Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Webcams (take 1)

I'm playing with webcam systems at the moment. My first purchase was a Linksys WVC54G, a wireless camera, and compared to most of the other wireless cams around quite reasonably priced. It comes with a bunch of nifty services on free trials (such as MMSs when the motion detector is triggered). Setup was fairly simple (although it is notable that running WPA on our wifi net seems to defeat the small brain of this type of attached device). However, I can't say I'd buy another - because it only feeds IE or Linksys's custom software viewer. What kind of webcam is that? I've had a trivial prod at trying to access the MPEG4 stream otherwise, but the internal webserver seems determined to thwart me. Time to go buy one of the nice expensive AXIS ones, I think, to see if they do any better...

Sunday, March 26, 2006

Oblivion

Finally, Oblivion is out. As expected from the screenshots and trailer, it is astonishingly pretty. Really shows off the capability of the XBox 360 (not that we're playing it on ours - that's still off at Microsoft having unexpectedly turned into a brick after a software update - we have a borrowed box for now). Very much a next generation game - Morrowind was beautiful and insanely complex, but Oblivion takes this to a new level. Sadly with Paul having got a head start, and since I've got work and other things to keep me busy at the moment, my battlemage is still struggling at level 1 without a single axe to wield yet.  

Thursday, March 23, 2006

more cars

One possible rebirth for Smart roadsters: as MG Midgets :-) This is encouraging because it turns out that my Smart has more passenger legroom than an Aston...

Sunday, March 19, 2006

under pressure

Paul bought a blood pressure meter a while ago, because he was worried his BP was high. Invariably, it's turned out to be quite normal, whereas mine is pretty low - Paul seems surprised I can function at all. Today we finally got around to checking out what is a low BP online, and luckily mine is just high enough to keep me safe from fainting. We also checked our BMIs (I'm very annoyed to find that I've moved from underweight to healthy since I last checked mine). A cholesterol test is next on my list, as that's more concerning given my cheese consumption, but there's no rush on that. The one Paul used, bought in Boots, was expensive, astonishingly complex to operate, and required a non-colourblind person with quick reflexes to determine the result. Also, embarrassingly, I'm not sure that I'm up for lancing my finger to access some blood - it's hard to imagine that I'm capable of pumping out a "falling drop" quantity anyway, with such low internal pressure...

Desperate Housewife

Which desperate housewife are you? Answering the questions I felt I'd come out very evenly distributed between all 5 (which is usually how I feel watching the show, too, although generally I don't relate much to Gabrielle, and even less to Edie). But I'm a Lynette. Hmm. Should I buy the T shirt? I was unaware that so much DH merch existed - although I should have guessed that one could buy Bree's pink dish gloves somewhere...

It's also Cambridge Science Festival week

And, judging by things yesterday on the New Museums Site, one of the busiest Science on Saturdays ever too. We worked out that I've been involved in Science Week since practically the dawn of time; it's not always been jitterbugs, but I was around the first time ExSciTe ever did them, which was Science Week, ooh, many years ago. We must be doing something right though. One family who visited yesterday said it was the fourth year in a row that they had built jitterbugs with us, and that their small son had been planning his for most of the previous year...

My extremely unrepresentative sampling shows that Bottle Your Genes (which when spoken invariably makes one think first of blue denim) was one of the most popular activities, or one of the least well sign-posted; but I think the former, as the queue once you got there was not just out of the door but down the stairs, round the corridor, etc. People were so desperate to find activities which didn't have huge queues that they were even willing to join the denizens of the Engineering Department outreach section who were building submarines, outside in freezing conditions. Impressive dedication, CUED people! The queue for Mark Lewney's lecture didn't all fit into the lecture theatre, and I was extremely jealous of the folk that were there early enough to get in. I've only heard the 3-minute version of his talk, plus bits of his rehearsal earlier in the day yesterday, but he's damn good, and cute Scouse physicists playing rock guitar are few and far between. If the queue for Mark's talk on superstrings was long, I dread to think what the queue for the Science of Harry Potter lecture was like!

(Photo archive of jitterbugs yesterday, for hardcore 'bug addicts.)

