Sheffield-based company Viners has produced the "Assure" range, square-ended knives which are "shaped to reduce and prevent injuries, accidents and fatalities." With knife crimes in England and Wales at their highest in a decade, a 3% increase on last year and the highest level since 2009, this new knife is intended to not be used in crimes and only in the kitchen. While anti-stabbing messages have been left on fastfood containers and a crackdown on knife crime has been tried, for which included limiting the sale of knives, so far nothing has blunted the knife based problem.
When have social problems been solved by technical solutions?
(Score: 2) by c0lo on Monday January 20 2020, @01:19AM
Now, that's interesting. So self-evident once one point it to you.
I always found that knife useless, it tends to push away the stuff I'm trying to chop and I end in spending more time bringing the stuff back into place or chasing it around the board.
I see a new project for me in the near future - make a concave shallow chopping board and try the difference. Trying which depth gives better results sounds like "science at home" too.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford