Archive for the ‘Elena Campus’ Category

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Website critique: www.ansa.it

December 18, 2008

Ansa .it is the website of most important press agency in Italy.

First impressions

The website seems at a first sight quite cluttered and cahotic.

This is because:

  • The nameplate is too small and in a odd position (on the left-hand corner) so that it is not immediately recognisable among advertising
  • Too space has been dedicated to a banner on the top of the page that catches completely the attention of the reader
  • There are at least twenty articles on the homepage without any categorisation, which makes the sites very difficul to read through.
  • The typography is very small

The colour scheme is quite simple and coherent, with a good combination of white, green and some parts of text highlighted in grey.

Writing

The majority of the articles don’t follow Jacob Nielsen’s rules:

  • The paragraphs are too long and dense, which descorages from going on reading . Each paragraph is about 100 words long without any space beetween sentences.
  • There are no sub-headings.
  • Bold is extensively used in the text.
  • There isn’t any criteria in the presentation of news. On the top of the page there’s an article about national politics close to another one about sport
  • There isn’t any hypertext link.

Content

The website is quite rich in terms of multimedia. there are viseos and photographs for most of the articles, but all this material is not displayed in a captivating and neat way.

A  weak point is that there are absolutely no links in the articles, which doesn’t allow the reader to have any possible background or in-depth analysis of the news.

Navigation

The main navigation on the left is consistent and easy to use. The subnavigation however is very confusing. Once you choose a kind of news you want to read about it’s like groping in the dark.

On the whole the website seems not be able to contain appropriately the huge amount of news that, being the website of a press agency, it has to.

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Chewing-gum art

December 18, 2008

dsc001581Is it possible to create cohesion among people by sticking them together with chewing-gum? A guy in Muswell Hill said yes, it is.

 

I saw this chap for months and months, lying on the pavement, every windy, snowy or rainy day, painting something. But what? And above all, why? When finally my curiosity exceeded my shyness, I had the chance to get to know the most soul-warming person I’ve ever met, Ben Wilson, also known as The Chewing Gum Man, as he introduces himself to me.

 

He’s giving shape to the most genuine, basic and profound idea of art: taking the harsh reality of life and transforming it into something beautiful, full of meaning and worthy of admiration.

 

He’s creating a chewing-piece-of-art, painting a miniature on a minuscule white spot that before was in somebody else’s mouth, then was discarded, and now regains life and sense through his paintings.

 

Art, he simply claims, can be just an instinctual form of self-expression and a way to make the world better by creating a profound connection between people.

 

And the demonstration of this is right there under my nose. During our conversation an awful lot of people stop to say “hi”, some of them commission the artist to paint a personalised chewing-gum with their names or a message for somebody special, others just watch him, dying with curiosity.

 

So, when you’re walking down the road, after a working day or going to the supermarket, just keep your eyes wide open! Trust me, Ben’s chewing-gums will stick in your mind!

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(Background) Is Britain ready for a Mumbai-style terror attack?

December 18, 2008

In India some call it their country’s 9/11 moment.

The November 2008 Mumbai attack  hasn’t been the first terror attack but it’s been without any doubt the most cruel and heinous.

From 26 to 29 November 2008 173 people lost their lives in a series of ten terrorist attacks across Mumba

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Is Britain ready for a Mumbai-style terror attack?

December 18, 2008

While commandos were still fighting against terrorists in Mumbai Peter Clarke, former head of Scotland Yard’s Counter-Terrorism Command, from the pages of The Sunday Telegraph warns: “our enemies have not gone away. They are determined, resilient and utterly murderous”.

 Is Britain prepared?  According to what Mr. Clarke points out no, not at all.

In his opinion an India-style terror attack would cause in London a massacre and turn the city into a temporary war zone.

What makes Britain particularly vulnerable in the event of such an attack is that the country doesn’t have an armed conventional police.

Moreover the armed police is trained to deal with armed criminals, but wouldn’t be able to cope with a multi-site, mobile terroristic incident like the one in Mumbai.

Probably the relevant point here is not whether the police is well-trained or not, but if we even need a military force to deal with the terroristic threat.

As the last events in Mumbai showed, the police were not prepared for an attack of this magnitude. The police anti-terrorist squad even lost their chief early in the day. The police seem underfunded and underequipped for something of this magnitude.

