BankSA Crime Stopper advertising

Media

BankSA Crime Stoppers

At BankSA Crime Stoppers, our advertising is as up to date as our technology! I kid, they do valuable work, but you'd think while they rearranged their advertising layout for widescreen HD television they would have updated the graphics and the pictured mobile phone handset too.

Though with all that said, ironically if its an analogue phone it probably has better sound quality than our current mobile phones! Wait hold on I'm typing this in Safari on my iTelephone and its complaining about a lost data connection.


Links for 2009-08-19

Internet

Links shared from del.icio.us today:

(categories: ssh linux debian openbsd howto software foss)


Poetry while you wait

Thoughts

I originally posted this story in Google Reader but thought it was worth sharing here. The photo above is of Allan Andre, a street poet from New York. From the New York Daily Photo website:

If you were guiding a young person, making a list of things not to plan doing for a livelihood, writing poetry would be somewhere near the top. So, poets must think out of the box and in doing so, take it to the streets. There are many benefits to taking your writing to the sidewalks of New York City – no persuading agents of the merit of your work, you receive 100% of the proceeds and payment is immediate. And often, skills and arts honed on the streets for an audience of passersby who are cynical and jaded, will fare well in a more conventional venue. Many well known performers have worked the streets early in their careers. Their material is the product of sifting out the unsuccessful material, leaving that which grabs and holds an audience, frequently with many other options.

Allan Andre hails from New York City. Online searches, however, find him plying his trade in other locales including San Francisco. See his website here. I met him in Washington Square Park and offered the subject “indecision.” Only some minutes later, typing away on a manual typewriter with a carbon copy, he offered me his poem. I made a contribution. See the text of my poem here.

As a computer science and economics student who no doubt will get a technical job when I finish studying, I really stand in awe of creative people like Allan who can literally create art out of nothing but a simple concept or idea. My late mum was very much like that too.

It takes a special kind of person to create art, and heaven knows I'm not one of them! How do poets, and writers, and painters, and sculptors, and designers do it? Don't look at me for answers!

I know if I ever find myself in New York or San Francisco I'll be looking for Allan and the Poetry While You Wait folks! Think they could write me a poem about why Objective-C is better than C++?


#Anime Bakemonogatari 05

Anime

Sitting down and reviewing an anime episode I've timed takes the same amount of time as three to four regular posts here, even if they're something obscure like a fun fact nobody cares about. Busy, but back to business. That sentence had some fancy alliteration.

Because the Hitagi Crab story arc only went for two episodes, I had wrongly assumed the Mayori Snail arc of Bakemonogatari would only last two as well, but here we are for a third serving in that gigantically surreal playground with that raised coloured track everywhere. Dang urban renewal!

After the fruitless search efforts in the previous episode desite Hitagi's awesome GPS phone, this one focused on Mayoi's troubled family life and how she ended up looking for her mum on Mothers Day (surprising though it may seem) in the first place. Or in this case the first "house". That sounded wittier in my head.

As someone who lost their own mum to a debilitating illness I can understand how difficult it can be growing up without a mum, but I imagine it must be even harder for someone who knows their mum is alive but due to a divorce and legal proceedings they can't see them. These characters and I have such happy home lives!

So after some spendgags about groping someone far younger than himself by accident and the subsequent bites which quickly healed given his past affliction (lots of thinks they expect you to assume and accept!) Hitagi returns and starts profusely apologising for pretending that she could see Mayoi. It's a coping mechanism because she wanted to appear normal.

We find out why she couldn't see her this episode, along with some funny takes of Koyomi arguing and fighting with himself from Hitagi's point of view. Even J.J. Abrams made a directing appearance:

Now due to Koyomi's desire to help people out of the blue Hitagi tells him in English that she loves him. My first reaction wasn't "awwww", but "what?" After only a few episodes, three of which were in the same day she drops a bombshell like that! Of course as she follows the tsundere personality to a fault, Koyomi is the typical guy who doesn't reciprocate but merely feins surprise and dodges answering directly.

And yes, it turns out they do find Mayoi's mum's house, or at least where it used to be (dang urban renewal) and her "state" is subsequently promoted. I had no idea spirits followed strict ranks and orders, and that by merging with a vacant lot that formerly held a place of residency it could generate an intense glow that apparently nobody else in the neighbourhood saw!

I gotta say, for a series that was so interesting and weird to start off with, having three episodes set in the same scenery with the same graphics was a bit tiring. I'm still liking the story, but here's hoping other things that get "promoted" are the scenes.

And of course an episode of Bakemonogatari wouldn't be complete with some just a bit of blatant fanservice, this time a bizarre angle of Hitagi just before she confessed her feelings. Allegedly you need buns of steel to confront Koyomi's spirit seeing ways!


