He should fix PayPal first

Thoughts

Icon from the Tango Desktop project

PayPal-founder Peter Thiel was so inspired by Atlas Shrugged – Ayn Rand’s novel about free-market capitalism – that he’s trying to make its title a reality.

The Silicon Valley billionaire has funnelled $1.25 million to the Seasteading Institute, an organization that aspires to launch a floating colony into international waters, freeing them and like-minded thinkers to live by Libertarian ideals.

Mr Thiel and his colleagues say their ocean state would have no welfare, looser building codes, no minimum wage, and few restrictions on weapons. ~ Mail Online

A 19th century nirvana. Libertarianism: anarchy for rich people.


Ruben + Nerd = Rubenerd?

Internet

The Post A Day 365 team recently posed the question: Explain the name of your blog and why you chose it.

Mine was born of a simple mind from the bad old days of Web 1.0. Having decided to register for an online email account, my 12 year old brain was mortified that Ruben was taken. It dawned on me though that my name and the adjective Nerd shared a letter that could be portmanteau-ed into something terribly awkward, but unique!

13 years later, and I'm still using a variant of that logo I designed as a kid, and the Rubenerd handle for virtually everything. I could probably design and think of far better things now, but there's a certain childish innocence and optimism in them that's nice to have sticking around :).


Anime@UTS

Anime

Registered for Anime@UTS!

After many pointlessly long delays, I finally got around to joining the UTS Anime Club! Went to my first screening on the top floor of the tower today and got my membership card. Mental note for next trip: bring a larger USB key!

Funnily enough, their official website is hosted with NetLogistics too… small world!


2007: Apple should pull the plug on the iPhone

Hardware

Plenty of people on Twitter today were sharing a link to this story from John C. Dvorak in 2007 that was just too good to pass up ;).

The problem here is that while Apple can play the fashion game as well as any company, there is no evidence that it can play it fast enough. These phones go in and out of style so fast that unless Apple has half a dozen variants in the pipeline, its phone, even if immediately successful, will be passé within 3 months.

There is no likelihood that Apple can be successful in a business this competitive. Even in the business where it is a clear pioneer, the personal computer, it had to compete with Microsoft and can only sustain a 5% market share.

Imagine if John had been right and Apple ceased development after the first failed iPhone. Spare a thought for Android developers, who would be left for them to copy off? Microsoft? Would we all be using Kin-like devices?


Tech I couldn’t live without: The INSERT key

Hardware

When I was asked to describe a technology I couldn't live without, I chose the the World Wide Web, then I revised this to door handles. In what has become an unintentional blog post series, today I'll discuss another: the INSERT key.

Allegedly some sort of Judgement scientific railgun keyboard doesn’t have an INSERT key, or judging from her expression it’s just hard to find.

INSERT terrible prose here

Before we can understand the brilliance of the INSERT key, we must take a moment to appreciate the device upon which the INSERT key often finds itself attached to, and struck against. While seemingly simple in construction and operation, the computer keyboard is a sophisticated piece of electronic equipment, able to convert mechanical energy into electronic signals a computer can interpret. In a way, the keyboard acts as the interpreter between two people who don't speak the same language. Appreciate for a second how beautiful that is.

As with most keyboards, the IBM compatible keyboard has more than one key, and if you were to strike one at random while blindfolded and attached to the back of a beluga whale somehow, chances are slim but not impossible that you would hit the INSERT key. Often abbreviated to INS or ERT… no wait, scratch that last one — the INSERT key is often found above the cursor keys on a typical full-length IBM compatible keyboard.

Depending on the application in use, the function of the INSERT key varies, but typically it invokes or disables the overwriting mode of typing. This allows mistakes to be easily corrected by moving your cursor several spaces to the left (or right, if you happen to reside in a local that enforces a right-to-left mode of typing) and replacing characters instead of pushing them along the line.

Previous classic home computers such as 8 bit Commodores had this mode enabled by default, and I'm sure had I been alive when the first IBMs came out, I would have been most pleased that such functionality could be enabled on my IBMs, and later my clones.

Other applications such as Brown Bag Software's PowerMenu system for DOS used the INSERT key to logically insert new items into a menu. This is significant in that… when you do a search for PowerMenu on The Googles I'm one of the first results. When I was using our first home computer with DOS, PowerMenu and Windows 3.0 with MME, I had no idea that 20 years later I'd be de facto owning their brand name online! But I digress.

