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February 26, 2005

Cardboard Spaceship: Dreaded Air Travel

It's not like I particularly care about the fate of any single carrier, but the future for air travel is looking more and more like a grinding low cost, ineffective and not very integrated series of bus rides round the world.

Posted in: Dismay
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February 24, 2005

Now this is a speech worth listening to...

Highlights of MP Brian Sedgemore's resignation speech:

As we move towards a system of justice that found favour with the South African Government at the time of apartheid and which parallels Burmese justice today, if hon. Members will pardon the oxymoron, I am reminded that our fathers fought and died for liberty — my own father literally — believing that these things should not happen here, and we would never allow them to happen here. But now we know better. The unthinkable, the unimaginable, is happening here...


How on earth did a Labour Government get to the point of creating what was described in the House of Lords hearing as a ‘gulag’ at Belmarsh? I remind my hon. Friends that a gulag is a black hole into which people are forcibly directed without hope of ever getting out...

Have we all, individually and collectively, no shame? I suppose that once one has shown contempt for liberty by voting against it in the Lobby, it becomes easier to do it a second time and after that, a third time...

Many Members have gone nap on the matter. They voted: first, to abolish trial by jury in less serious cases; secondly, to abolish trial by jury in more serious cases; thirdly, to approve an unlawful war; fourthly, to create a gulag at Belmarsh; and fifthly, to lock up innocent people in their homes. It is truly terrifying to imagine what those Members of Parliament will vote for next. I can describe all that only as new Labour’s descent into hell, which is not a place where I want to be.

Posted in: Random
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The joy of wrong numbers

You know what happens when you have a phone number that’s only one digit off from the number for Sprint’s collections department?

You get a lot of deadbeats calling up some random dude in Massachusetts begging him to not disconnect their service. Stewart Woodworth says he’s logged something like 8,000 misdialed calls from Sprint customers over the past 2 1/2 years, and after Sprint refused to change their number he recorded an outgoing message on his voicemail that says: ‘Pay your Sprint bill or your service will be shut off. It’s that simple. If you don’t pay your Sprint bill, you might as well take your Sprint phone and throw it in the trash. Even a person with your limited intelligence should be able to figure that out. Go ahead – write a check. Hang up the phone, write a check, jerk.’

Given that my telephone number is one digit off from Lothian Regional Transport's Lost Property number, I get lots of strange calls from people looking for things.

Given that my telephone number is also one digit off from the London Street Sauna, I also get lots of phone calls from people who won't admit what it is that they're looking for...

Posted in: Random
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No sex please, we're British...

A would-be MP who admitted to having 'worked as a tart' has been kicked off a shortlist of candidates by Labour:

"I am not ashamed at all. I have worked as an encyclopaedia salesman in Germany - I'm more ashamed of that."

Posted in: Random
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Phil Agre on Conservatism

What Is Conservatism and What Is Wrong with It?

From the pharaohs of ancient Egypt to the self-regarding thugs of ancient Rome to the glorified warlords of medieval and absolutist Europe, in nearly every urbanized society throughout human history, there have been people who have tried to constitute themselves as an aristocracy. These people and their allies are the conservatives.

The biggest problem I have with Phil Agre is that he just doesn't post enough...

Posted in: Random
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February 22, 2005

Edinburgh rejects congestion plan

Edinburgh's congestion charging plans have been comprehensively rejected, with 74% of voters voting against the council's proposals.

It's too simplistic however to see this as a rejection of congestion charging per se, although many in the car lobby will and have already done so: it is much more of a rejection of the Council in general, and in particular its [in]ability to manage traffic issues.

Edinburgh has had long-term traffic problems [for 60+ years - see the 1949 Abercrombie Report for examples], and successive Councils have failed to address the problem. Traffic control/management problems are widespread in neighbourhoods across the city, and the Council's responses are weak and ineffectual - many Edinburgh schools are still not surrounded by 20 m.p.h. zones for example, and commuter traffic in residential neighbourhoods is a major issue.

Much of the congestion on the city's streets is caused by buses, not by cars, but it is hard to see how the Council will tackle this, given that the Council owns the dominant bus company and has a vested interest in preserving its dominance against its commerical rivals.

The central problem, which we have always known about, is that there is no high-capacity route that commuters can use to get in and out of the city, and with increased growth on the fringes of the city [aided and abetted by the Council, first through the development of the office park and then the mall at the Gyle, and now through the growth of the retail park at Kinnaird] the problems are only getting worse. If you are on one side of the city and wish to get to the other you have little alternative to driving through the city centre.

