Posts from July 2007

Facebook versus LinkedIn

OK. I couldnt resist any longer. Scobles recent post about this killer Google Reader application forced me to sign up for yet another pointless, short-lived, social network, Web 2.0 application - Facebook.

I was keen to preserve my 'Johnny Come Lately' status and was relieved to find, coincidentally, that Donncha had signed up just ahead of me so I am now confirmed as the very last person in the world to sign up for Facebook.

Scoble's right. Mario Romero's Google Reader application is blissfully simple and lets you browse friends' shared items and aggregates the most popular shared items. Once it gets enough traction, this application will indeed be 'Digg for intelligent people' (and me).

Facebook is better than LinkedIn because it's more human and it's more fun. That senior partner at Accenture with a tedious, dry 6 page CV can now be seen half-naked, pole dancing in Bangkok, juggling firesticks, laughing and simultaneously drinking a colourful cocktail through a novelty straw.

Facebook is aimed at a teenage audience and people who snigger at 'Poke Norman !' and I do have some difficulty with people writing graffiti on my 'wall'.

For example, some cheeky Irish builder wrote this: 'Urgently needs re-pointing. Can do you a deal if you get your drive done at the same time.'

Planet Earth by Prince

The 80s pop star - Prince - simultaneously delighted both his fans and horrified the music industry with his shock inclusion of a disposable CD with a leading (shurely shome mishtake) UK Sunday newspaper.

Norman Brightside, an avid Daily Mail reader, was absolutely delighted with the complimentary inclusion of 'Planet Earth' with his £1.40 Mail on Sunday.

'I simply love 'The Artiste Formerly Known As Prince'. Whenever I get invited to a fancy dress or themed party, guess who I always go as ? With this latest gift from The King (geddit?), we really are 'going to party like it is 1999'. I had heard a rumour that his latest CD would cost £8.99 and include a free copy of the Daily Mail but this surpasses all my expectations. Let's go crazy !' 'I am hosting a dinner party on December 18. Normally, I like to get things underway with some David Gray, bread-sticks and dips followed by Dire Straits and amusingly shaped carrots that resemble human genitalia. However, this free copy of 'Planet Earth' will make an ideal ice-breaker and help initiate stimulating conversation for at least 3 minutes.'

'My wife isn't quite so happy. She drove the 'Little Red Corvette' round all the newsagents and bought 153 copies of the Mail on Sunday because she thought she was getting a free CD single featuring the Duran Duran single of the same name. She is now suing Associated Newspapers for compensation as she hurt her back lifting the pile of newspapers into the recycling bin.'

Zzzzzzzz.

Stadium Rock etiquette

Lyrics plugin for Media Player and Winamp.

Although you will spoil the Reading festival for your immediate neighbour with your loud, tuneless, intoxicated karaoke at least you will know the words.

surreal taxi ride

uk

Last Thursday, I enjoyed an superbly entertaining taxi ride back from LHR. Unusually, the taxi driver wasnt waiting for me at the meeting point. I called the taxi company and was told he was 3 minutes away. He was actually 10 minutes away but, to be fair, he was extremely apologetic when he arrived.

The driver was a rather tall, imposing, Indian gentleman. Once in the car, he immediately got into a protracted and increasingly heated argument with the dispatcher about the address for his next drop-off. The dispatcher insisted the location was 'Surbiton' with no address. Not unreasonably, the driver argued that he needed an exact address.

Finally, he turned to me and asked 'Sir. May I ask you for your address ?' so I obliged. He then exploded at the dispatcher who eventually conceded that my address was indeed correct, wasn't actually 'Surbiton' and did include a road and house number.

Puzzled, I asked the driver why he simply didn't ask him where I lived when I got into the car. 'Because you, Sir, are the customer and I shouldn't have to pester you just because I work with complete idiots.'

He then informed me that 'while he wasn't a racialist (sic), British people were all incredibly stupid' and proceeded to expand this sweeping generalisation with the startling fact that 'last years Mensa study reported that 68% of the world's population was below average intelligence.'

He then proceeded to regale me with a variety of hilarious anecdotes from just two years in the minicab business.

