Search Results: "thep"

6 November 2008

MJ Ray: Elections and SPI: Open Voting Foundation

So, as everyone knows by now, the party which is a lot like our Conservatives won the US elections (instead of the other party which is a lot like our Conservatives). I’m particularly touched by Aq’s comment:-
The mood in America has been likened to the one here in 97 when we managed to kick the conservatives out for the first time in about 20 years, which amuses me. However, the fact that ours failed to live up to that optimism doesn t mean yours necessarily won t
Oh well, at least it was better than drifting further to the right (in both cases). I’ll wait and see whether it lives up to the optimism. As you may know, SPI is associated with the Open Voting Foundation. That doesn’t sit well with me - while paper voting is imperfect, it seems more verifiable and scalable than machine voting. I’ve been assured that OVF seeks to replace current election machines, rather than spread machine voting to new places and it looks like my area is not under immediate threat (ORG latest news), so I’m not working on it just now. Broadly, I agree with Simon Rumble on Voting machines: a solution searching for a problem?
So without even going into the serious problems with voting machines, it seems they don’t actually solve any actual problems, and I suspect cost a lot more to operate
I’m currently finding out more about standing for election to The Cooperative Group committee and ThePhoneCoop board - I’m not sure yet, but I think both still use paper voting. Cooperatives-SW and TTLLP both use in-person voting. What’s the current thinking here? What’s best?

MJ Ray: Elections and SPI: Open Voting Foundation

So, as everyone knows by now, the party which is a lot like our Conservatives won the US elections (instead of the other party which is a lot like our Conservatives). I’m particularly touched by Aq’s comment:-
The mood in America has been likened to the one here in 97 when we managed to kick the conservatives out for the first time in about 20 years, which amuses me. However, the fact that ours failed to live up to that optimism doesn t mean yours necessarily won t
Oh well, at least it was better than drifting further to the right (in both cases). I’ll wait and see whether it lives up to the optimism. As you may know, SPI is associated with the Open Voting Foundation. That doesn’t sit well with me - while paper voting is imperfect, it seems more verifiable and scalable than machine voting. I’ve been assured that OVF seeks to replace current election machines, rather than spread machine voting to new places and it looks like my area is not under immediate threat (ORG latest news), so I’m not working on it just now. Broadly, I agree with Simon Rumble on Voting machines: a solution searching for a problem?
So without even going into the serious problems with voting machines, it seems they don’t actually solve any actual problems, and I suspect cost a lot more to operate
I’m currently finding out more about standing for election to The Cooperative Group committee and ThePhoneCoop board - I’m not sure yet, but I think both still use paper voting. Cooperatives-SW and TTLLP both use in-person voting. What’s the current thinking here? What’s best?

3 November 2008

MJ Ray: Misleading the Public: BT and Windmill Opponents

The Advertising Standards Agency provides an RDF Site Summary (RSS) feed of their decisions, which seems to be updated more-or-less weekly. It can be an interesting way to keep informed about which companies are making misleading claims and why. One of BT’s internet adverts just got banned for a whole range of reasons, including truthfulness, substantiation, failing to name clearly the services that form the basis of comparison and also failing to differences between services. “The ads must not appear again” I’ve not trusted BT’s claims for a while - they assured me many months ago that they’d stop junk-mailing us and they still haven’t. I’m glad I’m with ThePhoneCoop. On another note, I spotted ASA adjudications on FLAT and BLEW anti-windmill campaign ads recently. Now they really seem to be full of hot air. I can understand why the Severn tidal power projects are controversial, but has anyone ever seen “paths littered with dead and dying birds” around a windmill?

MJ Ray: Misleading the Public: BT and Windmill Opponents

The Advertising Standards Agency provides an RDF Site Summary (RSS) feed of their decisions, which seems to be updated more-or-less weekly. It can be an interesting way to keep informed about which companies are making misleading claims and why. One of BT’s internet adverts just got banned for a whole range of reasons, including truthfulness, substantiation, failing to name clearly the services that form the basis of comparison and also failing to differences between services. “The ads must not appear again” I’ve not trusted BT’s claims for a while - they assured me many months ago that they’d stop junk-mailing us and they still haven’t. I’m glad I’m with ThePhoneCoop. On another note, I spotted ASA adjudications on FLAT and BLEW anti-windmill campaign ads recently. Now they really seem to be full of hot air. I can understand why the Severn tidal power projects are controversial, but has anyone ever seen “paths littered with dead and dying birds” around a windmill?

