Being the thoughts and writings of one Gustaf Erikson; father, homeowner, technologist.

This category contains posts about everything and nothing, or, in other words, I couldn't be bothered to find a category for them

Wednesday, 2006-04-12


Off for Easter

We’re leaving for Halland tomorrow to visit my parents over Easter. I’m looking forward to it, Spring is always a bit further along down South, and my sister + boyfriend will be there too.

Here’s hoping I get everything fixed tomorrow. Luckily I got the day off (in exchange for working a full day on another “half-day” later this year) so I should have enough time for last-minute laundry, dropping off the cats at my sister-in-law’s, packing etc.

Thursday, 2006-04-06


Surfacing

Light activity on the blogging front. I’ve been busy as a bee at work (tired, but it’s a good tired). Spring is in the air, and things are looking up at a few places. Some other things just stay the same, but life is about dealing with that situation.

Something that grabbed my attention was a mention in The Economist about Hottxt, which is basically SMS over data. I’ve long wondered when mobile IM will cut into the fat revenue stream that is SMS, but I didn’t see this coming. It makes a whole lot of sense, especially if the receiver of the text doesn’t have to be part of the service.

Thursday, 2006-03-16


RFID in new Swedish passports

E-passport logo

I picked up my new passport today, in the nick of time for the trip to London tomorrow. I asked if the new passport had an RFID-chip, and was told that it had. I guess it’s behind the little symbol on the front cover.

There’s not much info in Swedish about this. Specifically, I wonder what would happen if the chip is “accidentally” erased: is the passport still valid? (This is the case with US passports.) How do you check that as a citizen before being stopped at the US border?

Another question is what info the chip contains. Biometric data sounds pretty scary from a privacy standpoint, especially as it seems as though the encryption has been cracked.

I can’t believe that a contactless technology was chosen for this application. I’m gonna try to find a shielded cover for the passport as soon as possible. Too late for tomorrow’s trip, I’m afraid.

Sunday, 2006-03-05


Lost week

For some reason I’ve had Lloyd Cole’s Lost Weekend running through my head recently. But even though I haven’t had double pneumonia in a single room I’ve still felt pretty crummy. It started last Saturday and it’s been up and down all week. I went in to work on Wednesday: big mistake, Thursday I felt like death warmed over.

Yesterday I was convinced I had step throat or avian flu or something so I ponied up the double fee for a weekend consultation, only to be informed that it’s “just a cold”. At least I got that morphine-laced cough syrup to ease my throat. Basically I try to get a receipt when I visit the doctor’s since there’s nothing wrong with me every time I go there, and I like to feel like I’m getting some value for my money.

Anyway, it feels like I’m finally getting better, which is a good thing. I really need to get back to work, my poor PFY is inundated with issues, and there a couple of surdegar (lit. sour doughs, Swedish for stuff that’s been festering for far too long) that really need to be fixed.

I also feel that there’s a bunch of stuff that’s fundamentally b0rked in our processes, but I think I’ll have to take that up via official channels instead of just venting my spleen via the internal blog (or here).

Saturday, 2006-02-25


Turin Olympics

Apparently this year’s Winter Games have been Sweden’s best ever, medal-wise. But I haven’t seen squat on the TV (and we have no daily paper, so I miss a lot there too).

However, tomorrow is the “dream final” in ice hockey between Sweden and Finland — ancient rivals in this game — and I’ll do my best to see that at least.

Thursday, 2006-02-23


Hooters!

[No, it’s not what you think.]

I found something nice at TPB today: The Hooters: Greatest Hits. Man, that takes me back. Satellite, And We Danced, Blood from a Stone. Great stuff.

Saturday, 2006-02-11


A bit more hope

Many of my age are quite knowledgeable about the the global challenges that lie ahead of us. My generation, born in the 70s, grew up with a fundamental environmental awareness, Many of us have travelled the world and seen the gaps between rich and poor. Yet so few with knowledge and talent really put their potential to use for these issues.

I think that doubt is a paralysing obstacle — doubt that we can achieve results in these areas, doubt that small-scale action can have large scale impact. When the difficulties are immense and no solutions are in reach, it’s easier just to ignore the threats.

To mobilize much talent, I wish that there was more belief that the big, complex challenges of today really can be solved. A bit more hope and some courage could do wonders.

