Archive for the 'Life' Category

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Setting the clock on my Renault Clio

Saturday, April 3rd, 2010

Because it took me such a long time to work this out, I thought I should post. There didn’t seem to be any other posts about this on google or bing. Anyway on my Renault Clio dash, there is only 1 button and pressing and holding it resets the milometer.  What took me a long to to discover is that turning it left or right allows you to change the time on the clock. Actually it didn’t seem to work the first time and I had to turn it quite hard. Then when it flashed, pushing it quickly changes the hours and minutes. Hope this helps someone else.

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Andrew Robinson – Quotes on the ‘Building a Digital Economy’ report

Friday, March 19th, 2010

TechRadar has posted some great quotes from Andrew Robinson on the ‘Building a Digital Economy’ paper. I want to share them with you.

“This is just the latest round in an industry-sponsored campaign of scaremongering that began with the infamous ‘home taping is killing music’ hyperbole in the 1970s and 80s… We are expected to believe that piracy damages paper pulp producers, accounting machine manufacturers and railway operators. Yet again, we are asked to swallow the lie that every download is a lost sale.

Most of the evidence available seems to indicate that more money is going into the creative industries than ever – those sectors and businesses that have embraced the internet and the distribution and marketing potential that it offers are flourishing and it is the other areas, if any, that are suffering.

Perhaps organisations such as the BPI should focus more on investing their resources in new, progressive, and genuinely innovative business models and content rather than on advertising campaigns complaining how their outdated methods are failing.”

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Digital Economy Bill – Threat to Democracy

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

The Digital Economy Bill will shortly be rushed through parliament and bring into force powers that would allow the government (or certain appointed non-government agencies) to cut off internet access to millions of upstanding citizens. The burden of proof would be shifted to a guilty until proved innocent approach and all this at the request of the large record lables and film studios. Ordinary people are to suffer. The worst part though is that despite restricting the freedoms and human rights of millions this law will not actually achieve what the companies who are pushing for it want…. to continue their ability to extort unreasonable amounts of cash from us consumers under an outdated and economically unsound model.

How long before our right to criticise government on line is removed. Have lessons in Iran and certain other dictatorships taught us how dangerous this road can be? The Guardian summed it up as follows.

“The High Court (in Scotland, the Court of Session) shall have power to grant an injunction against a service provider, requiring it to prevent access to online locations specified in the order of the Court for the prevention of online copyright infringement” – could be used to block sites like Wikileaks (which after all exists for the reposting of material from organisations – which those organisations could argue is copyrighted). My reading is that it could – and it’s no use government saying “oh, but we wouldn’t”. Bad law isn’t made good law by not being used badly; it’s made good by actually being well-drafted.”

A campaign has been set up to try and stop the law from being rushed through. Rushed because the corporate sponsors know that this is the only way for them to sneak through a deeply unpopular bill that seeks only to benefit their outdated corporate kingdoms.

“There’s plenty to oppose in the Digital Economy Bill, it gives the government the ability to disconnect millions. Schools, libraries and businesses could see their connection cut if their pupils, readers of customers infringe any copyright. But one group likes it, the music industry. In a leaked memo a few days ago they admitted the only way to get the bill through would be to rush it through without a real parliamentary debate. Let’s stop that happening”

To assess this law we must consider a number of points. 1 – Is this law needed. 2 – Does the law benefit society. 3 – Will the law work. 4. Is there an alternative? Let me address these points.

1. The justification for this law is that billions of pounds worth of copyrighted material is being pirated and therefore billions of pounds of revenue is being lost to the major entertainment companies and that this is indeed terrible for the UK economy. Let’s analyse this. First, the kind of figures circulating are based on the value of the pirated material should the downloader have paid the full retail price for that item. I’m sure it doesn’t take a genius to realise that the average 14 year old who downloads 1000 mp3s a year and 30 films would not otherwise have spent well over £1000 on media. They do not have this money, they’ve never had it, this is not money lost. Implementing the bill will not create this income from nowhere.

