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Mercedes-Benz C180 Avantgarde: Compact luxury

By - Jul 11,2016 - Last updated at Jul 11,2016

Photo courtesy of Mercedes-Benz

Launched in 2014 as Mercedes’ fifth compact executive saloon since the 190 first appeared in the 1980s, the C-Class has become a more luxurious and technologically advanced car. Closer to a junior luxury car and first stepping stone towards Mercedes’ flagship S-Class luxury saloon, the current C-Class vacates the “Baby Benz” mantle to the front-drive A-Class hatchback and CLA-Class saloon. 

Confident in its Mercedes-Benz character and seemingly un-concerned with competing with others on their own terms, the current C-Class’ luxury credentials include the segment-first use of optional air suspension — usually reserved for full-size luxury cars. With a broad range of models available from C160 to fire-breathing AMG C63, the driven C180 Avantgarde is luxuriously appointed, versatile and efficient with accessible yet confident performance parameters.

 

Fluent lines

 

Taking its design cues from Mercedes’ S-Class luxury flagship, the C-Class features elegant curves, sporty proportions and toned body, utilising discrete concave and convex surfacing. Distinctly luxurious, with long wheel-arch to A-pillar distance to highlight its rear drive platform, the C-Class’ smoothly arcing roofline and strong shoulders fluently taper towards a descending boot line. 

Driven in Avantgarde trim level, the C-Class features a two-slat grille with body-colour grille outline with large tri-star emblem embedded within, rather than the traditional three-slat grille with bonnet-mounted emblem. Emphasising different facets of the C-Class’ character, Avantgarde isn’t as aggressive as optional AMG trim, but sportier than other trims, and includes thin twin-slat and mesh side intakes.

Elegant yet subtly athletic, with broad grille, flowing lines and charismatic surfacing, the C-Class features low CD0.27 aerodynamic drag for enhanced efficiency and highway refinement. Lighter than its predecessor by 100kg lighter owing to increased aluminium body content of 50 per cent and energy-saving features like electric-assisted steering, the current C-Class is up to 20 per cent more efficient.

 

Small but punchy

 

The second to entry level C-Class model, the C180 is powered by a 1.6-litre direct injection engine, turbocharged rather than supercharged as in previous generation, for enhanced efficiency. Developing 154BHP at 5300rpm and 184lb/ft throughout 1200-4000rpm and driving its rear wheels through an automatic 7-speed gearbox, the 1,425kg C180 accelerates through the 0-100km/h benchmark in 8.5 seconds and can attain 223km/h.

Responsive at low-end with little by way of turbo-lag, the C180 is responsive and muscular in mid-range for such a small engine, driving up steep inclines on rural Jordanian roads with confidence. Punchy in mid-range, the C180 is, however also seamless as power accumulates and eager to spin towards peak power, despite its low-revving character.

Smooth and responsive in sportier selectable settings and manual mode shifting, the C180’s 7-speed gearbox uses a broad range of ratio’s to eke the best of its compact engine. Aggressive lower gearing provides responsive acceleration while taller gears provide cruising refinement and efficiency. With stop/start system, the C180 returns 5.4l/100km combined cycle efficiency — only just less frugal than 2-litre C200 and C250 sister models.

 

Smooth and settled

 

Riding on four-link front and five-link rear suspension with optimised road surface vibration paths, lowered centre of gravity and near ideal weight balance, the C180 is smooth, poised, stable and refined at speed. Additionally, it is agile and tidy through switchbacks — with responsive, precise and well-damped steering — and manoeuvrable on narrow lanes and congested city streets.

With small light engine at the front and improved weighting, the C180 turns tidily and eagerly into corners, with balanced handling and good body control, before one re-applies throttle and unlocks the steering as the rear 225/50R17 tyres dig into the road before pouncing onto a straight. Nimble and settled, the C180’s mechanical suspension also provided buttoned down vertical rebound control. 

Incorporating more high strength steels and adhesives, and larger frame components, the current C-Class is stiffer, with handling, performance, refinement, fuel efficiency and crash safety benefits. With much improved noise vibration and harshness refinement, the C180 rides smooth and poised. During an extensive test drive only one especially jagged bump at a specific frequency and low speed was felt slightly more than expected.

 

Refined and well-equipped

 

Larger yet lighter than the previous C-Class, the current model gains 40mm width, while its wheelbase is increased by 80mm for improved rear legroom, while boot volume rises to 38 litres. Quiet, comfortable and refined inside, the C-Class’ well-appointed cabin features comfortable, supportive and highly adjustable and versatile front seats, ergonomically accommodation a broad and diverse range of driver sizes.

Classy and elegant utilising quality upholstery, trim and materials the C-Class Avant-garde feels and looks like a compact luxury car. Driven with light leather seats and black dashboard, steering and glossy console the C-Class features stylish design including three metal-ringed round centre vents, cone-like instrumentation, tablet-style infotainment screen and touchpad and rotary menus access. Meanwhile, good visibility allows one to accurately place the car on road.