Friday, March 17, 2006

Copper Kettle

The Copper Kettle is an old Cambridge landmark, but is barely recognisable now following its refit. It's much lighter and brighter now, and opens in the evening to serve Greek (ish) food. Still, they do a nice pot of tea, and have an awesome coffee machine, adorned with many LEDs in both blue and red. I've never seen the like of it before; very shiny indeed. I tried to take a picture, but my cellphone isn't up to much on that sort of indoor pic, and my new camera perhaps would have managed, if I'd been happy to use the flash, but I didn't want to distract the guy serving the carrot cake...

It's Social Science week

I didn't know there was such a thing, but I guess the social scientists I met today at the Technology and Gender Inequalities seminar hadn't heard of Science Week either. Some interesting points (from memory - notes at the office, doh). Ingrid Schoon reported that women's aspirations to work in SET (at age 16) were more critical than men's, when considering whether they ended up in SET careers aged 30. (So men are perhaps more likely just to "fall" into a SET career, whereas women only go for it if they really want to.) If teachers thought that a girl was good at maths, she was more likely to opt for a SET career. Single sex schools didn't seem to affect whether girls chose SET or not (surprising - goes against the received wisdom on that front).
Mia Gray talked about networking, mentoring and social capital with reference to a study about two Cambridge chip companies (can you guess who it is yet?). Admittedly a small sample, but she found that tech support and testing roles (low level) were dominated by women, and that men dominated the higher echelons of development engineering and management. Men tended to perceive and understand the hierarchy, to be able to say who was on the way up the ladder, and how they might manoeuvre their way to promotion. Women - in the same company - reported a flat structure, with no promotion prospects! Astonishing. The men also tended to fully utilise their networks, getting informal information about job opportunities, how best to fit in to the company culture, and so on. It seemed to genuinely surprise the social scientists that networking like this didn't involve an equal sharing of information with all your contacts, but that information exchange was more subtle. Some people get more, you might invest in people in the hope of returns later, and there's sometimes an understanding of favours being exchanged. Much of this, she speculates, comes back to the two-body problem: women move jobs to follow their partners, and their networks (both professional and social) suffer dreadfully when this happens, further setting back their careers. The importance and interaction between social networks related to the home and geographical location, as well as professional networks both within an industry, a company and a location, was emphasised.

Dale Southerton talked about time, and how "harried" we are these days. He says we don't have more to do than we used to, but that our ability to co-ordinate with others is reduced as everyone has such individualised commitments. Each task is either fixed in time, or flexible; in the past, people in the same community had similar fixed commitments (market opening, men going off to work, tea, etc) and so fitting in flexibly-timed activities with others in between these was easy. Now we each have different fixed activities, and many things (such as shopping) can now be performed over a wider time range; so fitting things where others need to be involved in between fixed slots becomes tricky. We end up with hot spots (when many things must happen in a short time), and cold spots (also known as chill time, relaxation, me time, pottering time and so on) when not much is happening. The hot spots are balanced by times when not much is going on - this isn't necessarily the same as a cold spot, though, as it may include time which we can't use efficiently, because the activities we want to do aren't feasible because of time period (or spatial) limitations. People end up packing activities densely - creating their own hot spots - in an attempt to leave free time to unwind in.
Miriam Glucksmann talked about ready meals, which made a nice change :-) Interesting statistics about European consumption of such food - Italians hardly touch ready meals; the Germans eat almost as many as the British, but prefer frozen rather than chilled. The recent return to women employing other women to work in the home was also mentioned. Hua Dong discussed inclusive design practices for consumer products, and the importance of the design community remembering that product users are not all young men who wear a lot of black...
Anyway, it was interesting to meet a different community working on technology and gender issues, and good to see that they got to meet some proper female techies too (myself, insofar as I count, Ursula Martin and Pam Wain) as well as people simply interested in the field (such as blogger Geoff Jones).

(No report from the Vint Cerf talk at Google, because glancing back at my notes there wasn't much to say.)

