Friday, June 8, 2012

PayPal Fraud


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Peter’s Comment
If you receive an email like the one above from PayPal or from any bank do not respond to it. It is a fraud. PayPal and banks do not ask for the above information. If you fill the spaces you will give fraudsters everything they need to empty your account.

A REGISTER FOR BAD BOSSES


Waitress jobless as boss gets wrong drink
NZ NewswireJune 8, 2012, 3:26 pm

A New Plymouth waitress has been awarded more than $10,000 in lost wages and compensation after she was fired for serving a director of the company she worked for the wrong drink.
Jessica Chand, who started working for $13.50 an hour at the Japanese Steak House in New Plymouth on August 31, last year, was fired under the 90-day trial legislation.
She filed a personal grievance with the Employment Relations Authority (ERA).
The ERA said her employer Otaku Holdings acted in a grossly unfair way.
Ms Chand thought her work was going well until the evening of September 16 when Thomas Buckthought, a director of the company employing her arrived for a late meal.
Thomas Buckthought
Ms Chand took over responsibility for his table after there were difficulties with the service.
She was told the next day that she was being dismissed because she served Mr Buckthought the wrong drink.
The ERA said the employer's processes were poor. The probation clause in Ms Chand's contract did not explain the provisions of the law as required and was therefore defective.

Peter’s Comment
Served him wrong or served him right? I’ll go for served him right. How much perfection did the ‘buck thought’ was appropriate for $13.50 an hour?

Just as there are registers of people with bad credit histories there should also be an official register of bad employers where a job applicant can check out a prospective employer before committing themselves to something they may regret.

I decided to Google Thomas Buckthought and below is what I found. Jessica Chand should not hold her breath awaiting payment. And perhaps she did serve him the wrong drink; some people may say she should have given him something more potent than alcohol.
Description: Stuff.co.nz


Taranaki home builder goes into liquidation
JOHN ANTHONY
Last updated 05:00 02/03/2012
ON THE RUN: Taranaki housing company Dream Homes has gone into liquidation with more than $1.5 million owed to creditors. Attempts to speak to Dream Homes owner Thomas Buckthought on Thursday were unsuccessful.
Failed Taranaki housing company Dream Homes has been put into liquidation amidst revelations the company traded under a fake Registered Master Builders logo.
Dream Homes director Thomas Buckthought said he was now selling his home and leaving Taranaki, possibly for Australia, to keep his family safe after receiving threats from suppliers.
All six housing and property companies owned by Mr Buckthought were put into liquidation on Tuesday.
The first liquidation report for Volk Industries, trading as Dream Homes, showed the company owed more than $1.5 million dollars to creditors.
On February 28 the company had only $13,000 to its name.
Hamilton-based liquidator Kim Thompson said the company had virtually no assets to pay creditors.
"There's a huge hole there and right now I can't quite figure out how it got so big," Mr Thompson said.
The report shows more than 80 unsecured creditors were owed $823,000 and 12 secured creditors were owed $692,000. . . .


Click here for great reading



Thursday, June 7, 2012

Pilot Inexperience?


Air France Flight 447 Investigation: Pilots Not Properly Trained to Fly the Airbus A330?

