Reflections on life at “De Witte Wand”…

  • Soldiering On

    I see that Paul Thurrott, in an article published on his Supersite for Windows, has done a U-turn and is now betting on Windows Home Server 2011. Back in October 2010, when he was first told by the current WHS team that they would be removing the Drive Extender technology from WHS 2011, his first reaction was that:

    “Removing Drive Extender was the equivalent of driving a dagger right through the heart of the product”.

    Indeed, that was my first reaction on hearing the news when it became public a month later, and the reaction of many, if not most, of us who had bought the original version of Windows Home Server.

    Despite the outcry (for example, there are currently 5,581 votes in favour of retaining the DE technology in WHS 2011 versus 73 against over at the Microsoft Connect site – tagline: your feedback improving Microsoft products), the technology will not be put back into the final WHS 2011 product. (Addendum: on the 12 March 2011, Microsoft removed all the suggestions that had been posted by WHS 2011 beta testers in the connect forum, including this one. An act that reminded me of the Soviet’s airbrushing ex-politicos out of photographs. One way of removing embarrassing facts, I suppose)

    So now, Paul Thurrott has put his sense of disappointment behind him, and written that:

    So yes, I’m disappointed about Drive Extender, I really am. And yes, I’ve sweated this decision for months. But when the final version of Windows Home Server 2011 appears in the months ahead, I’m switching. And I’ll let you know how it goes, of course. But I can tell you now that Microsoft’s home server solution is still the best game in town, even with the removal of Drive Extender. And if you could stop crying into your beer, I think you’ll admit the same.

    Well, perhaps. But what I find most telling about this whole debacle has been the way that it has been (mis)handled by Microsoft. It seems clear, from Thurrott’s own account, that the current WHS team did not have a clue, at least in the beginning, that the decision to remove DE would have such a negative reaction.

    In effect, the team had just torn up the guiding principles for the product developed by Charlie Kindel and the original WHS V1 team – but they don’t seem to have appreciated that fact, or the likely reaction from customers who had bought V1 on the strength of those principles.

    The team then soldiered on with the decision – and I have to give them credit for their brass necks – and very probably have weathered the storm. But I really could have done without the disingenous posts on their blog telling us that they were only following feedback from their customers:

    “When weighing up the future direction of storage in the consumer and SMB market, the team felt the Drive Extender technology was not meeting our customer needs”.

    There are some good things remaining in WHS 2011, but the heart of WHS V1 – its provision of consumer-friendly storage – has been surgically removed.

    The die has been cast – we’ll see what happens.

    6 responses to “Soldiering On”

    1. Robert Dammers Avatar
      Robert Dammers

      I’m a bit irritated by Thurrott’s dismissive attitude towards the “silly” third party replacements for DE (which, after all, was the sort of thing Microsoft appeared to be looking for). I agree that one should wait for maturity in that sort of product before adopting, but I still need that functionality: my data pool consists of 3 internal 1TB drives, 3 external 1TB and 1 external 2TB drives. I don’t intend to replace that lot in a hurry.

      1. Geoff Coupe Avatar

        Yes, it was a rather strange comment, at odds with his love of DE, wasn’t it?

        I agree that we should be looking for a solid solution, but if it comes from a third party, then so be it; it’s what we have to live with. After all, others are looking at stuff such as Greyhole and UnRaid as DE replacements, and those are also “add-on” products.

        On a side-note – good to hear from you, Robert. Hope all is well with you and yours.

    2. Robert Dammers Avatar
      Robert Dammers

      >>After all, others are looking at stuff such as Greyhole and UnRaid as DE replacements, and those are also “add-on” products.<<

      Exactly. There's a piece by Sean Daniel, "Senior Program Manager for the Home and Small Business Server Team" which has been posted on the Windows Home Server Facebook page which outlines features and benefits, all very fair and good, but concludes that people who have a lot of data just need to get their damned house in order. Now I get that MS have a strong interest in simplifying the low-end server range, and that it is attractive to take DE out of the base product. So why don't they just either provide it as an optional add-in, or partner with one of the 3rd party developers working on equivalent functionality to provide a certified, thoroughly tested alternative.