 

Extensively well equipped with convenience, comfort, safety and Internet-enabled infotainment system, the C-Class is available with optional cross-traffic sensing brake assistance, stop/start cruise control, lane keeping assistance and a collision prevention system able to prevent or mitigate collision severity up to 40km/h collision and 200km/h respectively. The driven C180 Avantgarde also featured dual-zone climate control, rain sensing wipers and standard run-flat tyres.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

 

Engine: 1.6-litre, turbocharged, in-line 4 cylinders

Bore x stroke: 83 x 73.7mm

Compression ratio: 10.3:1

Valve-train: 16-valve, DOHC, direct injection

Gearbox: 7-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive

Ratios: 1st 4.38:1 2nd 2.86:1 3rd 1.92:1 4th 1.37:1 5th 1:1 6th 0.82:1 7th 0.73:1

Reverse: 1st 3.42:1 / 2nd 2.23:1

Final drive ratio: 3.07:1

0-100km/h: 8.5 seconds

Maximum speed: 223km/h

Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 154 (156) [115] @5300rpm

Specific power: 96.5BHP/litre

Power-to-weight: 108BHP/tonne

Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 184 (250) @ 1200-4000rpm

Specific torque: 156.7Nm/litre

Torque-to-weight: 175.4Nm/tonne

Fuel consumption, urban / extra-urban / combined: 6.8-/4.6-/5.4 litres/100km

CO2 emissions, combined: 126g/km

Fuel tank: 66 litres

Length: 4,686mm

Width: 1,810mm

Height: 1,442mm

Wheelbase: 2,840mm

Track, F/R: 1,588 / 1,570mm

Overhang, F/R: 790/1,056mm

Aerodynamic drag co-efficiency: 0.27

Headroom, F/R: 1,039/942mm

Boot capacity: 480 litres

Payload: 565kg

Kerb weight: 1,425kg

Steering: Power-assisted, rack and pinion

Turning circle: 11.22 metres

Suspension: Multi-link, anti-roll bars

Brakes, F/R: Ventilated discs/discs

 

Tyres, F/R: 225/50R17

Will Tesla or Google pull ahead of competition?

By - Jul 11,2016 - Last updated at Jul 11,2016

SAN FRANCISCO — Google and Tesla agree autonomous vehicles will make streets safer, and both are racing towards a driverless future. But when Google tested its self-driving car prototype on employees a few years ago, it noticed something that would take it down a different path from Tesla.

Once behind the wheel of the modified Lexus SUVs, the drivers quickly started rummaging through their bags, fiddling with their phones and taking their hands off the wheel — all while travelling on a freeway at 96kph.

“Within about five minutes, everybody thought the car worked well, and after that, they just trusted it to work,” Chris Urmson, the head of Google’s self-driving car programme, said on a panel this year. “It got to the point where people were doing ridiculous things in the car.”

After seeing how people misused its technology despite warnings to pay attention to the road, Google has opted to tinker with its algorithms until they are human-proof. The Mountain View, California, firm is focusing on fully autonomous vehicles — cars that drive on their own without any human intervention and, for now, operate only under the oversight of Google experts.

Tesla, on the other hand, released a self-driving feature called autopilot to customers in a software update last year. The electric carmaker, led by tech billionaire Elon Musk, says those who choose to participate in the “public beta phase” will help refine the technology and make streets safer sooner.

Tesla drivers already had logged some 209 million kilometres using the feature before a fatal crash in Florida in May made it the subject of a preliminary federal inquiry made public last week.

The divergent approaches reflect companies with different goals and business strategies. Tesla’s rapid-fire approach is in line with its image as a small but significant auto industry disruptor, while Google — a tech company from whom no one expects auto products — has the luxury of time.

With the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration yet to release guidelines for self-driving technology, existing regulation has little influence on corporate tactics.

That makes Google’s caution even more surprising, as it has long operated with the Silicon Valley ethos of launching products fast and experimenting even faster. But in developing self-driving cars, the company has splintered from its software roots. It is taking its time to perfect a revolutionary technology that will turn Google into a company that helps people get around the real world the way it helps them navigate the Internet.

“I’ve had people say, ‘Look, my Windows laptop crashes every day — what if that’s my car?’” Urmson said at a conference held by the Los Angeles Times on transportation issues. “How do you make sure you don’t have a ‘blue screen of death,’ so to speak?”

The stakes are simply higher with self-driving cars than with operating systems and apps, Urmson said. That’s why Google has yet to bring its self-driving technology to consumer vehicles even though it has been in development for seven years and logged more than 2.4 million test kilometres.

Tesla insists its vehicles go through vigorous in-house testing and are proved safe before they reach consumers. And, according to the company, putting them on the roads makes the software — which learns from experience — only better.

“We are continuously and proactively enhancing our vehicles with the latest advanced safety technology,” a Tesla spokeswoman said via e-mail.

And there’s truth to that, said Jeff Miller, an associate professor in the Computer Engineering Department at USC, who said there is no way to stamp out every problem from technology before launching it. At some point, this kind of technology needs to be thrown into the real world.

“Every single programme in the world has bugs in it,” he said. “You have imperfect human beings who have written the code, and imperfect human beings driving around the driverless cars. Accidents are going to happen.”

But this doesn’t mean these products shouldn’t launch.

“We have been testing the vehicles in labs for a good number of years now,” Miller said. “Like with airplanes, eventually you’re going to have that first flight with passengers on it.”

Getting the technology to work is only half the challenge, though. As Google learned when its employees took their hands off the wheel, the other half is ensuring that the technology is immune to human error.

It’s not enough for the technology in a vehicle to simply work as intended, said David Strickland, a former chief of the NHTSA who now leads the Self-Driving Coalition for Safer Streets, a group that includes Google, Volvo, Ford, Uber and Lyft. Part of the safety evaluation has to account for how the technology could be misused, and companies must build protections against that.

Tesla and other automakers have launched automated cruise control features with built-in sound alerts if a driver’s hands are not detected on the wheel. But these checks aren’t fool-proof, either.

“Having developed software and hardware products … I can point to the incredible inventiveness of customers in doing things you just never, ever considered possible, even when you tried to take the ridiculous and stupid into account,” said Paul Reynolds, a former vice president of engineering at wireless charging technology developer Ubeam. “If customer education is the only thing stopping your product from being dangerous in normal use, then your real problem is a company without proper consideration for safety.”

Google and other automakers aim to solve the human problem by achieving the highest level of autonomy possible. The NHTSA ranks self-driving cars based on the level they cede to the vehicle, with 1 being the lowest and 5 the highest.