22 October 2008

MJ Ray: The Phone Coop, Best Social Enterprise 2008

a phone
ThePhoneCoop Congratulations to all our friends at The Phone Coop for winning the Best Social Enterprise Award at the Enterprising Solutions Awards 2008 yesterday. (TTLLP is an agent and I’m a member personally too.) Longer report at Cooperatives-UK. Comiserations to Barnsley Building Society, who are merging into Yorkshire Building Society after having 10m with collapsed Icelandic banks. Still, it survived further into the banking crisis than even the biggest of the demutualised building societies.

17 October 2008

MJ Ray: What topics do you want to read here?

I’ve just set up a poll on my site asking: what topics do you want to read here? Since this July, when cycling and most local and political themes were split off into other blogs, this site has been mostly Web Development and GNU/Linux topics, with an SPI article appearing most weeks, and minor themes of Koha news and ideas and general internet/telecoms issues around ThePhoneCoop. Finally, Drupal, OSCommerce and general business topics appear less frequently. By traffic, the SPI series seems by far the most popular (but at least one of those is heavily spam-attacked now, so I’d discount it), followed by other political themes, then the technical posts. I suspect that politics is getting a temporary boost because of the US and Canadian elections, even though I’ve not written about them much. But is there some other theme that people want to read about? The poll box on the right column lets you tick as many or as few as you want. It requires javascript, but if you don’t have javascript, please leave a comment on my site. If you want to suggest a new topic which I should add, please leave that in a comment too.

Jaldhar Vyas: Plumbing the Depths

Wow this Joe the Plumber phenomenon really seems to have Democrats spooked as they are now scrambling to find any possible dirt on the guy who dared to question Dear Leader. One might think people with a solid 6-10% lead wouldn't need to be so desperate but Adam is probably well aware of the Democratic partys penchant of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. A lot of these progressive types are still nursing resentment for the "swiftboating" of John Kerry and wary that it will happen again so todays strategy is pre-emptive douchebaggery before Karl Roves evil minions can sully the pristine reputation of their fair candidate. What they don't realize is that calling Kerry an America hating traitor worked because there was reasonable evidence that he threw his medals away, and made speeches denouncing his country which are typical of acts people associate in their minds with America hating traitors. The 527s exaggerated but the exaggeration would not have worked if there was not an element of truth behind it. Now no one is disputing that Obama actually did make the "share the wealth" remark. Whether the person he said it to is a republican plant or some other sort of nogoodnik is immaterial. Obama is a redistributionist and that is precisely the reason why liberals want to him to be president. And how pathetic is the "dirt"? He owes backtaxes? Gee I wonder why someone who already owes money would be apprehensive about having to pay more? A lot of people owe money at one time or another and even have liens placed as a result. Perhaps it is relevant to mention that for someone in public office (like oh, say, Charles Rangel who I'm sure Adam will discuss in his next post.) but for a private citizen? Isn't that one of the "chilling effects on free speech" we were going to be subjected to in Bush's America? The other one one was how is not a real plumber. Apparently he is not licensed but, sit down for this one, it is actually possible to do work without a piece of paper from the government. Really! I've seen it happen. Is it always a good idea to ignore licensing regulations? Well they often serve to protect the public from malpractice but then again they often prop up cartels. Here in the NY/NJ area plenty of people of all political persuasions seem to be willing to take the risk of hiring unlicensed plumbers and other tradesmen because at the end of the day, it's the, you know plumbing, that makes you a plumber nothing else. And none of this has any bearing on Obamas policies or what they mean for America. So if you like socialism and think its what America needs, feel free to make the case to the voters and perhaps they will agree with you or perhaps not. But stop with with the ad hominems against people who point that out.

