I’m Binaryape

About me

Photographer, software developer, sysadmin, startup-founder, atheist Buddhist, vegan and Green. Wears a hat.

This blog reflects my personal opinions only, although most posts are so old they might not even do that anymore.

Recent public projects

Status updating…

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Contact at

apetracks@binary-ape.org

Rationalising Away From the Rational

- - posted in Ancient Archives

From Normblog, the weblog of a political academic and supposed leader of the Blairite intelligentsia:

The first of these: 9/11 - September 11, 2001. It is a day imprinted on the public memory - indelibly - because the crime committed in New York and Washington DC announced a terrible willingness, of which few previously had been aware: a willingness to use terror without limit for political ends; a terrorism, that is to say, unconstrained by any concern about the numbers of the innocent dead. That day was both an end and a beginning because it showed, and to many of us in an instant, that the world was now different, dangerously so, and in a way not amenable to simple-minded responses.

I think I could easily write 2000 words just on that paragraph alone, but it’s hardly worth it. All the same, two key things that rise to the surface are:

  • The Blairite obsession with History. They once believed opposition to the invasion of Iraq would fade after a quick victory and the creation of a wonderful new Iraq. We whingers would hang our heads in shame over our cowardly doubts, and history would record Blair as The Great Strong Leader Who Saved Iraq. As the utter carnage in Iraq continues, the entire region destablises, and more facts about the ‘planning’ of the invasion emerge, it looks as if they’ll be remembered with all the fondness of Nixon and Kissinger. As a result there is a desperate scramble to hang on to the history that didn’t happen, a strange parallel world where the people of Iraq are enjoying Liberty rather than suffering in The State of Nature.

  • The writer’s astonishing lack of self awareness. This person is supposed to be a thinker, but writes things like the above without any apparent realisation of what he’s actually written. “… a willingness to use terror without limit for political ends; a terrorism, that is to say, unconstrained by any concern about the numbers of the innocent dead” - who is he writing about again? He accuses the anti-war “left” of repeating their mistake of being apologists for the crimes of communist states, while he himself is desperately trying to excuse the actions of Blair and Bush using the exact same rationalisation process!

The entire Euston Manifesto appears to be a bundle of weak apologist rhetoric and obvious logical fallacies tied together with frayed string and decorated with buzzwords ( ‘Open Source’ indeed!). It has more straw men than a scarecrow festival.

I’ve long thought that the Socialist Workers Party were wilfully naive, but the Euston Manifesto gang are true masters, publishers of smug auto-satirical wibble. A world “not amenable to simple-minded responses”, eh?

Buy One, Give Two

- - posted in Ancient Archives

A worthwhile pledge at PledgeBank:

Nicholas Negroponte has previewed of the $100 laptop that he has designed for students in the developing world. ” One Laptop Per Child - a Preview of the Hundred Dollar Laptop http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/00… ” The suggestion has been made that he also offer it for sale for ~$300 to the rest of us so that we do have an interesting machine and can help to support the cost computers for the developing world. If he does offer it, then I will buy one at three times the cost and thus contribute to supplying two to the proposed users.

I was hoping this would be possible so to make it more likely I’ve signed up.

Link: I will purchase the $100 laptop at $300

We ‚ô• Tachikoma

- - posted in Ancient Archives

In between the endless miserable business of flat-hunting we’ve been working our way through the excellent Ghost In the Shell TV series ‘Stand Alone Complex’.

One of the interesting aspects of the series is how the AIs seem more human than the humans. As a viewer you end up caring more about the fate of the software than the people - despite them having a shape that is completely non-human (and non-mammalian) we felt more empathy with the Tachikoma than the human characters.

Forget flying cars; I want The Future to provide me with a spider-like robotic battle robot or two.

Uncanny Maracas

- - posted in Ancient Archives

Yesterday A. and I took part in a telepathy experiment being carried out by The University of Manchester. We were both equipped with classic virtual reality gear and then had to take turns to send and receive selections from various objects. I’m sceptical of this concept of telepathy, but I’m still very pleased to say we beat the odds :-)

It was also fun to sit in a virtual room. I was amused to notice that when I looked down and saw my ‘legs’ and left arm in the virtual room I instinctively tried to move them, even though they weren’t connected to any sensing devices. The graphics weren’t realistic enough to to fool my conscious mind, but my subconscious mind had immediately tried to associate them.

We earned £7 each for our time as psychic guineapigs, which we traded for food at the local Buddhist cafe the next day.

(This is part 3 in Making My Life Sound Quite Interesting By Focusing On The Odd Bits)

It’s Tricky…

- - posted in Ancient Archives

In 2003 I made a bet with a colleague. The colleague (let’s call him Neil) insisted that Gordon Brown would never be Prime Minister. I said that he would. The winner gets a CD of their choice. Note the clear advantage I’ve got here - I don’t really have to pay up until Gordon Brown is actually dead.

I’ve had the CD selected for years: Run DMC Greatest Hits.. I’ve avoided buying it myself. It’s my Blair Has Gone CD.

Brown seems to be making his move now…

Peter Millard

- - posted in Ancient Archives

I never met Peter Millard but I’ve liked and respected him for years, as a nice, interesting guy and a talented pioneer of Jabber technology. Peter recently both overcame cancer and become a father. It came as quite a shock to read that he has suddenly died from complications resulting from his cancer treatment.

Link: Peter Saint-Andre’s tribute to Peter Millard