Wednesday, March 30, 2005

AFP Investigating Interstate Drug Smuggling Claims

Eleanor Hall from The World Today, a national ABC radio program, today interviewed Federal Justice Minister, Senator Chris Ellison, who basically said not very much about Schapelle's case as he believes it would be inappropriate, but did confirm that the Australian Federal Police are looking into the claims of drug smuggling rings operating within Australia via airport baggage handlers.

Transcript of the interview is online, where you can read Ellison repeating his lines about it not being right to comment on the Corby case due to it being in progress now, etc, etc, respecting their courts, blah blah yada blah.

Look, sure, I understand the ethics involved in bringing in media, talking about the case, observing foreign social and legal customs, and so on. However, it is just such an awful, frightening situation going on over there -- Schapelle is required to prove her innocence in order to save her own life. This is not the Australian courts, in which the prosecutor would be needing to prove her guilt. This is Bali, place of widespread poverty and ongoing religious war on one side, and politicians lapping up their privileges and paying off their enemies on the other.

I disagree with you Ellison; we should be using the media. As much as we can. It wasn't until Bakir stepped in that anyone from the Aus. government even commented on what was going on.

What if this were someone else's daughter? Your own? Would you be wanting us all to be silent then too?

Monday, March 28, 2005

Profile of a Teen Killer

The Smoking Gun has published some chilling information from the latest American boy to go psycho with a gun at his school.

The snapshot from his MSN profile (now removed from the MSN site) includes gems like:
Category Interests: Military, High Schools, Death & Dying
Hobbies & Interests: Planning, Waiting, Hating
Frightening stuff.

How long was it there, I wonder? Did anyone see this, and question such antisocial words? How many other teens with hatred and misunderstanding soaked through them are sitting around spinning evil online?

Another shocking bit of footage from the dead teen killer: a short Flash movie, Target Practice. Rather well done, in fact, if one ignores the bloody content. If only Weise had seen his talents as potential for a good life, rather than wasted and pointless, only good for creating horror and fear.

Schapelle's Trial Moves Slowly On

I haven't been writing so much about Schapelle Corby of late as my original aim was simply to get her case known. As there is now so much more in the media and elsewhere about her awful situation, I don't feel so strongly that she is being ignored -- in fact, I am hopeful now that she will be released. Eventually.

Ever since the generous Ron Bakir stepped in to offer financial and legal assistance to Schapelle's defence team, things have been moving along relatively well:
And most recently, John Patrick Ford, a Victorian prisoner on remand awaiting trial (set for May this year) announced he had been trying to inform the police for months in relation to information he had about the drugs, yet had been ignored. Which Ruddock seems to have forgotten as he now points the finger at Corby's legal team for "inactivity" in attempting to get the Australian prisoner over to Bali to take the stand.

Lots of finger pointing and blame throwing. Continuing the trend started by the Bali customs officers who accused Schapelle in the first place, I guess.

John Ford, the prisoner, is risking a heckuva lot coming over to Bali. He's had death threats from other Australian prisoners for exposing the interstate drug traffickers methods, not to mention some of their names, and he's likely going to be a target for anti-Schapelle and anti-drug crusaders in Bali who'd like to silence him before he can help her cause. Bakir is calling for a closed courtroom for Ford to take the stand, and he's been under heavy guard from the moment he left Australia, but I can't help but be suspicious of even the Bali police who are "protecting" him at the moment. Aren't they looking for a scapegoat? They certainly wouldn't want Ford's testimony to ruin their chance at proving foreigners pollute their pristine, drug-free country. Ha.

Many people are commenting that Ford is only doing this to save his own skin, however I feel this is a misguided judgement. Firstly, as I've just stated above, he is risking his own life. And secondly, all that is needed for Schapelle to be freed is for the Balinese jurors and judges to think there is a chance, a possibility, that what he is saying could be true. Even if it's not the prisoners Ford is naming who were responsible for planting the drugs, they just need to believe it is possible for someone to have done it. Someone unrelated to Schapelle. Then, by Australian law at least, there would be enough doubt in the truth of the charges that she would be freed.

Of course, this trial is happening in Bali. Corruption is rife, and the lead prosecutor himself stated early on in the trial, "There is no need to fingerprint her. She is guilty. They always say they're innocent. It is common."

Sends shivers down my spine. Keep thinking of Schapelle, readers. This case has a long way to go yet.

