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Axver

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[3 April 2008|11:09 pm]
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[Current Music |'The Twyncyn/Trembling Willows' by Pure Reason Revolution]

Well, April looks like it's going to be considerably busy and stressful. The fact I'm updating LJ rather than writing an essay surely isn't doing me any favours either. However, I feel motivated to update, while I can't say I feel terribly thrilled about rehashing arguments on the Holocaust in Romania in the quest for a mark, so update I shall.

March quite unexpectedly proved to be a rather good month. To tell the truth, it was probably my best month of the fourteen or so I've spent in Melbourne so far. When it started, I can't say I expected that. It was stinking hot, I was feeling fairly lonely, and Mum was not in the best of health at all. But it turns out the Internet is more than just a vehicle for porn and flamewars, and I can largely thank LJ and Interference for such a good March - my mother's all too short visit also significantly contributed. From Interference, the Maj. is not just in one of my courses at university but in the very same tutorial (what are the odds, seriously), while outside of uni I've caught up with Ali and TE/Melissa a few times and went to the National Gallery with them. It's been terribly good actually getting out and doing things, and a group of us are going to the premiere of U2 3D next week. I must admit I really don't care too much about U2 3D - it's a sort of ridiculous concept and only one song in the entire setlist really leaps out at me as worth hearing, but I'm not going to say no to passing the evening with a cool group of people and music I'm sure I'll enjoy despite my skepticism.

Meanwhile, in quite a chance encounter, [info]harmonybear/Kat and I bumped into each other over on [info]melbournemaniac. Would you believe there is another albino railfan roughly my age in Melbourne? No, I didn't either. But I'm not even joking. We've been out railfanning and tramfanning a fair bit the last few weeks. Most of it has just been around the central city, including one day when the routes 3, 64, and 67 tram lines were running via William Street to terminate at Dudley Street - I really wanted (and got!) photos of Z1s and As on a route normally run solely by Z3s and B2s. I've also ridden the Frankston - Stony Point line twice, once by myself and once with Kat; it's the only non-electrified train on the Melbourne commuter network. At the moment, it's operated by an A class diesel locomotive hauling either two or three of four MTH carriages, undoubtedly the most comfortable rolling stock of any suburban train. It's well worth the trip, especially as it's going to be replaced by Sprinter railcars rather soon. Kat and I are planning another trip later this month before the A+MTH are replaced, this time to photograph it between stations and also photograph the Long Island Steel train, which I frustratingly missed by a matter of minutes when we went down last weekend. Assuming I don't get too stressed over the next few days with essay madness, I'll post some of my pictures from my railfan adventures.

On another note, I'm considerably relieved with the very sudden departure of summer. Three weeks ago, Melbourne was melting in 40C weather. Today barely reached 16C. Looks like the coming few days are going to be rather pleasant and comfortable around 20-25C. Tomorrow evening, I hope it's fine as I plan to go out and do some more tramfanning, unfortunately without Kat as she'll be in Adelaide making me jealous by riding Adelaide trains. But it's the last weekday evening before the end of daylight saving and I don't yet have a photo of a 00 tram on the route 55. The 00 trams are return workings of peak hour trams that aren't rostered to actually run the 55 in the counter-peak direction; they are simply returning to Essendon Depot. Since they run in the evening and it will soon be too dark for my camera to produce worthwhile shots when the 00 runs, I'll go park myself somewhere in Royal Park, do readings, and photograph the parade of passing trams in the hope that at least one 00 comes my way when it's still nice and light. I do wonder if any counter-peak 00s run from Essendon Depot to West Coburg in the morning, but I'm never even remotely up that early to find out! I imagine they do, but I'll stick with catching the 00 in the evening for now. I don't think any of the Melburnians on my friends list or Interference would be terribly interested in joining me tomorrow, but if anybody is, let me know! I'm thinking about getting pizza.

And I think that's about it in news from Axverland. I've 3,500 words over two essays due in ten days, of which only 900 words are thus far written, and 4,000 words to do for the Royal Historical Society before the end of April. What fun. Have a good one, everybody.
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The Bit Torrenters' Creed [2 March 2008|02:07 am]
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[Current Mood | tired]
[Current Music |'Lazarus (live)' by Porcupine Tree]

As I am on the tired side of life, I thought that today I would simply share something from the "postwhore-a-thon" over on Interference, which has managed to exceed 15,000 posts in the space of a week. I'd like to record this here so that it doesn't just vanish into the mountain of posts over there. We had two topics of discussion going at the same time, one about theology and one about downloads. I happened to remark that "I might reconsider my stance on Christianity if you can get an ecumenical summit to elect bit torrent as the new God", and after major_panic replied that he would love to see what creed would be created to conform with such a move, I produced this revision of the Apostles' Creed. I don't know about you, but if you ask me, this is the sort of religion to suit our modern Internet age!

