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Reading

Ocean Gladiator: Battles Beneath the Ocean: Amazon.co.uk: Mark Ellyatt
Reading

Emergent Design: The Evolutionary Nature of Professional Software Development (Net Objectives Product Development): Amazon.co.uk: Scott Bain
Reading

Overcoming Peace of Mind: Essays and Errata (9781452867755): Brett Palomar
Watching

Green Lantern (2011)
Snapping
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Being The
Geekly Diary of Waider
(may
contain traces of drinking, movies, and sport)
- February 03
- BT: the saga continues. I am told that they can't find my cancellation, and therefore I owe them for a domain registration they haven't been responsible for for over a year. This seems... off, to say the least.
Green Lantern was a bit top-heavy, with all the exposition at the start, the various "characters stand around explaining stuff to Hal - i.e. to the audience" bits, and so on, but it was on the whole pretty fun. I'm glad they opted not to do a hamfisted "comedy" treatement like the miserable mess that was Green Hornet (tip: all the good bits are in the trailer for that disaster).
- January 29
- Hooray for BT Ireland, who ignored my letter (as in, actual printed text on dead tree) wherein I notified them of a change of address and a termination of service, and decided to issue me a bill for a service that they're no longer providing me (and haven't been for over a year) to an old address. Guess I get to write them another letter in the hope that this time they'll actually pay attention. At least I cancelled the direct debit when I cancelled the service, so they can't take money off me.
Oh yeah. We're hiring. We have somewhere around 100 open positions, mainly engineering roles (software, systems, networking) along with a few managerial and some administrative (project manager and such). The benefits are good, the office is nice, and there's a bucketload of smart techie work going on. Drop me an email if you're interested.
- January 28
- Happy birthday, sis!
- January 25
- The linkfarm toy has been broken for some time. Attempted to fix it tonight, and wound up... segfaulting Perl. Gah.
Eventually fixed by completely abandoning *DBM, which I think I was only using because I didn't know about Storable at the time (not that Storable is a great solution either, but it generally works for this sort of thing).
- January 24
- The UPC modem locked up again (my current theory on this is that it runs out of UPNP buckets), so I added a function to UPC.pm to reset the modem, and then
perl -MUPC -e 'my $upc = new UPC( password => '********' ); $upc->reset()' It looks like my attempts to get the MRTG toys to cope sanely with this condition also met with failure. I'm considering replacing all that MRTG stuff with something more useful for my specific purpose (viz. how badly is my UPC connection performing today, and is it time to reboot it). The latest in the Bins of Dublin foofraw is an absolute goldmine of choice quotes, and I really don't know where to start. Councillors complaining of a breakdown in trust in, er, them? Paddy Bourke ragging on the council's failure to cope with bad weather AND the rejection of the Clontarf flood wall, designed to cope with said bad weather? A vote, passed by the majority, to resume collections by the council, followed by conceding that said vote has no actual impact? Also, go sign this: Stop Sopa Ireland. Don't let the music and film industries dictate the laws of the country just because they're backing a model that's past its sell-by date, and don't believe that this proposed legislation has anything to do with "Harmonising our laws with the EU" or "protecting artists". It's about protecting the profits of people who don't want to move with the times, nothing more. (One might wonder why, if "Mr Sherlock said the Government was merely seeking to restate what existed already in Irish law" (Irish Times), there is need for more legislation, but that would be needlessly pedantic of me - I am aware of the High Court case that is being pointed to as justification for this.)
- January 23
- Tried out Apple's Remote Disc doohickey to rip a new CD. Due to (according to the Apple Knowledgebase) some unspecified DRM, this failed. Funny, that. No DRM on the CD, and after perusing the KB page further I even tried switching off the firewall on the drive-bearing computer. Oh well. Guess I'll find out if importing it to one iCloud-enabled machine will cause it to magically appear on the rest of 'em.
- January 21
- A choice quote from the whole SOPA/PIPA fiasco:
"It is clear that we need to revisit the approach on how best to address the problem of foreign thieves that steal and sell American inventions and products" - Lamar Smith, the Republican chairman of the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee Apparently Mr. Smith is unaware of a recent prosecution in this space, where an American "thief" was responsible for the "stealing". Of course, maybe I'm misinterpreting Smith's statement; maybe his intent is to allow such home-grown "theft". In other news: I stumbled across an Irish "news" site, which I won't be revisiting, which consistently crashed the browser on my iPad. When I tried the same site on the laptop, it caused the CPU to crank up to fan-requiring levels. I've no idea what they've done, but they're not getting any more visits from me (never mind that the general quality of the site makes Youtube comment threads look like erudite discourse).
- January 20
- I'm currently learning Python, or trying to learn more of it than I forcefed myself a few years back when trying to figure out Red Hat's Linux installer. As I've gotten to grips with more of the language, and because I'm vaguely familiar with the strong design choices that have gone into it, I am finding the occasional bit of incongruity in its behaviour. Nothing earthshaking, mind you. The thing I dislike most in principle - the whole "whitespace is meaningful" crap - is not really an issue in practice as it's handled by Emacs. Well, most of the time. Having to manually unindent lines and then correct again them because they unindented too far is a bit annoying, and the sort of thing that enclosing code blocks with some sort of non-whitespace syntactic marker guards against. I'm sure I'm probably just doing it wrong, though.
The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest is a nice conclusion to the Swedish TV/film conversion of Stieg Larsson's books. As with the second movie, they retained the bulk of the book, but as with both the first and second movies, I felt that some of the departures from the original plot weakened the story. To recap, the first movie suffered badly from pacing more than anything else; the second movie was tight, but the conclusion at the farmhouse was a bit lacking; the third movie, well, the bit where Erika basically bottles it was disappointing, as it weakens her character needlessly, and while I appreciated the technical versimiltude of Plague's infiltration of Teleborian's laptop, the book version of the (not quite the) same events made for a more entertaining setup for the trial - it didn't need the added edge of "will they get the information they need?". When all's said and done, though, a good piece of work. One final note on the trilogy: Noomi Rapace really sold the role. I found myself believing every second of her performance at the end of the second movie, despite the somewhat fantastic nature of her survival (I actually found the movie more believable than the book in this respect), and the continuation into the start of the third movie had me recalling the closing sequence that preceeded it as if it were fact rather than fiction. A truly excellent performance.
- January 19
- Happy birthday, Hannah!
- January 17
- Real-world fun and games:
Greyhound Recycling said it will provide a seamless service for the council's 140,00 former customers. (...) Bins are to be collected on the same day they are now in each area. (Irish Times, January 14th 2012) ...except for the bit where they moved all the bin collection days around (ours is now apparently every Thursday, if you look at the FAQ, or every second Thursday, if you look at the collection calendar) and where they failed to make the Monday collections on the day of changeover until well into the evening. Greyhound's response was apparently to say that DCC were supposed to collect the bins in my area this week, which seems at odds with the notices on both Greyhound and DCC websites. And real world fun and games part II: one of my perennial sources of irritation/amusement (irritmusement?), Vodafone, sent me a text today to tell me my latest bill was available online; it further informed me that the bill came to (4-digit code used to access my bill via the online billing service) and that it was due on (some amount in euros). I suspect someone didn't update their template in step with the parameters being fed to it.
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