No Costco in Adelaide any time soon

Thoughts

Firefox 3.0.13

It's official, the American megachain Costco has opened their first store in Australia and the Southern Hemisphere with plans to open more stores in Melbourne and Sydney:

Costco is a membership warehouse club, dedicated to bringing our members the best possible prices on quality brand-name merchandise. We provide a wide selection of merchandise, plus the convenience of specialty departments and exclusive member services, all designed to make your shopping experience a pleasurable one.

Costco Wholesale Australia will open its first warehouse to the public on 17 August 2009, in Melbourne’s Harbour Town Docklands.

Apparently there are no plans for an Adelaide store yet. What a shame ;-).


Three million Wikipedia articles!

Internet

3 million Wikipedia articles!

As Arnott's is always quick to tell us, there's no substitute for quality. That said, three million articles is still pretty damned impressive.

Unfortunately I've had a few too many negative experiences with dealing with some of the, shall we say terse senior editors, but that's not to say it hasn't become an important part of my life. For better or worse I nearly always Wikipedia something before I Google something now. Good think I got out of creating verbs out of product names. Speaking of which I need to Hoover the house and Xerox a few documents. Damn Kleenex and papercuts.

At least I don't get papercuts from Wikipedia!


Links for 2009-08-18

Internet

Links shared from del.icio.us today:

"Debian provides many Java implementations. Each of them have a development environment (JDK) and a runtime (known as JRE, or Java Virtual Machines JVM)."
(categories: java programming sun debian)

(categories: thinkpad x40 ibm hardware drivers windows dos)


Initial ThinkPad X40 review, is gut!

Hardware

OpenSolaris LiveCD

I'm typing this post as we speak on my second hand IBM ThinkPad X40 and I have to say I'm thrilled with it! While obviously larger in dimensions than a netbook, I just can't get over how light it is. I put it in my bag I usually haul my 15 inch MacBook Pro in along with my folder of study papers and as I carried it to the Boatdeck for my morning cup of coffee the bag felt like there was only the folder in it!

The machine currently has Windows XP Professional installed and even has the genuine OEM licence sticker on it. Given I'm not sure how much Windows software I'll need to run for my studies in the future I've decided to shrink the Windows partition and put FreeBSD on it with a boot menu.

The main thing I was worried about was the tiny 1.8" ZIF PATA hard drive, I had read plenty of stories by people claiming the 4800RPM drive is noisy and has slow seek times but it booted XP pretty quickly and loading applications didn't seem to take too long at all. Given this is a second hand machine I will be running SpinRite on the drive before I put any data onto it to triple check that it's functioning properly.

Even if the internal drive turns out to be working flawlessly, once I've got a bit more money I will be looking into a replacement if only to protect myself against errors that I can't see right now. 1.8" ZIF PATA drives are uncommon but not too difficult to find, 60GB Samsung drives seem to be going for around $80. Another option is Amazon.com stocks 1.8" ZIF PATA 16GB SLC drives for US$140 which is way too steep for my budget but could be something I get in the distant future if I still have this machine.

As for the other features, I've been using it lightly for half an hour and the bundled battery still reports a 90% charge which is pleasantly surprising! I was also able to connect to our WPA2 secured AirPort WiFi network at home without any problems, the next thing to test will be whether it can use my university's VPN.

I don't intend to spend much money on this machine but I did pick up a few replacement mouse stick caps for a couple of bucks, and a 12.1" screen protector for another few bucks at the Mawson Lakes Apple shop of all places.

I got me a ThinkPad netbook! Boo yah!


OpenSolaris doesn’t like 512MiB of memory

Software

OpenSolaris LiveCD

It really seems I can't catch a break with OpenSolaris! Unfortunately after trying it on my ThinkPad X40 it turns out it has insufficient memory — not to run, but to install in the first place.

The problem is, unlike FreeBSD and most GNU/Linux distributions OpenSolaris doesn't allow text based installations (to the best of my knowledge), which means you have to boot off the CD and load an entire live Gnome graphical environment into memory. I think this is a serious flaw and doesn't help to sway the rallying point that Jonathan Schwartz made in the early 2000s when he called it Slowlaris! But that's for another post when I have more information.

Because I only have 512MiB of memory in this machine it means the optical drive is constantly thrashing to unload and reload that last 200MiB+ of data that doesn't fit. The result is the installer took over 1.5 hours just to reach the screen where I could enter the timezone information of all things. I gave up at this point, perhaps if I had persevered for another 3 or 4 hours I may have got it installed.

As I said in my earlier post this machine supports up to 1.5GiB of memory so I intend to grab a Kingston 1GiB memory module (#KVR333X72C25-1G) as soon as I can afford AU$80, in which case I might be able to give OpenSolaris another try. For now it's back to my beloved FreeBSD or to Debian.


iTunes running for 80:16:19:22

Media

iTunes running for 80:16:19:22

Can that time really be right? Back in Singapore my dad and I combined have well over 130GiB of music and I don't remember seeing a time like that!