Tesla’s autopilot feature is classified as Level 2, which means it is capable of staying in the centre of a lane, changing lanes and adjusting speed according to traffic. Google is aiming for levels 4 and 5 — the former requires a driver to input navigation instructions, but relinquishes all other control to the vehicle, while Level 5 autonomy does not involve a driver at all.

Volvo plans to launch a pilot programme for its Level 4 autonomous car next year. BMW has signalled ambitions to develop levels 3, 4 and 5 autonomous vehicles.

The problem with Level 2, critics say, is that it’s just autonomous enough to give drivers the false sense that the vehicle can drive itself, which can lead to careless behaviour.

Tesla disputes this — its owner’s manual details the feature’s limitations — and it says drivers are actually clamouring for the product. Tesla executive Jonathan McNeil said in a February investor call that the autopilot feature is “one of the core stories of what’s going on here at Tesla”.

The sudden rollout of the tool in October is in line with a company that has made a name for itself as a boundary-pusher that appeals to those willing to take a risk on technology with world-changing potential.

Its regular software updates bring flashy, first-of-their-kind functions to cars already on the road — a way to build loyalty among current owners and court new ones. Indeed, 40-year-old Joshua Brown, who died when his Tesla Model S failed to detect a white big rig against the bright sky, posted two-dozen videos showing the autopilot technology in action.

Analysts aren’t surprised that Tesla is moving faster than Alphabet Inc. — Google’s parent company and the second most-valuable publicly traded company on American markets. Cars, after all, are Tesla’s business.

Google makes money from its search and advertising business and has its hands in hardware, software, e-mail and entertainment. Self-driving vehicles are one of its “moonshots” — ambitious projects with no expectation for short-term profitability. They are lumped into Google X, a secretive arm of the company that has experimented with ideas such as using balloons to connect the world to Wi-Fi and the head-mounted gadget Google Glass.

The company has no plans to manufacture and sell its own vehicles. Instead, it likely will partner with automakers, hoping its autonomous-driving software will come to dominate the market the same way its Android operating system dominates the smartphone industry.

“Google has the time, and they can develop things quietly,” said Michelle Krebs, a senior analyst with Auto Trader, “whereas Tesla is under some pressure to build this car company and start making a profit”.

As self-driving technology becomes commonplace, regulators, automakers and consumers will have to decide whether rolling out early products is worth the potential risk, said Shannon Vallor, a philosophy professor at the Santa Clara University who studies the intersection of ethics and technology.

 

“It is far from obvious that the ends here do justify the beta testing of this technology on public roads without better safeguards,” Vallor said.

Charlie robot new best buddy for kids with diabetes

By - Jul 10,2016 - Last updated at Jul 11,2016

AFP photo by Bruce Adams

EDE, Netherlands — Cheeky Ruben is just seven and learning to read. But thanks to his new knee-high buddy Charlie robot he can expertly measure his blood sugar and count carbohydrates in a glass of milk.

Such skills could be lifesavers for the blonde Dutch boy diagnosed with childhood diabetes just over a year ago.

Just like other kids his age, he enjoys birthday parties, riding his bike or playing video games. But these can all play havoc with his blood sugar levels, and unlike his peers, Ruben has to learn how to navigate such potential
minefields while managing a disease he will have all his life.

There are roughly some 6,000 children across the Netherlands with type 1 childhood diabetes. And at least one a year dies from the disease.

Now thanks to a unique collaboration between healthcare professionals, robotics engineers and academics in the Netherlands, Italy, German and Britain, families struggling to learn about the illness and manage it on a daily basis have a new life coach on their side.

He’s a friendly red-and-white robot called Charlie, with arms and legs, big round eyes and speakers disguised as ears, who can talk and dance.

Some 40 Dutch children have so far been involved in the testing — the first phase of a four-year EU-funded project launched in March 2015.

Young patients can chat with Charlie during clinic visits — currently two hospitals in the Netherlands and one in Italy are participating. And the kids have access to Charlie’s avatar twin whenever they want on their tablets and computers at home.

There’s a staggering amount to learn.

“A child and a parent with diabetes thinks about diabetes every 10 to 15 minutes a day,” said paediatrician Gert Jan van der Burg, medical director at the Gelderse Vallei Hospital in the Dutch town of Ede. 

Coma risk

In type 1 diabetes, the pancreas fails to produce the hormone insulin needed to break down sugars in the blood to convert into glucose used for energy. These can then build up to dangerous levels. The only way to control the disease is by regularly taking in insulin either through injections or a pump. 

Children and parents must figure out injections, blood sugar levels, carbohydrate intake, knowing how much insulin to take. Too much or too little can cause shock, seizures and even coma. 

“It’s a huge burden and that’s why a lot of children with diabetes also have a lot of social problems,” Van der Burg told AFP.

Parties awash with cake, or trips to kid-friendly fast-food places, sports days, even an hour on a favourite video game can all send blood sugar levels soaring dangerously too high or too low.

“What must you do if you are feeling hypo?” Charlie asks Ruben in one play session, referring to hypoglycaemia when blood sugars are too low.

Charlie can talk — in Dutch and Italian at the moment — but the questions are also written out on a tablet in front of the child, with an answer and a line “true or false?”

The mini robot is currently aimed at children between the ages of 7 — as they can read a little — and 13 to 14. 

“We’ve noticed that he is counting his carbohydrates much more,” said Ruben’s mum, Caroline van As.

Although it’s faster if she intervenes, she knows that “he has to learn, it’s his life”.

“We try to live as normal a life as possible, even if we know he could suffer for it the next day.”

