* Posts by TheFifth

226 publicly visible posts • joined 30 Jul 2010

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Dyson moans about state of UK science and tech, forgets to suck up his own mess

TheFifth

Re: With two-faced "friends" like Dyson, Britain doesn't need enemies

I took the referendum seriously and spent countless hours reading about the EU, exactly what it does and how it works. I also read up on both sides of the argument and what the outcomes of leaving were likely to be, even learning about economic gravity among other things.

I came to the conclusion that leaving was never going to work the way the grifters were saying it would and, although I didn't love everything I learned about the EU, on the whole it was a plus to my life and the UK in general.

And after all that, I've lost count of the number of times I've been called a 'sheep' by people who spout provable nonsense and propaganda that they've fallen hook line and sinker for.

My irony meter is broken beyond repair at this point.

YouTube's 'Ad blockers not allowed' pop-up scares the bejesus out of netizens

TheFifth

Agreed. I can't read a page that has flashing or moving elements around or within the text. My brain just can't cope. Maybe I'm getting old.

TheFifth

I may be wrong, but something in the back of my head tells me that when mid-roll ads became a thing, Google automatically enabled it on all old videos and also pre-ticked the button on any new videos. So a creator with hundreds of past videos had no way to disable them on older content without going back through and manually deselecting the box on every video. Also, they needed to remember to deselect the box on all new uploads too.

That may have changed now, but I remember when every creator was getting massive amounts of hate for the number of adverts in their videos and they were trying to explain it wasn't their choice and it had been auto-selected for them.

TheFifth

I tolerated the ads when it was a 5 second, non-skippable ad at the start and end, or a longer ad that allowed you to skip after 5 seconds.

Now though it's two non-skippable15 to 30 second ads at the start and end and if the creator doesn't deselect the 'allow YouTube to automatically place ads' option, then Google will place a 5 to 30 second un-skippable ad every 3-5 minutes. It's just too much. And every content creator is saying that their YouTube ad income is in the toilet. How can the number and length of ads increase by orders of magnitude, but the payout to creators plummet so much? I think we all know.

I mostly watch retro tech electronics videos and they are on the longer side, often 45 minutes and some over an hour. With YouTube auto-placed ads that can be 16 to 20 throughout the video and two at both the start and end. And they are always placed really badly, so the flow of the video is disturbed with ads constantly cutting in right in the middle of something interesting. Thankfully most of the people I watch do switch off the mid-roll ads, but if they forget to the content is unwatchable.

Maybe it's a European thing as we're not used to such incessant and frequent ads, but I just can't watch a video like that. It's too disturbing to the flow of the content.

Now I use uYouPlus installed via AltStore on my iPad (where I watch most YouTube videos). All ads and even sponsored segments within the videos are automatically skipped. YouTube is usable again.

And I'm not expecting the people I watch to provide free content. I instead pay them a small monthly amount via Patreon. So I'm actually paying more than I would for YouTube premium, but I'd much rather the money I spend goes to the people making the content I enjoy, not Google.

Dropbox drops 16% of staff, points finger at hard-up customers and AI

TheFifth

Agreed. All I wanted was about 250GB of off-site space to sync up some work. Dropbox only offers 2TB minimum and the app has become a bloated mess of 'Enterprise' and 'Team' features. I don't want any of that, I just want a good value cloud sync service.

I cancelled Dropbox and purchased 260GB of lifetime space on Koofr for what amounts to about six months worth of the cheapest Dropbox subscription. It's a few years down the line now and Koofr has been working flawlessly. The data is all kept in Europe too, which I prefer. I also like that it allows me to setup multiple sync folders anywhere on my system, including external drives. It doesn't have anywhere near the number of features that Dropbox has, but that's why I love it. It does what it does well.

In my opinion, Dropbox lost its way.

CEO sorry after telling staff to 'leave pity city' over bonuses

TheFifth

Exactly this. The bigger the company, the more likely they are to use any excuse to squeeze their employees or suppliers. As long as the big wigs get their cash, all is well.

During both the 2008 recession and Covid, almost all of my clients tried to get me to reduce my fees claiming they were struggling and could no longer afford to pay me prices, no matter how well they were actually doing. It was a good excuse to cream a little more profit off the top. From my experience, the better they were weathering the storm, the more they'd try to squeeze their costs down.

It took me a while to realise that more often than not I was the only one struggling, due to lowering my prices, and they were doing perfectly fine thank you very much!

It was sometime in 2009 that I drew a line under it and said "full price or not at all". During Covid I refused to negotiate on price at all. I didn't lose one client, they all just said "fine".

Theranos founder Holmes ordered to jail after appeal snub

TheFifth

She definitely posed a risk to those who received incorrect blood test results.

Nostalgic for VB? BASIC is anything but dead

TheFifth

Re: MR

Don't get me wrong, I'm not hating on the product for the sake of it. I'm just so disappointed in their recent path and (in my opinion) poor decisions. I had been an active user and cheerleader for RB / Xojo for many years, but I just don't feel I can do that anymore. I'm more sad about it than anything else. I genuinely think they are destroying what was and could have remained a great language / framework.

For desktop it is (or was) great. It's mostly stable and mostly does what you need, although you will likely need third party plugins to go beyond the day to day stuff. Xojo iOS is a toy (believe me I've tried to use it for work and it's not up to scratch for much beyond a simple shopping list app) and I'd bet that Android will be little more than a toy when it's finally released.

The Web 1 to Web 2 transition (or lack thereof) is a real kick in the teeth for anyone who went all in on Xojo Web. I didn't thankfully.

I used to use it for prototyping and bashing together quick little utilities all the time, however as my last experience doing so was so frustrating I don't know if I will anymore. All the language changes and the impenetrability of their new language reference, and of course the utter uselessness of any Google or forum search as all the code is outdated and doesn't work anymore, made the experience unpleasant. As my little utility was for Mac only, I think it would have been quicker to make in Swift rather than Xojo (and I've only just been learning Swift recently).

