If you want to achieve something, there's often two ways to do it. The proper way, or the way that will actually get results. Do you have procedures and processes that get in the way and other people have to work around?
Wednesday, 12 October 2011
Thursday, 4 August 2011
Marching orders
I'm not the most political of people, but I do try to keep abreast of what's going on in the governance of the country I live in. I read a few political blogs and I've noticed something that I'm increasingly finding irritating. It seems you can't be a lefty/liberal/etc and a Christian.
Monday, 18 July 2011
The choice is yours
If you're a manager/supervisor/whatever you'll regularly have encounters with those who's work you oversee. In each of those encounters you can encourage, inspire or challenge (in a positive way), or you can do the opposite.
Sunday, 17 July 2011
Are BT slowly imploding?
I have a suspicion that BT is a company in crisis. It isn't necessarily reflected in their financial performance (yet) and they probably don't know it; at least senior management probably don't. So where do I draw such a conclusion from?
Tuesday, 28 June 2011
Grrrrr Seagate and your shoddy disks
Should anyone be tempted to buy a Seagate Green 1TB drive model ST1000DL002, let me save you some bother.
Don't. I've got four of them, they're all equally rubbish.
Don't. I've got four of them, they're all equally rubbish.
Tuesday, 14 June 2011
We own all your ideas
Recent legislative moves by France suggest their government is supportive of US style software patents in the EU.
This is a worry because at the moment software isn't patentable in the EU or UK. The problem with the US system is well debated but in essence is this: companies are able to patent an idea, often a vague description of that idea and what the software process will achieve but, crucially, without having to actually write that software.
This has lead to the rise of patent trolls, companies such as Lodsys (currently suing iPhone app developers, apple and indeed everyone from adidas to the wall street journal).
Lodsys are a fine example of the worst of the breed. The company doesn't actually produce anything. It only exits to hold and defend a portfolio of patents. Businesses like this contribute nothing other than to keep some lawyers employed.
So many ideas have been patented in the US that it's probably almost impossible to write software that doesn't infringe at least one patent.
And to be clear, it isn't a matter of copying code, that's covered by copyright.
I'm not a software developer and the chances of me being sued are somewhat small. However we should all be concerned about something that, in the view of many, stifles creativity and competition.
After all, the trouble with patenting ideas is 'there's nothing new under the sun'
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
This is a worry because at the moment software isn't patentable in the EU or UK. The problem with the US system is well debated but in essence is this: companies are able to patent an idea, often a vague description of that idea and what the software process will achieve but, crucially, without having to actually write that software.
This has lead to the rise of patent trolls, companies such as Lodsys (currently suing iPhone app developers, apple and indeed everyone from adidas to the wall street journal).
Lodsys are a fine example of the worst of the breed. The company doesn't actually produce anything. It only exits to hold and defend a portfolio of patents. Businesses like this contribute nothing other than to keep some lawyers employed.
So many ideas have been patented in the US that it's probably almost impossible to write software that doesn't infringe at least one patent.
And to be clear, it isn't a matter of copying code, that's covered by copyright.
I'm not a software developer and the chances of me being sued are somewhat small. However we should all be concerned about something that, in the view of many, stifles creativity and competition.
After all, the trouble with patenting ideas is 'there's nothing new under the sun'
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
Location:York,United Kingdom
Friday, 27 May 2011
What's the point of this?
This is a waste of everyone's time:

An irresponsible dog owner isn't going to stop and look at this poster. If they did, it likely wouldn't make any difference to their behaviour. After all, PC Copper threatening the risk of an occasional £75 fine vs always picking up dog waste... Sounds like a good deal to me.
The implication of this is other places may actually say yes to dog fouling. In fact if I were put up a poster with my stupid grinning face next to a massive pile of turds saying "Yes! to dog fouling" would everyone suddenly go "oh. Ok then"? I somehow doubt it.
People who are lazy, stupid or generally irresponsible are not best reached through the use of posters. The very people who will look at this are those who will agree that 'something should be done'.
Enough of these same people obviously think taking this picture and putting together an uninteresting poster is actually doing something about the problem. It isn't.
If there really is a problem then really do something about it. That will mean confronting people, fining them, perhaps having a mob with flaming torches hunt them down. Because I doubt there's many in the Redcar & Cleveland area who genuinely think letting their dog take a dump on the pavement and leaving it there is really ok.

An irresponsible dog owner isn't going to stop and look at this poster. If they did, it likely wouldn't make any difference to their behaviour. After all, PC Copper threatening the risk of an occasional £75 fine vs always picking up dog waste... Sounds like a good deal to me.
The implication of this is other places may actually say yes to dog fouling. In fact if I were put up a poster with my stupid grinning face next to a massive pile of turds saying "Yes! to dog fouling" would everyone suddenly go "oh. Ok then"? I somehow doubt it.
People who are lazy, stupid or generally irresponsible are not best reached through the use of posters. The very people who will look at this are those who will agree that 'something should be done'.
Enough of these same people obviously think taking this picture and putting together an uninteresting poster is actually doing something about the problem. It isn't.
If there really is a problem then really do something about it. That will mean confronting people, fining them, perhaps having a mob with flaming torches hunt them down. Because I doubt there's many in the Redcar & Cleveland area who genuinely think letting their dog take a dump on the pavement and leaving it there is really ok.
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