By MIGUEL SANCHO, NIKKI BATTISTE (@NikkiBattiste) and JON MAYERSOHN
June 6, 2012 ABC News
The Airbus A330 has one of the most sophisticated automated piloting systems in the airline industry, but the 2009 crash of Air France Flight 447 has some experts saying that the pilots weren't adequately trained to handle the plane in an emergency situation, and that the plane's stall alarm system may have added to the crew's confusion and contributed to the disaster.
An Air France Airbus A330
The crash, which killed all 228 passengers and crew on board, is considered one of the worst -- and most mysterious -- aviation disasters in modern history. One theory for what caused that Airbus A330 to go down is that the two co-pilots, led by 58-year-old Captain Marc Dubois, were not properly trained and depended too heavily on the plane's autopilot system. That system disconnected at high-altitude when a speed sensor, called a pitot tube, froze over, sending inconsistent readings to the plane's computers.
Air France declined ABC News' request for an interview, pending the July release of the final report from France's investigation. But according to Bill Voss, the president and CEO of the Flight Safety Foundation, Air France was so confident in the design of the Airbus A330, the airline had not trained nor prepared its pilots for the situation the crew of Flight 447 encountered the night of the crash.
"No one was trained for high-altitude stall recovery in the cockpit," said Voss. "It's not part of the normal training curriculum...this is something that really has to be reformed globally. This is a really big deal."
Air France Flight 447 was en route from Rio de Janiero to Paris on May 31, 2009, for an overnight trip, when it vanished. The plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean in the early morning hours of June 1, 2009 -- nearly four hours after take-off.
Black box tapes were recovered from the wreckage two years later in April 2011 and, amazingly, still worked. The tapes revealed that almost four hours into the flight, the plane was 800 miles off the coast of Brazil, and Captain Dubois left the cockpit for a scheduled nap. At the time, the plane was about to fly into a thunderstorm, one that other flights that night had steered around.
Once in the storm, the plane's pitot tube, a critical piece of equipment that tells the pilot the aircraft's air speed, failed, likely from ice crystals forming on it, according to BEA officials who inspected the wreckage. When the pitot tube fails, the Airbus's automatic pilot system disengages, shifting control back to the pilot.
According to the tapes, First Officer Cedric Bonin, a 32-year-old pilot who had fewer than 5,000 flight hours under his belt, was at the controls but had never been in this situation before at high-altitude. Bonin made the fatal mistake of pulling the plane's nose up, which caused it to go into a deep stall.
"It seems that the pilots did not understand the situation and they were not aware that they had stalled," said Jean-Paul Troadec, the director of BEA, the French authority conducting the investigation into the Flight 447 crash.
When the Airbus A330 goes into a stall as severe as what happened to Flight 447, Voss said the plane's computer rejects the data it's receiving, thinking the plane couldn't possibly be flying in such a radical condition, and then shuts off the stall alarm.
"The computer is thinking 'this doesn't make any sense, we must be on the ground. We must be parked at the gate or we would be dead,'" Voss said.
Airbus claims the stall alarm on Flight 447 "was performing as designed," and said there is rationale behind its design.
"If you get as low as 60 knots, the stall warning will cut out by design, and we do that because on landings and take-offs at a low air speed, when the angle of attack is erratic and it may not be reliable, we cut that out so it would not distract pilots during take-offs and landings," said Bill Bozin, the vice president of safety and technical affairs at Airbus.
As co-pilot Cedric Bonin pulled continuously up on the controls, the stall alarm sounded for 54 seconds straight. But as Flight 447 went deeper into its catastrophic stall, the alarm cut in and out intermittently, the black box tapes revealed. The stall warning was working as designed, but critics charge the pilots would have been confused by the mixed signals.
The co-pilots called frantically for help from the captain, the black box tapes showed, but it took Dubois more than one minute to return to the cockpit.
"What's happening?" Dubois is heard asking when he re-enters the cockpit.
"I don't know what's happening," one co-pilot responded.
It was not until the final three seconds before the plane hit the Atlantic that the pilots even realized they were going to crash, the black box tapes revealed. Co-pilot David Robert is heard on the tape recording saying, "Oh my God, we're going to crash. I can't believe it." The last words on the recording are Bonin saying, "But what's happening?"
Peter's Comment
If the stall warning was designed to switch off automatically during lower than normal stalling speed flight (deep stall) then it was an accident waiting to happen.

The pilots don’t need a stall warning while the wheels are on the ground but they will certainly need it at any time in flight when the angle of attack is critically high regardless of speed. It is normal on modern airliners for the speed brakes, once armed, to automatically deploy when the wheels touch the runway. In my view, it follows that the stall alarm should only be silenced by the wheels touching the runway rather than when the airspeed falls below normal stalling speed.

And what of the pitot head heating failure. That would have been turned on during routine checks at the beginning of the flight and the pitot should not have iced up. This indicates a technical failure rather than crew inexperience.

All too often dead pilots are blamed for the shortcomings of others. This crew appears to have been one of normal age and experience. I don’t think the same can be said of the aircraft with regard to its design and/or maintenance.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Bargains are Waiting for You

Traveling to the world’s most expensive cities
Published June 05, 2012
FoxNews.com
Oslo is, on average, almost 40 percent higher than in New York City. Lunch can be upwards of $45 and a movie ticket is over $18. (Hotels.com)
The average pint of beer in Copenhagen will cost upward of $7, while the average local train ticket costs nearly $4. (Hotels.com)
Continued below:



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In Stockholm you can expect to pay more than $4 for a dozen eggs and more than $15 for a movie ticket. (Hotels.com)
Geneva has a very high per capita income. A beer at a bar can cost you almost $10. (Hotels.com)
Worried about spending too much on vacation? Then you might want to think twice before visiting these five cities that will have you digging deep into your wallet, according to a report from UBS Wealth Management ResearchDescription: http://global.fncstatic.com/static/all/img/external-link.png.
Oslo, Zurich, Geneva, Copenhagen and Stockholm have for years consistently ranked among the world's most expensive cities.  
While the hefty price of traveling these cities may make you want to avoid these places, there are ways to cut costs while checking out the sites. To save money when confronted with steep restaurant prices, try thinking outside the box when deciding where to eat, for example. Instead of seeking restaurant recommendations from your hotel concierge, Bill Miller, CEO of CheapoAir.com recommends talking with locals to find the best bargains. Similarly, he advises frugal travelers to purchase food from the local grocery store, instead of eating breakfast in the hotel restaurant.

Peter’s Comments
Why would anyone want to spend big dollars vacationing in northern Europe when for a fraction of the cost they can have a wonderful time downunder in beautiful New Zealand?

Mount Cook, South Island
Americans, for example, can visit the beaches and fruit groves of Florida, the lakes of Minnesota, the hills and forests of New England, the mountains and skifields of Colorado, the farmlands of Kentucky, the sights of Yellowstone and the deserts and casinos of Nevada, all within an area the same size as the state of California. Furthermore, the population of New Zealand is only one-eighth the population of California.
Paihia, Bay of Islands, North Island
In spite of New Zealand’s remoteness from the world’s population centers, it has a large and modern tourism industry with excellent hotels and motor-coach tours and guides without equal anywhere in the world.
Free overnight motor-home parking in many areas
Tourists can choose self-drive hire and motels or backpacker hostels to save even more hard-earned cash. But if you are planning to self-drive, remember that New Zealand drives on the left side of the road. Roads connecting tourist centers and the main cities are excellent.
Main Street, Arrowtown, South Island
Air New Zealand and other airlines have daily flights from the West Coast direct to Auckland with very competitive fares. Talk to your travel agent today and come to my part of the South Pacific where it is clean, green, friendly and within your budget.



