This little story is dedicated to anyone who is attempting to make the excruciatingly painful transition from Delphi or Visual Basic to C#
Thursday, 11 September 2008
Rupert’s Brand New Bicycle
Friday, 13 June 2008
Mischief and Oily Emissions
Don't let's hang about
Let's have some mischief
Another magnificent Tory coup de théâtre! Michael Heseltine doing his Tarzan bit in ’76 and now after a gap of a mere 32 years, David Davis’s master stroke. In fact, Davis couldn’t have done better if he had taken Heseltine’s tactic a step further and dashed Gordon Brown’s brains out with the Mace. Certainly it would have been kinder. But I suppose the otherwise dull as ditchwater Davies lacks Heseltine’s natural flamboyance.
Just when the hapless Brown thought things were going to settle down, just when he thought he might at last be granted the space to fulfil his dream and reconstruct himself as a statesman (it's cruel to snigger), he now faces the prospect of David Davis on the News every night talking about the erosion of civil liberties under Labour. And then there is the little matter of the looming Tanker strike.
One wonders if Gordon is going to have to take an immense gulp, swallow his pride and call on the Machiavellian mendacities of Peter Mandelson. Certainly it would be a mistake to rely on the kittenish hisses of dear little Jacqui Smith, who last night actually claimed that Davis’s move was a sign of Conservative "disarray". Talk about the pot calling the kettle Brown! Can there be any truth in the rumour that Tony & Cherie Blair go around humming ‘Things Can Only Get Better’?
Friday, 23 May 2008
West Country Gothic
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
As the weather was fine, Poi decided to walk home from work last night. I said that I’d meet her, but she said that it was quite safe at 9.30 as there people were always about and that she would be accompanied by a friend. Ours is a peaceful town, especially during the week, and the walk would take less than 10 minutes. I was not especially worried.
Having just finished work myself, I was sitting in the kitchen when she burst into the house, looking white, breathless and absolutely terrified. “I am being haunted”, she gasped as she locked and bolted the front door but was too scared to say more. Thinking she might have been stalked by some lout, I interrogated her and she told me that she had been passing NatWest, glanced in and saw a malevolent old man looking out at her. The bank was deserted and he was sitting perfectly still in the gloom. He face was grey and unhealthy looking and his legs were crossed. She took all this in at a glance before fleeing as fast as her legs could carry her.
Poi wouldn’t be convinced that her vision must have been a trick of the shadows so, deciding that the only way to allay her fears was to find out exactly what had triggered them, I said that I’d go and investigate. Poi said that there was no way that she would be left on her own and accompanied me, insisting that we took the car in case we had to make a quick getaway. I don’t believe in ghosts myself, but suspected that were they to exist, an elderly Nissan would be little defence against the forces of Hell. However, my wife is Thai and, thus, exceedingly well versed in matters supernatural. She should know best.
We got to the bank, and in a split second my scepticism was confounded as there facing me was the sinister old man exactly as Poi had described. Not only that, but he had a companion. Sitting to his left was an evil looking old woman, her gaze fixed on mine, a quizzical half-smile on her lips and a gnarled stick grasped in her aged hand. There was indeed something distinctly unnatural about the pair: they looked almost too wizened to be alive.
At this point, taking the car seemed not such a bad idea after all. I now understood what it meant to feel one’s flesh creep. With foot poised over the accelerator, I steeled myself and took a second glace at the strangely motionless pair. Despite the crepuscular lighting, it was then that I noticed a sign next to the couple saying “Please don’t touch”. They were in fact papier-mâché sculptures of an elderly vicar and his wife made by the artist Peter Rush. They may have been intended as humorous but in the gloom bore a distinct resemblance to Grant Wood’s American Gothic. Feeling none too proud of myself, I returned home with my somewhat chastened wife.
Thursday, 31 January 2008
On Nearing 50 - An Emergency Checklist
- Desist from playing hopscotch with pretty secretaries outside the offices of clients. Pretending to be a trapeze artist on the walls of clients’ car parks is also to be eschewed.
- Throw away all my clothes and buy several tweed suits and sensible brogues. I might also need ‘long johns’ and trusses (I am not entirely sure what these are so I’ll check with some genuinely old people like my friends David & Mike)
- Wear a tie at all times and replace sarong with night shirt or pyjamas.
- Cultivate a grave demeanour, exude gravitas and stick to ½ a pint of bitter at pub. Getting half cut, falling on the floor and laughing hysterically are definitely off the agenda.
- No more gadgets and especially no more robots (sadly this includes voice activated battle daleks). Instead spend money on pollyfilla, raw plugs and chamois leathers.
- Start talking about sensible things. Subjects to include the M25 corridor, power tools and grouting tiles. Also the price of various lengths of woods (2x4 or something) and the relative merits of different makes of workbench. (NB Find out what one actually does with a workbench).
- Refrain from conversational topics like cannibalism, cargo cults and sexual deviancy especially on first meeting people. Bear in mind that not everyone finds medieval torture techniques that amusing.
- Stop going to Amsterdam. Walking tours of the Lake District now on the cards.
- Take up a mature hobby like fishing or car washing.
The Quantum Beach Ball
Take a gander at this BBC news article: Future directions in computing . Then ask yourself, why now and what does it all mean? And what's with all the dry ice and what is the greenish ball with its misty nimbus all about?
Is the ball – or rather the picture of the ball - some kind of visual trope? An example of metonymy, say? Is it a graphical representation of a concept associated with another? I think not – the mistiness that envelopes the ball is all pervasive. With metonymy as with metaphor and synecdoche, a degree of precision is required. "Keels ploughed the deep", to take a classic example of all three tropes.
Something here is possibly being reified. But it is reification not so much for the sake of the signified but for that of the signifier. OK, maybe the signified is just about definable – the uncanniness of quantum physics or, more generally, the perceived spookiness of hard science. A misty image standing for a vague concept. But ultimately the medium – or rather the beach ball – is the message, to paraphrase the ever tedious Marshall McLuhan.