Zen and the Art of Ajax

Posted by | design | No Comments

Marc Canter had it absolutely right when he cautioned about the fuss over Ajax. Perhaps Ajax is a meme more than a ‘thing’, and like all good meme’s something that is spreading because the environment is ready for it. When I first used Gopher or WAIS and then downloaded Mosaic I was impressed by the architectural simplicity of Internet applications, so much so that I stopped being an architect and started working on web stuff. Here was something in computing that was seemingly a retrograde step – one window instead of many. I spent most of my day at the time in front of a twin screen CAD application that had several hundred palettes. But because that one window opened onto a world of other computers, like a unix terminal, it was so much more elegant. (My favorite new experience with UI has been finally using VI, a text editor…

Read More

Hydrocarbons found on Titan

Posted by | science | No Comments

Ancient rivers and sedimentary rocks on Mars. A gravity warmed sea beneath Europa’s crust. Microbe like structures in a Martian meteorite. Planets around distant stars. And now: Cassini Finds Hydrocarbons on Titan The last few years have dramatically changed the notion that life on Earth is unique. With a sample of one, there is way way to be sure, but each new discovery points in the same direction. I would hazard a guess that the universe is indeed teeming with life, as a natural, emergent phenomenon. That seems like a wonderful, awe inspiring thought, and yet we are still arguing as to how life evolved on our own planet. Arguing about evolution itself. There are those who would have the universe be billions of times smaller, thousands of times younger, and with no diversity. Is that more wonderful, more spiritual?

Read More

I like tabloids

Posted by | media | No Comments

Tabloids are big in the UK, and its always been a mystery to me why in a country like the US, which is the king of popular culture, there is no real-news tabloid. I like tabloids cos they are funny and I like Sploid even more because it is like Slashdot meets the Onion, edited by Richard Dawkins.

Read More

Moral relativism means moral progress

Posted by | religion | No Comments

You often hear the term ‘moral relativism’ used pejoratively compared to the continued use of the morality of 2000 years ago. What this needs is a new term – much like the use of the positive word gay instead of homosexual or pro-life instead of anti-abortion. Moral relativism means is that your notion of morality changes over time – but like the arrow of time itself it always moves forward – moral relativism means moral progress, as compared with the static and eventually obsolete morality endorsed by all religions. Quotes by Pope Ratzi: “Having a clear faith, based on the creed of the church, is often labeled today as a fundamentalism. … Whereas relativism, which is letting oneself be tossed and ‘swept along by every wind of teaching,’ looks like the only attitude acceptable to today’s standards.” Indeed it is, and moral progress is better by definition.

Read More

Greenspan shouts and nobody listens

Posted by | business | No Comments

Below is the top story on Reuters: it shows a recent trend where Greenspan has had to repeatedly warn against government spending and yet the markets and the party favored by the markets doesn’t react… There was a point when the government and markets would quiver if Greenspan looked like he had got out of bed on the wrong side. Nowadays, idealogy and faith seems to be driving capitalism too – a dangerous thing. Greenspan Warns Deficits Endanger Economy “Much of the Fed chairman’s testimony echoed prior cautions he has made to Capitol Hill lawmakers. He stressed that steps to fix the problem were essential. “As the latest projections from the (Bush) administration and the Congressional Budget Office suggest, our budget position is unlikely to improve substantially in the coming years unless major deficit-reducing actions are taken,” the Fed chief said.” Latest Business News and Financial Information | Reuters.com

Read More

Androcles and the lyin’. Classical Holy Grail find turns out to be hype.

Posted by | Uncategorized | No Comments

Ars Technica takes apart a story in the Independant that has spread widely on blogs, which claimed that a huge number of ancient texts by people such as Sophocles were about to be deciphered. The “classical holy grail” or unholy hype? The Original Story pre-fisking: “Decoded at last: the ‘classical holy grail’ that may rewrite the history of the world. Scientists begin to unlock the secrets of papyrus scraps bearing long-lost words by the literary giants of Greece and Rome… In the past four days alone, Oxford’s classicists have used it to make a series of astonishing discoveries, including writing by Sophocles, Euripides, Hesiod… They even believe they are likely to find lost Christian gospels…Academics have hailed it as a development which could lead to a 20 per cent increase in the number of great Greek and Roman works in existence. Some are even predicting a “second Renaissance“. “. Ars…

Read More

Is the Pope’s election being rigged? Never mind the Da Vinci Code – today’s news from Rome is more strange than pulp fiction.

Posted by | politics | No Comments

Today’s Financial Times has a piece announcing the trial of 4 men for the murder of a senior Vatican banker, who had threatened to blow the whistle on corruption linked to the Catholic Church with details he said were enough to provoke ‘the third world war’. This announcement comes more than twenty years after the murder happened – on the exact day that the first election of a new Pope commences. The Shady Deals of God’s Banker Over twenty years ago, after being arrested on corruption charges involving dissapearance of $1 billion, on a trail that lead to the Vatican, and possible funding of right wing governments in South America, Roberto Calvi was found hanging under a bridge in London. His death was deemed to be suicide but was later deemed to be murder. Against the backdrop of the Vatican banking scandal, Pope John Paul II was appointed as the…

Read More

The apathy of moderates leads to the agenda of the extreme

Posted by | religion | No Comments

Home schooling has traditionally been given to kids whose parents are on the extreme fringes of society, hippes on the left and bible bashers on the right. Because of the growth in religious extremism, there has been a similar growth in home schooling, meaning that some schools have had their budgets cut as they lose pupils and per pupil funding. To woo pupils back, a school in Oregon is changing its curriculum to include creationism in science classes and biblical texts in English literature classes, leading to a crappy science and boring, one-dimensional art education for everyone. So for those that do point out that the US is by and large moderate, here is a concrete example of how the passion of a mindless minority over the apathy of the majority leads to an undemocratic situation where the minority view is enforced rather than tolerated. Oregon District Aims to Woo…

Read More

The US isn’t really a theocracy.

Posted by | religion | No Comments

Great post by Ryan at ‘You Know what Part’ that shreds my last post on the US becoming a theocracy. You Know What Part: Religion, politics and my ticket to Hell Things that Ryan is right about: 1. I did invoke Godwin’s law. Godwin’s law is useful when ranting. 2. The US is not really becoming a theocracy. In actual fact as the Economist pointed out, most people have centrist, moderate beliefs and politics, but the margins are where elections are won. 3. Progressive circles have their fair share of hypocracy and there is something even more irritating about liberal self-righteousness – because they should know better. 4. As my friend Alex pointed out – as a founder of an Internet genealogy company, I have a vested interest in the Earth being older than Biblical claims. But… There are a bunch of religious nutters whose voice tipped the margins in…

Read More