Sunday, January 08, 2006 - Posts

Window XP Home Support Scheduled to End This Year

Microsoft appear to be saying that they will discontinue support for Window XP Home at the end of this year.  This would mean that there would be no more security updates for Windows XP Home; an operating system that is likely to still be installed by default on new computers bought well into the second half of this year before the release of Window Vista.

This would be a public relations nightmare for Microsoft and I really don't think that they can go through with it.  They may go for the solution of making updates for Windows XP Professional continue to work for the Home version.  The problem here is that there is likely to be confusion about what the end of support means and there will be much negative publicity.  To avoid this, Microsoft must extend the support period in the same way as they did for Windows 98 and I am sure that they will.

King Kong

Penny dragged me off to see King Kong on Wednesday.  I was in no particular hurry to see it but I am probably glad I did.  It is a well put together movie with plenty of good performances and a special effects Kong that lived up to the legacy of the original movie.  Kong is very much the star of the movie but this also leads to the main problem with it; the length of time before he makes an appearance.  Peter Jackson has taken a lesson from his phenomenally successful Lord of the Rings films to be that a film should be 3 hours long.  The problem is that, while the Lord of the Rings had enough story to support (and even require) that, the story of King Kong is really rather simple.  Three hour films should be rare.  It is uncomfortable to sit and watch for that amount of time and you need to be very much into the story for it to work.  A three hour version of King Kong is simply too long.  At two hours it would have been a great film.  At three hours, it is still an experience, but it is not a great film.

Scottish Cup Third Round

It has been a good weekend for Rangers.  There was a convincing win to enthuse the many young fans attracted by the £12 ticket price.  A good professional display dispatched the lower league opposition with the creation of lots of chances.  Kris Boyd scored a hat trick on his debut.  The last two players to score a hat trick on their Rangers debut both went on to score in a European final.  Could it be this year?  Maybe not, but we can grasp at straws. 

And then just when it seemed like a pleasant, but not remarkable, weekend, Celtic contrive to lose their match against lower league opposition while turning in a memorably bad performance on the debut of their star signing, Roy Keane.  In addition, it looks like they simply don’t have a decent defender while Bobo Balde is away at the African Nations Cup.  It could be an interesting January for Celtic.

So it's Hibs at home in the fourth round.  The last time Hibs came to Ibrox they ran out comfortable winners.  Hopefully, we have turned around and can go on to win some silverware this season.

Conspiracy Theories

It’s all too easy to get caught up in a conspiracy theory.  You only have to look at the number of, otherwise sensible, Celtic supporters who will jump on any evidence of a wrong refereeing decision as incontrovertible proof of a conspiracy.  It is also easy to concoct a conspiracy simply be selecting the appropriate evidence and ignoring contrary evidence.

The recent video, showing a couple of Celtic players on-stage singing an Irish political song while members of the audience chanted their support for the IRA, has brought conspiracies in droves.  Celtic minded conspiracy theorists have jumped on a fake “second video” to conclude that the original video is a fake.  I’m sure that they would not have needed the fake video to come to that conclusion.  Rangers conspiracy theorists have pointed to the discrepancy between the way that the press jumped all over Donald Findlay’s singing of an Irish political song and their seeming reluctance to cover this story; sitting on the story for several days after they were aware of it.

There was a time when it was difficult to conjure up a good conspiracy.  You mostly had to rely on you and your mates to come up with evidence and it was difficult to disseminate your theory beyond this group.  They still popped up, growing up in instances like Willie Woodburn’s sine die ban, where a sense of injustice was universal amongst a group.  In recent years the conspiracy business has really taken off.  The internet has made it easy to get all of the “evidence” you need to “prove” any theory and has also made it trivial to disseminate the theory. 

This has led to two main conspiracy theories on the fan sites for the old firm and these in turn have become an article of faith for many fans.  For Celtic fans, this is that there is a refereeing/SFA conspiracy that favours Rangers.  For Rangers fans, it is the media favouring Celtic (although Celtic fans also like this one in the opposite direction).

Both of these are nonsense, of course, but it is easy to see the evidence that supports your beliefs and simply not notice the evidence that does not support your beliefs. 

The argument made about referees is that since Rangers have more fans (active or otherwise) than any other team in Scotland, it stands to reason that more referees will support them than any other team in Scotland.  There are two problems with this theory.  The first is that, in my experience, the majority of non-old firm fans have a deep dislike for Rangers so there will still be more football fans that dislike Rangers than like them.  The second problem is the assumption that referees go onto the pitch supporting one side or another.  I think this is pretty laughable, both from a logical point of view and based on the evidence.  So-called Rangers supporting referees are just as likely to give bad decisions against Rangers as for them.

As for the media. The simple fact is that almost without exception, the Scottish sporting press are a bunch of lazy, amateur hacks who will take the easy story when ever possible.  The editorial policy is to come up with something that will sell.  This normally means something that will scandalise at least one half of the old-firm.  So, if you don’t like what they are printing, stop buying it.

Conspiracies are an easy alternative to examining reality.  Stop subscribing to them and start seeing things as they are.


Headaches (Cont.)

Today, I woke up with a slight headache but stayed in bed all morning.  It was gone by the time I got up.

Charles Kennedy Deserves No Sympathy

I find it difficult to find much sympathy for ministers or party leaders who lose their position.  They know the job that they are taking on and that it could turn nasty on them.  Resigning is part of the job. 

Politicians get a bit hypocritical when they try to claim the moral high ground with this behaviour.  For instance, the BBC had a clash with the government and various members of the government suggested that if staff at the BBC had been politicians then they would have resigned.  This sounds like a reasonable argument until you remember that members of the government only resign their ministerial position.  You virtually never hear of someone resigning as a Member of Parliament because of incompetence or a scandal. 

So, if someone resigns from a ministerial post they are in fact still in a job with a salary of £59,095, more than twice the national average.  A bit different from someone resigning from a post that actually allows them to live.