I am part of the millions of Australians who don't vote. About 8% of people living in Australia aren't on the electoral roll. There are also about a million overseas who don't vote. Add to that the informal votes, up from 4% to 6% for the 2010 election and you have about 20% of the population eligible to vote who don't.
For a country that rushed in compulsory voting after the massive drop-out 1922 election (60% turnout), I am proud to announce that we're back!
Not that not voting changes anything. How can it? Voting doesn't change anything. Nevertheless, one should not encourage them. It's poor form.
Monday, August 23, 2010
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Watts Riots started today, 1965

The Situationists had a little to say about the riots.
Let the economists fret over the $27 million lost, and the city planners sigh over one of their most beautiful supermarkets gone up in smoke, and McIntyre blubber over his slain deputy sheriff. Let the sociologists bemoan the absurdity and intoxication of this rebellion.
[...]
Until the Watts explosion, black civil rights demonstrations had been kept by their leaders within the limits of a legal system that tolerates the most appalling violence on the part of the police and the racists [...]
[...]
Looting is a natural response to the unnatural and inhuman society of commodity abundance. It instantly undermines the commodity as such, and it also exposes what the commodity ultimately implies: the army, the police and the other specialized detachments of the state’s monopoly of armed violence. What is a policeman? He is the active servant of the commodity, the man in complete submission to the commodity, whose job is to ensure that a given product of human labor remains a commodity [...]
[...]
The rational world produced by the Industrial Revolution has rationally liberated individuals from their local and national limitations and linked them on a global scale; but it irrationally separates them once again, in accordance with a hidden logic that finds its expression in insane ideas and grotesque values. Estranged from their own world, people are everywhere surrounded by strangers.
Labels:
politics,
revolution
Kick Ass
Kick Ass: Clever combination of Watchmen and The Professional. Excellent, ironic portrayal of vigilante fascism. Love the controversy and critical response sections on wikipedia. E.g.
Roger Ebert gave the film one out of four stars. He called the film "morally reprehensible", appalled by the violent scenes in which an 11-year-old girl murders dozens of gang members and is then almost beaten to death by an adult man. "When kids in the age range of this movie's home video audience are shooting one another every day in America, that kind of stops being funny."Does it Robert? Does it really? 'Cause, you know, I was laughing quite a bit through those scenes.
Friday, August 6, 2010
Genetic Algorithms
There is something a little bit creepy about writing genetic algorithms. I'm not quite sure what it is...
// Run selected breeding program
while (stopWatch.Elapsed < _parameters.SimulationExecutionTime)
{
population = Selection(population).ToList();
var children = Breed(population);
Mutate(children);
population.AddRange(children);
}
Labels:
c#,
genetic algorithm,
programming
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Subversion
I have decided to hide subversive quotes in the software I am working on.
If you find them all, you unlock "The Revolution Complete" achievement.
If you find them all, you unlock "The Revolution Complete" achievement.
Labels:
communism,
programming,
revolution,
wpf
Food Inc.
One of the best documentaries about the food industry I've seen. A US bias, but most of it applies to Australia (feed lots, GM soy, production houses for broilers, etc.). The annoying organic farmers and family farmers don't dominate.
This doco beats, by a long margin, anything Michael Moore could ever do. Really interesting.
This doco beats, by a long margin, anything Michael Moore could ever do. Really interesting.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
iPad
5 reasons not to buy an iPad:
As it is, I can play games, read, surf the web, instant message, and send email all really well. That's excellent.
As a word, the iPad is "very good." It really is a totally new type of computer. Fix those issues above (all could be done in a single update) and I could do pretty much all I want on it.
- No rich text editing with Safari (no google docs, no blogger, etc.) Huh? Why not? Pathetic.
- Apple doesn't allow other music players (I want WinAmp.)
- Web-browsing is slow. Don't expect the speeds/convenience of a desktop/laptop
- No find text in web-page
- Can't delete default apps (who's going to use iPod, iTunes, etc.?)
- Say goodbye to RSI
- There are some great games that use the new UI really well (e.g. Osmos, Labyrinth 2, Train Controller 2). Even old games are great (Civ Rev, Wesnoth)
- Reading with GoodReader, iBooks or Kindle is very good. I think I'm transitioning away from physical books.
- The device syncs perfectly with your gmail, calendar and contacts.
- There are some excellent apps (DropBox, IM+, GoodReader, Table of Elements, Desktop Connect, AirVideo etc.)
As it is, I can play games, read, surf the web, instant message, and send email all really well. That's excellent.
As a word, the iPad is "very good." It really is a totally new type of computer. Fix those issues above (all could be done in a single update) and I could do pretty much all I want on it.
Labels:
iPad,
review,
Technology
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