Archive for September, 2007

Recursive desktops. Nice. Not.

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

God, if you exist: Please let my next PC not be a Windows PC!

Yesterday night, in Vista’s COMPUTER view (what used to be called MY COMPUTER in XT), I accidentally dragged my desktop into Documents (due to the fact that I was using the touch pad rather than a real mouse).

And that proved very difficult to fix. After trying for over an hour, I now have the following structure:

…\michael\

…\michael\Desktop\

…\michael\Desktop\[my desktop files]

But also:

…\michael\Documents\

…\michael/Documents\Desktop\

…\michael\Documents\Desktop\Desktop\

…\michael/Documents\Desktop\Desktop\Desktop\

…\michael/Documents\Desktop\Desktop\Desktop\[my desktop files]

This appears impossible to fix. The desktop directories know they are special, and behave as links, but they are not links. Every fix attempt so far results in another recursive Desktop. Deleting one deletes the other, but I cannot move files from one into the other (in fact in that one directory I cannot even select multiple files for some reason.

What a mess.

UPDATE: another hour later, and using command prompts, explorer and especially Regedit I have restored averything. Messy. How do we prevent users (who do not know Regedit) from messing up their Vista installs?

Slippery slope

Saturday, September 29th, 2007

Everyone who knows me knows that I am a civil libertarian who fears that we have not seen the last of dictatorship and fascism. I am afraid I think most people are stupid - that is, they do not think things through. People go for simple solutions. and that is dangerous.

As The Economist says in the conclusion of its review this week of a new book about the Weimar Republic:

…two main lessons can be drawn. One is how quickly democracy can slip away. In 1928 the Nazis won just 2.6% of the vote; five years later Hitler was in power. The other, which Mr Weitz rams home in his last pages, is how often democracy is under most threat not from enemies abroad but from those who use its institutions and claim to speak in its name. These lessons are hardly new. But they are well worth stressing at a time when, in the name of the fight against international terrorism, individual liberties in democratic societies are being steadily curtailed.

The lack of belief in simple solutions is what distinguishes thinkers from George Bush, Adolf Hitler, and born-again religion. Nice to be decisive - but it just isn’t that simple. Science and philosophy are the opposite. In one of my monologues (diatribes, some would say) over dinner last night I explained to my boys (who are now both teenagers) that if I want them to have one property it is to think things through - and to delight in complex issues that force you to do that.

My example to them last night was veils in schools. “Ridiculous”, one of them says, that girls at his school are allowed to wear veils. I understand why he says that - but do you want the school to tell you what to wear? No, they both say - of course not. Absolutely not. A nation should not tell kids what to wear.

I agree - but then, what if a boy went to school in a dress, or a bikini? OK, so the school CAN tell kids what to wear and what not to wear. Ah. Complicated.

How far does cultural relativism go? Clearly the way the Taliban treated women is bad - that is not an interesting problem. But look at less extreme examples and things get much muddier. Are veils in our schools good? What if girls say they want them? But you suspect that’s Stockholm Syndrome in action? Covering yourself head to toe because you are deadly afraid of sex is a 5,000 year old abberation and should not be tolerated. But then back to whether governments should tell people what to do - and no, they should not.

A complicated problem! Great!

Terror

Friday, September 28th, 2007

A 1940s photo album was recently found that shows SS personnel at Auschwitz having a good time. See the entire album here [link] - updated. Follow the link to the album and see these people as they saw themselves. Several pictures include Dr Jozef Mengele, happily socialising with the other officers.

A salient detail: photo 105, and how it desrcibes the funeral of a number of SS-men who died as the result of a “terror attack”.

This “terror attack”, of course, was an allied bombing raid. Goes to show.

Ausweis Bitte

Thursday, September 27th, 2007

The Economist has a perceptive article this week about security and the rights we (and the British in particular) are willing to give up for questionable (I would say: non-existent) “terrorism reduction benefits”. The article is here [link]. Chilling reading: it seems to me that we really will have another Nazi event soon enough, since we seem to have learned nothing from the 20th century.

It is strange that Britain, which as The Economist says as recently as the 1970s was the liberal outpost of Europe, has regressed to the opposite side of the spectrum. I have been saying this for years: Britain was relatively free; it is now the most illiberal democracy in the world. Voluntarily.

The No2ID campaign makes the case against ID cards. These are not simple ID cards: read the officious language (so often used in England to allow outrages to happen) that describes the data that can be stored on the card. And read the rest of the site: Kafka would have enjoyed this.

(Kafka would have enjoyed this too: in Britain, almost every car journey is tracked and stored by police for five years.)

Back to ID cards. The issues with these cards are not just fundamental - they are also practical. The No2ID campaign, for example, makes one of the best points at the end of its page here:

Lost identity, becoming an un-person

By making ordinary life dependent on the reliability of a complex administrative system, the scheme makes myriad small errors potentially catastrophic. There’s no hint from the government how it will deal with inevitably large numbers of mis-identifications and errors, or deliberate attacks on or corruption of what would become a critical piece of national infrastructure. A failure in any part of the system at a check might deny a person access to his or her rights or property or to public services, with no immediate solution or redress—”license to live” withdrawn.

I lost my ID a few years ago - that is, I had it stolen. Through no fault of my own, I was that un-person for a week. As Canadian Embassy staff told me at the time: “even if Her Majesty the Queen walked into here right now and personally vouched for you, we could still do nothing without a valid form XYZ”. People do not realise the horrors of being that un-person.