      Still, I think eventually there will be a satisfactory outcome. Which is just as well, because I'm very fond of my Windows Home Server 🙂

      Best wishes to you and Martin!
      R.

      1. Geoff Coupe Avatar

        Yes, I saw the Sean Daniel piece – it was also on a Home Server blog page, where I commented on it (using much of the material from my blog post).

        I see that he does the usual trick of claiming that you can access your home PCs remotely via WHS, without pointing out that you need the Professional or Business versions of Windows to be able to do this. This stretching of the truth to hide the small print always annoys me intensely…

    3. […] as a server and media appliance that could be used by the average consumer, and they’ve thrown that chance […]

    4. […] as a server and media appliance that could be used by the average consumer, and they’ve thrown that chance […]

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  • PVV Absurdities

    I’ve written before that I worry about the popularity of Geert Wilders and his Freedom Party (the PVV) here in the Netherlands. While I find the demagoguery of Wilders extremely disturbing, I take some comfort from the fact that others in the PVV seem to be little more than political clowns.

    We’re about to enter into an election for seats in the provincial governments. So all the candidates are out there and using every opportunity for campaigning. No problem about that. But when one of the PVV candidates for the Gelderland province (where I live) calls for repatriation of Highland cattle back to Scotland and Polish ponies back to Poland, then I have to wonder why anyone should take clowns like this seriously?

    Since some people have commented that surely no-one could be that stupid; I give you PVV candidate Olov Wullink, in person, uttering his inanities (from 1:10 in the second video linked on this page here). Sorry, the full absurdity is only intelligible to those of us who understand Dutch.

    However, I think it’s worthwhile to remember that, while events like this have their humorous side, the politics, and subsequent impact on all of us, are deadly serious. The rise of Wilders continues to concern me. I don’t think it is good for us.

    One response to “PVV Absurdities”

    1. Francis Sedgemore Avatar

      Bleedin’ Scottish cows, coming over here and polluting our pristine Dutch atmosphere with their noxious emissions! Shouldn’t be allowed.

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  • What’s Sauce for the Goose…

    The serious assault on a CBS journalist, Lara Logan, in Tahrir Square has rightfully drawn widespread condemnation from many quarters, including women’s rights activists and pro-change protesters in Eygpt.

    Of course, there were some commentators, such as Debbie Schlussel, who got into the “blame the victim” game, saying that the attack was partly Logan’s fault. That deserves the contempt that Schlussel got for her comments.

    However, there was a reaction from Heather Blake, of Reporters Without Borders, reported in the Guardian’s story that I found rather interesting. She said:

    “At the moment, female and male journalists have the same training. The truth is that female journalists need to be taught about different cultures and the ways in which men behave in those cultures. They need to know about gender-specific expectations in different countries, from what they wear to how they interact with those they met.”

    I’m not sure that I agree with that. I think that both men and women journalists need to be taught about different cultures and the ways in which men behave in those cultures. It seems to me that consciousness-raising is just as important, perhaps even more so, to members of the male gender, who are often blithely unaware of, or complicit in, the various forms that oppression of women can take.

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  • Someone Like You

    I wrote a couple of months ago that I was looking forward to the release of Adele’s next album: 21. We got it a couple of weeks ago, and have been playing it frequently ever since. It’s very, very good.

    Here she is performing “Someone Like You” at the BRIT Awards recently; just her voice and a piano – but what a depth in that performance:

    4 responses to “Someone Like You”

    1. JL Avatar

      Hmmm. Makes me glad not to be 20-something anymore.

      Still reading you and still enjoying your writing.

      1. Geoff Coupe Avatar

        Yep, although love can give pleasure or pain at any age, I think. But perhaps you’re right that age dulls the worst excesses (in either direction)…

        1. JL Avatar

          I’ve since become another hopeless/helpless Adele addict. Thanks. I now have ‘Take It All’ on a continuous loop from morning til night.