1 September 2008

MJ Ray: Oddments from Planet Debian

Three replies to things I saw today on Planet Debian on blogs of people that don’t have fully-working web comment systems:-
  1. Professional Slide Installer (usual buggy blogger.com CAPTCHA) - yes, they exist. My village’s council sometimes hires them. I think they’re carpenters who have specialised. There are also professional slide inspectors (well, childrens’ play area safety inspectors, but professional slide inspector sounds cooler).
  2. Internet Speed Hype (usual buggy wordpress kind-a captcha) - ThePhone.Coop (UK) doesn’t cap, but charges extra if you go over your subscription amount. We have a monitoring system that lets you check your usage fairly easily and set up email alerts when your prepaid amount is almost used up. (I work for agent AG_471 of ThePhone.Coop but I think I’d like them anyway.)
  3. home of the madduck/ blog/ Recovering a lost default route (site under construction - see bottom of page) - I was told by a very wise man to always start a delayed reboot (shutdown -r +5) before messing with anything to do with the networking on a remote machine.

MJ Ray: The Phone Co-op: interview, phorm, challenges

Among other things, my webmaster cooperative is an agent for the Phone Co-op. Particularly with Free Software, cost-efficient ways of downloading data is a good companion service to have and the Phone Co-op has given a good ADSL and calls service to my own home and office for a few years now. When there are problems, they’ve worked pretty well to fix them. Just last week, I had a phone call to tell me when routing problems in LINX were fixed… which was a great help. I don’t remember an ISP doing that for me for years. I think the last one was my university’s dial-up service, 10 or more years ago. Another unusual thing for a UK ISP is the excellent public position on the Phorm ad-snooper that I mentioned previously: We strongly oppose these practices, especially the loss of privacy [...] Phorm is not operating on our users’ lines and we have required and received assurances from our suppliers that this will remain the case. Our Chief Executive Vivian Woodell gave an interview to the FT (accept the first two cookies, then block the rest, else you only get two paragraphs) which has a pretty good explanation of how the business side of the cooperative works. We’re recruiting for Line Rental (PSTN and ISDN) until the end of the year, including special offers like residential Unlimited Anytime Calls for 7.95 a month (normally 9.99) at the moment, as well as the great climate-neutral and ethical policies - if your landline contract renewal comes up, give it a look. The Phone Co-op was ten years old in June, but there are still big challenges: I’d love to see a cooperative pay-as-you-go mobile phone service and the mobile contract offers still look a bit expensive to me (no bundled data on phones, 25 per month for a 3G data card). I’d also love to see support for some daring innovative solutions like customers owning their own tails (tails are the last link to their house, where most of the UK has a choice of one provider: BT), using that as a way to upgrade small towns and villages to fibre-optic, or offer resident-owned wifi. Update: As if by magic, Ofcom has started a social web consultation about mobile phone services. Go comment.

20 May 2008

Martin F. Krafft: Guitar Hero 2000

People who know me are surprised when I tell them I play Guitar Hero, simply because I don t ever touch gaming consoles, or any computer games whose complexity surpasses Pac Man, with a stick except Guitar Hero, which is just fun. I also listen to a bunch of music, whenever possible, basically, and there are plenty of songs that I d love to try on Guitar Hero. Mel and I decided that e.g. Shine on You Crazy Diamond or Comfortably Numb are far up there (and they probably exist somewhere), but today I listened to Damn the River by The Phoenix Foundation and thought the same, yet I doubt that this song has been transcribed, which is a shame. I am well aware that sites exist, or must exist, which have songs for download, or you could make your own (check out Metallica s Master of Puppets there!). But that sounds like a lot of time lost, which I prefer to spend otherwise like today it occurred to me that Guitar Hero 2000 is long overdue. Guitar Hero 2000 is the Guitar Hero game that takes your song on audio input and scans it in advance and that fits the song to play to the five frets in the game in real-time. It can t be that hard. Where is it? NP: Pure Reason Revolution: The Dark Third