On the contrary police forces seem to be confident enough.

Jamie Johnson, a Metropolitan Police officer, in a conference at the University of Westminster  when asked about this possible scenario said that police receive an intensive training in order to be able to face a broad range of terror attacks, included chemical and gas attacks.  

Stephen Tankel, expert on conflict and security studies at King’s College of London told Bury the Lead “an attack like this is obviously very difficult to deal with, but my presumption is that most of the people who are in charge of keeping us safe should have probably anticipated something like this if they had done their jobs. Every time there is a spectacular attack like this, like 9/11, or in Mumbai, it’s quite normal to feel as though  this is something that is entirely new and we would be unprepared for. I think an attack of this magnitude would be difficult for any security service to handle anywhere in the world”.

Click here for a backgroung to Is Britain ready for a Mumbai-style attack?

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(Background) Where to die: that is the question

December 18, 2008

The debate about how to address the end of life care has been on the agenda for a while now, and it’s drawn even more attention recently with the case of Craig Ewert’s assisted suicide at a Swiss euthanasia clinic.

In July 2008 the Government published the End of Life Care Strategy, a massive ten year plan that aims to provide people approaching the end of life with more choice about where they would like to die and more support.

 The plan involves a training for medical staff in order to enable them to talk more comfortably about death with patients allowing them to express and make the best decisions while approaching the end of life.

The government also allocated 286 million pounds to guarantee a better palliative care by 2011.

The report from the National Audit Office, published in November 2008, has basically formally pointed out with the evidence of statistics some problematic areas that were well known by the experts.

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Where to die: that is the question

December 8, 2008

According to a report published by the National Audit Office the UK Department of Health and the NHS are failing to meet the basic needs of people approaching the end of life.

“Death comes equally to us all, and makes us all equal when it comes”, said John Donne. Perhaps he was wrong.

Findings of an extensive research published on 24 November 2008 by the National Audit Office showed that although the majority of people (between 56 and 74 per cent) express a  preference to die at home or in a hospice, only 35 is enabled to do so.

There are widespread variations and inequalities across the country in the access to end of life care and resources, according to The Times.

Some Primary Care Trusts spend £ 150 per person on palliative services to be delivered at home, whereas others spent up to £1700 per person in 2007.

A lack of services in the community leads to terminally ill patients being unnecessarily admitted to hospital against their wishes.

Reasons why

Speaking to Bury The Lead, Tom McBride, lead auditor on the NAO project, tried to explain which areas in the service delivered are poor and could be improved.

“I think there’s a poor coordination of services. There’s not much joined-up work between local authorities and primary care trusts. There a lack of training for many clinicians working in hospital, both doctors and nurses, like the training they need to identify people approaching the end of life and to identify whether they should more appropriately cared for”.

Moreover, if on the one hand patients are not allowed to die at home as they desire, on the other hand there are many who are not enabled to even express what they really prefer.

A good communication between patients and doctors should be the priority, and all clinicians should be encouraged to talk about end of life choices.

Emily Sam, Deputy Director of Policy Development at the National Council of Palliative Care, when asked about the possible strategies to improve the situation of terminally ill patients said “one by talking about it, which means that people have the chance to say where they  want to die, that means care be put into place ready for them at home, if that’s what they want. And it means that professional teams need to be working closely together across health and social care to enable that. But the main thing is about planning and helping people communicate their wishes earlier on”.

Click here for a background

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India is not so far away

December 8, 2008

The Bombay terror attack has been described by many as a second 9/11.

The brutality and death poll of the attack had a profound repercussion all over the world.

In London the conspicuous Indian community seems to be lost and astonished.

At the Indian temple in Neasden, North London, the atmosphere is tense. Only one out of eight people in this place, which is the largest Hindu temple out of India, accepted to comment upon the tragic events of the past few days.

Aarish Patel, an Indian banker who’s lived in London for the past ten years, said “what happened in Mumbai deeply affected our community and it is going to leave an open wound for a long time”.

The Indian community has been holding prayers services for the victims of the attack, and on Saturday 20 of November the Harrow and Brent many residents joined the Indian community to express sadness and grief for all those killed.