Posts Tagged ‘research’

Hovercraft still afloat 50 years on

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

It all began with a tin of cat food, an empty coffee tin and a hairdryer. When air was forced between the two tins, the ensemble began to float on its own little cushion of air. Thus, through a combination of eccentricity and genius, Sir Christopher Cockerell invented the hovercraft, in a shed, in a boatyard, in Norfolk”.

The hovercraft, whilst as a passenger carrying vehicle was superseded by the channel tunnel, is very much a British success story.

Development was largely funded under the aegis of the National Research and Development Corporation, a government body set up in 1948 expressly to help British inventors develop and commercialise their work. As well as the hovercraft, other British inventions which benefited from NRDC assistance include:

The NRDC was privatised in 1992 after being renamed British Technology Group, and thus public funding of research and development ended. BTG itself scaled its operation right down in 2005 to concentrate only on medical research. Of course, private enterprise hasn’t been entirely unsuccessful in bringing brand new products to market, as Clive Sinclair, Eric Laithwaite, James Dyson, and Trevor Baylis proved (though the first two clearly could have benefitted from better help in making their inventions commercially successful), but in an era where enterprise is supposed to be key to Getting Us Out Of The Recession(tm), what real help is government offering to British inventors? Indeed, what real help has government offered for enterprise in the last 25 years?

Mouse genome laid bare to science

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Scientists have finished sequencing the mouse genome after a 10-year effort.

The humble mouse is the experimental workhorse in laboratories worldwide, so this high-quality genome sequence will aid in the fight against human disease”.

The reason why it’s important research, & why it will help Them find the cure for cancer etc is apparently because human beings share 75% of our DNA with mice.

But since we share 85% of our DNA with a kiwi fruit, won’t we find the cure for cancer quicker by experimenting on kiwi fruit instead?

Speed of eating ‘key to obesity’

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

“Wolfing down meals may be enough to nearly double a person’s risk of being overweight, Japanese research suggests. Those, who, in addition to wolfing down their meals, tended to eat until they felt full, were more than three times more likely to be overweight”.

So basically, ‘research shows’ that if you eat quickly, you eat more, and you get fatter.

Well shit no.