Thursday, March 24, 2005

Upgrade to Firefox 1.0.2 and Thunderbird 1.0.2

Mozilla have today released a small but important upgrade to Firefox: version 1.0.2, which offers just 3 fixes for potential problems:
  • buffer overflow when using an obsolete Netscape extension for GIF processing
  • malicious sidebars that could load nasty code into the browser
  • a variation on a problem fixed in 1.0.1, the firescrolling bug, in which dragging components could hijack and run privileged XUL code
The first fix here is the most dangerous one, as the NS extension is actually still part of the library used in Firefox, Thunderbird and the Mozilla Suite.

Thunderbird was also upgraded yesterday, with 1.0.2 quietly replacing the previous download on the site. A few more fixes in this one, the other important one being a potential problem if users download .pif, .lnk, or .url files twice via the mail app.

Yahoo! 360° + Flickr = Blogger Beater? Or Just Follow the Leader?

Hot on the heels of news about Blogger's problems comes the announcement of Yahoo's new blog offering: Yahoo! 360°. (Doesn't really roll off the tongue, does it? "Yahoo three sixty degrees"... "Yahoo three sixty" would be better. Which gets me wondering about titling this post "Yahoo comes full circle", heh. Although it hasn't really. But anyway.)

Yahoo's 360° isn't yet open to the public, but in the meantime they've been playing in another of Google's sandboxes lately, purchasing the popular and clever photo sharing site Flickr. Google bought Picasa last year, and while they haven't rechristened it with a more Google-centric name yet (Piccle? Picca? Plogger? Ick!) apparently that is on the cards for down the track once they determine exactly how best to make use of it.

Microsoft also jumped into the blogosphere last year, launching MSN Spaces (is anyone actually using that?) and one must ponder whether they will follow the pack again and buy up a true online photo sharing tool soon. (They already offer simple photo sharing via MSN Messenger, but it's integrated, not standalone.) There are a few photo sharing sites still available for them. (If they hurry.)

[Prediction? I'm putting my money on Pixagogo, which offers photo printing on true photo paper as well as the sharing bit, plus international shipping. Nice, clean UI, added value for money-hungry MSN-ers. (Although, one must ask, are printed photos a dying species?) Then there's ImageEvent, who have a similar but more expansive service, allowing prints to be made into jigsaw puzzles, calendars and other gifty-type things. I'm guessing one of those two will be snapped up soon.]

That's not all the players in this battle though: HP have recently acquired SnapFish, moving in hard on the photo printing scene.

And also this week, Yahoo! Mail matched Gmail's super-sized 1Gb of email space winner, just after Gmail has started offering accounts to random Google users. (A bit too late, some would say, although possibly they had a whiff of Yahoo's plans and were forced to play their trump card to stay ahead of the pack.)

Back to the issue though, can someone please tell me: What is it with these groups? There seems to be an awful lot of follow-the-leader going on lately. (With MS doing an awful lot of tailing.) Why do these mega-giants confine themselves to constantly fighting for the same group of users online?

Web applications are growing at a rate of knots, even making uneducated CNN editors predict we'll all be ditching our machines and logging onto a web-based thin client-type operating system sometime in the near future. And even though said editor really has no clue, [yeah, like we'd trust Google -- or, worse, MSN -- enough to beam them all our data] it is interesting to watch the flap going on amongst the web giants, each eager to grab that one special tool that will next drive our world.

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Blogger Speeds Up

That last post was my first since reading about the Blogger development team's commitment to improving the speed of this here blogging tool, and I must say it was suuuuper fast!

Apparently the Blogger service has had an upgrade, server capacity upped 20%, then upped again, the changes coming about after Blogger folk (who use their own stuff thus suffer the same prob's) noted some lag last week.

Sounds like they ain't been using their own stuff all that long, then, as I've been noting such problems for a while now. But not to complain, as now we're cooking with gas...

AmazType

Get your search results in graphical form.

AmazType is an amazing Flash web application, programmed by Yugo Nakamura, which uses Amazon's search API to return results as book cover thumbnails, and then arranges them to form your search words.

This guy is just too cool.

Check out another new offering from Nakamura for Japan's NID (Nagaoka Institute of Design), a fascinating UI for displaying students, teachers and other artists of the institute along with their work in a compellingly interactive way.

Saturday, March 19, 2005

Aust Government Upgrades to Panoptic Search

The Australian Government web site has upgraded its search facilities to use the Panoptic enterprise search engine, ZDNet Australia reported yesterday.

