Primal Sneeze

I’m off again

PRIMAL SNEEZE HAS MOVED

to http://www.primalsneeze.com

Please sit down, have a nice cup of tea and update your bookmarks

April 23, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Blogs | | 3 Comments

Snippets #2

  • RTÉ recently screened a documentary called Megastructures about the building of the Golden Gate. One of the engineers interviewed was Forest Woody Becker. One of the best nicknames ever. Class that. Absolute class.
  • Bertie is a grandad! Twin boys called Rocky and Crusty or something like that. Little mini-Berites complete with red noses I imagine. Clones to the left of me, jokers to the right.
  • They’re trying to make me go to BarCamp, but I say no, no, no. (With apologies to Ms. Hairy Jowels 2007). I’m just too tired. I have been up since 3 trying to finish a night’s sleep which was due by 7. I hate missing deadlines. And hate missing BarCamp even more. I’m just so full of hate today I may need to develop an evil laugh, as Kav did(n’t).
  • I had the pleasure of having lunch with a real life anthropologist this week. I couldn’t help thinking I was an ape meeting Jane Goodall for the first time. The subject of using a phone while driving came up. In typical Paddy-fashion I was boasting to my new American pal that using a handheld is illegal in Ireland and that most of us use handsfree. Equally dangerous, he said. The distraction level is on a par. Smart feker that I am, I replied, but then a conversation with a passenger would be dangerous too, but it isn’t. He, being an even smarter feker, shot back with your passenger is seeing what you see and knows or senses when to shut up when a potentially dangerous situation arises. Try driving with a blind friend or a child. Martin Cullen fukt up again.
  • One final thing: Read the Reluctant Memsahib. (Found this via a Gorilla and a Problem Child). Forget the setting. Read it. Read about a mum trying to care for her children in very difficult circumstances. Once you have done that, then understand the setting.

April 21, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Snippets | | 7 Comments

I need help

I need help. Okay, okay. I hear ya. Regular readers have been thinking that for ages.But I do need some help from you guys. Nothing too serious or difficult.

I’ve been lumped with doing a paper on the usability of Web 2.0 applications. In this context, Web 2.0 means Blogger, WordPress, Flikr, Feedburner etc. Get the idea? Tom Raftery has a good list here.

I would really appreciate it if you could leave your views as comments, or mail me if you wish, at primalsneeze at topmail dot ie.

The kind of thing I’m interested in (but anything goes - I’m leaving it up to you) is how easy/difficult do you find these tools to use. I am more interested in hearing from non-techies, but also welcome feedback from fellow geeks too.

For example:

I don’t like WordPress.com because I can’t use javascript. I had a javascript stat collector on Blogger and I miss it now.

I find Google Reader great because I don’t have to trawl though my favourite blogs to see what’s new.

I was able to being using Flikr immediately. It was so obvious what to do I didn’t need to learn anything new.

I’d love to have a banner on my site just like so-and-so has. But I can’t figure out how to do it. The help pages are no good.

I’d love to have a fancy animation on my site just like so-and-so has. But I don’t want to have to learn new stuff like messing with CSS or javascript (whatever they are).

Any input would be a great help to me. Depending on the feedback, I may be able to build a hints and tips page. I suspect some folks will read comments and say wow, I didn’t know you could do that!

Update>> In response to a comment and some mails received:

I have a personal deadline of April 25 for this. But as it is something I am interested in professionally, I would still love to receive feedback after that. Indefinitely.

If you wish to remain anonymous, use that option when posting your comment.

This paper is not for publication. It cannot be made public without my, and the sources’ (your) consent. No blogger’s details will be used. I will follow a format along the lines of many said they had problems with blah-blah while one said they found blah-blah easy to use because ….

<<End Update

April 18, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Blogs, Internet, Tech stuff | | 20 Comments

Rites of Passage

I always look forward to Sarah Carey’s column in the Sunday Times. Even more so I look forward to reading the full version on her blog. She wrote an excellent piece a couple of weeks back on how non-believing Irish parents are being forced to have their children baptised etc. You can read it here in all its unedited glory.

She points out that the majority of our primary schools are owned and managed by the catholic church. Religious education is part and parcel of the curriculum. Parents can opt to have their children excused from these lessons but come first communion time these children want to participate, simply because the other children are. Children usually have one burning wish – to be like all the other children, she wrote.