13 April 2008

Russell Coker: Car Sharing in Melbourne

Recently I noticed that some parking spots in the city area are reserved for car sharing. There seems to be two car sharing companies operating. Flexicar [1] costs $50 to join, has a $10 per month membership fee (which includes one hour of driving at a value of $12), and costs $12 per hour or $80 per day to drive a car plus $0.15 per Km if you drive more than 100Km in a day. They also have pre-paid plans which bring all the guesswork and complexity of mobile phone bills to car rental. Also they give discounts to members of the City Rewards [2] program which are greater than the membership cost, so anyone who plans to join them should join City Rewards first. To use a car you phone up or use their web site to make a reservation. Then you find the car you reserved at it’s designated location and swipe your card across the windscreen to unlock the doors (presumably it’s an RFID card). The glovebox has the key for the ignition as well as fuel cards for any fuel you use a BP, Shell, and Caltex petrol stations (presumably if you run low on petrol when not near those ones you end up paying). All you pay is the rental rate and any tolls for toll roads you use. When someone doesn’t return the vehicle to it’s designated spot on time there are penalty rates, which may include the cost of a taxi fare for the next person who had booked it. It seems like a really good idea that can save significant amounts of money for people who live in the central areas (the costs of maintaining and insuring a car are significant, as is the depreciation on a new car as an asset). The competitor is Charterdrive [3] which costs $25 to join (less than Flexicar but the same once you consider the discount), the same $10 per hour for 8:30AM to 5:30PM hours, and then cheaper rates for evenings and weekends. $25 for a night (5:30PM to 8:30AM the next morning) is good value if you want to drive home from work and then return the next day (if you work late then you might expect to pay $30 or more for a single taxi ride to get home). The weekend rate of $90 for 5:30 Friday to 8:30 Monday is also quite competitive, I expect that there are many people who only use a car on the weekend who could benefit a lot from this. $90 per weekend for 40 weekends a year (some weekends you would stay home or just use public transport) is $3600, insurance, registration, and basic maintenance of a car that you would want to own would cover most of that. Charterdrive does charge $0.20 per Km though for all journeys (with a discount rate of $0.15 per Km for long journeys on some plans), as opposed to Flexicar only charging $0.15 per Km for distances in excess of 100Km per day. Charterdrive seems to be a newer company and has a far smaller presence. But it’s business model seems a little different and the focus on renting cars for people to drive home means that some people might benefit from being members of both companies. The $0.20 per Km makes Charterdrive more expensive more expensive for most city use, and the discounts offered for Flexicar seem to make it cheaper for use during business hours. Charterdrive states that they have a deal with Red Spot Car Rentals [4]. It is not stated on their web site if you want to use one of their cars and they are all in use, I wonder whether a Red Spot car would be provided for the same price. Flexicar however claims that they aim to have a ratio of cars to members sufficient to make such things unlikely. Maybe it would be prudent to join both organisations so that if one had no vehicles available then you could use the other? In one city car park that I often pass the Flexicar and Charterdrive parking spots are adjacent so there would be no difference in convenience in terms of which one you use. I wonder whether they will continue getting adjacent spots. If many people join both organisations then it would be more effective if they don’t get adjacent spots to get better aggregate coverage. I think that at the moment the main challenge for both companies is to grow the popularity of the car-sharing business. I expect that the real competition for who gets the biggest slice of that business will happen in a few years time. Update: There is another Australian car-share company in operation named GoGet [5], interestingly I discovered their existence when I reviewed the Google advertising on this post… GoGet has a significant presence in Sydney, a small presence in Melbourne, and is only making a start in Queensland. Their hourly rates are significantly lower than the others (as little as $4.40 per hour) but distance rates are as high as $0.35 per Km. One significant benefit is that they have plans for two or three drivers which could allow an entire family to sign up on one account. If you drive less than 20Km in an hour (which would not be uncommon in city driving) then GoGet would be cheapest.

