Welcome Guest! The IOSH forums are a free resource to both members and non-members. Login or register to use them

IOSH Forums are closing 

The IOSH Forums will close on 5 January 2026 as part of a move to a new, more secure online community platform.

All IOSH members will be invited to join the new platform following the launch of a new member database in the New Year. You can continue to access this website until the closure date. 

For more information, please visit the IOSH website.

Postings made by forum users are personal opinions. IOSH is not responsible for the content or accuracy of any of the information contained in forum postings. Please carefully consider any advice you receive.

Notification

Icon
Error

Options
Go to last post Go to first unread
Admin  
#1 Posted : 25 February 2008 18:22:00(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Admin

Posted By Merv Newman I know that the moderators have locked the original thread and "temporarily" suspended the "reprise" thread (which I didn't get there in time to see), but : The following quotes come from the Sunday Times Magazine, February 24th 2008, "A life in the day" Dr Robin cox. "The physicist, 39 is designing the world's largest accelerator at CERN in Geneva" "They start serving alcohol around 3 in the canteen, so people start drinking a little bit of red wine, getting more energetic and chatty" "At around 7 everyone goes for a beer, then they do a bit more physics, then they go out" "usually I've drunk about a bottle of chateau neuf du pape" End of quotes. My level of confidence used to be about 6 sigma. Now I'm not so cerntain. Merv Merv
Admin  
#2 Posted : 25 February 2008 21:28:00(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Admin

Posted By RP After delivering some training for them, a normal day in the office!!!
Admin  
#3 Posted : 25 February 2008 21:39:00(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Admin

Posted By Jonathan Breeze Read it too Merv & was tempted to drag the issue out of the black hole into which it had collapsed. The idea of physicists smashing atoms when half cut after a nice Coteaux du Languedoc at the Restaurant at the End of the Universe did not appeal.
Admin  
#4 Posted : 26 February 2008 08:44:00(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Admin

Posted By Dave Merchant Some of our best work happens during a heavy night of alochofrlolism. Feynman was often out of it by 8am even if he did have a lecture at 9. If you're trying to rationalise 6-dimensional space in string theory, it helps to be a little numb about the gills - remember physicists never actually *do* the dangerous stuff at CERN. Lab techs do the button-pushing, and they're not paid enough to drink wine.
Admin  
#5 Posted : 26 February 2008 09:34:00(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Admin

Posted By Robert K Lewis Dave In the bad old days the physicists stood under/on the reactor manually insering the graphite control rods. Times change - it is called risk export I think. On a serious note the link to the CERN site provided by Jonathan was not a risk assessment in my view but rather the spinning of an argument by Physicists that everything is OK really. Problem is I remember too well the steady state and big bang debate and the vigorous defences of each combatant. Bob
Admin  
#6 Posted : 26 February 2008 10:42:00(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Admin

Posted By IOSH Moderator Merv, I believe what you were really trying to do was post this link to the article: http://women.timesonline..._live/article3403949.ece And not copy and paste the text of the article, which could cause the thread to be removed for copyright reasons. However the self same chateauneuf du pape temporarily worked it's effect on you and you forgot to do this. Am I correct?
Admin  
#7 Posted : 28 March 2008 13:48:00(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Admin

Posted By Jonathan Breeze I feel it beholden to me to break the following news to the forum. Papers have now been served, the issue is now going to law in the US. See the following link: http://cosmiclog.msnbc.m...e/2008/03/27/823924.aspx
Admin  
#8 Posted : 28 March 2008 14:59:00(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Admin

Posted By William I think if I had to work with so many physics geeks then I would need to be drunk permanently, how many brain cells does an average glass of wine kill??
Users browsing this topic
Guest
You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.