Falling CD sales are all very well and recent evidence has even suggested that downloaders actually spend 20% more on music than people who don’t illegally download, but if you look at the total amount spent on entertainment, it is a different picture. We now spend a higher proportion of our income on entertainment than we did 20 years ago. The pattern of spending has just shifted. Sure people don’t spend as much money on CDs, but we buy other things. The computer games industry for example has exploded into a multi-billion pound industry over the last 10 years. Despite the internet. We spend more on live music than we ever did and a 14 year old’s pocket money is increasingly spent on mp3 players and mobile phones. This is not money lost from the economy, simply redirected to what’s popular at the moment. Times change and the laws of economics direct revenues to those companies that competitively provide popular products. We don’t need laws to protect outdated models. We need laws to facilitate efficient markets that reward innovation.

2. Does the law benefit society? Clearly not. If it did, then why could it not be debated properly supported by the people. Why does it have to be rushed through by a few companies who seek to protect vast profit empires? Why are they spending large amounts of money lobbying the government and courting Peter Mandleson on private yachts?

If this law was introduced, the average person (63% of the population use the same internet connection as an illegal downloader according to the BBC. I suspect higher) would potentially put themselves at risk of having their internet connection terminated or crippled. Many of these people rely on the internet for studying, banking, accessing public services, communicating and some for almost all social interaction. Is cutting off a connection to all these things proportional a response to someone who has downloaded and enjoyed a music track they would never have originally paid for or in many cases will go out and buy anyway precisely as a result of having downloaded it? Will a small amount of extra revenue for the record labels really compensate our society for this?

The argument is sometimes posed that the music industry is declining. Panorama, though slightly one sided in their approach did produce a particularly interesting quote. “It’s not the music industry that is in decline, it’s the record labels.” Are artists really suffering. While there are examples of labels cutting back on the money they invest, there are also numerous artists who’s careers have been created precisely because of the internet and filesharing. What we are seeing is simply a shift from one model to another. Is it really fair that a few artists should become millionaires? Would it not be more sensible for large record labels to be removed from the equation and a larger number of artists be able to interface more directly with their fans? Will implementing this bill really improve the life of most musicians to a greater extent than it will inconvenience the general population?

3. This brings us to the next question. Will the laws work? We have already seen a shift widespread encryption over bittorrent (most people are unaware when they just upgrade their software). There are a number of cheap or free services available that can potentially mask an IP address or show the downloader as located outside the jurisdiction of this government. The internet has no boundaries and attempting to impose laws which do will only drive people to safe havens where they cannot be touched. Sure some site may be taken down, but we have seen time and again that every time one disappears, 10 rise up in it’s place. History teaches us that before digital restrictions have effectively been put in place, clever software designers have already rendered them useless. Why bother spending money on something that is essentially in vain.

Then there is the matter of using the law to restrict internet access. As it has proved impossible to restrict downloading of copyright material alone, we must have our very connection to the outside world crippled, or worse that of our family or people who live in the same house affected. Imagine being told that you could not use your car to drive to work because someone else in the house had been caught speeding on a road that had no signposts and that there was no conclusive evidence that they were speeding in the first place.

Would a letter through the post telling you your son had downloaded 1000 mp3s from pirate bay cause you to go out and spend the £800 on music CDs that these tracks would have cost? That is the suggestion! How can any sane person really believe that this system will save the record industry?

Do you really think that if you give a court (or worse an agency) the power to have a meeting and block a web address that it will stop internet piracy? Given the obvious answer of no, is it really a good idea to write a blank cheque allowing the powers that be the facility to restrict our freedom of information when the reason behind this power is simply to stop the unstoppable?

4. What are the alternatives? The head of the recording industry association would have you believe that this is the ‘last rung’. As if without forcibly cutting people off from their internet access music and film is doomed and that nobody would consider paying for entertainment any more. In my mind this is the biggest lie that has been peddled to the government.

Look at Sky’s satellite TC. You pay per month, you can watch as much as you want. You wouldn’t bother copying it and sending the video to your friend because very few people would bother with the hassle when it is cheap enough and easy enough for them to have sky too. Content creators who create popular content are rewarded very well. Revenue is also generated through advertising. This is a very successful enterprise providing large sums of money to the industry for the last 2 decades or so and proof that there’s a perfectly viable alternative.