I have a sneaking suspicion that this API 2 stuff is all about getting people to renew their licenses. Many users don't renew yearly, especially since they stopped offering discounts on license renewals. People just use the last version that does what they need until a new version has something they want. Personally I only updated once every two or three years. I only have a current Mac Desktop license, but have a few older Pro licenses if I need to build for Windows (which is once in a blue moon). By ensuring that anything I write in my newer Mac version isn't compatible with the older Windows version I have means I'll need to buy a Pro or Windows license to build for it.

Why else would you make changes like App.AutoQuit to Application.AllowAutoQuit and ListBox.CellCheck to DesktopListBox.CellCheckBoxStateAt? They both do the same thing, one is just annoyingly verbose. It's just forcing backwards incompatibility for no gain other than perhaps selling a few more licenses. Not gonna happen I'm afraid.

TheFifth

Re: Xojo all the way...

I've been a RealBASIC / Real Studio / Xojo user for more than twenty years, but recently it seems the management is making decisions that are actively hostile to pro and long term users. The language changes for API 2 and worst of all, the changes to the event names and desktop controls seem utterly pointless and are making years of example code and instructional content obsolete. What is the point of changing the 'Open' event to 'Opening' or 'Dim' to 'Var'? All it does is break old code examples. Also, to stay current and get bug fixes for issues in the Xojo framework (there are many!), you have to put in hundreds of hours of work to transition old projects to API 2. All this to make no progress on the project at all, just hours and hours of work to stand still.

They say API 1 won't be going away for a long time, but as it won't receive any updates for the many bugs it's obviously not a long term solution for existing projects. Also, how long is a long time?

I've been maintaining old API 1 projects for years, so haven't had much contact with API 2. These projects will stay on API 1 and be ported to other languages sometime in the future. Recently however, I needed a simple utility app for personal use and thought I could bash it together quickly in Xojo. It was massively frustrating as my 20+ years of experience were useless in so many areas. Adding to the frustration is that if you search for solutions on Google, or even their own support forum, all you get are hundred of results that are no longer relevant. To top it all off, Xojo have changed their documentation system in such a way that it is not SEO friendly, so the up to date reference material that you actually need is hidden away on page 10 of the Google results. And don't talk to me about the search box on their new documentation system either. If you type too fast, it doesn't return any result (as it's using AJAX in the background to get results but stops searching as soon as you hit enter), and the results you get are pretty useless. It's an utter mess and the worst part of it is that it is all mostly pointless.

Many passionate, long term users, and pros who rely on Xojo for their income warned them about all of these issues before they happened. They were simply labelled as trouble makers and banned from their forums.

I used to love RB because I could be very productive with it, but now I won't use it for anything beyond personal utilities and certainly not for any paid work. I just don't trust the company to make the right decisions anymore. Pointless fettling with the language whilst framework bugs fester for (sometimes) years seems akin to rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic.

Ex-Tweep mocked by Musk for asking if he'd actually been fired

TheFifth

As mentioned above, DC-X was specifically developed to be made from cheap, off the shelf parts and be reusable. It was developed in the 1980s and first flew in 1991. It was a NASA / McDonald Douglas project and is said to be the inspiration for both Blue Origin and Space-X.

So NASA was working on it over 30 years ago and its tech has been a stepping stone for what's come later. Even to the point where many of the DC-X engineers are now working at Blue Origin.

"On the shoulders of giants" as they say.

TheFifth

NASA might get there in 50 years.

Errr... What about the DC-X, which was conceived in the 1980s and flew in the 1990s? A NASA / McDonnell Douglas project that successfully vertically landed a rocket several times.

As with many of NASA's experimental projects, funding was cut and the project canned before the tech was put into use. Imagine where NASA would be with it now if that hadn't happened?

So no, NASA won't get there in 50 years' time, but maybe they will 32 years ago.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39cjZTCay24

https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/dc-x-the-nasa-rocket-that-inspired-spacex-and-blue-origin

Tesla's self-driving code may ignore stop signs, act unsafe. Patch coming ... soon

TheFifth

Yup, the way I see it is that the software (or current version of it) is being removed from the cars, therefore the software is being recalled. Doesn't matter if it's going to be replaced with a new, shinier version. It's still being recalled.

Just do a google search for 'microsoft patch recall' and you'll see a tonne of articles about MS recalling patches or updates. The software is being recalled. It's a recall.

Elon Musk starts poll with one question: Should I step down as head of Twitter?

TheFifth

Nothing to add other than this is exactly what I came here to say. It's his 'get out clean' play.

Musk bans private-plane-tracking @Elonjet on Twitter, threatens legal action

TheFifth

You are right, Elon does have a problem here. Looks like the journalists were banned just for reporting on the story and linking to @ElonJet's other account on Mastodon. So linking to any live tracking data is enough for a ban.

With that being the case, I assume any links posted by @FlightRadar24 to their own site will also be an insta-ban? They are tracking the whereabouts of almost everyone who is on a commercial aircraft anywhere in the world in real time. They also track Musk's jet whilst it's in the air.

If Flight Radar aren't banned then it's obvious that the rule is actually 'don't track anything Elon owns'. Although, just for the illusion of fairness he's also banned the tracking of other billionaires' jets too, so I guess the rule is 'know your place, little people'.

Musk roundly booed on-stage at Dave Chappelle gig

TheFifth

I've pretty much moved 100% to Mastodon now. I only check in on Twitter from time to time out of morbid curiosity. On Mastodon I see people I follow and the things they've boosted (which are usually relevant to my interests). That's it. Nothing is being pushed at me. So far it has a nice early Internet feel, I wonder how long that will last?

TheFifth

Yup, I watched one account get suspended in real time. I was half way through watching the video when it stopped and the account was suspended. It's great to see free speech in action.

I enjoy Thunderf00t for the scientific explanations as to why Musk's claims (and other high profile scams) are nonsense. Most boil down to the fact that you 'cannae change the laws of physics'. I wish his videos weren't so dripping in sarcasm and condescension though, I don't think he needs to stoop that low, but I guess he has a style and it's up to him how he wants to present the info. When it comes to the science, he's not often wrong and will usually admit if he is.

