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

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Contact at

apetracks@binary-ape.org

Fight Piracy — Regulate Singing Fish Novelties!

- - posted in Ancient Archives

US Senator Hollings’ proposed CBDTPA law would make any new “digital media device” illegal in the US unless it included government approved copy protection. It seems that the ability to move data around without permission from the authorities is a terrible threat to the world. The whole idea is both idiotic and very scary. Scary because a supposedly sane person is proposing the death of IT freedom in the US to boost his sponsor’s (Disney) profits, and idiotic because the law itself is utterly unworkable and would cost the USA billions. Each day, the Freedom To Tinker site is listing an item that would get CBDTPA regulation.

    Link: <a href="http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/archives/cat_fritzs_hit_list.html">Fritz's Hit List</a>

Metre-long Insects?

- - posted in Ancient Archives

Metre, centimetre, what’s the difference?

    Link: <a href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.jsp?a=11&amp;o=9667"> SA team to study Antarctica's metre-long insects</a>

Verisign Verisign Themselves

- - posted in Ancient Archives

I’ve had the Verisign experience - their system effectively lost two domains for me, and I had an unpleasant time trying to recover them. Well, now it seems they’ve lost one of their own domain names - the Network Solutions UK domain.

    Link: not <a href="http://www.netsol.co.uk/">Network Solutions</a> at the moment...

That Optical Illusion

- - posted in Ancient Archives

You know, that one you’ve already seen everywhere else. The explanation is very interesting. The cause is not so much a brain bug than a brain hack, an exploit/side-effect of a useful feature.

    Link: <a href="http://www-bcs.mit.edu/people/adelson/checkershadow_illusion.html">Checker Shadow Illusion</a> (thanks Eddy)

The Ideal Prepuce in Ancient Greece And

- - posted in Ancient Archives

Despite all the crap on the Internet, there is still a huge amount of varied, quality academic work available, often on remarkable subjects.

    This is a fascinating article on Greek and Roman attitudes to penises.

    Link: <a href="http://www.cirp.org/library/history/hodges2/">The Ideal Prepuce in Ancient Greece and Rome</a>

Snow Crash

- - posted in Ancient Archives

Why oh why do people like Snow Crash so much? I’ve just seen Snow Crash described as a book that “redefines the art form”, alongside The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy. Have these people ever read real, decent SF? It’s like saying that BoyZone are like the Beatles for goodness sake. Or saying that Panda Shandy is Real Ale.

    This is a long overdue incoherent review. OK, maybe it's just a rant. Snow Crash doesn't deserve the time a proper review would require.

I could only get halfway through Snow Crash before giving up. Reading it almost hurt. The prose felt like a cross between laboured Usenet fan fiction and a technology article by a journalist in a Sunday newspaper.

    It's without consistency, believable technology or three dimensional characters. It's dull. It seems to have been constructed around a checklist of nerd fantasy elements - cars, pizza, samurai swords, lasers, 3D internet environments... Technology is immediately described  in excessive and patronising detail, as if the author is desperate to prove how "with it" he is.

    In fact Neal Stephenson seems to be in a mirror social group to that of the <a href="http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/jargon/html/entry/script-kiddies.html">script kiddies</a> - he clearly wants acceptance from The Real Hackers, he want to be part of the "revolution". He ends up as the SF equivalent of a script kiddy - he adopts the imagined language and culture of the peer group he wants to join, but really just repeats  cliches. A futurist groupie.

    Good SF books present the story, and  gaps in the detail are filled in by the reader's imagination By doing this they stimulate the reader's imagination, and thus make the reading more enjoyable and a creative process for both the writer and the reader. Snow Crash is written without any space for the reader, almost as if the author doesn't trust the reader (or himself) with spaces in the narrative.

    Snow Crash's vision of the future doesn't reflect the way networks and net communities have developed. The central plot device is a plot hole. Do you have a favourite character from an 80s cyberpunk novel? Here they are again! Some reviewers say that he makes the technology believable. To me, he makes it flawed and lifeless.

