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THE TALK TO YOURSELF THREAD. (NOWT)     

goldfinger - 09 Jun 2005 12:25

Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).

Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.

cheers GF.

cynic - 17 May 2017 12:05 - 76879 of 81564

corbyn and his puppet-master (and fred) would have the country back to the 70s where the unions ruled (to the detriment of all including their members) and many industries were nationalised


those older than some will remember docks which were a thieves paradise for the stevedores, steel works where there were strikes about who should draw chalk lines on a steel plate, and a railway system which was always being hit by strikes

that is not to say that privatisation has been a saviour of these industries ...... far from it, for there remains some pretty dire (and greedy) management albeit that there remain some pretty obstructive unions as well
however, that is no reason to re-nationalise

How much would it cost to re-nationalise?
don't worry; that is capital expenditure we are told, so borrowing the mega sums is perfectly reasonable, or so we are told
i suppose corbyn could always propose the chavez system which involves no compensation at all

2517GEORGE - 17 May 2017 12:22 - 76880 of 81564

One of the many benefits of privatisation was the removal of the pension liability from the public to the private sector, and whilst many private sector pensions/pensioners will disagree (rightly in many cases), bringing that cost back on the taxpayer would be economic suicide

KidA - 17 May 2017 13:14 - 76881 of 81564

Calls for Arsene Wenger to be investigated for match fixing after journalist's memo records him saying, 'I hope Middlesbrough can win on Sunday.'.

aldwickkk - 17 May 2017 14:27 - 76882 of 81564

Cynic

That's what younger voters who didn't live in the 70's don't realise, what it was like when the unions were a law unto themselves. Liverpool held ransom to Derrick Hatton , the Winter of discontent when people couldn't bury the dead ., The three day week and the blackouts, Red Rob and Jack Dash, car and dock strikes.

cynic - 17 May 2017 15:30 - 76883 of 81564

ah yes; i'd forgotten about derek hatton, now transformed into a property developer

what price principles, one might ask?

Fred1new - 17 May 2017 16:43 - 76884 of 81564

Tory principles.

Perhaps he is a reformed man!

Any similarities with you?

cynic - 17 May 2017 16:53 - 76885 of 81564

absolutely :-)

"what price principles" was actually said to me many years ago by a very good solicitor - ie you may win the case, but is it actually worth the cost
there are quite frequent occasions when pragmatism or a commercial decision is the correct course of action

aldwickkk - 17 May 2017 17:02 - 76886 of 81564

Red Fred has no principles.

The fat cat capitalist who bought all those gas,water , power and Royal Mail shares.

cynic - 17 May 2017 17:17 - 76887 of 81564

100% certain that mccluskey will have a union pension (and why not indeed), and that the money for that emanates from the stock markets

ExecLine - 17 May 2017 17:37 - 76888 of 81564

I have another serious concern: Teddy Bears - and other similar Blue Tooth linked toys and stuff.

Boy, 11, hacks cyber-security audience to give lesson on 'weaponisation' of toys
Reuben Paul, 11 tells conference that smart cars, fridges, lights and even teddy bears can be used to spy on or harm people

Reuben Paul showed how a teddy bear which can connect to the cloud can be hacked. An 11-year-old “cyber ninja” has stunned an audience of security experts by hacking into their Bluetooth devices to manipulate a robotic teddy bear, showing in the process how interconnected smart toys “can be weaponised”.

Reuben Paul, who is in sixth grade at school in Austin, Texas, and his teddy bear Bob wowed hundreds at a cyber-security conference in the Netherlands.

“From airplanes to automobiles, from smartphones to smart homes, anything or any toy can be part of the Internet of Things (IOT),” said the small kid pacing the huge stage at the World Forum in The Hague.

“From terminators to teddy bears, anything or any toy can be weaponised.”

To demonstrate he deployed his cuddly bear, which connects to the cloud via wifi and Bluetooth to receive and transmit messages.

Plugging into his laptop a device known as a “Raspberry Pi” – a small credit-card size computer – Reuben scanned the hall for available Bluetooth devices, and to everyone’s amazement including his own, suddenly downloaded dozens of numbers, including some of top officials.

Then using a computer language called Python he hacked into his bear via one of the numbers to turn on one of its lights and record a message from the audience.

“Most internet-connected things have a Bluetooth functionality ... I basically showed how I could connect to it, and send commands to it, by recording audio and playing the light,” he told AFP later.

“IOT home appliances, things that can be used in our everyday lives, our cars, lights refrigerators, everything like this that is connected can be used and weaponised to spy on us or harm us.”

They could be used to steal private information such as passwords, as remote surveillance to spy on kids, or employ GPS to find out where a person is, he said. More chillingly, a toy could say “meet me at this location and I will pick you up”, Reuben said.

His father, information technology expert Mano Paul, told how aged about six Reuben had revealed early IT skills.

Using a simple explanation from dad on how one smartphone game worked, Reuben then figured out it was the same kind of algorithm behind the popular video game Angry Birds.

“He has always surprised us. Every moment when we teach him something he’s usually the one who ends up teaching us,” Mano Paul told AFP.

But Paul said he been “shocked” by the vulnerabilities discovered in kids’ toys, after Reuben first hacked a toy car, before moving on to more complicated things.

“It means that my kids are playing with timebombs, that over time somebody who is bad or malicious can exploit.”

Now the family has helped Reuben, who is also the youngest American to have become a Shaolin Kung Fu black belt, to set up his CyberShaolin non-profit organisation.

Its aim is “to inform kids and adults about the dangers of cyber-insecurity”, Reuben said, adding he also wants to press home the message that manufacturers, security researchers and the government have to work together.

Reuben also has ambitious plans for the future, aiming to study cyber-security at either CalTech or MIT universities and then use his skills for good.

aldwickkk - 17 May 2017 17:40 - 76889 of 81564

His a bit old for a Teddy bear ? That should worry him more.

MaxK - 17 May 2017 20:54 - 76890 of 81564

The dad is on the make, and the son will be coming out soon.

Fred1new - 18 May 2017 10:50 - 76891 of 81564

Things to look forward to when Theresa May gets back in control.

VICTIM - 18 May 2017 11:16 - 76892 of 81564

I bet you wish that was you there eh ,being grappled by our boss .

Fred1new - 18 May 2017 14:49 - 76893 of 81564

Vicky darling,

I am not as gullible as you seem to be.

But I can see why Miss Whiplash appeals to you.

VICTIM - 18 May 2017 14:55 - 76894 of 81564

You're the one who keeps posting pics on her , just admit it , you fancy her .

cynic - 18 May 2017 15:10 - 76895 of 81564

ah so fred remembers wistfully his jolly times when under the care of lindi st clair :-)

Fred1new - 18 May 2017 16:30 - 76896 of 81564

Manuel.

You know more about these things than I do.

Was Theresa may a member of the Corrective party before she took over the little boys in the tory party?

Or was she Lindi St Clair in a former life?

cynic - 18 May 2017 17:04 - 76897 of 81564

i recollect lindi st clair was much more attractive

ExecLine - 18 May 2017 20:16 - 76898 of 81564

Conservative Manifesto - General Election (June 8th 2017) - Key Points

Social Care

• Winter fuel payments for pensioners will be means-tested and people will pay more towards home care visits to plug the £2.8 billion social care funding gap.
• Pensioners will stop paying for their own care once their savings and assets are down to £100,000. At present only £23,250 is protected.
• But a person's home will be counted among their assets when they are means-tested for domiciliary care (currently this only applies to people needing residential care) meaning more people will pay.
• No-one will have to sell their home during their lifetime, as they will be able to borrow money which will be paid back from their estate after their death.

Schools

• Lifting the ban on new selective schools.
• Build at least a hundred new schools a year.
• £1 billion more per year for schools, paid for by ending universal free school lunches for children aged 5 to 7 (a policy brought in by Nick Clegg in 2014).
• All children to be offered free school breakfast.
• It will mean no school will be worse off when a new funding formula - designed to give more money to schools that most need it - comes in.
• Banning failing schools from accepting new pupils
• 100 top private schools could lose charitable status

Tax

• David Cameron’s tax “triple lock”, which guaranteed there would be no rise in national insurance, VAT or income tax, will be scrapped in favour of a general statement of intent to lower tax and simplify the tax system.
• No increase in the level of VAT

Income Tax

• A commitment to raise the tax-free personal allowance to £12,500 by 2020 will stay.
• The Tories will also keep a commitment to raise the threshold for the 40p tax rate to £50,000 by 2020.