Panoptic is another great CSIRO-developed technology offering deeper and broader search capabilities than traditional and currently popular engines for larger companies. It integrates standard searching of web pages and documents with a host of database indexing capabilities, HTTPS crawling, dynamic site indexing that works with cookies and session id's, highly customisable XML format and metadata searching, and integrated CMS searching, including Lotus Domino, Microsoft, Oracle, Verity, and Vignette.

In addition, it enables companies who already run their own proprietary or customised search engines to extend what they already use easily and seemlessly, allowing for faster, more relevant, higher quality results.

Australian companies already taking advantage of Panoptic's offerings include the ABC, NineMSN, Australian National University, Westpac, the ACCC (Australia's consumer watchdog), and Bluepages, a depression information site.

For more information, see the Panoptic website.

Thursday, March 17, 2005

Online Petition to Government: Save Schapelle

Anton Bouwer has created a petition at the free online petitions site, Petition Spot. Topic: We want government intervention in the Schapelle Corby case. Target number of signatures is 5000.

Please sign his petition, the more noise we make, the more they listen, and hopefully, the sooner Schapelle will be freed.

New Witness Statement Clears Schapelle's Name

ABC's The 7:30 Report tonight relayed information that a man has given a sworn statement to police and the Corby defence team, giving the name of a known drug trafficker as being linked to the 4.1kg bag of marijuana, blowing apart the prosecution's claim that Schapelle Corby owned the drugs and intended to sell them in Indonesia herself.

Apparently this man has been trying for over two months to get the Australian Federal Police to listen to him, but with no luck. The statement was faxed to Corby's defence team in Bali last night, just in the nick of time, and has been passed onto authorities for investigation. The defence now plans to ask for an extension to the trial, in order to clarify this new info for presentation before sentencing next month.

Hope and pray that more evidence can be found to support the man's claim. So far he has also offered corroborating accounts to police, although it appears he is hesitant to take the stand in Bali himself.

More information:

Rincon: IE7's Hollow Bend

"Rincon" is the code-name for the next Internet Explorer version, IE7, announced recently by Gatesie to appear in beta form sometime later this year.

Dictionary.com defines "rincon" as:
An interior corner; a nook; hence, an angular recess or hollow bend in a mountain, river, cliff, or the like.
which I find mildly amusing, in light of information leaking out regarding the updated browser. Microsoft Watch has reported that Microsoft plan to include features such as tabbed-browsing, PNG image support, simplified printing and an RSS aggregator, but only a few updates to its abominable CSS2 support, the one thing developers across the globe are crying for.

So, on the surface, this all sounds like MS/Gates are rapidly trying to copy Firefox, consequently producing a hollow replica of Mozilla's winning browser.

And/or hollow promises from Gates. And/or hollow releases, simply to stay in the game, perhaps.

Wednesday, March 16, 2005

Minor Blogger Annoyance

Why are my archives showing in chronological order? Should not the most recent stuff be top of the list?

Another hit for the Blogger Annoyances list.

Sena Cases: Quality PDA Cases, Terrible Site

My beautiful Toshiba e800 is currently case-less (not counting my home-made version, a snap-lock sandwich bag inside a hard, velvet-lined jewellery box, a perfect fit in fact, however, it renders my gadget completely useless whilst imprisoned in there) so I've been researching options for a new pocket jacket for a little while now.

In my sporadic searches I keep finding myself at the Sena Cases web site, whose front page is the only one on the site that works in Firefox. (Well, apart from the Flash ad at the top, which also fails.)

Why? Check this out for a URL:
http://www.senacases.com/cart/home.php?cat=290&
send_isJS=Y&send_browser=YNN|Mozilla|5|Win32|N|
1024|768|Mozilla+Default%20Plug-in|RealJukebox+NS
%20Plugin|RealPlayer(tm)+G2%20LiveConnect-Enabled
%20Plug-In%20(32-bit)%20|RealPlayer+Version%20Plugin
|MetaStream+3%20Plugin|Adobe+Acrobat|QuickTime+
Plug-in%206.0.2|QuickTime+Plug-in%206.0.2|QuickTime
+Plug-in%206.0.2|QuickTime+Plug-in%206.0.2|Windows+
Media%20Player%20Plug-in%20Dynamic%20Link%20
Library|Microsoft%AE+DRM|Microsoft%AE+DRM|
Shockwave+Flash|Adobe+Acrobat
Nasty stuff. Returns a rare 414 Request Failed: URI too long error, in fact. Seems they're attempting to parse details about my installed plugins, but something is going very awry on the backend, resulting in URL-pie. (No, not PIE, pie.)

