I was looking around on Google Earth (as you do) and unfortunately my current location is a bit too far out of range is is in a low res area. :-)
More fun though, my old house is in a high res area and I was able to locate it and zoom in. Even more fun I was able to see both of my cars! Quite unusual to have them both out, they were probably being washed!
You can make out my bright red Mk1 Golf GTI (1983) and my daily driver Audi A4, dark green. Little things please little minds!
( Jan 30 2006, 09:05:54 PM GMT / Jan 30 2006, 09:05:54 PM GMT )
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Friday January 27, 2006
Narnia : Coming back through the Wardrobe...
Went to see 'The Chronicles of Narnia : The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe' recently, full of the trepidation usually reserved for classic book film adaptions...
It opens with a quite terrifyingly accurate portrayal of the blitz (though the Pevensey's blackout rigour left something to be desired) and proceeds from there at an energetic pace.
The English countryside looked like England for a change. The train stations were correct for the period (yes, most country stations were unmanned) and they even got the right steam train, a 4-6-0 Great Western Castle Class. Top marks!
The fear and worry etched in the mothers faces whilst evacuating their children to an uncertain future was spot on too, this was set when the UK was standing alone against the Germans and we were expecting to be invaded in short order.
The rest of the film was a faithful protrayal of the book, with a few 'action sequences' thrown in. However these didn't detract from the flow. Giving the Beaver an east London accent was a nice touch, and it worked. Some of the dialogue was especially good, my favourite being from the eldest boy 'Peter' as the children are deliberating about whether or not to follow the beaver when he bursts out with "It's a beaver! It's not even supposed to be talking!"
All in all it felt like a junior version of Lord of the Rings, and that's not a criticism. Go, see and enjoy. I was pleasantly surprised. Recommended.
( Jan 27 2006, 11:52:00 AM GMT / Jan 27 2006, 11:42:09 AM GMT )
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Out of the way, I'm coming through!
Whinge of the week time again, and I'm turning to the roads.
Usually I travel mostly by rail, which despite it's bad reputation hasn't been too bad of late, though extortionately expensive for what you get, particularly in the rush hour. You'd have thought £30 a day would guarantee you a seat... but no....
Anyway, this week is all about the motorways, and you get two whinges for the price of one...
1. Middle Lane Morons. This is where some bumbling idiot fails to return to the inside lane after overtaking something, even though the lane is clear far into the distance. Result, to overtake this idiot, you need to move into the fast lane (pedant alert : I know it's not supposed to be called the fast lane, but tough, ok?) and so you end up with a stream of mostly executive cars all queueing up to over take, whilst the inside lane is empty. Inefficient bandwidth utilisation that is. Great website here about it all btw.
2. HGV (Heavy Good Vehicles) or SGSLs as I prefer to call them (Sodding great slow lorries). You get one of these in the inside lane doing 55.5 mph, and then in the second lane another overtaking at 55.6 mph. These HGVs are of course about 600 metres long so it can take them the entire length of the UK for them to overtake one another. I understand it's not entirely their fault as they have speed limiters aboard, but they are guilty of the heinous crime of occasionally venturing into lane 3 (actually illegal) and blocking the entire country. Trouble is many of our motorways (particularly in my neck of the woods) only have 2 lanes anyway, which means I'm stuffed.
Solutions?
HGVs are easy. They should only be allowed in lane 1. No overtaking whatsoever. What's the point, you can only do .1 mph difference anyway.
Middle lane morons are trickier, though I think the latest round of cars is moving in the right direction...
I notice many car manufacturers are now adopting head up displays on the windscreen. All I want is a few small additions: The words 'Missile Armed', 'Target Locked' and a nice red trigger button....
( Jan 27 2006, 11:16:23 AM GMT / Jan 27 2006, 11:01:27 AM GMT )
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Thursday January 26, 2006
Signs of the times...
Walked across from London Bridge station yesterday on my way to the office and was confronted by this sign as I left the station which made me laugh. (sorry about the poor quality camera phone pic!)
