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Wikipedia – Historical Revisionism, Negationism and Dystopian Fiction

Wikipedia reminds me ever so much of Winston Smith’s job in 1984 by George Orwell (or Eric Blair), as I recall Winston constantly rewrites the past to suit the needs of the present.

Surprisingly however (or not) Wikipedia’s entry for ‘Historical Revisionism (Negationism)’ doesn’t include any references to itself.

The chap in ‘Brazil’, the 1985 film by Terry Gilliam, has the same, or very similar, job to Winston, as I further recall.

My favourite ‘traditional’ dystopian story is Malcolm Bradbury’sFahrenheit 451‘, although I enjoyed Alan Moore’sV for Vendetta‘ when it came out in 18 years ago, when I was 18, in 1988.

However I suspect that I’ll enjoy Aldous Huxley’sBrave New World‘, when I eventually get around to reading it (although I didn’t get on with his ‘The Doors of Perception (1954)‘ which I read half-heartedly at 14).

I appear to have read, and own, an unhealthy amount of the material on Wikipedia’s list of dystopian literature – strangely my favourite author of ‘unsettling’ dystopian fiction, J. G. Ballard, doesn’t make the list at all – perhaps because Ballard focuses on the dysfunctional present and our dystopian modernity rather than a far flung fiction.

So is Wikipedia the symbol and reminder of our current dystopian situation or a of the good that can be derived from the “Hive Mind” and it’s approach to collectively working together to break down social, intelectual and technical problems ?

Of course the real truth is that for all the good that Wikipedia does it is still the great ‘Lowest Common Denominator‘ in many cases – and perhaps this isn’t such as bad thing as long as people are aware of it’s limitations, using it accordingly – long may it (and it descendants) reign.

Marble driven, wooden, binary adding machine

This is great – I saw this marble driven, wooden, binary adding machine on my friend Doug Clinton’s ‘blog and I just had to add it here. …..

Games the kids play

Current games on the boy’s PCs…

  • Age of Empires III
  • Age of Empires III – The War Chiefs
  • Dawn of War – Dark Crusade
  • Dragonshard
  • Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
  • Jade Empire
  • Neverwinter Nights 2
  • Oblivion
  • Overlord
  • Power Rangers – Ninja Storm
  • Rayman 3
  • Rayman – Raving Rabbids
  • Rise of Legends
  • Star Trek Armada II
  • Stronghold Legends
  • Supreme Commander
  • The Lord of the Rings (Battle for Middle-Earth II)
  • The Lord of the Rings (Battle for Middle-Earth II)- The Rise of the Witch-King
  • Warcraft III
  • Warcraft III – Frozen Throne
  • Zoo Tycoon 2
  • Zoo Tycoon 2 – African Adventure (part of the ‘Zookeeper Collection’ edition)
  • Zoo Tycoon 2 – Endangered Species (part of the ‘Zookeeper Collection’ edition)
  • Zoo Tycoon 2 – Marine Mania
  • Zoo Tycoon 2 – Extinct Animals (includes the ‘Dino Danger Pack’)

Caernarfon Castle

Here’s some photos I took on my Sony Ericsson W880i the week before last whilst the family was on Holiday in North West Wales. ….. 2 Trackbacks

Scott McNealy to be honoured as a Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer Society

Scott is due to be honoured as a Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer Society (BCS) – and will be joining me as the only other Fellow of the BCS at Sun.

Fellow is the most senior professional grade of the BCS, it is in itself quite an achievement to be awarded with one, and Distinguished Fellowship is even rarer – being presented to members of the computing profession who have made an outstanding contribution to the advancement of computing (the last one was eight years ago).

The presentation is being made during the BCS’s Winter Gala and Candlelit Dinner, by BCS President-elect Rachel Burnett, on the 14th of November (the day after Scott’s birthday) and the location is the beautiful Goldsmith’s Hall in London.

When I last spoke to Scott he said he was “Really looking forward to it.”.

You can learn more about the event here at the offical event website.

