Tech

Plastic World

Tea

Tea (Photo credit: chumsdock)

A few weeks ago the lid of my kettle disintegrated so I bought a new one, from a well-known brand.  It looked nice, had a blue light inside that shimmered as the water boiled and the unusual feature that the water that came out of it tasted of plastic.  I boiled it a few times, cleaned the inside, tried emptying it out after use but to no avail.

When I searched for the kettle on Google to see if there were any product recalls in place, you know the kind of thing – plastic kettle leaching chemicals into the water – I found nothing except dozens of people complaining about the same issue on Amazon’s product page for the very same kettle, people had tried everything I had.

I tried to get round the problem for a couple of weeks but eventually I was fed up of not being able to taste my tea for the overwhelming flavour of plastic – I see enough of the stuff at work, I have no desire to eat, or drink it at home.  I found the box, the instructions, the receipt and trudged back to the shop.  I explained the situation to one assistant and immediately the assistant next to her said someone she knew had the same one and the same problem, then the customer next to me said that her son had the same problem.  No doubt the manufacturer would say there was no risk to health from it but still I don’t like the idea of chemicals leaching into my morning cuppa.  I swapped it for a metal kettle.

I don’t write bad reviews of a product if it goes wrong, it could be a one-off failure, but this was unbelievable – three people in that shop had the same problem with this simplest of devices, and dozens more on Amazon too.  I felt disappointed that such a product was allowed out of the factory of a respected brand and hoped it was perhaps an oversight rather than a case of concern about profits dictating the use of lower quality materials.  Plastic is already often seen as cheap, we don’t need it tasting like it too – with appliances like this we deserve better.

 

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Society, Tech

I Want To Like This, I Really Do

Reading Linux Format

Reading Linux Format (Photo credit: redjar)

We are reading more online than ever, services like Flipboard can make you a personalised magazine on your tablet, online newspapers have appeared with mixed levels of success and of course there are many blogs out there, out here, wherever.

This has led to some unusual crossovers where people lose the distinction between digital and analogue when they go back to paper – we’ve seen videos of kids trying to swipe or pinch-zoom a picture in a magazine and recently someone told us how he’d tried to swipe the page of a paper book he was reading because he’d got so used to reading on his iPad.

Another thing I’ve found myself is when you’re reading something on a site that doesn’t support comments, you scroll down to see what people are saying about the article but there’s nothing, no login button, no comment box.  “But how can I say how I feel about this, I have an opinion, there’s not even a Like button”, you think before closing the tab and reading something else.   It’s worse when you feel the same way about a magazine article, or TV show – maybe it’s only a matter of time before the appearance of “press the blue button to like this programme”.

The ability to reply to, comment on and interact with the media that was once such a one-way channel giving you their opinion only is becoming ingrained and expected.  Writers online don’t have to wait for comments to appear in the limited forum of the letters page, the feedback is instantaneous and often not polite, depending on the subject, but it gives readers a sense of being part of a discussion, being engaged with the subject and the writers, instead of a being just a passive receiver and for the most part this is a good thing – as commenters add more information, weigh up arguments, correct details, correct grammar.  There are times that the comments are better than the articles.  Many news sites still don’t have comment sections on articles, many say it’s due to the problems of moderating them but with buttons to report misuse (as on Amazon’s forums) the good commenters can weed out the bad.

Of course the downside is that there are always those who just want an argument, we’ll never be free of trolls, but as part of an open and free internet these little havens of discussion should prosper.

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Science, Tech

Future Filters

English: Drop of water falling into a glass of...

English: Drop of water falling into a glass of water with a green paper background. Italiano: Goccia fotografata mentre cade in un bicchiere d’acqua su sfondo di carta verde (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I have in my kitchen a Brita filter jug.  I don’t use it for some health reason but because, generally, without it the water around here tastes awful.  It’s a choice I make and a not particularly life and death one, the worst situation I’d find myself in is getting home gasping for a cuppa.

