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Archive for November, 2007

More than a few words about PluggedOut

Those who visit the PluggedOut website will perhaps be wondering what on earth has happened - the website has changed considerably once again. I have been tinkering - that’s what has happened.

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The screenshot gives some idea of the changes. The template is called “The Morning After“, and is far more magazine influenced than previous templates I have used. Continue reading ‘More than a few words about PluggedOut’

Kasparov Arrested

The former Chess world champion Garry Kasparov has been arrested in Russia for daring to take part in a march against Vladimir Putin.

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I’m not going to write too much about it on my blog, because I don’t want the Russian authorities pulling my website down. I will link to some articles about it though…

Garry Kasparov Jailed for Anti Putin Protest (The Times, London)

Kasparov Arrested in Street Protest Denouncing Putin (SFGate)

Police Beat, Detain Russian Protesters (LA Times)

Second Day of Protests Against Putin (NY Times)

The Net Tightens (Washington Post)

Isn’t it wonderful that we can read a cross section of a news story on the internet and gain a wide ranging view of it.

On Any Weekday Morning

When Wendy first saw this lying on the desk, she laughed out loud.

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PayPerPost - Justice At Last

To all those people out there writing blog posts for “Pay Per Post”… your time is up.

Google have begun wiping the page rank of websites using Pay Per Post.

That’s made my entire afternoon.

The Blockbuster Bargain Bin Strikes Again

While struggling into town with a bad cold to buy medicine, tissues, and food earlier I stopped at Blockbuster to raid their bargain bin for second hand video games. Something to help us through the weekend while feeling like crap.

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I left the store with “Futurama”, and “SSX on Tour” for the Playstation 2. This is where I admit that I get the choice of pretty much all of the used games, because I have all of the last generation consoles.

Tip for everybody here. For the price you might pay for one next generation game on the Playstation 3, XBox 360 or Nintendo Wii, I can wander into Blockbuster, Gamestation, or Game in the UK, and pick up perhaps four, or eight old games. I’m not talking about rubbish either - I’m talking about the likes of Gran Turismo, Ratchet and Clank, Jak and Daxter, Final Fantasy, and so on.

The laughable thing here is that people are buying the “next generation” games machines, and yet the games so far available are nothing of the sort. They are the same driving, fighting and shooting games released twenty times before, only a bit more shiny. Nintendo are the only company trying to be original at all.

We have only played “SSX on Tour” so far, but from what I have seen, it’s fan-bloody-tastic. Coming to this game about 18 months after everybody else, it looks great, plays wonderfully, and sounds amazing. The artwork throughout the game reminds me of the old shorts inbetween MTV videos years ago - sticky tape and magic markers rule the look and feel of the menus. The music is much more rock oriented than previous releases, and this is a good thing - although it would probably do your head in if you had a headache.

SSX is the closest I will ever get to real snowboarding - I dislocated my knee a couple of years ago which basically counts me out of ice skating, snowboarding, skiing, or anything else like that for the rest of my life. I’m not that bitter though - how many snowboarders can do somersaults over the top of thousands of spectators in real life anyway (while dressed as chewbacca) ?

The Face of Tutankhamun

In order to protect the mummy of Tutankhamun against damage from exposure, his remains have been transferred to a glass box within the Cairo museum. While exposing his face for the first time from the famous golden sarcophagus, forensic artists worked to recreate an image of him as he would have looked in life…

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You can read more about the story here.

Apple Prepares the UK iPhone

News is starting to appear this weekend that the Apple iPhone is arriving at stores throughout the UK in readiness for sales to begin on November 9th.

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I think it’s going to be interesting. The iPhone did very well in the United States on it’s opening weekend, but then the US has lagged a long way behind europe in terms of mobile technology thus far. While the iPhone has wonderful integration with the Apple OSX operating system, as a straightforward mobile telephone, it’s not that stellar at all.

