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18 July, 2008 at 10:32 am #355122
14 Years ago a large retail chain employed a section of the company I worked for to make cost savings (project) They did the following simple things;
When a ceiling light has four lamps in it they removed two
Taps that could not be left running were fitted (you know bash the top and they turn themselves off)
Heating and air conditioning systems had their upper and lower thermostats + & – 2%
(It was a little cooler in winter and a little warmer in summer)De-hums (Duhumidifiers to us) well they turned one if four of them off completely so all the freezers on the shop floor just spewed moisture into the atmosphere
You could probably now go with new generation solar panels and use them to heat a tank of hot water, Very quick pay-back = one or two yearsChange all your tungsten lamps to LED’s (However the making of an LED is by no means green or carbon freindly)
Fit a water meter to your water supply and re-fill your toilet cistern with rain water (simple modification but effective)
Have better more efficient glazing and insulation fitted at home, In sweden there are houses that lose virtually zero heat, Why cant that technology be readily available here!
We perhaps need to think about design as an alternative to retrospective savings
Other than that eat cold food because then you do not have to pay to heat it up!
16 July, 2008 at 12:26 pm #354555@catmanblue wrote:
catmanblue :shock: :shock:
That’s absolutely true and gospel
From silly sausage………
16 July, 2008 at 12:25 pm #354671@prettypink wrote:
@*Sian wrote:
I fink it mean your network provider PP :oops: :lol:
Blimey fanks Sian..bloddy ell! why didnt they just say that…so would that be like Tiscali who im with?
I might be preaching to the converted but I would imagine it needs configuring to your ISP (internet service provider)
:?:
16 July, 2008 at 6:50 am #351870@*Sian wrote:
Virgin Media will push broadband speeds up to 20Mb/ps on its flagship XL cable broadband service from May, that’s double the current 10Mbp/s limit.
That makes it the fastest (widely available) home internet connection in the UK. What does it mean in real terms? Well, a standard MP3 music track can be downloaded in around two seconds. The one downside is a price increase – £37 per month instead of the current £35 rate, with unlimited downloads and online security.
I’ll get this + XLtv and Freecalls all day everyday for just 56 quid, worth it or not?
Sian,
And your machine can cope with those speeds?We are on our own fibre optic network at work and first thing in the morning it’s light-speed but as everyone logs on………….It does slow down, Probably through the sheer amount and systems running
I’ve just ditched my L/Line and broadband at home and gone for the mobile USB modem, It’s a bit slower but works anywhere there is a mobile phone signal. £15 quid a month, For the ”out & about” It’s ideal.
Let me know how it works if you take it .
Cheers
15 July, 2008 at 2:03 pm #354537@bon bon wrote:
I’m frigid
Cat’s nun
*apologise*
It’s my memory it’s going with old age!
Alzheimer’s next………………..WoooOOHOOOoo!
15 July, 2008 at 1:33 pm #354535@bon bon wrote:
i posted this on a thread ffs
Pass me a valiumI’m Diane in the rooms
whats your user name if its different ?Hi Fridge or NUN…LOL
Dibb’s here Dibb’s there!
15 July, 2008 at 1:27 pm #354422@forumhostpb wrote:
There IS a national fiasco (as you so succinctly put it). The Government (who we all love and respect don’t we ….. I said DON’T WE ?????) have handed the contract for SATS marking to EDS – who have totally messed the entire thing up yet again.
Hey. . . .I work for HM gov *calls his mate in the revenue* and ask’s him too check PB pays ALL his taxes!
We’re ok. . . (some of us)
And for the gooner this info from the BBC news website
(Who is not linked to HM gov @bbc)
It sounds like a full floating ocean going teflon coated b a l l s up doesnt it?
Boxes of unmarked English test scripts are sitting uncollected in a school, despite the exam chief’s claim to MPs that delayed marking was 100% complete.
English tests taken by 11-year-olds at several schools were sent to a maths marker, who is also a head teacher at another school.
He has made repeated efforts to have them collected for marking.