The part I find most amusing, however, (or, depending on my mood, annoying) is that I keep forgetting the name of this poorly-developed site's company, so quickly is it that I shut the tab when I realise ["Damn! This site again!"] that it ain't gonna load. Can't decide if it's bad marketing on their behalf that it hasn't sunk in yet, or just my mind blocking them out due to their non-support of my favourite browser. I'm suspecting the latter, but really, that boils down to nothing more than bad marketing too.

And, no. No way will I open up IE just to use their web site. How can I trust a company whose products target predominantly tech-minded people, when they shut the door to (arguably) the most tech-minded users with their web site? And why would I want to?

(You may be surprised to learn that in person, I hardly ever talk about Firefox, and I definitely don't wangle the topic into completely unrelated conversations whenever I can. Usually.)

Saturday, March 12, 2005

Utterly Pointless Spam

The Minimo list seems to be the target of a spammer today, although I'm not sure you would actually call this spam. It seems more like true blue garbage to me.

A sampling:
"When will you speed the weird cheap officers before Alhadin does? Other colonial magnificent capitals will dare honestly in terms of candidates. Some reputations will be medical relative biass. Everybody enforce bottom eyebrows, do you suppose them?"
Umm... huh?

What is the point of spam that is not trying to sell something? And sent to a mailing list, what's more, so tracking images or other email harvesting attempts don't actually work?

Am I missing something? Is this in code? Are people seriously that bored, or that stupid, that this sort of inanity provides entertainment?

Amazon vs. Alibris: No Contest

In January this year I ordered two books from Alibris, an online bookstore based in the US. The coveted items finally arrived this week, almost seven weeks later.

Last year, I ordered two books from Amazon, another [far more popular] US-based online store. Those books arrived ten days later.

Why the discrepancy?

Alibris tell me it takes "up to four weeks for books delivered via the Standard International Shipping method I had selected", and that the time lapse is due to "Customs", whatever that entails. (Seems time they reviewed their maths here.)

So, in actuality: seven weeks? For a couple of books? Amazon quoted 12 to 20 days for the same thing, then bettered it.

Considering that Alibris also stuffed a bookmark into each package, stamped with a "$1 off your next purchase" coupon that expired two weeks ago, and they won't replace this, I know where I'll be buying next time.

On a related note, Amazon now have an express shipping membership package, Amazon Prime, which, for $79 USD a year, will give me as many items as I want direct to my doorstep within two days of purchase. This is actually great value, if "Express Shipping" is the same as "Priority International Courier" for Australian customers, as the shipping charge on a single book shipped that way would be $31.98 USD ($24.99 shipment charge + $6.99 item charge). A couple of individual book purchases and you've nearly spent that anyway.

[Can you tell that I love online shopping?]

RIP: Mozilla Suite

The Mozilla Application Suite has come to rest, with version 1.7.x being the last full series the Mozilla Foundation will release. (This is Mozilla, the standalone client that houses an integrated set of web tools including a browser, email client, html editor and more, as opposed to Mozilla Firefox or Mozilla Thunderbird, its newer children.)

I am definitely not alone in finding this news rather sad, however logical it may be for the MoFo to want to focus their energies and hone their focus on their most successful products to date: FF and TB. And, truth out, I've actually not used Mozilla (the product) in almost two years now... from memory, 1.4 was the last version I downloaded, although by then I was only using the Mail portion. Phoenix (now Firefox) was already way better.

However, times do change, and one thing the Mozilla Foundation is doing so well here is acknowledging that, and adjusting accordingly. Mozilla (the app) will quite probably live on, with individual developers who are keen to continue working on it currently proposing their plans for such, with MoFo's agreement (but not their branding). Personally, however, I'm not sure why they're bothering. I used to like the idea of an all-in-one product for my web needs. But this all-in-one was more than that, huge and bloated, with other embedded tools that I never used and simply did not need. Firefox, on the contrary, is small, light and super-fast... 'nuff said.

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

Pocket Gmail is Good for PIE

I'm still getting used to the word "PIE" for Pocket IE. I generally like pie. However, I don't like PIE. (At least not in its default form.) But that's another story. This story is just to report that Gmail has now released a Basic HTML version of their application, and it's compatible with IE 4.0 and up -- the version that PIE equates to, by default.

It's taken a while for Google to answer the pocket crowd's cries, however, and in the meantime, a few other 3rd-party, PIE-compatible Gmail login points have sprung up. As the creator of the popular and oh-so-cute Wiggster Pocket Gmail site noted recently though, they may no longer be needed as Google finally catches up with the rest of us.

