golden-discs-dundrum

Every Friday, we give away a voucher to the value of 25 big ones to spend with abandon at any of the many Golden Discs stores nationawide.

All we ask from YOU is a tune we can play TODAY.

This week’s theme: Diddly aye.

What traditional Irish tune tickles your ear buds and bangs your bodhran?

To enter, just complete this sentence:

‘The most outstanding example of traditional music from the island of Ireland would have to be______________________________’

Lines MUST close at 2.30pm

Golden Discs

youngpeoples

FIGHT!

Could Fair City be next for axe as RTÉ looks at all areas in cost-cutting drive? (iIndependent,ie)

Meanwhile…

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Mary Fitzgerald

RTÉ is at it again, selling off the family silver. First the lands around the RTÉ studios in Donnybrook, and now the jewel in the crown, children’s and young people’s television programmes.

As a former RTÉ children’s and young people’s television presenter in the 1980s and 1990s of very successful children’s shows, made in-house by great RTÉ production teams, I am very disappointed and sad to hear the news that RTÉ is outsourcing the making of children’s and young people’s television programmes to independent production companies.

Did anyone ask the children or young people what they think? Probably not. Their voices are always the last to be heard. Once again children’s interest are bottom of the pile, and the accountants win out. A very short-sighted decision.

Mary Fitzgerald

Irish Times Letters

Update….

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This year’s Web Summit in Lisbon, Portugal

…Exsqueeze me?

Never mind. How was Web Summit?

Web Summit is where humanity rushes towards its extinction….

Right so.

This would explain a few things. For instance, what do any of the companies exhibiting at Web Summit actually do?

Much of the conference space is given over to these start-up exhibitors; each of them gets a meter of wall and a plug socket for their laptop, along with a big sign in which they announce their ambitions in terms that make absolutely no sense whatsoever.

Of course, the tech industry has its own specialized discourse, so while one company announces that it “brings the next generation of B2C, B2B, B2E platforms to a high qualified partners network supported by a great business model,” you can make the vague assumption that all this gibberish might actually mean something to someone somewhere.

Similarly, with TrackingDoc, tagline “selling is a game,” which lets you “discover how people engage with your sales documents.” It’s a strange kind of language, all modifiers bleached lifeless by cliché, employing the most grandiose terms (‘discover,’ ‘transformational,’ ‘revolution’) to describe what tends to be a new way of doing paperwork, spinning precariously on the edge of meaninglessness, but it’s still language.

But what about the firm calling itself (for unknown and possibly unpleasant reasons) Kwanko, announcing simply that “data is the new performance?

Or Lapa, which claims without any other information to be “transforming the way people search and protect all the things they can’t live without?” Or CrowdT, a “crowdfunding platform using apparel to raise funds?

This isn’t meaning, in any of its usual senses, something that exists to be understood, but the zombie signifier, words building and feeding on each other to form a system terrifyingly self-sustaining and utterly opaque.

Gulp.

Watching the World Rot at Europe’s Largest Tech Conference (Sam Kriss, The Atlantic)

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Members of the The Joint Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform From left: Senator Gerry Horkan,Senator Rose Conway-Walsh, Senator Kieran O’Donnell and John McGuinness T.D Chairperson of the on the Plinth, Leinster House in Dublin today.

The report [on the motor insurance industry[ concluded that on average premiums have increased by 37%, but in some cases premium hikes have been in the order of 200%-300%.

“It is apparent that insurance companies in many cases are refusing even to quote insurance. In other instances, insurance companies quote but the amounts sought are so large that the net effect is to prevent people from getting insurance,” the draft report states.

It says it is unacceptable that the insurance industry publicly states that certain variables are behind steep increases in motor insurance, yet fail to publicly furnish the supporting evidence. “The insurance industry cannot have it both ways,” it added.

Want to bet?

FIGHT!

Report concludes drivers have ‘been thrown to the wolves’ over car insurance (Irish Examiner)

Motor insurance industry accused of cartel-like behaviour (Irish Times)

Previously: Unacceptable

Premium Content

‘There Is A Cartel Of Insurance Underwriters’

Rollingnews

Broadsheet.ie