— David Sjögren

Original version from Visions from the Present, Compositions and Contributions from participants of the Tällberg Forum 2005, published by the Tällberg Foundation, Stockholm 2006.

Friday, 2006-02-10


[SvSe] David Sjögren

Allteftersom tiden blir det svårare att skaffa vänner. Kanske den gyllene tiden för detta är runt 20-årsåldern, då man äntligen kommer hemifrån och kan träffa andra människor i samma ålder och med liknande intressen.

För en lite nervös 22-åring på KTHs borggård en solig septemberdag tog det inte lång tid att inse att Stockholm inte var Lund — här kom en stor del av kurskamraterna ifrån stan, med egna färdiga sociala nätverk.

David Sjögren var, vid första anblicken, en av dessa. Vi var med i samma nolleuppdragsgrupp, och efter fullbordat värv (vi satte upp skyltar i Tekniska Högskolans T-banestation som påminde om att föhsarna ständigt var närvarande) samlades vi hemma i Davids föräldrahem för att sätta ihop en presentation för att slå resten av årskursen med häpnad. (Detta var tiden före PowerPoint, så det var diabilder och kassettband som gällde.)

Efteråt kom jag ihåg att jag tänkte att David visserligen var mycket trevlig, men att jag inte skulle ingå i hans sociala nätverk i framtiden.

Turligt nog hade inte David några sådana fördomar. Jag minns inte exakt hur det skedde, men vi började umgås mer och mer. Upptäckten att jag var fyra år äldre än honom minns jag slog honom med viss häpnad: så här i efterhand vet jag inte om jag var milt förolämpad eller smickrad, men det gick snabbt över. I mångt och mycket var David den äldre av oss.

När vi lämnade KTH var vi vänner, tillsammans med många andra. Vi kom att arbeta på samma arbetsplats, ett företag fylld av smarta människor (en del från KTH, tack och lov inte alla). David var otvivelaktigen en av de smartare, även om jag kunde slå honom på fingrarna i esoteriska datorfrågor. En gång medan jag gjorde mitt exjobb fick jag ett samtal från David. Han hade fått i uppdrag att sätta upp en Solaris-server och råkat skapa en fil som började med “-“. Som av en slump hade jag inte mer än några timmar läst om hur man blir av med en sådan fil, och mitt blixtsnabba svar “använd rm -- -fil” måste ha gjort djupt intryck.

Några år senare började ett halvt dussin av oss samlas hos varandra för herrmiddagar. Detta var tämligen välstädade tillställningar med mild one-up-manship vad gällde matlagningen. David var svår att slå på den fronten. Han hade alltid en massa goda recept på lager, och om han fick stå vid spisen mer än andra så var det desto mer uppskattat.

Det finns många saker jag kommer att sakna nu när David är borta. Hans glada humör, sättet han liksom spratt till när något roligt var i görningen, hans mail med länkar till Berglin-teckningar och filmer med biljardtrick. Men framförallt kommer jag att sakna honom som vän: som en person som alltid var där, som man i sin okunskap om vad som komma skall tror kommer att vara där för överskådlig framtid.

Saknaden efter David är djup, och jag påminns nästan dagligen om att han är borta. Jag är glad och stolt över att ha kunnat räkna honom som en av mina bästa vänner.

En minnesfond i Davids namn har startats. Den är för utvecklingen av unga afrikanska ledare:

  • David Sjöberg Memorial Fund, c/o Tällberg Foundation
  • Bankgiro 5774-6513.

Jag vill tacka Frederic och SSSK för informationsmötet där vi fick tillfälle att ställa frågor till dom som var med när det hände.

Thursday, 2006-02-09


Preparations

I’ve made most of the preparations for tomorrow:

  • polished my shoes with Kiwi Parade Gloss
  • found the 2 parts of my dark suit — the pants were on the top of the coat-rack, go figure
  • found my black necktie
  • washed a pair of dark socks and said to L. that these are mine, please don’t take them tomorrow
  • trimmed beard but not head

Still to do: iron the white shirt, and try to find something to cover my head that’s not a baseball cap.

Right now I’m writing this entry and listening to Reeperbahn.

Sunday, 2006-02-05


[SvSe] Ellen

SMS från Henrik:

Hej. Idag födde Liselotte en flicka som ska heta Ellen. Båda damerna är något trötta men mår mycket bra!