One lady asked 'Are you a cab ?' to which he replied 'No, madam. I am not a cab. I am a taxi driver so please do not leap onto my shoulders.'

Another teenager asked if she could smoke in the car. He politely pointed to the 'No Smoking' signs clearly displayed and said 'No. I'm sorry madam. That won't be possible.' Undeterred, she then asked 'How much extra would it cost to smoke ?'. 'Well, madam, if you pay me the current market value of this car, I will get the bus home, you can drive this car to your garage and you can smoke there all night long.'

On another balmy summer evening, a rich lady from Mayfair didn't answer the door or phone for 15 minutes. When she eventually deigned to open the front door and announced 'she had been sitting out in the back garden with a glass of wine because it was sunny', he replied 'You're right. It is a lovely evening so I am ending my shift right now and going to sit in my garden with a glass of wine'. He promptly left her standing, speechless, on the doorstep.

Another customer threatened to call the office because the driver was slightly late and he had a flight to catch. He said 'Well it's not my fault that I'm late. Blame the idiots working at this company.' When the customer said 'That is outrageous. I am going to call your manager', he replied 'Sir, you can call New Scotland Yard for all I care.'

But my favourite story involved another rich lady. It was late on Saturday night, the roads were busy and the driver wasn't familiar with the area so he started to enter the destination address into the SatNav system.

The well spoken lady said 'Oh don't bother with that. Just follow that blue Mercedes'. My friend said 'Certainly madam but I really would like to key in the address as well if you don't mind.' The lady said 'Look. I've already told you once. Just do what you're told and follow the blue Mercedes.'

The driver complied. 25 minutes later, the blue Mercedes pulled into a driveway. The taxi driver pulled up at the kerb and stopped. He looked into the back seat. His well dressed female passenger was asleep and suddenly awoke. 'Are we there ye - What are we doing here ? Where the hell are we ?'.

The driver gestured to the car in the darkened driveway: 'Madam, you told me to follow the blue Mercedes.'

damned with faint praise

uk

My son, Norman Junior III, plays competitive junior tennis. When I watch him play, I tend to stand at a distance and remain completely silent. Outwardly at least. I always try to offer positive encouragement - congratulations if he wins and commiserations after a defeat.

My son wins some matches and loses a handful more. However, he always enjoys playing, he doesn't scream and shout or thrash his racket into the ground. He wins and loses with the same good grace which makes me just as proud as his sporting prowess.

However, recently, he was given a real hiding by a lad of a similar age, ranking and ability. When he came off, I said 'Jesus. If you're going to play and serve like that, I think even I could take a set off you.' I always call him 'Jesus' when I am cross with him.

This lunchtime, work and school commitments finally allowed the great Brightside veteran-junior invitational challenge to take place.

He thrashed me 6-0. I took him to a couple of deuces but only because he made a couple of unforced errors and threw in a few double faults. When Sue Barker interviewed me, in a sweaty and breathless state (me not Sue) immediately afterwards, she made the preposterous claim that I only made two outright winners during the whole 24 minutes.

When I asked my son for tips to improve my all-round game, he graciously replied

'You actually weren't as bad I thought. You did get some serves in.'

I may have lost but I can tell you, I really looked the part as I strolled out onto court 14, immaculately attired in cream flannels, cream blazer with a cream holdall embossed in gold lettering with 'NB'.

We then adjourned to Asda for an emergency purchase (toilet rolls) and I cheered myself up with the purchase of Editors 'An End Has a Start'.

This CD has been on my wishlist for a whole but I have been poised on tenterhooks, waiting for Doug Burns to divulge his innermost thoughts on this indie band but, sorry, Doug, I simply can not bear the suspense any longer.

I see Interpol's third album ('Our Love To Admire') is also out which has received negative reviews for being too similar to the previous two with vivid echoes of Joy Division so that has also been ordered.

out with the old, in with the new

A minor irritant with uninteresting email cluttering up my Inbox has resulted in some minor changes to my Web 2.0 first-team squad.