[And yes, I do think the Wiggster PC interface is cute, however, it uses an iPAQ. Ick. Give me a Toshie any day... although, as we all know, no more Toshie PPC's to be made. Sadness abounds.]

But I digress. In addition to Wiggy's site, there are a few other "Gmail-Lite" sites around, including at ThePlaceForItAll.com and PC-Counselor.com. These are all derived from Gan Yinghung's fantastic, open source Gmail-Lite project.

Alternatively, add Gmail as an RSS feed:
https://gmail.google.com/gmail/feed/atom you@gmail.com password
Wiggster has also produced a Smartphone-friendly version, GmailSmart, with another cutie interface for PC browsers, this time using what looks like a Motorola V600.

Monday, March 07, 2005

Hackin' It For IE

IE just plain sucks when it comes to CSS Positioning. It's seriously hilarious what a mess it was making of this template.

However, for you poor sods having to use the blighter, I've just added some quick hacks to get things here looking almost the same as they are for people using decent browsers.

Let's hope IE7 is rebuilt totally from the ground up. As IE6 is a right royal mess.

[Of course, though -- who cares! Use Firefox. You'll wonder why MS are even bothering.]

Knife in Skull Proves a Headache

This has got to be one of the strangest things I've read in my life.

A retired teacher in Poland doing some DIY repairs in his kitchen last week slipped and fell, somehow causing a 12.5 cm bread knife, snapped off at the handle, to become lodged in his skull.

But that's not the strangest part -- the fact that he didn't actually notice, is almost beyond belief. The 61-year old did, however, notice his bread knife was missing when he needed to cut some bread.
"Despite carefully searching the room I could only find the handle. But I forgot about it as my headaches got worse over the next few days."
Pain from the headaches forced Mr. Woronowicz to take himself off to hospital.
"I thought they might give me an aspirin. Instead they pulled a 5-inch knife blade out of my head," he said.

Baggage Handlers Speak Up

The Age newspaper tonight reports that Triple J, Australia's popular alternative youth radio station, received a stack of callers to its topical talkback show, Hack, this week, all of whom agreed that Schapelle Corby is more than likely innocent.

Callers included baggage handlers and drug traffickers, who suggested that the interstate drug trade is alive and well here in Oz, but that to import anything to Bali would be plain stupid, with one caller stating:
"Why would you pay $10,000 for something in Australia and then try and sell it in Indonesia for a couple of hundred bucks.

"You would have to be an A-grade moron to think it's a good idea."

Corby vs. Bashir: What has happened to Justice?

Quick wrap-up of Schapelle-related news to date:

Melbourne's The Age has posted an editorial which compares the 30-month sentence given to Abu Bakar Bashir, suspected [read: known] Jemaah Islamiah leader, in Indonesia last week for his role in the Bali Bombings, to the death penalty that prosecutors are asking for should Schapelle be found guilty of smuggling marijuana into the country in her unlocked boogie bag.

I don't entirely agree with their hesitance to back the PM's recent carefully phrased announcement that he is following Schapelle's case, and Downer's intention to [finally] meet with her lawyers in Bali, however all press is good press, and The Age does agree that the leniency of Bashir's sentence highlights just how broken the Indonesian "justice system" is. Making an even greater mockery of the whole thing is the fact that Bashir has already served 10 months awaiting trial, and could walk free within 2 years -- even sooner if the judges agree to shorten his sentence after appeal.

The Australian newspaper has also hit out at Bashir's sentencing via their Editorials page, a more horrified and disgusted treatment, however, than from The Age. Good on you, The Australian.

Also last week, Ron Bakir hit out at the Australian government for their ignorance of Schapelle's case (hence, of course, the latest round of "we are watching" statements, as mentioned above), stating that without help it is likely Schapelle will die in jail.

Earlier last week, Schapelle's travel companions took the stand to agree with her statements that the marijuana is not hers, however the Indonesian judge seems deaf to valid requests by the defence for other witnesses, giving all sorts of reasons why they are "not relevant". Shocking in the extreme.

Lastly, an horrifically sad but true article detailing Schapelle's long, long days in Kerobokan prison was published by the Sydney Morning Herald on Thursday. I also had some extremely insightful comments from Jacquelyne of NZ posted here the day after, pointing out various truths and delinquencies with the current charges against her. Thank you Jacquelyne.