People are willing to spend a certain proportion of their income on music and film. They just want a reasonably way of doing it. There is an industry that can be supported and it doesn’t need letters, accusations and access to the outside world and basic services cut to enforce it. What’s wrong with a system where people pay a reasonable amount monthly and can access what they want with the more popular content rewarded with proportionately higher slices of the profit. This leads artists to create what people want. Money isn’t wasted in a futile attempt to restrict consumers and innovative companies can compete for the best platform to make a profit from. People would pay for this type of service because they already do, just in other forms.

People are still willing to pay for live music and though cinema is in decline, large screen TV buying with subscription channels are becoming more and more popular. I pay a fixed fee for unlimited text messages on my mobile, a fixed fee for my television licence, I can sign up to a fixed fee for unlimited DVD rental. I don’t see TV production companies going out of business. The electronic games industry is flourishing. Our creative economy is not on the brink of collapse. I’m not the only one who thinks this. Big businesses like Virgin, BT, Sky, TalkTalk are all against the bill. So what some record labels go out of business? What other company who refuses to accept reality wouldn’t.

Please visit http://www.38degrees.org.uk/page/speakout/extremeinternetl and register your opposition to this bill!

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Islam4UK banned – disgusting!!!

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

Rarely do I write my opinions on such subjects, but today I want to vent my anger at the Alan Johnson. Apparently, Islam4UK have been banned under terrorism laws and membership in the UK now carries up to a 10 year jail sentence.

Now I do not support their activities and I strongly believe what they do is highly insulting to the bereaved families of servicemen is wrong, but should you make membership of a group who has an unpopular opinion illegal? Is this not an affront to our civil liberties. Could you criminalise amnesty international for criticising the government? I understand that actions could be deemed illegal and even seeking to cause distress to the families by verbally abusing them criminal, however membership of a political group alone? Shocking.

What is needed is common sense. Separation should be made over the nature of the illegal act and the group of which some members have performed. What about people who chose to join but would not commit acts of terrorism? They are not criminals simply by membership. Many people consider the  policies of the Labour party offensive. This is a slippery slope to the erosion of our freedom of democracy.

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Should you use Comic Sans?

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

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What a difference good customer service makes

Friday, October 9th, 2009

This is a quick note to tell the world how much I appreciate good customer service and especially that offered by O2 broadband. Having previously suffered at the hands of Tiscali who have fittingly joined the evil that is Carphone Warehouse, I was presently surprised to be treated like a human by the O2 team.

Little things like receiving texts when you order is going through and being able to check the status online made all the difference. They checked that I was on the right package and genuinely seemed to care. This is a commodity that is becoming all too scarce in this country. People just simply don’t take pride in their jobs any more and don’t care about customer service.

Sure, everybody wants cheap, but at what cost? Having being conned into a terrible deal with Tiscali where by my 10 days cancellation period expired before my service was even connected (it took 2 weeks) I can safely say that I will never get involved in another year long contract with a company that doesn’t take customers seriously.

Which brings me ironically back to O2. Has anyone else noticed that at around 9am and 5pm, despite having great signal strength in the London Bridge area, it is simply impossible to use the 3G network? I mean yesterday it took me over half an hour to send a text. Checking train timetables on my iPhone just didn’t work. I’m not alone here and it is definitely not a handset issue as everywhere else is no problem.

Clearly O2 have overstretched their network. I’m n0t sure if they can do anything about it because of the limit in spectrum available, but I would seriously consider changing networks (when Orange and Vodafone become available) based on this. There’s no point in having a phone that you can’t use. Have emailed them and will await the reply. I look forward to posting it here.

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How to make a Super Mario mushroom

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

OK, I know this has nothing to do with anything, but I found a really cool guide showing you how to make a Super Mario mushroom from an ordinary radish. I feel I need to share it with everyone! Guide here at annathered.

mushroom

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First London Swine Flu Death. Is the tube safe?

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

The BBC is reporting that a 19 year old has become the first fatal victim in London of the deadly swine flu. This has got me thinking. Is the tube safe?

