Category: General

  • Stupid drawing bug in SQLEditor

    I just managed to fix a really weird bug in SQLEditor. The problem was that when ever you drew a connector between two fields all of the lines would get drawn slightly thicker. This gave a really odd visual effect.

    It turns out that the connector lines were using a slightly thicker line style and that the thinner default line style wasn’t being reset correctly when drawing function completed. This then meant that all future lines were drawn in a thicker line style.

  • Lake District!

    I’ve sort of just got back from a really wonderful trip to the Lake District (google map). It was great to get away from technology (mostly) and the demands of work. I really enjoyed the holiday and if you ever get the opportunity to visit that part of the country, do it. Windermere is a really great place to visit.

    We spent all day doing outdoor stuff, the walking in the area is amazing. The views are amazing and although the weather was a bit wet, the walking is great. We were hoping to do some sailing as well, but the weather proved a bit difficult in that area, but we did get in a motor boat hire and several trips across and around the lakes. We also went horse riding, which is something that I haven’t really done much of, but I enjoyed it immensely.

    There was also great food at various resturants and several ruthless board games (mostly monopoly).

    Everyone was really friendly and the people running both the Windermere and Ambleside youth hostels couldn’t have been better.

    I’m already hoping to go back 🙂

    [edited to improve structure]

  • Quango

    quango
    quasi-autonomous non-governmental organisation

    from The Times

  • Are bankruptcies useful to society?

    Recently I was reading an Article that was talking about venture capital funds and their need to rapidly invest or return big sums of money that they have sitting in their bank accounts. The VCs apparently either have to invest the money (about $25 Billion) OR return the yearly management fees on the money (about $3 Billion). The catch is that the money doesn’t have to be invested wisely or responsibly, it just has to be invested. The theory then goes that this will lead to another boom similar to, but perhaps smaller than, the 2000 boom.

    Whether this will happen is difficult to guess, but a thought did occur to me as I was reading the article. Booms, bubbles and bankruptcies can be a way of comercially funding things that need to be built but aren’t, strictly speaking, viable in a financial sense.

    There are lots of examples of this, the internet infrastructure is one and the British railway system is another. In each case investors were enthused with the idea that vast fortunes could be made in the chosen area, the investors where driven into an investment frenzy and the infrastructure was constructed (typically at vast expense). The bubble then collapsed, but crucially the infrastructure was still there and still usable. A bit of restructuring and some fiancial fiddling and now there is lots of shiny new stuff.

    The investors of course have lost their money by this stage, but hopefully the more speculative investors have sufficient reserves and everyone should always be following the key rule:

    Never invest money in a risky venture that you can’t afford to loose

    I suspect that this topic has been written about already so I’m currently doing research to see if there are more examples of it.

  • The Spielberg of Hereford

    The Spielberg of Hereford

    includes a steam-train chase, several laser gunfights and an original score by a full symphony orchestra. Not bad considering his total budget was £20,000.

  • Lumberjack Jargon

    If you need a ready reference for Lumberjack Jargon there is a page at wikipedia that offers such useful, everyday phrases as:

    Hayburner
    a horse
    Homeguard
    a long-time employee of a company
    Hoot-nanny
    a small device used to hold a crosscut saw while sawing a log from the bottom up

    Why not use one or more of these phrases in conversation!

  • Trackback spam

    Unfortunately I’ve had to disable trackbacks for the time being due to excessive spam.

    I’m not entirely sure if it is possible to do a test to see if trackbacks are from real people or not.

    If I can come up with a better idea I’ll start using it.

    Not that anyone really found the stuff on this weblog worth trackbacking anyway, so little is lost 🙂

  • Single Sign on?

    I’ve been wondering whether it makes sense to try to implement a single sign on system.

    I now have 2 bug tracking systems, a wiki, a webmail system and this web log. All of these have different authentication systems.

    Maybe we need a common standard in web applications like RSS but for authentication?

  • iMac Mini Disassembly probably ok?

    Daring Fireball has a comment from someone who saw a Mac Mini being disassembled and it sounds ok.

    A standard issue putty knife and some assistance from a jack knife were all that was needed to crack the case.