3 April 2008

Lars Wirzenius: Secret Life of Machines

"The Secret Life of Machines" is a wonderful British TV series from 1988, about how various everyday machines work. The first season (six episodes) covers the vacuum cleaner, washing machine, sewing machine, fridge, central heating system, and television set. All the usual kind of hard-core geeks already know all that, but since I'm not one of those, I enjoyed the show a lot, and learned from every episode. The show did not have a bid budget. It's less showy than your typical mainstream production from the US: fewer people, fewer computer generated effects, fewer exotic places, and not HD, either (what with being made 20 years before HD). What they lack in budget, they more than compensate in cleverness. It's truly a magnificent show. The wonderful dry British humor doesn't hurt. What's more, the author of the show, Tim Hunkin points people at places to download the show. One of the places is a torrent file at Pirate Bay. That's highly unusual. In order to encourage such behavior, and to help others enjoy the show, I am using some of the bandwidth I have to seed the torrent.

21 March 2008

Runa Sandvik: What makes you smile?

Don’t forget the words that made you smile a long time ago. Don’t forget the words that made your heart skip a beat, the words that gave you goose bumps in a good way. The words that made you smile a bit more, feel a bit better. And tell everyone about those words on World Poetry Day. In december 1999, at The Party, Replay released the demo Fall Equals Winter. The tune on this demo, I realize, is something that always makes me smile more and feel a bit better. With lyrics that, for some reason, gives me goose bumps in a good way. If I could gather all the stars and hold them in my hand,
the colors I would then possess would not be half as grand
as those which I have seen when I look deep into your eyes,
or come across when I have kissed your lips, I realize.
If I could ponder all the truths men sought since time began,
they would not teach me more than if I were to touch your hand
For truth to no one you have touched appear as simple lies
And nothing could be truer than your touch, I realize.
If I were given lasting life as only God could do,
I’d shun it all and turn away, if I could live with you.
For even God has never known the immesurable size
Of the love that’s within your heart, I realize.

17 February 2008

Martin F. Krafft: The Penny & Martin adventure: phase 2

Following the first phase, the second and final phase of the Penny and Martin adventure ended last Friday at Wellington airport. I am now 11 500 metres high on my way from Bangkok to Zurich, looking back at seven days on the New Zealand South Island, another in Wellington, and a night in Melbourne. Here s the summary of the 2200km we travelled, with selected photos inline. Penny has more pictures in her Flickr album. My New Zealand beer top-ten, in reverse order: Monteith s Original, Monteith s Black, Mac s Great White, Monteith s Golden, Monteith s Celtic, Monteith s Pilsener, Emerson s Pilsener, Mac s Hop Rocker, Emerson s 1812 India Pale Ale, and (drum-roll): Mac s Sassy Red. Yum! The Emerson beers get no links because the brewery website uses Flash. Thanks, Penny, for a fabulous two weeks! NP: The Flower Kings: Back in the World of Adventures

30 December 2007

Clint Adams: And like a heroin-addled bat, he was gone

I spent two hours answering the phone, ribbing the clients affectionately before sending their calls off to different areas in the firm. It was like I couldn't get enough. I had to stop when Carol came back to her desk and demanded to know what the hell I was doing. I rejected the first fourteen answers that came to mind, and instead gave her a shrug, a wink, and a fingersnap. Then like a Carmelob, I scuttled away and strolled back across town to my office. My dyspeptic boss tapped his foot in a hostile manner. He demanded to know where I had been. I rejected the first three answers that came to mind, and simply responded that I had been answering phones. Also I quit. It seemed the thing to do. Explaining to my colleagues that I had just freed up a bit of time, I returned to Carol's office, where I found her rocking back and forth in the corner. I turned off her light. It seemed the thing to do.

