Coldplay snubs Adelaide on their Aussie tour

Media

Coldplay photo by Wonker Wonker
Coldplay photo by Wonker Wonker

As much of a popular music snob I am (even when I was 13 couldn't stand 95% of the music I was hearing on the youth Top 40 radio stations!), I do admit to being a huge fan of Coldplay. They're unconventional, their lyrics are lucid and thought provoking, and the style is such a breath of fresh air.

For fans of the English Chris Martin and Co. in Adelaide though, we've been excluded from their scheduled tour of Australia. According to Adelaide Now, they'll only be performing in Perth, Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.

Despite my general apathy towards online petitions given they generally do little to zilch, I've signed the Adelaide Now and Sunday Mail's petition to bring Coldplay to Adelaide; if you're a South Aussie you might want to as well. So far they've collected over 1,000 signatures.

As a followup to this post, one sentence from the Adelaide Now article stood out:

A schedule clash with High School Musical Live, on at the Entertainment Centre from February 28 to March 8, means the band could only play in Adelaide after its final Australian concert in Sydney on March 12.

I've always thought the entire High School Musical franchise is extremely fake and downright creepy, but I never thought it could end up being partly responsible for messing up a Coldplay concert timetable. Darn you Disney!

On an unrelated note, any idea when they'll be in Singapore next?

Countdown to 1000 posts, thank you everyone!


Catpuccino

Thoughts

Catpuccino

Countdown to 1000 posts, thank you everyone!


Ruben’s words of camera phone wisdom

Hardware

A waffle iron

My latest piece of philosophical brilliance (uh…), brought to you by a cup of Boatdeck Cafe coffee. Friends, don't let friends only use camera phones in lieu of proper cameras!

Purchasing a mobile phone on the basis that it has a great camera is akin to purchasing a car on the basis that it has a great waffle iron. Mmm, waffles.

Thank you, and have a pleasant Saturday afternoon.

Countdown to 1000 posts, thank you everyone!


iPhone 2.2 makes MobileSafari usable again!

Hardware


The only downside to the new MobileSafari is the permanent Google search box stealing space from the main web address bar. It's not so bad in landscape mode.

The iPhone 2.2 update really has made this device I'm typing on now even more of a pleasure to use. Aside from the downright bizarre new layout for MobileSafari's toolbar, all the new features such as Google Street View (amazing), the podcast downloader (even if you are limited to 10MiB on a phone network connection) and a few helpful tweaks to the home button and to enable/disable auto correction are right on the money. You can listen to Rubenerd Show 257 to hear more about my experiences with the 2.2 update.

None of the features though are what I was most excited about, I was exited about what this update fixed.

At the risk of invoking Murphy's Law and forever jinxing this device, I can say that one of the primary advertised fixes bundled in the iPhone 2.2 update has worked. Since updating I've been able to use MobileSafari to browse all sorts of pages without it crashing at all. It has done wonders for my sanity.

As I mentioned in a previous post (Only problem so far with the iPhone: MobileSafari) before the iPhone 2.2 update MobileSafari would incessantly crash without warning, and it seemed to be getting worse. While it seemed to crash for no apparent reason sometimes, more often it would struggle with rendering larger pages or pages that used HTML forms or Ajax. Curiously it was the only iPhone application that ever crashed on me, and that includes all the third party apps I downloaded from the app store!

As I relegate more duties from my mammoth MacBook Pro to my iPhone, I'm finding myself using more tabs (or whatever they're called in this case) in MobileSafari to multitask. The relief I feel now that I can be confident MobileSafari won't crap out on me is overwhelming.

Thank you Apple for fixing this, it's a fantastic Yule present! Now if you folks could just allow another browser access to this device… say, oh I don't know… Opera then you've got my birthday covered too.

Sent from my iPhone

Countdown to 1000 posts, thank you everyone!


The GetUp Team on the Great Australian Firewall

Internet

No Filter, No Censorship, No Clean Feed, No Great Firewall of Australia

I was forwarded an email from the GetUp team by our infinitely fabulous close family friend [Little] Sue Heins earlier this week. I think it speaks so well to the issues surrounding Senator Conroy’s plan to have a mandatory internet filter on every Australian internet connection I just had to pass it on.

For those who want to learn more, you can read my previous posts on this ongoing subject and visit nocleanfeed.com, GetUp.org.au’s Save The Net campaign and of course Electronic Frontiers Australia. I’ll be posting a separate entry with further links because each time I create a post like this, I invariably find even more sites to refer people to!