Unlike the more common type 2 diabetes which develops more often in adults and results from unhealthy lifestyles, the exact cause of type 1 is unknown. Genetics play a role, but researchers believe there is also an as yet unknown environmental factor, such as possibly a slow acting virus.

The $4.5 million project called Personal Assistant for a Healthy Lifestyle is a collaborative effort between the Dutch Organisation for Applied Scientific Research, TNO, and its Italian and German counterparts FCSR and DFKI as well as TU Delft University and Imperial College in London.

Emotional support

It aims to develop “a specific new kind of character that supports the children to cope with the disease, to learn what the disease is, to learn what the effects are of exercising, or food for example”, said senior research scientist Mark Neerincx, from TU Delft.

For children acutely aware they are different from others, Charlie also provides “social support, that helps them to express their feelings also when they feel bad... they can tell the robot and share some experiences”.

Charlie builds up a profile of each child, so he gets to know them and their likes and dislikes.

“Charlie’s nice, he ask questions about me. I like to play with him, he is helping me learning things about diabetes,” said 10-year-old Sofiye Boyuksimsek, diagnosed two years ago.

Researchers are now expanding the trials to better assess the needs of children and parents, as well as improving Charlie’s voice and making his interactions more conversational.

 

“It’s not only that they want to learn about the diabetes. A little small talk with the robot is already very valuable,” added TNO researcher Olivier Blanson Henkemans.

How the past produces the present — and the future

By - Jul 10,2016 - Last updated at Jul 10,2016

Shifting Sands: The Unravelling of the Old Order in the Middle East
Edited by Raja Shehadeh and Penny Johnson
US: Olive Branch Press/Interlink Publishing, 2016
Pp. 261

“Shifting Sands” contains essays by 15 intellectuals first presented at the 2014 Edinburgh International Book Festival, each trying to make sense of the violent chaos that followed on the heels of the Arab uprisings, or to assess the current situation in Iraq, Iran and Turkey. The analysis is sober, but far from dispassionate. The contributors are not scoring academic or political points, but committed to reaching new insights that would promote justice and human values. Most are deeply grounded in history, view the world with unfettered eyes, and care about people’s everyday lives. Editor Penny Johnson sets the tone by paying tribute to Ra’ed Al Hom who with a screwdriver defused unexploded Israeli ordnance in Gaza in the summer of 2014 before a huge bomb killed him. “A pen is less useful than a screwdriver,” she observes. (p. 3) 

Still, the contributors take up their pens to analyse the past and present, in search of keys to creating a better future.

In the initial essays, scholars of different disciplines go back to World War I and the colonial division of the area, for these events “are not simply background to today’s conflagrations, but producers of the same”. (p. 4)

The focus is on the legitimacy crisis of the resulting Arab states that recently caused the fragmentation of several of them. In the words of Avi Shlaim, “the post-war order imposed by the Entente powers created a belt of turmoil and instability stretching from the Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf. Its key feature was lack of legitimacy… [and] laid the groundwork for conflicts that continue to plague the region… It is the story of our own times”. (p. 32) 

Salim Tamari examines diaries kept by three soldiers, to see how the war radically changed people’s lives, identities and loyalties, especially with “the death of the Ottoman idea… of common citizenship and a multi-ethnic homeland”. (p. 65) 

His conclusions has relevance to today’s turmoil: “when people are faced with devastation, they tend to revert to the comfort and security of local identity, because it is protective and familiar and allows people to insulate themselves from what seems to be the impending collapse of the world around them”. (p. 64)

Khaled Fahmy also connects the past to the present, and counts the state’s lack of legitimacy as a major cause of Egypt’s January 25 revolution. After enumerating the many popular revolts in Egypt over the last two centuries, he highlights what was distinctive about 2011: “We acted in history and affected a radical change… We have also prized open the black box of politics… People now see the political in the quotidian. The genie is out of the bottle and no amount of repression can force it back in.” (p. 81)

Tamim Al Barghouti is most searing in his indictment of the failure of the modern Arab states, which he views as structural due to their colonial origins. Conversely, he finds hope in new trends that surfaced in the Arab uprisings, as when Egyptians organised their lives without a police force for five months in 2011: “They were behaving as if they had a government, but without one.” (p. 89) 

Moreover, “if narrative is replacing structure, if ethnic and religious identities are replacing state-based affiliations and if public opinion becomes a determining factor… it will not be long before an anti-Israeli consensus, or quasi-consensus, manifests itself”. (p. 94) 

Hope is also to be found in three essays on fiction’s role in promoting change. Mai Al Nakib, Selma Dabbagh and Marilyn Booth concur on overlapping reasons for writing in difficult times: to question the old order, to invent worlds that suggest alternatives to the present, to explore differing points-of-view and difference itself, to create something worth fighting for, and show that “it doesn’t have to be this way”. (p. 187)

The final section focuses on Syria today, conveying totally different impressions than one gleans from news coverage. As Robin Yassin-Kassab writes of his two visits to Syria in 2013, “Neither visit took me to a country or a people recognisable from Western media reports”. (p. 206) 

His chronicle crosses war zones but records non-war activities showing how communities function in the heat of conflict. Malu Halasa writes about the creativity unleashed by the democratic uprising, and what the graffiti, art, media and theatre show about popular politics. In an eye-opening essay, Dawn Chatty reminds of Syria’s great demographic diversity, and explains how community cohesion has enabled survival and propelled marginalised groups, like the Kurds and tribes, to prominence. 

The concluding essay posits the centrality of Palestine in a new way. Raja Shehadeh contends that if this most intransigent conflict is solved on a democratic, non-exclusive basis, it would serve as a model for resolving the conflicts in the region as a whole. 

If you only have time to read one of the many books now being published about the aftermath of the Arab uprisings, this is the one to choose.

