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Because archives are so much easier than having just hundreds of posts on the home page. I learned that the hard way.

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Wikipedia reaches 10 million articles!

Big shout out to everyone at Wikipedia and the Wikimedia Foundation for reaching 10 million articles! The record breaking entry was an article on English artist Nicholas Hilliard written in Hungarian. Hungarian of course being the language native to a country called Hungary. Sometimes I surprise even myself.

Wikipedia reaches 10 million articles!

I wonder what ol’ Nick who died in 1619 would think about being the 10 millionth article in a collaborative online encyclopaedia powered by electronic computers connected through a globally spanning network… makes you think.

Jeremy Zawodny inspired Yahoo scenarios

Jeremy Zawodny, one of the tech bloggers I respect the most (and one of the first people I added to my Bloglines account all those years ago) has posted a list of possible scenarios and outcomes of a Microsoft Yahoo merger. I’ll try not to blatantly plagiarise his material, but suffice to say he says the following are possible:

  1. Microsoft does buy Yahoo
  2. Another suiter (or suitors) will make a bid, forcing the price up for Microsoft
  3. Yahoo outsources it’s advertising and search business to Google
  4. Yahoo gets in on the DoubleClick deal and dominates visual advertising
  5. Yahoo rejects the offer outright, back to the status quo

I know what is good for their business probably doesn’t correlate with the outcomes I’d like to see, but if I were given the chance to choose the outcomes I’d prefer, I’d arrange them in this order:

  1. Yahoo outsources it’s advertising and search business to Google
  2. Yahoo rejects the offer outright, back to the status quo
  3. Yahoo gets in on the DoubleClick deal and dominates visual advertising
  4. Another suiter (or suitors) will make a bid, forcing the price up for Microsoft
  5. Microsoft does buy Yahoo

Yahoo is in trouble and does need help with their core search and advertising businesses, but I look at their track record on acquisitions and how much respect I see they still have with most people, and I can’t help but think a merger with Microsoft would do them any good.

Microsoft desperately wants to whip Google and they see Yahoo as the easiest way to do it, given their failure rate and return on investment on all their online ventures, but what’s in it for Yahoo? A possible clash of business cultures? Disillusioned workers who don’t want to work for the evil empire? The dropping of services?

Personally I see Yahoo as more of a diversified internet services company, not a services company that’s dominated by search with other services on the side such as Google. This is why I’m very concerned with people who simply cite Yahoo’s slipping market share for search and conclude that they’re failing. Flickr for example is one of the most respected, if not the most respected, photo storage and sharing sites, and I don’t know of any nerd or heavy computer user who doesn’t at least have a del.icio.us account.

Mmm... Swedish meatballs
Mmm, Swedish meatballs.

Anyway with Jeremy’s list as a starting point I’ve compiled my own short list of possible outcomes:

Google and Yahoo enter a partnership
Either as a delay tactic against Microsoft, or using it as a "white horse defense" against a hostile takeover.
eBay and Yahoo merge
Skype and auctions somehow integrated with search and existing services such as Flickr could be quite interesting, and their business cultures are far more compatible. eBay does has far less cash though, it would have to be a merger not a takeover.
Yahoo is purchased by News Corporation
Replaces Google as the default search on MySpace. Shudder!
Yahoo is purchased by Time Warner
I’ve always said merging Time Warner with an IT company would be a brilliant idea, they really should do it one of these days. Heck, it’s not as if they’ve ever tried before.
Yahoo’s goes bust
Their share price and market share continues to slide, and they eventually go into Chapter 11 Microsoft and Google swirl like vultures to pick up the pieces
An angel investor
The Flying Spaghetti Monster swoops down with his noodley appendage and provides investment just in the nick of time.

You can read Jeremy Zawodny’s original post here.

Watching Leo Laporte at 0400!

Timezone differences are a bum!

The problem with living in the 0800+ time zone (Singapore, China, Hong Kong, Perth etc) is that aside from Australia most cool English-language produced stuff online is either in Western Europe or North America which can be problematic for someone here when shows are broadcast live… over there! It means I either need to get up at a ridiculously early hour or go to bed at a ridiculously late hour which for someone who has lots of stuff to do all the time is not always feasible!

Nevertheless I can now add TWiT along side the Whole Wheat Radio morning wheat berry broadcast from Alaska to my list of shows I’ve stayed up late for, and have stuffed up my sleeping and work patterns for the whole next day!

Watching Leo Laporte at 04:00am Singapore time!
Watching Leo Laporte at 04:00am Singapore time!

