Luke Haines, Off My Rocker At The Art School Bop, produced by Richard X. Listen.
This should really be a big hit, but it won’t be. I suppose that’s life.
Because 2018 somehow is still a thing
Luke Haines, Off My Rocker At The Art School Bop, produced by Richard X. Listen.
This should really be a big hit, but it won’t be. I suppose that’s life.
I’ve just installed Vista RC1 on my main desktop machine, and for the first time it’s speedy enough and almost ready to be my main operating system. I’m typing this in Vista IE7 now.
Vista has had a bit of a troubled history for me. I have an Athlon-64 3500+ homebuild machine, with 1GB RAM, a SoundBlaster Live! Platinum 5.1 I paid quite a bit of money for a few years ago, and an NVIDIA 6800GT graphics card – something which should be fast enough for anything much thrown at it (it’s certainly fast enough for Doom 3 and Half-Life 2 at my LCD monitor’s resolution with anti-aliasing on.) Yet previous Vista builds have been horrendously slow, swapping to disc or just unusable.
Much of this seems to have been the fault of two companies: NVIDIA and Creative Labs. NVIDIA have fixed their problems and now their graphics drivers are quick, stable and very much up to the task. Creative have not, and it’s entirely their fault – they have decided not to write any Vista drivers at all for the Soundblaster Live! series, including the 5.1 Platinum I own, in an obvious attempt to make us all buy Audigys and X-Fis (too bad their Audigy and X-Fi Vista drivers don’t work properly, if at all, according to everyone who’s tried them). Microsoft themselves have tried to cajole Creative into writing the needed drivers, with no effect. The end result is that I had to use the kludge that is the kX drivers, and they don’t work too well on Vista.
No more. Now I’ve replaced my long-cable hi-fi link with Xbox Media Center, I no longer need to have two front outputs – one in the rear to my hi-fi, one in the front for my headphones. Now I can plug my headphones directly into the rear, and use XBMC to play music through the hi-fi in the next room. And because I can do that, I can use my NForce4 on-board audio, of which NVIDIA’s RC1 drivers work (if a little minor-buggily).
So when I was swapping a TV tuner today, I yanked out my Live 5.1; the last act in a long struggle, the very final straw for me being the fact that Creative despite all the complaining have refused to change their position (whilst their Audigy and X-Fi drivers still don’t work properly for everyone). So, goodbye Creative; I’ve bought a lot of your stuff over the years, but you’ll never see a penny of my money again. Good riddance to you all.
So, the albums in competition are low-key numbers from Richard Hawley, Thom Yorke and Isobel Campbell (the former of which should win); “popular act we’ve ignored previously” entries from Muse and Scritti Polliti, the Big Name entry from the Arctic Bloody Monkeys, and the “truly godawful, WTF they put it there over a decent album” entry from Hot Chip. And the real should-be winners, Kate Bush and the Pet Shop Boys, aren’t on the list.
SPOILER WARNING: Unfair winner revealed after the break…
If you don’t want football matches to be shown between 2:45 and 5:15, maybe you might wish not to allow TV companies to broadcast them. This thought has apparently not come to the SPL:
A licensee in Glasgow has been stopped from using a decoder to access and screen overseas broadcasts of Scottish Premier League matches.
The Court of Session in Edinburgh granted an interim interdict against The Spirit Bar in the east end.
[BBC News Scotland, “Licensee handed TV football ban“]
The basic situation is that all games are taped. Through a UEFA ruling, we can’t actually show most games live within the UK (those between 2:45 and 5:15 on Saturdays) because it’ll stop people being extorted by the clubs, but at the same time rights to all the games are sold to countries outside UK jurisdiction which aren’t subject to this limit.
Since the satellites that serve the Middle East are very much accessible from UK skies using a large (but standard) dish, you can entirely legally purchase a subscription from a Turkish satellite provider and thus gain access to SPL/EPL/other non-Sky football. Often with English commentary, too. A few people in the know – mostly satellite enthusiasts and pubs – have taken this up, and the football authorities are not happy.
Sky in particular are furious at this: the fees they charge pub-owners are astronomical (for a lesser service, too – the pub versions of Sky Sports are 4:3, not widescreen) and they don’t want to lose that easy, monopoly income. They’ve actually failed at this in the English courts, but obviously they’ve decided that the Scots might be an easier target.
Going straight to the point: it is not illegal for a pub-owner to posess a foreign decoder, the decoder owner pays the subscription fee to the foreign satellite company, the SPL/EPL/whatever are paid for the rights from the foreign broadcaster, and therefore if it gets picked up in Britain it should be none of their business. All prosecuting people does is shows us
Yes! Buy a motorised dish! Screw Sky! Screw £30+ gate fees! Screw the SPL and EPL! And then maybe, just, they’ll see some sense.

We can only hope we’ll be able to do the same for 2012.