Looking at my aging Sony Ericsson K800i, I have a much better camera (click here to see a representative photo from it), and massively longer battery life than the iPhone. I can play MP3 files, movies, browse the web via 3G, and use it as a bluetooth modem too.

If the iPhone is compared against the Nokia N95, things start to look even worse - the N95 has wireless, satnav, bluetooth, 3G, and still a better camera than the iPhone.

So how is the iPhone going to compete?

  • The interface is much easier to use than any other mobile phone.
  • The operating system is much more capable than any other mobile phone.
  • The browser (Safari) is by far the best browser on any mobile phone available.
  • Integration with OSX and productivity applications such as address book and iCal is fast and seamless - making existing Windows smart phone integrations look hilarious by comparison.
  • Integration with iTunes makes moving music to the iPhone a one click operation.

Given the above list, you might imagine that I’ve been taking happy Apple pills. The iPhone has major drawbacks too.

  • It has no 3G capability. Unbelievable.
  • The touch screen keyboard is fiddly to use.
  • Using the camera is a nightmare due to accidentally touching the screen while using it.
  • Battery life is just as bad as the Nokia N95 when using all the functions (but then again, this is true of all powerful mobile phone handsets).
  • Integration with Microsoft Windows productivity applications is virtually non existent.

Thankfully, the iPhone does appear to work very nicely as a telephone - which is the main reason most people carry these devices around, after all.

It strikes me that to extract maximum benefit from the iPhone’s feature set, you almost certainly need an Apple Mac of some description, running Leopard. In the Windows world, the iPhone requires iTunes to both activate, and sync with the computer. It’s no secret that iTunes runs like a dog on Windows - you have to see the Mac version on native hardware to appreciate the difference.

This is all rather complicated, isn’t it. If you subscribe to the Apple product set, pull on your black polo-neck, and your Steve Jobs issue denim jeans, you’re going to be a happy camper. If you live in the Microsoft Windows world however, the benefits of moving to an iPhone are very, very difficult to balance.

Sure, you’ll have a phone with a screen as big as a PSP to play movies on, but do you really want a device that’s quite good at most things, as against a few devices that are very good at each thing?

The Order of Things

When you get five minutes, sit down and watch this movie. Absorb it. Take it to heart.

The world is changing, we are changing it, and we must change with it.

Righting Wrongs at the Natural History Museum

While visiting London with friends recently, we took the chance to visit the British Museum of Natural History. It’s a wonderful, cavernous old building in Kensington with mock gothic arches, labarynthine hallways and huge galleries filled with all manner of dinosaurs, fish, reptiles, mammals, invertibrates, and everything else inbetween.

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The place holds fond memories for me - like many young children I was fascinated by dinosaurs and proudly recited their names at family gatherings. I can still remember my first visit to the museum at about 6 years old, and the feeling that we were entering a very special place indeed.

Returning as an adult rekindled those memories. After nearly thirty years the Diplodocus skeleton still stands proudly in the main hall, but the Tyrannosaurus skull is no longer off to the side, and the Triceratops is no longer parked like an armoured car to the right of the entrance doors.

Returning as an adult also meant I returned with many years worth of reading, knowledge and perceived wisdom stored away in the darker recesses of my mind. I surprised myself when we walked into a display showcasing the story of “archeology”, and therefore the effective founders of the museum.

Looking around, I was shocked to discover that Gideon Mantell was not afforded pride of place, and could not hide my disappointment, and therein lies a story that I couldn’t really tell because we had impressionable youngsters with us.

The display (like most text books, public galleries, and museums) heaps credit on Richard Owen for the discovery of Dinosaurs. While Richard Owen was chiefly responsible for the creation of the Natural History Museum, and the coining of the name “Dinosaur”, that’s all history will actually credit him with.