Thursday, 2006-02-02


A bad habit is back

The habit of staying up late, surfing Bloglines and generally not getting eight hours of beauty sleep (and at my age, you need the beauty sleep, believe you me). I’m as awake as I’m always am in the morning, but during the day my effectiveness at work goes towards zero, and I’m essentially marking time until the factory whistle blows.

Wednesday, 2006-02-01


Four things

Tagged by Frank.

Four jobs I’ve had

  • Shop worker at a small company that made packing machines
  • Bank clerk
  • Software contractor
  • Support specialist

FourOne movie I can watch over and over

  • Metropolitan

(this was harder than I thought, I don’t often re-watch movies)

Four places I’ve lived

  • Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
  • Halmstad, Sweden
  • Lund, Sweden
  • Stockholm, Sweden

Four TV shows I love, or have loved

  • Star Trek: The New Generation
  • Simpsons
  • Futurama
  • Friends

(Gah, that was predictable…)

Four places I’ve vacationed

  • Paris, France
  • Aegina, Greece
  • Vilshärad, a small summer village on Sweden’s West coast
  • Åland

Four of my favourite dishes

  • Pytt i panna
  • Fried rice
  • Skånegås
  • That dish with fried potatoes we used to eat in Lund each Friday

Four sites I visit daily

  • Bloglines
  • Gmail
  • Sluggy Freelance
  • The Register

Four places I’d rather be right now

  • In bed on a Friday night (no work next morning)
  • On a sunny beach with my wife
  • At an Aimee Mann concert
  • In an alternate reality where David is still alive

Four bloggers I’m tagging

  • Matt
  • Russ
  • Petter
  • Tarek

Sunday, 2006-01-29


Bad news

I got a phone call today telling me that an old university friend and former coworker had died after going through the ice while skating.

He was part of a larger group in a skating outing. Another person has died too, and a third has critical injuries.

He was in many ways one of the best and brightest guys I knew. It’s utterly unbelievable that he’s gone.

Tuesday, 2006-01-24


[SvSe] Biltullar

  • 06:30—06:59: 10 kr
  • 07:00—07:29: 15 kr
  • 07:30—08:29: 20 kr
  • 08:30—08:59: 15 kr
  • 09:00—15:29: 10 kr
  • 15:30—15:59: 15 kr
  • 16:00—17:29: 20 kr
  • 17:30—17:59: 15 kr
  • 18:00—18:29: 10 kr
  • 18:30—06:29: 0 kr

Friday, 2006-01-13


Stockholm’s congestion charges

I had my first taste of the trial of congestion charges in Stockholm today.

The trip into town at 8:30 was really smooth. There was a queue of vehicles for the access tunnel to the free motorway from South to North, but the route to work was nearly empty. I kept a constant 70 kph all the way through Södertunneln, almost unheard of unless it’s a weekend.

The trip in cost 20 SEK, I paid 15 SEK on the way out (a bit earlier in the afternoon than peak time).

I like congestion charges on principle, as they put a price on a resource that’s scarce and makes the cost visible, but I can’t agree with the way the charges are implemented. As the roads are owned by the state, only the state can take care of the revenue — as a tax. Due to Sweden’s public disclosure of public records, each and every passage through a toll station is public record — tied to the vehicle’s license plate number.

This raises obvious privacy issues. As far as I’m concerned, these need to be addressed if the trial becomes permanent.

Wednesday, 2006-01-04


Torg Potter

One of the online comics I regularly read is Sluggy Freelance, an involved amalgam of nerd humour, ghouls, vampires and demons from the Dimension of Pain.

Seeing that I’m on a Harry Potter jag ATM, I thought I’d point to the three parodies of HP in Sluggy: Torg Potter and the Sorceror’s Nuts, Torg Potter and the Chamberpot of Secretions, and Torg Potter and the President from Arkansas.

Although I think the Chamberpot is best, being creepy as well as funny, this Sunday strip from Sorceror’s captures the essence of Sluggy for me.

Sunday, 2006-01-01


New Year’s resolutions for 2006

  • Be a better husband and father
  • Improve my career prospects
  • Finish kitchen, garden and windows

Tuesday, 2005-12-27


Narnia

We went to see The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe on Christmas Day (big movie-going day in Sweden). I was impressed. The movie captured the feel of the book very well (at least as far as I remember, I haven’t read them for at least a decade), and the visual style was very near the illustrations I remember.

