Wednesday, 9 August 2006
see through
I finished in Stockholm early enough to catch the last plane back on Wednesday and we zoomed back landing 20 minutes early at about 22:00. The thing was, we parked at a domestic terminal and although we had a jetway to walk off the plane, we were not allowed to use it because we would have missed immigration.
The buses to take us to the International gates took about 15 minutes to arrive and we had to de-plane from the back stairs.
A few mutters from the passengers, but this was nothing compared with the next day, when just about every flight was cancelled because of the security alert.
I'm not flying again until next week; but it looks as if it will be with no hand luggage except a carry-on see-through bag.
Tuesday, 8 August 2006
Sweden
A quick trip to Sweden today; and I'm staying in a hotel with a view of a bricked up window. But then I looked up into the sky, and behold, a hot air balloon. Admittedly it says Nokia (Finnish) rather than Ericsson (Swedish) but at least it is showing a Nordic perspective!
And if you look closely, you can see the people out for an aerial ride!
Monday, 7 August 2006
hot
A technical post today. My PC tower has been making a lot of extra noises lately. I use it for some music editing and some video tasks, via some special hardware.
I suspect there is something wrong with the fans which are supposed to keep it cool. As such, it is protesting at the current heat and maybe expecting a new cooling system.
My thoughts are that it doth protest too much.
Now I've seen the new Mac Pro, which has two 64 bit intel Xeon Core 2 processors and 1.33Ghz frontside bus delivering 21Gb/sec and up to 16Gb of memory, then it starts to jeopardise the need to replace the PC with another PC, when a Mac could happily run the remaining PC applications as subtasks.
In the short term, I'll buy some new PC fans for about £12, but medium term, I shall start playing with the autoconfigurator across on apple.com.
Tag: PC, apple, Mac Pro, intel, quad, terabyte
I suspect there is something wrong with the fans which are supposed to keep it cool. As such, it is protesting at the current heat and maybe expecting a new cooling system.
My thoughts are that it doth protest too much.
Now I've seen the new Mac Pro, which has two 64 bit intel Xeon Core 2 processors and 1.33Ghz frontside bus delivering 21Gb/sec and up to 16Gb of memory, then it starts to jeopardise the need to replace the PC with another PC, when a Mac could happily run the remaining PC applications as subtasks.
In the short term, I'll buy some new PC fans for about £12, but medium term, I shall start playing with the autoconfigurator across on apple.com.
Tag: PC, apple, Mac Pro, intel, quad, terabyte
Sunday, 6 August 2006
deer bike
As I was out cycling again in the afternoon, I thought it would be amusing to publish another bicycle picture, this time with fat tyres, as used when I was bumping about through the woodland along by the New Forest Ponies and a few more red deer.
OK, here's a picture of one of the deer, complete with mini antlers...
Tag: bicycle, mtb, deer
ride
An early start today, out in the nearby lanes on my bicycle with the thin tyres, before most people are up and about.
The main accompaniment today has been startled birds, rabbits and a few red deer. Another hour and the local world will be awake and most of the wildlife by the sides of the lanes will be back in hiding.
I estimate I covered about 15 miles this morning, which is enough to see some quite varied countryside and still to be back for the rest of the day by about 07:30.
Tag: bike, bicycle, hybrid road bike
Saturday, 5 August 2006
montaditos
Back in England, I'd only been home for around 30 minutes when the doorbell rang with a visitor. Not even time to swap clothes from travel.
By this evening I was more or less de-jet lagged and was out for friendly sangria and tapas at nearby La Tasca. Bring on the patatas bravas and the brocheta di pollo!
Next week, Sweden, but not until Tuesday.
Friday, 4 August 2006
childrens' shoes
Saturday, in London, there will be a protest about the current war in the Middle East by leaving childrens' shoes outside Tony Blair's place. I note that Blair is staying around instead of vacationing in order to be involved in ceasefire negotiations.
This war started asymmetrically, after the capture of two soldiers leading to a breathtakingly fast and disproportionate response. The underlying long term pressures on the small nation of Israel surrounded by Arab states become part of a rationale for escalated actions of the Israeli warplanes.
I don’t want to take sides; I have visited (and worked in) both areas and have friends in both areas. This makes it all seem close. But I do want to comment that we now seem to have relatively indiscriminate missiling and bombing of civilian populations in both territories.
