Alec Muffett Update : Monday 17th July

From Bart:

I went to Lille earlier today and visited Alec — he’s doing quite well (I found it very noticable how his breathing is now much more relaxed than it was at the beginning of the week). We walked in on him enjoying his lunch, the dessert portion of which vanished extremely quickly…

Alec is, however, bored out of his mind as there’s little to do; he listens to his iPod, does some exercises (some for his lungs and some for the rest of his body, to retain mobility), looks at the shiny coloured things in his room, or the clock, or the emergency light over his bed… all in all, not the most exciting environment.

(He’s in need of his connectivity fix, so here’s to hoping he gets to Birmingham soon… and that they have wifi or so there)

He still has his drain in (because the insurance company wants it there should they finally repatriate him), which means he still has an IV in, and which also means a nurse comes in every morning and gets blood for testing (not overly pleasant).

His leg, in a kind of supporint harnass/cast thing, seems to be causing him no trouble (as long as it’s left in peace), so he has now added an ankle-mobility part to his exercise routine.

I have a new “Alec’s adventures in Lille” podcast and will send it to Geoff for posting tomorrow (I can’t get it off my phone right now so won’t be able to send it today – sorry for the delay)

From Rachel:

The insurance company are being really, really difficult. There is no guarantee at present that he will be re-patriated on Monday, they are putting un-necessary obstacles in the way. If things do not improve fast on Monday morning, then calls to local MP and perhaps whatever the insurance worlds ombudsman set-up is have to be made.

I suspect (and this is just a hunch on my part) that in the (very) long run, Alec may change his insurance firm for his bike/travel (the culprits are Carole Nash for anyone interested).

More news, when we get it!

Another Tragedy in Lebanon

The UK Independent Newspaper reports:

The Israeli bombing was directed at what the army described as Hizbollah strongholds in southern Beirut, as well as roads, bridges and fuel installations across the country.

An Israeli missile incinerated a van in southern Lebanon, killing 20 people, among them 15 children. Police said the van was carrying two families fleeing the village of Marwaheen after Israeli loudspeaker warnings to leave their homes.

Other raids on north, east and south Lebanon killed 14 people and wounded 37. At least 103 people, all but four of them civilians, have been killed in Israel’s four-day-old assault.

So the Israelis have managed to kill 4 Hizbollah at the cost of 99 civilian lives, that’s almost 25 civilian lives per fighter.

It is an appalling figure and yet the UN Security Council can’t even agree a statement calling for a truce, although it’s too late now for those civilians (and, I fear, a lot more in the near future) anyway.

How much of our humanity and caring have we sacrificed in the name of this “War on Terror” ?

Alec Muffett Update: Saturday 15th July

This was posted as a comment over at Alec’s last (to date) blog post by Joep Vesseur at Sun Microsystems:

I went over to see Alec just before he would travel back to the UK (so I thought). Your wishes and photograph went with me and made a deep impression on Alec. He is seriously moved by all your attention and best wishes for which he thanks you all.

His condition is progressing; nothing has come out of the drain in his chest for a number of days (so the internal bleedings have stopped). In fact the French staff has been willing to remove the drain (which causes Alec quite some discomfort[a]) but they leave it there because the insurance company wants him “drained” for the flight home (which it seems, in contrast to earlier statements, might not be happening anytime soon, see below).

As was mentioned before, Alec and anesthetics don’t mix: he told me that waking up after the knee-operation, the most logical explanation his brain could come up with for his current condition was that someone had registered a domain-name for his knee (can you say “nerd” The only problem he saw, while still in delirium of the anesthetics, was that he didn’t want his knee to have a free “fr” domain…

All fun aside, the current obstacle is that the insurance company is making life terrible by simply not moving Alec to the UK even though the French staff is happy to let him go and the Birmingham hospital is ready to receive him; I send out this message internally maybe someone reading this blog can advise as well:

Folks,

I drove down to France today to visit Alec (writeup on that later) and spent quite some time with Alec and his sisters to convince the insurance company that it is in Alec’s best interest to get him to the UK as soon as possible.

As it turns out, the insurance company (Carole Nash) (or more likely, the intermediary Intergroup Assistance) is continuously coming up with different requirements[1] in order for him to get repatriated and the way it looks now it might not be before Tuesday or Thursday before they can set “the wheels into motion” even though the French medical staff has been OK with moving him for a number of days already.

I’m forwarding a distress call from Alec’s sisters: is there any way Sun (or anyone working for us as an individual) can help in putting some pressure on the folks that need to bring Alec home? I am convinced that keeping him in France any longer than strictly necessary (today actually) will seriously hinder his revalidation and causes him a lot of grief (even though the French hospital staff is excellent, that’s not the problem). Not at all good for Alec, and not at all good for Sun.

So if you have any clue as to which strings we need to pull, or which pressure we can apply (maybe you’ve dealt with something like this and have a good tip), please let me “joep at sun dot com” or “bart blanquart at sun dot com” know.

