Monthly Archives: May 2011

“Did you see that video about the seal being released into the wild.”

Now you see why they prefer Stephen’s Green.

A heartwarming scene this afternoon at the Dublin City Wholesale Fruit and Veg market.

Eithne and Jo (real names) with models Georgia Salpa (left) and Jude Nabney.

The models are wearing Irish-designed headpieces to launch the OMC Championships in Hair, Nails, Beauty and Bodypainting taking place in RDS Dublin (May 29-30).

Yes folks.

That‘s bodypaint?

(Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland)

Because it’s not his job.

Pat Farrell, chief executive of the Irish Banking Federation, this morning (on Morning Ireland) rejected Edmund “Yes, He’s My Brother” Honohan’s contention that the banks are driving people to kill themselves.

Maybe he hasn’t taken a taxi for a while because he dismissed the very idea “completely”.

He went on to say: “I reject the fact that those assertions are being made because at the end of the day I have to look at it from the perspective of my members.”

We guess he’ll get back to us if any of his members should call it a day.

Debt Forgiveness A Matter Of Urgency (Irish Times)

Previously: A Honohan You Can Believe In

(Photocall Ireland)

Yes, probably.

The graveyard of outer space – crowded with some 17,000 spent rocket stages, dead or dying satellites and countless crumbs of human-made orbital flotsam – is building toward critical mass, colliding, creating more debris. According to experts at the John Hopkins Space Department, it’s now inevitable that every satellite in orbit will be ‘percussively decommissioned’. According to Gen. William Shelton, commander of USAF Space Command:

“The traffic is increasing. We’ve now got over 50 nations that are participants in the space environment,” Shelton said last month during the Space Foundation’s 27th National Space Symposium. Given existing space situational awareness capabilities, over 20,000 objects are now tracked.

“We catalog those routinely and keep track of them. That number is projected to triple by 2030, and much of that is improved sensors, but some of that is increased traffic,” Shelton said. “Then if you think about it, there are probably 10 times more objects in space than we’re able to track with our sensor capability today. Those objects are untrackable … yet they are lethal to our space systems — to military space systems, civil space systems, commercial — no one’s immune from the threats that are in orbit today, just due to the traffic in space.”

Ugly Truth of Space Junk: Orbital Debris Problem to Triple by 2030 (Space.com)

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