Thursday, March 16, 2006

So long, and thanks

Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the Western spiral arm of the DNA message board system, lies a small unregarded yellow forum. This is currently the home of an excellent 5-part hybrid between The Archers and H2G2. It resides here (and continues here, here, here and here). The author, Mr Snowy, is a giant amongst men; it's particularly wonderful that he's managed to produce 5 of these, when he started out planning only 3 ;-)

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Belle and Sebastian

Yet more for me to listen to :-) NPR are hosting a recording of their recent DC concert. (Thanks to Hanna for the link!)

Friday, March 10, 2006

Comic Life

Today, you can make your own Cat and Girl comic. My effort is here.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Over-caffeinated?

Find out how fair FairTrade coffee is. Does it have a soul? (TMCM is accessible this week; the How to be Happy theme has made it more mainstream.) We got overexcited without the benefit of coffee at the Smart Home Show last week. I'm buying a remote control doorlock (as soon as I get a quote - get a move on people!) and after a brief excursion into the Homebuilding and Renovating show Paul's sorting out some Solatubes for the hallway. I think we should get some in the kitchen too, definite lack of natural light in there. Give us a few months and we'll be ready to go for the full rewire/automation refit :-) But with which system or systems? Tricky. Compatibility? The automation community ain't heard of it.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Entrepreneuring for Geeks

Some proverbs to bear in mind.

IWD & related bits

I heard that in France, women shopping in certain supermarkets were each given a rose at the checkout to celebrate International Women's Day and the progress women's rights have made worldwide. Somehow I doubt that I'd get a flower of any sort if I went to Tesco later.
An interesting article about how the increasing societal pressure for an active/adventurous sex life in later life means that women never get a chance to relax and accept their bodies as they are, but must maintain the tiresome and tiring beauty regimes society, and most men, still expect.
A funny piece in the Washington Post about dating and the extreme pickiness in selecting or ruling out dates which is sometimes present these days (one warning sign mentioned is indecisiveness: "Where do you want to go?" "I dunno, you?"; evidently one should also steer clear of men who wear backpacks - hmm).

Blogging against Sexism

Today is International Women's Day. It is also the day of the annual Global Women's Strike for the return of military budgets to the community, for caring work to be paid for, and for equal pay for men and women worldwide. I feel somewhat inadequate for not striking for the cause; however, I can at least contribute by Blogging Against Sexism. Why? Because women are still undervalued and underpaid; still underrepresented in the higher echelons of academia, of politics, of industry, of the arts; still oppressed either directly or indirectly; still trafficked as slaves in some parts of the world. Indeed, however frustrating the situation in the West is, things are much worse for women elsewhere. Feminism still has a long way to go even here, and in some places (South Dakota, anyone?) is in the process of being set back a few decades.


You might like to read some more hardcore feminist blogs than this today. There's a wide range, from the extremely passionate and personal, to the more sober and political. You could try
I Blame the Patriarchy which suggests that all men might not be rapists, but that they do all benefit from women's subjugation; or have a look at gendergeek. You might also like to read the latest report Shaping a Fairer Future from the Women and Work Commission. On a more frivolous note, check out Joy of Tech's comic for the day!

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Vint Cerf at Google

Just back from Google HQ in London, where Vint Cerf was speaking to a random selection of Oxbridge and London academics (and other hangers-on, like me). Perhaps more about his talk tomorrow, but one of the more notable things to me, as a Women@CL attendee, was the audience behaviour. It was between 90 and 95% male, I'd say. No laptops out at all (rare indeed), and I didn't see any men taking notes in any form; but of the women I could see, every one except the Google employees took notes, in small books or on scraps of paper.

Friday, March 03, 2006

Macbook update

I've now found the first bit of my usual software which doesn't run on Intel-based Macs :) NeoOffice hasn't been ported. Luckily there's an alpha build of OpenOffice for Mactel... (ick, what an ugly word!)

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Personal DNA

It turns out that I am a:
Quite an interesting personality test.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Slide guitar

The dude who was playing in the National Theatre foyer yesterday was John Crampton. Damn fine music.

Thud.



Custom polystyrene! It's all far too exciting round here. (Although, to be strictly fair, the speakers didn't sound stunning when they played the Apple turning on noise - is there a proper name for that?)

Swoon



Dessert at the National Theatre


Very girly - rose wine jelly with champagne rhubarb. Mmm.