
Wish I had the guts to do this with my hair…
When I finish going grey, my hair is totally going to be purple. Or going to be totally purple. One of those.

Wish I had the guts to do this with my hair…
When I finish going grey, my hair is totally going to be purple. Or going to be totally purple. One of those.
Not that I wish to be negative, but this year’s only 10 days old and not going so well.
Swiftcover have declined to accept my No Claims Discount transferred from another policy. It was frozen in aspic the year I switched to driving the Minor full time, and has been waiting to be used since then as I couldn’t accrue any more NCD on that policy. Unfortunately, it turns out they don’t accept NCDs that have been preserved. So they’ve suddenly upped the Prius insurance by 100 quid. Yay, thanks Swiftcover.
I ordered a hard disk on e-bay; highly suspiciously it was ‘shipped’ yesterday and I received a ‘signed for’ envelope today. The envelope was, of course, empty. Having googled the ‘I got an empty signed for envelope’ thing, apparently it’s a longstanding scam. So the envelope’s up on the shelf, being held in case they contest it and I’ve opened a case on e-bay. Irritatingly, and foolishly on their part, they require that you give the seller seven working days to reply. There’s no button for ‘the seller is a fucking scam artist’.
I’m currently treating the RiscPC as dead, which is another joyous thing. Oh, and my laptop did it’s spontaneous reboot without telling me which is twice it’s done it in a not terribly long space of time.
And last night, in the storms, the wind blew the Chiminea off the deck. It was last year’s Xmas gift from my mum and we only got to use it a few times. It’s my own stupid fault, I should have grocked that it was so windy that it was a risk. But I didn’t. And this morning it’d fallen and cracked. I’d always intended it should live inside the tool store over the winter, but haven’t ever finished the storage under the deck which is where the tools are meant to live… to make space so that the chiminea can live in the cupboard where the tools currently are. Which is making me feel like my lack of ability to complete tasks is largely at fault. I’m hoping I can repair it with some fire cement, but it’s a pretty big crack.
I don’t want to be a harbinger of doom, but so far 2015 has largely sucked.

Damn I REBLOGGED This so FAST… and will keep doing it…

Damn I REBLOGGED This so FAST… and will keep doing it…

Damn I REBLOGGED This so FAST… and will keep doing it…

Damn I REBLOGGED This so FAST… and will keep doing it…

Damn I REBLOGGED This so FAST… and will keep doing it…
So, my poor old RISC PC may be dead. It may be having a strop about the monitor. The power supply might be dead. It’s a bit of an unknown at the moment. The first time I powered it up I thought YAY! for about the time it takes for the self test to run.
Cyan showed the crappy LCD
Green showed the crappy LCD
Then up flicked ‘Input Not Supported’. I’ve had this problem before, when I first connected the LCD monitor to the RiscPC. It’s poor aged video hardware sometimes has a few issues when it comes to modern LCDs, a technology that it has not even the first concept of. Thanks to the flexibility of the hardware though, it was fairly easy to do both the ‘go back to autodetect’ and then modifying the set-up so it could handle the crappy-cheap LCD. All good.
But not today.
Resetting the CMOS and then telling it to try to autodetect the monitor didn’t work. It’s still producing the lovely chime of RISC OS starting. ‘Thwoop’ it goes. And the monitor switches off. Indeed, rather alarmingly, the power-on LED is no longer coming on, which leads me to wonder if something more alarming is going on.
I’m pondering whether to take it round to John’s house where there are old CRT monitors that are perhaps somewhat happier to be driven with whatever shite is coming out of the VIDC… but I’m also trying to steel myself for this beloved computer being very, very dead.
And what I do if that’s the case…
I could stick a Raspberry Pi in it, which would allow me to have a box that could keep running RISC OS. Which’d be rather nice.
Similarly, there’s the Beagleboard XM which seems a bit more umphy, which would again provide the ability to run RISC OS – and perhaps be a bit more capable in terms of real computing than the Pi; that said, how much do I use it? I’ve not used it seriously in years.
Then there’s the possibility of making it into a real ‘working’ computer. By which I mean, at some point this laptop is going to finish its long drawn out death rattle (it again decided to power-off for no obvious reason, and today didn’t even have the good manners to come up with ‘Your computer reset because of a problem’. I am forced to conclude that at 7 years old it’s starting to show its age. I did check ebay, and it’s now worth distressingly little* so selling it isn’t really worth it). When it dies I’m going to have to replace it with something and I’m very, very tempted to replace it with a Linux PC and an Android / Sailfish tablet. The PC being for video editing and, if I ever get back to it, my podcasting. The tablet being more my daily use object.
At any rate, until I’ve had a chance to wave the RPC at John (and possibly threaten it with test equipment) these multiple vague possibilities will keep wandering around my head.
What does make me (potentially) sad is that I’d like to retrieve the data from the RiscPC and we’re nearing the point where that’ll be impossible.
* For a few minutes I was hoping that Apple’s usual value retention plus the boxed nature of it would mean it was worth enough that I could flog it, buy an adequate android tablet and a way more powerful PC to throw in the Risc PC case. That brief flight of fantasy was brought to the ground somewhat quickly.

