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The Dawkins Rap
Fucking brilliant – nothing else comes close.Oh, and there’s a high resolution version available via BitTorrent. The video has sparked off enormous discussion on both Pharyngula and Richard Dawkins Net over whether this is pro science or not. Frankly, I don’t care if it was produced by a bunch of creationists – it’s very funny, and if we can’t laugh at ourselves, then we’re all doomed.Update: Apparently, the video was made by Michael Edmondson at the behest of the Expelled producers (aka as a bunch of creationists). Well, they may be a bunch of wankers, but Michael made a piece of art. Kudos to him, it’s still brilliant.Update 2: and here’s more of the story behind the making of the video. -
Weeding Those Links
A garden benefits from regular weeding. So does my list of links to web sites stored in the "Favourites" of my web browser. Up until now, I’ve done it manually, but with currently over 1,200 links in the list – it’s a real chore to check for dead links. Thanks to a tip I found on Watching The Net, I’ve discovered AM-Deadlink, a utility that will weed out all those dead links for me automatically. A terrific little tool that does its job very well indeed.Leave a comment
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Fun With Vista
While Microsoft Vista has been getting some bad press, on the whole, I’ve been pretty satisfied with it, and would not want to return to Windows XP. True, in the early days, the shortage of proper Vista software drivers from third party hardware manufacturers was a real issue, and I suffered from that as well. But now, those problems are mostly behind me(*), and my Vista systems have been humming along nicely. Until, that is, a couple of weeks ago.I began to notice that free disc space on the main drive on one of the systems was vanishing at an alarming rate, and I could see no reason for it. Gigabytes were disappearing daily. I ran the Disk Cleanup utility, but, as expected, that reported it could only recover a couple of gigabytes from the disc space allocated to my files. I began to wonder if the disc was beginning to fail, so I ran the low-level error check on the disc. This also revealed nothing untoward. Meanwhile, the relentless tumble in the amount of free space continued.Finally, I stumbled across the additional option in Disk Cleanup to delete Shadow Copies and Restore Points. Now, my versions of Vista (Home Premium) do not have the Shadow Copy feature, but they do use Restore Points. Well, nothing ventured, nothing gained, thought I and selected the additional option as I tried the Disk Cleanup utility again. This time, I got over 100 Gigabytes of free disc space back…So, that was the cure, but what was the disease? Why would Vista’s Restore Points be taking up so much space? After further googling, I came across this excellent article: How To Reduce Disk Space Used By Windows Vista System Restore. It turns out that, by default, Vista should be set to use up to 15% of a drive to store Restore Points, but on my system, it was set to "Unbounded" – in other words, Vista was free to keep on grabbing disc space for Restore Points. I used the vssadmin command as described in the article to change from no limit to a reasonable 30GB (on a 400 GB drive). Something had occurred in the past few weeks to set that parameter on the Shadow Copy Service of Vista to "Unbounded" – I still don’t know what it was, but at least I have got it back on track.Aren’t computers fun?* It took over a year for Creative Technology to release proper Vista drivers for my EMU 1820m audio hardware. And I gave up waiting for Creative Technology to sort out the problems with the Vista drivers for the Audigy range of soundcards. I finally ripped the Audigy card out of my PC in disgust and replaced it with a soundcard from Terratec, which came with working Vista drivers. I’m still not completely out of the woods though. Steinberg, the company that many musicians love to hate, announced, to an angry chorus of frustrated users, that it would not be releasing 64 bit Vista/XP drivers for its Midex 8 interface. So that means I have to stick with the 32 bit version of Vista, where I can use the old XP driver for the Midex 8.Leave a comment
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Time To Die
Mark Crislip has a thought-provoking post over at Science Based Medicine on whether people can die simply by willing it. He points out that while he has anecdotal evidence of the phenomenon (he’s apparently a doctor working in an acute care hospital), the study data is much less clear-cut.It also, as he points out, shows up a contradiction of two views. One is that the mind is simply the result of the workings of the brain. He and I both share that view. But, on the other hand, if there is evidence of people who die simply because they will it, then does that not point to the "mind over matter" possibility? He’s not convinced that it does, but he remains intrigued (as do I) by that little niggle of doubt.Oh, and this article has a bearing on the topic, but I’m not convinced that the evidence that the physical changes in the brain that can be brought about by training (The Knowledge is another example of this) can be said to be the same as willing oneself to die.Leave a comment
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It’s Baaack!
