The Anonymous Widower

The Olympic Torch is Now On The Red Button

This is so much better. And doesn’t use all that bandwidth on the Internet.

I wonder why it’s now available.

June 8, 2012 Posted by | Computing, Sport | , , | Leave a comment

When Social Media Goes Awry

The Telegraph reports an unseemly spat between Joe Simpson, the author of Touching the Void, and schoolchildren doing the book for GCSE.

It is the sort of thing that can happen on social media and I suspect both parties could have been a little bit more discrete or less outrageous with their replies.

I had a letter published once and it attracted some fairly abusive letters in reply. In the end, history has shown that I was right.

May 25, 2012 Posted by | Computing, News | , | Leave a comment

Religious Spam

I just received some rather evangelical religious spam.  It’s funny but it is actually quite unusual to get spam like this, although I do get a fair bit through the letter box and see it stuck to the bus stop. But then that tends to be a bit phobic in various ways.

This message was just too long to read, so I deleted it.

I did have brief look at it and sees that it mentions someone called Linda Newkirk from Arkansas. Searching for her on the Internet reveals the sort of things, that give Christianity a bad name in the minds of the well-read believer.  But then people like this have always been around to burn Catholics or Protestants at the stake, persecute the Jews, Huguenots, the Muslims, the Hindus and the Sikhs, to name a small selection of those persecuted over the centuries.  And I suspect the Homo Sapiens used to persecute the Neandertals before that!

If this mad woman had any faith, she’d be against capital punishment and would proclaim the fact, as it is still legal in Arkansas.

To me anybody, who believes in capital punishment and religion is a complete hypocrite.

April 28, 2012 Posted by | Computing | , , | 1 Comment

The Camerons Get a Real Aussie Nanny

According to this report in the Standard, the Camerons have got a new nanny and she’s a real Aussie.

Interestingly for her employers, she admitted to shoplifting, smoking and drinking, but denied taking drugs “in the past month”. When asked if she swears, she replied: “f*** yeah.”

At least there’s no mention of sheep.

In some ways the most interesting part of the story is that the Camerons interviewed the nanny on Skype.  I wonder how many of our Prime Ministers and/or their partners could have done that?

April 26, 2012 Posted by | Computing | | Leave a comment

Groupon Told to Improve

I’ve always felt the web site, Groupon, a bit suspect and in the “If-it-looks-too-good-to-be-true- then it-must-be” category, so if any offer has anything to do with it, I ignore it.

So now the Office of Fair Trading has told it to improve as reported here on the  BBC.

I’ll ignore it even more, if that were possible.

March 17, 2012 Posted by | Computing, Finance, News | , | Leave a comment

Has ARM Cracked the Internet of Things?

Probably not yet, but reports like this one are circulating on the Web, that they’ve made a good start on the problem of solving the Internet of Things.

To crack the problem, you need a very small chip, which uses virtually no power. Both of these are ARM‘s specialities.

March 14, 2012 Posted by | Computing | , , | Leave a comment

Web Programmer At Risk of Execution In Iran

This is from Amnesty International.

Web programmer Saeed Malekpour could be executed at any time in Iran. His death sentence was confirmed by the Supreme Court on 17 January 2012 and a court official has indicated that his death sentence may have now been sent for implementation.

 

Saeed Malekpour, a resident of Canada and Iranian national, aged 36, was again sentenced to death on 19 October 2011 by Branch 28 of the Revolutionary Court, and it was confirmed by Branch 32 of the Supreme Court on 17 January 2012. On 14 February 2012, one of Saeed Malekpour’s lawyers visited both courts to ask about his case, but learned that the file was being held at neither court. Comments from a court official suggested that this is because Saeed Malekpour’s file has been sent to the Office of Implementation of Sentences.

 

Saeed Malekpour was sentenced to death for “insulting and desecrating Islam” after a program he had developed for uploading photos online had been used to post pornographic images without his knowledge.  Branch 28 of the Revolutionary Court sentenced him to death in October 2010 following a trial that reportedly only lasted 15 minutes.  After a June 2011 announcement that the Supreme Court had returned the case for further review, Branch 28 of the Revolutionary Court imposed again the death sentence as well as prison sentence of seven and a-half years. Amnesty International understands that although he has legal representation now, for much of his detention Saeed Malekpour has had no access to legal counsel.  

 

Saeed Malekpour had been living in Canada since 2005, but was arrested in October 2008 while visiting his family in Iran. He was allegedly tortured while held for over a year in solitary confinement in Tehran’s Evin prison.  In 2009, Iranian state television repeatedly aired a “confession” by Saeed.  In an open letter dated March 2010, Saeed Malekpour stated his “confession” was extracted after prolonged torture following orders by Revolutionary Guard interrogators.

I see many e-mails like this. To the Iranians justice seems to be a word with seven-letters and that is all.

This one touched me, as I’ve written programs to upload pictures and othe files to the Internet.  As far as I know no-one has used them for any illicit purposes.

February 19, 2012 Posted by | Computing, News | , , , , | Leave a comment

Facts About London During Wikipedia Blackout

You don’t need Wikipedia.  Just look here.

January 18, 2012 Posted by | Computing | , | Leave a comment

Wikipedia Goes Black

Wikipedia is off line today and already I have wanted to use it twice and couldn’t.  It’s all because of the SOPA and PIPA acts in the US Congress. Read about the reasons here.

I actually don’t see what these Acts have to do with the UK.

January 18, 2012 Posted by | Computing, News | | Leave a comment

Diane Abbott Slips Up

The media is making a hell of a fuss about Diane Abbott’s comment on Twitter.

I find Ms. Abbott entertaining, although her politics are very different to mine. I suspect, that if we were sat next to each other on a plane or train, we’d argue and agree and disagree in unequal measure.

What she originally said was probably scientifically correct in its full context, but was rather shortened because of the rules of Twitter. I don’t disagree with her reasoning and “divide and rule” is a method, that is used by everybody to get their own way on a committee or in a meeting, whether inside politics or not. The British Empire probably used the technique in the past, but hopefully that is all history and to be learned from and not copied. I suspect that it is technique much less used in business and management these days as well.

The real mistake she made was to publish without thinking. But this is the Twitter trap!

I think it would also be better, if when we see something wrong on Twitter posted by someone we know, we douse it in a bucket of very cold water, rather than report it all to the media.

Having read the tweets that caused the story, it strikes me that an early intervention, perhaps in a light-hearted vein could have created a molehill out of a mountain.

We have had politicians in the past, who would have mangled their words with impunity and got into awful trouble on Twitter. George Brown comes to mind, although there would probably be many others in his era. On the other hand, politics has had its fair share of precise wordsmiths, who would have found Twitter suited to their style.

January 5, 2012 Posted by | News | , , , | Leave a comment