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Feedback: Beware of dangerous signs

Danger signs, non-existent products, prime confusion and more

Feedback: Beware of dangerous signs
(Image: Paul McDevitt)
Feedback: Beware of dangerous signs
(Image: Paul McDevitt)

Beware of dangerous signs

“CAUTION”, reads the sign that Sofia Graves photographed at an information office in Pincher Creek, a small town in Alberta, Canada. “This sign has sharp edges. Do not touch the edges of this sign.” Sofia remarks that she has seen “many pointless and contradictory signs – but none whose existence created danger”.

Investigating, we find that the these same words, with the addition of a second phrase, in small type: “Also, the bridge is out ahead.”

So can we thank a highway engineer fed up with warning signs being ignored? Or one hoping for a mention in Feedback? Finding only copies of a single image does makes us wonder whether it might instead be a cleverly manipulated photo.

We also find companies of the sign to be attached to office cubicles for humorous purposes. Inspecting the pixels, we suspect the sign Sofia photographed is a home-made version of these.

The email Paul Maclean received from Material Recycling World magazine was headed “Rubbish news you can trust”. Paul’s email security system classified it as “junk mail”

100-year-old CDs

INFORMED of these doubts, Sofia responded with another photo, taken in an antique shop in London. “Edwardian CD/DVD storage unit,” it proudly announces. “This could change the history books,” she observes.

(For readers resident in republics, that would be the history of the reign of Edward VII, 1901-1910.)

Non-existent product

“NOW 78p” reads the label on the lump of cheese with apricot pieces that Tim Adlam is holding in the photo he sends from his local Tesco supermarket. At that price, we immediately suspect the “best before” date is imminent. But it’s stranger than that. The sticker continues: “Do not use.” Why? “Product does not exist.”

We started imagining how this might have come about, but our brain informed us firmly that anything we might know about shelf-stacking and stock control was going to remain a repressed memory.

So we’re left wondering about the label from a consumer’s point of view. Is non-existent food the next big thing in weight loss? If Tim had scanned the barcode, would the entire supermarket chain have undergone a “blue screen” crash?

Or could this paradoxical product be the secret key to tunnelling into the real reality, the one outside supermarket-world? We can but hope.

Enigmatic announcement

MEANWHILE, Mike Martin sends a photo of a sign on the Camperdown campus of the University of Sydney, Australia, which very neatly and elegantly announces: “Sign under repair.”

There was no clue what repairs were required, and a few days later it vanished, possibly into a logical maelstrom.

A little bit private

AND while we’re obsessing about signs again, David Ivory notes that he has seen several signs near where he lives in Warwickshire, UK, saying “Strictly Private”. He wonders if any readers have been lucky enough to find a “Fairly Private” or “Moderately Private” sign in their travels.

More magnet magic

IT IS amazing what magnets can do. Philip Hanser recently ran across an advert for a ““, which sells for a mere $59.95.

“Why would anyone want to accelerate their ageing?” you may wonder. But the ageing referred to here is that of wine, which is universally considered A Good Thing.

So how does it work? The advert claims that “Extremely powerful Neodymium magnets in the Vintage Express realign particles in beverages. So wine in a glass shows noticeable improvement in just a few minutes.”

This sounded like familiar fruitloopery, but then we remembered a report in these very pages on “How to make cheap wine taste like a fine vintage” using not magnets but electric fields (20/27 December 2008, p 58). Has any reader tried either of these?

Prime numbers meet the press

FINALLY, let us record the ways in which certain newspapers misunderstood the announcement on 6 February of a newly found largest prime number.

“Although of little significance,” UK paper the Daily Mail “have long fascinated amateur and professionals and the discovery of a new one is a badge of honour in mathematical circles”. Er, no. Richard Mallett was just one of those who pointed out that prime numbers are central to the entire and much-vaunted internet economy, through their role in encryption and hence online payments.

And Pui Wah Carter writes of his son Peter’s response to the UK Independent Աɲ貹’s that “Even the most powerful computers struggle to work out the factors of a large prime number”.

Peter thinks he could work out the factors of any given prime number, even without the help of a computer. (For any readers who bunked off school that day: the definition of a prime number is that its only factors are itself and 1.)

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