claidheamhmor: (Pentagram)
2024-11-11 02:37 pm
Entry tags:

Second time around

So Trump won the US election, managed the popular vote, and Republicans control all three arms of the government. It's going to be a mess, and lots of people will be hurt. As many as Trump allowed to die last time around? Who knows.

To be honest, I'm gobsmacked. I truly don't understand how people could have voted for a rapist and felon with a string of personal and business disasters behind his name, even if he'd been running against a trained dog. 

Voters were supposedly worried about the economy, but apparently too ignorant to realise that Biden's economy is the best in years, with record low unemployment, stock market highs, inflation dropping and much less than other G7 countries, with infrastructure investment, record oil production, illegal immigration lower than in recent years (and record numbers of illegal immigrants being apprehended), and more. 

This was an interesting read on some of the religious right-wingers behind Trump: How Opus Dei Conquered Washington, D.C.

Project 2025 is going to be very unpleasant if any of it is actually put in place. 

Frankly, I think the US has some very, very deep-seated social ills that may take generations to fix, if ever. 

Of course there are all sorts of recriminations on the Democrat side - they should have had a different candidate, Biden should have stepped down earlier, Harris laughed funny, they attacked Trump, they didn't attack Trump, people are worried about inflation, coastal elites, blah blah blah.

To win again, I think the Democrats need to focus their policies on the people who matter in elections: billionaires, tech bros, right-wing podcasters, Russians, Saudi princes, Israeli hawks, and media conglomerate owners. Don't waste time on the disadvantages, the middle class, minorities, and so on, they don't get votes.

Incidentally, one way of knowing if you're supporting the right side or not: if Nazis openly support your party, you are on the wrong side of history. It doesn't matter if your leader got the trains to run on time, or built autobahns, you're on the wrong side. 
claidheamhmor: (Snowflake)
2024-09-26 01:45 pm
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The winter spring

Spring started off pretty hot (30C+), and then last week we had a cold snap; we haven't had on at this time of year since the late 2010s. Saturday was rainy and cold, the cold-in-your-bones sort of cold. Sunday, thankfully, was cold but not wet, a good thing as I was doing a 15K race. On Saturday, 53 parkruns around the country were cancelled, the highest ever!

Conditions countrywide were cold too. In fact, the N3 freeway, the biggest inter-city freeway in the country, was closed at Van Reenen's Pass because of snow, and 1800 cars were trapped in the snow. Locals and farmers were helping the people in cars out. 

The weather is hot again, but I hear it may be cooler over the weekend.

claidheamhmor: (FusionReactor)
2023-07-03 01:21 pm
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Technology integration entropy

I'm getting so annoyed with the deliberate entropy in technology lately. It used to be that social media apps and tools would interoperate and integrate with each other quite nicely, but companies have been locking down their environments into walled gardens.

For example, you used be be able to use a single app to connect to heaps of different messenger programs, like GTalk, ICQ, MSN Messenger, Yahoo Messenger, and others. Now, every service requires its own dedicated app.

We all know what a shitshow Twitter has become, especially now that they are charging extortionate amounts for the use of the Twitter API. So now you cannot use any third-party app to use Twitter, you have to use only the clumsy, uncustomisable Twitter app.

Livejournal locked down its API too, preventing crossposts from Dreamwidth.

Now Reddit is doing the same as Twitter, charging for its API, and this has broken all third-party apps, broken many of the tools used for moderation, and broken access for the visually disabled. Reddit moderators in many subreddits tried to stand up to Reddit, but they're being strongarmed.

What's the result of this? Well, the number of messenger apps I use is limited to only a couple; I'm not going to be trying to use half a dozen chat apps on my phone. I've just about dropped off Twitter because of the rubbish app, but I can see increases in bigotry and misinformation, and less content from those I follow. I've dropped off Livejournal; manually crossposting is too much hassle. And on Reddit, some subreddits have markedly less content (IAMA's moderators have said they don't have the capabilities to go and get good content and manage it anymore), there's an increase in fake reposts, and some subreddits have basically dropped off. 

