Thursday, 4 September 2008
New Laws to stop Gun Crime....
1. They are increasing the age limit for possessing an air rifles is 17 years and above.
2. Prohibited certain air weapons that are easily converted to fire live ammunition.
3. Any person that is caught with an illegal firearm in their possession, will be sentenced to prison for a minimum of 5 years.
I agree that these laws would work to a certain extent, but i do not believe that these laws are not that harsh enough for example i think that the 1st law stated above should be raised to the age of 18 years old. Or i believe to possess an air rifle a person should be certified by the government or the police.
Gun crime is on the LOW LOW LOW....:D
I have found out that people belive that gun crime is increasing but facts have shown that between 2006-2007, gun crime has dropped a bit in England and Wales. Below are facts i have found out:
Facts & figures
1.The number of overall offences involving firearms fell by 13% in 2006/07 compared to the previous year.
2.Firearms were involved in 566 serious or fatal injuries in 2006/07, compared to 645 the previous year - a drop of 12%.
3.The number of armed robberies involving guns dropped by 3%
4.There were 13% fewer serious and fatal injuries related to gun crimes in 2006/07.
5.The number of reported crimes involving imitation guns dropped by 15% in 2006/07.
6.The number of reported crimes involving air guns dropped by 15% in 2006/07 over 2005/06.
Tuesday, 8 July 2008
Statistics on Gun Crime in UK
However, there have also been recent rises. In the 12 months to July 2007 the Met saw a 3.5% rise in firearms offences in London - up from 3,485 to 3,607 incidents.
Thursday, 3 July 2008
From Kidulthood to Adulthood.....
Friday, 27 June 2008
Different ways media have tried to connect the public about crime...
Channel 4 News anchor Jon Snow is making his computer game debut in support of the broadcaster's Disarming Britain season examining the effect of gun and knife crime on Britain's streets.
An animated Snow features in the scene of a violent crime in the online game, which is called Dead Ends and was specially commissioned by Channel 4 to raise awareness of the dangers and consequences of street crime.
The game which went live yesterday centres on a new gang recruit called Keith Wilcox and a police detective investigating a gang killing.
Dead Ends involves interrogating witnesses, chasing suspects, passing gang initiation tests and navigating dangerous streets.
Snow recorded scripted dialogue especially for the project and has taken part in a Making Of documentary about the game that will be shown on Channel 4's website.
In the documentary Snow says: "I'm extremely excited. I've never been in any kind of a game before. I think computer games are a fantastic means of communication – everybody plays them and I think they're a terrific way of getting messages through."
Produced by RollingSound, which works to provide multimedia out-reach projects to young people, the online game was made through collaborations with young people, ex-offenders, the Metropolitan police and youth workers. The process was managed by digital marketing agency Profero.
Disarming Britain is a special season of programmes about the increasing use of violence and weapons by young people on UK streets, and includes a five-part series featuring Cherie Booth called The Truth About Street Weapons which begins on Monday 30 June.
Yr 13 Introduction
Saturday, 3 May 2008
Who'S ToP oF ThE TeCh ChArT?! HmMmMm
1. Nintendo
$2.48bn. That's Nintendo's profit for the last year. Not just a 48% rise on the previous year, but the biggest profit ever made by a games company. The Wii effect contunues to work its magic on a business which was thought doomed to irrelevance just a few years back - and is now one of Japan's most valuable companies. Will new games continue to refresh Nintendo's profits - or will the new audience of family gamers fade away when the novelty wears off?
2. Apple
2.29 million. That's how many Mac computers Apple sold in the last three months. Which reinforces our earlier blog posting about Apple's growth now being led by Macs - not iPods or iPhones. The iPod certainly did the job of making Apple matter again - but now as sales flatten off, it's the firm's success in winning converts to the Mac OS which is the real moneyspinner. Having expanded its following beyond the cult of Mac-lovers, Apple just needs to keep the newcomers interested with constant innovation. Easy....
3. Google
42%. That's how much the search firm's revenue was up in the last three months, compared with the start of 2007. A figure which confounded expectations of a slowdown in the remarkable Google growth story - and set the scene for a week of good news about the technology economy. As we reported, the firm is now Britain's biggest earner of advertising revenue, overtaking ITV. But one small shadow - Google's revenue in its home US market failed to grow much. Is that the first sign of a downturn in the US hitting the technology sector?
4. Microsoft
$4.75bn. That was the revenue earned in three months by the Microsoft division which develops its Office software. Which goes to show that Microsoft's core products are still extraordinary moneyspinners. But that figure was actually a shade down on last year. And when I looked at the rubric which accompanies Microsoft's forecast of future earnings, one item stood out: "Actual results could differ materially because of factors such as challenges to Microsoft's business model". The real threat to its business model comes from the firm at number three in our chart - and that's why Microsoft wants to buy number five.
5. Yahoo
$27.30. That was the Yahoo share price on Thursday evening - about a dollar down on its level before Tuesday's results which actually exceeded market expectations. What that says is that the market does not believe Jerry Yang's promises of a better future as an independent company, nor is it betting on Microsoft coming up with an improved offer.
GTA game smashes UK sales records
The previous record holder was GTA: San Andreas, which sold 501,000 copies in 24 hours in October 2004.
But despite its success the game has been hit by reports of software problems and crashes on some consoles.
"The cut scene at the office is freezing up.. I get audio, but the video just freezes," wrote one gamer on Sony's PlayStation 3 forum.
The problem was originally thought to be confined to games running on the 60GB version of the PlayStation 3 sold in the US. However, other models running the game also seem to be affected.
In addition, gamers that have bought the version for the Xbox 360 have also reported problems.
"Is anyone else experiencing major freezing issues? I cant play the game for more than 10 mins without it freezing," wrote one on the Xbox forums.
Monday, 7 April 2008
Children flock to social networks
Most sites, such as Bebo, MySpace and Facebook, set a minimum age of between 13 and 14 to create a profile but none actively enforce the age limit.
Ofcom's survey of 5,000 adults and 3,000 children found 49% of those aged between eight and 17 have a profile. The Ofcom report looks into the impact of social networks on people's lives in the UK as part of a wider media literacy campaign and surveyed 5,000 adults and more than 3,000 children. Its statistics suggest that around 19% of all UK youngsters have a presence on a social networking site.
SOCIAL NETWORKING SURVEY
49% of children 8-17 have an online profile
22% of 16+ have an online profile
On average adults have profiles on 1.6 sites
63% of 8 to 17-year-olds with a profile use Bebo
37% of 8 to 17-year-olds with profile use MySpace
18% of 8 to 17-year-olds with a profile use Facebook
59% of 8 to 17-year-olds use social networks to make new friends
16% of parents do not know if their child's profile is visible to all
33% of parents say they set no rules for their children's use of social networks
43% of children say their parents set no rules for use of social networks
The three leading social networks, MySpace, Bebo and Facebook, all say they remove profiles of users that are found to be too young on their sites.
But at present no technology is used to actively verify the age of users.
The Home Office guidelines are set to encourage social networking sites to investigate age verification technologies and to give better signposting to users about privacy settings, and warnings about the implications of posting personal details.