Now onto the email:

Imagine a government proposing an internet censorship system that went further than any other democracy – one that made the internet up to 87% slower, more expensive, accidentally blocked up to one in 12 legitimate sites, and missed the vast majority of inappropriate content.

This is not China, Saudi Arabia or Iran – this is the vision of Senator Stephen Conroy for Australia. Testing has already begun. The community must now move to stop this plan. Click [the link below] to save the net:

www.getup.org.au/campaign/SaveTheNet

The system that Senator Conroy wants is a mandatory filter of all internet traffic, with the government of the day able to add any unwanted site to a secret blacklist. Already, the wrangling has begun for the inclusion of material relating to anorexia, euthanasia and gambling. It isn’t difficult to see the scheme is open to abuse.

Even when it comes to preventing child pornography, the filter will not prevent peer-to-peer sharing and is very simple to sidestep. The protection of our children is vitally important — that’s why we can’t afford to waste funds on this deeply flawed system. We should be concentrating on solutions that are more effective and won’t undermine our digital economy or our democratic freedoms.

This must rank as one of the most ill-thought decisions of the Rudd Government’s first year in power. We need to act now to tell big brother the mandatory internet filter is incompatible with the principles of a modern democracy and modern economy:

www.getup.org.au/campaign/SaveTheNet

Our government should be doing all in its power to take Australia into the 21st century economy, and to protect our children. This proposed internet censorship does neither. Take action to save the net today.

Thanks for being a part of the solution,
The GetUp team

PS – The proposed scheme will pass all internet traffic through a government filter – it’s like asking Australia Post to filter every letter sent in Australia. Click here to save the net.

Countdown to 1000 posts, thank you everyone!


DBS Bank’s support for Focus on the Family

Internet

Below is my letter to DBS Bank in Singapore regarding their latest Christmas holiday promotion which I'll be sending when I arrive back in Singapore in early December.

Ruben Schade
16 Balmoral Park
Singapore 228519
DBS Bank
6 Shenton Way, DBS Building Tower One
Singapore 068809

To whom it may concern,

Focus on the Family DBS credit card donations

I am writing to you to voice my grave concern over your company’s pledge to donate a "sum" of money to Focus on the Family for every 300 Singapore Dollars spent with DBS cards at selected shopping centres. While your company’s stated aim of donating funds to "a charity dedicated to helping children and families thrive." is enviable and motivated by a desire to help others less fortunate, I fear it may be misguided.

AIDS Awareness Focus on the Family is a conservative Christian organisation that spreads disinformation about safe sex practices which has cost countless lives, that persecutes homosexuals and perpetrates homophobia, and that refuses the right for women to make their own choices concerning their own reproductive systems.

While Focus on the Family’s Singapore chapter does indeed help children, they do not represent the moral views held by all of your customers. I believe there are far more culturally sensitive organisations that do not just subscribe to — and represent the views of — one religion you could be presenting your donations to, particularly given the multicultural and inclusive nature of Singaporean society.

After many years as an extremely satisfied POSB and DBS customer, I will be advising my family and friends here in Singapore to use alternative forms of payment this holiday season if they choose to shop at the shopping centres designated by your promotion.

Peace, health and happiness,
Ruben Schade


Installing Alpine on Mac OS X

Software

Build options available for Alpine in MacPorts
Build options available for Alpine in MacPorts

I've been asked by a few people on Twitter how I installed the lightweight Alpine console based email client on my Mac. Alpine of course is the current version of the pine email software that addressed some concerns about licencing. I love Alpine, and the logo reminds me of the classic Altavista :).

As with most free and open source software, by far the easiest way to get it running is just to install it from a package manager. You can go ahead and fetch the source tarball and do the usual ./configure, make, make install and make clean, but it does have several dependencies which in turn have several dependencies. You know what I mean.

MacPorts
For MacPorts, grab yourself the latest version and install just as you would any other Mac software that uses a setup assistant. Once you’re up and running it’s simply a matter of firing up your Terminal.app and entering in # port -v install alpine.

By entering # port variants alpine you can see all the custom options you can set. If you want to compile Alpine with one or more of these custom options, use the same install command above but append the options you want with plus signs. For example, if I wanted password files support I’d enter # port -v install alpine +passfile.

