Category Archives: Blogging/IT

Blogging/IT

Finding wifi hotspots: a website

Just landing in my inbox (from an email I’ve already lost sorry, so don’t know who to credit), a potentially useful website, listing locations of wifi hotspots. I’ve tried it out on a couple of UK places and it looks quite good.

The listing is fully international; I tried it out on Belize, the most remote place my eye lit on in the list and it came up with one spot there. I’ve no doubt there are more, but at least it is a starting point.

And I won’t hold the fact that it comes from USA Today against it.

Blogging/IT

The Britblog roundup

… but not as you know it. Chameleon brings her own inimitable style to Britblog Roundup No 116 – if you think it is usually a collection of usual suspects, you’ll want to check this out for something different…

Blogging/IT History

Potentially useful

A site that lets you publish, I gather anything up to book length and that will automatically format it, online while not letting people copy and paste the material – the same sort of view as you get in Amazon. Open Floodgate – unfortunate name and horribly cheesy introduction, but still might be useful.

(And since I’m linking, might I also point interested persons to the History Carnivals Aggregator – listing upcoming and just posted carnivals.)

Blogging/IT

Deeply weird – technical help please!

When I look at this site in Safari, any time I run my cursor over a hyperlink – text or picture – it immediately disappears. It seems, however, to be fine in Firefox. Any explanation/fix would be much appreciated.

The site also seems to be very slow for reasons I’ve been unable to identify, although it might have something to do with the spam blizzard that seems to be currently raging – I’m getting about 50 spam links an hour. Aksimet – lovely little plug-in – is catching most of them, but the odd one is sneaking through. I’ll catch it eventually – in the meantime apologies for the “gay wrestling” links and their ilk sometimes to be found in the comments!

Blogging/IT Environmental politics

Carnival of the Green No 72

Welcome to the Carnival of the Green No 72….

Let’s start with some good news, since it so often seems thin on the ground. On Thrilling heroics is is report on the US Supreme Court ruling that greenhouse gases ARE pollutants – which should force some federal government action to match that taken unilaterally by a number of states. On Sox First is a post giving a business view of the US political and legal scene regarding global warming.

Also on the good news side, there’s been a fresh sighting of the critically endangered Sumatran striped rabbit, not seen since 2000: reported by Dr Nancy Swift on the Animal Broadcast Network. And Aydin Örstan on Snail’s Tales has also been observing nature (if not of the endangered kind) at close quarters, with an amazing photo of a barnacle.

Staying in the wild, Sarda Sahney on Fish Feet reports on grizzly/polar bear hybrids – one of which was discovered under the saddest circumstances – after it was shot by a hunter who’d paid $50,000 for the privilege.

Now every carnival should have at least one good laugh in it, and here’s this carnival’s – have you considered the effective of the albedo of sheep in your climate calculations? (On the always excellent RealClimate.)

Turning practical, on Green Options, Clayton Bodie Cornell offers some myth-busting about bio-diesel – basically, if your car is post about 1993, drive up, fill up, and drive away, perhaps from your local chippie. Staying practical – very down to earth you might say – is a commercial offering of a composting toilet, which looks just like any other.

Also a plug, although for a very good cause, is this post, from Marie Myung-Ok Lee on Green Fertility, about a line of organic, charity T-shirts.

And Sally on Veggie Revolution writes that a celebrity chef, Wolfgang Puck of Los Angeles, is going humane and eco-friendly in all of his ingredients.

Combining environmental and peace concerns, on Jen’s Green Journal is a suggestion, particularly to Americans, that even if you can’t give up you car altogether, you give it up on Tuesdays, “to demonstrate our willingness to personally sacrifice for world peace and justice”.

And on the simple, serious campaigning side, on Save the Ribble, Reigh Belisama explains just why a barrage and mass development is a very bad idea. Jim on The Daily (Maybe) is also campaigning against genetically modified potatoes.

Tim Abbott of Walking the Berkshires explores the proposal for nuclear power in Namibia, from a floating reactor. If the fishing grounds can’t be secured…?

Finally, one topic on which I’d love to see more blogging is green history – so often I fear we are reinventing the wheel and one of my first ever posts, nearly three years ago now on this very blog, was about an 18th-century “green”. This week one of the Green Party of England and Wales principal speakers, Derek Wall, was offering his own stream-of-consciousness thoughts on the history of Greens in the English town of Stroud. “Unspeakable activities” went on there in the Twenties, the authorities thought.

Coincidentally the other GPEW principal speaker, Sian Berry, has also been blogging on history, and on the pleasures and environmental rewards of holidaying near home.
*****
To find out more about the carnival visit Tree Hugger’s introduction. The previous carnival was on Sludgie, and the next, on April 16, will be on Common Ground.

Blogging/IT

Britblog Roundup No 112

Welcome to the wandering Britblog roundup, the best of the British blogosphere, as nominated (by and large) by the British blogosphere.

