Tag Archives: Storage

E.coli facts

E. coli (short for Escherichia coli) is one of several bacteria that normally live in our intestines – one gram of faeces contains a billion E.coli cells! These cause no problems, but the bacterium can change properties and produce new strains such as type E.coli 0157:H7, which has acquired a gene that makes it produce a powerful, potentially lethal, toxin.

This dangerous bacterium has caused alarming breakouts of food poisoning. In America, 65 people in seven states contracted E. Coli infection from contaminated unpasteurised apple juice. In a case in Japan nearly 10,000 became ill and 12 deaths were reported as a result of slovenly hygiene attitudes by butchers. In November ’96, central Scotland witnessed its worst ever breakout of E.coli 0157 food poisoning with more than 140 infected cases and several deaths. An 80yr old church elder was the first to die. Children and the elderly are affected more seriously.

E.coli bacteria

E.coli bacteria

E.coli 0157 is named the ‘hamburger bug’, as minced meat can become a breeding ground for this dangerous bug which is often found in cattle and sheep. The bacterium is killed by thorough cooking – heating at 70 C for two minutes. The Scottish outbreak which was traced to cooked beefburgers, sausage rolls and pies from one butcher’s shop, suggesting that the infected meat hadn’t been adequately cooked. E.coli can also be transmitted through milk, cheese and untreated water, though some outbreaks have been traced to the storage of cooked meats below uncooked meats in the fridge, so that infected dangerous juices have dropped onto the lower shelves and their contents.


Other cases of E.coli have resulted from person to person transmission. Washing hands before handling food and especially after visits to the ‘loo’, will reduce this avenue of infection.

After 24hrs of infection with E.coli 0157, severe abdominal pain is experienced along with profuse watery diarrhoea and heavy blood loss via the rectum. A high fever develops and dehydration may ensue. After 10 days about 5% of sufferers develop kidney failure and sudden destruction of their red blood cells.

Treatment consists of counteracting the dehydration and loss of salts and minerals, with severe cases needing hospitalisation.

Apple unveils MacBook Air

Apple has unveiled the thinnest, lightest laptop ever which combines features from the iPhone and iPad with traditional series of MacBook.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced the new MacBook Air Wednesday night which will incorporate FaceTime video conferencing and a suite of applications, which the company is now bringing to all its Macs. FaceTime allows for video calls between iPhones, iPod touches and Macs.

The new laptop has an 11.6-inch screen but weighs as little as 2.3 pounds. It comes with a multi-touch trackpad which lets users control by pinching, rotating, swiping and double-tapping just like on the iPad or iPhone, reports the Daily Mail.

The new MacBook Air uses flash storage rather than a hard drive like conventional computers, which means it can power up almost instantly from standby mode and store data twice as quickly as a standard hard drive.

However, it has less processing power compared with Apple’s other laptops.

MacBook_ Air_lancastria

MacBook Air

Apple will bring a version of its mobile applications store to the Mac, aiming to replicate its success and spur development of new programs.

“We asked ourselves what would happen if a MacBook and an iPad hooked up? Well, this is the result,” Jobs said at a media event in Cupertino, California, calling MacBook Air the “future of notebooks”.

The MacBook Air comes in two sizes, one with a screen that’s 13.3 inches diagonally and another with a 11.6-inch screen.


The larger one clocks in at 2.9 pounds and can be used for seven hours – thanks in part to a low-voltage processor from Intel that consumes less power than ones running in standard laptops.

The 11-inch model with a 64 GB memory will cost 899 pounds while the 13 inch version with 256 GB of storage comes in at 1,349 pounds.

“They’re basically merging the product lines; they’re simplifying it,” said Kaufman Bros analyst Shaw Wu.

“They’re taking the strengths out of what they’ve learned on the iPhone and iPad and bringing that technology over to the Mac side. It makes a lot of sense,” Wu added.

While plenty of attention is lavished on the iPhone and iPad, the Mac has been critical to the company’s success over the past years. Apple sold USD 22 billion worth of Macs in 2010, comprising one-third of its revenue.

Nearly 50 million people worldwide use Mac.