whittier Street Health Center on Wednesday for treatment of unrelated pain when she heard about the flu emergency being declared in Boston.

She took a flu vaccine on the spot, fearing that if she got the flu her 4-year-old daughter might catch it as well.

"I love her more than anything in the world and I don't want anything to happen to her," Davis said.

Frederica Williams, president of the community health center in the inner-city Roxbury neighborhood, said her facility had opened a special flu clinic and was using social media and sending letters to residents urging them to come in and get flu shots. Williams estimated that the number of patients coming to the clinic with flu-like symptoms was triple that of a year ago.

Hospitals around the state were also taking precautions to protect patients and staff members from exposure to the flu.

Baystate Health, which operates Baystate Medical Center in Springfield and two other hospitals in western Massachusetts, announced it was changing its visitor policy. The hospitals will no longer allow visitors younger than 14 and are recommending no more than two people visit a patient at once.

"This is the worst in several years," said Dr. Sarah Haessler, an infectious disease specialist at Baystate. She said the flu outbreak has strained the hospital's resources and helped to fill its beds to capacity.

City, state and federal officials have all identified a Type A influenza known as H3N2 as the predominant strain reported so far this season. The strain, historically associated with more serious illnesses, is among those covered by the current vaccine.

"No vaccine is 100 percent effective," cautioned Kevin Cranston, head of the state bureau of infectious diseases. Some people, for example, might be vaccinated but get the flu in the 10 days to two weeks it takes for the immunity to take hold.

"There are any number of reasons why people could have done all the right things and still get the flu," he said.

High flu rates were being reported all over Massachusetts, Cranston said, and while he didn't have specifics on the 18 statewide deaths, he noted that the flu is most dangerous for the young, the elderly and people with other chronic health conditions.

"I hate needles, and I got (a shot)," Gov. Deval Patrick said Wednesday, adding that he wasn't aware of any shortages of vaccine in the state. He also reminded residents to use common sense, such as washing their hands and sneezing into their sleeves.

The CDC said 18 children have died from the flu so far this season. While the CDC doesn't keep a tab of deaths overall from the flu, it estimates that 24,000 Americans die each year.

___

Associated Press writer Rodrique Ngowi in Boston contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-09-Massachusetts%20Flu/id-d55be0b09afb4004901aeec77d59f656

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