It's all a bit disappointing. Where's all the integration we were promised?
claidheamhmor: (Ladyhawke)
2023-05-17 03:01 pm
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Foxy

There was much excitement on our neighbourhood WhatsApp and Telegram groups last week, because a jackal was wandering the area. In fact, it was spotted on our road, and a lovely video of it filmed just around the corner. Fortunately an animal organisation managed to catch it and transport it to a safe location. 

Here's a link

claidheamhmor: (Snowflake)
2022-12-01 12:55 pm
Entry tags:

Twitler

Anyone who had any illusions that Elon Musk could competently run a business must surely have lost them by now.

After a court forces him to follow through with his offer, Musk buys Twitter at a vastly inflated price, taking out billions in expensive loans to do so (because Musk's fortune is in stock, not in cash). 

He fires half the staff without bothering to see what they actually do (and is forced to re-hire some). He's now facing legal issues in states and countries where it's illegal to let staff go like that. 

Then he revokes all work from home, exceptions approved only by himself. He obviously thinks people only work when he's watching them. Many other staff resign.

Then he sends an email saying all staff are expected to work extra long hours, and those that don't like that can take severance. Many do, because they can easily get new, better jobs.

He terminates most teams that handle content moderation (like the team that watches for child porn).  And he invites fascists, Nazis, abusive people, and other problematic banned accounts back onto the platform. Unsurprisingly, advertisers leave in droves. Musk starts a fight with Apple, a company than can snuff Twitter out in a keystroke.

I work in a large IT organisation. We here know what happens when you lose staff. Management don't always know what people do, but the systems are fragile, and held together with people and their processes. Losing almost entire teams...that could well be fatal. It's not quick, but over time, systems will degrade and fail. The guy who gets the notifications for expiring certs, the people checking mailboxes, the infrastructure team watching for disk space alerts...if they're not around, things will fail eventually. There's a huge amount of institutional knowledge that's been lost. Timeline, two-factor auth, and comment issues are already happening. 

Musk has a lot to lose here...


claidheamhmor: (Stranger in a Strange Land)
2019-03-29 03:34 pm

Being average

I found this question being asked on Reddit (I hang around there a bit), and thought it was quite interesting:

"People who were told they were “gifted” growing up, how did you deal with realizing that you were pretty average?"

Has anyone else ever had that experience? I've done quite a lot of thinking around intelligence, success, achievement, and so on; it's quite sobering.
claidheamhmor: (UnderworldEvolution)
2014-10-02 11:02 am

Celebgate

My insurance broker popped round last night bearing pizza, and we had a good chat. Something we talked about was Celebgate, with all the leaked nude celebrity selfies. He was saying that people shouldn't be taking nude pictures of themselves, because there's that chance the pics will be leaked.

I'm of a different opinion. If people want to take selfies, that's up to them. If they want to store them on the cloud, fine. Obviously, take a few basic precautions - choose a secure location, enable the phone password, etc.

But there's more to the whole Celebgate leak than just pictures:
  • Apple let those celebrities down, by having an insecure "feature" on iCloud that let hackers repeatedly enter password attempts without blocking access.
  • Many of those celebs, I'll bet, had no idea their phones were being automatically backed up to iCloud.
  • All the focus has been on the nude pictures. That's only part of the story, because what the hackers got were complete iPhone backups. Not just pictures, but email, text messages, contacts, calendar, notes, documents, and more. In other words, if those users had a copy of their bank statement in their email, or any unencrypted passwords typed in, or any personal information, or email addresses or phone numbers of family, friends, or other celebrities, or personal calendar entries, or home addresses... that information has been hacked, and someone has it. That could be a lot scarier than pictures.
To say people shouldn't take nude pics implies that they also shouldn't have any other personal information on their phones (or email, or websites, for that matter). It's possible to live like that, but if you do, why bother having a smartphone? Just get a cheap Nokia.