The event is open to non-BCS members, as well as members, and tickets can be reserved from the website above – however if you’d like to go I would recommended that you hurry as I believe most of the tickets have already gone.

Obviously I’ve already booked tickets for Donna and I – those of you who know me reasonably well know that I am huge fan of Scott’s – in fact that I contribute an early major growth in my career to Scott (see this ‘blog entry for the whole story – “Why I work for Sun Microsystems”) – or at least a moment of epiphany brought on by Scott.

I’m really excited about Scott receiving his Fellowship – the BCS are working really hard to promote ‘Professionalism in IT’, something I’m extremely supportive of – and I believe this helps to strengthen that agenda both in Sun UK and Ireland and in the wider IT community of the UK.

My Fellowship came through in June this year, on the 50th anniversary of the BCS and our (Sun’s) 25th anniversary. My generous sponsors were Colin Thomas (an ex IT Director of the Inland Revenue, and ex Deputy Chairman of the BCS) and Chris Loughran (Head of SI Consultancy at Deloitte in the UK) – both of whom I have a huge amount of respect for and certainly look up to as great implementers of technology.

I very much believe in Professional Membership, both as a means to bring together like minded individuals into a community which can share ideas and information, also to provide a single point of contact and collective ‘voice’ for that community (notably into Government as these organisations represent a ‘trade’ or a number of ‘trades’) and to provide guidance in the respective industry around qualifications and capabilities.

I call the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET – formerly Institution of Electrical Engineers (IEE) and Institution of Incorporated Engineers (IIE)), the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and the BCS the ‘big four’ as they have the largest coverage (by member numbers) and make the largest contribution to the wider technology community (than most of the other technology professional membership organisations).

The major segregations of the ‘big four’ are that of location of the membership population and technology focus:

  • The IEEE is predominantly ‘Engineering’ focused and mainly US / Worldwide (circa 350,000 members)
  • The IET is predominantly ‘Engineering’ focused and mainly UK / some Worldwide (circa 150,000 members)
  • The ACM is predominantly ‘Computing’ focused and mainly US / some Worldwide (circa 60,000 members)
  • The BCS is predominantly ‘Computing’ focused and mainly UK / some Worldwide (circa 80,000 members)

Personally I am a member of two of the ‘big four’ technology Professional Membership organisations: the BCS and the IEEE (of which I’m a Senior Member) – I felt for me this gave the best ‘coverage’ across the major technology alignments and member locations.

To be inclusive I wanted coverage in engineering and computing, local and worldwide (mainly US) – as a technologist whose career in IT has mainly been around the implementation of computer technology and computer systems my primary requirement was computing.

I felt that the BCS was best aligned to meet my needs in computing, plus it’s local coverage is excellent (60,000 members mainly spread across 60,000,000 population of the UK is around 1 member per 1,000 population – the ACM in comparison has 80,000 members spread across the 300,000,000 population of the USA is around 1 member per 3,750 population – almost four times less than the BCS, although it has strong competition from the IEEE computing group, according to wikipedia).

As both computing and UK coverage was taken up by the BCS, it made the IEEE the obvious choice to cover engineering and Worldwide – serendipity as the IEEE have the largest membership of any of the ‘big four’ worldwide – and arguably contribute the largest amount in terms of standards definition.

This doesn’t mean that I’m unsupportive of the IET or of the ACM, in fact I hope that in the future there is more co-operation and joint working initiatives between the ‘big four’. This is something I have consistently been vocal about with the BCS and IEEE – and I very much hope that it helps to lead to this end. I’m fortunate that at a personal level this is something I can demonstrate – currently I’m working with my good friend Mike Ashton (of Sun UK), our only Fellow of the IET at Sun, on a technology assessment and quality improvement initiative focused upon the delivery of our solutions via the Sun UK services organisation.

I very much recommend getting involved with the appropriate Professional Membership organisation for your chosen career or career area – although take your time in choosing the right organisation for you. In many respects they will already be representing you indirectly either to your local government (as in the case of the BCS) or to the wider community, especially if they are seen as indicative of your industry.