Elsewhere in the world clean water is more of a priority and recently a number of advances have been made in getting clean water to people who need it the most including a water carrier that cleans the contents via reverse osmosis – using the motion of the barrel as it’s rolled along the ground to force the water through membranes which allow water molecules to pass but stop larger impurities.  Reverse osmosis processes to desalinate water typically need high pressures and much energy to operate.

The latest development though uses sheets of the 21st century wonder-material – graphene, which, at a single atom thick, are  500 times thinner than the best desalination filter on the market, allowing the process to operate with pressures 100 times lower.  As Gizmodo reports these filters are being developed and rushed to production by Lockheed-Martin though as a commenter points out MIT has also been working on the same solution.

Some have said that the process also filters out minerals from the water but given the choice I think most people would choose mineral, and contaminant-free water over no water at all.

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Tech

Be Careful What You Search For

Watching

Watching (Photo credit: Laddir)

You are being watched.  No, calm down, I didn’t mean in the real world, sit back down and stop looking behind your sofa.

For many years people have simultaneously worried about how their browsing habits were being tracked and perhaps used to monitor their activities while marvelled at how Amazon suggests new products for them based on their previous choices  – online data collection really is a double-edged sword.  In the UK we have a law where websites have to visibly inform you about browser cookie use and give you either a choice or instructions on how to enable them or otherwise.

The data collected by browsers is not always sent to advertisers, much is used today to improve services, make useful suggestions for stuff to buy, places to visit, people to friend on Facebook etc.  The data collected when you’re logged into Google’s many and varied services, for example, can be used by their Google Now service to provide real-time information relevant to you.  I was impressed when without being told my Nexus 7 knew where I worked and how long it would take to get there, giving me weather and travel information too.  My first reaction was “how did it know?”  I don’t take it to work, has it been talking to my phone?  Well, in a way, it used my contacts information, I think, I hope.  These computerised personal assistants like Google Now and Apple’s Siri are a wonder of our time, intelligently finding, collating and presenting information in truly intuitive ways, I’m still impressed whenever I ask my Nexus 7 what the weather’s going to be like tomorrow.

But the other day I discovered something about Google Now that could, in the right, or wrong circumstances be interesting or awkward.  I searched for Cromwell Weir on Google Maps on my laptop and later that evening noticed that my Nexus 7 was giving me, like the helpful little soul it is, travel information to Cromwell.  Later still I searched for a shop in Lincoln and again it was there saying “are you wanting to go there now?  I can show you where to go.”

Which is all very helpful until you’re searching for a hotel for a surprise weekend away for you and your other half on your PC while your tablet, in the hands of your beloved in the room next door is happily giving the game away.

So if you don’t want Google, or for that matter Siri if Apple’s assistant has similar abilities blabbing about your plans remember to log out before browsing.

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Tech

Copyright Wrongs

Copyright Symbols

Copyright Symbols (Photo credit: MikeBlogs)

Copyright law has protected creative people for hundreds of years but is often misunderstood as it can be a complicated area.  Generally if you’ve created something original you have the copyright on it, you don’t have to put a (C) symbol on it, or register it, it’s automatic (in the UK at least).

The internet though has muddied the waters somewhat and numerous myths have popped up and as the recent kerfuffle about online service terms and conditions and what sites can do with your images showed there is still much confusion over the issue.

Recently I heard someone saying that images uploaded onto Facebook are copyright free, that if someone uploads something you can download it and do what you like with it.  Big no-no there – even Instagrammed pictures of someone’s dog in the park are covered by copyright and belong to the person who took the photo, not Facebook, not even the person whose Facebook account they were uploaded to, unless the copyright is assigned to that person.

Where an online service says, in their terms and conditions, that they can use your images typically you’ve granted them a perpetual licence not the copyright to the image.  When I signed up to Olympus’ Flickr group I granted them such a licence though as my images aren’t taken with a Pen camera they’re unlikely to use my images – the licence is that specific.  This is why the recent flurry of people posting copyright notices on their Timelines was pointless.