Obviously this is designed to stop passengers from waving at the train drivers, but it's more fun to misinterprete it as a piece of general advice on the mental health of train drivers... On the whole I guess it's probably a good thing that train drivers aren't off with the fairies, chasing giraffes or talking to themselves whilst driving hundreds of tonnes of fast moving metal! ;-)
More misleading signs on the otherside of the bridge too, a man with a placard bearing the message,"The End is close, turn to Jesus."
I'm not quite sure what this is supposed to indicate either, as, according to my Christianity inclined friends, no one is supposed to know the exact date of the end of the world anyway. Anyone claiming the opposite has, so far, been quite demonstrably wrong, unless as the late Douglas Adams pointed out, the end of the world has already happened and we were all to drunk to notice!
( Jan 26 2006, 01:55:07 PM GMT / Jan 26 2006, 09:45:24 AM GMT )
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Monday January 23, 2006
Thin clients in the news again..
This isn't really my area, but I'm interested in it.
These two chaps...
Mark Hall and Frank Hayes set up a nice little debate (one side and the other) on 'thin client' and where it might be headed in 2006. Now, obviously, Sun has a vested interest in TC's as we produce the SunRay technology and you might expect us to be in favour of it...
I found Mark's (in favour of TCs) arguments quite good and he presented a number of them. I found Frank's (not in favour of TCs) a bit odd. He only had one point, which was that 'users won't like it'. He cites that users need to be able to install bits of software and that this is crucial for them to be able to do their job.
Two thoughts on this.
I bet the vast majority of '3rd Party Software' on users laptops isn't in the 'business critical' category. More likely it's iTunes, Bittorrent and children's 'educational' software.
One assumes that these users are using company supplied equipment. What gives users the right to install other software on their company laptop? You can't go out and modify your company car can you? It's sort of assumed that you just do. If I was in charge of these companies I would ban users owning the root/admin passwords immediately. My own work laptop has nothing on it but Sun supplied software. I have taken the novel step of having my own personal laptop for my stuff (not counting the fact my own laptop is way better than the work supplied one!)
I think they both missed the two real reason TCs haven't yet taken off properly. They need to be wireless (we'd need vpns and WWAN coverage too), and have a laptop form factor. Without the disk drive dragging down the power consumption, laptop style TCs would last for hours longer, be more secure and still be cool enough for users/executives to use on the train to impress everyone else...
( Jan 23 2006, 05:28:15 PM GMT / Jan 23 2006, 05:16:08 PM GMT )
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Friday January 20, 2006
My family is on its way to Pluto...
Well, not exactly, but we got to put our names on the 'New Horizons' spacecraft that successfully launched yesterday evening. Well done!
I thought this was quite a good away to capture the imagination of kids. The New Horizons website ran a page where you could submit your name for inclusion on a CD which would be loaded onto the spaceship before launch. That CD with our names on it, (along with 430,000 others!) is now somewhere in interplanetary space between here and Jupiter...
My kids loved watching the launch on the net (no TV coverage mores the pity) and now we have to wait. 'New Horizons' will go past Jupiter in early 2007, but won't reach Pluto until 2015. By then my two sons will be 15 and 12 - scary!
( Jan 20 2006, 09:07:00 AM GMT / Jan 20 2006, 09:07:00 AM GMT )
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Friday January 13, 2006
Incoming space debris...
There is a bit of a tradition in the tech circles of Sun in the UK to find the most esoteric, odd ball or just plain funny URL or email and forward it around to a select group of appreciators on a Friday afternoon. This is the 'Friday URL'.
Occasionally this explodes into a frantic exchange of humour based on how 'good' the URL/email is. Last Friday was one of these.
Robin forwarded us all the unlikely tale of a poor Nigerian spaceman. Particular attention was devoted to the subject of space station exports, which eventually degenerated into mammoth speculation what exactly was done with 'waste products' produced by the occupants of the space station in question.
After applying our brains for a while it was clear that the best bet was to dump the stuff into the earths atmosphere and allow it to burn up. I even coined a new technical term: "The Excreteor." ;-)
Of more serious note would be the ones which didn't burn up completely and actually hit the ground. These are: "The Excreteorites."
If you were unfortunately enough to get hit by one of these and happened to live in the United States (prone as it is to turning nouns into verbs) you might suffer that most terrible of fates....
...Excreteorisation.
