杏吧原创

Feedback: Is this a cornucopia of cures?

In search of a cornucopia of cures, the parts of a naming, an application of the Goldilocks Meso-Tech Principle and more
Feedback: Is this a cornucopia of cures?
(Image: Paul McDevitt)

Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more

Cornucopia of cures?

IMMEDIATELY after our appeal for information on the health effects of newspaper health advice (19 April), we found a resource that will be invaluable for any such study: .

The site chronicles front pages of the Daily Express 鈥 a publication that is registered as a newspaper at the Post Office 鈥 that bear 鈥渕iracle cure鈥 headlines. We looked at the headline for 25 April 鈥 鈥淐offee helps beat diabetes鈥 鈥 and in the previous fortnight also found 鈥淢ajor cancer breakthrough鈥 (17 April); 鈥淧roof statins beat dementia鈥 (14 April); 鈥淎rthritis: new way to ease pain鈥 (7 April); and 鈥淒iet that adds years to life鈥 (1 April). That last was the same news that prompted Roy Stillman to contemplate 鈥渟pending much of the rest of eternity on the loo, [given] the effect that fruit has on me鈥 (19 April).

The Creekside Grill in Ann Arbor, Michigan, enticingly that it boasts 鈥渁 TV-maligned bar鈥. If that鈥檚 where patrons malign the television, isn鈥檛 it a normal bar?

A productivity boom for what?

WE count the Daily Express headlining 84 breakthroughs in the past 12 months, on the above-mentioned website. Others might wonder whether it is press-releasing rather than medical science that is experiencing such a productivity boom, but we couldn鈥檛 possibly comment.

Indirect inspiration

AGITATED delight at the above mention of coffee as a wonder cure is tempered by the realisation that caffeine may not be the font of creativity. We had noticed that ideas tend to pop up after we get out of our chair, and had attributed this to the caffeine in our tea.

But experiments at Stanford University have shown that people are more creative when walking than when sitting (). So it appears the effect is less direct; as a diuretic, caffeine stimulates us to walk to the loo, and the walking stimulates the ideas.

What should this headline be?

INDEED, while Feedback was out taking the air just now we had a most excellent idea, which鈥 er鈥

Mapping mystery

IT IS a few years, Martin Horwood writes, 鈥渟ince I took a few minutes off from my parliamentary duties to report the historical and future time limits of Outlook鈥檚 calendar鈥 (4 August 2007). Now the MP for Cheltenham writes about an odd feature of the mapping service offered by a famous web search engine (FWSE).

Locate London. Zoom out to show it in the context of England. now shown is Leigh-on-Sea in Essex. Not Cambridge, Cheltenham or Oxford.

Don鈥檛 get us wrong, Leigh-on-Sea has its charms: Feedback recalls a happy afternoon eating fish and chips in a quayside pub there. But why should it be any more map-worthy than other places?

Martin naturally suspects that politics is involved. We hunted in vain for connections between Leigh and Steve Hilton, former strategy guru to the UK prime minister and married to the FWSE鈥檚 senior vice-president of communications and public policy for information technology, Rachel Whetstone. But we did find out that Hilton , which was shown on the FWSE鈥檚 map when we looked.

Then we glanced across the sea鈥 Brussels was missing! Not surprising, given the FWSE鈥檚 many run-ins with the European Commission there.

The parts of a naming

FWSE? Why? Recently arrived colleagues, and reader Andrew Ward, want to know. In 2006 New 杏吧原创 received a letter from trademark lawyers 鈥 as did other publications. It comes to such lawyers as naturally as breathing to object to the use of lower case verbs like 鈥渢o google鈥, lest it convert their trademark into a 鈥済eneric鈥 word.

We heard spluttering from a neighbouring desk at this restriction on journalism鈥檚 vocabulary. We decided that henceforth we would be referring to a Famous Web Search Engine (2 September 2006).

This usage is now recognised at . It also saves giving free advertising, to which our bank manager objects.

Just right

THANKS to Tony Harker for the first response to our call for more examples of technology that is 鈥渏ust right鈥 in terms of its antiquity 鈥 or, as we prefer to say, adheres to the Goldilocks Meso-Tech Principle (19 April). He sagely observes that the principle applies to electric kettles: 鈥淚f they have transparent water level gauges, they leak; if they have press-button lids, the linkages break.鈥 He has 鈥渞everted to one with a solid metal body and a lid that lifts off鈥; any older, though, and a kettle鈥檚 frayed, cloth-wrapped lead would disqualify it.

A wheely good analogy

FINALLY, talking 鈥 as one does 鈥 of kettles, we thank Martin Harris for directing us to the website of the Falkirk Wheel, an ingenious engineering solution to moving canal boats from one level to another. So ingenious is it that 鈥渏ust 1.5 kilowatt-hours (5.4 megajoules) of energy in 4 minutes, roughly the same as boiling eight kettles of water鈥.

Oddly enough, it may have been this column that helped inspire use of the kettle measure 鈥 for the power consumption of China鈥檚 Tianhe-2 computer cluster (6 July 2013). To avoid unfortunate unit-confusion consequences, we should stress again that we were referring to a European kettle drawing on a 230-volt supply.

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