I watched Leo Laporte record the latest episodes of Security Now and MacBreak Weekly using his UstreamTV feed on the TWiT website; it was wild! Better still for the first time I also joined the irc.dslextreme.com IRC chat room with Colloquy and not only was able to send messages to Leo while he was editing the shows which he replied to but I also subscribed to a whole bunch of cool new people from around the world on Twitter as well!

One of the people on IRC suggested that this is real Reality TV! I’d rather watch Leo editing audio files and taking about cool stuff with his listeners after the recording is over than some sleazy and predictable reality TV show on a network or cable TV channel. Then again that’s really not saying much is it? Leo, I didn’t mean it like that ;).

IRC TWiT chatroom

It is a great system because I can’t watch The Lab with Leo here. Fortunately I’ll be able to when I go back to Australia for my final year of uni.

So a big thanks to Leo for showing me what it’s like to record and edit your fine shows, was lots of fun :).

Now I just need to figure out next time if it’s worth going to bed early and waking up at 04:00am instead of staying up that late. Hey, I could listen to Whole Wheat Radio, then watch TWiT. Who needs sleep?

Africans are genetically inferior? Codswhallop!

Angélique Kidjo

Angélique Kidjo, in my opinion one of the most talented vocalists today.

I admit I only just read today on Truemors about how James Watson, a Nobel prize winner for his work on DNA research, blames Africa’s economic, health and political woes on their “generic inferiority”, but after some brief further research it already seems to be a hot issue across the internet and even on the local news here in Singapore.

There’s probably nothing much else that I could type here that hasn’t already been said somewhere else online about now, but even if you were to ignore the blatant racism and just focus on the economic side of it, it makes a mind boggling lack of sense.

As I posted on Truemors, from the dozen or so African people I know personally and seeing what is coming out of Africa, it seems to me they’re the most creative, resourceful, warm and artistic people on the planet. We should all be as “genetically inferior” as Dr Watson said.

Africa’s long term economic problems have as much to do with the genetic makeup of her people than Ruben has to do with girls in general. To even entertain the notion that somehow Europe’s meddling and resulting international borders which divide the country along colonial borders not on cultural or historical lines have nothing to do with it, or the corrupt governments have nothing to do with it, it’s just their genetics… it boggles the mind.

Then again Denial isn’t the only river in Egypt is it?

Weird CNET network links

CNET News.com

If you read CNET’s News.com you may have seen they’ve added a separate news bar along the top of all their pages that link to their partner networks. In particular they give TechRepublic a lot of coverage, which I guess targets similar people.

Some of the headlines and their corresponding articles though I think have been funny :):

Windows Services That Can Be Disabled
One of the most effective ways to secure a Windows XP workstation is to turn off unnecessary services.

I know an even more effective and bulletproof way to secure a Windows XP workstation… uninstall Windows!

Apple’s new keyboards stink
As you can see, I don’t have much good to say about the new keyboards. Just about everything with them is bad. Apple is putting form over function with the new design and for something as critical as a keyboard, it’s a grave error.

I’ve been using one for two weeks now, and it’s been a real pleasure to use. I don’t know if the reviewers have been throwing dead fish on theirs which would make them stink ;).

Alien Vs. Predator 2 invades FilmSpot
The intergalactic battle continues in a sleepy Colorado town. The Aliens inhabit a small town and the predators arrive to sanitize anything that can come in contact with them.

Argh I can’t stand movies that are lifted from computer games, and the first AVP movie was the worst of the lot!

How to disable 10 annoying Word features
f you’ve gotten more than your share of support calls from users trying to wrestle Word into submission (or pulled out your own hair on a few occasions), this list will help you quickly cut Word down to size.

That’s nothing, I know how to disable ALL of Microsoft Word’s features… uninstall it and install KOffice or OpenOffice.org!

Vista DRM: wrong, wrong, wrong

Headline is half right. Vista itself is just wrong ;)

Review of Cranky Geeks 081

Cranky Geeks

Cranky Geeks is one of the best video podcasts I watch… probably because it’s one of the only video podcasts I watch. No but seriously it’s a fantastic show, I encourage you to check it out especially if you enjoy lighthearted and cranky discussion of tech trends and the well-deserved ridiculing of stupid news stories.

This was my review Episode 081 dated the 11th of September 2007.

Of all the episodes of Cranky Geeks I’ve watched (and that includes all of them) this would definitely be up there as one of the crankiest of them all. Not to mention the fact they mentioned Singapore twice and Malaysia three times!

