Author: Adam

“I won’t let Yahoo! invest any more money in consumer inconvenience.”

That’s what Ian Rogers, boss of Yahoo* Music, said to Digital Music Forum West last week. Here it is in context.

Ian Rogers: I’m here to tell you today that I for one am no longer going to fall into this trap. If the licensing labels offer their content to Yahoo! put more barriers in front of the users, I’m not interested. Do what you feel you need to do for your business, I’ll be polite, say thank you, and decline to sign. I won’t let Yahoo! invest any more money in consumer inconvenience. I will tell Yahoo! to give the money they were going to give me to build awesome media applications to Yahoo! Mail or Answers or some other deserving endeavor. I personally don’t have any more time to give and can’t bear to see any more money spent on pathetic attempts for control instead of building consumer value. Life’s too short. I want to delight consumers, not bum them out.

Someone buy that man a pint.

* Sorry Ian, I don’t do the bang.

Books To Go

Very clever. Natty bookshelves that become easily transportable, with books, with a few twists of a screw.

Books To Go

(Hopefully Rose won’t be one of those arsehole designers that doesn’t get WOM.)

Cleaning the Paris Sewers

Apparently they used to shove a big wooden ball down there and let the water pressure push it along the sewer, until it and all the gunk it caught up in front popped out somewhere. I’d hate to have that coming at me Indy-style!

Sewer Ball

kexec looks kool

Sorry, that’s probably more appropriate for a KDE app, and this most certainly ain’t one of those. IBM explains it far better than I can:

developerWorks: Even if your work doesn’t require you to reboot your Linux machine several times a day, waiting for a system to reboot can be a real drag. Enter kexec. Essentially, kexec is a fast reboot feature that lets you reboot to a new Linux kernel — without having to go through a bootloader. Faster reboot is a benefit even when uptime isn’t mission-critical — and a lifesaver for kernel and system software developers who need to reboot their machines several times a day.

Unfortunately kexec doesn’t unload your apps before loading the new kernel yet, but apparently that’s on the slate. Given that some of my servers are solid-but-cantankerous old farts that sometimes stall at the BIOS level when booting, this’ll be a boon when I want to reload them remotely.

Bring me the head of the person responsible…

…for the traffic lights and 60kph speed limits on the N25.

I mean, seriously, only a moron would put traffic lights in instead of a flyover when three large local businesses would be feeding into such a busy road, and only a complete moron would keep working on it when one of the businesses announced a two year delay.

Yes boys and girls, the scumbags in Amgen pulled the plug on the Cork plant. They say the project has been indefinitely postponed, but we already know they’re lie through their teeth, so that’s that. Now we’re left with a dual carriageway with traffic lights and a 60kph speed limit, that doesn’t actually deal with one of the major arteries into it.

Seriously, I want that guy’s head. I want to play football with it. I’m pretty sure I won’t have a problem putting a team together. I could probably start a tournament.

(BTW, I’m running a book on when the Gardaí will start enforcing that speed limit. By rights they should wait a while now, but don’t forget that comfy little weighbridge shed at just the right spot. If there’s a kettle in there, the odds could rise dramatically.)

(Thanks for the heads-up Despod.)

Google’s Dictionary

I think Google must have a special dictionary that constantly redefines the word “evil” to suit their own ends. The words “privacy” and “competition” would seem to morph about quite a bit too.

In response to a letter the German data protection commissioner wrote to the European competition commissioner, coming out against the Google-Doubleclick deal, Google responded:

“We believe that this acquisition will increase competition and benefit both consumers and advertisers”.

Perhaps if they’d put the statement the other way around it would have been more believable. Of course it will benefit advertisers, since they’ll be in a much better position to target users as a result of the merge of company data. And it will benefit users on one level, in that those ads will be more relevant to them.

What about privacy though? Damien contends that the new kids on the block don’t care about privacy, and he’s probably right, but there’s plenty of us remaining that aren’t kids. And to be perfectly frank, many of us think those partiular kids are thick-as-shit reality TV vegetables, and their own worst enemies anyway.

To add insult to injury Google and DoubleClick add that “DoubleClick does not own, and has limitations on its use of, the data it processes for its publisher and advertiser clients”, which of course ignores the fact that DoubleClick does control the data. And the limitations.

But it’s the “increase competition” line that gets me. How exactly will a merger of two of the biggest advertising firms on the planet increase competition? Answer: it won’t. That would be a lie.

Little tip for you Google: Lying Is Bad. Some might call it “evil”.

“Illegible players”

Best thread title I’ve seen in yonks. Wrong on so many levels.

Rams fielded 4 illegible players against Bruins last night

MMM: 2010 Camaro

It looks like the US has found it’s muscle car feet again, after years in the wilderness. The new Camaro will look a lot like this, albeit with a b-pillar.

2010 Camaro

Sadly the Challenger will gain a pillar too, but I can’t see it taking too much from these cars if they don’t screw with the concepts too much.