This is something which has been nagging at me for a long time now. I have friends who took their daughter to Euro Disney the week her classmates were having their first communion. They felt she had to be distracted from the peer pressure. She is an extremely bright individual and now that she’s older she is nonplussed that her pals are in confirmation mode.

Other friends, a Lutheran and a non-practising catholic, have had their kids baptised in a catholic church, partly to placate the paternal grandmother, but mainly, as they explained, to mark the occasion of the arrival of these new family members.

In both cases there was an occasion to be marked. The latter is obvious, the former less so. First communion is usually at the age of 7. This is when a baby becomes child. They know right from wrong at this stage. Again, at 12, confirmation time, another change takes place. They become teenagers. They reach puberty.

There are rites of passage here. All societies down through the ages have had these. A boy’s first hunt. A girl’s first period. More rites than you could shake an anthropologist at. Modern western society has some subtle ones too. First drink. First car. First sexual experience. Yet there isn’t a modern rite to mark passing from infancy to childhood and then through puberty. Perhaps first communion and confirmation fill this void. Perhaps there is a subconscious need in us all to mark these milestones and both parents and their young sense this. Perhaps my friends were marking an occasion by taking their daughter on her first foreign holiday rather than just avoiding peer pressure.

Sarah hit the nail on the head in her article. I’m just giving it another tap and hoping I’m not splitting the timber.

April 17, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Commentary, Irish identity, Life, Occasions, Religion | | 5 Comments

Pinned down and passed out

Everything has a password or a PIN* these days. I have PINs for bank cards, my house alarm (and three neighbours’ alarms), one to reset the car radio, a PIN and a PUK for my phone. I’ve go a PPN (which used to be a PRSI number), a student ID number and one for online banking. I’ve got six email accounts with different usernames and passwords. Logins for a few webservers. A login for my ISP’s account server. A login for Google, Statcounter, Polldaddy, about ten job sites, WordPress, Blogger, Irish Independent and more. A WEP key for my home network. A voicemail code. And on top of all that, there are account IDs for clients’ machines.

All of these, we are warned, must never be written down. We must memorise them and eat the slip of paper they came on and possibly shred your crap, just in case. You never know what geek has hacked into your pipework and hidden a poo-cam in your loo.

My fear of forgetting one of these, passcodephobia, (not to be confused with passcodaphobia which is a fear of going to the toilet after eating fish - the bones you know) has been getting gradually worse.

Passwords are not too bad. I tend to use about ten base ones in a variety of combinations which gives me about 50 unique codes. Numbers I remember by directions or shape. 9713 is a square. 0856 is up, up, right. Get the idea? Try it on your phone.

Yesterday I cracked. For the first time. I could not, not matter how hard I tried, recall my phone PIN. Having exhausted everything from isosceles triangles to down, outside, left-a-bit, I had to resort to getting my PUK from the website and resetting the PIN. No big deal. No harm done. But now my passcodephobia is worse than ever. If I forgot a PIN I use frequently what about all the others.

My head is just too full of codes. It can’t take any more. Now what’s my WordPress password so I can post this?

*Have you ever noticed how we all say PIN number? Personal Identification Number number. And we say Automated Teller Machine machine.

April 16, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Banks, Commentary, Internet, Pet Hates, Tech stuff | | 7 Comments

Grand National Sweep - Enter Now

The Aintree Grand National, tomorrow Saturday at 16:15. 40 horses. 30 fences. Big ones. 4.5 miles (7.2 km in new money). The greatest national hunt race of the calendar.

Right. Nothing serious. Just a bit of fun. To take part in a sweep, just leave your name in the comments below.

The first 40 names will be assigned a horse at random. If there are less than 40 names then some, or all, will be assigned more than one horse. Who drew which horse will be published here. Only two people are prevented from entering: Me and Anonymous.

Entries close at 13:00 GMT on Saturday.

The prize. Well I haven’t one. Yet. But I’ll think of something. And sure it’s only a bit of fun. Nothing serious. The prize will most likely be chosen to suit the winner. In fact this bit might be more fun than the sweep itself.

Entries now closed

Note: The ladies got 1 horse extra each as did Eolaí. Not because he’s a lady, but because he said some nice stuff about me on his site this morning. That’s just the way confectionery crumbles.