Akismet, the popular and widely used anti-spam solution, was letting an increasing trickle of irritating comment and trackback spam through. As I had configured email notification for all blog comments, this was generating pointless, tedious, worthless emails that simply had to be deleted. A complete waste of time and energy.

Initially, I toyed with the option to simply disable comments on articles older than 90 days which accounted for 95% of the spam but would block authors with valid contributions.

A little research revealed a possible alternative - Spam Karma. I was loosely aware of Spam Karma from the footer in Tim Hall's excellent blog

This blog is protected by dr Dave's Spam Karma 2: 23182 Spams eaten and counting...

as well as Andy Beard's positive review and useful tutorial on configuring Spam Karma. Initially, the Spam Karma interface was a little confusing. With Akismet, you literally set and forget whereas Spam Karma has a configuration page with a plethora of different options. Anyway, after deciding to start out with the default, out of the box settings, I just activated Spam Karma and waited.

Sure enough, the never ending barrage of spam trickled in and the vast majority were correctly marked as such, valid comments were allowed through and I couldn't detect any false positives.

The moderation mechanism wasn't quite as obvious as Akismet which emailed me whenever a comment was held for moderation. However, Spam Karma was actually better as moderated comments are held in the Spam list and can be quickly moderated from there. In addition, Spam Karma can email a daily/weekly digest summarising recent activity.

I have been running Spam Karma for almost a week now and not a single comment/trackback spam has got past the barriers yet. A truly impressive and valuable piece of software.

A few features in Spam Karma I really like:

  • All comments are assigned a score depending on various criteria.
  • Comments on older articles get penalised...
  • ...but older articles with recent (valid) comment activity score higher.
  • Instant comments within seconds of viewing get penalised.
  • First-time commenters are presented with a captcha.
  • Established commenters are recognised and scored accordingly.
  • Trackbacks without a valid reference URL are penalised.
  • My comments score higher than anyone elses :-)
  • A detailed breakdown of the score assigned to any comment is available.

-12.5
0: Encrypted payload valid: IP matching.
-2: Browser doesn't support Javascript
0.5: Comment has no URL in content (but one author URL)
-2: Flash Gordon was here (comment posted 8 seconds after page load)
-9: Entry posted 7 months, 3 weeks ago. 0 comments in the past 15 days
Current Karma: -3

I was so impressed I donated $20 to the author and that doesn't happen very often. Another source of unnecessary email was valid blog comments (albeit much fewer). The solution for this was obvious. Subscribe to my own comments feed and read them in Google Reader.

Another source of Web 2.0 irritation was that the Firefox extension for coComment broke some of the drilldowns in the revamped Google Analytics reports so I reluctantly stopped using it. This was a real shame as coComment was one of these Web 2.0 applications, I actually used on a daily basis.

Again, I looked for an alternative and installed co.comments (yeah I know - it's a Web 2.0 domain with an embedded period) which works fine. There is a Firefox bookmarklet (not an extension) so the author has to remember to mark any comments posted whereas coComment automatically tracked these 'conversations'.

The other advantage of the coComment extension was automatic notification whenever a comment was added to a tracked conversation.

Again, the solution for this issue was obvious. I simply subscribed to the RSS feed for my tracked conversations and read them in Google Reader.

a doctor writes

uk

Dear Cathy and Claire

I wonder if you can help me. I recently was asked to host a deluxe barbecue for some Scottish friends who live in a town called 'Glasgow', near Scotland. I live in London and had stocked up on decent cuts of meat, firelighters, barbecue coals (impregnated), vegetable kebabs and fish because some veggie always turns up unannounced.

As my wife is so quick to prepare her lovely potato and pasta salads and often brings the baked potatoes out before my BBQ is actually hot enough to start cooking, I took the precaution of stocking up on a few gas canisters and hundreds of gallons of fuel accelerant. She won't mock me in front of my friends this time. Oh no.

Anyway, I just popped into a corner shop to buy 514 gas lighters, and guess what. My beautiful silver Mercedes got a ticket from a traffic warden and then got towed away. In the dead of night, in the heart of London, those blinking traffic wardens and damned wheel clampers are still working for their stupid commissions. Can you believe it ?