 

What is in cigarette smoke? Most people do not know

By - Jul 09,2016 - Last updated at Jul 09,2016

Photo courtesy of gizmodo.com

 

Many people in a recent study said they’d tried to find out what chemicals are in tobacco products or smoke, but most were not familiar with components other than nicotine.

Surveyed by phone, more than half the respondents said they’d like to see this information on cigarette packs and a quarter would like to have access to it online.

Of the 7,000 constituents of cigarette smoke, 93 in particular are quite toxic, said Dr Kurt M. Ribisl of the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Centre at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

“It’s pretty surprising how relatively few people have heard of these yet many were interested in hearing more about them,” Ribisl told Reuters Health by phone.

The most simple and effective messaging may be to list the chemicals and, briefly, their health effects, he said. For example, cigarette smoke contains arsenic, which causes heart damage, and formaldehyde, which causes throat cancer.

Ribisl and colleagues surveyed nearly 5,000 US adults by phone, targeting high smoking/low income areas and cellphone numbers. 

Almost a quarter of respondents reported being smokers, most saying they had smoked every day for the past month.

The researchers chose 24 harmful chemicals in tobacco and divided them into six groups of four. Each participant answered questions about one group of four chemicals, selected at random. 

More than a quarter of respondents said they had looked for information on the constituents of tobacco smoke, most commonly young adults and smokers. More than half said they would most prefer to see this information on cigarette packs.

Only 8 per cent of respondents knew that at least three of the four chemicals they were asked about are present in cigarette smoke, the researchers reported in BMC Public Health.

“Many people seek information on smoke components but not many find it,” said Dr Reinskje Talhout of the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment at the Centre for Health Protection in The Netherlands.

“Here they also seek it but in general don’t understand it very well, so we developed fact sheets for the general public,” Talhout told Reuters Health by phone. 

Having this information may help smokers make an informed decision, but there is no evidence yet on how it may change smoking behaviour, Talhout said.

“If people hear about these components they are quite shocked,” she said.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has a list of harmful and potentially harmful tobacco components available to consumers, and tobacco manufacturers are obliged to send this list and amounts in their products to the FDA, Talhout said.

It’s still not clear how providing this information on packs might change behaviour, Ribisl noted, and it is possible that listing amounts of chemicals will simply lead consumers to “comparison shop” and choose a brand with marginally lower amounts of the same dangerous chemicals, rather than quitting altogether.

“Both the Centres for Disease Control and FDA are very credible sources about this information,” he said. 

 

“One of the things I would like the FDA and others to think about is what they can put on the side of the cigarette pack, what kind of message can we put there to help create informed smokers,” he said.

Welcome to Jupiter: Juno spacecraft loops into orbit around giant planet

By - Jul 05,2016 - Last updated at Jul 05,2016

Photo courtesy of digitaltrends.com

PASADENA, California  — Braving intense radiation, a NASA spacecraft reached Jupiter on Monday after a five-year voyage to begin exploring the king of the planets.

Ground controllers at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Lockheed Martin erupted in applause when the solar-powered Juno spacecraft beamed home news that it was circling Jupiter’s poles.

The arrival at Jupiter was dramatic. As Juno approached its target, it fired its rocket engine to slow itself down and gently slipped into orbit. Because of the communication time lag between Jupiter and the  Earth, Juno was on autopilot when it executed the tricky move.

“Juno, welcome to Jupiter,” said mission control commentator Jennifer Delavan of Lockheed Martin, which built Juno.

Mission managers said early reports indicated Juno was healthy and performed flawlessly.

“Juno sang to us and it was a song of perfection,” JPL project manager Rick Nybakken said during a post-mission briefing.

The spacecraft’s camera and other instruments were switched off for arrival, so there weren’t any pictures at the moment it reached its destination. Afterward, NASA released a time-lapse video taken last week during the approach, showing Jupiter glowing yellow in the distance and its four inner moons dancing around it.

The view yielded a surprise: Jupiter’s second-largest moon, Callisto, appeared dimmer than initially thought. Scientists have promised close-up views of the planet when Juno skims the cloud tops during the 20-month, $1.1 billion mission.

The fifth rock from the sun and the heftiest planet in the solar system, Jupiter is what’s known as a gas giant — a ball of hydrogen and helium — unlike rocky Earth and Mars.

With its billowy clouds and colourful stripes, Jupiter is an extreme world that likely formed first, shortly after the sun. Unlocking its history may hold clues to understanding how Earth and the rest of the solar system developed.

Named after Jupiter’s cloud-piercing wife in Roman mythology, Juno is only the second mission designed to spend time at Jupiter.

Galileo, launched in 1989, circled Jupiter for nearly a decade, beaming back splendid views of the planet and its numerous moons. It uncovered signs of an ocean beneath the icy surface of the moon Europa, considered a top target in the search for life outside the Earth.

Juno’s mission: To peer through Jupiter’s cloud-socked atmosphere and map the interior from a unique vantage point above the poles. Among the lingering questions: How much water exists? Is there a solid core? Why are Jupiter’s southern and northern lights the brightest in the solar system?

“What Juno’s about is looking beneath that surface,” Juno chief scientist Scott Bolton said before the arrival. “We’ve got to go down and look at what’s inside, see how it’s built, how deep these features go, learn about its real secrets.”

There’s also the mystery of its Great Red Spot. Recent observations by the Hubble Space Telescope revealed the centuries-old monster storm in Jupiter’s atmosphere is shrinking.

The trek to Jupiter, spanning nearly five years and 2.8 billion kilometres, took Juno on a tour of the inner solar system followed by a swing past Earth that catapulted it beyond the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

Along the way, Juno became the first spacecraft to cruise that far out powered by the sun, beating Europe’s comet-chasing Rosetta spacecraft. A trio of massive solar wings sticks out from Juno like blades from a windmill, generating 500 watts of power to run its nine instruments.