Twitter is really weird right now. I had carefully crafted a nice little feed for myself of retro tech enthusiasts, science news, news from Ukraine, and music related stuff. I never got involved, or even saw much of the toxic side of Twitter at all.

Now when I open my feed, for some reason it's full of conspiracy theories and right wing American political news (especially references to MTG and the like). Why? I'm in the UK and have no interest and have never looked at any of this stuff. The most obvious thing though, since the Musk take over, is that I see tweets from the Lord Muskiness himself. Everyday. Without fail. Pretty much every single thing he tweets ends up on my timeline. I don't follow him, I don't post about him, I don't read anything about him on Twitter. Why am I bombarded with his inane ramblings?

Did he buy Twitter purely to increase the audience for his nonsense?

Oh, and I'm seeing so much Piers Morgan. Why?!?!

If Apple's environmental rhetoric is meaningful, Macs and iPads should converge

TheFifth

Completely agree

I really hope this happens. I understand that the reason for the iPad's success is that they got the tablet OS right and didn't try to crowbar everything in like Windows 8 did. But...

I'd love them to release a Mac that was something similar to the Surface devices. Run full fat MacOS, but on an iPad style device. They can still keep the iPad product line separate, that's fine, so there would be no confusion and people can make their choice of device at purchase. A completely new 'Mac Touch' line.

MacOS has already morphed into something that is more touch friendly than Windows 8 ever was. Things like Launchpad, the change to catalyst based builds for most of the inbuilt apps (with a more iPad like layout), and the recent change to larger switches and sliders (very iPadOS in style) would already make it a usable tablet experience in my view.

Finally, Apple have just added 'Stage Manager' as an optional new way of multitasking in MacOS. This is a direct lift from iPadOS. I can't imagine why anyone would want to use it on a Mac to be honest. Unless it's preparing the way for touch based Macs, it seems like an odd addition to a mouse based OS.

If you ask me (I know, you didn't), all Apple needs to do to enable a 'tablet mode' on MacOS is to default to Launchpad rather than the desktop, always run apps in full screen, and use Stage Manager for multitasking. Right there you have a better touch experience than Windows ever was. OK, not as seamless as an iPad, but pretty close and probably the best of any transformer style device.

It seems a waste of all the MacOS changes not to do it. Come on Apple!

Using the datacenter as a dining room destroyed the platters that matter

TheFifth

Re: Wine cellar

That brings back some memories. I did a couple of onlines at Framestore back at the end of the 90s (not sure they were officially in 'Soho' but they were / are right next door). It was great being the client there, you were treated like a king! Big, comfy sofas with beer and food on tap.

Felt sorry for the runners though who had to attend to your ever whim, especially as I was only recently graduated myself and had lucked into an offline editing job in the South West. I didn't feel I'd earned the right to order anyone around!

Mouse hiding in cable tray cheesed off its bemused user

TheFifth

Re: Not heard of PS2 ports being taken out

I've also never had anything blow up, but on my old 486 IBM PS/1 it would completely freeze the machine if you hot swapped anything PS2.

Parallels increases prices with Desktop version 18

TheFifth

Never again

I've had many Parallels licenses over the years, my need for virtualisation is not great and I only use it once in a while. That need is also decreasing as each year passes.

The last license I bought was for version 15. I knew I'd need to test something on an older version of MacOS in a couple of weeks so bought it to ensure I had the software ready for when it was needed. I fought with VirtualBox to get it to run MacOS, but I couldn't get it to work and thought I'd cut my loses and just purchase a Parallels licence.

I purposely bought the 'pay once, use it until it doesn't work anymore' version as I refuse to pay a yearly subscription for something I need once in a blue moon. If the older software still works then it will likely fit my needs (which it normally does for a couple of years at least).

So about 11 days after purchasing I came to the point where I actually needed to use Parallels. I installed it for the first time, entered my license details and the first thing that popped up was a window asking me to upgrade to version 16 and pay them more cash.

That's OK I thought, I've only just bought this and it's literally the first time I've installed it. Surely they can see I'm only just activating the licence and they must have a grace period for a free update if you've just purchased. Well there is and it's 10 days, so I'd missed it by a day or so. I contact support and their response is basically "tough" (but couched in nice PR language) and I'm told that if I wanted to always run the latest, then I should buy a subscription.

I don't want to always run the latest, but I would have thought 11 days is close enough to have a free upgrade (especially as I've not actually used the license yet). I'd just spent close to £100 on it, so they weren't getting any more cash from me. Being asked for more cash the first time I install something I've just purchased left a bad taste in my mouth and the support response made me vow to never pay them a penny again. I knew version 16 would be out sometime in the future and was fine with staying on version 15, but when it comes out less than 2 weeks later, and before you've actually used the version 15 license, that's a bit much. It looks like they don't even offer the pay once option now, it's subscriptions all the way.

Thanks El Reg for the heads up on UTM, looks like it will meet my lowly needs pretty well.

This is the military – you can't just delete your history like you're 15

TheFifth

Some are definitely true. They even wrote a book about it...

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0056DR5KY/

Apple's new MacBook Air: Is the jump to M2 silicon worth another $200?

TheFifth

Re: Stamp Sized?

I'm waiting for an 10 to 11 inch iPad Pro style machine that runs full MacOS. Like a Surface Pro, but with an M1 or M2. iPadOS is useless for any sort of real work for me.

Misguided call for a 7-Zip boycott brings attention to FOSS archiving tools

TheFifth

Re: Have an upvote

Agreed. From my experience, most keep their head down and try not to get noticed. They just want to get on with their lives without being hassled. My partner is from a small town about 12 hours drive from Moscow. She's been in the UK for 10 years now, but still has family in Russia. She also has fears about returning as she holds dual nationality. No idea what we're going to do if there's a family emergency.

TheFifth

Re: I like 7Zip.

Yup! My Russian Wife is a language teacher and has been volunteering to help Ukrainian refugees learn English. She feels awkward when talking to them about the situation, but all of them have been lovely and not placed any of the blame on her. They've been dealing with Putin long enough to understand he doesn't represent the views of all the Russian people.

