Posts from 2008

in praise of Frank Dancevic

uk

Two weeks ago, I made my annual pilgrimage to the Surbiton Trophy where I enjoyed a day in the sun watching an excellent Mens Final between Frank Dancevic and Kevin Anderson.

Norman Junior III also plays tennis at Surbiton albeit not to such a high standard. In the lull between the main event and the Men's Doubles Final, Norman Junior III and the juniors came on to entertain a handful of spectators on the two main courts, performing some standard drills with their coaches.

After two hours on court on a blisteringly hot day, I expected the winner, Frank Dancevic, to hoist the trophy for the obligatory photo, pocket his cheque and beat an hasty retreat to get a shower and a cold drink. However, much to my surprise, Dancevic joined in with the boys and girls playing with some 6 year olds on a quarter size court with orange balls.

Dancevic was absolutely brilliant with the kids, laughing and joking and even throwing in some grunts if he struggled to make a return. He then rallied with some up and coming teenagers who were very keen to score a point off the professional. Even after the fun session was over, Frank still made more time available to chat and sign the kids' tennis bags.

Last night, on Court 1 at Wimbledon, there was a minor shock as Frank Dancevic beat David Nalbandian in straight sets (6-4, 6-2, 6-4). Nalbandian was the 7th seed for Wimbledon while Dancevic is ranked 98 in the world and unseeded.

Well played Frank and good luck in the next round against Bobby Reynolds.

Intranet on the Internet

Oracle AppsLab is one of my longest standing and favourite blogs.

Jake Kuramoto (and the AppsLab team) always post interesting and thought provoking articles and I also share a few areas of common interest (Twitter, Disqus, FriendFeed et al).

Although I happen to work for the same company as Jake Kuramoto, I have never actually met Jake in person. Curiously, I have had more interactions with Jake by commenting on the blog as opposed to communications via Oracle email.

When I read this recent post announcing a new version of Oracle Connect (an internal networking initiative within Oracle behind the corporate firewall), my immediate reaction was: 'Why did he post this to the AppsLab blog ? Why on earth would this possibly be relevant, or of interest, to non Oracle employees ?'

Then I realised such internal developments are of interest to a wider audience as it demonstrates Oracle's commitment to 'Web 2.0' technologies.

I also pondered how long it would have taken me to find out about this upgrade if I wasn't subscribed to the AppsLab blog.

There is a certain irony in finding out about internal developments within Oracle on a public blog.

BRU-LHR

On Friday I returned from a very enjoyable week in Brussels. Hard work, challenging customer and miscellaneous technical issues. However, unusually, I had the pleasure of the company of a few of colleagues so we were able to have a chat over a meal and share a few excellent beers together.

Over the past five years, I have visited so many European airports, that they all tend to blur into one. However, certain key characteristics soon reminded me that I was indeed back in Brussels.

The lengthy queue for the 123 taxis to pass the roadworks to reach the set down area. The massive queue to clear passport control. The cursory glance at your passport from the policeman followed by a grunt. The long and winding road to security. The same officious, self-satisfied, arrogant security staff. Unfortunately, this queue doesn't actually move as crew (acceptable) and security staff, cleaners, shop assistants (less so) keep jumping the queue because they are so important.

The short flight itself is uneventful enough although there is a little turbulence on the descent into London. Then, as I fold my tray and return my seat to the upright position, fear is struck into the very core of my heart as I witness something no-one should ever have to witness on an aircraft.

My immediate neighbour reaches into here rucksack for a bottle of orange Powerade. She stands up and screams 'For the glory of Allah !' and switches her digital watch to UK time. No, no - only joking.

Suddenly and without any warning, the young lady next to me reaches for the 'Call' button with her left hand while simultaneously extracting the 'Sick Bag, unfolding it and skilfully placing it under her mouth.

I respond by edging away, averting my gaze and covering my knees and expensive Pierre Cardin suit with various sections of the Daily Mail. I note an interesting story about fashions for the summer on my right thigh.

The BA stewardess comes promptly and is kind and reassuring. A glass of iced water arrives and she dispenses some magnificent advice on coping with motion sickness: 'Take your jacket off to stay cool, keeping sipping the water and oh - don't forget to breathe.'

Once we clear the cloud cover, the flight is smooth once again and the potential crisis is averted.

We land at Terminal 5 and park on a remote stand. Unfortunately, the young lady is unable to disembark, get some fresh air and rush to the nearest lavatory. After 10 minutes, the smooth, well-spoken co-pilot announces the bad news:

'I'm awfully sorry, ladies and gentlemen but there will be a slight delay. We are just waiting for some steps and buses to be brought to the aircraft but BAA groundstaff have been practising for the tomorrow's arrival of George W. Bush and there are now significant delays as a result.'

After 15 minutes, no-one screams with delight or initiates mock applause at the sight of a single bus. We are British, you see. The steps arrive 5 minutes later so half the passengers are free to disembark. But not us, sitting in rows 15-28.

