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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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So I took a day off work and went to the pub.
The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. -- Adam |
#2
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On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote:
So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. |
#3
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On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote:
So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Were you shirtless and surrounded by broken glass? Or is that just how they do it around these parts? |
#4
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On Mon, 12 Apr 2021 18:33:39 +0100, ARW wrote:
So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Snowed here. Cheers Dave R -- AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64 -- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#5
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On 12/04/2021 19:33, David wrote:
On Mon, 12 Apr 2021 18:33:39 +0100, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Snowed here. Cheers I took my big coat just in case. -- Adam |
#6
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On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote:
So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. no apprentices, then? |
#7
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ARW wrote:
So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Very happy for you.... *******. ;-) Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
#8
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On 12/04/2021 20:57, newshound wrote:
On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. no apprentices, then? No. But I had one on Saturday when we did the IPAF course. It snowed when we did the practical test that was outdoors. -- Adam |
#9
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On 12/04/2021 19:31, R D S wrote:
On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Were you shirtless and surrounded by broken glass? Or is that just how they do it around these parts? I was posh for the day and went to Lincoln. -- Adam |
#10
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On 12/04/2021 19:31, R D S wrote:
On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Were you shirtless and surrounded by broken glass? Or is that just how they do it around these parts? Friends sent me some photos of their visit to the pub today - in the pub garden in the snow! -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#11
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On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote:
So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. I did exactly the same thing. Bill |
#12
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On 12/04/2021 21:39, ARW wrote:
On 12/04/2021 19:31, R D S wrote: On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Were you shirtless and surrounded by broken glass? Or is that just how they do it around these parts? I was posh for the day and went to Lincoln. Funnily enough so did I. Bill |
#13
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On 12/04/2021 19:56, ARW wrote:
On 12/04/2021 19:33, David wrote: On Mon, 12 Apr 2021 18:33:39 +0100, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Snowed here. Cheers I took my big coat just in case. Yes I took mine. Bill |
#14
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On 12/04/2021 21:50, alan_m wrote:
On 12/04/2021 19:31, R D S wrote: On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Were you shirtless and surrounded by broken glass? Or is that just how they do it around these parts? Friends sent me some photos of their visit to the pub today - in the pub garden in the snow! Who says the British weather does not have a sense of humour? :-) -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#15
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On 12/04/2021 21:27, ARW wrote:
On 12/04/2021 20:57, newshound wrote: On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. no apprentices, then? No. But I had one on Saturday when we did the IPAF course. Do you get any dyslexics attending that course? It snowed when we did the practical test that was outdoors. |
#16
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And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections
as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Brian -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! "ARW" wrote in message ... So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. -- Adam |
#17
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Brian Gaff (Sofa) formulated the question :
And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Yep, it was manic. I kept well away. |
#18
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On 12/04/2021 21:27, ARW wrote:
On 12/04/2021 20:57, newshound wrote: On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. no apprentices, then? No. But I had one on Saturday when we did the IPAF course. It snowed when we did the practical test that was outdoors. Don't! You're bringing back memories - of checking the calibration of a pressure transmitter, 80 feet up the outside of a factory, on a swaying scaffold (accessed by a very long and bouncy ladder), during a howling gale, with heavy snow, in the early 2000s. And it was a bloody Saturday morning, I wasn't supposed to work Saturdays and didn't get paid overtime! I also remember driving back from that, on the M62, when my washers froze. Vehicles were kicking up all sorts of muck and I dared not use my wipers, as they just smeared it and made it even worse. |
#19
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On 12/04/2021 21:50, alan_m wrote:
On 12/04/2021 19:31, R D S wrote: On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. Were you shirtless and surrounded by broken glass? Or is that just how they do it around these parts? Friends sent me some photos of their visit to the pub today - in the pub garden in the snow! Somewhere, I have a photo of myself and a friend, sunbathing on top of a boat on the Norfolk Broads. Typical postcard style - rolled up sleeves and trousers and knotted handkerchiefs on our heads. Only when you look closer can you see the heavy rain bouncing back up off the roof of the boat. |
#20
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On Tue, 13 Apr 2021 09:02:02 +0100, Harry Bloomfield, Esq.
wrote: Brian Gaff (Sofa) formulated the question : And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Yep, it was manic. I kept well away. Darwinism at work. ;-) Cheers, T i m |
#21
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On Monday, April 12, 2021 at 9:39:39 PM UTC+1, ARW wrote:
I was posh for the day and went to Lincoln. Nah then.... Lincoln? Posh? By 'eck, duck, things must be bloody rough round your way if yer think this is posh! |
#22
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On 12/04/2021 21:27, ARW wrote:
On 12/04/2021 20:57, newshound wrote: On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. no apprentices, then? No. But I had one on Saturday when we did the IPAF course. It snowed when we did the practical test that was outdoors. So, I looked up IFAP, and found that it referred to MEWPs, so I looked up MEWPs .... I remember my father encouraging me to look up a word in the dictionary when I was quite small. So, I looked it up, and there were three words in the definition that I didn't understand. So, he told me to look those up, too. We both learnt a lesson, that day, in the power of exponential growth. |
#23
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On 13/04/2021 08:44, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote:
And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Brian Maybe lots of infections but few hospitalisations. My main concern would be the increased likelihood of mutations from the increased number of infections. |
#24
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On 13/04/2021 13:28, Fredxx wrote:
On 13/04/2021 08:44, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote: And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Â* Brian Maybe lots of infections but few hospitalisations. My main concern would be the increased likelihood of mutations from the increased number of infections. We don't have to grow our own mutations, although we did that very successfully in Kent last autumn. We can import mutations from overseas. The Brazilians have some really impressive ones! The P1 variation has brought Manaus to its knees a second time. 76% of the population had antibodies after their first wave, and a large proportion (estimated as 25-60%) of the current patients with the P1 variant are thought to have had Covid previously. https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...us-covid-cases |
#25
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On 13/04/2021 12:21, GB wrote:
On 12/04/2021 21:27, ARW wrote: On 12/04/2021 20:57, newshound wrote: On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. no apprentices, then? No. But I had one on Saturday when we did the IPAF course. It snowed when we did the practical test that was outdoors. So, I looked up IFAP, and found that it referred to MEWPs, so I looked up MEWPs .... It is an annoying term - what was wrong with the much more descriptive Cherry Picker and Scissor Lift? I remember my father encouraging me to look up a word in the dictionary when I was quite small. So, I looked it up, and there were three words in the definition that I didn't understand. So, he told me to look those up, too.Â* We both learnt a lesson, that day, in the power of exponential growth. Try Engineering specifications that reference 20-odd Standards and Codes of Practice, that reference a dozen or more each and so on! |
#26
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Fredxx wrote
Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Maybe lots of infections but few hospitalisations. That assumes most are vaccinated but that isnt true yet. My main concern would be the increased likelihood of mutations from the increased number of infections. The mutations come from those with severely compromised immune systems that take a long time to recover from the virus or die from it now that treatment is so much better. |
#27
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On 13/04/2021 15:47, Rod Speed wrote:
Fredxx wrote Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Maybe lots of infections but few hospitalisations. That assumes most are vaccinated but that isnt true yet. But the ones who are vulnerable and most likely to die have. My main concern would be the increased likelihood of mutations from the increased number of infections. The mutations come from those with severely compromised immune systems that take a long time to recover from the virus or die from it now that treatment is so much better. That is a thought but I doubt you'll find a cite saying it is directly caused by a severely compromised immune systems. https://www.scientificamerican.com/a...mmune-systems/ Gives an account the patient showed that the virus evolved rapidly after being given convalescent plasma. This article: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/2...g-the-pandemic Highlights it is the number and duration of infection that increase likelihood of mutation; "With almost every person it infects, the virus changes very subtly €“ picking up a letter in its genetic code here, another being deleted there or swapped for something different." |
#28
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On Wed, 14 Apr 2021 00:47:48 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: FLUSH the trolling senile asshole's latest troll**** unread -- John addressing the senile Australian pest: "You are a complete idiot. But you make me larf. LOL" MID: |
#29
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Fredxx wrote
Rod Speed wrote Fredxx wrote Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Maybe lots of infections but few hospitalisations. That assumes most are vaccinated but that isnt true yet. But the ones who are vulnerable and most likely to die have. Thats not true, it still isnt clear who many of the vulnerable and most likely to die are. My main concern would be the increased likelihood of mutations from the increased number of infections. The mutations come from those with severely compromised immune systems that take a long time to recover from the virus or die from it now that treatment is so much better. That is a thought but I doubt you'll find a cite saying it is directly caused by a severely compromised immune systems. Fraid so. https://www.scientificamerican.com/a...mmune-systems/ Gives an account the patient showed that the virus evolved rapidly after being given convalescent plasma. Thats not something that common at all so isnt likely to have been the cause of most variants. This article: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/2...g-the-pandemic Highlights it is the number and duration of infection that increase likelihood of mutation; "With almost every person it infects, the virus changes very subtly €“ Thats mindless bull****. There arent that many variants. picking up a letter in its genetic code here, another being deleted there or swapped for something different." Just more **** from some arts graduate like that other steaming turd you waved around from the New Scientist. They are clearly recruiting those who can write clear and error free english but dont have any way of weeding out those who wouldnt know what logic or analytical thought was if it bit them on their collective lard arses. |
#30
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On 13/04/2021 17:03, Rod Speed wrote:
Fredxx wrote Rod Speed wrote Fredxx wrote Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Maybe lots of infections but few hospitalisations. That assumes most are vaccinated but that isnt true yet. But the ones who are vulnerable and most likely to die have. Thats not true, it still isnt clear who many of the vulnerable and most likely to die are. My main concern would be the increased likelihood of mutations from the increased number of infections. The mutations come from those with severely compromised immune systems that take a long time to recover from the virus or die from it now that treatment is so much better. That is a thought but I doubt you'll find a cite saying it is directly caused by a severely compromised immune systems. Fraid so. https://www.scientificamerican.com/a...mmune-systems/ Gives an account the patient showed that the virus evolved rapidly after being given convalescent plasma. Thats not something that common at all so isnt likely to have been the cause of most variants. This article: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/2...g-the-pandemic Highlights it is the number and duration of infection that increase likelihood of mutation; Â* "With almost every person it infects, the virus changes very subtly €“ Thats mindless bull****. There arent that many variants. That's show your lack of knowledge. Most mutations will fail in one way or another. The most successful mutation is one that doesn't kill the host and lives indefinitely in the body. picking up a letter in its genetic code here, another being deleted there or swapped for something different." Just more **** from some arts graduate like that other steaming turd you waved around from the New Scientist. Don't you like being shown you're wrong? |
#31
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![]() "Fredxx" wrote in message ... On 13/04/2021 17:03, Rod Speed wrote: Fredxx wrote Rod Speed wrote Fredxx wrote Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Maybe lots of infections but few hospitalisations. That assumes most are vaccinated but that isnt true yet. But the ones who are vulnerable and most likely to die have. Thats not true, it still isnt clear who many of the vulnerable and most likely to die are. My main concern would be the increased likelihood of mutations from the increased number of infections. The mutations come from those with severely compromised immune systems that take a long time to recover from the virus or die from it now that treatment is so much better. That is a thought but I doubt you'll find a cite saying it is directly caused by a severely compromised immune systems. Fraid so. https://www.scientificamerican.com/a...mmune-systems/ Gives an account the patient showed that the virus evolved rapidly after being given convalescent plasma. Thats not something that common at all so isnt likely to have been the cause of most variants. This article: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/2...g-the-pandemic Highlights it is the number and duration of infection that increase likelihood of mutation; "With almost every person it infects, the virus changes very subtly €“ Thats mindless bull****. There arent that many variants. That's show your lack of knowledge. Bull****. Most mutations will fail in one way or another. Yes, but if they fail quickly, there would be no way to know that stupid claim. The most successful mutation is one that doesn't kill the host and lives indefinitely in the body. We havent seen any like that with this virus. picking up a letter in its genetic code here, another being deleted there or swapped for something different." Just more **** from some arts graduate like that other steaming turd you waved around from the New Scientist. Don't you like being shown you're wrong? You're projecting now given that you never had the balls to admit that that New Scientist steaming turd you waved around proved you wrong. Same with the virus in Sweden. |
#32
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On 13/04/2021 17:45, Rod Speed wrote:
"Fredxx" wrote in message ... On 13/04/2021 17:03, Rod Speed wrote: Fredxx wrote Rod Speed wrote Fredxx wrote Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Maybe lots of infections but few hospitalisations. That assumes most are vaccinated but that isnt true yet. But the ones who are vulnerable and most likely to die have. Thats not true, it still isnt clear who many of the vulnerable and most likely to die are. My main concern would be the increased likelihood of mutations from the increased number of infections. The mutations come from those with severely compromised immune systems that take a long time to recover from the virus or die from it now that treatment is so much better. That is a thought but I doubt you'll find a cite saying it is directly caused by a severely compromised immune systems. Fraid so. https://www.scientificamerican.com/a...mmune-systems/ Gives an account the patient showed that the virus evolved rapidly after being given convalescent plasma. Thats not something that common at all so isnt likely to have been the cause of most variants. This article: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/2...g-the-pandemic Highlights it is the number and duration of infection that increase likelihood of mutation; Â* "With almost every person it infects, the virus changes very subtly €“ Thats mindless bull****. There arent that many variants. That's show your lack of knowledge. Bull****. Most mutations will fail in one way or another. Yes, but if they fail quickly, there would be no way to know that stupid claim. The most successful mutation is one that doesn't kill the host and lives indefinitely in the body. We havent seen any like that with this virus. There are coronaviruses that are mere colds. So no reason to create a vaccine against them and they are free to propagate without lockdowns or anything sinister. https://www.the-scientist.com/news-o...19-cases-68146 picking up a letter in its genetic code here, another being deleted there or swapped for something different." Just more **** from some arts graduate like that other steaming turd you waved around from the New Scientist. Don't you like being shown you're wrong? You're projecting now given that you never had the balls to admit that that New Scientist steaming turd you waved around proved you wrong. Hardly a turd, it was an example of a mutation that occurred indirectly through a compromised immune system. I don't see how one example changes the validity of my post. However much you might wish otherwise. We have a choice, accept an article in the New Scientist or a senile phool in Australia posting to a UK newsgroup. Tough one isn't it? Same with the virus in Sweden. That's right, you didn't understand the meaning of 'rate'. |
#33
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On Tue, 13 Apr 2021 18:25:11 +0100, Fredxx, the notorious, troll-feeding,
senile smartass, blathered again: That's right, you didn't understand the meaning of 'rate'. You demented senile asshole STILL don't understand what "Don't feed the troll!" means! |
#34
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On 13/04/2021 14:23, Steve Walker wrote:
On 13/04/2021 12:21, GB wrote: On 12/04/2021 21:27, ARW wrote: On 12/04/2021 20:57, newshound wrote: On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. no apprentices, then? No. But I had one on Saturday when we did the IPAF course. It snowed when we did the practical test that was outdoors. So, I looked up IFAP, and found that it referred to MEWPs, so I looked up MEWPs .... It is an annoying term - what was wrong with the much more descriptive Cherry Picker and Scissor Lift? Too many types. I did 3a and 3b. PAV thrown in for free. So I cannot use ones with stabilisers - or in English I cannot use a static boom. -- Adam |
#35
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On 13/04/2021 14:23, Steve Walker wrote:
On 13/04/2021 12:21, GB wrote: On 12/04/2021 21:27, ARW wrote: On 12/04/2021 20:57, newshound wrote: On 12/04/2021 18:33, ARW wrote: So I took a day off work and went to the pub. The sun on your back and a pint in your hand and with good company. no apprentices, then? No. But I had one on Saturday when we did the IPAF course. It snowed when we did the practical test that was outdoors. So, I looked up IFAP, and found that it referred to MEWPs, so I looked up MEWPs .... It is an annoying term - what was wrong with the much more descriptive Cherry Picker and Scissor Lift? Doesn't really cover all the modern kit such as mast lifts? -- Robin reply-to address is (intended to be) valid |
#36
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On 13/04/2021 09:02, Harry Bloomfield wrote:
Brian Gaff (Sofa) formulated the question : And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Yep, it was manic. I kept well away. The pubs will be the first to be blamed if the infection rate rises. It will of course have nothing to do with gyms, shoppers or snotty nosed school kids. -- Adam |
#37
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On 13/04/2021 19:28, ARW wrote:
On 13/04/2021 09:02, Harry Bloomfield wrote: Brian Gaff (Sofa) formulated the question : And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Yep, it was manic. I kept well away. The pubs will be the first to be blamed if the infection rate rises. It will of course have nothing to do with gyms, shoppers or snotty nosed school kids. The "snotty nosed school kids" have already been at school for a while so can't possible attract any blame. Of course opening everything else at once just means directed blame becomes easier. |
#38
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On 13/04/2021 19:28, ARW wrote:
On 13/04/2021 09:02, Harry Bloomfield wrote: Brian Gaff (Sofa) formulated the question : And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Yep, it was manic. I kept well away. The pubs will be the first to be blamed if the infection rate rises. Yep, that's why the infection rate was so high during all the months that the pubs were shut ![]() It will of course have nothing to do with gyms, shoppers or snotty nosed school kids. The novelty of sitting in cold pub garden seems to have worn off very quickly. I passed 5 pubs today (12:30 to 1pm), all with outside seating and saw a total of 3 customers -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#39
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On 13/04/2021 16:06, Fredxx wrote:
This article: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/2...g-the-pandemic Highlights it is the number and duration of infection that increase likelihood of mutation; Â* "With almost every person it infects, the virus changes very subtly €“ picking up a letter in its genetic code here, another being deleted there or swapped for something different." I read that quote and immediately distrust the article. The code is sets of 3 letters. If you delete one then you scramble the rest of it - you have to delete (or insert) a multiple of 3. Deletions and insertions are rare compared with substitutions. Andy |
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On 13/04/2021 19:28, ARW wrote:
On 13/04/2021 09:02, Harry Bloomfield wrote: Brian Gaff (Sofa) formulated the question : And judging by the reports in the media, probably a huge surge in infections as well, despite the pubs and shops best efforts. Its like the January sales. Yep, it was manic. I kept well away. The pubs will be the first to be blamed if the infection rate rises. It will of course have nothing to do with gyms, shoppers or snotty nosed school kids. All a part of it. However pubs are the only place that people spend hours in close proximity, without masks, talking or even shouting over the noise of other conversations and drinking, which lowers inhibitions and reduces the chances of following rules. |
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