A friend, Ali Akbah, kindly lent me his black 4x4 Jeep for the jaunt to Glasgow and it was a long, tedious journey particularly as I wasn't allowed to stop at service stations or smoke for some odd reason. Why - I was pretty relieved when I finally got to ~~the safe house~~ Uncle Mustafa's house and could use his toilet. I cracked that old joke 'Mustafa Wee' but he didn't get it.

Some of the very important guests for the BBQ were flying in from all around the world so I drove to Glasgow airport to meet them. Unfortunately, as I was so tired from the long drive, I lost control as I approached the terminal building. Instead of braking, I mistakenly hit the accelerator and crashed into the front of the terminal building and Ali's lovely, brand new black Jeep caught fire.

Imagine my surprise, when I managed to leave the vehicle and tried, in vain (and excruciating pain for that matter) to save my 756 Birds-Eye (100% beef) Quarter Pounders. I felt pretty warm and sweaty and slowly became aware that was because my clothes and hair were on fire so tried to grab an ice-cold can of Grolsch from the boot to cool down.

Imagine my relief, when a friendly policeman came to my assistance and tried to drag me away from the vehicle into the terminal building to buy me a Coca Cola. I fought with him, pleading with him to help me retrieve my 128 portions of finest rump steak but no, he insisted on dragging me away to safety.

To add insult to injury, a Scottish BAA employee then waded in and started to attack me, raining in kicks and blows, talking in a language I couldn't quite understand. It sounded like 'Whityedaein? Yae dinna come to Glasgae and mess with the polis, you wee bawbag !'.

My questions are:

  • Will I make a full recovery from my burns ?
  • If I rearrange the BBQ for Monday 30 August 2018 (late August bank holiday), would you both be able to attend ?

Cathy & Claire reply:

'Sadly, I have some bad news for you. Very bad news. You have 90 degree burns over all of your body. Your medical prognosis is not good. Even if you survive, you will be condemned to a life of skin grafts, complicated operations, expensive plastic surgery and you will have to learn to tolerate extreme levels of pain. You will also be horrendously disfigured for life. In fact, you are more likely to die than survive, particularly if the British authorities refuse you any medical treatment.'

'In the unlikely event that you survive, Ali Akbah is not pleased with the state of his Jeep, the loss of his no-claims bonus and has issued a £20,000 contract on your life.'

'PS. Cathy & myself would be delighted to attend the event if an alternate host (and venue) can be found. Just so you know, Claire is a recently converted vegetarian but still eats fish.'

Manchester City announce two new signings

Newly appointed Manchester City manager, Sven Goran Eriksson stunned the football world today by opening the transfer kitty and swooping within hours of his appointment, to announce two high profile signings from two major Premiership rivals.

The new arrivals are a combative 24 year old midfielder and an experienced, classy central defender

  • Joey Barton (Newcastle - £18.4 million)
  • Silvain Distin (Portsmouth - £7.2 million)

beat the bookie with Brightside

Seven weeks ago on this blog, I predicted that Manchester City would appoint a foreign manager.

'However, I have a horrible feeling in the pit of my stomach that, in seven weeks, Manchester City Football Club are going to appoint a foreign manager.'

I also suggested the name of 'Sven Goran Eriksson' as the most likely candidate to be appointed.

Now, seven weeks ago, you could get decent odds from your local bookie on Eriksson being appointed: 100-1 in fact.

So, I put my money where my mouth was even though I don't follow Citeh and decided to risk £10 on a long shot.

However, if you, dear reader, shared my convictions and also followed my sage advice, please do not waver now. Please do not be weak.

Now is the time to seize the moment. Now is the time to significantly increase your original investment of £10. Now is the time to be rich beyond your wildest dreams.

Bet the £1,000 proceeds (all of it) on this accumulator

  • Manchester City to win Premiership, Carling Cup and FA Cup in 2007-2008 (2,500-1)
  • Manchester City to win Champions League in 2008-2009 (50,000-1)

In just two years, you will be 125,000,000,000 pounds richer.

Tell William Hill, I sent you.