TheFifth

Re: I like 7Zip.

How many did the West kill and murder in Iraq based on lies? The adjective "despicable" is a little closer to home than many would admit.

Why do people seem to think that believing Russia is in the wrong and also believing what coalition forces did in Iraq was wrong are somehow mutually exclusive positions to hold? It's perfectly possible to believe both are "despicable" and be in no way internally inconsistent.

Where were you when Baghdad was being bombed and looted?

I was again expressing my disagreement with it, the same as I'm doing now. Not having any power other than my vote, my voice, and the ability to donate to aid workers in the region, there's not much more I can do. I don't think the Ukrainian military needs a severe asthmatic with a bad back slowing them down on the front line. No hypocrisy there at all. See how that works?

Obviously there are nuances about why each invasion happened, the justifications, the lies, the behaviour of those involved etc. that differer greatly between the two situations, but this insistence that if you believe one is bad, then you MUST believe the other is good it total horse excrement.

BOFH: HR's gold mine gambit – they get the gold and we get the shaft

TheFifth

Re: Favourite CPU socket?

Exactly what I was going to say. Give me a 40 pin DIP and a Z80 any day. :)

Microsoft pulls Windows 10/11 installation websites in Russia

TheFifth

Re: I resisted for all of 20 seconds

Russians like things made in Russia

I just said this to my Wife and she laughed.

Not sure how many Russians you know, but I'm married to one and have spent lots of time in Russia. This is not my experience at all. Most of the Russians I know are deeply cynical of all things made in Russia and drive Western (or Eastern) cars, have Hotpoint and Samsung washing machines and fridges and a house that is chocked full of Ikea furniture. And those who can't afford the Western made car or the Ikea furniture are deeply jealous of those who can. Made In Russia is the last thing they look for when purchasing anything (except maybe food produce).

well how DO you say 'Windows' in Russian?

Окна (pronounced Okna)

I'd like to see an OS called 'Okna'. Be interesting to see what MS would do about it!

Russians are pretty smart and will not just put up with this

This is exactly why I support these sanctions even though they have a direct impact on myself, my wife and my extended family. Most Russians I've met just want a quiet life, so they keep their heads down and try not to get noticed. They absorb the state media without question. The overriding opinion seems to be that the Government knows best, so if they say Ukraine must be invaded for the good of Russia, then so be it. Although it's not their fault in any way, maybe impacting their lives a little will shake them into doing something. My wife however is not convinced this will work and I bow to her better knowledge of the country and the population. It's the younger generation who grew up in post Soviet Russia we have to put our hope in. Most of my Wife's friends still in Russia are anti Putin and anti war (the ones who engage in politics to any degree anyway), so there is hope. But in the current climate, actually doing anything about those beliefs carries a great deal of danger.

We sat through Apple's product launch disguised as a dev event so you don't have to

TheFifth

Re: We're long past peak tech

"Snow Leopard 10.6.8."

This a 1,000 times!

I remember being really impressed when Leopard came out. Genuinely useful additions to the OS that made day to day usage easier. And then a couple of years later, Snow Leopard was a performance, memory and stability release. Not worrying about big new features, just making what was already there more efficient. Essentially the same feature set, just faster and more stable. Probably Apple's last, great release. Ever since it's been a race to see how much tat they can staple on with each release.

Yandex CEO Arkady Volozh resigns after being added to EU sanctions list

TheFifth

Re: Give Ukraine Nukes

Ukraine do not want nukes. When they became independent in 1991, they specifically said they did not want to keep any nuclear weapons on their territory and shipped them all to Russia. In fact, although Bush was playing the 'we won the Cold War' card at home, in the background he was trying to hold the USSR together long enough to ensure all nuclear weapons were sent to Russia and he was also backing a new union of states proposed by Gorbachev. It was Ukraine who were one of the main reasons that the new union did not succeed. They wanted independence and to be free of all things USSR, including the nuclear arsenal.

Also, giving nuclear arms to a country that is currently at war with a nuclear power would be amazingly idiotic. It would make them and the country that supplied the weapons a target of nuclear attack. Putin is paranoid enough already. The 'nuclear deterrents work' line is incredibly simplistic thinking if you know anything about the history of the region or the current situation.

Declassified and released: More secret files on US govt's emergency doomsday powers

TheFifth

Re: Presumbly the UK has similar plans

I give up. I'm just trying to explain to you that as someone who has Russian family, and that Russian family has Ukrainian family in eastern Ukraine (who are ethnic Russians), the way you are painting things is not at all what they have experienced over the past 15 years or what I have experienced when talking to them.

They tell me that Russian speakers were not being targeted in the their everyday lives pre-2014, when Russia used political instability to launch a land-grab and create a buffer zone (obviously I can't speak for all Russian speakers, but I'm just sharing the stories they have told me). I have no reason to question them because they are Russian speaking Ukrainians who live in eastern Ukraine. Yes there are nationalist idiots, but every country has those and it was no worse in Ukraine than elsewhere, but from what they tell me, their day to day lived life was not what you are making it out to be (not until Putin stoked the hatred anyway). You are painting Ukraine as a country that has been involved in state sanctioned ethnic cleansing for years, which is simply untrue if you actually asked the people who are the supposed targets. Yes things are nuanced, even pre-2014, but you seem to be countering a perceived lack of balanced reporting with a total lack of balance in the opposite direction.

I have also shown poll data that was taken in 2015 that said that Russian speakers in the areas in which you claim they area being suppressed still did not consider themselves targeted, even after 2014. I'm sure that will change now after the invasion, but I don't think that can be blamed on the Ukrainian people. The fact is that even post 2014, the vast majority of people in the east of Ukraine did not support Russian interference in the Donbas and Russian speakers did not feel in any way 'under pressure or threat'. This is what they themselves have said. This fits exactly with what my extended family is telling me. The people on the streets didn't want this, even the ethnic Russians. It's purely a very small, mainly politically motivated group, who are interested in personal power more than what's good for the region. So all your whataboutism misses the actual point, which is that the people in the east did not want this, pre or post 2014. Putin used a tiny minority of support to justify an invasion that was useful for him, not the people of eastern Ukraine.

If you want to see where Putin gets lots of his ideological ideas, look up the 1997 book 'Foundations of Geopolitics' by Aleksandr Dugin. The guy is known as Putin's Rasputin and has been in the ear of Putin for many, many years. The ideas in the book read like a laundry list of what Russia has been up to over the last 10 years.

Yes the current reporting may be substantially one sided, although in the UK it's certainly been reported that Ukrainian soldiers have shot unarmed Russian soldiers and yes, there have been calls for war crime investigations into those reports. I don't know where you are, but it's certainly not 100% one sided here in the UK. However, taking the extreme opposite view doesn't make it any better. You just sound like you're parroting the blatantly absurd talking points Putin used to justify invasion.

And please, stop trying to make the term 'ethnic' into some sort of nationalistic slur. It's an academic term that is used to describe the make up of a population. It's even a term that is mandated in the the UK Government's style guide when writing about populations. It is used instead of the word 'race', which is considered to have the connotations you are levelling against the term 'ethnic'.

Anyway, I'm out, believe what you like. I'll believe what I'm being told by my extended family who have lived in eastern Ukraine and Russia all their lives.

TheFifth

Re: Presumbly the UK has similar plans

The problem is that when another country invades a sovereign nation, or indeed 'gives support' to a tiny minority that want to break away, the far-right nationalists are generally the first to respond. If the US was attacked tomorrow, I guarantee that the ultra-nationalist organisations would be the first on the front line. The clues in their name.

However, let's not pretend that the breakaway regions of Donetsk and Luhansk are all sweetness and light. The UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine reported in 2014 that there was growing lawlessness in the region, documenting cases of targeted killings, torture, and abduction. With beatings and attacks on supporters of Ukrainian unity.

Also in 2014 Human Rights Watch have said that "Anti-Kiev forces in eastern Ukraine are abducting, attacking, and harassing people they suspect of supporting the Ukrainian government or consider undesirable...anti-Kiev insurgents are using beatings and kidnappings to send the message that anyone who doesn't support them had better shut up or leave". Most of the ethnic Ukrainians did leave and they relocated further west.

And yes, Amnesty International have also raised concerns in 2014 about the volunteer battalions in eastern Ukraine. Saying that they act like "renegade gangs" and also use abductions and torture. But as I say, this is the problem when there are threats to your sovereignty. Those ultra-nationalist groups become useful muscle, because the desire to protect their nation is part of their belief system. I would say though, be careful with what you believe of that 'footage that came out of Ukraine'. Some has been proved to be either filmed within Russia or be footage of previous Russian encounters. Bellingcat described some of it as 'Dumb and Lazy' with corpses showing signs of having had previous autopsies (i.e. they are cadavers placed within a scene to fake photos etc.). It happens from both sides, but it's Russia's go to ploy. Having watched a lot of Russian TV within Russia, it's like an alternate reality. They present objectively and provably false things with a straight face.

As you say though, "As for actual war crimes, wait until the dust has settled".

I would note that the make up of battalions like Azov now are far more diluted of nationalist sentiment than they used to be. Russia invading the country has understandably stirred up the desire to protect the homeland in people of every persuasion, but even pre-invasion those battalions were made up of people from all walks of life and all beliefs. Far-right experts Vyacheslav Likhachev and Andreas Umland have both said that since 2017 the Azov Battalion has been 'de-ideologised' and openly right-wing radicals had been 'cleansed' from the ranks. It even has several Jewish members now and is considered a regular fighting unit by most observers (granted one with a fierce reputation).

Putin has been using the nationalists' playbook within Russia for years and since 2014 Zelensky has been playing that game too. I hate these nationalist games, but the problem you have is that threats to a nation will always increase nationalism, not decrease it. The Russian 'de-nazification' line is a joke. Putin is just creating more extreme views, in both Ukraine and Russia. But that's all part of the plan. Create a tonne of extremists as a product of your actions and then point and say "look, we said they were all extremists". It's a tried and tested playbook.

You could argue all day about 'who started' the atrocities in the east, but the fact is, pre-2014 things were mostly peaceful and it was Russian interference in both the east and in Ukrainian politics in general that caused most of the problems. Yes there was political unrest during 2013-2014 and there were protests both pro-Russian and pro-Ukrainian, but it wasn't all out fighting. Ukrainians and Russians consider themselves part of a wider Slavic family and the close bonds between the people kept things peaceful (or it used to anyway).

As a side note, you seem to be using the term 'ethnic Ukrainian' like it's some sort of big bad conspiracy by the Ukrainian population, which is weird to me. It's merely a way of describing a subpopulation within a country or region. The wider population of 'Ukrainians' is made up of ethnic Ukrainians, ethnic Russians, ethnic Belarusians, ethnic Moldovans etc. It's just a way of saying 'this Ukrainian has Russian roots, or this Ukrainian has Ukrainian roots'. They're all still Ukrainian citizens and we need some way of describing the subgroups.

Of course Ukraine has nationalists, but it has no more of a problem than other countries have, including Russia and the US. You can argue that France and Hungary have a far bigger issue with extreme nationalist groups than Ukraine does.

And to pick up on the point about corruption you made earlier. Yes Ukraine has an issue, but it has been improving since Zelensky came to power. Reducing corruption was the main policy he ran the election on and he has had some success in tackling it. It's always going to be slow going when the country has had deeply ingrained corruption since the time of the Soviet Union. Even with the problems, Ukraine still has a better rank on the Corruption Index than Russia does. And I can tell you, having spent time in Russia over the past 15 years, the corruption there is rife and impacts almost every aspect of life. I've come face to face with it several times.

TheFifth

Re: Presumbly the UK has similar plans

Ukraine obviously wants to eliminate all Russians inside Ukraine, and restore it's territory. Sections of the Ukrainian population do not want to be ruled by Ukraine's regime since 2014.

