Posts Tagged ‘Local’

The RMS Queen Mary 2 is to date the largest ocean liner ever built (but no longer the world’s largest passenger ship, a record she held until 2006).She arrived in Durban harbour this morning around 07h30 SAT to much fanfare and local excitement, these photographs are from colleagues who watched the arrival from the harbour area (she was also easily visible from the Derivco building).

RMS Queen Mary II’s current status (added bonus – a webcam on the bridge, even if it’s low quality)
Twitter coverage from @MarcForrest and @tequiladiva

Also see Marc Forrest’s Flickr set.

Horison-sensor-imageSouth Africa’s second satellite – Sumbandila (“lead the way” in Tshivenda) – has produced its first official images from orbit (see left).

Launched on 17th September 2009 from Kazakhstan on a Russian Soyuz rocket, Sumbandila is a small 81kg low orbit (500 km) solar-powered satellite with a Butane propulsion system successfully fired in January. It carries a 6 spectral band imager (6,25 m × 6,25 m resolution) for ground photography and video (agriculture, mapping of infrastructure and land use, population measurement and the monitoring of dam levels etc), as well as an amateur radio transponder (SA-AMSAT) among other experiments.

See the Sumbandila mission blog for details, as well as the Wikipedia article – there is also a Facebook group.

A video taken of Earth from orbit (13th October 2009, moving over Namibia).

Skeptical-Hippo_500x500 From Ionian Enchantment – the latest version of the African science and skepticism blog-roll, or a list of “those dedicated to science and reason on the African continent”. I am proud to be included. Definitely something thought-provoking for everyone – and quite a few reasons to get vocal and involved, no matter what your viewpoint is on science, pseudo-science, skepticism, religion, homeopathy, maths, vaccines, general woo-woo etc.

The latest Carnival of Africans – the Phoenix Edition – is well worth a read.

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Listen on posterous

Almost unbelievable, fascinating stuff. There are some seriously twisted minds out there – if ever there was a reason to *not* be proudly South African, they must be it. I’m also happy they are a minority,
Thanks for posting this Nic.
I’m all for free speech, but the ZASucks site crosses several nasty lines – I’m glad it is finally closing down. The (current, final?) entry pretty much says it all.

Posted via email from Ewan’s posterous

Joining in the meme inspired by EXMI and tracked by Spacebook - 10 reasons I love being South African, and I love this country:

  1. Our high interest rate – look what a too low rate did to the US world markets
  2. Our constitution. We’re not the most tolerant people at times, but we seem to be more open-minded and tolerant than most
  3. We are willing to stand up for what is right technically
  4. Durban weather (an average of 320 days of sunshine a year *), our beaches and the Drakensberg
  5. Summer in Capetown (February in particular)
  6. We never lose our sense of humour :-)
  7. There are always positive people out there, willing to share their viewpoints to try and dispel some of the unnecessary doom and gloom
  8. Braai time – 24th September (next Wednesday) is braaiday, Like we need an excuse.
  9. We have an industrious web2.0 group, and we have a habit of rapidly adopting new technology appropriately, despite our 3rd world limitations often getting in the way.
  10. If there ever is a global nuclear war, we’re in an excellent global position to survive – or at least be the last to go

References: SA Rocks

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