From those silly people at DeadTroll.com – The Sysadmin Song!
Category Archives: Writing
Doctor Who meets Dangermouse, almost..
This is interesting, the BBC is going to replace two episodes of missing Doctor Who video footage from the series The Invasion with animation by the award winning Cosgrove Hall company. They’ve got a 30 second teaser up at the moment.
Sounds great, but I’ve been conditioned into thinking of Cosgrove Hall doing Dangermouse and so I can’t help but think that perhaps they might introduce a new character..
Penfold: Oh crumbs Doctor, there’s them nasty Cyberwotsits again! Help! Ahhhhhhh!
🙂
Via: Sandra
An Unfortunate Headline
From the BBC:
Before you fear too much for the decorum of old Auntie Beeb, this is what it’s about:
Around 1,000 fans arrived for the Ivory Coast tie in their traditional bright orange trousers – but bearing the logo and name of a Dutch brewery.
To protect the rights of the official beer they were denied entry, so the male fans promptly removed the trousers and watched the game in underpants.
Talk about a strict dress code..
Chronic Fatigue Given as Official Cause of Death for First Time
New Scientist is reporting that CFS has been recorded as cause of death in a coroners inquest in the UK.
On Tuesday, coroner Veronica Hamilton-Deeley of Brighton and Hove Coroners Court, UK, recorded the cause of death of a 32-year-old woman as acute aneuric renal failure (failure to produce urine) due to dehydration as a result of CFS. The deceased woman, Sophia Mirza, had suffered from CFS for six years.
An Accessory For Those Feeling Flushed With Their iPod
Must have musical accessory meets household sanitation. the iCarta..
Tesla Down Under
Google Earth for Linux Finally Arrives (Beta4)
Downloading now – you can grab yours from the Google Earth Downloads Page, you need to look for Beta 4 on the right hand side.
Zimbabwe
The International Crisis Group launched a report on the 6th June called Zimbabwe’s Continuing Self-Destruction, highlighting the dire situation the country is in.
In April 2006, inflation officially topped 1,000 per cent, helped by the decision to print $230 million worth of Zimbabwean currency to pay international debts and sustain operations. Unemployment is over 85 per cent, poverty over 90 per cent, and foreign reserves are almost depleted. Over four million persons are in desperate need of food. HIV/AIDS and malnutrition kill thousands every month. Agriculture, the major source of foreign currency earnings, has been particularly hard hit. There are severe shortages of basic consumer items, and the prices of fuel and food are beyond the reach of many. The 2005 “Operation Murambatsvina” to clear urban slums forcibly deprived more than 18 per cent of the population of homes or livelihoods and badly damaged the informal sector, the lifeline for many urban poor.
The overview I’ve linked to above gives a good example of how complicated the situation is, with in-fighting within the opposition as well as within Zanu-PF. South Africa is trying to help by facilitating talks, but got caught out by Mugabe:
South Africa has tried to use financial leverage, in the form of a credit line, to press for new inter-party constitutional talks, repeal of repressive laws and an economic recovery plan. Mugabe sidestepped the initiative by printing enough currency to repay debts to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in February 2006.
You can read the entire 20 page PDF report freely available online.
Singapore Photos
I’ve just put some of the photos from our trip to Singapore where first I was at CCGrid and then Donna did 7 talks in 2 days!
These are from our trip to Sentosa Island on a “guided tour” which would have been great if the entire group hadn’t been bossed around all the time by the guide who was obsessed with everyone being on time! Ironic really given that Sentosa means “tranquility” in Malay..
US Government Gives Monty Python Response to Guantanamo Suicides
The BBC is reporting that 3 detainees at Guantanamo Bay have committed suicide by hanging themselves – but the camp commander seems to have been taking Life of Brian too seriously:
The camp commander said the two Saudis and a Yemeni were “committed” and had killed themselves in “an act of asymmetric warfare waged against us”.
Human Rights Watch are probably a bit closer to the truth..
Ken Roth, head of Human Rights Watch in New York, told the BBC the men had probably been driven by despair.
“These people are despairing because they are being held lawlessly,” he said.
“There’s no end in sight. They’re not being brought before any independent judges. They’re not being charged and convicted for any crime.”