Personally, I think there's a balancing act between the risk of such information being on your phone, and the convenience and utility of doing so. My opinion: go for it, but take precautions. Use a phone password. Use encrypted password storage apps (like LastPass, Password Keeper, et al). Use secure cloud storage (I use OneDrive and Box). And if your information is more valuable (if you're a celebrity, say), take even better precautions (hey, how about a more secure phone).

claidheamhmor: (F-111 in the Sky)
2013-05-07 09:23 am
Entry tags:

Best pilot ever

I reckon Eric Brown is probably the best pilot in history. I read his book "Wings of the Luftwaffe" in the early '80s, and met him when he came out to South Africa. I'm amazed that he's still around.

 


claidheamhmor: (Fiday)
2013-05-03 01:15 pm
Entry tags:

Science and Religion

The Bad Astronomer posted an article mentioning links to Science and Religion surveys. Fairly interesting, especially if you read the stats afterwards.

Here they are:
Science quiz
Religion quiz

I got 15/15 for the science quiz, and 14/15 for the religion quiz (I got the last question wrong).
claidheamhmor: (Blackberry)
2012-07-27 02:49 pm
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Mobile phones, and QNX

World Wide Worx just completed a survey on mobile phone use in South Africa, and it's pretty interesting.

South Africans and their cellphones
Data dominates SA mobile trends

Some interesting bits:
84% of users are prepaid.
Most popular phone feature: FM radio

Cellphone (not smartphone alone) market shares:
Nokia: 50%
BlackBerry: 18% (up from 4% 18 months ago)
Samsung: 18% (down from 26% in 2010)
iPhone: 1%
(If you're looking at smartphone market share, BlackBerry has just over 75% (and increasing), with most of the rest split between Android and iPhone).

Social Networking:
Facebook: 38%
Whatsapp: 26% (up from 0% in 2010, driven mainly by Nokia)
BBM (BlackBerry Messenger): 17% (up from 3% in 2010)
Mxit: 23%
Twitter: 12%

QNX and car infotainment systems
For those still quick to write off BlackBerry, I suspect a lot of people have forgotten that RIM is not just about BlackBerry handsets. For example, the QNX software that is the core of the BlackBerry Playbook and the upcoming BB10 operating system is running on the infotainment systems of 30 million cars, 64% of the global market. The brands that QNX systems are in include Audi, Acura, Nissan, Toyota Honda, Mazda, BMW, Ferrari, Lamborghini, Porsche, Chrysler/Fiat, and General Motors. Soon enough, you'll be able to download apps from BlackBerry App World for your car.
claidheamhmor: (Witch King EE)
2012-02-29 04:14 pm
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Taxi driver up for murder

Last year a taxi driver drove on the wrong side of the road, past booms, and onto a railway crossing. A train hit his taxi, killing 10 children and injuring four. He was arrested and charged with murder and attempted murder; there's legal precedent for being egregiously reckless and causing deaths.

He was convicted of murder and attempted murder, and got 20 years. Good.

Article


Next up, a drug-fuelled DJ and his friend who were racing each other on a public road, lost control, and ploughed into a bunch of school kids, killing several.
claidheamhmor: (Blackberry Logo)
2012-01-23 02:24 pm
Entry tags:

Gadgety news

Some news in the mobile device market:

Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis step down. Thorsten Heins becomes new CEO of RIM. With luck he'll shake a few trees in the organisation. While they may have some good technology, it's not being delivered properly, and communications are poor.

How the U.S. Lost Out on iPhone Work. A really interesting article on technology jobs, the US middle class, and Chinese manufacturing.
claidheamhmor: (Conan)
2011-11-20 10:27 pm
Entry tags:

Sci-fi masterpieces

Interesting selection from this article:
10 Modern Must-Read Sci-Fi Masterpieces

Any discussion of science fiction invariably begins and ends with the masters of the genre. Jules Verne, Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, Phillip K. Dick, Arthur C. Clarke, Ray Bradbury, H.G. Wells, Frank Herbert, Jerry Pournelle and so on. But what do all of those authors have in common besides their sci-fi prowess? They all did their most significant work before 1980. Ironically for a genre that’s so much about the future, much of our discussion of the great work done within it seems to center around things written in the distant past.

