August 2005

Where’s me Nuclear Powered Jet Pack?

Borg

Those of us brought up in the 60s, who fully expected to be traveling to work by nuclear powered Jet Pack from our free fusion electrically supplied homes by now, but instead are faced with wonders of the 21st century such as non-drip paint, the jug kettle and SPAM email, may be forgiven for being a little skeptical of BT’s new innovation timeline. Apparently we’ll probably have “virtual windows” by 2007 (Vista anynbody?), invented time travel by 2035, moved into cyberspace by 2038 (have they not heard of the year 2038 bug?) travelled faster than light by 2045 and met ET by 2050. Aye, champion!

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Lost at Last

LOST

This post may bemuse those on the other side of the pond who are well past the first series and are now being bombarded with repeats, but here in the UK we’ve just had the first ‘pilot’ episode of ABC’s LOST on Channel 4 along with a ton of ‘making of’, ‘behind the scenes of’, ‘where were you when ..’, hype of the third order.

Watching the show, it passes the time nicely, though the long term outlook doesn’t look good. An air crash on an impossibly beautiful island where impossibly beautiful people with perfect teeth and perfect racial representation hang around as the plot frugally drips in.

The committee of script writers have lots of prior art to work with: a boy looks at a comic with a picture of a polar bear, minutes later a real one materialises (Shore Leave), bickering amongst the ‘characters’ is resolved by fisticuffs on The Beach, all whilst the id-monster from Forbidden Planet, itself a rehash of The Tempest makes the odd appearance. Thus far, Lord of the Flies, it ain’t. Bad timing meant it came to us in the same week as “land of the clones”, The Island, hit the cinemas and was universally missed by critics.

The biggest puzzle is given it’s hard to point at a mainstream Hollywood film which leaves you with any question unanswered or end untied, why Americans put up with TV series which go on and on well past the point of smelling iffy. It’s well recognised that Fawlty Towers and The Office wouldn’t be as popular now if they’d jumped the shark. So, in eight years time, I guess we’ll still have no more idea what is going on, let alone where they’re getting all the toothpaste, sun bloc and hair gel. The big question is, will anyone still care?

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BP (Before Powerpoint)

Terminal

A few years ago, OK 19, I had to present our proposed architecture for a graphics terminal emulation card. This was before the days of Powerpoint when preparing slides involved drawing on transparent plastic with felt tipped pens. The photocopies of the hand drawn slides I just happened upon tickle me even now, in part because my ‘font’ was created by tracing the letters from a newspaper (the pre-Murdoch Times), but mostly because they demonstrate a shameless devotion to abstraction.

My current presentation tool of choice is slidy.

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A better view from here

Robin-Cook

Reading the obituaries for Robin Cook I was struck how well his resignation speech stands up today. He’ll be missed, and not just by the likes of Dead Ringers.

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Drilling a Hole

postit

In the middle of a DIY frenzy, I suddenly recalled a top-tip which saved a bit of mess - when drilling brickwork, put a postit note under the hole to catch the dust. Works a treat!

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