Sebastian on Cranky Geeks 081

First off Sebastian was really sharp again this episode. In the whole AMD Barcelona (or Bencoolen or Breatstick or whatever the chip is called) debacle he made the point that even though clock-speeds are less relevent now that they’ve ever been when compared to the efficiency of said chips, it’s still an important consideration. I don’t agree with the Crank-o-metre ratings, I think he’s been right on the ball the last few episodes.

Marc Canter on Cranky Geeks 081

I’m afraid I had mixed feelings about Marc Canter’s appearance. I first became aware of him after learning about his Ourmedia free media sharing site he set up with J.D. Lasica. Listening to him at the time I thought he was a very interesting person, so when I saw his name on the guest list for this Cranky Geeks I was excited. While watching it it was obvious he also had the best coloured shirt.

By the end of the episode though I was a bit tired of him. I’m certainly one of the last people he needs to convince with regards to his political views (I feel we’re about the same on the flawed left-right spectrum analogy) but the way he brought it up during a discussion about net neutrality didn’t have much tact, or for that matter relevence. Had he stayed just on the topic being discussed and delivered a few smart barbs against the people in question I think it could have made far more of an impact without bogging down the whole panel into a discussion about Republicans in American politics, which isn’t what the show is about. With those points he would be a great guest to have on a Cranky Washington show, but not Cranky Geeks.

Patrick on Cranky Geeks 081

Despite the fact I really couldn’t care less about Revision3 it was a real pleasure to have Patrick Norton and his awesome set-destroying coffee thermos on, he always brings good points and material to the table. Despite my agreeing with Sebastian on the processor debate, I do agree with what he said regarding efficiency: if a much slower CPU can do the same amount of work with far less power and at a lower clock-speed that’s definitely a good thing. Plus, I couldn’t argue with someone wearing such a swish hat you see.

John on Cranky Geeks 081

This episode had the best introduction to a show I’ve seen yet, John looked as though he was on a totally different planet for a second! I loved the shots of him looking at his hands with his head down when the political discussion started getting intense, as if to say “I’m not here”.

As I said above, it was interesting that Singapore and Malaysia got such coverage this episode. Being an Aussie (sorry John, an Australian!) who has lived in the former for over 10 years and the latter for 2 it was great to hear such heavyweights in the American technology scene talk about my region of the world, even if it was about the taking over of American telcos or piracy! The corridor that Marc was talking about was the “Multimedia Supercorridor” that the former Prime Minister Mahatir introduced to try to get the more economically properous areas of the country in the Klang Valley (Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya, Cyberjaya) digitally connected, but as of 2007 most of the goals still haven’t been met. All you have to do is type TMNet or StreamyX into Google to see how people love the only DSL provider in the country.

The Cranky Geeks 081 panel

To me the biggest story they talked about was the whole issue of Botnets. I have to disagree with the panel’s general consensus that people who use computers are on the whole stupid, I just think that many people use computers as tools, just as they do their cars for example. Just because you use a computer doesn’t mean you’re also automaitcally aware of how to maintain one, just as people who own cars aren’t automatically mechanics. Therefore just with cars I’ve always thought you should have to get a licence to use the internet. Nothing overly difficult, just basic training on how to spot fraudulent sites, block viruses and whatnot.

Very interesting episode. I’d love to see Marc Canter again, provided he left his political macho at the door next time. Dvorak dot org slash blog.

Earthquake hits Indonesia, rocks Singapore

LATEST,
THURSDAY MORNING: The Indonesians are feeling aftershocks and so are we here. I definitely felt the one this morning.

An earthquake this afternoon rocked Indonesia today and we in Singapore felt it too. Actually I didn’t, maybe I was on the MRT at the time and didn’t feel any difference, but it was enough for the Singaporean authorities to evacuate people from downtown:

SINGAPORE : Singapore buildings swayed after an earthquake hit Indonesia on Wednesday evening.

Residents in various parts of the island felt the quake and people in some buildings, including in the central business district, were evacuated as a safety precaution.

Areas in Singapore which felt the tremors included Novena, Paris Ris, Raffles Place, Potong Pasir, Marsiling, Toa Payoh and Thomson Road.

Singapore’s Meteorological Services said the earthquake measured 8.5 on the Richter Scale. The preliminary reading was 7.9.

The earthquake struck out at sea at 7.10pm. Its epicentre was 120 kilometres south-west of the Sumatran town of Bengkulu, at a depth of 15 kilometres.

This is some 670 kilometres from Singapore.

- Channel News Asia

Indonesia has sent out a tsunami alert, let’s all hope it spares those poor people too much damage. God knows they’ve suffered enough from huge waves in the last few years. The 2004 Asian tsunami was one of my first posts on this weblog.