It may be dead, Jim.
The poor old RiscPC may be dead. It’s powering on and not reporting any self test errors, but the monitors complaining and weirdly the power supply LED got dimmer and dimmer before failing to come on at all. Got one trick left to try….a much older, crappier monitor…

One tweet sums up the big problem with how we talk about terrorism
If a terrorist attack took place right here in the U.S., why isn’t it a national story?
Terrorism may be defined as “the use of violence and threats to intimidate or coerce, especially for political purposes,” but if you asked most people, the term conjures one image: brown people with beards and bombs. Nothing has made that profoundly racist misunderstanding clearer than the news coverage of two violent attacks that happened within roughly 24 hours.
A potentially serious ethical breach.Ferguson prosecutor Bob McCulloch admitted that he presented evidence he knew to be false to the grand jury considering charges against Darren Wilson. In an interview with radio station KTRS on Friday, McCulloch said that he decided to present witnesses that were “clearly not telling the truth” to the grand jury. Specifically, McCulloch acknowledged he permitted a woman who “clearly wasn’t present when this occurred” to testify as an eyewitness to the grand jury for several hours. The woman, Sandra McElroy, testified that Michael Brown charged at Wilson “like a football player, head down,” supporting Wilson’s claim that he killed Brown in self-defense.
McElroy, according to a detailed investigation by The Smoking Gun, suffers from bipolar disorder but is not receiving treatment and has a history of making racist remarks. In a journal entry, McElroy wrote that she was visiting Ferguson on the day of Michael Brown’s death because she wanted to “stop calling Blacks N****** and Start calling them people.” McElroy also has had trouble with her memory since being thrown through a windshield in a 2001 auto accident.
McCulloch’s prosecutorial team had McElroy testify to the grand jury over two days.
In intentionally presenting false testimony to the grand jury, McCulloch may have committed a serious ethical breach. Under the Missouri Rules of Professional Conduct, lawyers are prohibited from offering “evidence that the lawyer knows to be false.”
McCulloch justified his actions by asserting that the grand jury gave no credence at all to McElroy’s testimony. But this is speculation. Under Missouri law, the grand jury deliberations are secret and McCulloch is not allowed to be present.
A Missouri lawmaker, Karla May, called Friday for a legislative investigation of McCulloch’s conduct. May said that there is evidence to suggest that McCulloch “manipulated the grand jury process from the beginning to ensure that Officer Wilson would not be indicted.”
Even before Friday’s interview, many legal experts were highly critical McCulloch’s use of the grand jury. Marjorie Cohn, a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, said she believed McCulloch “did not want an indictment” of Darren Wilson and turned the grand jury process on its head, acting as an advocate for the defense.
Mae Quinn, a law professor at Washington University School Of Law, told ThinkProgress that the unusual decision to present testimony he believed to be false to the grand jury — along with other atypical aspects of the prosecutor’s conduct in the Wilson case — could be an issue. “In terms of personal or professional interest playing a role in the grand jury process, I am struck by the double-bind we keep hearing about. That is, the county prosecutor feeling unable to simply present Darren Wilson’s case like any other without concern for perceived relationships with local law enforcement and others – and then making strategic decisions not singularly focused on representing the county,” Quinn said.
If Maura McShane, the Presiding Judge of the 21st Circuit, agrees with this assessment, she could appoint a new prosecutor and effectively restart the case against Darren Wilson.
Under Missouri law (MO Rev Stat § 56.110) the presiding judge of the court with criminal jurisdiction — in this case Judge McShane — can appoint another prosecutor if the prosecuting attorney demonstrates a conflict of interest or bias. Courts have interpreted this provision broadly to include “conflicts that reveal themselves through the prosecutor’s conduct in the case.” In State v. Copeland, a 1996 case, a Missouri court replaced the prosecutor because the judge “sensed that [the prosecutor’s] sympathies for [the defendant] may have prevented him from being an effective advocate for the state.” The judge “found the adversarial process to have broken down in that [the prosecutor] appeared to be advocating the defendant’s position.”
The recent admission that the prosecution knowingly presented false testimony to the grand jury builds on a pattern of conduct benefiting Wilson’s defense that could justify the appointment of a new prosecutor. This included: vouching for police conduct to the grand jurors, gentle questioning of Wilson himself and aggressive questioning of any witness adverse to Wilson’s defense.
A prosecutor handling any case where a law enforcement officer is accused of misconduct, nevermind one that attracts national attention, finds themselves in “a really hard position,” Quinn said. Quinn added that “[i]f such outside considerations weigh on the mind of a prosecutor, ultimately impacting the way a case is handled, that seems unfair not only to the victim and community – but the prosecutor, too. A special prosecutor in police cases, one who is insulated from these ongoing relationships and concerns, likely would engage in far less second-guessing and ancillary analyses.”
It’s now up to Judge McShane to decided if a new, independent prosecutor is warranted in the Darren Wilson case.
Source: Judd Legum for ThinkProgress
The hell do they mean, “may be” a breach of ethics???
My thoughts exactly. Goddamn, what’s this “may be” shit? This whole thing has been a farce, beginning to end.


Oh my god if you’re going to judge someone’s cosplay you better learn your fucking shit because this is Duela Dent you goddamn assholes.
AHAHAHA
Perpetually laughing over the fact that “real gamer/comic book nerd” males keep insulting women for cosplaying things they’ve never even heard of
who’s the “fake geek” now, fuckers?
Make it viral
Haha. This kills me.