Covers to Broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Ciaran O’Tuama (Mail on Sunday); Spar, Leeson Street, Dublin and The Sunday Life; Enda Bolger (Irish Sun).
Covers to Broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Ciaran O’Tuama (Mail on Sunday); Spar, Leeson Street, Dublin and The Sunday Life; Enda Bolger (Irish Sun).
Italian architect Luigi Prina made his first model aircraft at the age of 16. In his mid 60s, after a successful career in building design, he met painter and boat builder Eugenio Tomiolo who challenged him to make one of his model boats fly.
In the twenty years since, Prima has dedicated his retirement to creating delicate, fully functional flying models worthy of Leonardo DaVinci.
MORE: Luigi Prina: The Ships That Sail Through The Clouds (Blinking City)
Photos by Gianluca Giannone.
On November 14, 1963, the Titan II intercontinental ballistic missile shot into space from the South Atlantic at 17,000 miles per hour. This unmanned booster would eventually carry the Gemini space capsules, NASA’s second manned mission to space, succeeding Mercury and preceding Apollo. But what made that fateful November morning particularly noteworthy was something else: Mounted on the second stage of the missile was a camera that offered a preview of what the astronauts would see from space and provided the first-ever footage from the cosmos.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3aFBgP23sw
A minute and a half of cats acting like teh hoomins.
(Thanks mihailfrancu)
On Wednesday Labour Minister Brendan Howlin suddenly withdrew changes to the Freedom of Information Bill that would have substantially increased the cost of obtaining information from public bodies.
Dublin solicitor and FOI activist Simon McGarr attended the Select Sub-Committee on Public Expenditure and Reform committee meeting on the same day, where Mr Howlin attempted to explain his FOI strategy.
On his blog, Mr McGarr writes:
Maybe it was the lateness of the hour or maybe it was just the effect of a couple of days of unexpected trouble but minister Brendan Howlin on Wednesday told us why he wants to charge €15 in respect of FOI requests.
The Minister was on his second day in Committee. The session had started with him announcing that he wanted to withdraw his controversial amendment to Section 12, multiplying Ireland’s FOI Fees.
He wasn’t abandoning his plans, he had just lost confidence overnight in his amendment’s wording. He confirmed his plan to bring back the fee hike later.
Despite this temporary retreat, he still faced questions. [Independent TD] Stephen Donnelly asked him how much money the Government expected it was going to cost to collect those fees – and whether the Government had estimated how much money they would raise.
Like the Hatter flanked by the Dormouse and the March Hare, the minister sat between his civil servants, who murmured words in his ear.
The Minister explained that his department couldn’t actually manage to make any estimate.
Donnelly pointed out that, without estimates, the Minister had no idea if the fees he was intending to levy would actually contribute anything to the state.
The Minister couldn’t deny it, having already said his department – which is involved in preparing the national budget – couldn’t give any estimate
In fact, it is quite possible that the fees might cost us extra. That we would actually spend money to collect less money.
It was then that the Minister told us that what mattered wasn’t whether the fee made money. It was that he didn’t want people getting something without paying for it. “In the current climate. ”
The State couldn’t have a situation where people could just get access to their information for nothing- as if it was a right!
Citizens had to make a contribution. Not a contribution to the costs, because who knows if the admin will eat it all.
Asked again about those fees, the Minister was worn out. Rubbing his eyes, perhaps wishing that-like [Lewis] Carroll’s Dormouse- he could just curl up and doze, he tried to make it clear to the rest of us:
He mostly needed to charge a fee to pay for the expense of charging a fee.
As an observer to the committee, this was a revelation.
I don’t know what the European Court of Justice would think of this.
I don’t know what the European Court of Human Rights would think of this.
I don’t know what the United Nations would think of this.
But I know what I thought of it.
I thought it was a polished, softly spoken outburst of irrationality.
I thought it was mad.
Lewis Carroll’s Freedom of Information Bill 2013 (Simon McGarr, McGarr Solicitors)
Previously: FOI It’s Worth
(Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland)
Meet Bruno the red titi monkey, Belfast Zoo’s latest arrival.
Proud parents mum Inca and dad Aztec are sharing parenting responsibilities.
About time too.
A little arrival but a ‘BIG deal’ at Belfast Zoo (Belfastzoo.co.uk)