Result: The Swearing Lady from the Arse End of Ireland won. Silver Birtch @ 33/1

The prize (to suit the recipient, as promised) is a bound set of Terry Pratchett books. Collector’s items. Really! No messing. Just five though, but they’re my favourites (doesn’t include Going Postal or Wintersmith unfortunately). Wailey, fukin’, wailey!

Shite! I phrased that arseways: What I meant was, Going Postal and Wintersmith are not included in this set, but are included in my favourite Terry Pratchett titles. Damn you Sweary for picking up on that! I’ll get ya. I know where ya live (for now).

April 13, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Fun, Occasions, Racing | | 29 Comments

Trilingual Joke

A French prostitute wishing to ply her trade in a Gaeltacht area is informed by the local pimp that due to an oversupply of Latvian hookers she will be restricted to working after 6:30.

She came to be known locally as Leath uair tar éis a sé.

[US readers. Just trust me. This is fekin hilarious!]

April 13, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Fun, Gaeilge | | 10 Comments

Bankers with a W

MacKozer has been doing a fair amount of bitching about Irish banks lately. In his last post he surmises that AIB stands for Absolutely Incompetent Bank-staff.

Well it’s my turn now. Step away from the keyboard, Mac.

Let’s face it. The AIB runs the Financial Regulator. Just as eircom runs ComReg. AIB are the big boys. They can do what they want and get away with it. They pwn the regulator! Extrapolate that and you realise they pwn the government too.

When other banks offer better rates and deals to attract customers, the AIB just might, if they feel they can spare 0.00001% of their billion euro profits, do the same, months later.

Because AIB are the biggest player they can offer the biggest range of services. With the exception of BoI the other banks are just credit unions with alloys, spots and go-faster stripes. AIB has it all and that’s why I’ve stuck with them this long.

When AIB announced they would be offering free banking I looked into it immediately. All I would have to do would be to pay one bill online or by phone once a quarter. No problem. I do that anyway. And I would have to make one purchase per quarter using my Laser card. Oops! A snag here. I didn’t have one. I had an old fashioned Banklink card. But the nice people in AIB knew this and wrote to me telling me how to replace my Banklink with a Laser. So I phoned the nice people and asked them to go ahead. No problem, sir. You will have your new card in two weeks.

That was so long ago I can’t remember what year it was. God was still sporting short trousers then. And I know we’ve all passed a lot of water under the bridge since.

I do remember calling six weeks later for an update. We are unable to process you request over the phone, sir. You will have to visit your branch. My account was opened at a branch in another town 24 years ago. With internet and phone banking there was no point transferring it to a local one. I couldn’t be bottomed visiting my branch so I left it at that.

This gave me time to think. I pay a government stamp duty of €10 on my Banklink card. I would have to pay €20 on a Laser card. Well, not exactly. I could pay €10 if I used the Laser only in ATMs or if I used it only for purchases, but if I used it for both I would pay €20. But to qualify for free banking I would have to use it for purchases and it would be no use to me if I didn’t use it at ATMs. So free banking was going to cost me €10 extra. The difference between the extra duty and the savings I’d make wasn’t great enough for me to bother switching.

The nice people in AIB wrote to me again this week. I am being automatically switched to a Laser card. I have no choice. The letter was dressed up to look like AIB were doing me a favour. I would have greater protection against fraud with chip and PIN technology.

I can’t help wondering if AIB are pandering to the revenue commissioners on this one. Here lads, how’s about we get you €10 extra from all our customers and you can owe us a favour?  We have a few things in mind.

The thing that’s really bugging me is the government stamp duty was brought in by Charlie McCreevy as a tax on banks. Not on customers. Or at least that’s what he told us at the time. But neither he, nor his successor, batted an eyelid when AIB et alia passed these taxes onto the consumer. But then, AIB pwns the government.

April 12, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Banks, Commentary, Plonkers, Politicians | | 6 Comments

Ted Walsh rocks!

Ted Walsh is many things. As he proved on RTÉ’s The Restaurant, he is a great cook. He is a great husband, father and neighbour, well liked and respected by one and all. He is an accomplished horse trainer, best know for his successes with Rince Rí, Papillion and Commanche Court, and as a jockey, was champion amateur 11 times. He is a natural wit and pundit.

But one thing Ted Walsh is not, is a politically correct waffler. He is a straight talker who says what he thinks. Whether he is chatting to someone on the street, a stable lad, a rich owner, a talk show host or as a TV commentator himself, Ted is Ted. Just like his cooking there are no airs and graces. Like it or lump it.

