mon | tue | wed | thu | fri | sat | sun | game shows | news snippets
The Highlights
The day is busier than it ought to have been. A simple format and re-install turns into the job from hell, as the PC's BIOS insists on detecting the disk as a mere 1GB, not the 15GB there. A last-ditch attempt, say it's a NORMAL rather than an LBA disk, does the trick.
|
Another virus day It starts out decently quiet, though I'm still playing catch-up by about an hour. Then news breaks that one of our chaps has an infection. Download the appropriate update files and run the scan program, as one does. 90 minutes later, the scan has finished. Reboot, and the PC is no better - it's still locking on boot. Check the registry, and the infective parts are still there. They need to be terminated with extreme prejdice. Check the infection's hidey-hole. It's still there! The AV program hasn't deleted it at all!! Get rid of that as soon as possible. Put the PC back on the network and it's booting fine. Lessons learned? 1) Anti-virus programs are no substitute for manual labour. Indeed, an AV program as poor as this one lulls people into a false sense of security. 2) Anti-virus programs are no substitute for safe hex. Had the person opening the mail taken a little thought about what they were doing, this would not have happened. 3) Windows is broken. We need something more secure, like Linux. Henna: |
And another virus day Same as yesterday, right down to the manual disinfection. Do that first, *then* run the scan. Running the scan makes it appear that we're fixing the problem, even though we already know it's fixed. Ho hum.
Victoria C: |
Yet another virus infection, this time at one of our site offices. It's no fun anymore.
Victoria C: |
The weather has gotten really hot in the past couple of days, and it's almost unbroken sunshine today. Not pleasant. Especially trying to work in such heat. I try to do things with databases, but it's not happening. Probably be trivial when the weather improves, but that's not scheduled for some days.
Perhaps more importantly, this is the first week where I've had more left on my in-tray at the end of the week than at the beginning. Things are stacking up, and it's not pleasant.
|
I had toyed with the idea of going into town today, but decided against. Instead, to the store, gets lots of things going cheap. Including the pears. Even though I'm happy to pay for them as Conferences, they can't find the code for the fruit, and hence can't charge a penny. Result!
Move round the garden, cutting off the overhanging branches from next door's hedges. These are the ones above head height, and are a pain to remove. |
Hot. Too hot. Not going to break much before next weekend. Gah!
The Charts#1 (20) Bootylicious - Destiny's Child (wk 5, #1)In the end, there was no contest. The Child went out at full price, scored heavily in overseas markets, and did everything right to make a huge first week. It's the third consecutive chart-topper for the Child, and the average of five weeks at #1 for the past two looks set to continue for the biggest band on the planet.#2 (#4) Eternity / The Road To Mandalay - Robbie Williams (wk 3, #2)Bouncing back to the peak position of two weeks ago - more as other records drop than he rises.#3 (#2) D12 - Purple Pills (wk 3, #2)#4 (#1) Lady Marmalade - Christina Aguilera / Mya / Lil' Kim / Pink (wk 12, #1 for 5 wks)#5 (#6) Perfect Gentlemen - Wyclef Jean (wk 3, #5)#6 (10) Castles In The Sky - Ian Van Dahl (wk 3, #6)Useless fact. Note the preponderence of records in their third week.#7 (#3) U2 - Elevation (wk 4, #3, SOTM)#8 (#7) Heaven Is A Halfpipe - OPM (wk 4, #7, SS)#9 (#5) Angel - Shaggy / Rayvon (wk 21, #1 for 3 weeks, SS)10 *new Eternal Flame - Atomic Kitten (wk 1, 10)Released at a discount, and with no overseas points. Very popular on airplay, though, and there's very little splitting them from #5.12 *new All Or Nothing - O-Town (wk 1, 12, SS)Second single for the Made Band, and it's a slushy power ballad in the Celine mode.16 (19) Someone To Call My Lover - Janet Jackson (wk 4, 16)22 *new Firewire - Cosmic Gate (wk 1, 22)Belgian techno-trance.23 (30) Drops Of Jupiter - Train (wk 13, 23, SS)A new peak as radio play starts in earnest, and the single is to buy tomorrow. Hurrah!26 (27) Sing - Travis (wk 10, #6)29 (32) Loverboy - Mariah Carey (wk 2, 29)32 (35) Hanging By A Moment - Lifehouse (wk 20, 25, SS)33 (39) When It's Over - Sugar Ray (wk 3, 33, SS)34 *new Stone By Stone - Catatonia (wk 1, 34)The comeback single from the Welsh queen, excluding Helen Big Brother. Underperforming slightly.42 *new All The Way To Reno - REM (wk 1, 42, SS)45 *new Do The Lollipop - Tweenies (wk 1, 45)One of these is the future of rock 'n' roll, on the third single from their album. The other is a transient band, on the second single. (Are you sure about this - Ed) |
