Cheering after goals :)

September 14th, 2010

Players of an Icelandic club found original ways to celebrate a goal. Enjoy!

Reading update

September 12th, 2010

Having been on a trip, I did manage to squeeze a few reads in. So, I figured to share some of that — and quite probably start ranting about how fantasy series go down the drain after a few books. They do, you know :)
Anyway, on my recently finished list:

  • The Summer Tree – Guy Gavriel Kay
    I still cannot believe I didn’t pack the other two parts… it was good, as usual :)
  • Wizard Squared – K.E. Mills
    Karen Miller brings us the third instalment of the “Gerald” series. Where the first one was a humorous variant on your every-day fantasy story, the second broke away and was a bit weird… but that one turned out alright in the end. This third instalment, however, doesn’t. Where the first can be said to be a humoristic view on fantasy, and the second may perhaps be said to be sort of a fantasy parody of detective stories (take “sort of” broadly here), the third book is reminiscent of The Sword of Truth series. This means: there is an all-powerful bad guy, and even though the good guys aren’t bad themselves, they have really no hope of defeating them… or do they? Naah, not really. I didn’t like the Sword of Truth series that much, and I don’t like mrs. Miller’s take on it either. The fun seems to have dried up, and willingness to submerge yourself into its worlds is tested (vivaciously) time and again. Too bad, I don’t think I’ll read another instalment. (Rant on fantasy and endless series coming below!)
  • Transition – Iain Banks
    Iain Bank’s version of “Amber“. It’s not as good as (the first books of) Amber. Zelazny did this before, and better. ‘Nuff said.
  • Duel – Joost Zwagerman
    The bookweek-gift. I finally got round to reading it… and finished it too.
    This book exemplifies why I hardly read Dutch literature. It just doesn’t captivate me as much as English books can. It’s okay, and there’s food for thought in there. But that’s not what I’m looking for in a book. I liked “transition” better, in the end.
  • The Brain that Changes Itself – Norman Doidge
    Reread. It’s still interesting. By the way, this is not fiction, but more of a popular science account. (Cheating a bit with including this, finished this a while ago)
  • The Emporer’s New Mind – Roger Penrose
    Again a popular science reread for me. Second time around it was more understandable than the first. I’m still worried I’ll need a third time to get to the core, though I find myself disagreeing more and more with him :) (again, cheating).
  • De tranen van Kuif den Dolder – Nico Dijkshoorn
    Bought it for the trip Schiphol-Luxembourg (6hrs by train). Bought it because I’ve read some of Nico Dijkshoorn’s columns, and generally, I like them. Even though I may disagree, I appreciate the style and the levity. In this case: good choice, the book was fun enough. (Finished it on the train)

So there’s still a stack, with amazingly enough 3 books dealing with philosophy in there:

  • Dus Ik Ben – Stine Jensen & Rob Wijnberg
    Reread. It’s still good :)
  • 50 philosophy ideas – Ben Dupré
    Got it for the trainjourney Schiphol-Luxembourg (but got another book too, and managed to finish that one… what was that again… Aah yes, De tranen van Kuif den Dolder, let me add that to the list above). Again a high-level popular science book. It’s fun, though not so deep (isn’t that a funny thing to write about a book on philosophy? ;-)
  • Justice: What’s the right thing to do? – Michael J. Sandel
    Apparently based on his “famous” Harvard lecture. So famous, a chap I met from Harvard had never heard of him. The name of the lecture vaguely rang a bell. Anyway, not that far in yet and find myself vehemently disagreeing – so it’s going to be a fun read :)
    Bought it in the UK for the Bertinoro-Swiss part of the trip.
  • Snow – Orhan Pamuk
    Recommended by a turkish friend. Apparently this book won a Nobel Prize for literature. Somehow that sounds too heavy for my tastes – I can’t bring myself to begin reading the book just yet.
    Bought it in the UK as well for the Bertinoro-Swiss part of the trip.
  • The Alchemist – Paulo Coelho (borrowed)
    Borrowed this from Ragga for my trip, but then was too scared to damage it, so didn’t take it :) Still intend to read it.
  • Der Schwarm – Frank Schätzing (borrowed)
    Borrowed via Ragga from Danielle, not got round to it yet (well gosh jolly no, will you look at the books I have recently read? No surprise there, or is there?). Was interested, because I have actually read another book by Frank.

