Howzat!
A reader writes: "I have an avid English cricket friend of mine here for the test matches who is staying in Mt Albert to be nearer the stadium while the cricket is on. We advised him to be careful taking any short cuts down the dark roads on the way back late at night. He rang me this morning to say things are okay, so I asked him about his late night walk from the ground. His reply was, 'I had the company of an English batsman walking home last night, he was as much in the dark as I was' ... priceless."
A helping hand from the dear departed ...
Families who have just lost a loved one are so desperate to get into smartphones of dead relatives that they are using the corpse's fingers to try to unlock them. The chairman of the Law Society wills and equity committee, Ian Bond, told the Times he had heard of cases where family members were placing the hand of a recently deceased person who was "slightly warm"on mobile phones to unlock them and retrieve their photos and messages. Most of the time they do not work as sensors rely on electrical charge to be running through the skin. People were not planning ahead for their death during a period where sentimental photo albums had been replaced by camera phones, he said. Unless you know an Apple user's password there is no way to get into the account and unless a Facebook user has nominated a legacy contact, access will not be granted. These problems can be avoided by drawing up a Digital Will, where passwords and codes for devices are left.