I believe in Bit Torrent, the downloader almighty,
Seeder of heaven and earth,
And in torrent trackers, its only distributor, our Lord,
Which were conceived by the power of the Internet,
Born of the virgin nerds,
Suffered under the RIAA,
Were banned, blocked, and sometimes arrested.
They descended into hell.
On the third day they rose again from being offline.
They ascended into heaven
and are seated at the left mouse button
of Bit Torrent, the downloader almighty.
From thence they shall come again to distribute the music and the movies.

I believe in the torrent protocal,
The holy torrent client,
The communion of seeders,
The forgiveness of leeching,
The resurrection of the dead torrent,
And the download everlasting.
Amen.
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[29 February 2008|11:49 pm]
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[Current Mood | exhausted]
[Current Music |'Cloudy Now (live)' by Blackfield]

Wow, I must admit I'm a wee bit impressed. For the first time since March 2005, I made an entry on every single day of a calendar month. It's funny how posting habits change. I made at least one entry for every single day between 29 September 2003 and 12 April 2005 inclusive. At the complete opposite end of the scale, I made just three entries in all of September last year, and missed an entire month between 14 February and 14 March 2007. A lot has come and gone in that time. I started this blog way back in year 11 of high school, and now here I am, heading into my third year of university.

I suppose February was a fitting month during which to write daily. Neither this year nor last have been kind to me at the start, and I will be rather pleased to see March after this miserable month. My paternal grandfather passed away, I lost the friendship of two significant people in my life, and now just to top it all off, my family has had some more drama. One of my uncles is entering into a very poorly considered marriage, and the whole furore over this reached its peak last night when he threw a tantrum at a family gathering and remarked that his mother, my maternal grandmother, should die and burn in hell. To reiterate from yesterday, I will not stand for bullshit, and such repulsive disrespect sickens me. I have already distanced myself from the developing drama, and that was the final straw; I am cutting him out too. Nobody talks to my Nan like that. Nobody.

In happier news, today's cricket between Australia and Sri Lanka was sensational. Undeniably the best game of the series thus far, and what a shame that it was a dead rubber before the finals! It began as per the usual script - the Sri Lankans lost wickets steadily and staggered to a paltry 221, and the Australians began their innings in blistering form, clearly set to chase down the target in double quick time. And then the wheels fell off. Australia crumbled from 0/107, with Adam Gilchrist on course for the fastest limited overs century in Australian history, to 6/123 and Gilly gone for 83 off 50. The Sri Lankan bowlers just tore up the script and threw the shreds to the four winds. The Australian tail-enders tried desperately to hang on, and had 14 runs to get off the final 12 balls with just one wicket in hand. Then Jayawardene made an inspired choice in bringing in Jayasuriya to bowl, and with his first and only delivery of the game, he clean bowled Brett Lee and the game was over! Australia were dismissed for 208 and the Sri Lankans won by 13. It was such a fantastic game, and so tense at the end as Lee and Nathan Bracken fought desperately to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. The game was even here in Melbourne at the MCG, so now I'm regretting not going! Well, in any case, bring on a close finals series between Australia and India in the coming week.

And so ends February. What a month. I'll take a quieter March if at all possible, thanks.
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[22 February 2008|11:58 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]
[Current Music |'Undertow' by Chroma Key]

Today has been an insane day. A new U2 song leaked, recorded by someone outside the studio, and it of course sounded like the band were playing underwater - not to mention at the other end of a wind tunnel. Truly hideous quality. And a clearer clip surfaced of The Edge just rehearsing, playing scales, which wasn't terribly interesting. So you'd think that suddenly Interference would explode with thousands of posts over-analysing it.

You would be wrong. Instead, in a random thread voting on the worst song from the Pop album, the most insane spontaneous messageboard discussion in a long time took place. And somehow I managed to burn an entire evening on this thing. I even stopped paying attention to the cricket. It spawned a second thread. We've shot well past 1,300 posts with this in very short time. I think almost a quarter of those are mine. We managed to cover just about every topic under the sun, from Steven Wilson to Christchurch's cathedral and even a bit of terribly amusing wink wink nudge nudge innuendo - and absolutely no U2! Because, of course, who on Interference actually likes U2? That's right, nobody.

In other words, that's why I don't have a worthwhile entry for today. But the epic Postwhoring of Pop Survivor Round 1 needs to be commemorated for the ages, and that's what this is for. I can't remember the last time I had so much fun online.
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[18 January 2008|04:35 am]
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Here's a completely worthless, rushed post to celebrate the fact that with this post, I have successfully posted every day for an entire month: 19 December to 18 January. It's the first time I have done so since a period in March-April 2005; those of you who were on my friends list way back then will remember that from a date in late September 2003 to mid-April 2005, I posted on every single day. Well, I've found writing regularly again has been a very positive thing for me, so I'll try to do a calendar month next. I can't believe I've been irregularly posting for so long - a post used to be a significant part of my daily routine, and a very enjoyable one at that.