15 December 2007

Zak B. Elep: To Australia and Back: OSDC Brisbane 2007

Its been a couple of weeks since the Open Source Developers’ Conference in Brisbane, but it was only now that I’ve got the time to blog about it. :) This is due to some work that got piled in my backlog (I haven’t been lazy enough to have this work all automated yet :(). First off, my trip to Brisbane was a long one, due to the UNDP travel agency giving me a route taking me to Bangkok first, because of my exchange grant’s papers made in short notice. No matter: this being my first ever international trip, this meant that I would be visiting two different countries in just one shot. Bangkok was just an overnight stay though, so I didn’t see much, but their new airport was nevertheless impressive. Arriving there at almost midnight, the only bright places I saw were the big Suvarnabhumi airport and the Novotel where I had my layover. After some sleep, I had a pleasant morning, but only a short one at Bangkok, as my flight to Brisbane followed after: DSC06879.JPG The Brisbane flight was long, and I arrived just an hour before midnight. Now, my next problem was getting a place to stay. I took an airport shuttle to the Royal on the Park, where the conference will be held, first to see if there are any free rooms, or barring that, some recommendation on nearby places to stay, even if only for the night. I was quite anxious because I wasn’t able to arrange for accommodation prior to this trip (short notice, remember?), so I decided to go directly to the venue to be the best way of trying my luck. And try my luck it was! First, I was greeted by a front desk manager who turned out to be a fellow Filipino, and he helped me get a room in the hotel. At the time though, he could not guarantee that I can stay there for the duration of the trip (only for the night) but he would help me to find alternate accommodation instead on the next day. I thought that was good enough, since it was already midnight by the time I reached the hotel, and just a bed to sleep on for the night would do great for me to worry about moving elsewhere later. And the next day: Day 1 of OSDC: DSC06880.JPG I was up rather too early that day; the worrying about moving elsewhere settled in too early as well, and had made me check out very early so I can hopefully look for that alternate accommodation by lunchtime. One by one, the attendees came, and soon enough more than a couple of hundred people were filling the main conference room, waiting for OSDC to begin. And we began with a keynote from Rusty Russell on C, the humbling language and Ian Clatworthy’s talk on distributed version control systems. After the keynote, I was notified by the hotel management that instead of moving elsewhere, I can just remain there for the duration of the conference. I was quite relieved! For the remainder of the day, I listened in on the Perl stream of talks from Kirrily Robert, Josh Heumann, and Jacinta Richardson, on packaging Perl modules, Perl 6, and Perl code optimizations, respectively. Kirrily’s talk was timely since I am writing a couple of Perl modules to be released on the CPAN (one, Tie::Amazon::S3, is now up ;) On the morning Day 2, I listened in on Mark Rees’ talk on testing web applications using twill and a scripting language, like Python. I then followed Adam Kennedy’s talk on the CPAN 1.5, learning about CPAN::Mini, the CPANPLUS (which IIRC will be standard in Perl 5.10) and the Tiny modules in the process. More on the Perl stream continued with another talk from Josh Heumann on intermediate Perl testing, providing a humorous yet informative strategies not really just for testing Perl scripts or modules but for software testing in general: DSC06888.JPG Later in the afternoon was Paul King’s talk on agile developer practices for dynamic languages, covering Groovy and Ruby. That was later followed by Leslie Hawthorn’s talk about the Google Summer of Code and the announcement of the Highly Open Participation contest for the young geeks who are not yet in college or university but would like to work on open source projects just like the SoC-ers. After the day’s schedule of talks, there was a break before the conference dinner, allowing also for a short keysigning session and CACert identity check. Then, we had the conference dinner, sponsored by Google. There was also a game held: every table makes up a team who, given some Play-dohs and imagination, are to make up a bug’; the best bug’ wins a free book. Unfortunately, my table/team didn’t win any books, but that was beside the point anyway, as the bugs that were made up were quite something: DSC06898.JPG DSC06895.JPG On the last day, the morning talks I attended were all about Ruby and Rails. Nic Williams gave an introductory talk on Rails, then Paul King gave another talk, this time on Grails (the Java version of Rails,) and closing the morning session was Keith Pitty’s talk on Ruby for Java shops. For the afternoon, I followed Adam Kennedy’s talk on optimizing projects for wetware. DSC06936.JPG For the closing keynote, Nat Torkington talked about the future of software: DSC06945.JPG And with a day left before returning home, I went to sightseeing mode, bought a couple of books, and the mandatory pasalubong for the relatives. At midnight, my flight took me back to Bangkok, another long trip that touched down at the crack of dawn: DSC07034.JPG After a few hours’ wait, I took the plane back to Manila, returning home just after lunchtime. This being my first international trip, making it alone seemed to be quite an adventure. But I wasn’t really alone in this endeavor: kudos goes to the UNDP International Open Source Network for their exchange grant program, to my relatives for their support, to Free and Open Source Software for really making things rock (and free ;), and to $DEITY for being there. Until the next trip!

