Total Nutter
Posted: Thu 9 November, 2006 Filed under: News, Weirdness Leave a comment »OK, I was wrong about the Strangest Story of the Week.
It’s actually this bloody idiot who for some reason decided to try lighting a firework that was, um, stuffed up his arse.
I honesly can’t even begin to think of any reasons why someone would think this was a good idea, let alone amusing. But there we go – I’d say it was a Darwin Award waiting to happen.
My favourite quote, though, has to be:
“We received a call stating there was a male who had a firework in his bottom and it was bleeding.
“He sustained fairly significant injuries in the fact that there’s huge damage to that particular area.”
Mastering the fine art of understatement…
Surreal
Posted: Wed 8 November, 2006 Filed under: News, Weirdness 2 Comments »And the award for “Most Surreal Story of the Week” goes to this little gem.
You just couldn’t make it up.
Adopting Madonna
Posted: Mon 23 October, 2006 Filed under: News, Thoughts, Weirdness 2 Comments »I must be missing something relevant in the farce about Madonna adopting a boy from Malawi.
Personally I don’t give a monkey’s toss what Madonna does or doesn’t do, and I think a lot of the hype around this story is just that – hype.
But I do have to wonder (in the little brain-time I’ve given this) one thing. If the boy has a father, what the blue blazing fiddly fuck has he doing in an orphanage?
Or do I have the wrong meaning of “orphan” stored in my head?
Woman of the Year
Posted: Wed 18 October, 2006 Filed under: News, Thoughts Leave a comment »I’m really pleased to see that Camila Batmanghelidjh has been recognised for some of her work, and won the “Woman of the Year” award for the things she’s done with Kids Company and the like.
(Pause at this point, as I was hunting for something I thought I’d written a long time ago about Kids Company on d4d™, but can’t find now)
Kids Company is, from what I recall, a fantastic charity based in London, with Camila as the main person. They do a lot of work with exceptionally vulnerable children and young adults, particularly those with emotional and/or mental health issues.
Oh, and her book is bloody fantastic too, and well worth the time/money.
All in all, a truly fantastic woman, who utterly deserves the recognition.
Binge Drinking
Posted: Sat 14 October, 2006 Filed under: News, Thoughts 2 Comments »So I see that the Government is releasing a ‘hard-hitting’ advert to show young people the risks of binge-drinking. Oh dear God, here we go again. Yes, OK, it’s actually quite a strong advert – particularly at the end, where the guy has fallen off the scaffolding, and is just laying there twitching. Will it work? No, almost certainly not.
At the end of the day, there are a couple of things that are actually needed. Adverts about the risks doesn’t come on that list. Neither does the other (incredibly dumb) idea that there should be health warnings on bottles of wine and spirits. Because, let’s face it, if you’re going to try and change the minds of the people who’re seriously binge-drinking, wine and spirits ain’t on the list. It’s beer and the inevitable ‘alcopops’ that appeal to that particular market.
But the two things that are truly needed are :
- A government that doesn’t get involved in all these bollocks sound-bites, and renaming one thing as another. ‘Binge Drinking’ is just the new government/media title for “Getting Pissed”. Binge Drinking? It’s drinking 6 (for women) or 8 units of alcohol (for men) in one session. That’s – um – about three pints of semi-decent lager. Figure it out for yourself. A pint of Grolsch (my preferred ‘general’ beer) is three units. So if I have three pints, I’m a binge-drinker.
- Instill the concept of personal responsibility. I’m sorry, but if you can’t control yourself when you’ve been drinking, and don’t know your own limits, you shouldn’t be fucking drinking. I can understand (to a degree) a one-off “drank more than I usually do” episode. I just truly don’t get the thing about going past your limits and being a twat every weekend. I don’t know, maybe it’s just that I’ve always preferred independent thought instead of caving to peer-pressure.
Personal responsibility is the biggie though. It’s about saying “I’ve made that choice”, rather than absolving one’s responsibility to the power of drink, drugs, whatever. The entire “It’s not my fault, it’s because of x,y and z” philosophy where basically everything is the fault of something else.
Maybe if we started working on that idea, we’d have less issues with ‘binge-drinking’ , addictions, and the like.
Or maybe I’m just full of bollocks. I’m sure you’ll let me know what you think…
Web Numpties
Posted: Tue 10 October, 2006 Filed under: Geeky, News, Security, Thinking About..., Weirdness 6 Comments »On the subject of numb-brained persons, and their inability to deal with common knowledge, is it really a shock to know that a large number of people are still total twunts when it comes to computers? No, not really.
Fair enough, this entire story is about “honeypot” PCs and seeing how long it takes them to be attacked – but by definition these honeypots are unprotected – no firewall, no anti-virus, and (most importantly) a complete numpty at the keyboard.
The survey found 17% of people had no anti-virus software and 22% had no firewall. A further 23% said they had opened an e-mail attachment that came from an unknown source.
I’m sorry, but if people can’t be bothered to use an anti-virus tool, and to activate either Windows’ own software firewall, or get one of their own, then they bloody well deserve to be taken for a ride. As for opening up email from unknown sources, I kind of wrote about this over the weekend, but still, nearly a quarter of people have opened random emails with (one assumes) a subject line that makes them think it’s OK to open? I despair. Mind you, again, people who do that just deserve to be ripped off – it’s like an idiot tax.
At home our broadband connection comes through a box with a built-in firewall and router. There’s also at least a software firewall on all the machines in the house. And all of them use AVG’s anti-virus as a matter of course.
After all, it’s not like it’s difficult to get a decent free bit of anti-virus software like AVG. And OK, while my favourite software firewall has now disappeared (thanks to Symantec, who always were a bunch of scum-sucking weasels anyway) it’s still not difficult to find and install the likes of Zone Alarm, or even to use the entire anti-virus/firewall combinations released by companies like Norton, McAfee, et al.. It’s just that the “Oh, it’ll never happen to me” attitude still prevails, and it’s likely to continue to do so for the forseeable future, and for one prime reason. People are numpties. Simple as that.
Personally I think that all broadband connections – be it ADSL, Cable, ISDN, whatever – should use boxes with at least a basic built-in firewall. I know Windows XP SP2 activated the software firewall by default, and I think that’s a good thing too. I would like to see new PCs come with a decent (and free) anti-virus scanner – although of course Dell et al probably get a huge dollop of cash for pre-installing shit like McAfee on the computers they provide – so that everyone has access to the basic protection, from Day One, without having to shell out extra money.
If PC makers, Broadband providers and so on simply work on the assumption that people won’t bother, and just provide these simple things as a built-in, then a whole load of these problems would go away. Most standard PC users don’t bother uninstalling what comes with the PC, they want to just plug-and-go. So give them the security straight away. Don’t assume that either a) people will know they need this stuff or b) that they’ll go and download and install it as the first thing they do. They won’t. They’ll leave it ’til the PC is a heaving festering lump of viral content, pop-ups, and email shite, and then complain…
The computer’s gone wrong! I didn’t do anything! It’s the computer’s fault!
Stanislav Petrov
Posted: Wed 27 September, 2006 Filed under: General, News, Weirdness Leave a comment »Amazing, the things you find out sometimes.
Twenty-three years ago today, Stanislav Petrov saw multiple missile launches reported by his early-warning satellites and waited, knowing the satellite had been reported faulty, rather than reacting instantly to those American missile launches by launching the Soviet nuclear missiles under his control. He’s since been awarded two “World Citizen Awards”, and can be seen as pretty much saving the world from World War Three.