26 November 2004

More offices?

I heard on the radio, that they think that we will need 50% more office space by 2015. Personally I don't think so. I mean, more and more people are spending their day in front of a PC so going into an office to do that are becoming more and more pointless as technology is enabling us to connect and communicate remotely from our own bedroom! Why would we want to waste even more time in trafic/trains/etc when we can do our job perfectly from our own home?

25 November 2004

Moving out...stuff

It has been a fact for a long time now, that the flat in Denmark Hill is too small. I know that a two bed room flat for two people seems fair enough, but it you don't want to be cluttering all your walls/floor with stuff then at some point things become too small. We have been discussing moving somewhere else for a while now, but that has its own issues:
  • We don't know where we want to live
  • 'A' must be able to travel to cental London (Liverpool Street specifically)
  • As long as 'A' is studying, it would be risky to move
  • We probably can't really afford what we want
So what do you do, when you don't want piles everywhere? You goto self-storage! When I first thought of the idea and checked out some prices, it seemed rediculous to pay 50 quid per month (!) for 15 sq.feet. I mean 15 sq.feet how small is that! But then if you thing about it, it an store about 25 moving boxes, which is as much as all my stuff when I moved from Copenhagen, albeit that was a long time ago... Anyway I presented the idea to 'A' and her initial comment was something along the lines of you must be nuts..., and that when other people run out of space they find a bigger place whereas I just ant to 'hide' it... I tried to explain that we had already thrown out as much as possible and that we really couldn't move right now (see above), but still she resisted... In the end I went ahead and made my way down to the Big Yellow round the corner and booked my 15 sq.feet... I must say that it does make sense. Yes, 50 quid is a lot, but then rent in London is just stupid! And if you need more space, it is a good option. Now I just need to find out what to put there...

23 November 2004

The blind spot

Just went to the local pub for a spot of lunch. I noticed they had a sign on the door saying that the menu was available in Braille! Is it just me or am I missing something here...

22 November 2004

When is it enough?

Where is the limit of interference of the politicians into peoples lives? Now in the US the lawmakers will prohibit fast-forwarding on DVD's and you have got to ask yourself the question: Who are the politicians working for? I suppose it is a question asked many times before, but fundamentally I would guess that they work for the ones that put them in office, i.e. the public. If that is the case, how on Earth can they think of putting something like this into law? I mean, it is blatantly obvious that they are just supporting an industry that is supporting their campaign to keep a warm and comfortable seat in an office where they can, apparently, act as small Gods!! If this is the case, haven't the public then lost their right to actually wield power through exercising their democratic rights? Aren't the politicians just serving the few instead of the many? I know, I know there is nothing new in this, but still...

Flatline...

Still no downloads on my open-source project...

Fruit cult

That Apples users are passionate about their Macs are nothing new. But does this help Apple? I am sure that a great part of the cult status of the Mac has to do with Steve Jobs and normally cults are also associated with individual persons, who then gets elevated to demi-god status with whatever benefits that may give them. But Apple is a business. Will a business benefit from a cult status in a similar way as a person will? The main purpose of a business is to make money. Everything it does should in the long run result in something black on the bottom line. Apple buts a lot of efford into creating a cult about their products, but it doesn't seem like they have a lot gain on the bottom line from this. Granted the share price is the highest it have been for a long time, but their market share is still nothing to write home about. Is Microsofts FUD the only way to penetrate the market? Does Apples cult really work in the long term? Will Linux show us how it should be done? Or is their a third way...?

19 November 2004

Activism by party

After the launch of Firefox and the parties organised by users (more than 400 last I checked), is this a new form of activism? I mean, everyone wants to party and using the internet, it will be pretty easy to organise people into meeting in a pub for a specific cause. I am sure the model, where individuals are organising their own local party will work just fine. In todays world of general apathy, we need some form of motivation that can get people out on the steets...

MS is FUD'ed

Seems like Microsoft is at it again spreading more FUD without be specific about what they want to do about it. Obviously threads like this will only work where software patents can be enforced, which (still) does not count Europe. Problem for Microsoft is that laws like this is more or less set by industry trends. If the industry is taking a monopolistic turn, such as with Microsoft, then it will result in patent laws as we see them to enable the politicians to get continued support from the industry big boys (read: bid money). If industry opinion changes, and software patents in general and Microsoft in specific gets out of favour, then the politicians will change their opinion and they will adjust to industry trends. Now that puts Microsoft in a catch-22. If they do nothing and loose market share to open-source, then we will see and industry trend change and a shift in policy, which will threaden to remove the very foundation of Microsoft. If they try and spread FUD and it backfires, i.e. companies/governments ignore it, then we will have the same situation. If they start draging companied to court, then the chance is they will have another SCO on their hands, which will just be a slow painful death! Policy can only be controlled if you are a monopoly, and Microsoft has successfully done this through FUD, but now they seem to be confused about which way to go. Will be interesting to see their next move...

17 November 2004

Too many things to do

I always find it amazing that the more we need to do, the less we actually get done! I am sure that numerous books has been written about how to organise your tasks (as it is genericly called in this day of age) to that you make sure you get the most important ones done first and eventually all of them. But I don't find these tools work - and I am wondering if there isn't something fundamentally wrong in the way we decide our tasks. It seems like the more sparetime we have on our hands the more tasks we take on, but the less we get done. And I beleive it is this compulsion to fill all our time with doing stuff that is the problem; for some reason we can not accept idle time, so we fill it up. Problems then come when our non-spare time has become so stressed that we need the idle time to clear our heads. If we don't let the brain run idle once in a while, we just end up in the situation, where we get nothing planned or done and then we have the bad spiral where the tasks (some of them important!) just piles up and we are looking at the piles unable to react.