Fink
I haven’t used Fink myself much, but according to their online package manifest it is available.
NetBSD’s pkgsrc
If you use pkgsrc for Mac OS X/Darwin, Alpine can be found in the ./mail/alpine directory in your pkgsrc tree. Once you’re in the right directory, it’s the usual routine of # bmake install clean clean-depends. As with all pkgsrc packages on OS X, remember to use bmake NOT make otherwise it won’t work.

If you’re interested in trying the sophisticated and elegant pkgsrc system on your Mac, I wrote up a tutorial in a previous post you can use to get yourself up and running with it.

Happy emailing!


Calling BS on cancer wait and see approach

Thoughts


Indonesia was absolutely my mum's favourite place in the world

ASIDE: Since taking up using Google Reader I’ve started following some extremely interesting people’s shared items, some of whom I would now consider friends :).

Reading my Google Reader feeds this morning, I came across an article about cancer treatment, or a lack thereof. I generally can't read an entire article about cancer without choking up, but this morning I thought my better than average mood would act as a shield. Besides, the only way to conquer fear is to meet it face to face, right?

After reading it though, I felt so passionately about it I decided to expand on it here rather than on my Google Reader shared items. The article in summary:

A soon-to-be-published research study says various forms of cancer may sometimes go away without treatment. They say it is happening in larger numbers than they could have ever imagines. The New York Times reported on this story and said, “At the moment, the finding has no practical applications because no one knows whether a detected cancer will disappear or continue to spread and kill.”

Doctors say that if the theory turns out to be credible, this could turn into a huge point of interest within the medical community. Women diagnosed with breast cancer could be allowed to opt for a watchful waiting process, monitoring a tumor within the breast to see if it grows before deciding how to treat it.

I don't swear on this blog. I don't use profanities. This post though will be different. If you use a screen reader in a public space you may wish to skip this.

I officially call bullshit on this article. I call bullshit because the premise is extremely dangerous.

Their point is that some forms of cancer can just be monitored and all will be fine. My concern is that cancer is notoriously hard to monitor. Blood tumour markers can give you a rough idea but for example with my mum they didn't give details where the tumours are, and unless you get scanned every other day, there's no reliable way to see how it's progressing. Scanning and monitoring are also apparently seen in this context as being superior to being treated. Hah. My beautiful late mum was a noticeably different person when she knew she had to have scans. She hated them. She would turn into a ghost, tremble and wouldn't be able to speak. Scans and waiting for the scan results are terrifying.

Pink ribbon Every day you wait you risk having the tumor metastasise, and then you're in even more trouble. If you monitor cancer it "may go away by itself", what criminally negligent, utter tripe.

My beautiful mum died because some lax, incompetent doctors in Australia in the early 1990s treated her then didn't follow up because they thought the cancer had taken care of itself. SHE BELIEVED THEM. When we moved to Singapore she had scans for what she thought were unrelated breathing problems and by then the cancer had spread to the stage where it was completely irreversible. She spent over 12 miserable years in hospitals having chemotherapy after chemotherapy trying to contain it before she finally overdosed on pain killers last year because she just couldn't take the constant pain anymore. She told me she wanted to stay alive to see her kids grow up before she left. I'm choking up thinking about this.

I'm just as worried as the next person about people taking medication they don't need, and I believe that alternative treatments (if actually effective) can be superior to taking expensive drugs that you may develop a tolerance for, or addiction. With that said, if you have cancer HAVE IT TREATED. DO NOT GAMBLE WITH YOUR LIFE LIKE THIS. I cannot over stress this. If a doctor says that they'll be taking a wait and see approach with your life, tell them that for the sake of your loved ones and for yourself, you'll be adopting a wait and see approach with them and that you'll be finding a new oncologist.


Photo of Napier Road, just down the street from Gleneagles hospital in Singapore. My mum and I spent many an hour sitting in the Starbucks in the pictured shopping centre on the far left after her chemo but before the side effects set in.

For what its worth, Dr Tan Yew Ooo and the tireless nurses of the Gleneagles Medical Oncology Centre in Gleneagles Hospital Singapore are the most selfless, humble, determined, intelligent, friendly people on the planet. If everyone who had cancer could be in such capable, warm hands I imagine the world would be a far more beautiful place.


Diplomatic responses to my government bailout

Thoughts


The GLORIOUS seven star Park Barrington Hotel!

