Otherwise we’ll have nothing to laugh at. A new Apple ad.
Through a glass, brightly
A winter afternoon in College.
The pleasures of reading
Provided you wrap up warmly. Seen on campus on Wednesday.
Brown’s Major moment
Readers with long memories will remember the moment when, as his administration was sliding into chaos, John Major revealed in an interview that he sometimes tucked his shirt into his underpants. This interesting sartorial detail was instantly fastened upon by the Guardian‘s Steve Bell, who from then on always portrayed Major with his Y-fronts outside his suit. Well, guess what?
Those missing CDs
Here’s a thought: since HM Government is currently short of two CDs, why don’t we all send a couple of blank disks to Gordon Brown, 10 Downing Street, Whitehall, London SW1? By Recorded Delivery, naturally. We wouldn’t want them to get lost in the post, now would we?
On this day…
… in 1963.
The future of media
Interesting, dystopian video.
Thanks to Juanita for the link.
Musharraf: Pakistan’s very own neo-con
Interesting column by Sidney Blumenthal on how Musharraf has lerned a thing or two from Bush and Cheney.
Musharraf’s coup spectacularly illustrates the “Bush effect”. His speech of November 3, explaining his seizure of power, is among the most significant and revealing documents of this new era in its cynical exploitation of the American example. In his speech, Musharraf mocks and echoes Bush’s rhetoric. Tyranny, not freedom, is on the march. Musharraf appropriates the phrase “judicial activism” – the epithet hurled by American conservatives at liberal decisions of the courts since the Warren-led Supreme Court issued Brown versus Board of Education, which outlawed segregation in schools – and makes it his own. This term “judicial activism” has no other source. It is certainly not a phrase that originated in Pakistan. “The judiciary has interfered, that’s the basic issue,” Musharraf said.
Indeed, under Bush, the administration has equated international law, the system of justice, and lawyers with terrorism. In the March 2005 national defense strategy, this conflation of enemies became official doctrine: “Our strength as a nation state will continue to be challenged by those who employ a strategy of the weak using international fora, judicial processes, and terrorism.”
Happy birthday TCP/IP!
Today marks the 30th anniversary of the first TCP/IP message exchange between three networks. It was orchestrated from this van.
The exchange took place between SRI International, Menlo Park and the University of Southern California via London, England. The networks involved were the ARPANET, the Bay Area packet radio network, and the Atlantic packet satellite network.
This inter-network transmission among three dissimilar networks is generally regarded as the first true Internet connection. It was also a major milestone in packet radio, the technology behind WiFi and other kinds of wireless internet access.
On November 7, the Computer History Museum and the Web History Center held a special celebration of the moment with contributions from Vint Cerf, Bob Kahn and Donald Nielson.
Berlin here we come?
Some cheery news from the Guardian…
An unlocked iPhone may become available in Germany as well as in France, leaving Britain with only the locked version of the Apple device on sale.
T-Mobile has the exclusive deal for Germany but, after Vodafone mounted a challenge in a Hamburg court, is understood to be considering also selling an unlocked iPhone, at a higher price.
Orange will offer the iPhone in France on November 29, abiding by French law and selling an unlocked version – expected to retail at well above the €399 (£286) Orange will charge to those customers who sign a long-term contract.
Britons have no option but to pay £269 for an iPhone from O2 and then sign an 18-month contract. There is unofficial software around which unlocks the device, but this voids the warranty. O2 said yesterday that it was confident its exclusive deal does not contravene UK or EU law. Vodafone said it did not intend a legal challenge in the UK.
UK consumers can go to France or Germany, buy an unlocked iPhone, and use it on their current network; O2, however, said some services, “visual voicemail” and text chat messaging, would not work.
Hmmm… I wonder if I can live without “visual voicemail”, whatever that is.
Thanks to Kevin Cryan for the link.