Thursday, October 27, 2005

I left my voice...

in Old Trafford. And what a sham.
Whether Flitney was out of his area was difficult to tell from where I was and just as difficult for the referee. It was the assistant who gave the decision. Unfortunately the referee who hadn't been able to see the offence committed deemed himself able to tell whether it merited a red card.
It was the wrong decision technically and morally. There are those who will trot out the rebarbative mantra about consistency, but no one was denied a goal-scoring opporunity, even though Flitney was clearly the last man. That makes it a deliberate handball and a yellow card offence. Instead the referee crushed the atmosphere for all the fans and ruined the biggest football game of two players' careers: the goalkeeper Flitney and Louie Soares, who was substituted by the new keeper Scott Tynan without touching the ball.
There may well be some positives to draw. If we'd had eleven men and got stuffed it would have been really embarrassing. At least we scored. The club should now be out of debt. But we spent over £50 each and took the day off work, spending nine hours on a coach for the referee to screw things up; and people taking their family up during half term spent more.
Football is a sport and the professional game should also be about entertainment. Despite what the phone-ins say it's not about conjecture and debate. If I wanted that I'd have stayed at home and watched Question Time.
By the way, if you don't know what I'm talking about, you can find out here.
addendum
I have since discovered that losing my voice was due to catching a cold. Flitney has meanwhile had his red card rescinded, which only serves to prove the referee's onanist tendencies.

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

All I want for Christmas

So he'd send his doting mother up the stairs with the stepladders
To get the Soccer Robot out of the loft
He had all the accessories required for that big match atmosphere
The crowd and the dugout and the floodlights too
You'd always get palmed off with a headless centre forward
And a goalkeeper with no arms and a face like his

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

Web 2.0, apparently

The analyst firm Gartner has been harping on about "global-class computing" for some time now, telling us how Google and eBay aren't really web sites but platforms and if we want to move to the next generation of the web, business will need to follow a similar model and think outside the enterprise box.
While it suits Gartner and those of us working in web development to think that the next generation of technology is here and that there is a clear threshold we need merely step across in order to attain super-webdom, Gartner's approach has all the symptoms of a futurologist's thinking. Specifically, it is based on technological possibilities rather than real requirements and is devoid of political insight.
While it's true that businesses should not need to host every application under the sun in order to provide a bit of brochure-ware with no idea of return on investment, there needs to be a compelling reason for people to make use of the always on, available from everywhere super fast web. And what's more — get this — it's actually got to work, securely, for people who don't need to be trained but who can make informed choices about their browsing preferences.
Content and interfaces need to be better. When I start up my application even at OS level, if I'm shopping I want the system to find me the cheapest product availabe. If I'm looking for an authoritative answer I don't want to be taken to Wikipedia. And above all I don't want to open up an application and have a couple of hundred offers for penis-stimulating pharmaceuticals.
The thing that gets me most about these predictions however is that they always forget the most important part of the internet: infrastructure. Anyone reading these reports would think that making a request to a web site or mail server and getting a response was some kind of auto-magical process, unworthy of comment.
Without infrastructure the web is nothing and beyond the shores of the developed world that's pretty much what you have. The entire African continent has barely as many internet connections as Manhattan island. Meanwhile there is dispute over who controls the internet's addressing system which, by a quirk of fate, currently resides with the U.S. government. Most states would prefer to see this control ceded to the United Nations, but not George Bush. He sees a danger in allowing countries which may prevent freedom of speech in controlling internet domains, but actually the fear should be that the U.S. will in future be able to simply cut an entire nation out of the internet: email, web access to uncensored content, everything. I guess it's better than dropping bombs on 'em. Meanwhile, what of the people working behind the screens? Will the global-class players act as such? Will Amazon allow trades union representation and remove the glass ceiling that prevents you from reaching management unless you're male and white? Will eBay recognise a duty to the consumer rather than training all its support staff to deny any errors and lay all the blame with whoever has just lost their money when their credit card details are stolen?
Web 2.0 will need to address such issues if it's not going to become yet another method for making capital, irrespective of social responsibility.

Friday, October 21, 2005

The new menace to society

There is a new menace on the streets, terrorising us in these autumnal days: social menace
The umbrella is a scourge, wielded by the incosiderate to strike at eye level. It can be used to buffet passers by and turn a tide of commuters into a maelstrom of madness. Why can't everyone just wear hoodies?
The office may be safe harbour, but it's as quiet as Highbury again this morning.

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

The Heat is On

2005 will bethe second or third warmest year on record globally according to the Meteorological Office; the exact place in the charts depending on how Siberia reacts between now and the end of the year.
1998 was the warmest year ever with the four next hottest years being in order 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2001. This is since records began in 1861 and includes both air and water temperature.
I'm not saying this to jump on some politically correct bandwagon, but in a world where the value of the Kyoto protocol is called into question and all the biggest consumers are struggling to cope with an energy deficit, it's often worth considering hard fact.

Monday, October 17, 2005

Wise Counsel

It's easy to harp and criticize, which is why I do it so often. Take an article from this weekend's Observer for example. The strapline began: "Debates about platonic relationships started with When Harry Met Sally ...". So not with Plato then.
On occasion, however, I prefer to relate something practical, so if you live in the U.K. this one's for you. (If you don't live in the U.K. come back soon and I'll have thought of something else.)
Death and taxes may be certainties, but there are always opportunities to reduce the burden of the latter. Fiscal forbearance should always apply and with Council Tax you can check whether you're over-paying very simply via the online valuation list. Simply enter your details and find out if your property is in the same band as your neighbours. If it's not, you can apply straight away to have it reassessed, albeit under a number of set criteria.
I've just done this and had our house dropped a band, saving us probably a hundred-odd quid a year... not sure how much exactly because Barnet council don't publish their rates. Would have been good to say "Here's what you would have paid..." Anyway, it's worth trying for two minutes of your time.

Thursday, October 13, 2005

The opposite of fast food?

Just popping out for a Chinese...
I will update this soon with some relevant content when I have time!

Saturday, October 08, 2005

Words of the week

Something for the weekend:
Go to google.co.uk.
Enter liar and hit I'm feeling lucky.
Enter failure and hit I'm feeling lucky.

And here's my quote of the week:
"There is no justification for Iran or any other country interfering in Iraq."
Tony Blair, 6/10/05

Friday, October 07, 2005

Guy Fawkes saved!

The government has decided that glorifying terrorism won't become a criminal act after all, which is fortunate given that Bonfire Night is less than a month a way. Wouldn't have fancied ninety days incarcerated without charge for celebrating Guy Fawkes; many people would have had traces of explosive material on their hands.
The home secretary has nevertheless given police the power to close places of worship being used by extremists; Opus Dei and the Alpha Group had better watch out. I wonder if this applies to fanaticism at football matches too?