TIA,

Joep

[1] even though they were OK—after a lot of talking—with trying to get him on a flight back home tomorrow, at 7pm they suddenly came up with the requirement that they needed a copy of the police report before they could start the process… The police report won’t be available before Thursday.

I have one or two pictures of his X-rays which I’ll try to get up here as well: broken ribs and screws in his knee..

[a] Alec to surgeon: “I need to have this drain taken out: my body objects to having extra holes in it” (seriously, it causes the swelling not to go away and keeps him from sleeping)

Inflatable Spacecraft in Orbit

New Scientist is reporting the successful launch of an inflatable spacecraft called Genesis 1 by Bigelow Aerospace which is a test of technology they’re working on to build various structures in space.

Bigelow themselves now have the first image from the spacecraft, a low-res thumbnail of the vehicle, saying:

We have extracted from early quick look data a low resolution thumbnail image of the Genesis I vehicle which verifies the success of vehicle inflation and solar array deployment. At this point in time, the vehicle is happy and healthy.

Genesis 1 Spacecraft in orbit, image by Bigelow Aerospace

More news at their site here.

Linux FUSE Port of “Open” Solaris ZFS

Because Sun unfortunately chose to create a new and GPL incompatible license for “Open” Solaris it is not legally possible to directly port their interesting ZFS filesystem code into the Linux kernel, so any Linux kernel implementation would need to be a clean room rewrite under a GPL compatible license.

However, there is a way around this license incompatibility problem for filesystems by using the Linux Filesystem in UserSpace (FUSE) project. It (as the name implies) allows a filesystem to run in user space rather than in the kernel, a system now used by many other filesystem projects as an easy way of providing a filesystem paradigm for all sorts of wacky ideas (including filesystem access to Wikipedia through WikipediaFS).

So the Google Summer of Code 206 project is sponsoring Ricardo Correia in Portugal to port ZFS from “Open” Solaris to FUSE – he’s keeping a blog of his progress too.

Ricardo writes:

I’m very pleased to announce that, thanks to Google, Linux will (hopefully) have a working ZFS implementation by August 21st, 2006.

Good luck to him – I’ve had a demo of ZFS on Alec’s laptop and it looked quite snazzy – it’s kind of a fusion of an online resizeable filesystem & logical volume manager.

Tonights Achievement – Stalling the German Advance into Norway

My good friend Iain and I have been playing the 1974 Game Designer Workshop Europa wargame Narvik, based on the Norwegian Campaign where both German and Norwegian/Allied troops faced off for the first time.

The Allied player (myself in this case) is trying to fight a slow retreat up Norway, hanging on as long as possible in the hope that you can muster enough forces in the north to capture Narvik and its surrounding hexes and (for a decisive victory) hang onto at least one port south of one of the “Weather Lines” that cross the board.

Well I just managed it – though Iain had been helping as I’d not played this before. I did manage to suprise him in the last few turns of the game by sneaking a couple of small Norwegian units around to a couple of lightly defended ports down south to try and grab one in case I lost the one further up. Unfortunately one was about 2 hexes too far to reach before the end of the game and the other was an indecisive battle between equally matched units..

Alec Muffett Update: Friday 14th July – Two updates and an operation!

Update 1

From Gilles via Rachel:

Just had a chat with Alec’s sister yesterday evening. Here is the latest news… and it’s good!

Alec was operated on his leg Thursday morning. Operation went well. He recovered from the operation very well.

Yesterday evening, he ate what seems to be quite a big dinner… so his appetite is now back up to what it is supposed to be!

They should be flying him back to the UK on Monday.

Update 2

Rachel’s description of her chat with Alec’s sister.

L… (eldest) has now joined M… in France, and will by now have surprised Alec at the hospital. Yes the operation went well, though he found coming round from the anaesthetic horrid. They reckon six weeks before he can put weight on the leg, and obviously in the long-run physio will be required.

M…. said that as well as a good meal, Alec had another good English Cuppa last night – to go with the box of English tea bags she’d been given, she has now bought a proper spoon and a Winnie-the-Pooh melamine cup, from which Alec can drink with the help of a “pippette” (straw to the English) as he is of course still fairly flat on his back.

M… is hoping that the Insurance firm do not mess up on the current idea of flying Alec home on Monday. The Lille and Edgbaston Hospitals and their staff have been brilliant – this is not something she says about the insurance guys. Apparently they keep moving the goal posts, and she is finding it very frustrating. Those of a praying style might like to bear this in mind over the w/e!

Alec’s destination is the BMI Priory Hospital in Edgbaston Birmingham, which I am pretty sure is this one: http://www.prioryhospital.co.uk/hospital/about.cfm (Not to be confused with any other “priory” hospital in that area!)

You will be pleased to hear that Alec has been very concerned as to the technical aspects of his room at the hospital – eg. Wireless internet and other things I don’t understand! Once there he will make a list of the things he needs (clothing is well down the list – there’s a surprise!)

[…]

That just about concludes this update. I am away Sat-Sun so things may go quiet, and anyway until Alec’s at the Priory I suspect that there won’t be anything too dramatic – unless the Insurance firm are a total pain!!