People didn’t suddenly stop writing science fiction novels in 1980. In the past thirty-years a new group of science fiction authors has risen to make their mark on the genre, with their own masterpiece entries into the sci-fi genre. This list is dedicated to those writers, the modern masters who haven’t quite yet taken their place in the pantheon of sci-fi icons, but probably should. If you’re serious about science fiction, or just looking for a great book to read without all the baggage of something written in a long since bygone era, make sure you own a copy of these must-read modern sci-fi masterpieces.

The Dark Tower (1982 – 2004)
Written by: Stephen King
King is best known as one of the modern masters of fantasy and horror but The Dark Tower series is as much science fiction as it is anything. It all started with the publishing of The Gunslinger in 1982, a story which opens with these unforgettable words: “The man in black fled across the desert and the gunslinger followed.” He followed through seven epic books on a journey across dimensions and time and space. The gunslinger is named Roland and he’s a cowboy, sort of, from a dimension which is sort of like our medieval past merged with a Clint Eastwood movie. His world was destroyed by an evil force, and he’s on a mission to find a mythical place called the Dark Tower, which he believes is at the nexus of everything. He picks up companions along the way, and they develop a relationship with each other (and in the process the reader) that goes beyond mere words. Filled with violence and misery, and heart-wrenching beauty and joy, it’s one of the most emotionally moving works on this list. Read all seven books, and say thankee-sai.

Neuromancer (1984)
Written by: William Gibson
William Gibson created the cyber punk genre with Neuromancer. A story about a dystopian future where Henry Case is caught as a thief, has his brain interface with the virtual reality world of the “Matrix” removed, and is now a drug addict desperate to find a cure for his problems. What follows is a story of hackers going to battle, the effects of technology on mankind, and an exploration of what exactly defines reality. What really matters in geek culture is that Gibson developed the notion of the cyber punk world with this novel. The idea of AI constructs taking on humans, technology as a drug, virtual worlds where battles can occur, are all either originated or defined clearly within Neuromancer. The novel also established the noir tonal quality of the genre. Of course Neuromancer is most known as the blueprint for The Matrix, but has always been regarded as a seminal work in the sci-fi world.

Ender’s Game (1985)
Written by: Orson Scott Card
There’s never been anything quite like Ender’s Game, before or since. Not even the sequels. Orson Scott Card’s masterpiece tells the story of young children whisked away to a battle school for gifted minds where, humanity hopes they’ll be able to transform one of them into the military genius the world needs to save them from an impending alien invasion. It’s about kids but it’s not a book for kids. What happens in that battle school is brutal and brilliant, full of strategic thinking and mind games played the way they can only really be played amongst untested genius intellects. In the end all the kids involved are left warped, changed, and screwed up, but none worse than Ender. In a sense Ender’s Game is about how saving the human race ruined one little boy’s life.

The Liaden Universe (1988 – 2010)
Written by: Sharon Lee and Steve Miller
Agent of Change was the first book published (though not the first chronologically) in what would eventually become known as the Liaden Universe. The series contains nine books in all, all set in the same fictional future, but each book completely different from the other. Agent of Change, for instance, is an intimate spy novel focused on a small handful of characters engaged in a complex game of cat and mouse , set on a single planet. Balance of Trade, my favorite of the series, is the story of the crew aboard a massive, intergalactic merchant ship, making their way from one planet to the next. Others are romance novels and political thrillers, all set in the same fictional world. Best of all, it somehow all fits together. They aren’t random stories but larger parts of the same whole, each told in their own way and from their own angle.

Hyperion Cantos (1989 – 1997)
Written by: Dan Simmons
The Hyperion Cantos is actually four books. The first two, Hyperion and The Fall of Hyperion tell one part of the story. The second two, Endymion and The Rise of Endymion tell a completely different part. Together they form one, contiguous whole, the story of a future where man believes he has conquered the universe, but really hasn’t. It starts with the story of a few pilgrims, journeying to a strange planet called Hyperion. There they’ll encounter an impossible and seemingly all-powerful being called The Shrike, who captures travelers and impales them on his tree of pain (which is every bit as horrible as it sounds). Rarely has anything more thoughtful, imaginative, and emotionally wrenching ever been written, outside sci-fi or in it. Dan Simmons’s story challenges the very nature of humanity and the universe, while delivering serious sci-fi adventure.