In the coming days, Juno will turn its instruments back on, but the real work will not begin until late August when the spacecraft swings in closer. Plans called for Juno to swoop within 5,000 kilometres of Jupiter’s clouds — closer than previous missions — to map the planet’s gravity and magnetic fields in order to learn about the interior make-up.

Juno is an armoured spacecraft — its computer and electronics are locked in a titanium vault to shield them from harmful radiation. Even so, Juno is expected to get blasted with radiation equal to more than 100 million dental X-rays during the mission.

 

Like Galileo before it, Juno meets its demise in 2018 when it deliberately dives into Jupiter’s atmosphere and disintegrates — a necessary sacrifice to prevent any chance of accidentally crashing into the planet’s potentially habitable moons.

Cadillac Escalade: The quintessential contemporary Cadillac

By - Jul 04,2016 - Last updated at Jul 04,2016

Photo courtesy of Cadillac

First launched in 1999 and swiftly re-styled to convey the Cadillac’s then new and so-called “art and science” design ethos for 2002, the Escalade became the brand’s most recognisable model. One could further and argue that with Cadillac’s saloons taking a more downscaled European trajectory, the Escalade has arguably become the defining model in Cadillac’s portfolio.

Cadillac’s first foray into the burgeoning SUV market, the big, bold and brash Escalade soon became synonymous with excess and overt yet attainable luxury, regularly appearing in rap videos and featured as fictional gangster Tony Soprano’s vehicle on TV. Supplanting Cadillac’s quintessential luxury “land yachts” of long past, the latest generation Escalade is the most refined, luxurious and advanced yet.

 

Imposing impressions

 

Arriving as a 2015 model, the latest generation Escalade is the most stylised SUV expression of the brand’s contemporary design ethos, with sharper more prominent ridges and angles in its body surfacing. Tall, imposing and aggressive, the Escalade features a dominant chrome finished grille flanked and active grille shutters for improved aerodynamics, and is flanked by slim, stacked LED headlight clusters. Aluminium bonnet and tailgate panels, meanwhile, reduce overhang weight. 

Reflecting Cadillac’s traditional rear light arrangements, the Escalade’s sharper new front headlights are joined by slim clear encased red rear LED lights flanking the tailgate and rising from bumper to roof. Wheel arches are somewhat squared and flanks little adorned apart from a prominent crease across the doors, while automatically lowered chrome-finished running boards make access to its high-set cabin easier without cluttering its design.

Big on bling and showmanship, the new Escalade features big badges, and more restrained use of chrome detailing for other than the grille and massive 22-inch alloy wheels. A more straight-cut shape in design, the Escalade features a higher waistline and lower roofline, both level for a maximum imposing visual effect.

 

Big and brisk

 

Compactly packaged and light aluminium built but large displacement, the Escalade’s traditional 16-valve OHV design naturally aspirated 6.2-litre V8 engine delivers abundant low- and mid-range torque and progressive power accumulation. Accompanied by a well-insulated but evocatively rumbling soundtrack, the Escalade develops 420BHP at 5600rpm and 460lb/ft at 4100rpm.

Squatting slightly as it digs all four wheels into tarmac, the enormous and hefty 2,649kg Escalade launches confidently off-the-line, accelerating to 97km/h from standstill in 6 seconds and is able attain 180km/h. A more traditional engine choice, the Escalade has a slight power advantage and torque disadvantage to its’ primary Lincoln Navigator rival’s 3.5-litre twin-turbo V6 engine, and to attain good in-class efficiency utilises an automatic cylinder de-activation system.

Driven through a 6-speed automatic gearbox — as tested — one can choose to channel the Escalade’s power to either all four-wheels for traction and grip, or to rear wheels for efficiency. Smooth shifting, the Escalade’s gearbox has been replaced by an 8-speed unit since test drive, which with more and better chosen and a more relaxed final drive, should provide improved off-the-line responses, mid-range versatility, highway refinement and improved efficiency.

 

Comfort and refinement

 

Built with a stiff 75 per cent high strength steel boxed frame, fully independent front suspension along with a five-link rear set-up and adaptive magnetic dampers, the Escalade’s refinement and body control is good for a body-on-chassis design with rear live axle. Smooth with damping and springing slightly on the soft side, the Escalade rides comfortably over imperfections and bumps — despite relatively low profile 285/45R22 tyres — and delivers adequate vertical rebound control.

Well refined from harshness, noise and vibrations inside the high, hefty and long Escalade maybe no agile sports SUV, but turns with compliant tidiness into corners with comfortably light steering ratio. With little by way of body lean for its height, the Escalade’s body control is due to adaptive dampers stiffening up when necessary, while through corners it feels balanced and predictable. On the highway, the Escalade is stable and reassuring. 

Best driven in 4WD Auto mode where power primarily goes to the rear and is direct frontwards when necessary, the Escalade also features lockable 4WD, 205mm ground clearance and 15.7° approach and 23.1° departure angles. Designed as a luxury SUV with hauling and towing more in mind rather than off-roading, the Escalade can carry a 662kg payload and tow up to a whopping 3674kg.

 

Cavernous cabin

 

Noticeably improved in terms of design, materials, quality and finish, the new Escalade’s features more use of soft textures, better leathers and plastics and is better fitted for an overall upmarket ambiance. Seating is comfortable and well adjustable while convenience equipment levels are high and include hands-free power liftgate, tri-zone climate control and a standard 16-speaker audio system and infotainment system with voice recognition and many more features.

With its high waistline and level roofline, the Escalade’s smaller glasshouse lends the Escalade’s cabin a more hunkered down ambiance suited to its popular perception and the origins of its name, borrowed from mediaeval military terminology for scaling a high fortified position. Seating up to eight with middle bench or seven with optional middle captain’s seats, the Escalade trades away some advantages and disadvantages with the higher roofed Navigator, but is nevertheless vastly spacious inside for passengers and cargo. 

 

Extensively well-equipped with luxury, convenience and safety equipment, the Escalade features stability and traction control, park assistance, rear view camera, tyre pressure monitoring and numerous airbags as standard. Optional high-tech driver assistance systems include lane departure, forward collision, rear cross-traffic blindspot, lane change alerts, and heads-up display adaptive cruise control, collision preparation and other features.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

 

Engine: 6.2-litre, in-line V8 cylinders

Bore x Stroke: 103.25 x 92mm

Compression ratio: 11.5:1

Valve-train: 16-valve, OHV, variable valve timing, direct injection

Gearbox: 6-speed automatic, four-wheel drive

Gear ratios: 1st 4.03; 2nd 2.36; 3rd 1.53; 4th 1.15; 5th 0.85; 6th 0.67

Reverse/final drive ratios: 3.06/3.42

Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 420 (425) [313] @5600rpm

Specific power: 68BHP/litre

Power-to-weight: 158.5BHP/tonne

Torque lb/ft (Nm): 460 (623) @4100rpm

Specific torque: 101Nm/litre

Torque-to-weight: 235Nm/tonne

Rev limit: 6,000rpm

0-97km/h: 6 seconds

Top speed: 180km/h

Fuel urban/extra-urban/combined: 18-/10.3-/13.1-litres/100km

Fuel capacity: 98 litres

Length: 5,179mm

Width: 2,044mm 

Height: 1,889mm

Wheelbase: 2,946mm

Track, F/R: 1,745/1,744mm

Ground clearance: 205mm

Approach/departure angles: 15.7°/23.1°

Legroom, F/M/R: 1151/991/630mm

Shoulder room, F/M/R: 1648/1636/1590mm

Hip room, F/M/R: 1,547/1,529/1,252mm

Cargo volume, behind 3rd/2nd/1st row seats: 430-/1461-/2667 litres

Kerb weight: 2649kg

Weight distribution, F/R: 52/48 per cent

Gross vehicle weight rating: 3310kg

Payload: 662kg

Trailer towing: 3,674kg

Steering: Electric-assist rack & pinion

Turning circle: 11.9 metres

Lock-to-lock: 3.4 turns

Suspension F/R: MacPherson struts/five-link solid axle, adaptive magnetic dampers, anti-roll bars

Brake discs, F/R: Ventilated 330 x 30mm/345 x 20mm

 

Tyres: 285/45R22

‘I have no wish to go to the moon’

Jul 03,2016 - Last updated at Jul 03,2016

The Gun Smoke Still Lingers… memories through India, Jordan and beyond

Ann O’Neill

UK: Gilgamesh Publishing, 2015

Pp. 182

 

Perhaps because she spent a happy and exciting part of her childhood in India, Ann O’Neill seems to have contracted a life-long case of wanderlust, without ever losing her English identity. That is the impression one gets from reading her memoir, “The Gun Smoke Still Lingers”, whose title refers to a family-related memory, and not violence in the countries where she visited and worked. In fact, references to war and politics are brief in the book. The focus is on the positive side of human beings and nature’s beauty.

Teaching, which became a near life-long profession for O’Neill, was actually something she embarked on as a way to see new places. She worked as a private tutor to children whose families lived in Turkey, Malaya and Switzerland, in addition to a short stint at a private school in England, before a life-changing assignment came along in 1961. Via the British Foreign Office, HRM Queen Zain engaged her as a governess for HRH Princess Basma, who was then 10 years old. Later, O’Neill served as the Princess’ guardian when she attended boarding school in England. O’Neill remembers the princess as “a very fine student and most conscientious”, and they have remained friends. Princess Basma wrote the foreword to this book, crediting O’Neill with helping her “to discover the joys of reading”. (p. xv)

Later, after years spent in England, during which time she married and suffered from the premature death of her husband, O’Neill felt the need to go abroad once again. After a disastrous experience in Iran, she returned to Jordan in 1972, where she has stayed ever since. Over the years, besides giving private lessons to scores of students, Jordanian as well as foreigners resident in the country, she developed her photography hobby into an art, and also worked for Jordan Television, Radio Jordan, the Jordan Phosphate Mines Company and others.

But for O’Neill, staying in Amman is a relative term, since she jumped at every chance to travel, making repeated trips to her beloved India, but also to South Korea, Egypt, Iraq, Oman, Cyprus, Bangladesh, Italy, Palestine and Kashmir, among other places. So in addition to this being a memoir of family and of life in Jordan, it is a wide-ranging travelogue embellished by O’Neill’s fine photos. What makes her travel accounts especially fascinating is her all-consuming interest in all aspects of life. She has a keen eye for detail, and equal attention is devoted to nature, especially flora, historical monuments, handicrafts and the daily lives of people of all sorts in the countries she visited. Wherever she went, she was determined to go off the beaten track. In her words, “I have found great joy in all kinds of places, but landscape the world over has been my inspiration and a great driving forces”. (p. 178)

Living in Amman, she made constant forays out of the city, often to the hills to the north, in search of wildflowers and other subjects for her photos. She recounts hilarious stories of venturing to out-of-the-way places, sometimes staying in hotels not worthy of the name, but always she found something to enjoy. Her love for Jordan is, however, laced with concern. “It is very sad to see so many private houses being demolished to make room for blocks of flats or business premises… What concerns me more is the increasing loss of Jordanian ‘essence’—that is, the flavour of local shops run by local people with close and friendly relations to their customers.” (p. 107-8)

Reading this book, one is struck by two qualities that pervade O’Neill’s narrative and make her the person she is. One is that her lifetime, begun in colonial times, spanned the global transition to independence, and on to the world we know today. This gives her a unique perspective. Second is that O’Neill is a truly self-made woman who, without higher education or a degree, turned herself into a productive teacher. Through constant activity, driving curiosity and determination, she developed a number of other skills and areas of expertise as well.

