Archive for June, 2005

Tuesday, 7th June 2005

Tuesday, June 7th, 2005

“This is not the way my country should be treating me,” she said. My concern is that if that’s the way they’re treating American citizens I would hate to think how they’re treating other people. It’s crazy.”

Quote: Cecilia Beaman, a 57-year-old grandmother, school principal and now suspected terrorist thanks to the swift and entirely inappropriate actions of a TSA employee. Thanks to Bruce Schneier for blogging about this and other interesting topics.

The US terrorism hysteria is well out of control now and has been for quite some time. When I visited Los Angeles back in April, I saw many of these school leavers (aka TSA screening employees). Most of them looked like they might be able to protect me from a conker fight in a school playground, but weren’t really likely to save me from a witch on a broomstick. They do – however – seem to be quite adept at frightening middle aged women leading school trips. Good old uncle sam’s federal government puts its citizen’s hard earned cash to good use yet again. Why don’t they just stop and think – 2000 people (yes, only 2000[0]) apparently died last year worldwide from terrorist incidents and many of those were figures the US chose to account in Iraq. My point is, make the roads safer, cut down on gang warfare, do those things that actually matter – and let a poor woman who makes a mistake and leaves a knife in her bag off with an appropriate warning.

I read a lot of US news now – and indeed other foreign affairs on occasion (e.g. Canada). I don’t know when I started to take such an interest, but I do know that these things bother me and I have a right to feel bothered by them. Someone asked me recently why it is that we should take such an interest in what’s going on in another country. The answer is that the UK mirrors the US but with merely a time shift in implementation – our government would love to be every bit as evil as Bush and his cronies, given the chance, but they don’t quite have enough idiots willing to go along with them at this stage. They are really trying to push the big brother (and I don’t mean a stupid TV show: wake up! take an interest in the real world!) thing over here.

Jon.

[0] Source: A random US news broadcast I saw in San Francisco on a major TV station. Apparently these were figures published by the US federal government – who are, somewhat arguably, also behind much of the violence in Iraq.

Jesu Joy Of Man’s Desiring

Monday, June 6th, 2005

Hannah asked me to brush up on Jesu Joy Of Man’s Desiring for some reason… :-) Here’s a copy.

Jon.

One final Apple Powerbook

Monday, June 6th, 2005

Apple confirmed our fears today by announcing that they are to screw us over by shifting architecture once again. They want to become cheap and nasty PC boxshifters of the kind many of us have been trying to avoid. I’m annoyed.

While it makes perfect sense from their business point of view (most customers don’t care what’s in the box, just how good the box looks), I used to think there was something special about Apple having a hand in the processor design, platform architecture – the whole hardware stack – which lent itself towards them producing superior kit. Now, I’m afraid it’ll all be cheap whitebox trash within five years. I might be wrong, I hope I am.

So, one last Powerbook to go before that’s it. Better keep two around, just in case.

Jon.

Runrig

Sunday, June 5th, 2005

I was just listening to a new Runrig track I got hold of, simply titled “Canada“. It’s great (not just because of the name). Like most of their other music. Alan Cox was indeed wise to recommend them to ajh, whom I’m glad decided to pass on the recommendation on our road trip back in February. I have been listening to a fair bit of their music and have learned that they are over 30 years old – why didn’t I discover this kind of music a lot sooner?

Anyway, if anyone wants to buy me anything, you can get me one of their albums.

Incidentally, I’ve been using Audioscrobbler for a while now and it has begun to profile the kind of music I like to listen to (or maybe just the music it happens to be logging at the time). Here’s my top 10 artists and tracks:

Artists

1 Runrig
2 The Arrogant Worms
3 Enigma
4 Garbage
5 Enya
6 Brad Johner
7 Bay City Rollers
7 Captain Tractor
9 Danny Elfman
10 A-ha

Tracks

1 Runrig – Rocket to the Moon
2 The Arrogant Worms – The Canadian Crisis Song
3 Brad Johner – The Last Saskatchewan Pirate
4 Bay City Rollers – We Built this City on Rock-n-Roll
4 The Arrogant Worms – Boy Band
6 Runrig – (Stepping Down The) Glory Road
6 Rita McNeil – Farewell to Nova Scotia
8 Enigma – Silence Must Be Heard
9 Garbage – Supervixen
9 Danny Elfman – Descent Into Mystery

Unforunately, it doesn’t currently account for listening I do when on the go so much of the above is just whatever I randomly decided to play with xmms when in a particular mood. To get a proper representative sample will require me to get gtkpod to talk to audioscrobbler and inform it of the music I have been listening to whilst away from a terminal.

Jon.

Saturday, 4th June, 2005

Saturday, June 4th, 2005

Photo: Jon Masters wearing a Kilt (Blackwatch Tartan, substitute for Devonshire Tartan).

I wore a kilt. I enjoyed doing so. I decided to continue wearing it even after I’d left the kilt fitting session at the store and had had some coffee to build up enough courage to do so. I think I might have to buy my own now and I think Joe is seriously tempted to get his own kilt too. Hannah doesn’t seem to much mind about him doing so either. Maybe I’ll see some on sale in Edinburgh.

Paul had randomly turned up by the time I got home and answered the door. So we decided to have some coffee and I procrastinated some more. We went out for some Geocaching earlier on this evening but we apparently couldn’t manage to find GCN4N4 – “Flint’s Folly” – even after we called Joe to get hold of the hint. Meh.

Photo: Paul Sladen and Jon Masters.

Jon.

New York, New York

Saturday, June 4th, 2005

I decided to book the New York train. It was around 50-60GBP and will give me a day to explore the New York City area before I return to Ottawa to catch up with whoever is still around.

Train Ordinal Train Number Date Origin Destination Departure Time Arrival Time Notes
1 68 Adirondack 27JUL Montreal, QC New York, NY 0950 1940 9 hours, 50 minutes.
2 69 Adirondack 29JUL New York, NY Montreal, QC 0815 1830 10 hours, 15 minutes.

Nova Scotia and Newfoundland can wait until my next trip to Ontario, at which point I will investigate taking a brief Maritime excursion.

Jon.

BBC reports Qur’an desecration did happen

Saturday, June 4th, 2005

I just saw breaking news on BBC News 24 stating that the US has confirmed soldiers did desecrate a copy of the Qur’an (English: Koran) at Guantanamo Bay.

Every time I don’t think it’s possible for the US Administration to be even more tactless and stupid in its handling of prisoners illegally held at Guantanamo against all international treaties and better judgement, I am once again proven wrong – it is possible for them to be this damn stupid.

In other political news, two other events that interested me yesterday were the announcement that police would use “anti-terror laws” at the Edinburgh rally (that’s just plain wrong – it’s a peace rally, not a march of assembled terrorists and the police have no right to abuse US lead hysteria laws to enforce crowd control) and that a peace protester who has been outside Westminster Palace for over 4 years is likely to be moved as he spoils the view (and there are laws against that too now). It had better be a brave new world that we live in.

…and if none of the above makes you feel disgusted. Try “Schools restrict use of Tasers“. Since when was it ever a good idea to have police officers using stun guns on kids in school? I like to think that if that were tried over here there’d be such a public outcry that the relevent police chief would be forced to resign – but in Florida it is now just considered something to use as a “last resort”.

Jon.