          1. Geoff Coupe Avatar

            Glad you’ve fallen – she also seems to be a down-to-earth person; not an airhead celebrity (at least, not yet). See:
            http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/mar/27/adele-21-letterman-no1-interview

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  • Being Economical with the Truth

    I know I’ve said it before, but I do loathe and detest marketing-speak. The last time my distaste was directed at Google; this time it’s Microsoft’s turn.

    This year’s Mobile World Congress is currently underway in Barcelona. So naturally, Microsoft is there publicising Windows Phone 7. The Marketing arm of Microsoft is running full tilt to supply the hungry maw of the news media, so we get this piece from Microsoft’s News Center. It includes the following quote attributed to Andy Lees, president of Microsoft’s Mobile Communications Business:

    Microsoft sold 2 million phone licenses in Windows Phone 7’s first two months, and the phone is now available from 60 mobile operators in 30 countries around the world, Lees said. As phone availability and sales grow, so too does the app marketplace – there are now more than 8,000 apps in the marketplace and 28,000 registered developers.

    Now, right there, is a prime example of why I loathe and detest marketing-speak. On the face of it, Mr. Lees’ statements are perfectly true. However, they are not the whole story. While Windows Phone 7 handsets are indeed available in 30 countries around the world, the applications marketplace is not. At my last reckoning, it was only available in 16 countries. So those “more than 8,000 apps in the marketplace” are not actually available to customers living in countries such as India, Norway, Sweden and the Netherlands.

    So customers buying phones in these, and similar countries, are then finding that instead of a smartphone they have little more than a premium-priced dumbphone.

    That does not make for happy customers.

    In that light, I find it very ironic that the Microsoft News Center puff piece ends with this quote from JP Wollersheim, a Windows Phone 7 product manager:

    “You don’t sell phones if people aren’t happy. That’s the leading indicator of where we’re at, and it’s predictive as to how many we’re going to eventually sell,” Wollersheim said. “We want it to sell, and we want customers to be super happy, and we want them to tell their friends and family. That’s the best recommendation you could have.”

    Be careful what you wish for.

    One response to “Being Economical with the Truth”

    1. […] Microsoft management keep trumpeting about the thousands of applications available for WP7, it is somewhat irritating when they aren’t […]

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  • The Story of Wind and Mr. Ug

    Vi Hart describes herself as a recreational mathematician. She’s also a pretty good storyteller, as evinced by this little tale set on a topologically challenging world.

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  • In Praise of the Dumbphone

    The leaking of Stephen Elop’s memo to his troops at Nokia has certainly focused the attention of business and technical analysts on the company.

    However, in all the excitement, Francis Sedgemore has picked up on something that he thinks is in danger of being forgotten, and I think he is right to do so. He has written to Elop reminding him that not everyone is enamoured of Smartphones with touchscreens. Some of us still find that mobile phones, with real buttons, that just make and receive phone calls and SMS messages are sufficient. He has a point. And, as he says, some attention should be paid to the poor quality software that Nokia (like most mobile phone manufacturers) provide to synchronise contacts and content with the user’s PC or Mac.

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  • The Survivor

    Good heavens, Jonathan Grimshaw is still alive and kicking. He contracted HIV way back in 1984, so must be one of the longest-surviving people with HIV in the UK.

    While I have never actually met him, for a time he was working closely with my best friend, who was a psychologist and epidemiologist working in the Home Office. Len was instrumental in the development of policy on HIV/AIDS in the UK’s prisons. By his account, Grimshaw was a charming and intelligent man, doing a lot of good work. So it’s good to hear that he’s still with us.

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  • Michael Moorcock, At Home In Texas

    Somehow, the words “Michael Moorcock” and “Texas” seem strange bedfellows. But this interview, by Hari Kunzru of the author Michael Moorcock starts to make some sense of it.

    Moorcock is a brilliant author. Whether he’s producing pulp or great literature, or both simultaneously, doesn’t really matter. His voice is worth harking to. To me, his name is a bell that instantly starts my soul ringing to a certain time, place and ethos in my mind. A place that is dear to me, but one that causes frissons as well. It’s the shiver of fear that runs up your back mixed with eroticism at the same time.

