Archive for July, 2008

Russell Howards updates Yes Prime Minister

// July 31st, 2008 // No Comments » // media, mock the week, russell howard, yes minister

I had mentioned over on IElection that I’d seen a brilliant piece on Mock the Week done by Russell Howard. Well here it is if you missed it.

And this is a somewhat older piece of wit along similar lines.

Jim Hacker: Don’t tell me about the press. I know exactly who reads the papers:

* The Daily Mirror is read by people who think they run the country;
* The Guardian is read by people who think they ought to run the country;
* The Times is read by people who actually do run the country;
* The Daily Mail is read by the wives of the people who run the country;
* The Financial Times is read by people who own the country;
* The Morning Star is read by people who think the country ought to be run by another country;
* And the Daily Telegraph is read by people who think it is.

Sir Humphrey: Prime Minister, what about the people who read the Sun?
Bernard Woolley: Sun readers don’t care who runs the country, as long as she’s got big tits.

Things I liked about yesterday

// July 31st, 2008 // 1 Comment » // Uncategorized

Things I caught or saw or hear yesterday.

Midnight in the garden of good and evil – really brings home how the visuals of cinema can shape our feel for a region or place.

Disclosure – not a very good movie, but it has a vaguely engineery feel to it and does suggest a great idea for a sequel. Let Demi Moore come back to try after ten years and try and buy the company but Dear God let the technology it is all tied in with be better than Cd-Rom’s.

And then The Stand started with Don’t Fear the Reaper by the Blue Oyster Cult. Just how good is that track!

Cuil launches, drops the L plate too.

// July 28th, 2008 // No Comments » // anna patterson, cuill, Ireland, search, searchme, tom costello

Saw on the beeb site that Cuill* or Cuil as it now is has launched. I had personally suspected that Cuil was going to go after the search as a service market for big iron folks but it is out there now as a Joe Public service.

Interesting that folks locally seem to be focusing on the Irish connection with Tom Costello, however there is a strong Irish link on one of the other co-founders in the office of the President of Cuill too. She was also in University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign around the same time as Marc Andreessen of Netscape. She is a very, very, intelligent individual and quite pleasant too.

The best of luck to them I say. Interestingly, their frontend UI puts me in mind of Searchme.com which is more a search assistant in many ways. Now if cuill were use the Searchme UI as an option I’d nearly count it as love at first site.

Update: Cuill is stated by some as being derived from old Gaelic, it doesn’t state it was our form of Gaelic. In Manx legend in Gaelic it would seem that it was a Finn Mac Cuill who created the Isle of Man, and through Fionn mac Cumhaill or Fionn MacCool we get to the Legend of the Salmon of Knowledge. And hence the link to the name. Now, I’m off to the leaba to read my Poirot.

*Just to be clear I’m not the Danny Sullivan quoted in the beeb article. He would be a proper tech-head commentariat person to my amateur dabblings.

It was just good clean S&M!

// July 24th, 2008 // 2 Comments » // masochism, max mosley, news of the world, sadism, SM

Max Mosley* has won his case against the NotW which characterised his engagement with five ladies of negotiable virtue as being a ‘Nazi themed sex orgy’. As the judge said “The “bondage, beating and domination” that did take place was “typical of S and M behaviour”,” So all good clean fun then!

I do wonder some times if we really need to be that interested in every aspect of people’s lives. After all Max Mosley is running Formula 1 not a girls’ boarding school. Is it in the public interest that every aspect of people’s lives. In an age when more and more social activity is on-line and traceable are we saying to anyone that wishes to engage in any role in public life that they must be completely and unbearably open about how they live every aspect of their lives whether it impinges on how they execute that role or not? I would hope not, but I can see it going that way.

*the spell check with Firefox recognised Mosley but not Max! There’s a message there I’m sure of it.

Is a big quake due in Japan?

// July 23rd, 2008 // No Comments » // earthquake, japan, kanto

Another quake in Japan today, following on from one off the east coast and another in the north in mid June – the 3rd in about 6 weeks. Quakes are not uncommon in Japan but there is a concern that large quakes can de-stabilise areas as well as relieve tension in the tectonic plates. They can be sort of pre-shocks to a more significant movement.

When I was living there, I remember being told that there are three major faults lines running through the main island and the Kanto region where Tokyo-Yokohama are and that all 3 were due/overdue to hit, that was back in the early 1990s. The Kanto area gets a big one every 70 years and the last one in 1923 caused 140,000 deaths mainly from fire. I think two of the lines were north-south and the other from the north-west to south-east. I don’t think was more than a 4.5er when I was there which amounted to more or less a strong tremor where I was living. Still gave me the willies all the same.

Of course the averaging out of hits from quakes is rough work at best. I sincerely hope that the current quakes are simply relieving tension in the plates and not precursors to something major brewing in mother Earth’s tummy.