While living in Tokyo a couple of years ago I would always be astounded by how many people wore masks. At first I thought it was so they could avoid catching illness and to help with hey fever, but one time I asked my sick friend, why she was wearing hers when she was already ill. To my horror she replied “so that I don’t make anyone ill!” I suddenly realised, people were actually that caring about other’s they would suffer the inconvenience to wear a mask. It all suddenly became common sense to me. Why had I been so selfish all my life? I guess it was just a cultural norm I’d come to accept. In London you look after yourself before others. Sad, but true. In Japan and many other Asian countries, wearing face masks in public is normal and to a degree expected as a courtesy to others.

japan-face-masks

So it has recently dawned on me… the only way we’re really going to stop this thing spreading in London is if people start thinking of others and wearing masks when they become ill. Once enough people do, it will become socially acceptable and maybe even looked down upon if you don’t. Think about it, who likes the person sneezing out open on a crowded train. Would you like them to wear a mask. Hell yes!

So I think I’m gonna start a trend. For my sake and yours. Get a pack of 10 for £13.50 here. Better still, get a pack of 50 for £3.95 here. Go out and buy a face mask now. The more people who start using them, the safer we will all be. Also, you might avoid being the second person in London to die of swine flu. Surely that’s worth more than £3.95.

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Effective ways to learn languages

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

On Learning

One thing that I first want to point out is that the most effective way of learning new vocabulary is not from a list at all, but from putting yourself in real life situations where the word comes into context and has a distinct situational meaning to you. This will allow it to stick in your mind and also provide examples of its usage so that you know how to string it into a sentence.

But

However, we are not all lucky enough to be surrounded by such a real life environment and also this system takes a considerable amount of time. Most language students are required to learn large lists of vocab, especially for tests. Subsequently, a different method must be applied (though ideally in parallel to the above).

Most effective way?

So based on the fact that a list must be learned, we then come to the question, what is the most effective way. First look at the goal. How will this list need to reproduced from memory. If the answer is sequentially in order, then go away and read the list 100 times. Usually though, we will need to be able to translate the word in one or both directions on the fly. To achieve this, we will need to create hooks in our mind that bind the two (or 3 in case of Kanji and pronunciation) words together. This can be done by simple looking at them continuously, but normally the greatest problem to overcome is knowing what needs to be learned and concentrating on the the ones that we are least comfortable. To efficiently manage our time, we should target learning specifically to what we need to learn. A Computer Program Can Help!

This is where a computer program such as Tango Blaster can REALLY HELP. I spent hours with paper lists and yes I did manage to learn a lot, but I ended up wasting valuable time reading down words on the list that I already knew and this caused me to get bored and skip ones I didn’t. Also, after a while I began learning the order which was really dangerous as taken out of this order, I found it much harder to produce the answers.

The solution

The solution is to have a program that can dynamically create lists, filter out what you know, leaving a core list of subject to be studied and then to be able to shuffle the data in order to test your ‘on the spot’ knowledge. Also, the other benefit is that it allows you to quickly select which part of the the data you want to be prompted with and which part to reproduce. I have found through bitter experience that simple knowing a word from Japanese > English, does not mean you can then reproduce it back the other way in a real life situation. it is VERY important to learn words both ways round in order to be able to use them.

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More top dists splitting

Friday, June 26th, 2009

Was sad to read today on TechPress that PCLinuxOS is going to split. I really feel that right now the linux community doesn’t need more fragmentation. Of course it’s great that there are so many distributions out there catering for a wide variety of tastes and demands, but what Linux badly needs right now is a core of large dists that are stable, updated reliably and with a community large enough to create the critical mass needed to really challenge the other OS players (specifically Windows and MacOS). PCLinuxOS does fall into this category and so I feel it’s sad that the community is likely to split.

There are already 101 smaller options and to be quite honest there are arguable only 5 or so mainstream popular titles to chose from. In my opinion, the PCLinuxOS community needs to rally and sort out their infighting. Having a founder / ‘owner’ who disappears for a year is clearly not acceptable, but is that really a reason to break up the project? People must accept in any community there will always be those who don’t agree. If a democratic system is set up with clear guidelines over who is in control and a mechanism to ensure decent project leadership this really shouldn’t be an issue. I think what people need to realise is that the project is bigger than they are and that sometimes we need to put our differences aside for the greater good.