Or of being that person. Germanic tribes like the Germans and Dutch have always held paperwork in high regards. Without paperwork you would have chaos! In the Netherlands, to this day you cannot just buy a house in any town you like: unless your house is in a certain price range, most towns demand that you get a “woonvergunning” - a residence permit. Which is not a formality, and which is often denied . And of course during the war the Netherlands sent more Jews to the Gas Chambers, as a percentage of the Jewish population, than any country in Western Europe: 95% died. In large part because the Dutch respected authority and had excellent paperwork, records, stamps, seals, compulsory ID cards.

Plus ça change. The Economist puts it in diplomatic language, but I am not a diplomat, so I will say it my way: people who do not fight back against this slow slide into total state power are contributing to the next Nazi Era.

We will not call them Nazis, of course; we will probably call them something like “ATHAPOOCs” (Anti-Terrorist Heroes And Protectors Of Our Children”, but it will be “like Deja Vu All Over Again”.

Unless, of course, enough of our children are taught to think.

And let’s start in England, where “They Don’t Need No Education”.

Outlook

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Can I just say that Outlook 2007 on Vista is probably the worst email app I have ever used: buggy as hell; no good html editing; filtering works much less well than in Windows Mail, the new OE; it is slow as molasses; it always stays in memory even when you are not using it; and the list goes on.

And the non-customiseable “Ribbon” in Office 2007 is the worst invention ever.

It seems to me that downgrading Office to make it appeal to idiots and ignoramuses may work for them - but it is not the way to create a good GUI. This is not the way Apple does it, for instance. That Ribbon is truly hideous, a productivity killer. No more similar menus - forget File-Print or Edit-Select All. Every app with a ribbon will be different. Everything is in silly and illogical pictorial “appeals to ignorant people” baby menus, but try and save, and it’s a symbol separate from everything away form the ribbon (why?) - and try to print an e mail and it’s nowhere - it’s hidden under right clicking the logo. And so on. Sigh. Yes, I am clever and I can find an option even if you put it 17 clicks away three layers deep under the wrong menu - but why should I?

I think the floccinaucinihilipilification (yes, I know how to pronounce that) of intelligence and knowledge must stop. You cannot fly a Boeing 747 without learning a few things. Same with computers. If you want to be efficient, menus are a good thing. Microsoft is to be blasted for removing them. Utterly idiotic.

Too free?

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

Today, OpenOffice.org version 2.3 was released. Another upgrade that makes OpenOffice an ever more viable product for both home and enterprise.

For those of you who do not know: OpenOffice.org (”OOo”) is an open office suite, owned by Sun Microsystems and supported by IBM and Google. It looks very similar to MS Office; it can write the same files (.DOC, .XLS, .PPT); it is small (100 MB for the lot); it does not try to integrate itself into everything you do; and it is free (as in, $0). You can just download it, click install, and you have a full-featured, tight, fast, office suite, all free of charge. Alone, or next to your other suite MS Office). And it even runs on Linux, a free OS, as well.

Is OOo a perfect Office clone? No - there are differences; some functions live where you are not used to finding them; MS Office document import/export is very good but not perfect; there are issues using existing Word macros; and no doubt there are a few bugs. But OOo is really very good: I have used it exclusively for several years now and I spend most of the day writing and reading Word documents, spreadsheets and Powerpoint presentations. I never run into issues; on the contrary, I find OOo much faster and tighter than MS Office.

So why is the world not switching? This constantly surprises me. I think the reasons are twofold. First, people just do not know about OOo and how good it is. Second, people in enterprise environments do not care if they waste money. “I want it, and someone else can worry about the money”. This is very shortsighted.. Third, they are used to MS Office and resist change. And finally - they think that an MS solution is the only one.

Sad. And unnecessary. Try it - take OOo for a ride!

Busy

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

The Unreasonable Man’s schedule is very busy, which accounts for the lack of recent posts. but he will be blogging again more actively very soon.

Express Post

Saturday, September 15th, 2007

I sent a radio to Italy after selling it on Ebay - I used Canada Post International Xpresspost. Mistake. “Xpress Post”, maybe, but “”Express post”, not.

  • 9 Sept: Item accepted at Post Office
  • 11 Sept: International item has left Canada and is en route to destination
  • 14 Sept: International shipment has arrived in the destination country
  • 14 Sept: Item has been sent to customs in the destination country

So it took two days for an Express package to leave Canada; then it took three days to reach Italy (which takes about 9 hours: so 63 hours were mysteriously lost). So that’s 5 days to get to Italy… and then Italian Customs grabbed the package, which should be good for another few days, I imagine.

That cost me $54.50 plus tax. And they dare call it “Express”! I think it is time these national postal monopolies just disappeared.

Evening

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

Limewire and I… “Won’t you please come to Chicago - just to sing”. It is really very odd that I am only just discovering Graham Nash, as well as the Mahavishnu orchestra and Chicago. And that is just tonight. Life is an adventure whose discoveries never stop. I have had 48 years of it already, and however many - or indeed few - I have left, no-one will be able to say that my life was boring. The things I have seen…

Borrowed thoughtlets for the day:

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

Thoughtlets for the day:

  • For an idea ever to be fashionable is ominous, since it must afterwards be always old-fashioned.
    George Santayana. Winds of Doctrine, “Modernism and Christianity,” 1913.
  • “I passionately hate the idea of being with it; I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time.”
    Orson Welles (1915-1985), American actor, and radio, film, and theatrical producer.

Clever people always think like me. And I am very modest.

Oh and about fashion. Look at this typical fashion page from Vogue [link]. Apart from the photography - very average, and I am glad to see it, since I too am called upon to photograph events like this sometimes, and it is really the best you can do with on camera flash - don’t they all look fake? I never used to know what people meant when they said “fake”, but boy, do I get it now.