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Posts Tagged ‘Ireland’

Phew! What a…washout!

September 2nd, 2009

picture-1As if we needed to be told, the official weather data for August has been released by Met Eireann, revealing that August was another damp – or soaking – squib. Rainfall figures show that July and August have been, respectively, 1.6 and 2 times the average at the Belmullet weather station.

Here in Mayo we should be grateful, however, as some parts of Ireland have been far wetter, with nearly 4 times the seasonal average falling at Johnstown Castle in July, and 2.5 times the mean at Valencia in August.

Interestingly, the temperature and sunshine figures for Belmullet have been slightly above average, 6% & 7% respectively. The summary, then, is warmer and wetter, which happens to be just what the climate change model is predicting.

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Child Abuse, the State & the Catholic Church in Ireland

May 23rd, 2009

Many of you will have heard about the report, published a few days ago, into the abuse of children in Industrial Schools in Ireland during the 20th Century.

The report, a massive work that has taken nine years to compile, documents the enormous scale of the abuses – every type imaginable – inflicted on both boys and girls by the, supposedly Christian, people responsible for their education and welfare. It documents the awareness of the abuses, some might say collusion, of both the Irish State and the Catholic Church. What the report does not document, thanks to a High Court ruling in 2004, is the names of the guilty parties.

Much has been written and broadcast about the report, by people far more qualified to comment than I am. Indeed, the abuses are not really news. These appalling abuses have been widely recognised for some considerable time, but the report brings together many of the stories of the victims and highlights the scale of the tragedy. It is important for all of us to be aware of what happened, in the hope that a blind eye is never again turned towards such dreadful crimes.

Read more about the abuses committed by the Catholic Church in Ireland by clicking this link.

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miscellaneous, national politics, politics , ,

Mayo Open Coffee Club gets down to business

February 25th, 2009

coffeeThe Mayo Open Coffee Club met for the first time today when a ‘bakers dozen’ gathered at the TF Royal Hotel in Castlebar for a bit of a chat and a cup of coffee.

Thanks and congratulations are due to Chris Kerndter, the driving force behind establishing MOCC – well done Chris!

The Open Coffee Club concept is to encourage entrepreneurs, developers and investors to organise real-world informal meetups to chat, network and grow. More details about Mayo OCC are at mayo-open-coffee-club.org, including details of future meetings.

A good mix of people were in attendance, from developers and business owners to mentors and people involved in support and incubation of fledgling businesses, all adding up to a solid foundation on which MOCC can grow. The venue, a large hotel in the centre of Castlebar, was spacious and accommodating, although the coffee was a bit on the pricey side.

So, a great start and plenty to look forward to in the future.

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Achill and the National Broadband Scheme

January 30th, 2009

This week saw the official announcement of something or other to do with broadband in Ireland. If that sounds a bit vague, well I’m sorry. I’m never quite clear about these ‘official’ events/launches/occasions: there is no new information – we all knew that 3 had got the job of supposedly providing broadband for all the places in Ireland that don’t already have it – just lots of smiling and congratulating and posing and repeating of tired mantras and ignoring difficult questions. Political posturing at its finest.

Now that it’s all ‘official’ (rather than just decided?) I suppose we can all comment on it. The newspapers are, briefly, full of smiley, posey pictures; all the politicians and aspiring politicians crawl out of the slime to either congratulate the government on another brilliant scheme or berate them for wasting money on another half-baked idea.

As far as the national picture is concerned, looking at the positives, it’s great that the government is prepared to step in and fund the provision of broadband for everybody. On the negative side, the government have surely set the bar too low, in that: less than 2MB cannot really be considered broadband in the 21st century (forget the moans about bandwidth reducing when there are lots of users – all broadband is contended); the target of ‘covering the whole country’ is imprecise – in the UK they are specifying the supply of broadband ‘to every household’, which is quite different.

To illustrate the second criticism, consider Achill. The island, as far as the NBS is concerned, is split into two parts: one is on the ‘planned’ list, the other is on the ‘not included’ list. Why does one part of the island miss out? Well, there is already a 3 mast which, notionally, covers this part of the island. The reality, as anyone with the slightest experience of cellphone signals will realise, is that in some spots there is a great signal but move around the corner and there is none. Achill is not flat; hills get in the way, leaving ’shadows’ where there is no signal. Then there are walls: most broadband users do not want to sit in the garden surfing the net, at least not in Ireland. So again, some houses and offices are fine, others get nothing. There is no reason to believe that the ‘planned’ part of Achill will fare any better.

Achill is not a special case: this picture will be repeated all over the country. Hence to say that the whole country will be covered by broadband, one way or another, is meaningless. You’ll find the usual ‘haves and have-nots’ thing between wired and wireless areas, and between good and bad signal areas. Let’s not pretend, either, that the proposed satellite coverage for areas where a cellular signal is impractical is the answer. As a satellite ‘broadband’ user for several years, I can attest to the deeply unsatisfactory nature of this ’solution’.

I have no doubt that, if I am one of the lucky ones, I will appreciate the improvements of cellular broadband over satellite broadband, but I will continue to look with envy at those a few miles up the road with their DSL lines.

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Life in Currane, national politics, politics, technology , , , , , ,

Row over Oasis’ Gallagher brothers at Mayo Council meeting

January 14th, 2009

img_0042Liam & Noel Gallagher, stars of British rock band Oasis, were at the centre of a row at a recent meeting of Mayo County Council.

According to a report in the Mayo News, councillors disagreed about a proposal to honour the brothers, whose mother is from Charlestown, with a Civic reception. Despite the objections, the Council agreed to invite the brothers to an event in the east Mayo town which, according to one councillor, would be “claiming these sons of emigrants back.”

It is not known if Liam & Noel would be interested in such an event.

Seems a bit presumptuous to me; just because someone is part Irish it is assumed that they would want to be ‘claimed back.’

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entertainment, local politics , , , ,

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