Archive for February, 2008

So, Are Young Fine Gael Threatening Legal Action?

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Update: So Young Fine Gael are distancing themselves from threats of a lawsuit. Eoin has commented below to confirm this.

Legal salvos were bound to kick off in this incident. Blogger Eoin Brazil commented on Damien’s blog saying:

“Damien, I heard both sides of this particular story and I believe its you who is overreacting. I’d love to say that they’re members of YFG but as ever you’re facts are incorrect. I’d also like to say I’m not one of the two.

I’d like you to retract your comments about YFG and UL YFG in particular or you will see the legal side for libel for taking the good name of one of UL societies into another one of your paranoid rants.

Please feel free to moderate this comment. I believe information should be free, do you ?”

This comment appears to suggest that UL’s Fine Gael branch may be making the first move, by threatening Mr Mulley with legal action. Is this true? Are UL’s Young Fine Gael branch going legal on this? I’m confused.

Where does the truth lie? Legal remedy may be the only option as this stage. This will probably run and run. It’s a sad incident that will not doubt tarnish Irish Blogging Week. I hope that the air is clear by Saturday night.

Protecting Our Free Speech

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

“I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it” is an oft-quoted line attributed to Voltaire, and it succinctly expresses how I feel today. Last evening Damien Mulley changed his Twitter updates to be protected in an attempt to stop people from allegedly harassing him. I say allegedly, as this incident may find its resolution through legal intervention.

One of final messages, before switching his account private made claims that certain members of the UL branch of Young Fine Gael were behind the harassment.

“With the continued harassment and stalking online and off I’m getting from members of Fine Gael in UL, I’m making this account private”

Now, I have no reason to disbelieve what Damien is saying, but I wonder what the Fine Gael party executive would make of certain members of its youth movement allegedly harassing a citizen practising his right to free speech.

The scary thing, is that trying to stamp on the right to free speech of one of us, is an attack on all of us. Every blogger in the country. How long is it before you say something that does not defame anyone, but rubs them up the wrong way so as to result in harassment?

There are many bloggers whose opinions I disagree with. People who challenge my views. They make me a better person and I hope I help them too.

Aside from this case, how long before one of us is next? How long before someone stamps on your right to free speech? How long before you are the object of harassment? Clamping on free speech is intolerable, and harassment to the point of outright stalking is unacceptable.

Note: If the allegations against members of Young Fine Gael are held up in a court of law, I would like to make the point that nowhere in this post, do I allege that this was an organised campaign sanctioned by the Young Fine Gael branch at UL.

Two of Us

Monday, February 25th, 2008

I’m mad busy at work trying to finish off bits and pieces before a couple of days off, but I couldn’t let today pass by without posting to celebrate the late George Harrison’s birthday. If George were alive today, he’d be sixty-five. I could be predictable and post a link to song that George wrote, but I don’t like being predictable. Instead, I’m sitting back listening to one of my favourite Beatle ballads from Let It Be.

The Beatles ‘Two of Us’

Red Links 22/02/08

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

Stuff White People Like. Via Irina.

Refreshing head wipes

Dublin is planning it’s own Improv Freeze following NY’s recent one at Grand Central. 4:30pm, this Saturday on Grafton Street for five minutes.

One more reason why Twitter can beat Jaiku for the hearts and minds of microbloggers.. Give him a chance, he’s only warming up.

Tiny Masters Of Today / Yeah Yeah Yeahs with ‘Hologram World’

Work Life Balance Day Comes Once Every Four Years?

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

Anyone else see the irony in having a national Work Life Balance Day on February 29th? I wonder who picked the date. What kind of message does it send?

Ten Commandments of Killing Server Performance

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

I’m looking at performance testing at work this week and I came across the ‘Ten Commandments of Killing Server Performance’. It’s an oldie, but a goodie - especially if you are working in testing. :)

Here’s the abridged version:

  1. Thou shalt allocate and free lots of objects.
  2. Thou shalt not think about processor cache.
  3. Thou shalt never cache frequently used data.
  4. Thou shalt create lots of threads. The more, the merrier.
  5. Thou shalt use global locks for data structures.
  6. Thou shalt not pay attention to multiprocessor machines.
  7. Thou shalt use blocking calls all the time; they are fun.
  8. Thou shalt not measure.
  9. Thou shalt use single-client, single-request testing.
  10. Thou shalt not use real-world scenarios.

Red Links 20/02/08

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

I command you to FART. Via Matt.

I haven’t bought into the 4 Hour Work Week idea, but author Tim Ferriss has some hints to help stop you from checking your email in the evenings or at weekends.

There’s a lot of buzz among my nerdy pals about LINQ.

Map of an Englishman


My Bloody Valentine ‘Only Shallow’, because I’m still celebrating that they are coming to the Electric Picnic.

Apologies..

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

.. to my commenters. I’ve lost some while porting over the export file. XML denies all knowledge despite the interrogations. Sorry. I’ll do my best to right things.

Creative Commons Scares Bad Web Designers

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

So, I wrote a post yesterday about how licensing content as Creative Commons is good thing. Robert also had a piece about how rights holders ought to think seriously about sharing before they license their work as Creative Commons. My stance hasn’t changed a bit. Sharing is good. I won’t demean the intelligence of rights holders by telling them what to share and what not to share. We all draw the limit somewhere. Knowing where that limit is and sharing still, benefits everyone.

Or does it? I find that some web designers revile Creative Commons, instead of celebrating it. Why? Because some view it (wrongly) as a disruptive force in their business model. Community sharing of graphics and themes is like landing a tonne of pile of bricks outside someone’s house when they want to build an extension. Yes, the raw materials are there, but some serious planning, designing and building needs to be executed. Done with taste and skill. That’s where web designers pop in. The site isn’t a product, rather it’s a side-effect of a web design service. What does it say about the skill-level of a web designer who is scared of Creative Commons? If their business is threatened by the proliferation of free site content, not much. And just to be clear, I speak specifically here on Creative Commons content that is licensed for usage in commercial products.

Wouldn’t clients that dabbled in the past with Creative Commons solutions and have reassessed the professionalism of their web presence, find it much easier to sign-off on improving it by employing web designers? The psychological barrier to entry is lower for them. Good design is not seen as a money-pit, rather as a tangible benefit to their branding story. More business for good designers and great sites for clients. Bad designers sulk in the corner.

Techie Dinners Everywhere

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

It’s awfully nice to see social dinners being kicked off to bring together fresh techie faces around a table. If you are a girl geek and around Dublin next week, Wednesday night the 27th, why not consider coming to the Girl Geek Dinner that Martha is organising. More details here.

Tom is doing some great work organising a blogger dinner in Cork on the eve of the BlogTalk 2008 conference. He’s got some interesting people registered already. Locals, tech heads and a nice mix of international faces too. In Cork on March 2nd, why not go?