The Natural History Museum was created in the same era that Darwin published the “Origin of the Species”. Richard Owen was a religious man, and at times an outspoken critic of natural selection. If he had lived today, he would have promoted “intelligent design”. You perhaps need to remember that science had not dared challenge the biblical account of history until Darwin published - books, scholars and theologians taught that the world was created in six days by a big white chap in a beard and robes about four thousands years ago. In order to ingratiate yourself with those who might fund your research, or the museum you want to start, you would need to tow the line.

History will record that Gideon Mantell made the first dinosaur discoveries in Oxfordshire, England - closely followed by Mary Anning in Dorset. Richard Owen did everything in his power (which by then was quite considerable) to thwart Mantell’s discovery, and stood on his results for years - even attempting to take credit for the discovery himself. Mantell nearly lost everything when he should have been celebrated.

Mary Anning quietly worked at Charmouth and Lime Bay in Dorset, digging curiosities out of the limestone cliffs. You may have heard the children’s rhyme - “She sells sea shells by the sea shore” - it’s about Mary Anning. She can be counted as the first professional archeologist - Lyme bay is now known as “The Jurassic Coast”.

Yet there Owen stands, in the centre of the display at the Natural History Museum, credited with the discovery and naming of the Dinosaurs, while the print of Mantell is around a corner, a sideshow with Mary Anning.

While looking at the displays I became angry. After all these years, and with the benefit of the whole story being exposed over the years, the man of science - Gideon Mantell - is still being ignored, and all credit is being heaped on the man of the church who did everything in his power - and more besides - to prevent the earliest advances in palaeontology and archeology from taking place.

To put things right, at some point a slight will have to be made against the religious world view that Owen promoted. That’s not goint to happen any time soon, because a great majority of the people of this world still believe that the world was made by a big beardy chap in six days.

The Macbook Survives the Apple OSX Leopard Upgrade

While out supposedly buying something for lunch on Friday I got sucked into the local Apple store in London, and walked back out with a copy of Leopard. For those who have no idea, Leopard is the latest version of the operating system on the Apple Mac. Think “Windows” for the PC crowd.

This is the desktop, replete with a shiny new dock that reflects things, translucent menu-bar, and this wonderful new feature called “Stacks” - see the pile of documents fanning out of the dock? All you need to do for that to happen is drag a folder down there, and it becomes a stack.

Stacks can appear in two configurations - this is the second - in this case we are looking at the contents of my Documents folder.

One of the most praised additions to OSX this time around is “Coverflow” in the file browser. You know how you can see 3D album covers in iTunes? Well that works for everything now - documents, photos, spreadsheets, even font files.

Here’s another picture of Coverflow at work - this time showing Applications (the equivalent of the Windows start menu).

Okay - here’s another huge benefit that will aid most people - if you press the space bar with a file hilighted, it immediately shows you the file. I’m still not sure how they are doing it, but all common file types open for preview almost instantaneously. Movies, music, photos, documents, spreadsheets - you name it, it opens immediately. I have heard it likened to pulling a file from a cabinet as you are sorting through them… that’s exactly what it feels like.

Next significant edition in terms of ease of use is “Spaces”. This idea has been called virtual desktops on just about every other operating system. Apple’s take on it is by far the most slick I have ever seen. With the press of a button you smoothly zoom into the air over your multiple desktops, and come back down on the one you want - or press a button to slide from one to the next. Moving applications between desktops is as simple as dragging.

OSX 10.5 Leopard obviously has a lot more to offer than I have covered here. I have perhaps touched on 4 items from 300 available before. I’ve not even mentioned “Time Machine” for instance…

The biggest surprise for me in doing this upgrade (pulling on my professional software developer hat) was how smoothly it went. No issues at all. Not one. Everything just worked, and when the computer re-started, everything was as it had been before - only shinier, more polished, in some cases faster, but on the whole the same.

The journey of discovery with regard to the new tricks the operating has up it’s sleeve will no doubt continue for several months.

I cannot enthuse enough. Leopard is the best operating system I have ever seen - bar none.