As someone who has in-laws who are Russian and who have family who are Russian and live in the east of Ukraine, I can tell you that you are so wrong with what you are claiming here. The 'eliminate all Russians inside Ukraine' bit is pure Putin propaganda. It may be worth mentioning that a 2015 poll of residents of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions outside of the Russian rebel held areas showed that 75% wanted the entire Donbas region to remain fully Ukrainian. Also, when asked if Russian-speaking citizens are under pressure or threat, 82% said 'no'. Only 7% 'somewhat' supported Russia helping rebels in the east and 71% did not. Note that these result are after Russia had already supported rebels in the east and many ethnic Ukrainians had fled. It's likely that before 2014, these figures would have been very different and shown less support for breaking away and less threat to ethnic Russians. So the line that Russia is saving the Donbas region from Ukrainian atrocities and that its people want to be part of Russia is complete bull.

Also, it's worth noting that in the 1991 referendum on becoming independent and separating from Russia, even in the east, over 80% of the population voted for independence (Donetsk 83.9% and Luhansk 83.86%). The only region below 80% was Crimea at 54.19%. So Russia could possibly make some sort of claim about popular support in Crimea (not really though), but in the east it's flimsy at best.

In the last census of Ukraine, the area with the highest ethnic Russian population was Crimea which stood at 58.3%. The next highest was Luhansk with 39% , then Donetsk at 38.2% and Kharkiv at 25.6%. Everywhere else is below 18%, with most below 10%. Something tells me that it would be tricky to get 97% to accept Russian rule when only 58% of the population are ethnic Russians (well, if the referendum was fair anyway). It's a moot point anyway as the referendum was illegal under Ukrainian law as all Ukrainian referendum that cause territorial changes can only be approved if all the citizens of Ukraine are allowed to vote.

Obviously the percentage of ethnic Russians in the east and Crimea is now likely far higher as ethnic Ukrainians have fled those regions due to mistreatment by Russian rebels (ironically).

I'm no historian, and I wouldn't dare to suggest you don't have a good understanding of the region's history (you may be a history professor with a really weird and unique take on it for all I know), but as someone who married into a Slavic family, with relations in both Russia and Ukraine, I've tried hard to read and understand the region and the history (not to mention having spent a lot of time in Russia over the past 15 years).

My suggestion is don't listen to Russia or the West's propaganda and read the history for yourself. You could even try talking to some actual Ukrainians and Russians if able. If you're interested, I would suggest starting with the following:

The Gates of Europe: A History of Ukraine

The Last Empire: The Final Days of the Soviet Union

Revolutionary Russia, 1891-1991

You can see the beginnings of these troubles going back hundreds of years, especially when you look at the way Ukraine was treated as part of both the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union. Ukraine has always been a country caught between warring empires. Be it the Byzantine Empire, the Mongols, the Ottoman Empire, the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth, The Austro Hungarian Empire or the Russian Empire, it's always been a battle ground that others used to fight their wars.

Ironically, Muscovy, which later grew into the Tsardom of Russia, began life as a mere region of Kyivan Rus', the Kyiv centred state that is arguably the mother of all Slavic countries.

Elon Musk 'violated' Twitter NDA over bot-check sample size

TheFifth

Re: violate ?

Many years ago I did some work for a Sure Start centre in a deprived area of the South West. The work they did was amazing, especially in the area of advice and support for struggling parents. Seeing the day to day work close up was a real eye opener for how Government funded schemes like Sure Start can make a real difference to people's lives. The guy who ran it was an absolute inspiration. The removal of their funding was a travesty.

Last I heard, their old premises was earmarked for housing development.

TheFifth

Interesting how he differentiates the public from "real people" isn't it

I didn't get that from what he said at all. My reading is he's saying that it's all fun and games for us to watch from the sidelines, but this isn't just rich men waving their willies around, it's having a real impact on real people (i.e. not billionaires, not rich investment companies).

It's hurting the rank and file employees too, who are actually members of the public themselves. Just because they work at Twitter doesn't make them outside of the 'public'. I bet they're not earning massive amounts of cash either and it's not like they have any control over any of this.

You could of course argue that billionaires are 'real people' too, which I guess they are in the strictest sense of the word, but certainly not in a social and economic sense, which is what I think he, as a financial analyst, was likely getting at.

We can bend the laws of physics for your super-yacht, but we can't break them

TheFifth

Re: You cannot bend nature; you have to bend

I had a sort of similar experience back in the early 2000s when building a bespoke CMS system to run a company's website.

This was the days before Wordpress was king and .NET was a thing, so we built a bespoke system using ASP and an SQL Server backend (at their request). All went well with our testing and development and the site ran fast and smooth on our servers.

When we installed it onto the customer's server however, things slowed down to crawl. After much messing around, we finally narrowed it down to the SQL server taking a long time to respond. Each request was taking seconds. When we asked for more information about the server, they told us it was in the US. They were in the SW of England. For some reason, even though they had their own data centre, they farmed out all of their SQL Server requirements to a company in the US.

So every time a page on their website was accessed, their server would make a request to a database that was over 4000 miles away. We added some local caching, which helped a lot, but still not exactly speedy when accessing things outside of the cache. I have a vague recollection that at the time there was a bug in ASP that made accessing remote SQL instances super slow, but even without that I doubt, given the Internet speeds of the time, things would have been much better.

Mozilla browser Firefox hits the big 100

TheFifth

Re: A well worn story.

That's fair enough, each to their own.

Personally, any UI changes take me about an hour to get used to and then I completely forget about them. What's more important to me is how easy does the browser make my work, or more importantly, how much does the browser not annoy me whilst I work, and on that measure Firefox's dev tools give me a smoother ride.

It's funny, I hate The One True Window Layout For Web Browsers(TM) as it takes up way too much screen real estate for me. I like a browser's UI to be utterly minimal and 95%+ of the window to be website. As I say though, each to their own.

I would agree about the combined refresh / stop button. I get the reasoning behind it (you only every need one at a time), but I'd prefer two. Unfortunately all web browsers have gone that way now. Firefox does have two companion extensions though, one that adds a stop button and one that adds a refresh button, so you could add those extensions and remove the combined button from the toolbar. So that's not a reason to ditch Firefox if you don't mind adding a couple of extensions. Can't say I've ever bothered though, it's something I've become used to.