Survivor: The Last WeekThe first challenge: Big Trousers asks the contestants to go orienteering round islands. Checkpoints - in the form of questions - lead them to the mud pool and a personal plaque. Shortest time from start to finish wins - the contestants are staggered at five minute intervals, and Jackie staggers up the beach. Richard races to an early lead. The contestants face some very, very easy questions, and proceed to mess them up totally. This *is* the new Crystal Maze. Charlotte is beaten by her lack of knowledge, Mick feels he's too far behind to win. Jackie scores 35'22"; Richard 32'07", and he's safe for one more night. Mick is certain he's off, and spends the best part of ten minutes on screen discussing this. When it comes to the voting, it's a surprise. Not. Mick 3, Jackie 1. He pays tribute to his colleagues. There's a quiz going on about details from the island. Charlotte and Jackie move to the tiebreak, eventually to Charlotte. She's safe, and she will ditch ... Richard. He's the strongest competitor. John Leslie, host of the studio interviews, welcomes us LIVE to the Wednesday night studio, where someone will win ONE MILLION POUNDS, CASH! These will be recurring themes throughout the night. Only 86 minutes to fill. Confessions of people on the island, a Pointless Phone Poll. At premium rates. With no bearing on the outcome. 0% going to charity. You could call, influence the result, *and* donate 20% to homele ss charities, but that's on Another Reality Show. Questioning from the jury. Zoe is particularly vicious, grilling both about rumours she's a thief. Eve is also nasty, on the subject of their honesty. Or otherwise. Andy calls them leeches and limpets; Richard tells a fable of how an eagle carried a sparrow. Then he pulls the fact he's a psychiatrist out of the hat, and challenges both on their use of language demeaning to those with mental illnesses. Richard and Andy both deny they're suggesting the finalists freeloaded their way to the final. Both deny it, this is live television and not pay-to-view boxing, but it's clear both are fibbing. Charlotte finds it incredible, thrilling, incredible to win 7-0. Jackie would have hoped to have at least one friend on the island. Big Brother: The Final WeekPaul's exit last week guarantees a first in the worldwide Big Brother syndication. All the other BBs have been won by straight white males. Dean is of Caribbean heritage, Brian is gay, Liz and Helen are women.Dean reckons Brian, or Helen's "shiny, uncomplicated goodness" will win. He's a little ambivalent about winning himself, and is clearly uneasy. Brian is reckoning Helen or Dean. He wouldn't like to take the publicity that would surround winning. Helen doesn't think she can win, and would be dangerous with all the money. Spending spree. She puts her hands literally in her mouth. Liz bites her lip, and moves in a defensive position. No one has given a straight answer to the question. Have I tuned into Newsnight by mistake? The team teaches each other their jobs and skills. So, Liz becomes an airline steward. Not a good career move - she's far too young to be cabin staff with the airlines I fly. Brian learns flamenco dancing, which could well be a good life skill. Dean teaches Helen the guitar, she trains him in hairdressing. Braiding a doll's hair while wearing the tightest t-shirt. And neon pink trousers. This is a site for sore eyes. Or a cause of them. Dean protests loudly, reckoning that he didn't want to be dressed as a homosexual. "You don't have friends like me," says Dean. Yes, but at this rate you won't have *votes* come Thursday. Brian cleans the mirror behind the sink. He looks hard for cameras. BB viewers don't get to see his bizarre stepping across the room, as if he's aware of being filmed for the first time. It's almost like dancing. "The person with the least number of votes will be evicted. The eighth person to be evicted will be .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Liz." Helen squeals. Liz remains quiet, hugs Dean forever, then squeals as she hugs Helen. Mine was one of just 73,482 votes for Liz. That's just 2% of the total poll... but fully 1/4 of the poll on Survivor last night. In other words, over 3.5 million votes have been cast *already*. Friday, 1100 people outside the house, plus Davina in her black t-shirt with sparkly "Big Mutha" message. The person who has come third is announced at 2054. Coming out... Dean. He's smiling, clapping, hugs Brian, and kisses Helen. Drains his glass of wine and he's out in just one minute. To the strains of "I'd like to teach the world to sing." A slow walk down the catwalk, fiancée Vanessa meets him part way down. They're all over each other. The long shots remind me that this is the only person to leave the house in daylight. Further chatter with the families of the remaining contestants, and someone called Paul. He looks familiar from somewhere. Helen's mother is wearing a "porridge princess" shirt, Paul is dressed like a pop star. Not a well-dressed one, mind. In walks Penny and Stuart, he's sorry for his purple suit, as he should be, she's in a spangly frock. Then Amma and Bubble, she's wearing a dressless evening strap, he's in smart jeans and a hat. Liz, Dean, and Josh enter, in one arty dress, one pair of leather pants, and one hasn't changed since he left the house. And Narinder and Paul, she's in a dress with the pound symbol, he's wearing exactly the same shirt as he was five minutes ago. Call now, during the commercials. The voting: 2,680,000 to 4,230,000, which suggests Dean got something around 150,000, and he can't have been that far ahead of Liz when the axe fell. Brian and Helen are standing toe to toe by the couch, holding hands. The winner is .