A co-worker complained that the look was too plasticky, at least compared to the Lord of the Rings movies, filmed near the same location, but I felt it didn’t detract from the movie at all. The tone of the novel is far from Tolkien’s darkness and — dare I say it? — grittiness.

Tilda Swinton was brilliant as the White Witch, with just the right combination of icy beauty and pure evil.

I know about the Christian content of course (and am fine with it), but what I found impressive was that the allegory was very “grown-up”. It wasn’t didactic at all. If you want to explain it to a kid, you’d have to explicitly make the connection between Aslan and Jesus Christ — it isn’t written in the movie (or the book). This means that the whole point of allegories is exposed, which can’t be bad at all. After all, if the Narnia books are allegories, can’t the Bible be it too?

All in all a very entertaining movie. And props to the producers for using British accents except for the evil wolves (and maybe Aslan — I can’t recall where his accent was from. Not Alabama, in any case.)

Saturday, 2005-12-24


Merry Christmas!

… and a happy New Year.

God jul och gott nytt år!

Wednesday, 2005-12-21


Four Christmas songs (that don’t suck)

  • Anders F Rönnblom, Det är inte snön som faller
  • Adolphson & Falk, Mer jul
  • Kirsty MacColl and The Pogues, Fairytale of New York
  • Weird Al Yankovic, The Night Santa Went Crazy

Note: I thought I had a list of five songs, but it turned out I didn’t.

Saturday, 2005-12-17


Kitchen progress

Finally some progress with the kitchen. Last weekend I put up the wallpaper, and today I started on the last 2 cabinets. I’ve build the plinth and will assemble the cabinets tomorrow.

Issues so far are with the wiring to the stove. I have no idea on how the big thick 3-phase cable will be able to fit behind the cabinets. I also don’t know how the stove top itself will be integrated in the cabinets, which are 2 x 120 drawer cabinets.

Another thing will be the problematic corner. I’m afraid I will still have a big unsightly hole in the join between the stainless steel workbench/sink and the workbench with the stove.

Friday, 2005-12-09


The draw

  1. England
  2. Paraguay
  3. Trinidad and Tobago
  4. Sweden

Phew, this’ll be a tough one. Sweden’s first game is 10 June.

Christmas and winter ales

I grabbed an assortment of seasonal ales at [Systemet] today. I’ll be trying them out during the week, hoping that they’ll be around in two weeks.

  • Shepherd Neame Christmas Ale 11347 — in its own cardboard package, natch
  • St. Peter’s Winter Ale 11306
  • Gouden Carolus Christmas 11371— this was really tasty. Dark and strong
  • Anchor Brewing Co’s Christmas Ale 11375 — this wasn’t so good, I’m skipping it

Update 2005-12-13: added links, opinion on the Gouden.

Sunday, 2005-11-27


Taking a “me” day

Yesterday I decided to do something about my frayed nerves and headed into town for (consumer) R&R.

I went to SF-Bokhandeln in Gamla Stan to stock up on Steven Erikson books. I just bought the first one in the Malazan series though, as I remembered that the second has a horrific battle scene at the end that I don’t really think I can handle right now.

Gamla Stan was of course packed with holiday shoppers standing around like lost sheep in the corners of the alleys, blocking the way with their umbrellas.

After that ordeal I grabbed something to eat at Söderhallarna and went to see the new Harry Potter flick on an impulse. The films are even more episodic than the books, which read as loosely coupled scenes hung together with the very thinnest of plot threads. The movies just lurch from one FX scene to another.

Sunday, 2005-11-20


Observations

Sindy and Ester.

Todo list updated.

Saturday, 2005-11-19


Observations

~>

Nothing sucks more than an iPod with a flat battery. The ‘hold’ button is there for a reason.

~>

The process of acquiring cats is underway. When I post pictures of them, this will finally be a real blog.

I remember listening to Lloyd Cole’s Bad Vibes album and playing Wolfenstein 3D at the same time. God I’m old.

I love the way you wear that Motorola generation chic, momma
[…]
You might call it ultra-violet radiation,
It’s only sunlight

— Lloyd Cole, So you’d like to save the world

Bad Vibes is way under-appreciated. Snagged for the ‘pod tonight.

Thursday, 2005-11-17


Observations

~>

Matt arrives safely in Kansas:

<Matt770> It is fscking cold

~>

Happy birthday, Erik!