The images I use on this blog are carefully selected from either a library of royalty-free images I have, sites which curate the millions of high-quality royalty-free images on the internet, and mostly via the content suggestion engine built into wordpress.com provided by Zemanta.  The term royalty-free and the Creative Commons licence are important as they give you the right to use the creators work but not to claim that it’s your creation, even if you modify it.  Lifehacker has a good article outlining how to avoid breaking the law here.

Whether we write blogs, books, Facebook statuses or tweets we need to respect the creativity of others and their wishes as to how their work is used, copyright law sometimes struggles to keep up with how technology is changing as we move further into the digital century but it’s still important.

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Meta, Tech

Lunch At One

Birthday Cake

Birthday Cake (Photo credit: Will Clayton)

With today’s Lunch we’ll be nibbling a slice of birthday cake.  It was a year ago, at midnight on 1st April 2012 that I flicked the switch and released this blog to the public of the internet.  It was a nervous moment for an introvert like me – will anyone even look at it, will anyone like it, will I offend anyone?  I remember when I got my first follower a few days later and as I wrote shortly after it felt great and awesome to know that someone on the other side of the world had seen my words, liked them and wanted to read more.

It’s been an interesting year and I’ve learned much, there’s still much to do though.

Before diving into some of what I’ve learned I’d like to thank those who have liked my posts and followed my blog.  As others have said the WordPress community is a great one and I’ll look forward to seeing more of other bloggers’ work in the future too.

The Tools

I’ve begun using Evernote to organise information to put into future posts, using my Nexus 7 tablet to write up notes and posts while I’m watching tv or am otherwise away from the main computer.  I’ve bought a new Logitech wired keyboard because I can type faster on it  – sometimes it’s the simplest things that can make the difference.

I’m using the WordPress app on my Nexus to read posts on other blogs I follow as I can instantly reblog them or send them to Pocket for commenting of referencing later.

The Time

I’ve told myself to set aside a bit of time each day to do this otherwise I end up with a long list of unread posts that seems too daunting to tackle before more turn up the next day – I have the same problem at work, feeling like new tasks turning up will prevent me from finishing the ones I’ve already got, leaving me feeling anxious, stressed and overwhelmed; but that’s another story.  The fear of the so-called information overload, a decidedly 21st century ailment, has stopped me looking for suitable stories about modern life elsewhere too, ironically.

The Confidence

I’ve learnt to be honest and say how I feel, to not agonize too much about what to say and not to put off writing a post if I have all the pieces right there in my mind – one problem I have is I too often over-think a post, or to put too many things into one post that could perhaps be spread out over many.

I still get a buzz when I see the notifications telling me that people have liked my posts, I don’t feel I’ve failed if a post gets no likes at all.  Most of all I just enjoy writing these articles, gathering information, articulating thoughts and sending them out into the world.  I still though hoard more information, more bit of what could become posts than write actual posts.  Procrastination is still a problem; the feeling of sitting down and not feeling able to write anything (which is still,  for me, a lack of confidence in my own abilities) is still a problem.  But I’ve researched and found solutions to these things which I will be outlining soon.

So onto year two, with clear plans, determination to overcome what stops me writing and keeps me watching TV instead, a bag full of Cadbury’s Cream Eggs and one more day off work.

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Tech

My Stereo’s Three Lives

KMNR's extensive CD collection

KMNR’s extensive CD collection (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I have an old Philips stereo, it sounds lovely with crisp, crackle-free audio, it used to be my alarm clock and saw daily use playing CDs but has languished in my living room, underused, being merely decorative for many years.  It has a cassette deck along with the CD player, it doesn’t have an iPod dock or even a 3.5mm input jack.  First the cassettes gave way to CDs and now MP3s are the norm, perhaps it could have been the end for my humble stereo.

