Category: Life

Random thoughts on life

  • It's 4:30am

    And I’ve been awake since 3am.

    Don’t know why. But I can’t sleep.

    I’ve been like this for over a week with only a few nights where I’ve slept through. But tonight is the worse as other nights I’ve been able to get back to sleep – finally. It’s also helped that on the other nights I’ve been working the late shift at work so have been able to get up later. Naturally, that’s not the case today.

    Thankfully I’ve not got a load of friends and family coming over tonight where we intend to sit and watch movies until gone midnight… Oh. Bugger.

  • Why is this so hard to work out?

    Well, after a great amount of work, I’ve turned OFF the online ticket facility on the BMTG website.

    Did it not work? Yes it did. And very well – with little publicity of it, we £500 worth of tickets via it for the last show. Not bad.

    It was my decision to turn it off, though, and one which I communicated to the committee (well, my appointed contact on the committee – whether the rest know or not is a different question).

    Here is my official reason (Mike is the chap who sells the tickets)…

    Since I’ve implemented the ability, there’s no proof that it’s increased sales, just simply moved it from one medium to another.

    Additionally, Mike is struggling as he’s not getting the emails from PayPal to say that customers have paid – I’ve attempted to try and sort it out with him but he appears uninterested.

    As I said during the AGM, it generated every £1 in £13 generated, but there has been no mention or general interest in it (indeed, my speech during the AGM was the only time it was mentioned). I’m assuming that this is due to my first point – that it’s probably not creating any more sales.

    Therefore, for the sake of Mike’s easier life and me not having to maintain it, I’ll turn it off. Obviously I’ll leave a page there, but it will redirect people to contact Mike in the normal ways.

    However, you might be able to detect something underlying there – the complete and total disinterest by everyone.

    After it did so well for last years show, I started working on a new, improved version of the online sales facility, expecting the committee to come forward and start asking for certain facilities to improve it (and hence being ready for them). I got half way through – and a lot of work – before realising they hadn’t said anything. And probably wouldn’t do. Now, nearly a year later I can say… they didn’t. Nor did it even get a mention.

    The problem is that they have an incorrect idea that I just want compliements and slaps on the back for the sake of my own ego. But that’s wrong. It’s not for myself that I want the credit, but the website. It’s doing a sterling job of publicity but no-one appears to care (and if they do, they don’t give out the right signals). So why should I put so much effort into it? Of course, this just leads people to think that I’m “throwing my toys out of the pram.” In other words, I can’t win. Spend my own spare time and effort working on something that everyone ignores or withdraw from it and get accused of spitting out my dummy.

    When putting on a show, they appoint a director to essentially “manage” it. But they (the committee) still get involved – of course they do. They want to ensure that things go well, help where they can, etc. But when it comes to the website… no interest. And the members are no different – not surprisingly given the disinterest from the management.

    To top it off, Mike doesn’t get the PayPal emails to say someone has bought tickets. I suspect they’re going into his spam folder, but he seems totally disinterested in sorting it out. Thankfully this was noticed because I’m copied into them. So, at the moment, I forward the emails on. But what if I’m busy or on holiday? This shouldn’t be down to me, but at the same time I don’t want customers to suffer (you see, it IS about the society and not me).

    So, the online facility is turned off.

    The word of the day… disinterested.

  • Missing Data

    After more reports of personal data being lost, I’ve been left confused.

    Where I work, only those who need laptops get them. And when they do, they don’t keep data ON the laptop, but on a remote server. When away from the office you have to sign in with a secure password, etc, to access any data, etc. If the laptop is stolen, you get nothing.

    Most laptops these days come with built-in hardware security including finger-print readers, TPM chips and, if you have Windows Vista, technology such as BitLocker.

    Additionally, you can prevent PC’s (whether desktop or laptop) from accepting USB devices, floppy-drives, writeable CD’s, to ensure that data doesn’t go wandering.

    Now, I’m not a security expert (I leave that to friends) but why (and this isn’t just aimed at government who are not the only people losing personal data) is this happening?

    I believe in the US they come down hard on companies who lose personal data such as this and we should do the same here. And that includes government departments. There really isn’t an excuse.

  • Database Update

    After whinging in the ear of my host, Streamline.net (poor quality but, erm, cheap), they have moved my MySQL database to a different server – a better one, they say.

    Well, they didn’t have to, so I have to thank them for that. Both this blog and the Copy+ site has been updated appropriately – time will tell if it will help.

    Longer term it’s still my intention to move to Memset.

  • CNN taking the cold war a little too seriously

    Or are they?

    This screenshot from their site seems to show them going a little hay-wire with the bar charts – how can the US have a larger bar than the USSR when they don’t have as many medals? Besides, who works out the positions based on TOTAL number of medals?

    This bar chart seems to be wrong for 1976 and 1988, but not other years. Probably a bug with the CNN website. But amusing anyway.