Anyway, I just thought I'd mark this entirely meaningless milestone. Just like I marked my 21st yesterday, even though it was really only just another day. But let's be honest; marking milestones is fun! Anybody want to spam me for old time's sake? We had such fun on LJ back the day - it seems like a good few people have moved on though. Ah well.

I better move on - time to go to the airport! See all of you on the 21st.
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Here I was, thinking the forces of social conservatism in Aussie politics had been banished ... [1 January 2008|10:37 pm]
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[Current Mood | annoyed]
[Current Music |'Sunset Of The Age' by Anathema]

Politicians, eh? Vile scum. Labour's Telecommunications Minister, Stephen Conroy, has announced mandatory filtering of online content at the Internet Service Providor level in Australia (Source: the ABC and the BBC).

All last year, I took shot after shot at the Liberal government's social policy, and rightly so. It's archaic, out-dated bigotry based upon intolerance and discrimination; a dislike of anybody who deviates from certain "traditional norms". It was hardly a surprise that the Liberals were quite happy to hop into bed with Family Fundies First. It was more than a relief to see them voted out of office on 24/11, and just yesterday, before this filtering was brought to my attention, I proclaimed happily that "Australia's political future really does look brighter".

I take it back. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. Now it's time for LiveJournal to show its true colours; recent [info]news posts have devolved into festivals of paranoia, with people fearing the sale of LJ to SUP will result in all kinds of implausible scenarios in which nasty Russian figures censor journals. But when it's something that actually matters, when it's something that's actually on the table and happening, when it's not just your little online blog, will people do anything? Somehow I doubt we'll see much drama about this at all. Well, I'll have my rant in any case.

Firstly, let's see what exactly this entails. From the ABC: "Senator Conroy says it will be mandatory for all internet service providers to provide clean feeds, or ISP filtering, to houses and schools that are free of pornography and inappropriate material" (emphasis mine). The BBC adds that "Australians wanting unfettered access to the web will have to contact their supplier to opt out of the new regime" (emphasis mine). The reasons why this constitutes complete stupidity are multitudinous. Allow me to throw around just a few of them.

1. Who, praytell, decides what constitutes "inappropriate material"? Some government censor maintaining a blacklist who knows better than me? Funny, I thought this was a liberal democracy. And just what constitutes inappropriate? Go back a few decades and the mere discussion of homosexuality was inappropriate. I don't want somebody else's values being forced upon me.
2. Why is it opt-out as opposed to opt-in? If I for whatever reason felt the filter were necessary (e.g. if I maintain a primary school's Internet network), then I could opt-in to a government-provided filter. The rest of us can continue to surf the Internet uninterrupted.
3. How transparent will the opt-out process be? How do I know that if I opt-out, I won't end up on some government list of people whose online activity may be suspicious? All my activity is above board, but I value my privacy and my freedom.
4. Why is this even necessary? Conroy's statements reek of "won't someone PLEASE think of the children!", and I frankly have the voice of Helen Lovejoy from the Simpsons in my head whenever I read any quotes from him. Look, if you're such a poor parent that your children are readily accessing content inappropriate for their age, then that's your problem, and it should not affect anyone else - and especially not legal adults like me who are not parents! No children use my computer, thus the entire argument that this is to protect children is a complete irrelevancy.
5. Will it even protect the children? Last year, the Howard government introduced a software filter that parents could put on their computer, only for the Sydney Morning Herald to report that a 16 year old schoolboy managed to get past it within 30 minutes, all while leaving the appearance that the filter was still on to deceive his parents. This filter will similarly be exploitable; if bloggers in China and Iran can get around much more severe and restrictive state filtering, teens with IT knowledge far superior to that of their parents will be easily able to get around the filter. While Mum and Dad are content in the knowledge the government's Internet filter is there, little Johnny's in the other room, bypassing the filter and downloading some steamy porn film.
6. Which brings me to my next point. There's the "won't someone PLEASE think of the children!" argument in the sense of protecting children from porn (oh no, the human body!), violence (depending upon what we mean, perhaps justifiable), and some vague and ill-defined concept of "inappropriate content". Then there's the "won't someone PLEASE think of the children!" argument in the sense of blocking access to child pornography. That sort of disgusting and exploitative filth should be combatted at every turn, but this filter does not help. Child pornography is already the subject of major international police activity, and it is safe to say that if you are accessing child pornography at the moment, this filter won't make a single jot of difference to you. This filter will not do a thing to stop sick people who get their jollies from the exploitation of children.
7. At the end of the day, you search for content on the Internet. Porn doesn't just spew onto your computer uncontrollably. Parents, if your child is looking at porn, it's because they looked for it and it's your responsibility to do something about it if you think they shouldn't be allowed to see it. Government, if people are looking up illegal content, it is your job to 1. prosecute those making and hosting the illegal content and 2. prosecute those who are actively searching for this content. This should not involve law-abiding Internet users, i.e. the vast majority, having to opt-out of a filter.