    2 responses to “Michael Moorcock, At Home In Texas”

    1. Mike Avatar

      Well, “Texas” may seem odd until you realize they mean “just outside Austin”. Then it all comes together.

      (I don’t know that I’ve actually read any of M.M.’s work, although I’ve known of him for a long time. Must rectify that.)

    2. Geoff Coupe Avatar

      Hi Mike. Well, you really should try some of his stuff, but I wonder whether it will have the same impact on you. Something like “Mother London” reached into my cultural genes with an ease like a warm knife slipping into butter. That may be a tad more difficult for someone from the Colonies, shall we say… 🙂 Nonetheless, I’m curious as to what you will find.

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  • Making a Silk Purse out of a Sow’s Ear – Not

    Oh dearie me, Microsoft has just unleashed the Release Candidate of Windows Home Server 2011 upon the world. And as they had promised, they have surgically removed the one unique selling point that WHS version 1 had – the drive extender technology.

    Frankly, this confirms to me that Microsoft has totally lost the plot when it comes to crafting consumer technology that ordinary people – as opposed to IT experts – actually feel comfortable about having.

    They are, of course, putting their spin on how WHS 2011 will be wonderful, but it all has the air of them trying to make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear, and failing miserably. Take, for example, this YouTube video that they put up to show us how to manage our storage in WHS 2011. With WHS version 1, when your storage was getting full, you could just add another drive and carry on. Now, as this video painfully points out, you have to worry about whether you need to move your folders around to rebalance your storage across your discs.

    Hello, Microsoft, wake up – Mr or Ms average consumer doesn’t want to think like an IT support person.

    I, for one, will be carrying on with WHS version 1 for as long as I possibly can. WHS 2011, with the removal of Drive Extender, has nothing to offer.

    5 responses to “Making a Silk Purse out of a Sow’s Ear – Not”

    1. […] major difference is of course the removal of the Drive Extender technology. Now, this has been done to death (but that doesn’t mean that it’s not important), however, let’s look beyond […]

    2. […] a server and media appliance that could be used by the average consumer, and they’ve thrown that chance […]

    3. […] I know that I had said that I would be sticking with WHS V1 as long as possible, but those who really know me are aware that I am often unable to resist poking new technology to […]

    4. […] already, I’m interested. I thought that Drive Extender was a unique selling point for WHS v1, and bemoaned its removal in WHS 2011. I never wanted to take on the task of managing a RAID configuration in my home server. […]

    5. […] a server and media appliance that could be used by the average consumer, and they’ve thrown that chance […]

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  • A Tale of Two Markets

    Following on from the previous post on Android 3.0 (Honeycomb), I see that Google also announced, and have opened, a web presence for Android applications: the Android Market.

    I found it quite instructive to compare using Google’s Android Market with the Microsoft equivalent, the Zune Marketplace.

    The first thing to note is that, in the Android Market, it is possible to browse and purchase applications for your Android devices directly via the web site. The Zune web site, on the other hand, does not allow you to browse applications for your Windows Phone directly. Instead, when you click on the “Browse Zune Marketplace” link, it fires up the Zune client application on your PC, which accesses the applications for Windows Phone 7 available in your location. And there’s the rub: the Android Market seems to be a single global marketplace, accessible to everyone, while the Zune Marketplace is heavily fragmented, and not open in all countries. I’ve written about this Microsoft Marketplace disaster before, but to see it laid bare by comparing the user experience with Android Market is very revealing.

    Microsoft really should open up a web site to allow global access to WP7 applications along the same lines as Google’s Android Market. If they don’t, then they will continue to be on the back foot in the Smartphone market.