The rest of the world is aghast but only responding quite slowly whilst the attrition clicks onward; Rice has made visits and the Bush machine is making “Hezbollah equals Iran” type noises in the background.
I am concerned that we are actually watching the ‘Iran proxy’ war as a precursor to a switch to another conflict. If America’s Defense Intelligence Agency really have an Office of Special Plans and a covert “lets do Iran/Syria” blueprint, then this is the sequencing for when it would be played as part of a long term regime change in Iran and a border defence for Israel.
It’s a reasonable assumption that information has leaked between the various players in each of the main countries involved. The Middle East works a lot on connections and the trade of information would probably be fair game. It’s also a reasonable bet that dissident support is receiving offshore funding in some of the targeted territories.
And for Iran, lets look. Condoleeza is on recent record saying "We may face no greater challenge from a single country than from Iran.”
Bush's ambassador to the United Nations is saying the U.N. “must be made aware that if it (Iran) continues down the path of international isolation, there will be tangible and painful consequences." Both pre conflict type statements.
So Blair’s vacation change could be significant; stop it; delay it or let the next escalated war play occur. We will know soon enough.
This war started asymmetrically, after the capture of two soldiers leading to a breathtakingly fast and disproportionate response. The underlying long term pressures on the small nation of Israel surrounded by Arab states become part of a rationale for escalated actions of the Israeli warplanes.
I don’t want to take sides; I have visited (and worked in) both areas and have friends in both areas. This makes it all seem close. But I do want to comment that we now seem to have relatively indiscriminate missiling and bombing of civilian populations in both territories.
The rest of the world is aghast but only responding quite slowly whilst the attrition clicks onward; Rice has made visits and the Bush machine is making “Hezbollah equals Iran” type noises in the background.
I am concerned that we are actually watching the ‘Iran proxy’ war as a precursor to a switch to another conflict. If America’s Defense Intelligence Agency really have an Office of Special Plans and a covert “lets do Iran/Syria” blueprint, then this is the sequencing for when it would be played as part of a long term regime change in Iran and a border defence for Israel.
It’s a reasonable assumption that information has leaked between the various players in each of the main countries involved. The Middle East works a lot on connections and the trade of information would probably be fair game. It’s also a reasonable bet that dissident support is receiving offshore funding in some of the targeted territories.
And for Iran, lets look. Condoleeza is on recent record saying "We may face no greater challenge from a single country than from Iran.”
Bush's ambassador to the United Nations is saying the U.N. “must be made aware that if it (Iran) continues down the path of international isolation, there will be tangible and painful consequences." Both pre conflict type statements.
So Blair’s vacation change could be significant; stop it; delay it or let the next escalated war play occur. We will know soon enough.
Thursday, 3 August 2006
massive release of beautiful energy
Beyond the obvious shopping streets of 5th Avenue and the sights of Empire State and Liberty Island, there's so much to see and do in New York. An example is wandering around the galleries of SoHo and East Village and I thought it would be fun to create a simple example here.
I've picked the small Deitch gallery in Grand Street because it shows up well on the internet and has some good audio visual experience about it. It also changes its entire look with each show as the pictures of the gallery shopfront above illustrate.
So go Manhatten metro and take a few minutes for a wander through the shimmering archives or join a visit to an opening at the gallery, captured here on video.
Tag: new york, nyc, metro
Wednesday, 2 August 2006
evening at paradise
things to do and people to see
Of course, my main reason for being in New York is work related and the whole place is still a great backdrop to whatever I'm doing and the scale, whilst vast, is somehow still manageable.
I suppose I've been here enough times to know my way around and have a good mental picture of how things link and the different styles and looks in different areas. Like London there are some great anchor points around the place too, and it is quite good fun to have a few 'regular' places to visit, as well as plenty of new ones!
Tag: new york, nyc, metro
empire state
I know its a cliche to say "I love New York", but I do. Its got a London buzz about it and every few metres there is something interesting to look at or experience. Here's a street scene I passed where a guy was selling castings of famous scenes of construction workers building the Empire State. Lewis Hine took the original iconic pictures and what better than to render them into 3D and then add them to the top of a pickup truck?
Tag: new york, nyc, metro
Tuesday, 1 August 2006
bronx is up and the battery's down
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