INSERT an obituary

Unfortunately, the INSERT key is under threat from several fronts, ranging from ignorance to a concerted effort to have it banished.

Because most computer users lack common sense and a certification to operate their computer devices, the INSERT key is generally even less understood than SCROLL LOCK or the ANY KEY, both of which can prove useful in certain applications. This has allowed unscrupulous, sneaky, fiendish hardware manufactures to eschew (gesundheit) these keys in favour of other friendly, more familiar keys, such as Help, or volume controls.

Given the relatively confined space notebook hardware manufacturers have to insert keyboards, many opt to remove the INSERT keys entirely because they mistakenly think they won't be missed. Google and Apple are the leading culprits behind this, though in the case of the latter it can at least be clumsily emulate.

While these are all shocking and terrifying, there's even more to fear. While tablet computers introduced by Microsoft largely kept keyboards attached to increase bulk, e-ink devices such as the Kindle have simplified keyboards without INSERT keys, and the iPad and its knock-offs that run the Android operation system don't even have physical keyboards at all.

Worse still, other devices that call themselves keyboards don't have INSERT keys, despite their obvious advantage of being able to scrub out a badly played or incorrect note with another one as you're playing it. Little does the piano playing Mugi-chan realise, but she is complicit in the downfall of one of the greatest keys of all time.

Finally, all keys share a common struggle against other keys that are used to gain access to devices with locks, such as door handles. Despite being spelled completely differently owing to the abject stupidity of the English language, Quays are also used to dock boats, which may or may not have door handles, locks, lochs, or computer keyboards on board, surrounding them, or a part of their design. In any case, these serve to further erode the influence of computer keyboard keys, which includes the INSERT key.

Could I live without the INSERT key?

Absolutely not. I use this key every day; it has thoroughly inserted itself into my life. Like the World Wide Web, and door handles.


#Anime Kyuubee desktop backgrounds

Anime

It's sad, now that I've actually seen Madoka Magica, I can't bring myself to have Kyuubee in the same desktop backgrounds as any of the girls! Which is a shame, because the series has generated a huge amount of really beautiful art, much of which is perfect for backgroundisation! Is that a term?

First/developed world problems.


Trains Ruben Taketh: M18

Annexe

This post originally appeared on the Annexe, in a post series pointlessly documenting every train I took.

Photo of the forementioned train.

M18 from Bardwell Park to City Circle.

Cleanliness: Shiny!


Links for 2011-08-11

Internet

Links shared from del.icio.us today:

"DCE/RPC is an implementation of the Remote Procedure Call technology developed by the Open Group as part of the Distributed Computing Environment. DCE/RPC is most commonly used to interact with Windows network services."
(categories: rpc dce software samba smb networking)

Beautiful
(categories: delaware unitedstates desktops backgrounds photos wikipedia)

I remember and use it for nostalgic reasons, but it really was terrible OS!
(categories: dos msdos history news)

"On August 6, 1991–20 years ago–Tim Berners-Lee posted a summary of a project for organizing information on a computer network using a "web" of hyperlinks: the "WorldWideWeb," or W3. At the same time, the W3 made its debut as a publicly available service on the Internet."
(categories: news internet web history)

Didn't realise just how large the Nikon kit lens for the D60 really was!
(categories: photography reviews cameras nikon nikond60 dslr)


Changi protection, now with more fibre

Thoughts

Photo taken by me at Changi Airport Terminal 3 in 2010

Changi Airport will be the world’s first airport to reinforce its perimeter fences with fibre-optic sensors to detect intruders. ~ TODAYOnline

So in Australia we're still squabbling over putting fibre into the ground to bring us back in line with the rest of the world, but in Singapore they have enough of it spare to put it to use[less]?

It's the world's best airport, but I hope this isn't a sign of any change in priorities. Next they'll be removing those trays of free lollies from immigration or the koi ponds because terrorists might poison or hide in them respectfully.


Tech I couldn’t live without: door handles

Hardware

I need door handles. This is why, after much pontification, I decided to write about them instead of the World Wide Web for my assignment on technology I couldn't live without.

This post brought to you by the door handles on PriceStore, the one stop convenience store for some sort of scientific railgun.