Jurassic Park (1990)
Written by: Michael Crichton
Long since eclipsed by the still great 1992 Steven Spielberg based on it, Michael Crichton’s original novel is still worth a read. It’s by far the best work the rockstar-level famous author has ever done and, if you read it you can seem smart in front of your friends when they’re talking about the movie. The plot actually deviates from the movie in some pretty key places, though it’s still about a billionaire who builds a park with live dinosaurs in it, which invariably goes wrong when “nature finds a way”. All the familiar characters are there, but the whole thing gets taken even further, beyond the special effects budget of even a Spielberg movie. Crichton’s book is far more dark and dire than the film too, filled with even more violence and a lot more things blowing up. Spielberg’s movie is the better version I suppose, but Crichton’s book is good enough to be worth a read in its own right. It’s a cultural touchstone which deserves its place in the pantheon of iconic modern science fiction.

On Basilisk Station (1992)
Written by: David Weber
On Basilisk Station is the first book in author David Weber’s expansive Honorverse series, but I’m not going to recommend the entire series. Start with just this one book and stop reading them when its right. The first book is the best of the bunch and the quality dwindles as the series goes on, but that’s fine, because On Basilisk Station works even as a standalone novel. It’s about a female military commander named Honor Harrington and her ship, the Fearless on assignment, and in the heat of battle in a remote part of space where they’re the last line of defense against invasion. Weber’s depiction of Honor is one of the strongest female literary characters you’re likely to encounter anywhere, and his detailed yet entertaining grasp of strategy and tactics used in outer space is unmatched.

The Time Ships (1995)
Written by: Stephen Baxter
In The Time Ships, a critically acclaimed follow-up novel authorized by the Wells estate to mark the 100th anniversary of The Time Machine, British author Stephen Baxter explores the paradox unwittingly created by the original story. Picking up where the Wells classic leaves off, the Time Traveler returns to the future to save the girl he left to die at the hands of the Morlocks. Along the way he notices that time has changed. He stops to investigate and learns that he’s polluted the timeline and the future he left never existed. In trying to repair the timeline, he only makes it worse, even to the point of threatening his very existence and that of the human race. It’s a complex, thought-provoking adventure in true Wells tradition, questioning the moral obligations to one’s future and past. Baxter seamlessly slips into a nineteenth century “Wellsian” writing style while remaining as relevant to modern steampunk audiences as to fans of the classic Wells.

A Deepness in the Sky (1999)
Written by: Vernor Vinge
You can’t really go wrong with any of the books in Vernor Vinge’s “Zones of Thought” series and most people would probably put the older A Fire Upon the Deep here, but I’ve always been partial to Deepness. Both books are standalone novels, despite being set in the same universe, so pick either one and you can’t go wrong. A Deepness in the Sky is the story of what happens when an intelligent alien species is discovered on a planet orbiting around an anomolous star which causes their entire race to go dormant for long periods of time every couple hundred years. The story’s told both from the perspective of the humans in orbit, and from the perspective of the alien species as they prepare for their planet’s big freeze. It’s a great story, but it’s particularly noteworthy for it’s complex depiction of a completely alien species, the best I’ve read since The Mote in God’s Eye. Vinge’s approach is, however, completely different than the one used by Niven and Pournelle in Mote, instead he attempts to translate their completely alien thoughts and life into human terms… and it works.