~>

Mike Arrington gets the kiss of death from DaveW. Beware, Adam Curry is now persona non grata with the Davester, in spite of earlier praise.

~>

In T9, ‘scoble’ is ‘ramble’.

~>

It sucks that you cannot mark items as “Keep new” in Bloglines mobile, using the default browser on the 6630.

~>

James Robertsson, Pity the PR Professional:

I, like many others, have grown tired and weary of the self-satisfied, holier than thou, “A-list bloggers” who believe they hold disproportionate sway on the matters of the day.

~>

Isn’t it weird that MS VPN support under Unix is better in some ways than under Windows? I mean, you can configure your routing in Unix, I’ve yet to find out how to prevent my BT traffic to go via the corporate servers when using WinXP.

Note, I said “better” above, not simpler.

~>

“Command & Conquer: Generals” is even more USA-tastic than the previous incarnations. At least you have a fighting chance as playing as the “terrorists”. I started with China though, gotta love that holdover Soviet vibe they have in the game.

~>

Google Base is the next Orkut.

~>

Rui:

Had a very productive work day (mostly due to the fact that an internal event whisked away a whole team and it was way quieter than average).

[…] Which leads me to the conclusion that whoever came up with the asinine theory that open-space offices make people more productive must have been ignored (or, more likely, snubbed) by his/her colleagues every day.

Update 2005-11-19: Scoble corrects the third observation above.

Sunday, 2005-11-13


Mountains out of molehills

Dave Winer:

Singling me out for abuse should be, and I believe is, bad strategy, and bad representation for [Ratcliffe’s] client, Audible. They both owe an apology for this abuse. I don’t expect one from Ratcliffe (although I would accept it) but I do expect one from Audible.

Now where have I heard this before?

This is what Mitch Ratcliffe says on his disclaimer page:

You’ll probably not be surprised by the fact that I am often critical of companies and people with whom I do business, at least those of you who know me will not be: I get paid to be honest with people, to tell them exactly what I think and to pull no punches, whether in writing, consultative work or as an advisor.

I predict interesting consequences.

Update 2005-11-14: Mitch engages Dave in yet another post. Kudos to him for keeping his cool.

Update 2005-11-15: This is the last word as far as I’m concerned.

Last Friday

I really should have blogged this then (2005-11-11) but I simply didn’t have time (also, I was hung-over). I attended the weekly sub rosa breakfast gathering at KTH, which this day had a celebrity guest: Johan Norberg and was therefore packed. We were supposed to discuss the EU, but true to form the discussion rambled. I made the observation that there are at least three European Unions:

  1. The original (and best?) vision of a united Europe so tightly bound together that war becomes impossible. This is the favourite argument of the pro-EU debaters in Sweden, but it’s rapidly losing its shine as the world wars fade from memory. Some countries (the Baltic states come to mind) still subscribe to it, with good reason.
  2. A free-trade area. This is the “Anglo-Saxon” view, and personally I think this is what EU should be first, before trying to start to layer on federalism and especially “social justice”.
  3. A method of distributing agricultural aide. This is what the EU is now, I’m afraid.

No conclusions were reached in the time I was there. I had to leave after an hour to get to work. Maybe the riots in France were discussed, I don’t know.

The rest of the day was rather hectic. Being as I noted a bit hung-over didn’t help. Even so, I feel pretty good about work right now. My colleague and I have found a pretty effective way of dealing with the daily deluge of issues, and we’re even finding some time to handle unscheduled stuff. Of course, there’s a whole lot of issues remaining, such as the pay and pensions situation, but I feel I can’t do anything about that right now anyway.

The evening was a nice little Ubuntu-fest, as previously noted.

Tuesday, 2005-11-08


Giséla’s silverware

My good friend Giséla Linde has finally got an online showroom/store. It’s at www.textoform.net, and the designs look fantastic. I must say her husband Petter has done a great job with the web design too.

There’s a blog too, at Gisélas silverblogg (in Swedish).

Friday, 2005-11-04


Sleep? What’s that?

I came home late today after a phone meeting with the mothership, and should have gone straight to bed. I’m already running a sleep deficit, after all. But nooo, I just had to check some stuff out online first.

Thursday, 2005-11-03


More Kathleen

Sunshine after a rainy day: Kathleen Edwards’ “Building 55”.

Wednesday, 2005-11-02


Congratulations Ewan!