That concludes the reading list and the “done” list. I also promised you a fantasy rant, so here in a nutshell: Any fantasy series with over 5 books will have at least one book that sucks. Supporting circumstantial evidence: Harry Potter (book 5? Please. Or, for that matter, most of book 7). The Wheel of Time series (any book beyond 3 still good?), Amber (2nd series starts with the sixth book – enough warning for you?), The Sword of Truth series (we got the whining after three books, thankyouverymuch mr. Goodkind), etc. etc. Actually, the fantasy books I have read that do make me happy tend to be the ones that actually end (eg. The Fionavar Tapestry, and the Night Angel trilogy).

So there you have it: if you ever start to write fantasy, stick to three books or less (yes, Eddings managed a series of 5 decent books – not deep, but decent. You’re not Eddings.)

Back in Surrey

August 29th, 2010

A bit of background first: I’m on a grand European tour (for work). There are three events: the combined UK/Lux voting project meetings in Surrey (UK), the summer school on voting I’m (co-)organising in Bertinoro (Italy) and the voting workshop in Fribourg (Switzerland).

So, I’m back at Uni of Surrey. It’s a bit weird to be here — for having lived here a mere three months, the place seems steeped in memories. There’s the breakup, the supermarket where I always got dinner, walking around town and enjoying the shops again…

Today was a good day. Dave, an UniS colleague, proposed on Friday eve in the pub to go swimming. There was an outdoor waterskiing center, that opened its track to swimmers in the early morning. Why not, sounded like a challenge. And it turned out to be! Woke up at 6:40 (continental time), so anxious was I. 30 minutes ahead of my alarm… We went there, I rented a wetsuit (previous experience: outdoor swimming over long distances works a hell of a lot better with wetsuit), and off we went! it went okay, though I’m not used to looking where I’m going (in a pool, you can easily tell if you’re going straight — not so simple outdoors). After a jacuzzi, Dave showed me the borough. We drove up to the gates of Windsor castle, and it was impressive. Windsor itself is fun too, a typical british hamlet with some tourist attractions (the leaning teahouse was unfortunately still closed). Next up was Ascot. Yes, Ascot! I treaded where the horses race… the grass is well-kept, long and quite wet that early in the morning :).

Onwards we went, through the borough, some quaint little villages left and right, till we got back to Guildford. Dave drove up the hill behind Castle carpark. I’d never been there, and the view is amazing! A bit further up the hill, you can even see Canary Wharf. We enjoyed our brunch at a restaurant, and then Dave had to leave.

Next up: shopping! My backpack had broken two days before this trip, so I needed a new one. Went to Argos, and found a cheap replacement. It’s not a high-quality bag, but for 5 pounds, you can’t expect much (got a wallet and a pencil case — both come in handy for this trip).

Final stop: books. I had run out of books, plus: I’m in the UK, they’ve got English books aplenty here — and that is what I predominantly read. I got myself the new instalment in a series by KE Mills (aka Karen Miller) I started reading while employed in Guildford. Plus more (Snow by Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish Nobel-prize winner), because I can and it came recommended :)

All of that was enough, so I went home, Tesco-lunch, home, worked a bit, and had dinner with Peter. Dinner was great for two reasons: one, we were having take-out Italian (and are going to Italy tomorrow); two, we ended up having a discussion on politics, on proportional representation versus geographical representation etc. That discussion was fun! Got us wondering when parties arose. It seems more logical in the Dutch (prop. rep.) setting than in the UK (geographical).

So: great day today, managed to do some work, still a lot of things to do before Wednesday :s. If time, I’ll try to post more after SecVote 2010.

Copyright online

August 24th, 2010

Online copyright is a very complex issue. Actually, it’s sufficiently complex to dedicate a long, well though-out post to. Which is not this one.

