Helsinki, Finland – 11 December 2015
Fun and games at the company Christmas party.
Author: Paul Mc Namara
The other side of the tracks – Helsinki, Finland – 29 November 2015
Finland, Helsinki, PhotographyBlue helmet
Finland, Helsinki, Photography, TravelHarti’s Nut Hut
Finland, Helsinki, Photography, TravelMarketing on Facebook
PhotographyHow Mad Men Lost the Plot – Financial Times
Even the people who do join brand pages on Facebook hardly ever click on them. The US company Forrester Research has found that the rate of engagement among a brand’s Facebook fans is seven in 10,000; for Twitter it is three in 10,000. People might watch ads on Facebook or YouTube, but that’s about all the interaction they want (Facebook itself recently conceded this point). A senior marketer at the drinks company Diageo, where Sharp’s book has been influential, put it to me bluntly. “After 10 or 15 years of f***ing around with digital we’ve realised that people don’t want to ‘engage’ with brands, because they don’t care about them.
Followers of Santa
Finland, Helsinki, PhotographyFishing in the dark
Finland, Helsinki, Photography, TravelCranes under the moon at Jätkäsaari
PhotographyJazz at Bärenplatz
Bern, Photography, Switzerland, TravelAn experiment that reduced theft and burglary by 93%
Thought ProvokingThe case for prescription heroin.
Very interesting piece about an experiment to prescribe heroin to addicts in one area of England in the from 1982 to 1995.
He expanded his heroin prescription programme from a dozen people to more than 400.
The first people to notice an effect were the local police. Inspector Michael Lofts studied 142 heroin and cocaine addicts in the area, and he found there was a 93 per cent drop in theft and burglary.
Since the clinics opened, the street heroin dealer has slowly but surely abandoned the streets of Warrington and Widnes.
What I find interesting in discussing solutions to the drug problem is that nobody considers the money argument. Take away the market by providing the supply and the market in pushing drugs disappears.
And something nobody predicted took place. The number of heroin addicts in the area actually fell. Research published by Dr Marks in the Proceedings of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh compared Widnes, which had a heroin clinic, to the very similar Liverpool borough of Bootle, which didn’t — and found Widnes had 12 times fewer addicts.
This approach is worthy of more investigation. It seems to have worked better than other experiments that I know about.
The independent reports that methadone treatment doesn’t work as well..
The last authoritative academic survey found that although more addicts on methadone were trying to give up drugs completely than patients receiving prescribed heroin, the methadone users were three times more likely to “top up” with drugs bought illegally.
Home Office civil servants, meanwhile, concede in private that they are becoming increasingly alarmed at the number of people who are dying from misusing methadone.