Links For Monday 16th January 2006

This entry was originally published at my workblog.

Yet more Moore

Thanks to zoo_music_girl pointing it out to me, I’ll be at Alan Moore’s talk on March 25th forming part of Tate Britain’s Gothic Nightmares season. (The more observant amongst you might also notice that that’s my birthday, so yes, I shall be off to a pub thereafter, I’m sure.) I have no idea what to expect, since it’s actaully taking place as a tour of the exhibition, but I’m sure it’ll prove fascinating.

Anyone else care to book a ticket and join me?

Links For Tuesday 10th January 2006

  • I’m rebuilding black-ink.org over the next few days, and I think this is the look I’m going to want for it. It’s a bit heavy, but it’s not a high-traffic site, and the look is important to me.

  • I’ve had my eye on this for a while – a keyboard with digital keys that can be changed depending on context, and it looks like it’s out next month, at last…

This entry was originally published at my workblog.

Links For Monday 9th January 2006

This entry was originally published at my workblog.

Hmmm…

Something appears to have gone wrong in my copy of Flock, because the comments don’t seem to have made it to del.icio.us even though the links have. Still, I’ve edited them back into the last post on the site, should anyone care to read my commentary on them.

This entry was originally published at my workblog.

Links For Friday 6th January 2006

  • Old news to everyone, just a reminder to myself to get this site upgraded when I get a spare minute.

    (tags: blogging)

  • Almost certainly not going to be any good for actual photography, but it looks like it might be a cheap and fun toy.

  • Dan Hill of City of Sound on the future of music, from the industry to the experience. Long, but very good.

    (tags: music)

  • A one day conference in London at the start of February, with some seriously interesting speakers. God, I want to go to this. Anyone spare me 100 quid?

    (tags: web_culture)

  • I had been planning to give this move a miss, because frankly, I know too many deeply annoying people who’ve been making squeeky noises about the fact that there’s a movie featuring boys kissing, and while I appreciate that it’s an important step for Holywood, it’s not something I find particularly remarkable, or interesting of itself. But Coates’ review has more or less singlehandedly changed my mind, and I’ll probably give it a look.

  • Nothing terribly revalatory in here, but there’s a few nice turns of phrase and a couple of interesting and new perspectives on some old stuff.

This entry was originally published at my workblog.

Emerging markets and censorship.

Microsoft follows Yahoo, bows to censorship pressure from China.

It’s a big topic, this, so I think this one gets a post to itself, because I honestly don’t know what I think. I was faintly admiring of a friend (the same one I stole this link off) when he stopped using any yahoo-provided service in the wake of their own caving. I didn’t, because they owned flickr (and now del.icio.us, and upcoming.org) as well this mailing lists, and it would just have been too much hassle to quit using theri stuff. Also, I have friends who work for Yahoo, and I have intention of stopping talking to them.

Microsoft, of course, represents another, even bigger hassle to quit, and I’m not going to do that, either. But is quitting using these companies’ products the answer? There’s the saw about how trade with China will eventualyl improve human rights/democracy over there, as they’re forced/encouraged to become more and more a part of the same world as the rest of us. There’s the flipside of that, that they’re going to do shitty things, no matter what we do, so we might as well conduct trade with them anyway. (Yes, it’s true, eveything I know about international affairs, I learned from The West Wing.)

Clearly, Yahoo and MS have bought one or the other of those lines. It’s not hard to see why: even if everyone were to suddenly stop using MS and Yahoo, and they were to stop going along with China, would it make any difference inside China? Almost certainly not. And so it’s easy to excuse ourselves.

Except of course for Burke’s maxim. “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing”. Surely, regardless of whether or not it’ll make a difference, there’s a moral imperative to stand up and register your dissenting opinion? And doesn’t the internet make it really easy to do just that?

Or does it actaully make it harder, as the technologies we use on it are increasingly owned by the same small group of companies?

This entry was originally published at my workblog.

[Work] A long shot, but…

Anyone out there got any experience moving from PHP4.3 to 5.1, and specifically with reference to the problems it causes with reference to a MS-SQL database? I’m getting a really odd change, in that mssql_fetch_array() used to return an empty string for null/zero-length string values, and now it returns a single whitespace character. Which means that all my result evalutions ( and the like) are fucking up, and it’s looking like migrating to the new version may have to be sacked off, which I’d rather not do.

Any help appreciated, as I’m at my wits end.

Important Decisions:

I’ve been putting off a trip to the barbers for a couple of months, so my hair’s a bit longer than I’ve generally had it for the last couple of years. No, I know you hadn’t noticed, but that’s not the point. And I’m thinking, “It’s a new year, I’ve got a new job, why not think about doing something more drastic than usual?” But of course, I am feeble and weak-willed and cannot possibly make a decision for myself, and thus I turn to the wisdom of LJ. So: