Fookem and Bug

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Archive for November, 2009

CODA is driving the coffee company van???

Posted by fookembug on November 24, 2009

By Bug

CODA stands for Child of Deaf Adult. CODA is a person who was raised by a Deaf parent or guardian. Many CODAs identify with Deaf and hearing cultures.

One late summer day I was driving on I-25 in Denver, CO and saw this coffee ad on the red and white van. It really caught my attention because I almost thought that was CODA driving a coffee van. That would be GREAT if CODA serves everyone a free coffee in the Deaf community!

I contacted that company and requested them to explain what CODA stands for. Roastmaster Tim responded (See below). Their coffees are named after musical terms, he explained.

Tim can fingerspell and sign a little bit. He took American Sign Language class when he was in high school. If you want to do a tour let them know how many people there are, and they’ll see if they can do it. To learn more about their coffee company: http://www.codacoffee.com/site/index.html

Note from CODA:

The definition of the word coda is essentially the final movement of a symphony, or some piece of music. At Coda we have a slight musical theme, our coffees are named after musical terms. There is a long journey/process a coffee bean must go through before it reaches the consumer, and we feel as a coffee roaster we are the final movement or the “coda” to the consumer. We have heard of the acronym “Child of a Deaf Adult.” I actually took a little sign language in high school. Our intention was purely musical though. I appreciate the inquiry, and invite you in for a tour some time. We’ll give you some coffee, and show you our operation. In the mean time, best of luck to you and yours. Love coffee, drink coda.

Sincerely,

Tim Thwaites

Coda Coffee Co.

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Two years old deaf girl died after Cochlear Implant operation

Posted by fookembug on November 20, 2009

A small report on Robert Enke

The circumstances of Robert Enke’s death are indeed now been resolved and now everyone knows that the real herzkrankeTochter Enkes died at the age of 2 years during an operation.

But hardly anyone knows about the tragedy of the operation, because the daughter did not die during a heart operation, but for a Cochlear implant surgery. Lara was born with a severe heart defect, so they had to take powerful drugs, which led to her deafness. The cochlear implant should correct this anomaly, but her heart could not stand the operation.

It takes at this point to say anything more about that one is not really vital to an operation is unnecessary heart disease and child Lara today perhaps could live and therefore Enke.

Enke, incidentally, as I have just learned visited the national team of deaf people during a training session and was received very warmly.

A very fine train of Enke! I hope that he really is reunited with his Lara and make it much better.

UPDATE at 20:14 Clock: I found a small but nice link about Enkes visit to the Deaf National Team!
Robert Enke and his wife visited the deaf national team in 2007.

More articles
Taubenschlag

Press , 19. 09. 2006
Declaration on the death of Lara Enke

Bild-Zeitung (Presse)

[Hat off to German woman, Maria]


Posted in Article from newspaper | 6 Comments »

Friday the 13th phobia? You have plenty of company

Posted by fookembug on November 13, 2009

friday-the-13th

By JFLMad

Friday the 13th occurs when the thirteenth day of a month falls on Friday, which superstition holds to be a day of good or bad luck. In the Gregorian calendar, this day occurs at least once, but at most three times a year. Any month’s 13th day will fall on a Friday if the month starts on a Sunday. In 2009 this applies to the months of February, March, and November. The next year to have three Friday the 13th dates will be 2012. The fear of Friday the 13th is called paraskevidekatriaphobia, a word derived from the concatenation of the Greek words Paraskeví (Παρασκευή) (meaning Friday), and dekatreís (δεκατρείς) (meaning thirteen), attached to phobía (φοβία) (meaning fear). The term triskaidekaphobia derives from the Greek words “tris”, meaning ‘three’, “kai”, meaning ‘and’, and “deka”, meaning ‘ten’. the whole word means three and ten. The word was derived in 1911 and first appeared in a mainstream source in 1953.

Is Friday the 13th bad luck or good??

Anyway, many reasons for this fear have been suggested:

- The number 12 is sometimes considered the number of completeness (12 months of the year, 12 signs of the zodiac, 12 hours of the clock, 12 tribes of Israel, 12 Apostles of Jesus, 12 gods of Olympus, etc). Adding one more to make it 13 breaks this completeness.

- There were 13 people at the Last Supper, and Judas was the 13th person to arrive.

- Jesus was crucified on a Friday.

- Some people say that Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit on a Friday, and that the Great Flood began on a Friday.

- There is a superstition, possibly derived from the Last Supper or a Norse myth, that having 13 people seated at a table will result in the death of one of them.

- Friday has been considered an unlucky day at least since The Canterbury Tales were written in the 14th century.

