Corrie tonight was Richard's confession to Gail that he'd killed... well, most of Manchester. Well, maybe not quite that many people, but the death count stopped short of including Gail because the baby woke up. Phew. Gail should have just called Ashley and Fred. Ok, so there'd be one more murder on the street, but it'd have been a closure for him.
Woo.
I've spent a little while looking at the components of IRClients. Some of
the bits in it are just downright weird, but there's some powerful things
in there. A Binary Tree class, implemented with callbacks such that the
elements in it can be compared in an overloadable manner. You can inherit
from a BTree and get its functions, plus extend it to provide additional
facilities. The Handler class is built upon BTree and used it to locate
and dispatch calls to named handler routines. The Window class uses the
Handler class to dispatch click and other events to its clients. The Window
class itself uses the core List class to track all its elements. And that's
before we even think about he terror that is the 'unknown variable' handler
that the 'Array' class uses to provide an associative array... There's
even DrawFile processing and parts of the IRC client that actally were
used included the CTCP, DCC, HTTP, Email and FTP handlers.
I remember demonstrating the HTTP and FTP handlers at one of the shows to
someone. I forget who and I was really impressed with myself. Looking at
it on the screen wasn't too impressive - it was only line based HTTP,
and FTP is never that interesting anyhow, but when you see the manner in
which the clients have been written you do appreciate a lot more how it
works... oh my god, there's a External Edit client handler and a CD control
script in here.
Yeah, IRClient was so far ahead of anything else. Never mind that it was
just a 'reasonable' IRC client... it was a programming language that just
got out of control. Matthew... well, he had exactly the right idea when he
wrote the BASIC interpreter and did a really quite excellent overloadable
class system. It's a pity that my scripts just couldn't take it anywhere
useful .
I think I may have found a limitation in BasCompress's special control
files tonight. Annoyingly you can't do... well, something that's quite
complex and I'm not in the right frame of mind to explain; basically you
can't pass a string that's a known function stem reference to a function
that requires a function stem reference.
Got a reply back from Energis today saying that they couldn't trace the
threat email. That's not entirely surprising, so I'm not bothered. At least
they tried.
Hmm; something of a light song sequence...
-
One , by
U2
-
Tears in Heaven , by
Eric Clapton
-
Mockingbird , by
Barclay James Harvest
-
Moonchild , by
Celtus
-
Fatal Hesitation , by
Chris de Burgh
-
Boys Of Summer , by
Don Henley
-
Rome Is Burning , by
John Wesley
-
Heart and Shoulder , by
Heather Nova
-
Dancing In The Dark , by
Bruce Springsteen
-
The Power Of Love , by
Frankie Goes To Hollywood
-
Stay , by
Lisa Loeb
-
Constant Craving , by
K D Lang
-
Toy Soldiers , by
Martika
-
Jesse , by
Joshua Kadison
-
I want to know what love is , by
Foreigner
-
I'm not in love , by
10cc
-
All out of love , by
Air Supply
I had a listen to some of the bits from the Buffy Musical soundtrack last
night. At the time I saw it on TV, two bits stood out - one was Tara's
solo 'Under your spell', and Xander and Anya's duet 'I'll never tell'
(Spike's 'Rest In Peace' was pretty cool too). 'I'll never tell' was the
more funny and grabbed me more at the time but listening to them again,
I think I 'Under your spell' is really great. You don't get quite how
good Tara's voice is normal, and it really shows through on her solo.
'Cold Feet' was an hour and a half tonight, so I've missed the second
episode of '24' now. Quite annoying. I'm watching series one in the
background, too, so I'm slightly confused in places, but as I know how
we get to series 5, it's not quite as confusing as (say) watching two
series of Buffy.
After turning over from Lovejoy and notice that "Time Gentlemen Please" is
on. Now I'm not amazingly keen on it, but Julia Sawalha's in it, so I
thought'd be a fun way to waste a bit of time. So I was quite surprised to
see Colin Matthew's on in it. Well, Paul Reynolds. It was just quite
strange to see Linda and Colin together again. Well, the actors anyhow.
I'm a little Press Gang fan, even now .
Finished Monkey Island 2 tonight. Good god, that's hard. 3 and 1 were very
easy by comparison. The end of 2 seems to be a little bit... odd... It
doesn't really fit with the start of 3, but then... oh well...
I spent a ludicrous amount of time implementing an OCS parser in !RSS and
the front end for it. It's nothing special, but it does allow you to import
feeds from an OCS file into your local hotlist. It's depressingly slow. I
would have hoped that my cut-down 37k file would have parsed in maybe a
second, and probably faster than that. It seems to be taking around 20cs per
site which is quite a significant amount of time. For this cut down file,
it's taking around 5 seconds to parse everything. Working to the same scale,
the 1M file from Moreover would take over a minute, just to parse. And during
that time, because the parser is recursive and my code sucks at the moment,
it doesn't multitask. Pretty poor.
Watched Stir Of Echos tonight, because I wanted to just do something
simple. I missed the very beginning, but only about 20 minutes, I think.
Anyhow, it's quite a fun film. Sixth Sense-y, and not too scary (well,
I managed to watch it).
First episode of the second series of 24 this week, too. The thing to
remember that Jack's down to only one person to worry about now so he's
totally paranoid about her. Of course, with the general threat of
terrorism at the moment, having a long running series about a nuclear
threat in a major city becomes almost mundane. Well, maybe not mundane,
but you know what I mean .
As I'm sitting here, talking to Hedley about the bizarre ways of women, I'm
drawn to think back to meeting Caroline again many months back. It's nothing
special. Just that really strange thought of "I can't quite believe that I'm
here with her". It maybe isn't that odd, but it's just that feeling of
"everything you thought for the past x years is wrong... she doesn't hate
you ... you can still talk to her", and whether or not we still talk or
anything, that feeling that things aren't how you think is nice.
Dunno why I thought that. But there you go.
Friends tonight had a thing about Richard having taped over a film of
Monica and him having sex. Julian dropped me an SMS asking whether I thought
that this was a rip off of the 'Coupling' episode 'The cupboard of Patrick's
love', which involves the guys watching a tape of Susan and Patrick and
Susan finding out (ok, it's better when you watch it), but which Patrick
has recorded over and the guys don't notice until Susan points it out. Sound
familiar ? I never actually noticed that it was so similar really; I
recognised the similarity, but it wasn't until Julian mentioned it that it
really made me think about how similar they were.
Comment from one of my friends: "I hope the joke in question wasn't open
source"
Comment from another: "but then Friends wouldn't call it a joke, they'd say
it was a gag and thus separate from the main script".
Julian was probably unaware of the amusement over the weekend .
And whilst searching for release dates of episodes, I discover that the
Friends official site is one of those 'we'll stick a bloody pointless flash
site there 'cos that's good isn't it' things. So whilst it's still
struggling to load the intro to the Friends site, I've already found what I
need on the BBC's nice HTML site.
Anyhow, the answer is thus...
Friends series 9, 2002-2003.
Coupling series 1, 'The Cupboard Of Patrick's Love', 16/6/2000.
Which means that Coupling predates Friends. Astounding, huh ? Given that
people compare Coupling to Friends, this probably isn't even vaguely
interesting, but given that Coupling is hoped to replace Friends as a
regular TV thing, it would seem... interesting. Amusing, anyhow. In a
'coo, look at that' way. Nothing else.
Received the EtherY sources from Castle today, too. I've asked Jack whether
he wanted fixes and comments returning to him or not. Anyone wanting a copy
can just ask, but it would be better if they were somewhere sensible. It
would seem that SourceForge would be a good place for them, but it's really
Castle's call as to what they want to do with them.
So I'm sitting here waiting for builds to finish and I pick up the baby
Rubik's cube that Julian got me. It's not far from one face done, but
I've actually done that face and the squares that bound on to it now.
I'm just amazed 'cos I'm actually able to do this much. I could never
even see how to start before. Maybe I just needed to be tired.
I had a quick look at one
of the stories about pictures of galaxies from the Hubble telescope.
The pictures are really pretty cool .
![[Quote]](../images/quoteleft.gif) |
Oh my god.
Can open. worms everywhere
[ Licking the spoon?; Friends ]
|
![[Quote]](../images/quoteright.gif) |
Castle have issued a
statement on
the issue of the GPL. Basically, what they call the Kernel didn't
contain the GPL components. It was the HAL that contains it. So you
make of it what you will. Remember kids, don't be specific - don't say
Kernel when you mean 'beginning part of RISC OS', because you'll be wrong.
![[Quote]](../images/quoteleft.gif) |
Mrs Landingham! What's next ?
[ '...with a sense of dread...'; The West Wing ]
|
![[Quote]](../images/quoteright.gif) |
I got my first hatemail today, which is reassuring.
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From: "Osama Binlarden" <osamabinlarden2222@hotmail.com>
To: justin.fletcher@ntlworld.com
Subject: Risc OS 5
Date: Sun, 09 Feb 2003 11:27:44 +0000
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Status: RO
You had better shut your fucking mouth quick about there being linux code in
Risc OS 5 or I will kill you
You have been warned
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So in my best vogon voice, 'Hello, where ever you are. I just want to make
it perfectly clear that you're not at all welcome.'
The likelihood of finding out how it is is so very low and anyhow, it's just
not worth worrying about. Like the other mails of abuse I get over the diary,
it's just someone else who wants to say something but is too ashamed to say
it outright as themselves. No big deal.
Of course, this could just as easily have come from someone at Castle as
from any Joe-random user. Not bothered anyhow.
Anyhow, the Castle GPL issue is pretty much out of my hands now. Castle are
making a statement tomorrow which will - they say - clear up the issue, so
that will be an end to the matter. Unless it's not a good statement. We'll
have to see.
So, I'm sitting here, working hard trying to stop my code from crashing
rather evily, and I decided to try RSS on SlashDot and see if there's
anything interesting happening. Shocked, I am, (Yoda style) as I see that
my
story's the one at the top. Well, I say my story, it's Russell King
who's at the front of this, but it's my evidence behind this. Which you can
blame me for if you like.
My page of 'evidence' is really a little more waffly than it ought to be.
Which is a pity, but I don't write all that well - reports end up more
like commentaries. Anyhow... I'm going to bed now. I've spent about two
hours writing up the second version of my comments so that there's
information about the other two files, and dumps of the output files, and
it's finally beginning to get to the point where I need to sleep. My code
works now and it's getting lateish. Well, early. It's 3 am.
Oh, and the story's been covered by
Drobe
(well, obviously!),
The
Iconbar and
riscos.org.
Anyhow, I'm going to post this and then sleep. Try to avoid the fall out
tomorrow.
It's quite depressing the number of reports questioning the use of the
shuttle and manned space flight in general. Maybe I just want to see more
people going to space because it's such a great step in the right direction.
Nice to see that China are taking on board what's happened but are
undeterred.
Meanwhile, Blair's failed to convince Chirac that there should be a war with
Iraq. Can I move to France ?
For the past couple of weeks I've been keeping up with little bits of news
with the quite lovely 'Feedreader'. It's nice because it
gives you stories from various news organisations and other RSS or RDF feeds.
Because of this, I've been getting fed up with the constant Blair/Bush cack
and started moving on to more interesting things. The Science and Space news
feeds from Moreover have been really quite useful in giving an idea about
what's going on in what is a more interesting field. Every couple of hours
(or quite likely more often), there'd be a story about the shuttle and what
the astronauts were doing, and how they themselves were. It being the first
Israeli on the shuttle, there were lots of things about him. Stories covered
various things which had been happening, from the changes to the ventilation
system because of a breakdown, to photographing electrical phenomena; from
studying spiders making webs, to the observation of religion. It seemed
quite interesting, and exciting to have been hearing about the things going
on with the Shuttle crew and to keep up to date with its events. This
afternoon, though, I popped on the the talker, and drobe pointed me at the
BBC news site saying that the shuttle had broken up on reentry.
It's a terrible accident and an awful end to what has been a very successful
mission - as far as I can tell anyhow. My sympathy to those who were involved
in the project, and to their relatives.
It strikes me as odd that I should feel so badly for the family and the many
thousands of people who put the shuttle into action and keep it running.
There are so many things which happen in the world where so many more people
die that it seems almost narrow-minded to feel that a group of 7 people on
the shuttle should get more attention than the events elsewhere. I don't
know why it feels like that. Thinking about it, I don't relate to wars or to
the persecution that happens in other countries as well as I do to a
scientific accident. Probably that's because I just turn off from such
things because it is so depressing that such things happen. Possibly it's
because there was no conflict here - it's just people doing science and
doing it on the frontiers of our understanding. Possibly it's because I
have been following their progress and so can relate a little more
to the events. All of these factors are involved, I think, but it's
difficult to say anything more than that.
The other thing that strikes me - and this is the more careful side
thinking, 'cos the emotional side has again decided it's too depressing - is
what this does to the US space programme. Some simple background as I
understand it is that China are just beginning to embark on manned space
flight; the European space programme has been set back by technical problems
on its last comet chaser mission due to concerns over a previous Arieanne
explosion; and the NASA were reexamining the use of nuclear powered space
flight for extended missions. So far as I can tell, concern over nuclear
powered flight stems partly from fears over the effects if an accident
should happen during transition to or from space. Todays accident, with
debris falling over Texas will give much more credence to these concerns.
Shuttle flight will be set back significantly whilst an investigation is
made, which might make things much harder for the development and crews of
the International Space Station, I imagine. I would hope that this accident
does not set back the space programmes of any countries in the manner that
the Challenger explosion did, but I'm not all that hopeful.
Coupled with this, there's the issue of Iraq. How the Bush administration
will deal with these issues together will be quite important in the process.
It is unlikely that UK sympathies with regard to involvement in Iraq will
change much in the light of this accident - I don't think that in general
we're a nation that will blur the issue of sympathy over a space accident
and military action against another country just because they originate from
the same country.
|
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