    2 responses to “A Tale of Two Markets”

    1. […] Inching Closer? Posted on April 4, 2011 by Geoff Coupe Back in January, I wrote about the fact that even though the Zune Marketplace was operational here in the Netherlands, it wasn’t offering any Apps for Windows Phone 7. The only thing that the Marketplace was offering here was videos to rent. Globally, Microsoft’s Marketplace is heavily fragmented or non-existent in most countries, in glaring contrast to the Android Market. […]

    2. […] Back in January, I wrote about the fact that even though the Zune Marketplace was operational here in the Netherlands, it wasn’t offering any Apps for Windows Phone 7. The only thing that the Marketplace was offering here was videos to rent. Globally, Microsoft’s Marketplace is heavily fragmented or non-existent in most countries, in glaring contrast to the Android Market. […]

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  • Honeycomb Looks Sweet

    Google presented the latest version of their Android operating system yesterday, which is codenamed Honeycomb. The presentation has been posted on YouTube.

    I must admit that there were some nice touches in the User Interface of Android 3.0, particularly the use of hardware accelerated graphics. The UI is finger-driven, of course, and watching the demo really drives home the point that a Windows Tablet just isn’t designed for fingers. If Microsoft still haven’t grasped that fundamental point, and continue to insist that Windows Tablets, in their current form, can compete against Android and iPad tablets, then they will fail miserably.

    Watching the presentation also drove home another couple of points to me. First, how much I loathe and detest marketing-speak. I’m afraid watching people with false smiles saying how excited they are to be here today to tell you all about their “cool” and “awesome” products has never been one of my favourite pastimes. Secondly, I am so clearly not in the target markets. I might just as well be from another planet. I think that was exemplified by the gentleman from Disney Mobile gushing excitedly about something called Tap Tap Revenge, which has probably earned the Disney Corporation more money than the GDP of most small countries.

    And then there was the team from CNN showing their news application for the Android tablets. Quite apart from the fact that quality journalism is already a threatened species, CNN seem to be wanting to drive it further into extinction by introducing something called iReport. Essentially, CNN want to fool us into submitting news reports to them, for free, and my bet is that the rights subsequently belong to CNN, and not to the originator. I suspect that the quality of the majority of the stories will merely underline the veracity of Sturgeon’s Law. For example, on the page of news stories being demonstrated was one concerned with the fact that the iReporter’s miniature dachshund was caught in a recent snowfall. 

    I was left with the feeling that if Sturgeon were to redefine his Law today, he would probably revise the estimate of 90% (of everything being crud) to a number that would be considerably higher.

    Still, looking beyond the fact that I am an old curmudgeon, it will be interesting to see how the Tablet market develops. This challenge from Google with Android 3.0 looks to be a good one.

    One response to “Honeycomb Looks Sweet”

    1. […] Coupe I know I’ve said it before, but I do loathe and detest marketing-speak. The last time my distaste was directed at Google; this time it’s Microsoft’s […]

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  • Cyclone Yasi

    I hadn’t quite grasped the huge size of cyclone Yasi until I read this story that shows the extent of Yasi overlaid on other parts of the world. It is simply vast. 

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  • Eurovision Looms

    Well, it’s a new year, and the annual spectacle of Eurovision is on the horizon. Last night, we were treated (if that’s the word) to the selection process of the Dutch entry. This year, the Dutch banner is being lofted by a three-man band called the 3JS, whose main claim to fame seems to be that they hail from Volendam.

    Last night, the Dutch TV viewing public (including Martin and I) were subjected – I think that is the correct term – to the 3JS performing five of their songs, from which one would be selected by the public to be the official Dutch entry to Eurovision 2011.

    Dear lord, but it was truly dire… I honestly think that if you sat yourself down to pick five songs that you, in your heart of hearts, believed had not a snowball’s chance in hell of being the winner of any Eurovision contest in its long and chequered history, let alone Eurovision 2011, then these five songs would be the result.

    The schadenfreude of seeing the judges desperately trying not to say that the songs were utter crap as potential Eurovision entries was truly wondrous to behold. It was car-crash television at its finest.

    This is the winning entry. Judge for yourself. To give the song credit, this was the last song, and the only decent stab at what Eurovision demands (you really don’t want to experience the others). However, the Netherlands has failed to qualify for the Eurovision final for the past six years running. This song is not going to change that.

    If this wins Eurovision, I’ll eat my hat.