This filter will almost certainly not impact my day-to-day Internet activity. However, it strikes me as a gross breach of individual freedom, not to mention a staggering waste of taxpayer money and IT specialist time. Australia's Internet is quite backwards enough, thank you very much. I would urge every Australian citizen reading this to write to Senator Conroy as well as your local member and state senators to protest this moronic decision.

Oh, and surely, surely, this backwards tool of subtle social control violates the human rights charter Victoria introduced today!
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[13 December 2007|10:17 pm]
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[Current Music |'(A Shimmering Radiance) Diadem Of 12 Stars' by Wolves In The Throne Room]

Some of you may remember an absolutely fantastic online game that I get addicted to every summer, and this summer is naturally no exception: Stick Cricket! And now they've introduced a multiplayer version. If anybody would like a game, let me know and we can sort out a time. It's good fun. My screen name there is Axver as per usual, but I'll only sign into the Clubhouse if someone I know will be there for a game. Otherwise I just find random semi-illiterate people trying to pester me.

On a completely different note, it's about time I posted about the Muse concert I saw almost a month ago now, on 15 November at Rod Laver Arena. I don't have the setlist for the opening band, The Checks; I made notes so that I could work it out, but I didn't care for them at all so I can't be bothered. They played a very mundane, basic form of rock; for some reason, while watching them, I felt reminded of Kings Of Leon but without the dying pig as a vocalist. I was fairly bored.

Muse's set. )

Now I just need more concerts to go to. Dream Theater hit Melbourne on 29 January 2008, so I'm really looking forward to that. I'm thinking about seeing Explosions In The Sky on 16 February 2008, but I'm not sure; it'd be nice if I had someone to go with. My biggest wish is that Porcupine Tree come here sometime next year; it seems possible but unlikely right now. Rest assured that if they do come, I will attend every Australian show that I possibly can. Their setlists lately have been beyond mindblowing. Waiting Phase One? Dark Matter? Drown With Me? The Sky Moves Sideways? Lightbulb Sun? And that in addition to the new stuff and the songs you'd expect like Lazarus, Trains, Even Less, Blackest Eyes, and Hatesong. Does it get any better? No, no it doesn't. I sincerely hope Steven Wilson can find time out of his ridiculously busy schedule to bring Porcupine Tree down to this part of the world.
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[10 December 2007|09:50 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]
[Current Music |'Don't Look Too Far' by Anathema]

OK, I don't normally do those "meme" things that clutter too many LJs devoid of any substantial content. I don't think I've posted a quiz result since early 2004. But this one amused me just a little too much, so what the hell, here it is.

Putting Wikipedia's random article feature to good use: New Zealand's next music sensation! )

That was peculiarly enjoyable. Now if only it really existed. I think a couple of people I know would be very rich if they got a dollar every time I said "if I had a band".
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[4 December 2007|11:58 pm]
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[Current Mood | good]
[Current Music |'Summer's Envy' by Woods Of Ypres]

Well, for the first time in my entire life, I'm proud of the government of the country in which I live. Kevin Rudd was sworn in as Australian Prime Minister yesterday. His first action? Ratification of the Kyoto Protocol.

As I was born in 1987, I was far too young to remember the Labour government of David Lange (and in its dying year, Geoffrey Palmer and Mike Moore). In my youth, New Zealand was led by Jim Bolger and the Nationals, who in my youthful political awareness did not appeal to me, and I left New Zealand months before Jenny Shipley took over from Bulger (a woman who repulses me) and over two years before Helen Clark became PM for Labour. While I've been in Australia, the Prime Minister has always been John Howard. Words cannot express my delight to finally have a Prime Minister I actually like. It's going to be interesting to see how Rudd's wave of support lasts. Given the absolute disarray within the Liberal Party, I think it's safe to say we've got a two-term Labour government on our hands. Here's hoping this means more funding for education and public transport. Maybe that Inland Australia Railway will finally happen.

In other news, I've noticed my friends list has been rather silent on the matter of LiveJournal's ownership passing from Six Apart to SUP. Meanwhile, the drama on the two [info]news posts (1 and 2) has been beyond hilarious. Watch out, everybody! Dodgy Russian politicians are coming to read your friends-locked entries and use your credit card to buy vodka and AK-47 Kalashnikovs. People, calm down. It's an online blogging service. You might want to consider putting the energy of your righteous indignation and wild paranoia towards a good cause. Or, you know, you could continue to whine incessantly and create all kinds of conspiracy theories about the Russian mafia, Vladimir Putin, and LJ while the genocide in Darfur goes on, Burma remains thoroughly repressed, and millions live in such poverty that they could not even imagine a website like LJ. Now, I'm not going to present myself as a paragon of virtue, someone whose priorities are perfectly straight, but for goodness' sakes, there are bigger things to worry about. I can't say I've noticed much in the way of tangible change since I began using LJ 4.5 years ago, and none of it negative. Ah well, I suppose all this drama provides me with a handy source of amusement. The news posts contain page after page of comedic gold!
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[25 January 2007|09:12 pm]
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[Current Music |'Scarred' by Dream Theater]

