Space opera + Hamer Horror = Hamer Space?

Since reading Peter Hamilton’s Commonwealth Saga a few months ago, I’ve been itching to get into his bestselling Night’s Dawn Trilogy, which I finally did this month. I’ve just finished the first whopping 1,200 page volume, The Reality Dysfunction.

It has great similarities to his more recent series – a grand, swooping, dynastic space-opera with hundreds of worlds, a complex political superstructure and economy, a fantastic cast of characters, and some very creative science and technology.

Where its different? Well, it tackles religion. And also the walking dead. The walking dead, needless to say, is where it gets really weird. I’ve never seen the word ‘sequestration’ used so many times, even in that density of pages – of course, its possible I’ve simply never seen the word used at all. How does it decline: I sequester, you sequester, he/she/it sequesterers…

The book is actually quite suspenseful at times (if not actually frightening), and I am looking forward to the next one. The sheer level of intricate detail he goes to is astonishing – everything resolves, eventually. I just need to get through the remaining 2,000 pages of the series to see what happens…

Social bookmarking is really useful

I was asked today about a news story I read back in October in the Times. Much as I like Times Online, the search function is moderately dire, and I had no chance of finding the particular story (about the computer programmer who had outsourced his job to India) using conventional means.

Fortunately, I had linklogged it with delicious and searching for the tag ‘outsourcing’ returned one hit. Bonza – and here I thought it was just a way to share the memes I get emailed every day :).

Rubbish TV

Have you ever just felt the need to watch rubbish TV? I have – last night being a particular case in point.

I admit, I had some curiosity about the Merlin’s apprentice miniseries, but it evaporated shortly after the principle character (the apprentice in question) started talking to a pig in the opening sequence.

“Who’s pig is this,” I asked myself, “and why do I care?”

It is one of the worst pieces of television I’ve ever encountered and it went on for nearly 3 hours. And I watched it all. And enjoyed making fun about the pig with my sister. Not sure why…

I am sure that Sam Neill should be ashamed of himself. No amount of money was worth that travesty…

Google launches calendar

Well, possibly not officially, but this link will let you login to Google Calendar, a reasonably sophisticated, quite slick Ajax-enabled web-based calendaring system (who’d have guessed). Here’s an interesting news bulletin covering the announcement.

Interesting that Google continues its rage against the MS machine. A few years ago, I couldn’t imagine depending on being online to use a service like this – POP email was necessary (IMAP was purposeless, web-based was tedious), and I relied (and continue to rely) on an Outlook Calendar. Now, though, I’m increasingly open to the possibility of reducing my reliance on MS based thick-client apps in favour of lighter online tools that don’t compromise the performance or reliability of my PC – which gets more unstable with each application I install, and as my email inbox creeps upwards of 700MB.

However: the calendaring function is definitely one where I think Google needs to think about MS integration. People at work regularly use Outlook invites to schedule meetings, and loads of third party software is designed to work with it. Google Calendar supports a one-off import (from a CSV file) of your Outlook Calendar, which is sub-optimal for ongoing, corporate, scheduling.

We’ll see… The app does seem to work well, but I sadly lack the time to bother with the novelty of duplicating my calendar just to see if it works better…

Bruges photos

So, Bruges was great. A few photos below for your enjoyment, rest at the photoset here.

DSC01365 DSC01358
DSC01335 DSC01320

Think I need to do more travelling. The trip really fired up the imagination and was very fun. Bruges is a fantastically relaxed town to visit…

Happy Easter

My Easter message to you all:

Life is like a barrel of fish. Easy to shoot, hard to clean up.

I’m going to tag this one ‘humour’ as I’m not sure the intention was clear.

Sheila doesn’t like my offline blogging

She claims to have a manual version of Bloglines that alerts her to new posts in my little black book. Then she nicks the book and writes ‘monkey’ all over it. Which, I guess, is an offline version of posting comments. And then I hit her (gently, she’s my sister, easy now), which I suspect is the offline version of a trackback, or a deleted comment. Or posting a comment that says ‘you suck’ on her blog. Offline.

Okay, getting silly now…

Armand David's personal weblog: dadhood, technology, running, media, food, stuff and nonsense.