Ready Player One (2011)
Written by: Ernest Cline
This is the novel that defines modern geek culture, and the impact of video games on our world. Although author Ernest Cline goes far beyond just extolling the greatness of classic video games, it’s within a virtual world that we get to love the oldies once again. Told from the perspective of 18-year-old generic everyman, Wade Watts is a kid who lives in a crime infested trailer park. He spends most of his time hiding out in a junkyard jacked into a school computer where he attends classes virtually. The novel mostly takes place within the virtual world of THE OASIS, a game that becomes so pervasive by the start of the novel in 2044 that it’s not just an online world but is really the whole Internet. Good versus evil, geek references to everything from Gundam to Ghostbusters, and a healthy dose of intrigue and action make Ready Player One not only a good bit of fun, but also this decade’s must read sci-fi novel.

Source: Giant Freakin Robot
claidheamhmor: (Pentagram)
2011-10-13 02:10 pm
Entry tags:

Witchcraft!

This was in the news the other day:

SAFA 'owe' sangoma R90 000
2011-10-11 14:09

Johannesburg - A sangoma [witchdoctor] claims the South African Football Association (SAFA) owes him R90 000 for providing the "magic" to beat France in the 2010 Soccer World Cup, the Daily Sun reported on Tuesday.

S'bonelo Madela said Bafana Bafana would not win any matches until he got his money, hinting he was responsible for the team's failure to go through to the Africa Cup of Nations finals on Saturday.

"If the national soccer team want to start winning, the SAFA bosses must settle their debt with me first," Madela was quoted as saying.

SAFA vice-president Mwelo Nonkonyane confirmed it had used Madela's services, but said he had already been paid.

"We are going to open a criminal case against this guy," Nonkonyane said in the report.

Neither Nonkonyane nor SAFA spokesperson Morio Sanyane and Gary Mojela could be reached for comment.

Source: Sport24
So SAFA actually used a witchdoctor, and paid him for his services?!!! *boggles*

(And before you lot in First World countries point and laugh, remember that the NHS pays for homoeopathy and other quackery in hospitals, and the US has its fair share too).
claidheamhmor: (EF-111 in the sunset)
2011-10-11 04:19 pm
Entry tags:

Dambusters



So it turns out that Guy Gibson, leader of the famous Word War II "Dambusters" missions, was shot down by a Lancaster in 1944.

Revealed after 70 years: Dambusters legend was shot down by BRITISH airman who mistook him for German
claidheamhmor: (AthlonX2)
2011-10-11 11:27 am
Entry tags:

Google+

This comes as no surprise. Google+ was launched with great fanfare, but I think Google seems to have missed the mobile market. I don't know about other people, but I follow Facebook exclusively from my smartphone. Google+ has no BlackBerry app (not sure if there are iPhone and Android apps), and their mobile page sucks. As a result, I spend no time on Google+.

Google+ loses 60 per cent of active users
So much for the amazing growth of the Facebook rival
By Dean Wilson
Mon Oct 10 2011, 12:35


INTERNET SEARCH GIANT Google has lost over 60 per cent of its active users on its social network Google+, according to a report by Chitika Insights, raising questions about how well it is doing against its rival, Facebook.

Google+ was originally invite only, generating significant interest as all and sundry attempted to join what many believed would be the next social networking craze. This frenzy continued when Google opened the doors to its social network to everyone on 20 September. This resulted in a massive influx of new members, with traffic growing by a whopping 1,200 per cent.

However, despite the clear interest in an alternative to Facebook, it does not appear that the people joining are staying around and actively using the web site. On 22 and 23 of September traffic appeared to peak on Google+, but it began to drop soon after, back to pretty much the same level it was before it opened to the public.

Google's problem is not getting users in the first place, it seems, but rather keeping them after they have arrived. For now it appears that a lot of users are merely curious about Google+, but return to the tried and tested format of Facebook when the lustre fades.

Chitika Insights argues that, despite this lack of staying power, Google+ could still become a competitive alternative to Facebook, providing it continues with its fast pace of adding new features. The problem is that Facebook is not going to rest on its laurels while Google attempts to get the advantage. Already it has added features inspired by Google+, particularly in terms of improving the transparency of its privacy options.

While the jury is still out on which firm will win this battle, there's no denying that the intense competition could make both social networks considerably better than they were before.

Source: The Register