Tuesday, June 5, 2012

FICTION ADDICTION

World famous but not in New Zealand
9:30 AM Tuesday Jun 5, 2012, NZ Herald
One of the most prolific and successful New Zealand novelists ever was a Christchurch-born minister's wife called Essie Summers. She sold close to 20 million books in 105 countries, published in 25 languages.
But if you're not in her target market you probably haven't heard of her. The same goes for a dozen or so other successful New Zealand authors who've bypassed our tiny local publishing market and headed straight out into the world.
They're genre writers who've hit the right niche with the right stories at the right time - the ones who have us all berating ourselves: "Oh why didn't I think 10 years ago to write vampire romances/boy wizard adventures/Christchurch crime thrillers ... "
Summers was a pioneer among these local word exporters. When she died in 1998, aged 86, she'd written more than 50 novels for Mills and Boon and was known as New Zealand's Queen of Romance.
So who are some of these blazingly successful New Zealand authors you've (probably) never heard of?
Paul Cleave
It sounds like an unlikely recipe for success: a series of serial-killer thrillers set in ... Christchurch. But, hey, whatever works. And it's definitely working for Cantabrian Paul Cleave. His first book, The Cleaner, which he wrote in his mid-twenties, sold more than a quarter of a million copies in its first year and was the number one bestselling crime novel on Amazon in Germany in 2007, for starters. He's now published in France, Australia, Germany, the Czech Republic, Russia, Poland, Japan, Turkey, Brazil, the UK and the USA - but until recently his books weren't even on the shelves in Christchurch. His fifth novel, Collecting Cooper (Penguin), came out this week - and should be very easy to find in New Zealand bookstores. Read an excerpt here.
Nalini Singh
A former student of Mt Roskill Grammar, Nalini Singh started writing paranormal romance shortly before Stephanie Meyer published her firstTwilight novel and Charlaine Harris sold the television rights to her Southern Vampire series (renamed True Blood for the telly). The genre took off, and Singh has repeatedly ridden the wave to the New York Times bestseller lists, with stories of love between shapeshifters, psychics, angels, vampire hunters and, occasionally, regular old humans. Like Cleave, Singh was a publishing success overseas long before her work started appearing in mainstream bookshops in New Zealand. These days her books are translated into about a dozen languages, including French, Thai, Indonesian, Hungarian and Japanese. Her latest book, Tangle of Need, will get a mainstream release here on June 12 (Hachette).
Stacy Gregg
While working as a fashion journalist, Aucklander Stacy Gregg got it into her head to write a book for pre-teens about a horse-mad Auckland girl and her friends. She sent it off to Harper Collins in London, and it was rejected. Five years later, an editor rang back to say they'd changed their minds. She's since sold more than a million copies of her 17 pony club books, in two series - Pony Club Secrets, and the more grown-up Pony Club Rivals. Both have been optioned for TV and film.
Daphne Clair and Robyn Donald
The rightful heirs to Essie Summers, this Northland pair have each written more than 70 romance novels for international markets. They've also, jointly, written the book about romance writing, Writing the Romantic Novel. Donald's latest book, Stepping out of the Shadows, is released this month by Harlequin. (Incidentally, if you fancy yourself as the next Essie Summers, Romance Writers of New Zealand is inviting budding romance writers to apply for the Sandra Hyde Memorial Scholarship, which will get you into the association's three-day August conference in Auckland for free. Applications close on Friday. Click herefor details.)
Juliet Marillier
Dunedin-born Juliet Marillier published her first fantasy novel at age 50, after emigrating to Australia. It was published in Australia, the US and the UK, translated into several languages, and won a sought-after American Library Association award. She gave up her day job in the public service in 2003 and now has more than a dozen books to her name, both adult and YA, which combine historical fiction, folkloric fantasy, romance and family drama. She is even a member of the druid order OBOD (The Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids).
Sheryl Jordan
Hawera-born Sheryl Jordan is what you might call persistent. Her first published novel, Rocco, was the 13th she'd written. Since then more than a dozen of her fantasy books for children and young adults have been published in New Zealand, as well as Australia, the US, the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, France and Denmark. She's also written and/or illustrated a pile of children's picture books.

Peter’s Comment

The above list is by no means complete. There are several current New Zealand Mills & Boon writers who make a good living from their romance writing.

There is also little known locally Richard Webster who has written and published over 100 titles, almost exclusively overseas. Retired broadcaster Gordon Dryden has sold 11 million copies of his educational books in China alone.

The list appears to focus only on books from traditional publishers of print books and seems to ignore the fact that there is a whole new publishing world out there – the EBook industry.

EBook authors, many overlooked by traditional publishers, are taking their books to the world without leaving home and are earning good money doing it. They can upload their manuscripts to Amazon, Smashwords, Lulu, Oceanbooks (New Zealand) and other EBook publishers free of charge and receive up to 80% of the retail price as royalties.

This new publishing order is reducing print book publishers to the level of horse-drawn carriage builders at the start of the twentieth century. More important, it is giving readers prices, mobility and convenience unimaginable a short time ago. As former British Prime Minister Harold McMillan once said, “The people have never had it so good.”


These EBooks have already sold more copies than the original print copies




Asker Trilogy Review by: Jennifer Petrofsky on Oct. 24, 2012 :
Wow! This was such a great story. And I truly did not expect it to end the way it did. What a surprise! I strongly urge people to read Nathaniel's Bloodline, Murder at Wairere and A Twist of Fate. You will not be disappointed. Peter Blakeborough did a wonderful job on all three books. Thank you!

BEYOND THE SEAS

This is my latest historical novel  Beyond the Seas When twelve-year-old orphan Nathaniel Asker is shipped from the back alleys of London to...