17 September 2007

Ross Burton: Sound Juicer "The Best Blue Is Through The Trees" 2.20.0

Sound Juicer "The Best Blue Is Through The Trees" 2.20.0 is out. Tarballs are available on burtonini.com, or from the GNOME FTP servers. Also thanks to the tireless translation team: Djihed Afifi (ar), Ihar Hrachyshka (be), Alexander Shopov (bg), Runa Bhattacharjee (bn_IN), Jordi Mallach (ca), Ask Hjorth Larsen (da), Hendrik Richter (de), Tshewang Norbu (dz), Kostas Papadimas (el), David Lodge (en_GB), Jorge Gonz lez (es), Ivar Smolin (et), I aki Larra aga Murgoitio (eu), Ilkka Tuohela (fi), Christophe Benz (fr), Ignacio Casal Quinteiro (gl), Ankit Patel (gu), Eyal Mamo (he), Gabor Kelemen (hu), Francesco Marletta (it), Takeshi AIHANA (ja), Young-Ho Cha (ko), Erdal Ronahi (ku), ygimantas Beru ka (lt), Raivis Dejus (lv), Arangel Angov (mk), Kjartan Maraas (nb), Wouter Bolsterlee (nl), Tomasz Dominikowski (pl), Og Maciel (pt_BR), Duarte Loreto (pt), Mugurel Tudor (ro), Nickolay V. Shmyrev (ru), Danishka Navin (si), Matic gur (sl), Elian Myftiu (sq), (sr), Daniel Nylander (sv), Dr.T.Vasudevan (ta), Theppitak Karoonboonyanan (th), Baris Cicek (tr), Maxim Dziumanenko (uk), Clytie Siddall (vi), Funda Wang (zh_CN), Chao-Hsiung Liao (zh_HK, zh_TW).

13 June 2007

MJ Ray: the Connection, paperless billing and post offices

Just got my copy of the Connection for June in the email today. Highlights: expansion of paperless billing and putting savings into a new sustainability fund that will be used to "green" the co-op further; profiles of Emerge, Cycle Training UK, Low Carbon Lifestyle, and Resurgence Magazine; not following BT's introductions of charges for 1571 ( 1/month), non-DD payment and late payment (up to 7.50/bill); free line transfers until end of August; new mobile phone services; previously-posted ADSL charging plan changes. (Note: I'm a member of this consumer co-op and my main company is Phone Co-op agent 471 if you'd like to join through us.) An interesting question is how that new sustainability fund will be allocated. I can't see an answer in this newsletter, but I've signed up for the extra paperless services anyway. I have mixed feelings about that: it may be helping save trees and fuel, but is it also further harming my rural post service by reducing the amount of post sent to me? Then again, it looks like the government has caused most harm to rural post offices by moving social service payments to banks and slowly reducing the number of services at rural sub-offices, while the Post Office themselves are doing "ludicrous" things like moving main post offices out of historic buildings and into the backs of newsagent chains. I care more about the offices than the delivery service and they don't seem very connected here.

15 May 2007

Biella Coleman: The Peer Review

Thanks to a Mr. Kandinski, I just learned about what looks to be like a really useful (and pretty) guide for graduate students and young professors.

12 April 2007

MJ Ray: Environment: Low Carbon Lifestyle Tour

Carpenter Mukti Mitchell has set off on a tour of the coastline of Britain in a zero-emission microyacht promoting low carbon lifestyles. During the course of his voyage, he will be stopping at 40 ports and towns around the country with events organised to promote low carbon products and services. He doesn't call at Clevedon or King's Lynn (I guess they're too far inland) but he's currently in South Wales and should be calling at Wells-next-the-Sea on 21 July and Sheringham on 23. More dates The Phone Co-op (agent 471) is a co-sponsor of this event with, among others, Ecotricity, Resurgence and Co-operative membership so at least two of my co-operatives are supporting it.

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