Been listening to a lot of Soft Cell lately, and if you haven’t heard their Art of Falling Apart and you like synthpop I highly recommend it – ultra-depressing and incisive lyrics matched up with some quite interesting, underproduced, melodic yet somehow off tunes. Good stuff, completely ignored back in 1983. Only €5.99 from a branch of Saturn in Munich, which was cool.
(Germany is very good for finding these obscure 80s albums at decent prices. Shame I can’t get a cheap P.U.L.S.E. DVD for love nor money, though… oh well, only three weeks until I’m back.)
Anyway, I’m off to Dresden for the weekend. See you Monday.
What on earth is going on? Here we have John Reid making one of his regular “freedom can get tae f***” speeches while obviously knowing what’s going on in the background, a “terrorist plot” allegedly foiled by the security services, and thus the introduction of yet another kneejerk “security” feature that seems to be designed to make people’s lives hell whilst doing absolutely nothing to stop anything bad getting on the plane.
(I mean, explosives getting set off by an iPod? The amount of effort needed to get the battery out of one of those things would make any terrorist attack using one about as effective as Richard Reid’s shoebomb. Maybe a mobile, but that would take time to set up too – and would be just as effective in the hold.)
What’s amazing is that these ‘security’ additions haven’t been thought about at all: instead they’ve just gone for a blanket ban. If you’re facing a threat from “liquid explosives”, (although the current Net rumour is that it was a production-of-HCN chemical reaction designed to incapacitate the entire aircraft) you don’t need to ban laptops, MP3 players, cosmetics or, of course, any and all reading material. Instead, you just have to force people to hand over their bottles of “water”.
Which idiot civil servant thought that banning (or rather, not allowing) reading material was a brilliant idea, and how much of an idiot does John Reid have to be for forcing it through? It’s a tell-tale sign that all that’s going on is a serious kneejerk reaction of the type that does nothing to improve the safety of British citizens. Spending (say) 24 hours on a flight to Australia with young kids, no reading material, no games consoles, nothing other than ludicrously priced airline mineral water is not going to be fun for those families who have to go through with it, or anyone else on the aircraft.
I was close to the weight limit for check-in baggage when I left Britain for Germany at the beginning of July. I return at the beginning of September. If I have to put all my books and my laptop in check-in (along with my laptop’s backup drive, AC adaptor and restore discs, wonderful, no chance of anything going wrong there oh no), it’ll probably take it over Easyjet’s 20kg limit and I’ll get charged oversize baggage – no-one is waiving the fee, because they don’t have to. Worse than that, I’m going to be stuck in Berlin SXF for a long time with absolutely nothing to do, followed by being stuck on a two hour flight to Glasgow with absolutely nothing to do other than read Easyjet’s pathetic in-flight magazine, followed by hoping beyond hope that my bag comes through unharmed with my laptop intact. Don’t know about you, but I’m dreading it.
BBC Have Your Say seems to think that we should blame the terrorists for all the disruption and be thankful that we weren’t blown up, since obviously if we were allowed books some terrorist might find a way to break a window with a bound Qu’ran or whatever. If the plot was real, then I’m fine with the cancellations and the removal of water bottles et al; however, I won’t blame currently hypothetical “terrorists” for what British airline passengers are suffering right now. I will blame John Reid and BAA for being unmeasurably stupid, for instead of thinking about what was necessary to protect us they simply chose to follow the TSA-style kneejerk “Oh my god, let’s ban everything!” overreaction.
And this is his claim to be deputy leader? Pathetic.
If you liked this rant, take a look at Europhobia, where as always Nosemonkey lays it out in the best written of terms.
…but what on earth is Brett Ratner on?
“The Boys from Brazil”. I ask you.
As is being pointed out by much of the blogosphere right now, the Mac Pro is actually a seriously good deal. Most of it has been Stateside, though, so let’s take it from a UK point of view:
Is Dell in trouble? You betcha, especially when you put in Apple’s massive education discount, which will certainly make up for putting a X1900 in there instead of the 6600 equivalent that is the 7300GT. Even if you add the cost of that and maybe an extra couple of gigs of RAM (at Crucial rather than Apple prices, obviously – with Crucial, you can get 2GB for the price of 1GB from Apple), and even a legit copy of XP to Boot Camp with for HL2 Photoshop before it goes Universal, it’s still going to be less than the cheaper Dell. Isn’t that amazing?
I’m a PC person, and always have been, but am definitely considering a MBPro if it goes Core 2 – these machines simply offer everything and they’re surprisingly competitive with normal PCs (especially after the Higher Education Discount.) Hopefully this means PC vendors might start getting competitive for a change; Dell can’t be smug about price anymore, at least for pro workstations. That’s going to be a good thing for everyone.
I have been listed by MSN UK as one of their “30 Top Blogs” (#17) amongst the likes of Boris Johnson, Mr. Biffo, Diamond Geezer, the Policeman’s Blog…
I see they like my taste in music. Should really write something more today, shouldn’t I?