NHS

• A pledge to increase NHS spending by a minimum of £8 billion in real terms over the next five years.

Deficit

• A pledge to eradicate the deficit by the middle of the next decade.

Pensions

• Maintain the triple lock pension guarantee until 2020, then replace it with a double lock - meaning pensions will rise in line with earnings or inflation, whichever is highest.
• Tougher punishments for those caught mismanaging pension schemes.
• New powers to be given to the Pensions Regulator to issue “punitive” fines for those found to have “wilfully left a pension scheme under-resourced” and, if necessary, powers similar to those held by the Insolvency Service to disqualify the relevant company directors.
• New criminal offence to be considered for company directors who “deliberately or recklessly put at risk” a pension scheme’s ability to meet its obligations.

Immigration

• An objective to reduce annual net migration to the tens of thousands. Overseas student numbers will remain in the immigration statistics.
• Students will be expected to leave the country at the end of their course unless they meet new, higher, requirements allowing them to stay.
• The Immigration Skills Charge levied on companies employing migrant workers, to be doubled to £2,000 a year by the end of the parliament, using the revenue generated to invest in higher level skills training for workers in the UK.

Markets

• Make it clearer for mobile phone customers to know when they have paid off the price of their handset and consider a ban on companies which cold call people to encourage them to make false personal injury claims.
• Review rail ticketing to remove “complexity and perverse” pricing, with a passenger ombudsman introduced.
• Minimum service levels agreed with train companies and staff during times of industrial action. A pledge to make this mandatory if a deal cannot be reached voluntarily.

Foreign Aid

• The UK will retain its commitment to spending 0.7 per cent of GDP on foreign aid but the way in which the money is spent will be changed.

Defence

• A pledge to spend at least two per cent of GDP on defence and increase the budget by at least 0.5 per cent above inflation in every year of the new parliament.
• A pledge to “maintain” the overall size of the armed forces and retain the Trident continuous-at-sea nuclear deterrent.

Media

• The second part of the Leveson Inquiry into the culture, practices and ethics of the press will not take place.
• Repeal Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2014. This would have forced newspapers to pay their opponents’ libel and privacy action legal costs, no matter who wins in court, if not signed up to an officially-recognised regulator.
• New powers to force internet firms to remove explicit or extremist material, backed by legal power to impose fines.

Justice

• A “national infrastructure police force” will be set up combining the Civil Nuclear Constabulary, the Ministry of Defence Police and British Transport Police.
• The Serious Fraud Office will be incorporated into the National Crime Agency.
• £1 billion will be made available to modernise the prison estate.

Housing

• A pledge to meet an existing commitment to build a million homes by the end of 2020, with a further 500,000 by the end of 2022.
• New “council housing deals” to allow local authorities to build more social housing.
• Fixed-term social houses will be built and sold privately after 10 to 15 years with an automatic right to buy for tenants. Cash raised from sales will be used to build further properties.

Democracy

• Pledge to go ahead with a boundary review and to reduce the number of MPs to 600.
• Voters will be made to present identification before they can vote while the traditional voting method of using a pencil and paper will be kept.
• The honours system to be reviewed to make sure it commands public confidence and to protect the integrity of the honours bestowed.

Homelessness

• A commitment to halve rough sleeping over the course of the next parliament and eliminate it by 2027.
Fishing

• A pledge to work with the UK fisheries industry to develop a new regime for commercial fishing post-Brexit.
• A promise to withdraw from the London Fisheries Convention.

Corporate Pay

• The Tories will legislate to make executive pay packages subject to strict annual votes by shareholder.
• Listed companies will have to publish the ratio of executive pay to to the broader UK workforce.
• Companies employing more than 250 people will be required to publish more data on the pay gap between men and women.

Scotland

• A referendum on Scottish independence will only be allowed to take place after Brexit has “played out” and should not take place “unless there is public consent for it to happen”.

Fox Hunting

• A free vote will be given to MPs on a government bill to repeal the Hunting Act.

Energy

• A fixed cap on energy tariffs, to be set by the regulator Ofgem and reviewed every six months.
• Smart meters to be offered to every household and business by the end of 2020.
• Make it easier to switch energy providers.
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