But no, I was not prepared to give up its audio abilities that easily.  Now it is an amplifier, with some adaptors and a bluetooth receiver attached to its rear it has a new lease of life.  I have just about finished uploading my 6,300 track music library to Google Play Music and as such can play any of my collection via my Nexus 7 tablet over bluetooth onto my venerable old stereo.  The old Philips now effectively has a touchscreen remote interface and access to six-thousand searchable tracks, all of which sound as good (to me at least) as they did when I first listened to them on that same stereo on the days I bought the CDs.

I am still awed by what modern technology can achieve with these powerful mobile devices and cloud services.  Especially when I can rope in my good old tech too.

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Society, Tech

I’m Just Not a Twitterer

Chick (image courtesy of Serif)

Chick (image courtesy of Serif)

It seems like everything’s “social” these days, no marketing campaign is complete without “find us on Facebook”, follow us on Twitter for exclusive news, competitions and stuff, and to make sure all your friends know what products you like.  I remember competitions including the line “put your answer on a postcard” but more and more the only method of entering is by tweeting your answer to @most-social-media-aware-company-evar.   Email isn’t an option, Facebook’s sooo last year.

I have Google+ because it was there, with my Gmail, I did enter a competition via that and Facebook today because it only involved clicking two buttons.  The third one was to enter via Twitter.  I didn’t because I can’t.  I don’t use Twitter, don’t even have an account, I have enough information coming at me as it is and I don’t want to have to remember another password.

It is, however, becoming unavoidable.  Presenters on radio shows say “is it snowing where you are?  Let us know.”  You think, yes it is, I’ll be part of this.  Then he says “tweet me to let me know.”  And a feeling of being left out makes you start to type twitter into your browser.  It’s not just unfair to those of us who don’t want to tweet but to those who don’t have the technology or the knowledge to sign up to these services.  Competitions and surveys should be open to anyone.

I haven’t given in yet, but it feels like it’s only a matter of time before I have to.

[Edit – March 2016]

Ok, I have given in, I was bored last week and decided to see what the fuss is about, also I thought I’d grab the same twitter name as my Flickr account.  @AndyByTheTrent.  I’ve followed a couple of people but not really done much with it.  #stillcantseethepointyet.

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Business, Psychology, Tech

Amazon Roulette

English: Amazon warehouse at Glenrothes

English: Amazon warehouse at Glenrothes (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

When it comes to buying things that are non-essential I tend to follow my gut instinct and be patient, waiting for the best deal and usually I get a bargain.  Sometimes this is because I’ve waited for the thing to be replaced by “next year’s model” and is discounted in a local clearance store or on Amazon, but many of these bargains have been through the wonder that is Amazon WarehouseI don’t know if other countries have this but we do in Britain.

I’ve had a slightly dinged Acer Netbook for half-price, £35 worth of ring binders for £2.76 which had only had the box opened it appears and a souvenir London 2012 notebook which only had a slight mark on the spine for a couple of quid.  High-street shops have been selling these “shop-soiled seconds” for decades as many people won’t buy things at full price if the packaging or the product is slightly damaged, or has even been opened.  Amazon’s back-room though is a treasure trove and it’s given me a little game you can play.

The prices of everything on Amazon can vary and you can use “Your Browsing History” to keep track of stuff you want and watch the prices, including the Warehouse prices which come under the “Used” pricing.  Recently I’ve been watching Sony Bluray players and the three models that have built-in iPlayer etc have been up and down like the proverbial yo-yo in the Warehouse for weeks.  First the basic model was cheap, then it shot up for no good reason, then the mid-range did the same, then the best one suddenly dipped below the price the basic one had initially dropped to – less than half-price for one with “slight cosmetic damage”.  I clicked “buy” and deleted them all from my history so I don’t see if they went even lower – if you are of the masochistic or pessimistic nature however you could keep watching.

Bargain spotting, 21st century style.  Just remember, in shopping as in life, patience is everything.