…that’s the BBC’s Apprentice. Yet another series that starts with 16 hopefuls demonstrating all that is worst in human nature. Is it just me, or are these 16 even more frightful caricatures of human beings than ever before? The first casualty, Nicholas de Lacy-Brown, was so over the top as an upper class fop who apparently knows nothing of how ordinary folks live that I wondered what century we are living in. It’s getting to the stage when I am finding it difficult to watch this programme without screaming continuously. I do, however, look forward to the pompous Raef Bjayou getting his richly deserved come-uppance.Update: Anna Pickard has a screamingly funny stream-of-consciousness blog on this episode here. Well worth reading.Leave a comment
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Coincidence
While it’s rather a nice coincidence, it remains just that – a coincidence. Nice one, though.Leave a comment
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I Don’t Know What I’m Talking About
Well, unlike Norm, I really can’t get worked up about sport. Never did, never will. Bread and circuses, anyone?Leave a comment
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We Are Made For More
It’s strange. This article misses the point on so many levels that it’s more than simply sad, it’s verging on a sin. As one of the commenters notes, it is a "breathtaking exercise in hypocrisy, cant and mendacity."Update: Justin says it far better than I could.Leave a comment
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Unscientific Scorn
I see our Maddy Of The Sorrows is back again with yet another ill-thought out article. This time she is worried about the amount of scorn that is being poured upon complementary medicine. Well, just two short comments, Madeline.First, no-one is saying that the placebo effect does not exist. It’s just that when homeopathists claim that their treatments are valid against diseases such as AIDS, cancer and malaria, then I think a border has been crossed. Medicine is not "complementary", it either works or it doesn’t.Second, with homeopaths such as Dr. Charlene Werner at large in the populace, I really do fear for society’s health.(hat tip to Ben for the terrifying clip of Dr. Werner. Thankfully, he does also provide a clip of Richard Feynman to soothe the pain)Leave a comment
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Prosopagnosia
If you suffer from prosopagnosia, then you are unable to recognise faces. It turns out that there’s a specific part of the human brain that has evolved to do nothing else other than to recognise faces. Here’s an interesting web page that uses the analogy of recognising stones to point out some of the tricks that people with prosopagnosia have to use to compensate for their face-blindness.(hat tip to Rachel for the link)Leave a comment
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Scaremongering Sermons
I do get very fed-up of prelates who wilfully, it seems to me, scaremonger and tell untruths. There appears to be a concentration of such people in Scotland at the moment. First we had the Bishop of Motherwell, Joseph Devine, with his charges of a "gay conspiracy" out to conspire against Christian traditions, and now we have Cardinal Keith O’Brien with his attack on the UK Government’s Human Fertilisation and Embryology bill. As Ophelia and Joe point out here and here, the Archbishop is being very economical with the truth and simply scaremongering.Update: Justin is also scratching his head in an attempt to find reason and morality in the pronouncements of those challenged by thought.Leave a comment
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Torchwood…
… continues to disappoint. I’m sorry, but tonight’s "Out of the Rain" episode was not a patch on "Something Wicked This Way Comes", from which it all too obviously seemed to be derived…4 responses to “Torchwood…”
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I thought it was a bit lame too. If Ianto and Jack had done a bit more lip-mashing it might have been worth it. Very hit and miss this series.
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I thought tonight’s episode was rather heartbreaking and well done. Though the plot and continuity had a brainfart in that I can’t fathom why Jack thought he had to keep the island a secret. Still, thumbs up for this one.
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p.s was the weather up there on the first day of spring as raucous as it was down here? Pea-size hail storms, snow, sunshine, melt, more snow, hail again. I miss global warming.
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Well, marginal improvement, I thought. It had another of those big emotive scenes between Gwen and Rhys that are full of sound, fury and mucus, but which, when you think about them are really a bit daft. And the final showdown between mother and son was too pat, and mechanical for me. Good idea, but not well enough executed for me to surrender to it. At least you got your Jack/Ianto lip mashing action.