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  • The Indefatigable Elena

    When I was living in London, back in the 1970s and early 80s, I was fortunate enough to be able to dine at L’Escargot in Soho a couple of times. The restaurant was ruled over by Elena Salvoni, the tiny, but formidable, maître d’. Well, I say formidable, but she was also charming, and put me completely at my ease.

    Incredibly, she’s still going strong at 90 years of age. She’s a Soho institution.

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  • The Value of Libraries

    A couple of days ago I mentioned someone’s idiotic idea to stop funding the UK’s libraries and use the money to give everyone Kindles. The idea came about because local government in the UK is looking to close many public libraries in a desperate attempt to save money. Philip Pullman gave a brilliant speech on the subject a few days ago, in which he defended the libraries from the bean-counters:

    I still remember the first library ticket I ever had. It must have been about 1957. My mother took me to the public library just off Battersea Park Road and enrolled me. I was thrilled. All those books, and I was allowed to borrow whichever I wanted! And I remember some of the first books I borrowed and fell in love with: the Moomin books by Tove Jansson; a French novel for children called A Hundred Million Francs; why did I like that? Why did I read it over and over again, and borrow it many times? I don’t know. But what a gift to give a child, this chance to discover that you can love a book and the characters in it, you can become their friend and share their adventures in your own imagination.

    And the secrecy of it! The blessed privacy! No-one else can get in the way, no-one else can invade it, no-one else even knows what’s going on in that wonderful space that opens up between the reader and the book. That open democratic space full of thrills, full of excitement and fear, full of astonishment, where your own emotions and ideas are given back to you clarified, magnified, purified, valued. You’re a citizen of that great democratic space that opens up between you and the book. And the body that gave it to you is the public library. Can I possibly convey the magnitude of that gift?

    Somewhere in Blackbird Leys, somewhere in Berinsfield, somewhere in Botley, somewhere in Benson or in Bampton, to name only the communities beginning with B whose libraries are going to be abolished, somewhere in each of them there is a child right now, there are children, just like me at that age in Battersea, children who only need to make that discovery to learn that they too are citizens of the republic of reading. Only the public library can give them that gift.

    Go and read the whole thing – it’s worth it.

    2 responses to “The Value of Libraries”

    1. technogran1 Avatar

      Yes Geoff, what a shame although as I read his missive, I couldn’t help thinking that the children of today are far too busy on their games machines, or on their computers or watching TV to do much reading. Its our generation (well certainly mine!) who grew up with books because let’s face it, there was little else. The only other pastime was listening to the radio. Good post though.

    2. Geoff Coupe Avatar

      TG, you have a point; yet it seems to me that while the trigger to firing a child’s imagination can come from many different sources today, more is not necessarily better. After all, Harry Potter seized the imaginations of millions of children when still in book form.

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  • Reaping the Whirlwind of Hate

    David Kato has been murdered. Given the climate of hate against LGBT people that has been encouraged in Uganda by both the State and organised religion*, it comes as no surprise. It still shocks though, and for those still in danger in Uganda, things must seem very dark at the moment.

    * Oh, and, we really should not forget, the sorry excuse for a human being who goes by the name of Giles Muhame. As the Guardian reports:

    He and other recent graduates of Makerere University in Kampala launched a newspaper late last year. With a circulation of fewer than 3,000 copies it would have remained obscure were it not for its anti-gay campaign.

    For its 2 October issue, it pictured Kato and another man on the front page under the words “Hang them”, and the sub-headlines “We Shall Recruit 100,000 Innocent Kids by 2012: Homos” and “Parents now face heart-breaks [sic] as homos raid schools”. The paper promised to expose 100 gay people, and printed the photographs, names, and in some cases home areas, of people it claimed were gay. A few weeks later Rolling Stone carried another frontpage story with the headline “More homos’ faces exposed”, with the identities of 17 people inside.

    I see that Mr. Muhame is reported to have said that “I have no regrets about the story. We were just exposing people who were doing wrong.”

    I’m sure that he does have no regrets. People like him never do. They just continue to cause misery and to make the angels weep.