In closing, O’Neill sums up her positive outlook: “My life has been full of adventures and I have been greatly blessed by my family, my friends and, not least, by the people whose hands touched mine where I have lived and travelled. I have no wish to go to the moon. This earth of ours, so stunningly beautiful, so kind and gracious, so generous in its gifts, I can never see enough of it.” (p. 178) 

“The Gun Smoke Still Lingers” is available at the Suweifiyeh Bookstore.

 

 

Sally Bland

Girls less likely to get pregnant if a teen friend experiences having a baby

By - Jul 02,2016 - Last updated at Jul 02,2016

Photo courtesy of everydayfamily.com

Girls whose friends have experienced teen childbirth are less likely to get pregnant themselves, a new study suggests.

The researchers compared two groups of teen girls: those with a similarly aged friend who’d given birth, and those with a friend who’d had an early miscarriage. 

They wanted to see whether these events affected the girls’ choices in having sex, getting pregnant, having a child, and getting married as teens — or their choices regarding school, marriage and family as adults. 

Altogether, the investigators studied 595 young women from across the US, interviewing them multiple times over the years, starting in 1994-1995 when they were in their early teens. 

Compared to girls whose friends had miscarried, those whose friends became teen mothers were less likely to have sex as teens, get pregnant or get married and more likely to attain their college degree. 

“Teens learn from their friends’ mistakes,” study co-author Dr Olga Yakusheva of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor told Reuters Health by phone.

“It’s common sense, really — we obviously know few people would follow their friends jumping off the proverbial cliff, but that’s how we used to think about peer influences among teens,” she said

But the study, published June 16 in the Journal of Adolescent Health, suggests that teens learn from their friends’ mistakes. 

Furthermore, girls in the teen birth group were 5 percentage points less likely to have a baby themselves as a teen, compared to those in the miscarriage group. 

“Sixteen of every 100 girls whose friend had a miscarriage had a teen childbirth themselves, whereas in [girls whose friends had babies] group, the number was lower, with only 11 girls having a teen birth,” Yakusheva said.

In 2000-2001 — the fifth year after the start of the study — girls whose friends had given birth had about 25 fewer sexual intercourse encounters, on average, than girls whose friends had miscarried.

Odds of getting married before age 20 were about 6 percentage points lower for the teen birth group versus the miscarriage group. Moreover, women in the teen birth group were 8 per cent more likely to complete a four-year degree.

No long-term effects were found in income earnings, possibly because the college-educated women in the study were just starting out in their career, the study authors write. 

By having sex less frequently, teens were more successful at not getting pregnant. 

Stigma might be one reason why the teens who were friends with a teen mom chose not to get pregnant, said Jane Champion of the University of Texas at Austin, who was not involved with the study.

Pregnant teens often drop out of school or go to alternative schools, which can have an impact on their social lives, said Champion, who specialises in behavioural intervention in teen pregnancy.

“They’re often ostracised by their community and no longer accepted by their circle of friends,” she said. “That can be a huge wake up call for teens.” 

Preventing early teen pregnancies is what matters, Yakusheva noted. 

“What our work shows is that, in addition to teaching kids how not to become pregnant, we should also teach them why,” she said.

She recommends exposing teens to the realities of pregnancy. 

 

“Kids have to see it for themselves,” she said, “not read it in books, not have an adult tell them, because that’s already being done and it doesn’t work very well”.

To do better in school, kids should exercise their bodies as well as their brains, experts say

By - Jul 01,2016 - Last updated at Jul 01,2016

Photo courtesy of pediastaff.com

Attention parents: If you’d like to see your kids do better in school, have them close their books, set down their pencils and go outside to play.

That’s the latest advice from an international group of experts who studied the value of exercise in school-age kids.

“Physical activity before, during and after school promotes scholastic performance in children and youth,” according to a new consensus statement published Monday in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

What’s more, exercise and fitness “are beneficial to brain structure, brain function and cognition”, the experts concluded.

The group of 24 researchers from the United States, Canada and Europe came up with this advice after poring over the latest scientific and medical research on the benefits of exercise in kids ages 6 to 18. The experts, from a variety of disciplines, gathered in Copenhagen this spring to assess the value of all kinds of exercise, including recess and physical education classes in school, organised youth sports leagues and old-fashioned outdoor play.

Though all of these activities take kids out of the classroom or away from their homework, they are still a good investment in academic achievement, the consensus statement says. Even a single break for moderate-intensity exercise can boost “brain function, cognition and scholastic performance”, according to the statement.

The benefits also extend to the psychological and social realm, the experts wrote. Exercise will clear their heads, help them make friends, and help them feel more confident around their peers as well as coaches and other adults.

Any kind of exercise is valuable, but goal-oriented activities provide extra benefits, the experts found. Among other things, they promote “life skills” and “core values” like respect and social responsibility, they wrote in the statement.

Not surprisingly, exercise — whether it comes in the form of a tennis lesson, football tournament, family hike or bike ride to school — also boosts physical health. Kids with good heart and lung function and strong muscles are less likely to develop chronic conditions like diabetes and coronary artery disease as adults, the experts noted.

All of these are reasons why schools and communities should make sure kids have access to playgrounds, parks and bike lanes, the statement says.

And if you’re worried that your son or daughter will lose precious minutes polishing up a book report or cramming for a final, you can relax.

 

“Time taken away from academic lessons in favour of physical activity has been shown to not come at the cost of scholastic performance,” the experts wrote.

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