Archive for September, 2002

Post

up and down

In Uncategorized on September 16, 2002

and i didn’t even make that last post with my web servers in mind. they’re
up, down, up, down and shaking it all about. i wish i knew why :-/

[update: indexing your database tables is a really good idea.....]

Post

is not

In Uncategorized on September 16, 2002

found in nick finck’s entry at the mirror project:

Failure is not falling down.

Failure is not getting up.

other sources.

...

Dancing with the Virgins by Stephen Booth

In books read on September 15, 2002

I've put off reading this book for ages because (nonsensically) I was expecting to enjoy it a lot and also worried that it wouldn't be as good as I hoped despite numerous reports that if anything it was better than Black Dog. One of the offputting things about the book is its 500 odd pages. I don't mind a long read at all, it's more that I've read several long mysteries with filler than plot and I didn't want to be disappointed in this one.

This is a book that is well worth its length though. Booth takes what could have been a basic plot driven story and fills it with in depth characters that deserve the attention that they receive. He also does a wonderful job with the setting though this might be helped by the fact that I now know the Peak District myself and am getting to know it better all the time.

One of the things that makes this book really good for me is that despite finding that I don't really like either of Booth's lead characters I enjoy finding out about them and I want to know what happens to them in the future. Local boy Ben Cooper is trying to live up to his father's reputation in the police force and still lives on the family farm run by his brother. Incomer Diane Fry has just beaten Cooper to a promotion and is viewed with deep suspicion by most of the local coppers, in trying to keep her personal life separate from her working life she comes over as a very cold person. Both characters are completely believable though and the fact that I want to knock their heads together is a testament to Booth's realistic storytelling.

The plot is solid and contains less predictable elements that the first book in the series, I'm very much looking forward to seeing what happens next in Cooper and Fry's world.

Oh, and I also wanted to add that Booth gets bonus marks for not falling into the trap that so many other authors seem to of calling men by their surnames and women by their first names. If anything his main characters are Ben and Fry. I got really fed up with Barry Maitland for referring to "Kathy and Brock" all the time and it's a habit that's been annoying me ever since and it's nice to see someone writing in reverse for a change.

Purchased on 16th April 2002.

A copy of this book is available on BookMooch.

...

No Offence Intended by Barbara Seranella

In books read on September 10, 2002

I've read this for a mailing list discussion so I'll wait until that starts before talking about the book here. In a nutshell though, this series is fast becoming one of my favourites.

Purchased on 15th January 2002.

Post

salvation of the dead

In family history on September 10, 2002

i really must sort out comments for when i ask questions round here!

thanks to john robinson of a site for sore eyes
and to kirsty neill for sending me details of why the mormons are so big on
family history. apparently the mormon religion allows for the baptism of
dead ancestors, something which makes me feel a bit icky about using their
resources. i’m of the opinion that religion is a personal thing and something
you decide on for yourself. baptising people posthumously doesn’t seem on
to me, though from my own point of view i don’t really think it does any harm either. john sent me a link to an old wired article that explains:

The obsession with genealogy really took off in 1836. That
year, when Joseph Smith’s controversial teachings were already arousing the
hatred that would eventually get him killed by an Illinois mob, Smith announced
that the Hebrew prophet Elijah had appeared to him, granting the Mormon priesthood
the ability to “seal” families together for eternity, a power that eventually
carried over to dead ancestors and then to the mass of expired humanity.
Mormons began to anticipate a heavenly reward that would fill many modern
Americans with terror: an endless family reunion. Central to this process
is the Mormon religious practice known as the salvation of the dead.

Nothing
ghoulish is required. The Mormons baptize and seal the dead by proxy. Inside
the temple, a living member of the church gets dunked in a baptismal font
and listens to a recitation of Mormonism’s teachings on behalf of the deceased,
whose spirit thus gets a chance for salvation.

thanks for the information!

Post

yay for redundancy!

In Uncategorized on September 9, 2002

life goes onwards, upwards and southwards (but stays northern and gets
better and brighter). plan b is well under way. happiness quotient is high.

Post

banned

In Uncategorized on September 9, 2002

this website appears to be inaccessible from china. curious. i’m guessing it’s a host or web hosting company wide ban rather than anything i’ve said or done.

[found via as above]

Post

more resources

In family history on September 6, 2002

i’m a newbie to this genealogical research stuff and am finding good stuff all the time. the international genealogical index
is my database of the day. this index is compiled by the church of jesus
christ of the latter day saints (aka the mormons) (i must find out why they
are so keen on tracking family history – a quick search turns up nothing
more than “family is important in our religion”). in england and wales it
mainly comprises an index of parish records, it’s not complete by any means
but when it works it’s stunning. i’m pretty certain i’ve tracked my great,
great, great grandmother down to a village in northamptonshire in 1834 and
i have possible matches for her parents and grandparents too.�

Post

ai

In Uncategorized on September 6, 2002

i don’t know why artificial intelligence is considered so complicated.
i find it easy to write software with a mind of it’s own. it’s just difficult
to get it past the “two year old having a tantrum” phase.

Post

network diagrams

In Uncategorized on September 6, 2002

this site is attempting to map broadband britain and this map (and in particular the zooms of individual areas) of exactly who has and hasn’t been able to get broadband installed could be a very useful house hunting tool if there were more data points on it. real data rather than just estimates is what i need right now.