Ah, good times: late last night, my DSL Internet burst into life. Of course, that was just after the light fixture in my lounge fell from the ceiling and was left dangling by one thick wire. Oh, the excitement never ceases at Axverland! The light is safely back in the ceiling now, though, and I'm happily back on my high speed Internet. Everything seems to be finally settling down here after so much craziness. I'm hoping that I can have a quiet weekend before hopefully getting into the swing of things and finding my feet here in Melbourne. It would be nice to simply rest after all that has gone on in the last fortnight, though my mother could certainly use rest even more than I do. More on Mum's condition. )

Daylight bloody savings. )
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[24 January 2007|07:55 pm]
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[Current Mood | lonely]
[Current Music |'Pseudo Silk Kimono' by Marillion]

Well, today my Nan returned to the Gold Coast and here I am, all alone in Melbourne. It's a weird feeling, certainly tinged with loneliness as my nearest family and close friends are an eighteen hour long drive away. I'm glad that Kate will be here in 2.5 weeks! And if any of my Melbournian LJ friends would like to meet up or are in the Brunswick West area, please drop me a line as I'd really love some company and someone to talk to (amakaxver[at]gmail.com is my e-mail address). For now, I'm just continuing the job of unpacking my stuff - I chose not to bring my third bookshelf as it was an old and crappy thing, worth less than it would have cost to move it down here, but now it's looking like I didn't do a very good job of thinning down my book collection and may need to purchase a new third shelf. Thank goodness we have external hard drives for music collections! Space really is at a premium in my new place, in stark contrast to my Brisbane flat that was pretty spacious and roomy, but I think I've managed to make it cosy instead of cramped.

I certainly feel like I live in a city more now than I did in Brisbane, even though I'm further from the CBD here. Melbourne feels a lot busier, but also a lot more diverse and interesting. I do miss how quiet, leafy, and suburban my little area of Brisbane was, but I'm now happy with my place in Melbourne and the trams are simply wonderful. Sure, Brisbane has its river catamarans, but I feel so much more mobile with the tram network here. Nonetheless, I feel a bit high and dry without any relatives to drive me around in an emergency - though considering how daunting and sometimes confusing Melbourne's roads seem, this hasn't really made me wish I could drive much more than I already did! It's funny, though - I've had a fair few observations go through my head in the last few days, but now that I actually have time to sit back and note them down, the words really aren't coming.

So I'll move onto today's exciting topic. Well, actually, the news is a tad older than that, but this is the first time I've really had the chance to write about it: Crowded House are reuniting! When rumours of a reunion began circulating last year, it made me feel a bit uneasy as it didn't seem right to have Crowded House without Paul Hester, but now I'm willing to embrace this. After all, Hester essentially left the band a couple of years before the end of the band anyway, and I'm willing to trust Neil Finn's judgement that resurrecting the Crowdies is the right thing to do and won't do a disservice either to the band's canon or Hester's memory. And I can't help but feel really excited about the prospect of seeing a favourite band of mine that I thought I'd always thoroughly missed the chance to see.

In less positive news, it appears in the last week of next-to-no TV, SBS has introduced their new hour long news bulletin with Stan Grant as co-host. Thank goodness Mary Kostakidis is still there, but Stan Grant's interview with some woman over Bush's State Of The Union address was one of the worst things I've ever seen on any SBS news show. Both of them were very poor in terms of content and on screen manner. Why can't the hour long bulletin be Mary Kostakidis and Lee Lin Chin instead? Bah.

I'm also seriously missing DSL. I hope the estimation of tomorrow as its re-establishment date is accurate, as I feel very much in need of some more classic prog and dialup is no way to get music. However, this morning, for over an hour, I had no dialtone at all and couldn't even access my dialup, which made me appreciate its existence considerably more! I called Telstra and they told me it might be until Monday that I would get service back on my line, but when I got home after running a couple of final messages with Nan, we found the fault had been rectified, much to my relief. Being without DSL is one thing, but being without any kind of phone or Internet service at all is quite another! I hope my line stays stable from now on. And that's all for now. Have a good one, folks!
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Because I felt like wasting a couple of minutes of my day. [21 May 2006|09:48 am]
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[Current Music |'Reverie/Harlequin Forest' by Opeth]

Here's a product of my insanity, inspired by "LMAO ZEDONG" pictures (examples: 1, 2). This is for all the New Zealanders out there.



(For all the sad people who don't get it.)
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[2 February 2006|06:45 pm]
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[Current Mood | cheerful]
[Current Music |'Language' by Tim Finn, Bic Runga, and Dave Dobbyn]

The events that took place around midday my time yesterday deserve some comment. They are the re-union of Split Enz and President Bush's State Of The Union speech, and I will address them in the order in which they happened.