Yesderday I received a letter in the mail from my landlord's realty company letting me know that because I was one day late with the rent, I was required to pay four weeks rent in advance (My own current woes with realtors and rent). I was able to make the payment without problems, but it did anger me that I was being treated with such contempt. All this while financial lenders were receiving billions across the world to bail them out. I guess I shouldn't be surprised!

As you know though I can't stand dry posts with no graphics or photos so I uploaded a photo to Flickr of the terse breach of contract letter I was sent, along with the heading "Where's MY government bailout!". Well ladies and gentleman I've officially been called out by Department of Dadaist:

Clearly the fiscal policy of the current Ruben Schade has been found lacking.

His tactic of borrowing broken eggs from the future to make an omelette has caused a chicken and egg situation which has come home to roost.

For too long we have looked under the mattress to find that the cupboard was bare. This rent non-payment is the last fiscal straw that has broken the piggybank’s back.

We need to elect a new Ruben Schade so that all Australians, Singaporeans, Germans and Sims can hold hands and walk towards the sunset of a new economic dawn.

Yes we can.

And the Ministry of Manny the Mailman (that's some good alliteration) also had this official diplomatic correspondence to pass on:

Oh he’s Ruben Schade, The real Ruben Schade. All the other Schades are just imitating. Wont the real Ruben Schade, please stand up, please stand up.

My administration has responded with the following press release.

Dear respondents, concerned citizens and other such peoples,

I would like to assure everyone who has voiced their concerns that my administration is doing everything it could be bothered doing to avoid a financial collapse, especially if said actions are easy to do and have the potential to be filmed for some great television publicity. Under no circumstances will I be bucking to the extreme demands of the reasonable citizen who would like to see adequate checks and balances introduced along with the financial assistance packages we will be receiving.

We believe the only way to successfully move forward after our financial system is exposed for the hot-air filled, bureaucratic and self fulfilling system that only benefits major shareholders, is to ask as few questions as possible and let everything return to how it was before. We also don’t expect to be taking any pay cuts. If pay cuts are forced, how are we supposed to continue to fly our private jets between our nine houses scattered across the world? At some point we just have to admit this is the best for everyone. Because if the ultra rich aren’t well enough, ask yourself: are any of us then?

And remember, we’re doing this all to save this economy, and you. Be thankful.

Danke shen, arigato gozaimasu, terimah kassih and so forth,
Ruben Schade

The Department of Redundant Language Department,
Ministry of Oversight


Ended up as an non-ode ode to John C. Dvorak

Software

John C. Dvorak's trademark card throw on Cranky Geeks 067!
John C. Dvorak's trademark card throw on Cranky Geeks 067!

I've always been a huge fan of John C. Dvorak. Ever since I was 7 I was reading PC Magazines and always looked forward to reading his Inside Track and opinion columns, even if my age limited my ability to understand even half of what he was writing. I very often don't agree with what he says, but I revel in his delivery and appreciate his bluntness. There are enough soft and fluffy press releases from companies to pad up several phone books each week, it's good to read someone who can consistently and so poignantly cut through the crap.

Now if only PCMag.com could cut through the crap and create a website that wasn't so awful now that they're giving up on print magazines, we'd be on the right track. And folks, Inside Track worked because the inline headings for each paragraph were in a bold typeface so you could review each point in the column before reading the whole thing; please fix this on the web versions of his columns!

ASIDE: Dvorak started writing Inside Track the same year I was born. Yes, it’s old enough now to start looking for employment and perhaps take up some post graduate studies.

On the multimedia front (ah what a throwback word!) I can remember when I first started listening to this WEEK in TECH because I saw Dvorak's name, I had no idea who Leo Laporte was at that point. Because we moved to Singapore in the mid 1990s we never had CNET TV, so listening to him on TWiT was the first time I heard his voice. His Cranky Geeks webcast with Sebastian Rupley has become my favourite online television programme. Well okay that statement is somewhat misleading seeing as it's the only online television programme I bother watching. Tech5 is insanely useful for when I don't have time to comb through the millions of new news stories every day, and despite some of his listener's vocal opposition to it, I like the cauldron!

As for feedback, on Twitter John C. Dvorak is one of the few well known tech guys who actually replies to messages I send him and he even follows my tweets.

But despite what you may think having read this far, this post was not designed nor intended to brown nose and suck up to John C. Dvorak. I did have a point, and I was going somewhere with this, but it's completely slipped my mind. Damn it this is going to drive me mad! Perhaps I'll just leave it at that. How many bottles of Bordeaux is this worth do you think? :-)