I contemplate brandishing a bottle of Lemon Powerade and and screaming 'Take me out of here to the land of Heinz 57 vestal virgins. Now.' While this might accelerate my exit from my plane, it might leave me with some explaining to do.

Finally, after 35 mins, we descend the steps. The co-pilot was indeed correct. BAA have been busy practising for Bush's arrival. There are eggs, rotten tomatoes and discarded placards strewn across the tarmac. I pause briefly to kiss the ground before boarding the bus. I am left with the pungent after-taste of rotten egg in my mouth.

How ironic, given his record, that the outgoing President refuses to enter the UK at a military base and instead chooses to bring chaos to Heathrow just to get his ego stroked.

We now enter the Stargate style timewarp in order to enter the main Terminal 5 building. Well, it must be a timewarp because on my outbound journey, I noticed multiple signs containing the dire warning: 'Please do not enter Satellite B unless your flight departs from 'B' gate. It will take (at least) 40 mins to return.'

Which is weird as it took me just 5 minutes, using the timewarp.

reader fragmentation

I suspect I have different audiences reading my blog, Tumblr, Friendfeed, Jaiku, GR Shared Items. I call this reader fragmentation but havent applied for copyright yet. Should I ?

The Chameleons - Splitting in Two

The Chameleons used to cover ATVs Splitting in Two for an encore. Reg (guitar) played the drums and John (drums) played bass. Mark Burgess threw himself into the crowd and chaos ensued.

Burgess also used to improvise snippets of The Fall's 'Rowche Rumble' and occasionally Joy Division's Love Will Tear Us Apart and some Beatles tune.

8 minutes of pure, manic, unsurpassed joy.

I once asked Mark Perry of ATV (via email) what he thought of the cover. He replied that he loved it and had even guested with The Chameleons for an encore at a gig at The Lesser Free Trade Hall.

30 second guide to musical taste

Since I started blogging, three intelligent friends have complimented me on my musical taste and 123 people have accused me of being stuck in an ‘manic depressive, 80’s time warp’. Obviously, this is preferable to being told you have abysmal taste in music and started me thinking. So here is another in the very occasional and popular ‘30 second’ series:

  • ‘Superlative’ - You love everything I love. You despise everything I despise and I have actually discovered new bands from your recommendation engine.
  • ‘Unexpectedly good’ - You love ‘The Chameleons’ who broke up before you were even born.
  • ‘Excellent’ - You like everything I like and you hate everything I hate.
  • ‘Mixed’ - You like Devo.
  • ‘Eclectic’ - as above but also includes Test Department.
  • ‘80’s time warp’ - Admirable but no overlap with my own particular 80’s time warp.
  • ‘Dinner party music’ - You tend to overindulge when hosting a dinner party and reach for Dire Straits ‘Brothers in Arms’.
  • ‘Esoteric’ - You like a Devo song and it isn’t even ‘Are we not men ?’
  • ‘70’s time warp’ - You have a penchant for vinyl, Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin. Seek medical help immediately.
  • ‘Unbelievably varied’ - Your name (pseudonym alert) is Ontario Emperor.

truth behind the Rangers fans and the Manchester riots

Thursday 15 May - Manchester, near England

107,239 hungover Rangers supporters (and an exiled Scotsman who drove up from Coventry) firmly blamed Great Manchester Police for last nights scenes of fighting, violent disorder and urinating in the street.

One fan, Jimmy 'Och Aye Jimmy' McTavish from Glasgow, claimed:

'Everyone was having a great time in Piccadilly Gardens, sunbathing, drinking and joking around with the police.

At 19:35, everyone went to the toilet, big Gordon put the kettle on, Doug popped out for popcorn and we all sat down to enjoy Rangers' biggest game in 36 years on the big screen.

Then, without any warning, the police switched channels to 'Coronation Street'. That's when it all kicked off.'

pocket Web 2.0 dictionary

Define your favourite Web 2.0 service in two words (or less)

  • Blogging: Dear diary
  • Flickr: Cat photos
  • FriendFeed: 'Friend's Feeds'
  • Tumblr: 'Disposable blogging'
  • Wikipedia: 'Online encyclopedia'
  • Twitter: 'Inane drivel'
  • del.icio.us: 'Period overload'
  • Disqus: 'Modern flamewars'
  • Digg: 'Technical narcissism'
  • Last.fm: 'Dire Straits'
  • YouTube: 'Cat videos'
  • LinkedIn: 'Gizza job'

so farewell then, Sven Goran Eriksson

I have to say I am a little surprised at this breaking news. Still, I guess Eriksson will draw another excessive compensation package while he seeks alternative employment.

In my view, buying all those expensive foreigners, beating United twice and finishing mid-table was a creditable first season.

Mind you, I always had niggling reservations about Mr. Shinawatra.

So, who's next for the job at Manchester City - Jose Mourinho ?