Firstly, rumours have been circulating for a few months now, and yesterday, it was confirmed: arguably the most unique, original, and creative band to come out of New Zealand has reformed. Split Enz broke up in the mid-eighties (though this ultimately resulted in the creation of Crowded House), and the re-union will involve the True Colours line-up. In other words, both Finn brothers, Eddie Rayner, Noel Crombie, Nigel Griggs, and Malcolm Green. I'm delighted to see both Neil and Tim Finn are involved. The schedule:

7 June - Brisbane Entertainment Centre
9 June - Sydney Entertainment Centre
11 June - Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne
13 June - Adelaide Entertainment Centre
16 June - Burswood Dome, Perth

I'm surprised it seems so short, but I'm not complaining - opening night is in Brisbane! At least that means there's no possible way I can discover the setlist beforehand without some kind of rehearsal access. Tickets go on sale on 22 February and I'm certainly going to make every effort I can to attend. I never ever thought I'd have the opportunity to see the Enz, so I won't be missing this.

Now, onto the State Of The Union. I listened in via audio broadcast on C-Span's website, and I'm sure my opinion of Bush's speech goes without saying. What really got me was the horrid Democrat response, which went out of its way to either agree with the Republicans or ask for unity with the Republicans. No independent stance, no firm leadership, no distinct and separate position, no blazing a separate trial! It was one of the most uninspiring speeches I've heard a politician give. I've said it already to a few people, and I'll say it here: right now, US politics seems to be essentially Republican versus Wishy-washy Uninspiring "I Can't Believe It's Not The Republican Party!" The Democrats at least need some solid leadership and to take a clear line. The unbelieveable part is how they have the material to rip Bush a few thousand new arseholes, and yet he continues to survive with just the one he was born with. The Democrats have been handed so many perfect opportunities on a platter and failed to capitalise on them. Who are they afraid of offending by saying what needs to be said and cutting Bush and Co. down to size? Conservatives who'd never vote Democrat anyway? Both of the major US political parties are recipients of my contempt, as are the major - and minor - parties here.

Well, in any case, this is the last post I make from home. It's my last night tonight and I move out tomorrow morning. I'm feeling excited right now. I've got some last minute packing to do, and I hope everything goes nice and smoothly tomorrow. For a few days, I'll be joining those of you afflicted with dialup, but the current estimated date for my DSL connection to be established at the new address is delightfully ahead of schedule and I hope I have that back soon.

For now, I think I'm off to eat dinner and watch Blackadder. Have a good one, folks!
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My rant against U2.com. [29 December 2005|10:01 pm]
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[Current Mood | frustrated]
[Current Music |'I Walk Away (live)' by Split Enz]

I'd just like to take this chance to voice my absolute displeasure with U2.com. At the time of this update, not only has a second concert in Buenos Aires been announced, but tickets have gone on sale - and if you read U2.com, you wouldn't even know this concert is going to happen. The people running the band's own official website seem to have forgotten that their job is actually to report on U2 and what U2's doing, such as tour dates!

This year really has been filled with countless examples of U2.com's incompetence and ineptitude, and I've frankly had enough of it. I cannot believe that while I am able to post an accurate setlist complete with snippets to U2-Vertigo-Tour.com within five minutes of the show's conclusion, the band's official site, when they finally post the set themselves, spell song names wrong ("Running to Standstill"), use incorrect and inconsistent grammar ("Pride in the name of love"), post inaccurate trivia (such as claiming The First Time was played in 1993), and make mistakes with the setlist itself! It's bad enough for them to post setlists that omit songs played or include songs not played (such as claiming Stuck In A Moment and All Because Of You were played at the final third leg show when THEY WEREN'T), but the worst example of their incompetence comes from the 10th of July show in Paris when U2.com's article centred on Bad, claiming that "it's always a special occasion when Bad is played" and that night was such an occasion ... even though U2 did not play Bad that night (in fact, they played Bad in Europe just once, in Dublin two weeks before the Paris shows). It's one thing to post a set containing songs that weren't played, but it's even worse to centre an entire article around making fanfare about a song the band did not perform.

I wish U2.com's incompetence was confined to setlists. I could then at least remind myself that your average person isn't nearly as concerned with setlists as I am. But of course, there was the presale fiasco that can't be ignored, the membership cards that many people never received, the insulting and pathetic U2 Communication disc, and just simply NOT announcing that a concert is happening. I was frustrated that the Australian and New Zealand presale was announced a mere day before it began, and I was unimpressed that Argentinian ticket details for the first Buenos Aires concert weren't announced until the day of the sale, but there was still the counter-argument available of "what if the details weren't made public until then and U2.com just reported it as soon as they could?" In this case, however, there's no excuse. The information is out there from the promoter, but U2.com has remained silent. Maybe they're on Christmas break? Well, look, all the major fan sites have managed to stay updated, the promoters have had enough staff active to make their announcement, Ticketek has had enough staff to put the tickets on sale, and I'm sure a lone U2.com staffer has five minutes to spare a couple of days after Christmas to write a brief article for the site stating that "a show has been announced for this venue on that day, tickets will cost $x for seats here and $y for seats there, so go get them at this link". Or maybe they're all just baboons who got a trainload of bananas for Christmas and haven't finished feasting yet.

A band of U2's calibre deserves far better and more competent online representation than this. In fact, no band deserves an inaccurate official website. What a disgrace.
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The Internet - the one and only guaranteed source of your salvation! [12 November 2005|09:47 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]
[Current Music |'Peruvian Skies' by Dream Theater]

Some website ads you have to see to believe. This is one I saw on a forum I attend, and after reading it once, I felt compelled to read it again and then I burst out laughing.

Take a look. Cut per request. )

Of course, the link doesn't even work. What am I going to do now? However will I gain 100% access to Christ at any hour of the day? How may I swiftly send my prayers to Heaven without the aid of such a holy website? Someone must contact the webmaster and re-establish the link to Heaven without any further delay!

I feel sorry for all the poor people who, before the invention of the Internet, did not have guaranteed 100% access to Christ. There is clearly no salvation outside the Internet. Let us now devote our lives to it and avoid the land of the heathens known as 'outside' or 'outdoors'. I shall now go forth and write tracts on why the sun is evil and how it wants to eat your children, make you gay, and sell you rock music by people with funny names like Bono and Sting and Petrucci.
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My computer had gone bung. [28 October 2005|07:43 pm]
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[Current Music |'My Telly's Gone Bung' by Crowded House]

Thank goodness, my computer and Internet woes appear to finally be over. Yesterday, I received my new modem in the mail, and the first thing that struck me was how small it is! Maybe it's not to some of you, but to me, it's definitely tiny. )

So I plugged in the modem, it came on properly, detected both my mother and stepbrother's computers ... and thoroughly failed to acknowledge the presence of mine. Brand new modem connected to my computer via a brand new ethernet cable - considering everything else on my computer is in good working order, I could only conclude that the storm killed my ethernet network card too. This morning, I got a new one put into the computer, and guess what was picked up by the modem straight away? Yep, my computer. So the power surge a few days ago that disabled my modem managed to continue up the wire to wreck my network card. Thank goodness it didn't go any further to do more damage. And thank goodness I'm now back on DSL and don't have to use my mother's computer, which I brought into my room temporarily as she wasn't about to be using it after her operation, though she's feeling better today than yesterday.

I must say I'm not that enthused about my new modem; the presentation of data may be more detailed than my old one but it's definitely not presented as clearly. The manual suffers from an extreme lack of details, and being someone who likes a good manual in order to fully grasp the capabilities of some new software/hardware/anything else with a manual, this disappoints me but as it's from the same company who made my old modem, I expected the manual to be pretty tiny. I thought that over time, they would have improved data and usability though. Ah well, I'm just happy to have a working modem!

It will likely come as no surprise that during my time with limited Internet access, I spent a good deal of time reading. Firstly, I finished reading Fyodor Dostoyevsky's The Possessed, which, while an excellent novel, is excessively lengthy and drawn out for the first half or so. Dostoyevsky certainly offers interesting insights into certain political ideals and the Russian nation, but he was clearly never taught brevity. The ending is absolutely superb and gripping, though. Once I finished that, I picked up Schindler's List by Thomas Keneally, and I couldn't put it down. Horrifying, fascinating, brilliant, and definitely recommended reading. Oskar Schindler is definitely my kind of hero - despite his great deeds, he is all too clearly a flawed man, unlike all these glorified 'heroes' (of both fact and fiction) who are never seen to do a wrong. The sense of humanity that comes through in the book in the midst of one of history's most vile inhumanities is refreshing. An overpowering, sickening horror also comes through that leaves me speechless, shaking my head in wonder. I suppose it's only appropriate that I've chosen to follow Schindler's List with Voltaire's Candide, a satire based around a man who believes this is the "best of all possible worlds" and then proceeds to suffer tremendous calamity after tremendous calamity. I'm currently halfway through, and the satire is delightful, though I have begun to feel that Voltaire may be using some overkill to prove his point.

And that will do for today. Have a good one, folks!
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[26 October 2005|09:33 pm]
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[Current Music |'Four Chords That Made A Million' by Porcupine Tree]

I love it when you miss something by just a few minutes. I've been worrying about my modem all afternoon, fearing something had gone horribly wrong as the tracking number was not on the system of the postage company and I couldn't contact the people I placed my modem order with ... but had I logged on to check my e-mails just five minutes later than I did, I would've found a nice response from the modem people correcting my tracking code, which shows that my parcel is in Brisbane and should be despatched to me soon, as in tomorrow.

Love it when that happens.

Also, the storms love us so much that apparently an even worse one than the one we just had will be rocking into town tomorrow. Have a wild guess who's going to remember to unplug all of his treasured electrical devices from the wall this time! Here's hoping this wild weather fails to materialise, though.

In other news, my mother went into hospital for some minor surgery to remove something from her stomach. I went in to visit her earlier this evening and she's doing fine, but I still can't help but feel some worry, that kind of minute and unnecessary worry that you just can't help feeling anyway. She's staying overnight tonight, but should be discharged and come home sometime tomorrow. I'm impatiently awaiting that. Tomorrow will hopefully be a good day, barring the arrival of any storms.