Phil Hollman, one of the head teachers whose pupils’ test papers are still in these boxes, said he was “appalled”.
Schools had been promised that all the marking had been completed and as of Sunday night almost all marks had been entered into a computer system for publication online on Tuesday.
The current position is that in Key Stage 2 the marking is now 100% complete
QCA chief Ken Boston, speaking to MPs on Monday
After the failure of the private contractor, ETS Europe, to complete the Sats marking process within the deadline of last Tuesday, a new date was set in an attempt to make sure 11-year-olds received their marks before the end of term.
Missing papers
The head of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, Ken Boston, told a select committee of MPs on Monday: “The current position is that in Key Stage 2 the marking is now 100% complete.”
However a photograph sent to the BBC News website shows six boxes of still unmarked English test papers in a Lancashire primary school, wrongly delivered last month.
It is thought this could contain the unmarked work of pupils in six or seven primary schools.
Despite the head teacher’s efforts to contact ETS, the National Assessment Agency and the Department for Children, Schools and Families, and receiving assurances that the test papers would be collected for marking, the papers are still there.
The children have put their heart and soul into this, that’s what hurts
Head teacher Phil Hollman
When the head checked the contents of one of the boxes, the registration numbers showed that some of the papers were from St Martin’s primary school in Runcorn, Cheshire.
The head teacher of St Martin’s, Phil Hollman, only found out that there was a problem when he checked the marks published online and found that his pupils’ English test scores were missing.
Now he has found out that his pupils’ papers have never even been looked at by markers – despite assurances that all would be well with delivering results.
“The children have put their heart and soul into this. That’s what hurts. I’ve had to speak to the children this morning to tell them nothing has come back,” Mr Hollman told the BBC News website.
“It sums the whole thing up. It’s the children who are suffering. We like to speak to each of them individually about their results.
“I’m not interested in league tables or percentages, it’s about how much individual pupils have been able to achieve.”
Without the information provided by the head teacher who still has the boxes, he says his school would have remained completely in the dark about what had happened to all its pupils’ hard work.
In terms of the company which has been running the Sats marking, Mr Hollman says he would like “to treat them with the disdain with which they’ve treated us”.
Responses from other schools getting in touch with the BBC News website show that this is not an isolated incident.
The head of St Augustine’s school in Weymouth says that he also has not received the English results or scripts – and that ETS has informed the school to check again in another 24 hours.
A spokesman for ETS Europe says that the company is investigating the non-collection of the boxes and will be contacting schools which are affected.
The unmarked papers in these boxes will be marked as soon as possible, says the ETS spokesman.
Following the publication of this story, the ETS vice-president Andy Latham has phoned the Lancashire school holding the unmarked papers and has promised that the boxes will be collected today.
A spokesman for the National Assessment Agency said that: “Every year a small number of scripts are mislaid during the marking process and some schools have no levels to report on results day.
“Everything possible is done to trace such mislaid scripts but, clearly, these scripts should have been located much earlier. The papers are now being collected and will be marked and we apologise to the schools concerned for the further delay in receiving their results.”
27 June, 2008 at 12:56 pm #350924ooooops
How did my text end up inside his quote?
27 June, 2008 at 12:55 pm #350923@ganjaman wrote:
i wish to lodge a formal complaint! on friday the 27th of june between the hours of 11.30 am and now i have been unsuccesful in gaining entrance to the chat forum of my choice…….. this has seriuosly affected my friday tarting session and as such i have been forced to stand on the street asking random female passers by such questions as ASL,do you come here often and are you horny?
and as such i have sustained personal injury on several occasions,to date i have been hit with three newspapers,two asda carrier bags ( full ) and been assaulted by one angry husband after asking his wife if i could enter her box please!! i wish it be known i hold the jc owners responsable for my injurys and shall pursuee the matter further with my legal dept!!!! :evil: i have now given up these antics and have instead searched through my back catalouge of razzle to find a suitable means of tension release :wink:rant over! :D
Are you having a stack overflow at line zero?
(and have you thought about calling in a no win no fee consultation service)
27 June, 2008 at 8:05 am #350593 -
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