Traditionally it starts with politics, but I thought this week I’d do something different – those seeking the politicos should look down in section two, but I’ve devoted section one to posts that distinctly aren’t about politics, but, if you were to try to create an overarching category, you might say were about “life”.

Section 1: Life

Being an adoptive Londoner, I start unashamedly with Pandemain’s celebration of the city. “I want to be left alone to enjoy my feminine hygiene products and saturated fat by myself,” she says, and London lets her do just that. You might not want to emulate that for yourself, but Winter on their Livejournal has an appealing idea – to wander the city from sunset to sunrise, camera in hand, and post the results.

Staying in the Big Smoke, Diamond Geezer has been tracking London Transport’s missing apostrophes.

But life in the city can get tougher than that: a new blogger, Dan Hardie, has an impressive account of an incident at King’s Cross station – this is the kind of nuanced, factual reporting you just don’t get on the mainstream media.

There’s a lot of interesting science blogging out there that too often seems trapped in a little ghetto all of its own, whch is why I often nominate posts from the always excellent Inky Circus. This week they are looking at
tracking the walrus
– with a great pic. For a bit of literary good news, meanwhile, visit Grumpy Old Bookman, who has a tale to warm any writer’s heart; in short, self-publishing pays off.

On the personal reflection side, Lady Bracknell revisits a younger self – brings back unpleasant thoughts about my own youth – self-obsession being a seemingly unavoidable part of youth. That doesn’t mean that self-examination is a bad thing, and that’s just what Chameleon of Redemption Blues, who’s coordinating the roving roundup, does in this interview on A Blog Without a Bicycle.

Now I’m aiming in this roundup to hit roughly gender balance in the writers of posts (no I haven’t been doing DNA tests), but I was pleased to note that this post was nominated by a man, defying the stereotypes: Rachel from North London is approaching what is traditionally known as her “Big Day”, but she’s got lots of good advice on getting around the wedding industry.

Pornobabble is subtitled “a British woman’s inside view of the adult film business”. This post tackles a key question – what do you eat for lunch at “Hot Rod productions”? (Not perhaps safe for very conservative workplaces.)

Now “blogs” on the mainstream media have traditionally been excluded from the roundup, but I’m going to make an exception for this one – the History Carnival No 51 on A Don’s Life on The Times. What could be more genuinely “bloggy” than a carnival, wherever it is held?

Finally, The Green Room is mainly a politics blog, but I feel I have to include a post on what to do with out-of-date condoms in the “life” section…

Section 2: Politics

Starting with politics that’s not as we know it: Important matters are being considered in
Namibia’s parliament – what do you do about a stray kudu?

Going Green, which might not surprise you on this blog, on Save the Ribble Reigh sets out exactly why we should do that, and how to do it. On The Daily (Maybe), meanwhile, Jim is tackling one of the big questions of the week:
What is Britishness anyway?
(And should we be teaching it?)

On the big news of the week – the British troops held by Iran, on The Sharpener a suggestion on how the situation might have been fairly reported. Fair reporting is not, of course, often what you find in the mainstream media, as Kate on Cruella-Blog points out in her evisceration of the Evening Standard’s coverage of the “nursery brats” research.

On Central News, meanwhile, youdon’tknowme doubts the wisdom of a newscheme to tackle benefit fraud – just get people to dob in their neighbours, he suggests. Pigdogfucker, meanwhile, says kill all the Luddites – he’s thinking particularly of those opposed to mobile phone masts.

House prices are another big topic of the week (and one of some interest to me personally, since I’m now sofa surfing while (hopefully) on my way to buying another place) – Molly on Gaian Economics asks who benefits from the boom?

When stories die they tend to get less attention, but The Yorkshire Ranter tells us that one of Tony Blair’s “Sunday for Monday”, pie-in-the-sky announcements — MagLev trains is officially dead. And why this is A Good Thing.

Finally, I have an interesting pairing: on the F-word the
Carnival of Feminists comes home to the UK
, while on Dodgeblogium is lamenting that some women find “chivalry” sexist.

Which provokes a closing reflection on the nature of the Britblog roundup – some people have questioned my involvement in the process, given that often there is a dominance of rightwing posts, but there are a couple of answers to that: 1. that it is good to get different “sides” of politics talking to each other – they might even learn from each other; and 2. that Tim Worstall, who started the roundup, had a policy of including all reasonable submissions, whether he agreed with the views expressed or not, and that’s a tradition that I, and to the best of my knowledge other hosts, have followed. The British blogosphere is now far too large to be encompassed in one weekly selection, but this is as broad a range as you’re likely to find in one place – it is a snapshot of our blogosphere today.

That’s the nature of blogging – it can be combative, but it should always be respectful of different views. But there are dangers – so finally I’ll point you to another post from Rachel from North London, about the hideous harassment that she has suffered online – a warning for all.

This roundup was prepared with the assistance of Rorty the cat (whom I am currently sitting) and Islington council (north London), which provides free, and surprisingly good, free WiFi on Upper Street and environs. Should be everywhere!