And if you end up going to the BCS Winter Gala on the 14th of November to see Scott receive his Distinguished Fellowship of the BCS – and you heard about it from this ‘blog post – then please do remember to say “hello”.

No ‘Blog entries for the last couple of weeks…

So I haven’t been posting much over the last couple of weeks – although lots has been going on. ….. 2 Trackbacks

iPhone ‘Media Orgy’ – I’m with this guy…

Given the complete and utter ‘Media Orgy’ over the iPhone, I’m with this guy over at the Register

Which is kind of a shame, ’cause up until now I’d been looking forward to it coming out.

Seriously though: although the post itself is amusing – it’s the comments which have been more telling about the general feelings about the iPhone, amongst the general technical community in the UK (and I use ‘technical’ in the loosest sense hear as the Register has a lot of readers outside the ‘technical’ arena, and outside of the UK).

The most telling theme is that much of the iPhone functionality has been available in Europe for a fair few years now – in fact with most handsets having 3G – most of them still have a higher level of functionality already. There’s quite a level of surprise of just how functionally limited the iPhone is.

Another good point is that, due to being touch screen, you probably need to use both hands: one to hold the phone and the other to use it. A standard handset can usually be manipulated by one hand – this is a big hitch, which users will really struggle with. The key to adoption of technology: userbility.

Personally I’m up for a bit of technology ‘convergence’ – so I like some of the principals behind the iPhone (outside of making Apple a ‘shed load’ of cash). I don’t want to carry mp3, mobile phone, camera, dictaphone, PDA, etc. around with me – just one single, multi-purpose device. Until that comes out I’m happy to go with the least number of devices I can get away with – a combined mp3, mobile phone and camera (with some basic PDA functions, like diary synchronisation, email and web browsing – but no document creation or editing) and a seperate dictaphone (doubles as a 1GB USB key – always good).

You’ve probably heard about all the limitations this ‘baby’ has – but lets go through them again, just for the record:

  • No MMS – er, like isn’t MMS the ‘Killer App’ for mobile in most of the World ?
  • No 3G support – browsing via GPRS – isn’t that so 2004 ?
  • No Adobe Flash support is officially out – so no playing YouTube (or even EUTube or intruders.tv)
  • No voice dialling – whatever – most electronic devices don’t recognise my dulcet ‘Brummie’ tones anyway
  • No recording video clips – there’s a camera, so photos, but it won’t record video (so no posting to YouTube either) – another ‘hasn’t that been standard on most handsets for a couple of years now moment’
  • Music can’t be used as a ringtone – even if it’s plain old MP3. No additional ringtones will be sold at launch. But you can bet the farm that they’ll be selling ringtones real soon (probably via iTunes)
  • Contact groups can’t be emailed as lists of contacts
  • 300 to 400 charges before the iPhone will lose battery capacity (you’ll have to send it in and get the battery replaced for a fee). I charge my current phone once or twice a day – so that’s easily going to be less than a year (unless the iPhone can do a 24 hour, work-day, stretch without recharge – which I don’t believe) – frankly I expect more out of a pricey handset…
  • No A2DP support. So multi-device bluetooth, which relies on A2DP is out too
  • The unverified rumour that the he mobile version of OS X the iPhone runs takes up 700MB of the device’s capacity

Does this mean I won’t get one, when they come out in the UK ?

Probably not – but I will be waiting for a gen. 2 device – which addresses these functionality ‘short falls’ – before I do commit my hard earned to Mr. Jobbs.

Father’s Day Klaxons

Father’s Day this year brings the new Klaxons album (“Myths of the Near Future”), a box of chocs and a mouse mat – I was well chuffed. …..

Wayne Horkan – Fellow of the British Computer Society

Had a call this morning from Brenda at the British Computer Society (BCS) that I have been accepted as a Fellow of the BCS. ….. 1 Trackback