Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




ABOUT US
'Digital eternity' beckons as death goes high-tech
by Staff Writers
Nantes, France (AFP) Oct 31, 2012


Death is no longer the fusty business it once was: from swipeable bar codes on headstones to designer urns, webcam-based ceremonies and virtual memorials, funerals have shot into the 21st century.

Can't make it to a faraway funeral? No problem. A growing number of undertakers will let you take part via the web, with mourners hooking up to join the ceremony via a secure Internet connection.

"Families are more and more spread out, these days people can have relatives at the four corners of the country or the globe, far from their place of birth," explained Eric Fauveau, who operates webcam services for French crematoriums.

Relatives can even opt to keep a copy of the ceremony on DVD, as part of the add-on cost of 100 to 195 euros ($130 to $250).

For the truly high-tech touch, several undertaking firms have started embedding bar codes at grave sites, to be scanned with a smartphone to call up an online biography complete with pictures, videos or tributes to the deceased.

Seattle-based Quiring Monuments began offering the QR, or Quick Response codes -- commonly used in ad campaigns -- last year, and French start-up "Memory History" and undertaker Chester Pearce from England followed suit this year.

Pitched as much at relatives as strangers curious to find out about the deceased, the bar code service comes with a price tag ranging from $75 in the United States to up to 300 pounds (370 euros/$480) in Britain.

Far-flung families wanting to post condolences, light a digital candle, share photos or memories, can choose from dozens of online memorial sites, a well-established US phenomenon that has newly caught on in Europe too.

"A little piece of digital eternity," is how Fauveau, who launched one such service in France, describes it.

Increasingly part of the Facebook generation, the fast-growing ranks of web-literate seniors are a key reason for the shift of memorial services online.

Facebook itself offers the option of turning a personal page into a virtual memorial by "freezing" the profile after its owner dies, but leaving it open to tributes.

-- "You are celebrating a life, not a death" --

The web also enables people approaching the end of their lives to reach out before they go.

One example of this is the French foruforever.net, launched two years ago under the slogan "Death is Part of Life", which today counts some 300 "life albums", according to its founder Sandrine Tenaud.

"Since death has become such a taboo, people are often left in a panic when the time comes to reach out to their relatives," Tenaud explained. "The web makes it easy."

As members of the baby-boomer generation take their final bow -- and the place of religion declines in the West -- funeral ceremonies are also changing drastically, with a large place opening up for music and humour.

"You are celebrating a life, not a death," summed up Herve Mankowski, an undertaker from Brest in western France, who played AC/DC's "Highway to Hell" as the tongue-in-cheek soundtrack for one recent funeral.

With cremation on the rise in the West, accounting for 30 percent of funerals in France, and more than 70 percent in Britain -- among the highest shares in Europe -- firms are also tapping into the need for modern types of physical memorial.

Urnea, a young firm set up in the Pyrenees by two French artists, Cyril Amouroux and Benoit Alcouffe, dreamed up designer urns that can be stacked into a column, for members of a same family for instance.

Made from aluminium-titanium alloy, their urns come with a 99-year warranty.

As for your traditional headstone, you can jazz that up, too.

The start-up company Funeralconcept, from Vendee in western France, offers tomb plates in laser-sculpted steel that can be carved into the shape of a musical instrument, or painted with a glorious sunset.

"Since I was a blacksmith, some friends asked me to imagine something for one of their friends," explained the firm's founder Freddy Pinault, who has notched up several dozen orders since launching in September.

Among the most recent, a colourful monument to the memory of the late Serge Danot, creator of the cult children's television classic "The Magic Roundabout", who died in 1990.

.


Related Links
All About Human Beings and How We Got To Be Here






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








ABOUT US
Lucy and Selam's species climbed trees
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Oct 30, 2012
Australopithecus afarensis (the species of the well-known "Lucy" skeleton) was an upright walking species, but the question of whether it also spent much of its time in trees has been the subject of much debate, partly because a complete set of A. afarensis shoulder blades has never before been available for study. For the first time, Midwestern University Professor David Green and Curator ... read more


ABOUT US
Greater effort needed to move local, fresh foods beyond 'privileged' consumers

Minimizing Mining Damage with Manure

Gaps in border controls are related to alien insect invasions in Europe

Black rice and tea in Italy as China shows its green side

ABOUT US
Near-atomically flat silicon could help pave the way to new chemical sensors

Japan's Renesas books $1.18 bn quarterly loss

New finding could pave way to faster, smaller electronics

Quantum computing with recycled particles

ABOUT US
Boeing Projects $820 Billion Market for 7,290 New Airplanes in North America

Bell Boeing Receives US Marine Corps Contract for V-22 Training Devices

Air China reports 16% drop in 3Q profit

China Southern 3Q profits tumble 29 percent

ABOUT US
Nissan chief wary of China amid island row: report

Wireless system charges electric vehicles

China approves Chery-JLR joint auto venture

Honda slashes forecast on China territorial spat

ABOUT US
Clinton to push Balkans for greater integration

FDI flow to South America double-edged?

China's ZTE swings to net loss in third quarter

US Navy to guard "freedom of navigation" in Asia

ABOUT US
Brazil's Indians appeal for help to stop eviction

Sting forces venue switch in Philippines tree row

Ozone Affects Forest Watersheds

Study: Windblown forests best left alone

ABOUT US
Satellite images tell tales of changing biodiversity

Google adds terrain to Maps as default

Rapid changes in the Earth's core: The magnetic field and gravity from a satellite perspective

Landsat Science Team to Help Guide Next Landsat Mission

ABOUT US
Strengthening fragile forests of carbon nanotubes for new MEMS applications

A 'nanoscale landscape' controls flow of surface electrons on a topological insulator

Nanotechnology helps scientists keep silver shiny

Scientists use molecular layers to study nanoscale heat transfer




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement