coming up…
Just to say that next week we’ll be reviewing David Kilcullen’s Accidental Guerrilla.
Read More coming up…Just to say that next week we’ll be reviewing David Kilcullen’s Accidental Guerrilla.
Read More coming up…OK, this space should be occupied by a visualisation showing time series of airlines in the Viktorfeed by week, which ought to show what happened to BGIA’s share of the business. But IBM ManyEyes is down or at least not up, the data hardly fits on an OpenOffice spreadsheet in any sensible way, so you’ll…
Read More no data for someAn idea, seeing as no-one is very interested in ORGANISE and it looks like I’ll have to learn erlang to make any impact on it. Observation 1: The price of voice telephony is falling fast. Mobile operators provide some truly huge bundles of minutes, and there’s Skype and Co.Observation 2: Political campaigns of all kinds…
Read More don’t leave me hanging on the telephoneResistance – The Essence of the Islamist Revolution is Alistair Crooke’s survey of modern Islamist thought. It would be clearer to say it is a couple of books occupying the same space; one would be a history of Islamist thought since the origins of the Iranian Revolution, with a polemic for greater understanding of such…
Read More Review: Alistair Crooke, “Resistance: the essence of the Islamist revolution”Whining about Firefox crashes. Here’s one day last week: Start 09301515 – 5 groups, 111 tabs. Pressed page down key; CRASH. Resume successful.1538 – Hang. RAM usage peaks at 66%, CPU 1 goes to 100%1541 – Running, very slowly. Resource utilisation still very high1542 – Hang1550 – Cache cleared, normal ops resumed1813 – Hang. RAM…
Read More firefoxWhat is all this whining about MPs doing constituency work? It seems to be conventional wisdom across the more fogeyish commentators (Simon Jenkins, Vernon Bogdanor etc) that members of the Commons are spending too much time representing the interests of their constituents; no article on the upshot of the great expenses row is complete without…
Read More For constituency workI recall saying about the British press’s coverage of the US elections that, in contrast to 2004 when the British papers were where you went to for actual information, this time around they delivered the most anodyne and skewed conventional wisdom possible, just three days late. They’re still at it. Journalism! If you were going…
Read More news-style productJournalism! Where would we be without it? You can already see some of the risks of a country reliant on the internet without the traditional checks and balances provided by the professional standards of established journalism. During last year’s US election, several stories whirled through the media sourced to one political pundit, Martin Eisenstadt. You…
Read More oh, the interwebs