    So why do people like Snow Crash? Here are some possibilites:

    - Many people don't like SF because they can't cope with unfamiliar situations. They can't suspend disbelief, or can't tolerate an environment they don't understand. The long, dull techno-waffle in Snow Crash holds their hand; they feel that they are learning something. They don't have to use their imagination.

    - People don't want something that makes them look at the world in a different way, that gives them a new insight, that broadens their mind. They want something familiar. Snow Crash makes "SF" feel like their familiar fiction of urban angst.

    - "Everyone has said it's great, so I must read it and tell everyone I've read it! Then I can look cool and cyber-knowledgable too!"

    - The author has written some <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/search-handle-url/index=books-uk&amp;field-author=Stephenson%2C%20Neal/026-7347897-4315663">other books</a> that were actually quite interesting.

    - Some people enjoy crappy SF. Fair enough.  As long as they say "It's crap but fun". I like lots of crappy SF and fantasy. Xena is a crap but fun TV show for instance. It's not redefining the art form, it's just fun.

    Here's my techno prediction: In a few years, sequels to Snow Crash will be produced by bots. The bots will parse blogs and IRC channels, read a few 80s cyberpunk novels, then apply evolutionary principles by testing their text in small chunks on Slashdot posters. These sequels will be better than Snow Crash.

    The final word goes to Arteth:

    "I wasted hours of my life reading this shit thinking 'it must get better', but it doesn't. I resent that."

Gravity Is Fickle*

- - posted in Ancient Archives

“Due to an uneven distribution of mass inside the Earth, the Earth’s gravity field is not uniform - that is, it has “lumps”.

    Sadly there are not places in the world where I can perform Matrix-like leaps.

    *This is an in-joke, don't worry.

    Link: <a href="http://www.csr.utexas.edu/grace/gallery/animations/world_gravity/">World Gravity Model</a>

Disturbing Auctions

- - posted in Ancient Archives

Online auction sites like eBay sometimes offer some very strange things… like this, this, and this.

    And what the hell is <a href="http://www.disturbingauctions.com/view.php?item=21">this</a>?

    Link: <a href="http://www.disturbingauctions.com/">Disturbing Auctions</a>

Things to Oggify

- - posted in Ancient Archives

The latest CDs I need to Oggify and store away with NetJuke are:

    <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000I3KB/qid=1032553873/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_0_1/026-7415012-6439607">Trojan Dub Box Set</a> - 3 CDs of old dub. I've loved the echoing pianos and bass lines of dub ever since I heard <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000001C1F/ref=sr_aps_music_1_3/026-7415012-6439607">"Johnny  in the Echo Chamber"</a> by the Aggrovators late at night on <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/alt/johnpeel/index.shtml">John Peel's show</a> about 12 years ago.

    <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005B19H/qid%3D1032553928/026-7415012-6439607">Thai Elephant Orchestra</a> - This is lovely, very strange, but very relaxing. The Elephants at an <a href="http://www.artbyelephants.com/background.html">elephant welfare centre</a> in Thailand enjoy <a href="http://www.artbyelephants.com/orchestra.html">playing their own music</a> on special instruments. They aren't directed or controlled by humans, this is music they have created. Some of them <a href="http://www.artbyelephants.com/art.html">also paint</a>.

Old Macs

- - posted in Ancient Archives

I’ve got a Mac Plus, a Mac SE with A4 monitor, and an LC475. I’m not sure why. I’ve been looking for a cheap localtalk to ethernet adapter for years, and now I’ve got it, I can’t remember if I ever had a practical use for it. Still, it’s fun to wire up a 16 year old Mac to a modern network. Sadly I don’t have enough room for all the old kit I’ve collected. Getting rid of the Acorn A5000 is an easy choice, but which Mac should I eBay away?