Maybe you had to be there, it was a Friday after all!
( Jan 13 2006, 05:19:28 PM GMT / Jan 13 2006, 05:13:54 PM GMT )
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Wednesday January 11, 2006
Computer game generation gap...
My 5 year old son is slowly getting into computer games. He's actually pretty good at driving games inparticular now, he's faster than my wife around a simulated Brands Hatch in a Honda Civic....
Just for fun I thought I'd introduce him to a couple of classic arcade games: Pacman and Asteroids...
Well, Pacman he got immediately, but he was totally stumped by asteroids. He watched me play it and I noticed he was giving me one of his "Dad why are you being so dumb?" looks... I asked him what the problem was.
"Dad, why are you shooting the clouds?"
I guess he's got a point!
By contrast, one of the guests at our Christmas party was an elderly (80 year old) major who used to fly Spitfires in the war (WWII). I happened to mention I had a copy of Combat flight simulator on a PC upstairs (with a force feedback joystick and pedals) and I could tell the old boy was itching for a go...
One thing led to another and we set up a proper multiplayer deathmatch. A few of the young 'playstation generation' were also up for a blast or two. So it became young versis old over Biggin hill, or atleast a reasonable facsimile thereof.
The result? Codgers 15, Whippersnappers 0. Our old major had lost none of his guile in the air and kicked some serious teenage butt, and they were trying hard. I think that did more for community relations around our way than anything else ever. The local kids had serious respect for him after that and, dare I say it, probably learn't something about the war in the process.
And it was fun watching the teenage bravado dissolve rather quickly into gasps of dismay followed by grudging respect and finally sincere admiration. There's no school like the old school! ;-)
( Jan 11 2006, 03:28:33 PM GMT / Jan 11 2006, 03:11:25 PM GMT )
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Wednesday January 04, 2006
Snow!
Slightly out of date, but I have a household rule that work PC's are switched off over the holidays, along with mobile phones and any other communication routes...
Whinge of the week is therefore whinge from last week... snow!
Now, you really have to live in the UK to understand our peculiar attitude to snow in this country. We have a strange love/hate relationship with it.
We love it because it's (relatively) rare, looks pretty, you can have fun, there's often a day or two off work/school etc..
We hate it because it obliterates our transport system in minutes, is unpredictable, melt and freezes making things treacherous and we're just not set up to cope with it here.
Me? I love the stuff. I live in East Kent, which is a slightly peculiar part of the UK in that it is the most south east point of this green land and, you would have thought, largely immune to snow. Fortunately (or unfortunately depending on your outlook) due to the nature of the terrain and the exposed northern coast we often get a curious Siberian wind from the northeast, which blows across the north sea, sucks up loads of moisture and then dumps it on us as snow, leaving the rest of the UK wondering what the fuss is all about. By contrast, we all tend to get the hottest temperatures in the summer too. (The highest temperature ever recorded in the UK was recorded in Kent.)
The results? 4 days effectively snowed in over the Christmas break. Not much of a hardship really! This is what we woke up to on the morning of the 27th. 10 Inches of snow and -6 degrees celsius - what my Dad used to call "Frosty 'round the Grampians" ;-)....
My 4WD Audi was about as much use as a chocolate teapot in this because there is a layer of sheet ice under the snow here, and there is a sharp tilt on the driveway which doesn't show up well in the photo. I gave up after almost hitting the neighbours car after 15 mins of sliding around, so we went for a walk instead...
My two boys and I (Joshua on my shoulders, and Mark) enjoying a 'Winter Wonderland' in the local woods! Priceless!
( Jan 04 2006, 05:16:42 PM GMT / Jan 04 2006, 05:06:57 PM GMT )
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Happy new Year!
Hi Folks!
Welcome to 2006 and all that. I'm happy to report that, due to the wonders of wireless networking, I am now writing to you all from the comfort of my new conservatory! Yay!
It was finished on Dec 24th at 12:30, so, technically, just in time for Christmas. ;-)
I'm officially poor now, funny how these things ALWAYS eat up about 50% more than you budget for!
( Jan 04 2006, 04:45:52 PM GMT / Jan 04 2006, 04:45:52 PM GMT )
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