    Further update: here are some other people, listed in a rightfully angry obituary who doubtless also have few regrets, but who should really recognise their responsibilities:

    The responsibility for the repeated harassment, beatings, death threats and now possibly his murder lies with all those politicians and religious leaders around the world who have led the campaign of hate against LGBTIQ people: David Baharti who introduced the anti-homosexuality bill in the Ugandan parliament; the Red Pepper tabloid which like the Rolling Stone had published names of people they alleged were gay; Martin Ssempa who led the Ugandan national task force against homosexuality; Ugandan Minister of Ethics Nsaba Buturu who has rabidly spoken out against homosexuality; the following religious leaders who have fueled the anti-gay campaign in the region: Archbishop of Rwanda, Onesphore Rwaje, Archbishop Henry Orombi of Uganda, the All African Bishops Conference, Apolo Nsibambi of Uganda, Rev. Bernard Ntahoturi of Burundi, Archbishop Akinola, Pastor Mulinde of Trumpet Church Uganda, Bishop Lawrence Chai of Free Apostolic Churches of Kenya and Sheikh Ali Hussein of Masjid Answar Sunna Mosque and Nicholas Okoh of Nigeria; Peter Karamaga of the National Anti-Homosexual Task-force Uganda; President Museveni who has showed no support for gay Ugandans saying that homosexuality is a western import receiving support from other African presidents like President Mugabe and Mrs Museveni who in the same vein has called homosexuals an abomination to African culture; American Christian right pastors Lou Engle, Rick Warren, Scott Lively and Dan Schmierer of the ex-gay group Exodus International, for their continued support of anti-gay legislation; South African diplomat Jon Qwelane and President Jacob Zuma. Finally, responsibility lies with those in power in regional and international bodies who have refused to take a stand on homosexuality as a human rights issue. Last year, the African Union denied the Coalition of African Lesbians observer status. Around the same time, the UN General Assembly Human Rights Committee passed a resolution condemning extrajudicial executions, deleted from this resolution was an amendment that explicitly addressed protections based on sexual orientation.

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  • Ken, Ken, and their Operas

    I’ve just watched the version of Mozart’s Magic Flute filmed by Kenneth Branagh. I was absolutely blown away by its sheer bravura. From the opening single tracking shot beginning in the trenches of World War 1, then rising far above; to the finale where summer returns to the blasted fields, it was an absolute visual tour-de-force.

    But the visuals were not alone. It was Mozart’s glorious music, after all. The performers were excellent, singing was top class, and there was an English translation of the libretto that was extremely good and witty. I saw from the credits at the end that the translation was done by Stephen Fry, so I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised at its quality.

    In the end though, the visual feel of the film was what struck me, and Kenneth Branagh’s direction reminded me of the baroque style of Ken Russell –particularly of Tommy, his rock opera. The sheer adrenaline rush of watching their imaginations writ large on the silver screen is terrific.

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  • Dinner Table Talk

    Mo seems to have captured the false logic expressed by Baroness Warsi to a tee.

    As Ophelia points out, Anthony Andrews has also demolished the Baroness’s claims quite effectively:

    She wants to give greater voice to religion in the political arena, yet she also wishes there to be less criticism of religion, in other words, power without scrutiny.

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  • Titter Ye Not

    I found it hard to suppress a titter, let alone a guffaw of derision, when I read today that the Astrological Association of Great Britain is sending a petition to the BBC. In one of the brilliant Stargazing Live programmes broadcast at the beginning of the month, the presenters (Dara Ó Briain and the physicist Brian Cox) made statements to the effect that astrology is rubbish.

    Gasp! Who would have thought it?

    This shocking revelation has spurred the AAGB into outraged action. Their petition is requesting that

    the BBC make a public apology and a statement that they do not support the personal views of Professor Brian Cox or Dara O’Briain’s on the subject of astrology. We also request that the BBC will commit to making a fair and balanced representation of astrology when aired in the future.

    It seems to me that the views of Cox and Ó Briain were a perfectly fair and balanced representation of astrology. Nothing more needs to be said.

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