geekage

This is interesting. Jim Bates, an expert witness for the defence in some of the Operation Ore cases we discussed, has been convicted of misrepresenting his qualifications. Specifically, the charges relate to whether or not he claimed to be an electronics engineer, despite not being one, and to his career in the Royal Air Force.…

Read More The Payback

Ha! Fixed. Despite the Mozilla Foundation telling you to install the Java Runtime like this: su rootpassword: yourrootpasswordherecd /usr/java/chmod x+a jre-6u5-linux-i585-rpm.bin/home/yourusername/Desktop/jre-6u5-i586-linux.rpm.bin It won’t work. But if you follow the rest of these instructions it should. Assuming you want Java in a directory called /usr/java/ and you downloaded the thing to desktop by default, that is.…

Read More Plugins for Firefox 2 on OpenSUSE – resolved

Whilst you snooze, this blog has been moving; I set up an alternate version of it some months ago using WordPress, but until now it’s been private. The upgrade should provide a generally less Spirit of 2003 look-and-feel, improved comments support (a frequent request), a recent comments service, better categorisation, and a linklog. I’d really…

Read More TYR 2.0 Beta

If this ZDNet story means what it seems to, Microsoft is looking at Python in the browser. Now there’s interesting…a Python Internet Environment, PIE for short?

Read More PIE

This story about the US Democrats, and specifically the Obama campaign, and their strategy based on small, autonomous campaign groups working from a honking gurt database of voters, hooks into something I’ve been thinking recently; in all kinds of fields, it’s all about big enabling systems that small autonomous organisations can benefit from. This is…

Read More Small groups and big systems