This one is just fast and simple.
who makes money of a CD
I’ve read a bit about it. All of my reading was from websources — I cannot vouch for their accuracy. But what I’ve read is in line with that picture.

Don’t steal from artists. If you must steal, be like Robin Hood and steal from those that rob the small people.

Post triggered by news that the RIAA considers copyright law not effective enough

FireFox tips

August 17th, 2010

Nice, I just spotted 2 firefox tips. One: http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/plugincheck/ — check if your plugins are up to date. Nice!
Two: you can disallow JavaScript to move / resize your windows. I knew there was a option (Edit > Preferences > Content) to enable/disable JavaScript, but if you click the “advanced” button there, you can have JS while disallowing all sorts of nasty behaviour. Makes for a more happy me :)
(Forgot where I got this from btw, let me check… here)

The external monitor

August 11th, 2010

Ubuntu logoSince 2 days (guess why) I’m the proud owner of a very shiny external monitor. Took a bit of effort to set up under Ubuntu (tip: don’t set the display to “not cloned”, and then try to run the external monitor at a different, high resolution than the local one — just keep cloning or shut off the local one and things’ll be fine :).

Anyway, I was running non-cloned, and it was nice, shiny and awesome-y resolution-y! But: if I closed the laptop, bam. Screen gone. It’s a power management thing. So we go to preferences > power management. Well guess what we can choose: shutdown, hibernate, sleep or blank screen. That’s right, no option to do nothing.

Luckily, there’s a hidden config option (see above link for explanation):
gconftool-2 --type string --set /apps/gnome-power-manager/buttons/lid_ac "nothing".

Yet another problem solved :)

If the internet could have rules…

July 15th, 2010

You have to be this smart to ride the Internet

Home improvement

July 10th, 2010

Tim 'The Toolman' TaylorLiving in a foreign country sometimes has a disadvantage. This is most obvious when you’re trying to interact, and you have to communicate in a foreign language (note: I do not consider English a foreign language — I converse more in English than in Dutch). The handle of the door to the garden broke down. No sweat, call the landlord and have it fixed. Right? Right??

Guess again, Sherlock. I call the agency charged by the landlord with fixing the place. I bravely speak french. I bravely get rerouted to another agency, as “they are no longer in charge of that building”. Cool. Next agency. I bravely re-express my problem (“loquet” is one of the french words for handle, btw). Once they get that my problem concerns my own apartment, and not a communal area, they politely inform me that my own apartment is Not Their Problem(tm). Apparently, they’re in charge of the communal areas of the building.

Okay, no sweat. I managed to use the broken handle to get the door to lock by now, so no hurry. Except that it’s consistently over 30 degrees here for the last weeks — me and whoever happens to stop by are probably sitting in the garden. (Yes I have a garden.) So taking the handle from near the fridge, and holding it against the door to open the door is kind of awkward — and happening way too often.

Mr. Two-Left-Hands to the rescue! As you probably don’t know, I most assuredly have two left hands (although, virtually all the furniture here was assembled by moi-même… perhaps I don’t suck as much as I think). Anyway, I went to a nearby bathroom and garden store, and it just so happened they had a place where they sell handles (and related items) — the quincaillerie (more or less “hardware store”).

Got home, handle fit but had plastic protrusions which didn’t. A bit of filing later, and tadaaa! Door is working again.

Happy me :)

Orange final!

July 10th, 2010

ROOOOAAAAAARRRR!
If you’re reading this, then you ought to know I don’t care that much for football (/soccer). I don’t. Still don’t.
Having said that:

  • It is a pity Germany didn’t make it to the finalsThe Dutch have been traumatised for 36 years, it would be good to have a shot at revenge :)
  • We made it to the finals! Woohoo!

Tomorrow, place Knuedler. Probably there will be loads and loads of Spanish. :s Can’t be helped. I’m counting on the Dutch being there too.

PS: That is a really cool graffiti depiction of the match, innit?

E3 update from PA

June 22nd, 2010

Penny Arcade logoThose guys at Penny Arcade just love Nintendo :)
(But yes: Nintendo’s updates probably did wash the competition away :)