Outside of work however I do use Safari for general browsing. This is purely because its sync for tabs and bookmarks between devices works way better than anything else I've used. Also, when I used Firefox on my iPad, it kept freezing and had stuttering scrolling, plus the lack of extensions like uBlock on mobile was a show stopper for me. I'll have to revisit and see if it's improved. Safari has too much general weirdness, but I struggle on purely for the convenience of reliable syncing and ad blocking on mobile. Things like the whole thing freezing for seconds when using autocomplete in the URL bar or some sites refusing to work at all with it are annoying to say the least.

TheFifth

Re: A well worn story.

I'll give you a thumbs up for that. I've read opinion pieces about how Firefox is going to die any second and the reasons they state seem completely alien to me. They complain about removed features that I either didn't know existed or did know about, but never used and didn't see the point of. They claim that all users will hate it because of X, Y and Z and I'm often thinking that I will use it because of X, Y and Z.

Maybe I'm just different than most users, or maybe I'm the same as a silent majority and it's those who are most vocal that are actually the minority? Who knows! Personally I like things very minimal and simple. With Firefox (and many other modern browsers) I can have the tabs in the title bar and a slimline toolbar with the URL address bar and buttons below it. Minimal clutter and maximum website. I can also install all of the extensions that I need. I know that tabs in the titlebar is one of the things people say will be the death of Firefox, but I've alway liked it. Many, many years ago, long before anyone else did it, there was a Safari beta that had the tabs in the title bar. I loved it as it wasted less screen real estate, but Apple removed it in the final release. I really wanted them back there ever since, so I'm glad other browsers have followed suit.

Is Firefox perfect? Hell no! Using a bit less memory would be nice (still better than Chrome though, which is the most popular browser out there, so that doesn't seem to matter much to the majority). I could list several more things, but honestly, I could about every other browser too.

Personally, I spend most of my time developing web apps, so I live in the browser for many hours everyday. I've tried them all and they all have their faults. But for me, the development tools are better in Firefox and having them open for a long time doesn't grind the browser to a halt, which it does with some other browsers (Safari, I'm looking at you!). Just the simple thing of having the 'Styles' always shown and the ability to have the 'Layout' or 'Computed' styles beside them for reference is a massive efficiency gain. You don't have to constantly switch between tabs. Safari has started doing that now too, but I don't really use it for development for the reason mentioned above.

So for my use case, Firefox is the least bad of all the browsers I've tried. They all have their faults, but for what I specifically do day to day, Firefox annoys me the least. Not a glowing report I know, but that's where I'm at right now.

In terms of why Chrome has such a big market share, I'm not convinced it's because it's any better than the competition. It's objectively worse in some ways - memory usage and privacy for example. Ask my non-tech friends and family why they use Chrome and the answer is normally because they saw a popup when searching on Google that said it would work better, be faster and more secure. Google has massive marketing clout and brand recognition and that's a big part of it. I was surprised in the early days of Chrome when my non-tech family started asking me about it. It wasn't because they'd used it and thought it was better, it was because they'd heard about it most recently. Having the marketing reach of Google goes a long way. I even installed FF on my Mum's computer and changed the shortcut icon to look like Chrome (as that's what she's always clicked - best not mess with things. It took long enough for her to move from the IE icon the Chrome one!). She didn't notice and even my sister, nephew and niece didn't notice when using it either. The browser is just 'The Internet' to them. So I personally think, for an everyday user, it's not a love for Chrome or a dislike of the changes in Firefox that makes them use Chrome. They just use what they're used to or have heard about most recently. My non-tech friends don't even remember the name 'Firefox', whereas they're reminded about Chrome every time they use a different browser to search on Google. It's marketing and mindshare. Not for every user obviously, but many of the non-tech ones.

Note this is only my very subjective view. And also my personal experience having tried out pretty much every browser for my day to day work. Your personal experiences and views may vary.

Elon Musk set to buy Twitter in $44b deal, promises stuff

TheFifth

Re: "Authenticate all humans"?

I was thinking that authenticating all humans would instantly turn off all the freedom loving free speech advocates he's trying to attract. Can't see all those libertarians being keen to hand over their details so they can be authenticated. Or is Elon somehow trusted to look after personal data?

Also, I love the way he just throws out there that he'll get rid of all the bots. Like it will be that easy. The fact that he thinks it's easy shows that he really hasn't a clue what running a massive social media company entails.

My guess is it will become another one of Elon's famous promises, like full self driving in 6 months (in 2017), solar roof deployments in 2017, Tesla semi to be produced in 2019, new Gigafactories to be announced in 2017, turn-around and reuse a rocket within 24 hours (2019), autonomous robo-taxis by 2020, and don't get me started on some of his Space-X Mars mission timelines.

Musk is great at (self) promotion. It's real easy to say all these things, and it's great for getting funding or raising your profile, but actually doing it is hard. He talks a good talks, but he's never been a 'details' guy. He reminds me of a guy I used to work for. Promises the world to clients (or investors) and then hands the problem of actually doing it to someone else (me at the time!).

ZX Spectrum, the 8-bit home computer that turned Europe on to PCs, is 40

TheFifth

Re: "Rival machines, such as the Commodore 64, did not suffer from the same problem"

The Amstrad CPC range also had no character colour attributes and had pixel level colour information, so it too should not have had any colour clash issues (apart from all those lazy Speccy ports on the system).

TheFifth

Re: Different route here

I had a CPC 464, which over the years had a ROM board, Multiface II and disk drive added. Was a brilliant machine.

As you say though, unfortunately it did get lumbered with a few too many quick and dirty Speccy ports. Cheap games companies looking for a quick way to turn out a conversion.

Games that were written properly to take advantage of the CPC's greater power could trounce the humble Speccy though. Some of the software that came out of France and Spain back in the day was great. Also, just take a look at the new games still being produced for the CPC. We would have been gob smacked if we'd seen some of these new games back in the 80s!