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. "Come on Davina," shouts Brian. .. .. .. .. Brian. Arms aloft, then bouncing around the house. "Calm down," shouts Davina. He's not calm! Helen's out in 30 seconds. Runs out, shouts "Oh my gawd!" screams at Paul, and enquires after Davina and her bump. She knows all Brian's sisters' names, fitted into her dress, and the hair's better than last night. Eventually to the studio and all her mates. Paul has something special, something he bought himself. Gucci handbag and shoes, the ones she turned down to have the birthday party way back when. Helen squeals and screams, and the gift makes Davina jealous. Brian's singing "Lean On Me." Walking around the lounge counter-clockwise in his white shirt. Bit more deodorant. Getting really ratty. Brian opens the patio windows a crack, it's quite the hot night. Finally, Davina ends the man's suffering. He leaves his bag in the house. A slow walk down the runway, sparklers going off behind him. Then a huge fireworks display from the house. "Don't even ask how I feel." He's shocked, in tears. Over the bridge, pausing to watch the fireworks. We can't hear a word Davina says. We don't really care. |
Greenhouse gases badA slightly watered-down version of the 1997 Kyoto treaty to reduce greenhouse gases is put in effect. For the first time, there's legal force behind national commitments to reducing emissions of gases such as carbon dioxide and methane. Contrary to most media reports, the US government under acting president Bryan Gould has signed up to this pact, in spite of opposition from the antipresident. The watering down is that new forests can be used to offset increases in greenhouse gases, under the Plant A Tree formula. This isn't enough for Greenpeace activists, who invade an Esso oil refinery in Essex and close it for a day. The group, protesting against parent company Exxon, chains two members inside each shipping container, rendering them unusable. Watching the previews to the World Athletics championships, we reckon we know why the event is attracting such low ratings in the US. It's that wretched national anthem they like to sing south of Edmonton. The current choice is utterly impossible to sing, and tuneless to boot. That it is also empty flag worship, and bellicose, does it no favours. Berlin Teen Fails to Stop Flying Cow Spectacle. In an episode eerily reminiscent of the Rodney King fiasco in early 90s LA, a Wakefield policeman was caught on tape beating a suspect outside his home. The suspect was knocked up at home, dragged outside, and beaten up. A neighbour caught the event on camera. The suspect - released without charge - is now suing the force for assault, false arrest, wrongful imprisonment, and malicious prosecution. Grobbelgaate (copyright When Saturday Comes 1994) moves into an unexpected fourth replay. A tabloid accused former Liverpool and Zimbabwe goalie Bruce Grobbelaar of taking bungs for throwing matches in 1994. After two trials in 1997, he was acquitted of all charges. Grobb then sued the tabloid for libel and won, a decision overturned at appeal this January. Now the retired star has been given leave to challenge that appeal in the House of Lords. From the "what in sodomy were they thinking of" files. A couple are convicted of the manslaughter through gross negligence of two children allowed to play on a railway line during a family picnic and killed by a train. The kids were struck by a train running at 60mph on tracks near their home in Tre'r-ddol, near Aberystwyth, West Wales, on a summer picnic last year. The couple allowed the children to play on the railway line unattended for up to 30 minutes before the tragedy happened. Outside court, solicitor May Li, representing a man whose daughter died in the incident, said his client would be claiming compensation against the couple. Miss Li said the verdict "did not ease the feelings of grief in [the] family following the tragic loss." Foot and mouth rolls on Slaughter teams begin a mass cull of 4,000 sheep on the Brecon Beacons, trying to stop foot and mouth disease spreading across the mid-Wales national park. Blood tests on flocks showed that significant numbers of animals had been exposed to the virus that causes the disease. Welsh rural affairs minister Carwyn Jones announced the cull, sparking fears that large numbers of cases could still be undetected across the country. Tourism chiefs predict that the mass slaughter will devastate business in the mid-Wales area. TOP 5: Sheriff's calls at Point Reyes Light: 1) Friday 1:34am Mailbox knocked over. Mailbox assailants fled scene. 2) A citizen called deputies at 12:15 a.m. Saturday to report a 25-year-old woman from Rohnert Park was supposed to meet the citizen in a restaurant but had never showed up. The citizen later notified deputies that the woman had called to say she had been drugged and had just awakened. 3) A man at 1:20 p.m. July 17 reported there was a loose cow in the middle of Sir Francis Drake Boulevard downtown. The cow was gone when a deputy arrived. 4) Deputies at 8:17 p.m. Wednesday received a complaint that a grey, two-door car with a raised vent on its hood was spinning tires and speeding downtown. A deputy found the car's juvenile occupants parked behind the bank and admonished them not to drive recklessly. 5) A deputy at 9:12 p.m. Monday escorted an intoxicated person from a bar. A friend gave the person a ride home. |