Friday, November 9, 2012

Polskie LNG Project Reaches Over 1,7 Million ... - LNG World News

1,7 Million Accident Free Man-Hours at Polskie LNG Terminal Construction

A culture of work safety based on the values, attitudes and standards of behavior in the field of occupational safety, common to all workers performing works on the construction of the LNG terminal, was introduced and fostered by the Investor ? Polskie LNG S.A. together with the Investment?s General Contractor (GRI). This approach resulted in over 1 785 920 man-hours without any serious or fatal accident (as of 31 October 2012).

GRI introduced a safety management system whose main objective is to identify any potential risk exposure which ? if not addressed ? could develop into an accident at work or occupational illness. A number of proactive measures have been employed to meet relevant health and safety standards at the construction site.

Since the beginning of works performed by the Saipem ? Techint ? PBG Consortium, more than 3000 people have been trained in health and safety issues, over 1504 persons have received instruction for working at height, and a first-aid training course has been provided to 197 staff members.

The EPC Contractor has introduced compulsory daily pre-shift briefings for each brigade. At these meetings employees receive necessary instruction from the foreman assisted by the head H&S inspector on the type of work they are expected to perform and all safety measures applicable. Additionally, potentially dangerous events that may be related to the scheduled tasks are also discussed.

GRI?s H&S Service also conducts continuous monitoring of jobs. Inspectors, each of whom has a designated area of responsibility, work in close cooperation with subcontractors? health and safety services. They report all anomalies identified as well as positive observations at the end of each shift. In the event of hazardous circumstance they initiate immediate action at the site, including suspension of work. Recognition of positive behaviours and instant intervention in the event of dangerous situation are particularly emphasized.

All works on the construction site are conducted on the basis of a written work permit, which allows to make right decisions in the event where works overlap and thus cannot be performed simultaneously. Furthermore, random breath testing of subcontractors? employees is also conducted. GRI pays particular attention to the operators of cranes, heavy equipment and hook carriers.

The EPC Contractor (GRI) provides the workers with well-functioning health care system in medical care facilities established directly at the LNG terminal construction site. These include four highly skilled paramedics working in an Ambulatorium furnished with equipment comparable to that available in ambulances. The paramedics also have a car equipped with rescue & emergency equipment at their disposal, which allows them to react quickly in any place on the construction site stretching over an area of approximately 40 hectares.

In order to monitor compliance with health and safety procedures, regular audits of all subcontractors are carried out, allowing to maintain uniform standards for the entire construction (for example, transport, storage and use of gas cylinders, storage and use of hazardous substances, ensuring the minimum standards for sanitary and hygienic facilities). Audits in first aid, involving first-aid kits? supplies checks, as well as the number of persons trained in the field of first aid and emergency behaviour, are held on a monthly basis.

Moreover, at least once a month evacuation and emergency first aid drills are held. Often they are run in cooperation with the specialists from local and regional units of National Fire Service. Such drills involve exercising different scenarios, such as rescue and evacuation from height of the tank, from the excavations or from the office space.


LNG World News Staff, November 09, 2012; Image: Polskie LNG

Source: http://www.lngworldnews.com/polskie-lng-project-reaches-over-17-million-man-hours-without-single-serious-accident/

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

Bullying has long-term health consequences

ScienceDaily (Oct. 30, 2012) ? Childhood bullying can lead to long term health consequences, including general and mental health issues, behavioral problems, eating disorders, smoking, alcohol use, and homelessness, a study by the Crime Victims' Institute at Sam Houston State University found.

"What is apparent from these results is that bullying victimization that occurs early in life may have significant and substantial consequences for those victims later in life," said Leana Bouffard, Director of the Crime Victims' Institute. "Thus, the adverse health consequences of victimization are much more far-reaching than just immediate injury or trauma. Understanding these long term consequences is important to assessing the true toll of crime on its victims and on society as well as responding to victims more effectively."

The study, "The Long Term Health Consequences of Bullying Victimization," recommends investing in victim services and effective prevention programs, such as the Olweus Bullying Prevention Program, a school based initiative for violence prevention. Programs can help address the immediate trauma, both mental and physical, that victims experience.

"This type of investment may also have the added benefit of reducing the long-term deleterious effects identified in this and other studies, thus reducing the high cost of victimization born by the victims themselves, the health care system and society in general," Bouffard said.

The current study is based on the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, a long term study that tracks a sample of U.S. residents born between 1980 and 1984. Nineteen percent of those surveyed said they had been a victim of repeated bullying.

The study found that those bullying victims had more negative perceptions of their general health and mental health and higher rates of emotional/mental or behavioral problems that interfered with school or work. They were also more likely to have an eating disorder, smoke, consume alcohol, experience subsequent violent victimization, or be homeless.

"While these are adverse consequences themselves, they may also serve as intermediate mechanism for even more long-term health issues, such as cancer, alcoholism, depression and other serious problems," said Maria Koeppel, co-author of the study.

Full report; http://www.crimevictimsinstitute.org/publications/?mode=view&item=32

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Sam Houston State University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/mental_health/~3/RjbRdo4Bv0s/121030210533.htm

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Best personal expenses and finance apps for Windows Phone

1. husfus posted on 9 hours ago 0 0

Great to see some windows phone app news!! Nice app though

3. snowgator posted on 9 hours ago 0 0

I actually have an app called "Bill Minder", which is free. It is a buggy little thing, and a little harder to use then I feel an app such as this should be. It does give reminders and charts, so it does what I need. But I do not recommend it.

Rankings by users on the Marketplace, just FYI:

My Expenses: 4 stars (259 users)

Toshi Finance: 4 1/2 stars (80 ratings

Expensify: 4 stars (27 ratings)

Finance Helper: free 4 stars (116 ratings), paid 4 stars (6 ratings)

Bill Minder (app I use): 3 stars (2 reviews)

For some reason, can not find "my Moneybook". Daniel, did you get the name wrong?

4. Daniel.P posted on 8 hours ago 1 0

When you click on the app title, it will take you directly to the app, and, yes, it is all one word "myMoneyBook" :)

5. snowgator posted on 5 hours ago 0 0

Thank you, Good Sir!!

Paid version- 4 1/2 stars (39 ratings)
Free version- 4 1/2 stars (2 ratings)

Source: http://www.phonearena.com/news/Best-personal-expenses-and-finance-apps-for-Windows-Phone_id36154

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Could the Computer Age Have Begun in Victorian England?

A Victorian-era device might have jumpstarted the Computer Age more than 100 years before the first personal computers of Bill Gates or Steve Jobs. That century-old dream has inspired a British programmer to launch a crowd-funding effort that can finally make the steam-powered "Analytical Engine" a reality.

The early computer concept ? a brass-and-iron machine the size of a small steam locomotive ? came from the mind of Charles Babbage, a famed mathematician who tinkered with different designs for the Analytical Engine until his death in 1871. The Plan 28 project aims to build Babbage's machine by raising $8 million (5 million in British pounds) over the next 10 years.

"The Analytical Engine would have been the world's first computer," said John Graham-Cumming, a programmer and director of Plan 28.

Victorian-era technology could only do so much. Babbage envisioned a general-purpose computer with just 1 kilobyte of memory ? 500,000 times less than the memory of an iPhone 4 ? that would have worked 13,000 times slower than the ZX81 home computer made in 1981.

But the Analytical Engine still had the same basic blueprint used by modern digital computers. It had a "Store" for holding numbers and results, a "Mill" for crunching numbers, and could even show its results through devices such as an attached printer. Programs were written in punched cards that represent pieces of stiff paper with holes similar to what some modern voting machines use today.

Such a computer might have changed history at a time when the Industrial Revolution, modern science, new inventions and Imperial British expansion were already reshaping the world. [Top 10 Life-Changing Inventions]

"I think a similar outpouring of ideas would have been generated as we saw when the computer age got started in the 20th century," Graham-Cumming told TechNewsDaily. "The big question is, who would have got to use it; perhaps the military, perhaps the government, perhaps the companies driving the British Empire."

The British government showed early interest in funding one of Babbage's simpler calculating devices, called the Difference Engine No. 1, but cut off funding by 1842. When Babbage died in 1871, none of his machines had been fully built.

One of Babbage's close friends and a fellow mathematician, Ada Lovelace, helped expand on the Analytical Engine's idea while translating a short Italian article about the device. Lovelace's translated article included her own sketches of programs for the machine ? earning her the honor of being considered history's first computer programmer.

Modern experts have since built two replicas of Babbage's Difference Engine No. 2 on display in London's Science Museum and the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif. The London museum's version helped inspire Graham-Cumming to dare dream of building the Analytical Engine.

"There are literally thousands of pages of hand-written notes left by Babbage and hundreds of large scale plans of the machine," Graham-Cumming explained. "They represent a lifetime of working on the Analytical Engine."

Plan 28 first needs to settle on a single design for the Analytical Engine. A computer simulation could then help test the functionality of the machine before committing to build the huge physical replica.

"Babbage constantly improved his designs and the notes and plans represent a succession of refinements and improvements," Graham-Cumming said. "We think it will take a couple of years to really settle on a plan that Babbage himself would recognize as his machine."

This story was provided by TechNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. You can follow TechNewsDaily Senior Writer Jeremy Hsu on Twitter @jeremyhsu. Follow TechNewsDaily on Twitter @TechNewsDaily, or on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/could-computer-age-begun-victorian-england-142206173.html

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