Back on topic though, I recently picked up a 48K Spectrum as a lockdown project. The first I've ever owned. I've had great fun playing through some of the old classics. There were some truly great titles available for the Spectrum.

Logitech Lift: Vertical mouse for those with small hands

TheFifth

I have been using cheap Anker upright mice for several years now. They sorted my wrist pain almost instantly, I'd never go back to a normal mouse again. Over the years I'd tried trackballs, trackpads and even pen / graphic tablets. The pen and tablet was actually really good for the pain, but it was not as efficient as using a mouse.

The main issue with the Anker mice is that the buttons and scroll wheel fail after a couple of years (cheap parts!). So I've been through four already, sometimes taking it apart and moving microswitches from the buttons I don't use into the main button positions to make it last longer. However, they can be picked up for as little as £11.99 if you look hard enough, so I've always just purchased them as all other proper upright offerings were £100 or more (I don't like the Microsoft ergo mouse - doesn't feel that ergonomic to me). It would take the best part of 10 years before it was better value to spend the £100+ and there's no guarantee those high priced mice would last that long anyway.

Now that this is at a better price, I may consider it. I don't have massive hands, so it might work for me. Will need to check it out first though.

Europe's largest nuclear plant on fire after Russian attack

TheFifth

Re: looks like starshell to me

Also, watch the second half of this video from around 18 seconds onwards:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/world-60613863

Not just flares unfortunately.

Also, looking at the map, the waste storage is directly behind the building that was targeted. Not hard to think that it could have been damaged by a rouge shot. Not a melt down, but still not great.

TheFifth

Re: looks like starshell to me

There are images of the administration building with blown out windows and a blackened front. So it looks like something a bit more than just flares / star shells have been fired at the plant. Definitely more than a hedge on fire.

Granted it's an administrative building and I agree that it's unlikely to cause a meltdown or damage to the reactors. Maybe I'm being over cautious, but personally I prefer it when no munitions are fired anywhere near a nuclear plant.

https://www.voanews.com/a/russian-forces-reported-to-control-zaporizhzhia-nuclear-plant-/6469026.html

TheFifth

Re: Not fake news but…….

The pictures I've seen this morning of the administration building of the plant with big black holes in it would certainly suggest something more powerful than a flare has been fired in the vicinity. Granted, it's not the reactor buildings that were on fire, but I'd suggest caution may have been a better approach than firing missiles into any building on a nuclear facility. Too easy for your aim to go accidentally awry.

Adobe warns of second critical security hole in Adobe Commerce, Magento

TheFifth

Re: Sadly, my company are magento heavy...

I'm currently in a soul destroying battle with Magento for a client. Time and again I advised them not to use it for their tiny little shop, but they wanted the 'industry standard'.

I've spent more time trying to keep the thing running than actually making progress on the updates I need to do for their specific use case. Even installing a simple payment module is likely to cause the site to fall flat on its face and take a day of debugging just to get it working again.

And to top it all off, the backend is so complex, the client can't work out how to do the simplest of tasks (like adding a product for example!).

I've never had the displeasure to use such a finicky, unstable system. I liken it to defusing a bomb. Although you partake in hours and hours of careful, delicate, painstaking work, there's still every chance the whole thing will blow up in your face.

I swear it's taken years off my life having to deal with it.

Tesla to disable 'self-driving' feature that allowed vehicles to roll past stop signs at junctions

TheFifth

Re: One benefit for the fuel companies...?

"We have a similar problem in the UK, with "timed" traffic light signals that stop traffic, even if no other traffic is crossing the junction...this is especially more wasteful, in the early hours, when few vehicles are travelling on local roads...."

This drives me nuts. The city where I live had a traffic light installing spree a few years back. It was like the council dropped them from the sky and installed them wherever they landed. They also put traffic lights around just about every medium to large roundabout in the city. These are all 24 hours a day too. I get that a particular junction on a roundabout may not be able to move during rush hour as cars will always be coming from the right, but 99% of the time, you sit at the lights staring at a completely empty roundabout.

I don't understand the aversion to part-time lights. I get that people may be initially confused as to when the lights are / are not operating, but the funny thing is, when the lights on the main roundabout near me are faulty, it seems to flow perfectly fine at any time of day.

TheFifth

Re: California roll

I have to agree, I know of no stop signs where I regularly drive. Hundreds of roundabouts and traffic lights (too many traffic lights!), but no stop signs.

The only ones I know of around here are out in the sticks, where it's single lane roads with high hedges either side. There is almost no visibility when pulling out of a junction, so they often have stop signs. None in the towns / city where I regularly drive*.

*I'm sure there are some around on the housing estates or on some odd, tight little junction. But none where I drive.

Linux distros haunted by Polkit-geist for 12+ years: Bug grants root access to any user

TheFifth

Re: CLI strikes again...

As someone who has also engaged in battle with the Xero API, I completely agree. When I was battling with it, the documentation was incomplete, most of it was auto-generated, and the examples included simply didn't work. I've noticed it's improving in that regard, but still has a long way to go. I've also had to rework the implementation many times too to keep pace with their constant shifting.

Google sours on legacy G Suite freeloaders, demands fee or flee

TheFifth

I've also not received any notification email to tell me they'll be pulling the plug. I've been considering de-googling my life for a while, but have been too lazy to do it. This is the push I need. Self hosting for me from now on!

After deadly 737 Max crashes, damning whistleblower report reveals sidelined engineers, scarcity of expertise, more

TheFifth

Re: "Aeroflot"

Aeroflot have one of the youngest fleets out there, with an average age of only 6.1 years (https://www.planespotters.net/airline/Aeroflot-Russian-Airlines). For comparison, British Airways have an average fleet age of 13.2 years and American Airlines 11.8 years.

Aeroflot have always been good when I've flown with them, they definitely don't deserve the reputation they have (maybe a couple of decades ago it was deserved). Also found Siberian (S7) to be good too. Russia still does have some major issues with its smaller airlines, but the main players are as good as any other major airline now.

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