Pot and Kettle

Microsoft – who have never ever stolen anyone else's ideas honest, no really – are sponsoring a film competition on the subject of intellectual property theft.

Films should be 30-45 seconds long, which is useful, because "You must not use any existing copyright works in your film including music, songs or existing film clips. You must not use any third party trademarks or other third party intellectual property rights in your film."

The entry form includes the absolutely classic clause:

"I will formally licence on terms acceptable to Microsoft, all intellectual property rights in my film and agree to waive all moral rights in relation to my film if requested to do so."

Or.. "you can do what you like with it, even if I object, and/or not give me any credit."

OK, draft one:

Pot and Kettle. Scene One.
Int Office. 1980.

Bill: Oh, if only we had an operating system… We could licence it to I've Been Mismanaged and then to every one else. We'd make billions!

Minion: I know, your Billness, why don't we buy this Quick and Dirty OS which rips off the current most successful microcomputer OS so completely that the quote author unquote doesn't know why all strings to be printed are terminated with a dollar character.

Bill: Dollars, dollars, why do they tempt me so?

Minion: He'd accept just 50,000 of them for all rights.

Bill: It would be wrong in so many ways. We'd probably end up doing all sorts of illegal things to crush the company whose intellectual property we were ripping off to keep our consumer and business-harming monopoly…

… Let's do it!!!

Fade.

Scene two. Int Office. A few years later.

Bill: Oh, if only we had a graphical user interface…

Newsletter / mailing list software

We want to email a few hundred people every month. Until now, that's been done by adding the names to the email program's address book and sticking the lot of them in the BCC line (because unlike say the BBC, we hide everyone's address from everyone else).

This is obviously not the best way to do it, not least because we're being dragged kicking and screaming into having to use Outlook soon (mind you, it's been 'very soon' since last July!)

So, it was off to google and hotscripts to find a free mailing list manager, preferably in PHP, with a web interface.

I don't mind it needing MySQL, but I do mind having to recompile it to use a different file format. I also mind having to turn off the register_globals protection because it's an old script. The admin must be able to add people without getting them to confirm, but no-one else should be able to do so (ie double opt-in). Emails have to be able to be sent in plain text and we must have control over the header and footer (no ads we can't delete!)

Tried and rejected

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

As a sticker on the underground said, that's about your lifetime's supply of democracy.

Voting for me means a trip to Harrow West.

"That was quick" said the presiding officer, as I put the ballot paper in the box.

In part, it was because this time there were rather fewer marks to make – last time there was the London Assembly election with a form of PR, the mayoral election with a form of alternate vote and the European Parliamentary elections with a third voting system.

And in part, it was because I didn't want to think too hard about voting for the SoggyLibDem Chris Noyce, AKA uber wally.

Had Danny Finkelstein been standing for the Tories again, I'd have voted Labour, because I expect to wake up tomorrow to discover that the Tories have beaten Labour there and almost anyone would be better than Danny.

Oh the joys of trying to get the result you want with first past the post (or first to the post, according to the Now Show's comment on postal voting frauds…)

Somehow, I think this one fails the Turing Test…

[02:54] snuggle_girl1212: hi…. anyone there?
[02:54] *** Auto-response sent to snuggle_girl1212: I am currently away from the computer.
[02:54] snuggle_girl1212: oh your there ::) hi…
[02:54] snuggle_girl1212: a/s//l (age sex location)?
[02:55] snuggle_girl1212: im 27/f/USA. was lookiin at your profile. thought you might like to chat.
[02:55] snuggle_girl1212: so what have you been up to [my yahoo account]?
[02:57] snuggle_girl1212: cool. i was just hangin out watching tv. ii was getting kinda horny 🙂 (*blushes)
[02:57] snuggle_girl1212: feel like a little cyber funn with me ? please please…

"It's funny.. because someone else said that, and I thought they were mad…"

I don't normally watch it, but thanks to Jonny Nexus for pointing out an episode of Property Ladder.

He spent £93k without telling his wife. Or getting a structural survey on a listed property that's a mess and falling down.

It's not even particularly nice. He wants to make it worse, but expects to make £57k profit. The experts tell him things – like the structural work will cost £50k alone – but he doesn't listen.

Who do I pitch Property Ladder: The Divorces to?

Just noticed: this is being repeated Ch4 4:55pm today.

Gosh

People are just tackling Tony Blair on the issue of GPs only giving appointments 48 hours in advance.

Clearly the one we were trying to get an appointment at for someone a few weeks ago is not the only one doing this…

Some of my friends have been dead for three hundred years or so…

One of the people on my "friends" list, thus proving once more how silly it is to call it that, is Samuel Pepys, pepysdiary.

Yesterdays entry, for Saturday 19 April 1662:

This morning, before we sat, I went to Aldgate; and at the corner shop, a draper’s, I stood, and did see Barkestead, Okey, and Corbet, drawn towards the gallows at Tiburne; and there they were hanged and quartered. They all looked very cheerful; but I hear they all die defending what they did to the King to be just; which is very strange. So to the office and then home to dinner, [..]

There are links to the various names. Turns out that what they "did to the King" was be signatories to Charles I's death warrant and, with the restoration of the monarchy, that was enough to get one yourself.

Their final speeches and prayers are here, which brought home again what a resource the internet is.

I'm also quite impressed that they had chances to avoid their fate, having been abroad, but returned.

Benedict XVI – the Catholics' version of Iain Duncan Smith?

Iain was picked to be Tory leader because he wasn't a rabid leftie radical like Portillo or Clarke, ie people who could actually reverse the decline in popularity and influence. Far better to have someone sound, at least as far as the people who get to pick the leader are concerned, on the issues that are splitting the organisation, even if that means driving away followers. TINA lives!

I am particularly amused by the opening of the BBC's story "Pope reaches out in first message".

Of course he wants to strive for unity of all Christians!

It's just that they would have to abandon their heresies (as he sees them) and return (as he sees it) to accepting the One True Faith with him as leader… easy!