This is the man who threatened, live on Channel4, to knock John McCririck* through the window of a commentary box. Who’d blame him? Watching the RTÉ coverage of Fairyhouse yesterday I thought his co-presenter, Robert ‘Mouth full of Marbles’ Hall, was going to suffer the same fate on two occasions. Neighbour, colleague and friend or not, Ted wasn’t taking Hall’s pandering to the powers that be.

Hall made a remark about the number of horses which had been balloted** out. A red rag to a bull. Ted pointed out the flaws of the HRI’s^ balloting system and the lack of joined-up thinking in that authority. There are hundreds of horses that will never see a racetrack. Granted they may get their allocation of 5 bumper^^ runs and any number of point-to-points^^ but that’s not real racing and is a big disappointment for the owners who have invested financially and emotionally.

Meanwhile, another arm of the HRI is investing heavily in promoting racehorse ownership. And doing a great job of it. They have made it easy for everyone to participate through clubs and syndicates. There were 1,500 of these in 2006. In Ted’s opinion they are doing far too good a job. What is the point of the HRI encouraging new owners into the game when they can’t guarantee them being allowed play?

Hall unsuccessfully tried to defend the balloting system on the grounds that it was the only solution. Ted just said it doesn’t work and they need to think of another way.

A trainer was fined €250 for withdrawing his horse at too late a stage. His real crime? He said the ground had become too firm from the third last in. Other trainers had used excuses like stone bruises and, the old chestnut, off feed. Here, Ted pointed out, was a man being fined for his honesty. Hall backed up the stewards saying they declared the going good, the trainers had walked the course that morning and concurred, therefore they had no right to be calling it good-to-firm or firm now.

But what Hall was missing was the simple fact that, while the ground had been watered overnight and was good that morning, the warm day and the breeze had dried it out since. Ted could see this. Even TV viewers like myself could see it. There was dust rising.

For readers with no interest in racing who have managed to get this far, let me draw some parallels with our state institutions.

Like the HRI who encourage more owners and horses into the scene but fail to provide them with a chance to race, our county councils allow housing developments but fail to provide for the backup facilities like schools, water supply and sewage treatment.
Like the stewards who made up their minds that the going was good not firm and would not be told otherwise or re-evaluate their decision, our government have decided the election will be on a Tuesday and will not be moved. This, despite the fact that so many voters who work or study away from home will be denied their constitutional right.

There are too many stewards and HRI-like officials running this country and not enough Teds. Perhaps too many of us are taking it lying down like Hall.

* From Kav’s image bucket.

** Balloting is the process by which horses are selected for a race where the number entered exceeds the number permitted to run. Considered unfair by most owners and trainers. I haven’t aksed the horses. More here if you’re really interested. You will have to be really, really interested to read it though.

^ Horse Racing Ireland. A body charged with the administration and promotion of horseracing in Ireland.

^^ I’m fed up explaining things. Google them. Sorry - just lazy today.

April 9, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Commentary, Plonkers, Racing, TV | | 4 Comments

Snippets #1

  • The Sunday Times TV Guide listed the following for Good Friday on RTE1: 3:00 Celebration of the Lord’s Passion in Ballina. The movie at 9:30 on the same channel was to be The Passion of the Christ, set in Jerusalem. That guy really got around. He must be one of Old Knudsen’s heroes.
  • Still on TV: TG4 have dropped EuroNews and are now relaying France24 as their overnight filler. France24 is similar to EuroNews. Just funnier. And sometimes their world weather report somehow misses out the USA.
  • Ladbrokes, a betting shop chain, with over 2,200 outlets in the UK, Ireland and Belgium have a multi-lingual website. In addition to English, they offer Español, Italiano, Deutsch, Türkçe, Suomi and more. Even Irish! Unfortunately, the Irish site is in English. They had gone sky high in my book for a few seconds only to rapidly plummet back to earth. Those kind of G-forces must have given them a headache.
  • Someone has found my site with a Google search for “You’re as useful as tits on a bull“. I tried it myself and mine is one of only three results. Well not really my site - It was a link to a WordPress tag search. Maybe I should adopt it as a new slogan. Even stranger, Google asked if I meant You’are as useful as tits on a bull. The folks over at Google aren’t great spellers it would seem.

April 7, 2007 Posted by Primal Sneeze | Snippets | | No Comments