Boston of all places has a risk of a magnitude 6 quake every 500 -900 years but the last was in 1755. However New England gets more moderate (magnitude 5) quakes happen every 50 to 90 years. And their problem is all the building that was done on the BackBay which is infill!

5 minute cake takes Web by storm!

// July 23rd, 2008 // 6 Comments » // 5 minute cake, five minute cake

The five minute cake recipe appears to be taking the male lazy cook world by storm. Load of folks are trying it and sending pictures of the results to their mates. And it looks moist and delicious. Now about those seven minutes abs.

Who watches the Watchmen? All of us I hope.

// July 18th, 2008 // No Comments » // alan moore, Watchmen

Watchmen trailer.

Got to say the Vietnam imagery is excellently realised, makes one realise why people would want to surrender to the good Dr. themselves. Pass it on.

Same sex relationships – won’t someone think of the aunties?

// July 12th, 2008 // No Comments » // breda o'brien, Civil Partnership, civil unions, david quinn, same sex relationship

Breda O’Brien returns to the topic again today ‘It is the belief that wherever possible, a child should be reared by a mother and a father, and that children have the right to know and have a relationship with their biological parents.’ I wonder if ‘wherever possible’ is the ‘wherever practicable’ of social thinking amongst the new Christian right. I say new right but they sound a lot like the old right to me.

I’m sure my own individual mail (see bottom of post) had nothing to do with her returning to the topic but I suspect she got lots of mail over the week and that fact probably did have something to do with her response. I had mentioned in my mail that I thought a more important fact was that ‘Children have the right to be raised in a loving home, …’

First though, let’s start with the above comment she made’ children have the right to know and have a relationship with their biological parents’ – is she in truth suggesting that all current adoptions should follow this route with biological parents being required to play an active part in their children’s lives? I would wish that she would be clear and state that she is also objecting to the adoption of children by single people and also objecting to IVF. David Quinn has mentioned that a few times but hasn’t banged that drum too loudly as most people are inclined to be sympathetic to those who go for IVF. They’re no eejits these lads and lassies.

Moving on from there she doesn’t mention at all that more important than being ‘reared by a mother and a father’ is that you are reared in a loving, nurturing and supportive environment. the mere presence of a male parental unit, and a female parental unit is not sufficient to ensure that those elements are going to be present. Shouldn’t we think more about the importance of children having loving and caring parents at all than what their sexual orientation is?

This is what I’d sent to her last week, I’m sure she had other comment too during the course of the week.

‘I’m not at all clear how asking a straightforward yes or no question like “Are you homophobic?” is a “have you stopped beating your wife?” type of question. Surely a version of that question would take more a form like “When will you stop persecuting homosexuals?”. I suspect Matt Cooper was as interested to know what was behind Senator Walsh sudden interest in
the topic (or in legislation more generally) given that he is one of the more laid back Senators when it comes to debate within the Seanad. He is more known for his work tending to the needs of those cllrs who vote for him than a strong interest in the legislative role of his office.

I don’t doubt that people use the term homophobe as a battering ram in many a discussion but it is also the case that the rights of children is being used to serve a similar purpose. Children have the right to be raised in a loving home, while I would have my own bias that it may well be a family unit with a mother and a father, aunts and uncles, grandparents and even siblings has the benefit of long practice. But the absence alone of some component of that ideal family is not a sufficient reason to preclude someone from the adoption process. I wouldn’t seek to prevent single people or those in same sex committed relationships from adopting simply because of their sexual orientation or the fact of being single.

No one has argued for the right to adopt children that I aware of. In fact no one has the right to adopt a child. They merely have the right to apply as people should be only able to adopt if they are suitable to provide a safe, secure, loving and nurturing environment to the particular child. The greatest challenge to traditional marriage is the attitude of some of those entering into it that it should come as easy as pie, when in truth all relationships require work and are all the more rewarding for it.’

Dublin South bye-election – Part 2

// July 12th, 2008 // 2 Comments » // dublin south, fiona o'malley, progressive democrats

This could be the PDs Bootle byelection, if Fiona O’Malley runs (and she simply has to given that she announced she was targeting this constituency once DL went to 4 seats; she can’t choose to nor run now in a constituency where they had a seat up to the last election and then try to run in the next general election) and if she gets considerably less than what Liz O’Donnell got – say under 5% – then the party would have some cause to simply wind itself up much as the SDP had to do after coming in behind the Monster Raving Loony Party.

Battlestar – Irish Government cross over episode

// July 11th, 2008 // No Comments » // battlestar, brian cowen, brian lenihan, Fianna Fail

It’s not hilarious I admit but it’s more a test of what might be possible once the telly card comes out of the plastic wrapping and into the maw of the machine.