Why door handles are so important

Before we can truly appreciate the sheer wonder, elegance and brilliance of the door handle, we must first understand the devices upon which they often find themselves affixed. Itself a wonder of design, the door allows users to access subdivided building units without the need to break down and subsequently repair walls each time. This has saved countless hours of work, not to mention medical costs incurred from plastering bruised hands. See what I did there?

Since prehistoric times, humankind has longed to put knobs on things, and arguably on no surface is it more fitting than the humble door. Such is the perfection of this union, the door handle owes at least half its name to its host device. I forget which part, but I'm sure Wikipedia has the information.

Andrew Cox could provide more information on the networking that occurs between this device and its host, but essentially the door handle acts as a user friendly interface to the door hinges, allowing them to be used to swing the door out of the way of a user attempting to enter or leave a room. Much as there are different types of operating systems for different classes of devices, or consistencies of Rindergulasch soup depending on one's location in Germany, the Czech Republic or Hungary, there are also different types of door handles ranging from circular knobs to sophisticated handles that pivot from a fixed point.

On the high end, some more sophisticated door handles even feature locking devices. These allow certain unscrupulous users to pick or hack doors (for analogue and digital respectfully) in order to gain access to a friend's property, allowing their owners to collect insurance. Such fraud isn't as profitable as setting one's house on fire, but is far less messy and allows the perpetrators to only damage or remove certain items.

The door handle under threat

Unfortunately this symbol of technological excellence has steadily but surely come under pressure from competing technologies and ideologies that threaten to make them obsolete.

Arguably the most dangerous of these is the automatically opening door made famous by the obscure Star Trek television series of the 1960s. By placing a sensor in the vicinity of the door one wants to open, a user is able to approach a door, have their presence acknowledged, and the door opened by two people hidden behind wall panels. These can be augmented by biometric devices which allow your fingerprints, retinal veins or other personally identifiable and completely unchangeable characteristics to be stored in a database and stolen along with your ability to use any other biometric devices in the future.

ASIDE: I’ve been to Germany several times, but have only been to the Czech Republic once, and we didn’t even go to Prague! I hope to rectify this one day, I really enjoyed my time there!

While these may seem sophisticated and therefore out of the reach of the core door handle market, there are other technologies that are arguably even simpler than handles. Recessed areas of sliding doors negate the need for door handles entirely, as do door flaps on certain vehicular devices. Rolling doors can often be opened by merely pushing the devices in the desired direction of travel. In public bathrooms, unhygienic push panels that encourage contact with the entire hand (often shared with people who don't wash) allow doors to be pushed out of the way. Most dining tables, headphone cables, bowls of peppermint chocolate chip ice-cream and statues of Sir Stamford Raffles don't even need door handles to operate at all.

On the political front, the No Agenda show has been waging a campaign against door handles in their Get a Handle On This segment. Adam and John's argument centres on the fact locking door handles pose a threat to freedom by limiting the locations certain people can frequent, and that the CIA is complicit in their installation. Adam also asserts doors themselves were invented to drive wall repair companies out of business, given they've rendered the destruction and rebuilding of walls to enter rooms unnecessary. If fiat currencies, central banks and all regulations were removed, this would solve all these problems.

In Australia, both the Liberal and Labor parties want door handles outlawed as they can be used by destitute refugees to enter rooms with cameras and reporters, and have their inhumane treatment broadcast to the world. If such reporters cared, of course.

Certain religions also forbid working on certain days of the week, and given the door handle is a machine (albeit a simple one), they cannot be operated. Fortunately, their religions also claim tattoos and shellfish are banned, and that hasn't the stopped their penetration into many areas of society, so we can be optimistic door handles will be unaffected by this, at least for now.

Could I live without door handles?

I spent my entire year 11 and 12 of high school avoiding opening doors for myself as a way to rebel in the nerdiest way I could think of. While it was possible, it was needlessly difficult and time consuming. Many a minute was wasted as I stood next to doors waiting for other people to enter or leave rooms so I could enter or leave the same room, though I did gain a certain level of fitness sprinting to doors that were rapidly closing.

I learned a valuable lesson from doing this: I need door handles. This is why I decided to write about them instead of the World Wide Web for my assignment on "technology I couldn’t live without".

DISCLAIMER: I did not write about this instead of the World Wide Web for my assignment on “technology I couldn’t live without”. This entire post was a complete farce, though you can’t spell farce without… wait, yes you can. Never mind. How awesome are door handles?