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Society, Tech

Maliciously Viral

Computer Virus

Computer Virus (Photo credit: talksrealfast)

This past week has seen me battling viruses, both in my head and chest in the form of another cold and on a computer at work.  Both had appeared out of nowhere and caused me much annoyance.

The subject of this post is the computer based one.  I’ll just state here and now that I have no love for malicious-virus writers, and I don’t even buy into the argument that they “test companies security” – if that were true then they would write harmless programs that simply phone home with details of where and how they got in.  Some do that admittedly, they are the ones referred to as White Hat virus writers, the ones I’m seething about at the moment are the ones who write the viruses that do indiscriminate damage to computers like the ones at the company I work for, that send out thousands upon thousands of spam emails in our name.  The keyloggers stealing passwords and credit card numbers.

The mechanisms for the virus getting in are ever more sneaky, an inexperienced user might click on an email that they think is genuine, I’ve even seen emails faked to appear like messages from the email server itself regarding undeliverable mail, but many people are wise to this and recognise when emails purporting to be about invoices or so on are from addresses they don’t recognise so now the virus writers are infecting unsuspecting websites, inserting code that just runs the virus without any intervention.  The only way round this is to disable JavaScript, Flash, Silverlight and anything else that gives the web its rich interactivity and shine.  Even then they’ll still find a way to run code.  You’re not even safe on an oil rig.

A common method is that the hijacked website will display a message saying that the computer has a virus, the popup looks like Windows Defender or Security Centre and when the user clicks the button to clean the computer they download a virus instead.  If in doubt about a popup on a website, close the browser without clicking anything else.  Viruses have been known to be loaded by rogue apps and spam messages on social networks, free games and utilities, you need to be so vigilant about what you click on today, carefully considering where it’s come from and whether it’s too good to be true.  Rogue emails are not all about Nigerian Millionaires anymore.

I don’t know how the spamming virus got onto one of our PCs but it seems that once it had done it invited many, many friends round to party too.  As this machine has no current incoming email account being used on it, only the account details of one that used to be used, I can only assume it was a hijacked website that did us in.  I’ll never know.  I do know it took a couple of days for four separate anti-malware tools to find and remove what was on there (it’s an old machine and the scans took seven to eight hours each) and even now I still don’t trust that it’s clean though it appears that we’re not sending out any unusual traffic now.

The takeaway lesson is to always have anti-virus and anti-malware software installed and running, and regularly run a couple of extra tools in case.  The ones I’ve been using are Microsoft Security Essentials, Malwarebytes, Superantispyware and other tools recommended by our website and email hosting company who also look after our server.  Further more always install updates to the operating system and anti-virus software.

Someone said to me last week that someone must be able to do something about the problem, that the ISPs should be held responsible for “letting them (the virus authors) get away with it, for not blocking the viruses” but it’s not that simple, neither is it simple to find those responsible for creating them in the first place though much of the tech industry invests much time and effort in cooperation with governments to try to find them.

Microsoft and Symantec had a recent success in locating and shutting down the control centre of what is called a BotNet – thousands of virus-hijacked computers used to commit crimes, hack other computers or just send out spam, all without the owners noticing.  The internet is vast though and the trails that lead to the sources of viruses are long, vague and often hidden by proxies and by the sheer scale of dispersal of the virus if it’s been in the wild for some time.

As for why they do it, some do it to prove that they can, for some kind of prestige, to show how clever they are; some do it for money; some do it to prove a point, maybe to make a political statement.  In the end they simply cause havoc; ordinary people lose money, important messages, their life’s work, business deals.  Maybe some of them just don’t have any empathy for the people whose work they disrupt, seeing the virus in purely technical terms, not being aware of or caring about the consequences, basking in the glory that what they’ve created has prospered and been noticed.  Many simply say that it’ll teach the infected users a lesson, to take backups, to not click on emails from strangers.

Those who say that the virus writers provide an invaluable service, to test security are perhaps right and that would be important where governments want to protect their secrets from other governments but without viruses and spyware we wouldn’t need our security testing in homes and small businesses would we.

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