Can’t change a page’s default template!?

Internet

Latest WordPress problem: it has decided to ignore page templates. If I go to edit a page, change the template under "Page Attributes" and click Update, it reverts back to "Default Template" each time. As such, my tags, archive and links pages are useless.

I have assignments to do so I can't waste time messing around trying to fix this, but letting you know its on my do to list. This may be another occasion where I have to bypass the web UI and fix it in phpMyAdmin.

In 2005 I decided to move to WordPress and I reaffirmed my decision in 2009 because I couldn't justify the time to port stuff over. I'm hoping I didn't bet on the wrong horse.


DownloadSquad got Flipped

Media

I know why AOL Tech canned the DownloadSquad: their old logo was cooler. In all seriousness though, if we needed any further proof that being bought out by AOL is tantamount to EOL, there it is. How long do we give TechCrunch and HuffPo?

It's just like Cisco's canning of Flip. Why do these companies buy other companies, then ditch them and their employees? I suppose we have the power of hindsight, but in both these cases it didn't make sense to me even at the beginning. Oh well, se a vida é.

I read GigaOm anyway, and so should you.


France to require cleartext passphrase storage

Internet

Icon from the Tango Desktop project

France’s new data retention law requires online service providers to retain databases of their users’ addresses, real names and passwords, and to supply these to police on demand. Leaving aside the risk of retaining all this personal information (identity thieves, stalkers, etc — that which isn’t stored can’t be stolen and leaked), there’s the risk of requiring providers to store plaintext passwords, as Bruce Schneier points out. ~ BoingBoing

Patently absurd, insecure, and will end up only driving French web services overseas. Therefore, unenforcable.


Ben Sidran’s Cool Paradise, track 05

Media

Ben Sidram's Cool ParadiseIn our continuing series of fascinating lyrical anecdotes derived from Ben Sidran’s 1990 album Cool Paradise, today Ben presents a song with the shortest title yet both in number of words and in characters in the track Try:

You… sit in your chair.

Wait hold on a minute, he’s watching me write these? In my chair?! How else would he know this is how I write blog posts? Call @Edible_Hat!

Other tracks:
#01,
#02,
#03,
#04,
#06,
#07,
#08,
#09,
#10,
#11.


Swagnificent

Annexe

This post originally appeared on the Annexe.

Will Smith with swag

hashbr0wns:

swagnificent.


The Day Sydney Trains Died

Annexe

This post originally appeared on the Annexe.

Empty CityRail train signs

Ben Sidran’s Cool Paradise, track 04

Media

Ben Sidram's Cool ParadiseIn our continuing series of fascinating lyrical anecdotes derived from Ben Sidran’s 1990 album Cool Paradise, today Ben explores the deep recesses of our subconcious minds in the track She Steps Into A Dream:

Just "another" top 40 song…
MAAAAAAAGIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIC!
She steps into a dreeeeeeeeeeam…

Magic… stepping into dreams… he must be referring to Ramona Flowers stepping into subspace. Wait no, supspace is for warp drive. Wait no, he’s referring to Ariadne stepping into another level she designed… no wait, he’s talking about Merry Nightmare not being able to return to her dream universe. No matter who or what, they don’t like mainstream music, allegedly. Good taste ;)

Other tracks:
#01,
#02,
#03,
#05,
#06,
#07,
#08,
#09,
#10,
#11.


Sydney train signal equipment #FAIL

Travel

It was a good thing I didn't need to go into uni today given two dreaded words from CityRail: Major Delays.

Apoliogies for the crappiness of the picture, I took it with my iTelephone with HDR in broad daylight with the sun shining directly on the displays. Only by distorting it like this did the words become readable!

Let me tell you a tale

Since I was young enough to venture out into this big world by myself, I've preferred trains to buses. They're infinitely smoother, quieter, I can read on them without getting car sickness, and given the direction of their travel is fixed I feel safter knowing the driver won't suddently change course or decide to take me somewhere different. I'm a terribly socially awkward person you see, so anything to reduce the number of variables when I'm in that giant room with the blue ceiling is welcome.

While all that is true (at least in my opinion) they're certainly no less or more reliable than buses. While I've had my fair share of bus breakdowns, trains in Sydney especially seem to have a mind of their own. We can't go for a month or two without some form of trackwork, and sudden disruptions because of reason XYZ.

The Tale… of Alan A’Dale

Today's disruption was due to "signal equipment repairs", and it wasn't planned. Turns out due to a fault in the signaling systems, commuters across the network (including on our line) suddently found their trains not moving for over an hour; would have been wickidly fun if you were trapped underground for that time period.