- Many professions have regarded Friday as an unlucky day to undertake journeys or begin new projects.

- Black Friday has been associated with stock market crashes and other disasters since the 1800s.

- The goddess Frigga (for whom Friday is named) was banished by the Christians and labeled a witch. Every Friday, she was believed to meet with 11 other witches plus the devil, for a total of 13.

- King Philip secretly ordered the mass arrest of all the Knights Templar in France on Friday, October 13, 1307. This story is told in The Da Vinci Code, but some people think this connection wasn’t made until the 20th century.

- In 1907, Thomas W. Lawson published his popular novel Friday, the Thirteenth, in which a stockbroker takes advantage of the superstition to create a Wall Street panic on Friday the 13th. References to Friday the 13th were almost nonexistent before 1907.

- In the Roman calendar, Friday was devoted to Venus. In the Norse calendar, Friday was named after Frigga or Freya. The Christians didn’t like strong women, so they vilified Friday.

- There are 13 months in the pagan lunar calendar.

- Friday was Hangman’s Day in Britain.

- Apollo 13 was launched at 13:13 CST, and its oxygen tank ruptured on April 13, 1970.

None of these sound like really good reasons, do they? A 2000 superstition survey found this:

“…while only 13 percent of the population at large believes that Friday the 13th is an unlucky day, 30 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds think so. Interestingly, the nine installments of the horror movie series Friday the 13th were released during this set’s formative years (1980-1993). Coincidence? Perhaps.”

This is an entirely made up fear, but it affects many people. Some people avoid their normal routines on this day, to the tune of an estimated $800 to $900 million in lost business in the U.S.

It becomes a self-fulling prophesy. If you expect Friday the 13th to be unlucky, you’ll find evidence to support that. I’m sure some bad things happened on Friday the 13th, but are they really that much more significant than September 11th, Hitler’s invasion of Poland, Lincoln’s Assassination, etc?

How about this: decide that from now on, Friday the 13th is good luck. Just see what happens today.

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Timeline of Closed Captioning Development

Posted by fookembug on November 3, 2009

  • 1971:  Preview of captioning at the First National Conference on Television for the Hearing Impaired in Nashville, Tennessee
  • 1972:  During a test at Gallaudet University, ABC and the National Bureau of Standards debuted closed captions embedded within the normal broadcast of Mod Squad.
  • 1972:  Open captioning began on PBS’s “The French Chef”
    • Open captioning appeared soon after on:
      • ABC World News Tonight
      • Zoom
      • Once Upon a Classic
    • These programs were captioned by the WGBH Caption Center
  • 1976:  The FCC adopted rules that provide that line 21 of the vertical blanking interval (VBI) be used primarily for the transmission of closed captioning
  • 1976:  The FCC adopted a rule requiring television licensees to transmit emergency messages in a visual format
  • 1979:  National Captioning Institute created
  • March 16, 1980:  The first closed captioned television series were broadcast for those who had bought caption decoders
    • The ABC Sunday Night Movie
    • The Wonderful World of Disney
    • Masterpiece Theater
  • 1982:  Real-time captioning debuted
  • 1990:  Television Decoder Circuitry Act of 1990 was passed, requiring all television receivers with screens of 13” or larger be able to receive and display captions by 1993
  • 1990:  Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 enacted, requiring all federally funded public service announcements to be closed captioned. 
  • 1992:  FCC adopted technical standards for closed captioning on cable systems
  • 1993:  Requirements from Television Decoder Circuitry Act of 1990 take effect
  • 1996:  Telecommunications Act of 1996 adds Section 713 to the Communications Act — requiring the FCC to prescribe rules and implementation schedules for closed captioning of television video programs
  • 1997:  The FCC adopts rules that gradually increase the amount of programming requiring closed captioning
  • 1998:  FCC’s closed captioning rules go into effect
  • 2000:  The FCC adopts an Order requiring an increasing amount of digital television programming to be captioned and establishes a phase-in schedule for closed captioning of digital programming
  • 2006:  100% of all new video programming, with exceptions, must be closed captioned on both digital and analog televisions (new analog programming is programming first aired on/after January 1, 1998; new digital programming is programming first aired on/after July 1, 2002)
  • 2008:  75% of all pre-rule video programming (pre-rule analog programming is programming first aired before January 1, 1998; pre-rule digital programming is programming first aired before July 1, 2002) must be captioned
  • 2010:  100% of all new analog and digital Spanish language programs, with exceptions, must be closed captioned
  • 2012:  75% of all pre-rule Spanish-language video programming must be captioned

From FCC website: http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/dro/cctimeline.html

Posted in Deaf History | 1 Comment »