Got a phone call with my GP at around 6pm tonight to get the results of my HbA1c test. Fingers crossed.
Monthly Archives: October 2008
Pain! Voltarol to the rescue
Today I have thumb pain (again). I have obviously been sitting with my hands in stressful positions when typing recently. The day before yesterday my left hand ached, around the base of my thumb, and then yesterday my right hand started up (left hand was ok), got worse toward the end of the night and today it’s killing me. The pad at the base of my thumb hurts, and the tendons feel stretched again. So I’m slathering Voltarol on and hoping it helps. The fumes the stuff gives off may certainly help.
Just looking at how I hold my hands when using this laptop, I suspect it may be at the root of the issue if I don’t concentrate I tend to hold my hands above the keyboard but rest my right hand against the base of my thumb and then stretch my thumb/fingers around to hit keys and use the mouse-nipple-thingy.
Anyway, yay me.
Empire’s top 500 movies of all time
Empire magazine (online) has published a 500 greatest movies of all time, as voted on by 10,000 readers, 150 random hollywood folk and 50 film critics.
The format is a bit annoying (it means you have to click through lots of pages to see everything), but it makes for an interesting top 500.
You can probably guess #1 without much effort, but there was some surprises in the list (although with 500 movies, that’s a lot of variation in opinion and not much between them).
Traffic and Open Wireless Networks
Around a mile from home we got stuck in traffic today. Long queue, moving very slowly in fits and starts, along a main road off which the road we live is directly connected. It took us about 20 minutes to travel that mile, maybe longer.
I jokingly said to Grete I’d get the laptop out, find an open wireless network and blog about the traffic to pass the time. I didn’t quite go that far, but I did get the laptop out and click refresh regularly on the ‘find wireless network’ option. It’s fun to see what people call their wireless networks. Some people give their own names away, some people continue to give away the name of their kit (both of these provide room for abuse if you can work out which house the kit is in), and the majority of networks in the area near to where I live are secured. But not all of them.
I can’t believe how many people still run unsecured wireless networks. We were probably 20-30 feet from the houses we were passing, and I was getting signal strengths of around 15% to 65% from inside a car, with the laptop running on battery on my knee. In the rain (not raining inside the car, obviously). Do people not think, or do they think it won’t happen to them? The best bits were where we passed side streets, and we’d go from 2 or 3 networks in range to 10. There’s a massive amount of wireless traffic hanging around our streets. Most of them are BT Home Hub or Sky devices (and identify themselves as such). Here’s a selection of our favourites.
Clearly someone with a sense of humour.
This person needs to secure their legs more carefully.
Random unsecured network (and default name)
Don’t be Nosy! More polite than the first one.
Another default open connection not far from where I live.
That’s the view from my driveway. That’s not my wireless network.
The one I didn’t get a screenshot of, but wish I had was the one with ~70% strength, called ‘default’ which was unsecured. I’m guessing it’s unconfigured as well, and hence if you got connected you could probably also connect to the router in question and reconfigure it.
Friends don’t let friends run unsecured Wireless network devices.
Gemmell Award on Twitter
You can now follow the David Gemmell Legend Award website and info on Twitter.
Democracy alive and well
From http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=5963751,
Young voters at Drexel University in Philadelphia, Penn. have already been targeted, with students reporting that flyers have been posted around campus warning that undercover police will be at the polls on Election Day looking to make arrests.
The flyer reads like a friendly letter to fellow students relaying a warning from an “Obama supporter”: “He informed me that on the day of the election there will be undercover officers to execute warrants on those who come to vote based on the anticipated turnout,” writes the anonymous student in the letter which was later posted on the Drexel College Democrats website. “He advised me if I had any outstanding warrants or traffic offenses I should clear them up prior to voting.”
Lethal Weapon 5
So it looks like Lethal Weapon 5 may soon be in production. Little bits of news and rumour here and here.
Oh and it looks like the rumours of a Blade Runner 2 weren’t quite as accurate as feared. Which is good, because I truly can’t imagine a follow-up movie being any good. I guess if they did an Alien -> Aliens kind of thing where the second one was set in the same world but had a totally different slant it might be worthwhile.
Early presents …
Bought Grete an early Christmas present but since I’m not telling her what it is, I’m not telling you either.
The era of instant feedback
I think one of the greatest changes the ‘net has brought about, or maybe faster and more global communication has brought about, and which the ‘net is at the forefront of is immediate product / action feedback.
The feedback is so immediate that it starts well before the product even hits the shelves.
In the past, maybe a small core of fans and people ‘in the know’ would start talking about a new movie or a new game or a new book long before it came to light, and there would be a bunch of people who knew about it but the vast majority would not. Even those who did know might not have any way of sharing their concerns or joys with the people producing their product.
If we look at computer games in the mid-80’s, there were plenty of monthly magazines which talked about possible games, and reviewed existing ones. They had some letters pages, people wrote in, but the market was small and the hype about games was still confined to small groups of people. People making the games may have read the magazines, but what impact could three or four fans have?
Sure there was Fidonet and bulletin boards, and I’m sure there was chatter in those locations about stuff coming up. But the big change I think is when not only fans but producers of products started using the same medium for talking. I’m not sure when it happened and I’m too lazy to go and do a load of reading around the subject, but if you skip to today you can see the vast difference.
Now, months before a product is even seen people are claiming it is rubbish or the best thing since Jet Set Willy. Fans claim products have ruined their lives long before those products ever turn up. Movies, music, games, technology and everything else you can imagine, lampooned, praised and analysed months before they arrive.
Once the product is actually in the market, the feedback is immediate and abundent (if not always entirely objective). Prospective buyers can trawl Google for a thousand comments on a product that’s been out for a few weeks, companies get to see the impact of their product almost in real time.
It’s a big change.
I was thinking about this in relation to 4th edition Dungeons and Dragons. Long before it turned up, when Wizards were leaking/revealing details, people were worried and claimed it would ruin the legacy of D&D. Some people said it would be fine. Within days of it being released the ‘net was covered in feedback. I wonder how that differs from the release of the Master edition of D&D or even the first release of 2nd edition AD&D? I wonder how companies handle that information, if they do anything with it during the production phase ((which clearly the company who made Snakes on a Plane did)) and the post-release period.
Moptimism
moptimism (noun):
- the tendency to take the most hopeful view in all matters first thing on Monday morning, for around 2 hours before the reality of working for a living kicks in.
noun: moptimist
adjective: moptimistic
advern: moptimistically