On the surface, my fellow train travellers and I watched the time tick by while we waited for trains, all the while with this sign on the electonic notification screen thingy:

Major Service Disruption: There is major disruption on the network due to essential signal equipment repairs. More information will be provided when available.

Jacob Saulwick from The Sydney Morning Herald had this to say:

YESTERDAY was one of the worst days on Sydney’s train system for six years, triggered by multiple signal failures during the morning peak hour at a critical junction on the network.

The problems started at 7.40am when two signalling systems at Sydenham control centre stopped working.

Trains on the Bankstown, Inner West, South, Airport, East Hills, Eastern Suburbs and Illawarra lines were immediately brought to a halt; some at platforms, some stuck between platforms.

And if you want to see some incredible pictures, this article by Georgina Robinson has them. Wow, just wow.

The phew is the flew

So I went to our local station to take that terrible picture, then came back home again to keep working on my assignments and whatnot. Glad I didn't have to commute today, that's for sure.

Hey Barry O'Farrell, weren't you going to fix this?


An Optus microcell? Me want!

Internet

An Optus femtocell

Optus have announced their own microcell (I can't bring myself to call these devices femtocells!) for sale in Sydney, Brisbane and a few places in between… to cries of outrage. I want one!

From Optus

It’s simple to install, secure, gives you up to 5 bars of signal and is compatible with all Optus 3G phones and Optus 3G mobile broadband devices.

Only with the Optus 3G Home Zone can you get your own private and dedicated 3G coverage signal that you control.

Optus 3G Home Zone is the newest and simplest way to boost your wireless coverage around the home and office. It plugs directly into your fixed line broadband service and uses your broadband data allowance to connect up to four simultaneous users. In fact you have the choice of adding up to 12 Optus 3G phones and Optus 3G mobile broadband devices.

The Optus 3G Home Zone is available for as low as $60 on selected mobile rate plans of $79 or more. A range of other convenient payment options are also available on other plans.

Alternatively you can buy the Optus 3G Home Zone Device outright for $240.

New! Simple! Expensive!

Fix the network!

First up, its no secret that Optus has spotty coverage, particularly outside urban areas. No wait scratch that, even within urban areas, here in Earlwood we're less than 12 kilometres outside Australia's largest CBD, and the coverage is so woefully bad I estimate half my text messages don't get through.

It seems people are up in arms about this microcell precisely because they see it as a stop-gap measure and as a way to shift the burden of poor coverage on their customers. Its not our fault reception in your house sucks, you didn't buy our microcell!

There's probably some validity to those claims, and I don't like it on principal just as much as you guys, but practically speaking if it will allow me to make reliable phone calls and write text messages from home I'm willing to implement it. We all know how long networks take to roll out new infrastructure in this country… yeesh.

Good, but should be free

Microcells have been in use around the world a while now, particularly in the United States where phone reception in parts doesn't sound like its much better than here. Microcells also allow phone reception in areas where even traditional base towers can't reach, such as (un)intentional Faraday cages.

Optus claims they haven't done this before and that they'll be working out how to bill such a device as time goes on and they learn more. I would argue that a customer should be able to get one free if they demonstrate to Optus that their phone coverage is suboptimal… a networking term for crappy. I don't care how many terms of service papers wavering all rights I've signed, if I can't make a phone call on their network they've failed in their contractual obligations. It should be free, and the data it uses should be unmetered otherwise they're double dipping.

I used a Motorola L series with my Palm III in the day

Finally, I've had people ask me on Twitter why I wouldn't just use WiFi directly instead of getting a 3G microcell that would pipe through my existing internet connection anyway.

They've got a point, and certainly for data it doesn't make much sense, but if your problems are quality of phone calls and text messages, I can see it being really useful. This is the aspect of its operation that blustery reports from the likes of The Register conveniently ignored.

Funnily enough, some of us want to use our phones as… phones?


Bean.app versus LibreOffice in Mac printing

Thoughts

Bean.appSo I had to help my sister Elke print a two part assignment today, one in Bean.app RTFD, the other in LibreOffice ODF. Both used the standard OS X printer window. Here’s how they performed:

Application Bean.app LibreOffice
Desired
outcome
Print two pages
to one
Print two pages
to one
Result Printed two pages
to one
Garbled mess

Elke says Bean.app and Exposé are the primary reasons she uses Macs! I masochistically hand code my documents in DocBook because I detest word processors, but high praise indeed ^____^.