Oh, and yes, we’ve had some storms, but nothing too bad – apparently there’s going to be more snow today…
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Steptoe And Son
I grew up watching Steptoe and Son on the Beeb, sitting on the sofa alongside my parents. We all loved it. And last night, BBC4 showed another side behind the flickering images on the haunted fishtank – the lives of the actors involved in the comedy. The Curse of Steptoe was simply brilliant. David Herman sums it up for me.Leave a comment
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Following Procedure
Not unexpectedly, Ama Sumani has died. As Udo Schuklenk writes, free care to medical migrants who make it to our shores seems a small price to pay for the asset-stripping that we do to the talent of the developing world.Leave a comment
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Vista SP1 Hiccups
Microsoft released the first Service Pack (SP1) for the Vista family of operating systems a couple of days back. There are two machines running Vista in our house; one reported that SP1 was available to install, the other did not. It turns out that the machine that did not react is behaving perfectly correctly. I have a Logitech webcam installed on that machine, and there is a known conflict between a Logitech driver file and one of the files in SP1. The update process checks for the presence of files that can cause problems on target machines, and does not proceed if it finds a potential problem. I’ll just have to wait until Microsoft resolves this issue.That’s fine, but what I found disconcerting was the experience I had with the other machine, the one that flagged that it was OK to install SP1.I gave the OK to install SP1, and the process began. While it lasted a while (about 45 minutes, I think) and included a reboot, that was acceptable. What I don’t think is acceptable is that when the machine was finally up and running, it was clear that, even though a successful upgrade had been reported, something was not right. It turned out that:- the screen resolution was set to 800 x 600, and could not be set to the proper resolution of 1280 x 800
- there was no sound
Both of these were caused because the upgrade process did not use the required specific hardware drivers, but used default drivers from Microsoft. Now, because I’m a geek, I was able to use Vista’s device manager to diagnose and correct the problems by reinstalling the NVIDIA and RealTek drivers for the display and sound hardware respectively. But for the non-geeks amongst us, this would simply be a disaster.Even more alarming, Windows Update started reporting that it had one more important update to install, but every time it attempted to install it, the process failed with an error code 80070103. Vista’s Help and Support system suggested reinstalling the update (it was an new software driver for the touchpad), but this didn’t help – the process simply reported that the latest software driver was already installed, and meanwhile Windows Update kept on insisting that there was an important update to install. In the end, I had to completely uninstall the touchpad driver manually, and then let Windows Update take over to install the new driver. Once again, I can’t see that non-computer folks would be comfortable about doing this.Leave a comment
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No Right Answer
For the geeks amongst us, Joel Spolsky has a terrific post explaining precisely why Microsoft’s IE8 team are damned if they do or damned if they don’t.Leave a comment
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RIP Arthur
Sir Arthur C. Clarke has died. Alas, he didn’t live to see his 90th birthday wish granted: seeing evidence of extraterrestial life in his lifetime.Update: This reminiscence of Arthur from Michael Moorcock strikes me as being a truer appreciation than those other po-faced pieces that I’ve read this last week. Thank god for Moorcock.Update 2: Timothy Kincaid, over at Box Turtle Bulletin, also publishes an appreciation of Arthur that acknowledges more about the man than more of his "official" obituaries did. I’m only sorry that I’ll be long dead before Clarke’s private papers are revealed to the world in 2058.Leave a comment
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Pennies From Heaven
Recently I saw, to my delight, that the DVDs of the 1978 BBC TV series Pennies From Heaven were once again available. I immediately invested, via Amazon, and they duly arrived last week.I’ve spent the last three nights reliving the glories of Dennis Potter’s creation, which was given magnificent life by the cast of Bob Hoskins, Cheryl Campbell, Gemma Craven, Kenneth Colley, Freddie Jones, Hywel Bennett and many others.The story lasts over seven hours – something that probably wouldn’t be commissioned in these days of short attention spans – but is worth every moment."It’s looking for the blue, innit, and the gold… The patch of blue sky and the bleeding gold dawn, and the light in somebody’s eyes."Close your eyes, stand on one leg, and count to ten, very, very slowly… Perfect in every way.Oh, and I can’t resist a bit of trivia: the exterior scenes of where Eileen comes to stay in London were shot in Bristol Gardens. The row of shops seen in the film are on one side of the street, and the house where Eileen stands in the window is on the other. The Royal George pub is at the bottom of the street. In Pennies From Heaven, the street is frequented by prostitutes, and I learned later that this was indeed the case in the 1930s when the drama was set.This was the street where I lived during the late 1970s. At the time, it was very run down. I, and my best friend, put in an offer to buy an old terraced house in the street from the council. Many of the houses had been squatted. We paid the enormous sum for us at the time of £55,000 for a practically derelict house. I hear that a house in the same street recently changed hands for £5 million. How times change, but of course, some things never do.Leave a comment
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Art For Art’s Sake
As 10cc once sang: Art for Art’s sake, money for God’s sake…Alistair mentions, amongst other things, the retrospective of Derek Jarman’s art, and is touched by the passion of the amateur/auteur. I agree, even though I have not seen the retrospective, but simply carry the ever-present memories of Jarman’s art in my head.Alistair also points to the the foul review by Waldemar Januszczak of Jarman’s retrospective:As my 13-year-old daughter muttered harshly as she fled a show that offered her absolutely nothing in the way of shared experiences: “Okay, you’re gay. Now move on.”That Januszczak boldly uses this as an excuse for his own shortcomings to understand Jarman is bad enough, but as Alistair perceptively states, it says more about Waldemar Januszczak’s parenting than his daughter’s aesthetic taste.2 responses to “Art For Art’s Sake”
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His comments were unfair. Anne Frank was a 13-year-old whose simple schoolgirl’s journal had great artistic validity. Maybe this 13-year-old was a bit stultified, but I recall an Indian schoolboy of yet younger years making his early mark as a film director.
Out of the mouths of babes… . -
…comes all manner of things. Sometimes it’s truth, but most times it’s vomit. I’m not convinced that Appleton was being unfair in this case.
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