And then there's the city centre. The Council has long has an aim of getting cars out of the city centre, and has reduced the number of parking spaces and agressively enforced parking regulations. At the same time, the Council has been increasingly hostile to retailers in the city centre, most obviously through a refusal to tackle the precipitous decline of Princes Street over the last decade, while agressively promoting the development of alternative out of town retail locations.

And despite all that, the Council argued that it, and its arms-length transport company, had the solution to all these problems that they'd previously ignored, arguing that if their proposals weren't accepted traffic would get worse, communities would be negatively affected and so on and so on, ignoring the fact that this is already the situation today. The Council would much prefer the silver bullet of congestion charging, rather than having to actually do any work mitigating traffic levels in residential neighourhoods and restructuring the existing public transport network. For the Council, congestion charging is the easy way out.

But people have no faith in a Council that is widely [and accurately] seen as both anti-car and anti-city centre. People don't take their cars because they feel like it: they take them because they can't get around/across the city otherwise, and don't feel they should be penalised for this. A minor detail, but there it is.

This wasn't a referendum on congestion charging. This was a referendum on the Council, and it got the result it deserved.

Posted in: Edinburgh
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February 20, 2005

Everything you know about anthropolgy is wrong

Or so it appears after a German professor [Reiner Protsch von Zieten] who claimed to have proved that homo sapiens and neanderthal man not only co-existed but interbred was found to have faked the evidence.

Posted in: Dismay
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February 19, 2005

The end of the innocence

WB seeks revitalized cartoon franchise with new look for Bugs Bunny and friends

There are things in life that just take your breath away: some good, some bad, some apalling, and frankly, this is one of the latter. Words fail me - the fundamental idea, though perhaps understandable from the corporate 'need-to-maximize-revenue-from-this-bit-of-our-portfolio' perspective is just so fundamentally wrong that it defies both belief and explication.

Think colourizing black and white films was bad? This is ten times worse.

Posted in: Dismay
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February 17, 2005

Heriot-Watt in 'devalued degrees' row

On the back of some rather dubious "research" [after all, only the lecturers and the external examiners know how good/rigorous a degree actually is...], we get the usual drivel about University expansion watering down degrees etc. etc. etc..

A Heriot-Watt University spokeswoman said: 'Heriot-Watt University awards a smaller percentage of first class and 2:1 honours degrees than many other universities'

Translation: assuming that degree standards have held firm [and are roughly comparable across UK universities, as is supposed to be the case...], Heriot-Watt has fewer very good and excellent students than many other universities...

Posted in: Education
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London tolls chief attacks capital's 'rush job'

Yes, that'd be putting it mildly.

Posted in: Retail
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February 13, 2005

The alienation of science in America

Neal Stephenson is interviewed in Reason:

It is quite obvious to me that the U.S. is turning away from [science and technology]. It has been the case for quite a while that the cultural left distrusted geeks and their works; the depiction of technical sorts in popular culture has been overwhelmingly negative for at least a generation now. More recently, the cultural right has apparently decided that it doesn’t care for some of what scientists have to say. So the technical class is caught in a pincer between these two wings of the so-called culture war.

More particularly:

science is all about diligence, hard sustained work over long stretches of time, sweating the details, and abstract thinking, none of which is really being fostered by mainstream culture.

[via Kottke]

Posted in: Dismay
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February 10, 2005

Jimmy Smith dies

Award-winning jazz organist Jimmy Smith died on Tuesday.

First Johnny Cash, then Ray Charles, now Jimmy Smith - it seems like the generation who profoundly shaped American music since the 50s are now swiftly dying away.

I have many CDs... well, far too many CDs. I'd say hundreds, but if you include all the boxes full of CDs that are squirelled away here and there, it's probably closer to a thousand, much of it, I'll freely admit, complete rubbish. But in the midst of all the chaff are 12 Jimmy Smith albums, mostly Blue Note, as I don't hugely like his later stuff - which is on Verve.

I'd recommend Back at the Chicken Shack and Crazy Baby if you were looking for somewhere to start exploring.

Posted in: Dismay
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Student sues university...

Translation: he [the student] had to take notes because he [the student] hadn't done the preparatory reading etc.. If he'd done the reading he'd already be familar with 80% of the lecture material and wouldn't need to be taking 'complete' notes.

Posted in: Education
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February 05, 2005

Half of broadband users dissatisfied

Transferring email addresses is virtually impossible when providers are changed in the same way as mobile phone companies make it difficult to transfer telephone numbers.

You can't transfer email addresses between ISPs. Do you really think PlusNet wants to [or is even able to...] handle your old ntl email address?? If you want to keep an email address, either get your own domain or get a webmail account somewhere.

Speaking of which, I have 50 gmail invites. Use the comments or the contact form.

Posted in: Internet
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