Have a good one, everybody!
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I forgot what life without DSL is like. [25 October 2005|01:28 pm]
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[Current Mood | rushed]
[Current Music |'All Along The Watchtower (30 December 1989)' by U2]

Well, last night was fun. I can't think of any storm in my eight years in Australia that equals that one, and apparently we were on the edge and other areas were pelted by hail. Sure seems like there has been a lot of hail lately in southeast Queensland. I hope this isn't signs of a storm-filled summer - as much as they're entertaining to watch, I'm a bit too hooked on the Internet right now to enjoy them. Last night's storm had so much lightning it was insane; the air was extremely electric. At one point, there was this gigantic crack like an explosion extremely close to my house, and although we still don't know what it hit, a few devices here are on the blink. The generator that powers our aerial for free-to-air television networks doesn't work, so bizarrely, we have pay TV but none of the free-to-air stuff! One light in the kitchen well and truly blew too, and of course, my modem's died. Otherwise, everything appears to be fine. I'm thoroughly baffled by this modem - right now, it turns on and even connects to the Internet, but doesn't register the presence of any of the three computers connected to it. Last night, however, it just acted weird and said it was connected to a phone line (but not the Internet) even when there was no phone cable plugged in! Hopefully I'll be able to tinker with it and figure out what's happening - I've already ordered a replacement modem, but I don't expect it until tomorrow. If I can get the current one to work, the new one will come in handy when I move to Brisbane so it's not a waste of money.

For the time being, I'm stuck on the slow agony otherwise known as dialup, and as my DSL plan comes with just ten hours of free dialup access, I'm conserving my time. I don't know how I'll take 7-8 hours without Internet this afternoon and evening, especially with my television not working (it only showed free-to-air stations; we didn't put a cable for pay TV through to my room). Maybe I'll do a lot of reading. Who knows.

Have a good one, folks!
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Images of destruction. [24 October 2005|10:04 pm]
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[Current Mood | jittery]
[Current Music |'Pride (In The Name Of Love)' by U2]

Although the cynic in me is not surprised, I'm at least a little startled to see how many people are not aware of the recent Pakistani earthquake, or if aware, don't realise the full extent. There are some sources estimating that the final death toll is going to be higher than that of the Boxing Day tsunami last year. This thing is catastrophically huge. But instead of giving you a longwinded ramble about the disaster, I have something to illustrate the damage even better: photos. (All courtesy of the BBC.)

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

As the valley explodes ... )

In other news, possibly the most violent storm I've ever experienced in my time in Australia passed through this evening, and from the news I heard, we caught only the edge of it too. Heaps of lightning, including a strike so close to our house that I've been shaking ever since, and my modem appears to have been killed during the storm. Not quite sure how it happened, but it's certainly not working so I've ordered in a new one and am currently on dialup. Rather slow, but the pictures above put this in perspective very, very swiftly.

Stay safe, everyone.
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And in the news today ... [16 September 2005|09:03 pm]
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[Current Music |'She Will Have Her Way' by Neil Finn]

OK, I normally keep my utter hatred of Harry Potter to myself (especially considering I'm outnumbered about Everyone to 2 on the friends list), but for goodness' bloody sakes, a movie preview is not deserving of being on the news, and definitely not deserving of being on one of those 15-second headline update segments they play during ad breaks! In fact, this doesn't just apply to movies I don't like: I don't care if the movie's LOTR, The Passion, or Why Axver's Right About Everything, a simple preview is not even remotely newsworthy. I don't care how insanely popular (re: over-hyped) a fandom is, there's just no excuse for giving something as mundane as a movie preview time on the news while racially-motivated rape and murder in Darfur and child starvation in Niger are thoroughly ignored. Now, if something important relating to the fandom has happened - actor died in mysterious circumstances, box office record was smashed, a street fight broke out between supporters of rival fandoms - then chuck it on the news. But quite frankly, I don't give a flying blue walrus about a preview, and even if you do, I am failing to see any justification for giving it headline or even newsworthy status, unless you're running an entertainment rag. I suppose it's just a ploy to gain viewers and boost ratings, which in my opinion is not what the news is about. I'll take my facts with a side of importance and a glass of relevancy, thanks.

In other, uh, news, 90km/h winds are predicted for tonight (for you Americans, that's not even 60mph). Now, while that seems rather pansytastic compared to some winds I experienced in Windington Wellington - and is, if I remember correctly, 30km/h short of gale force - it has become a source of concern for me. Why? Because after previous bad experiences, I have entirely no trust in the stability of the electrical network or in the ability of Energex to timely rectify any outage. Now, I don't know about you, but I am generorky enough to have a U2 setlist party to attend tomorrow, and anything that dares threaten my electrical and Internet connections is worthy of concern. You really do know you're a generork when you look forward to online setlist parties. Or when you make the icon I'm using with this entry.
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