… for the BAFTA nomination!

And many thanks for TPN Rock. It really makes Friday’s special. I keep meaning to try to write it up, but I just can’t seem to find the time.

Sunday, 2005-10-16


Back from Åland

We’re safely back from the demilitarised, Swedish-speaking region of Åland. Many thanks to Petter, Gisela, and the girls for making our stay such a pleasant one!

Friday, 2005-10-14


Åland revisited

We’re on our way to Åland again, “we” being me, wife + one kid. We’ll be giving a lift to Linus, our systems guy who hails from the archipelago.

Updates to follow.

An aside: I tried to find out from my previous entry the exact when I was there last time, but I think my blosxom entries have screwed them up. I really need a more reliable way to keep the dates static on this blog…

Friday, 2005-09-30


TPN Rock jitters

So it’s Friday, I eagerly look for the the latest TPN Rock show in iTunes. Nada! A timeout! Argh!!

Apparently I wasn’t the only one. But I could get a preview copy from the man himself, and found that Christin Cook makes great music (if not great websites, that one resized my Firefox, a hanging offence but one that I’ll forgive this time).

Anyway, the show will be back on the web shortly.

Monday, 2005-09-26


Gray day

Autumn is finally here with a gray overcast day. The dim sky seems reflected in my fellow-passengers, who all seem ugly or deformed.

Of course, everything is FUBARed at work too. Why not, it’s Monday…

Update: the day didn’t fulfil its awful promise, thankfully.

Sunday, 2005-09-25


35

Being born plumb start on a decade was a boon when I was younger, I just had to remember the current year and do some simple arithmetic to find out how old I was, or how old I would be in some time in the future. I remember thinking of the year 2000 as pretty impossibly far away, I’d be thirty.

Well, time marches on as the cliche goes, and here we are, 5 years past the turn of the millennium[1], and I have kept up with its pace, more or less.

I don’t subscribe to the theory that even multiples of ten are the significant turning points in life (20, 30 etc). I read someplace that multiples of seven are more important, and so far, this has been the case (mostly in retrospect, I think). Whether this year will turn out to be some sort of turning point, I don’t know. I doubt it. But I’ve been thinking more and more about the fact that I’m getting older. Mostly this is about the fact that I can’t go back. Student life, single life, unmarried life — that’s behind me. (Hopefully!). So it’s time to knuckle down and accept that life is in front of me, take some more responsibilities, and move on to the next level.

I’ll keep you posted on the progress on that.

[1] counting as common people do, not as pedants.

Friday, 2005-09-23


Double whammy?

Immediately after Katrina I wondered what would happen to the US and the world economy if another disaster struck in the US in the months after Katrina. Now we have a category 4 hurricane poised to strike the Gulf Coast again, the freeways are blocked with fleeing vehicles and the oil derivatives exchanges are thinking about staying open for the weekend. Scary. I must remember to fill up the gas tank today.

Update: seems the worst didn’t happen. Good.

Tuesday, 2005-09-20


[SvSe] Önskelista 2005

Önskelista för 2005: födelsedag och jul.

  • läderfodral för iPod mini
  • pannlampa för sängläsning
  • något från läslistan
  • kavaj-liknande plagg — antingen en snygg modern kavaj eller jeansjacka
  • god whisky eller calvados
  • biljardkö

Friday, 2005-09-16


Chakula

Björn came down from Uppsala yesterday and we wandered over to Kungsholmen looking for sustenance. Luckily he remembered a review of an Africa-themed restaurant called Chakula so we headed there. Even luckier they had a table free for us.

We went the whole hog with entrees, main course, and dessert. I had the eponymous “chakula” while Björn chose the swordfish. To this we drank a very nice wine, Morkel Malbec 2003 from Bellevue Estate Wines.

We ended up spending quite a lot of money, but it’s not as if we do this often anyway.

Tuesday, 2005-09-13


Bad car day

Not only was the car flunked in the yearly safety inspection, I also managed to bump into my boss’ Merc when parking.

I was very careful driving home, and got honked at by cab drivers for my pains.

Monday, 2005-09-12


Pretty in pink

I got my manly pink iPod Mini today (thanks, Stefan!) I’ve only filled it with 420 songs yet, and I’m looking forward to commuting by subway in the future.

Sunday, 2005-09-11


Back from Dalarna

Well, we’re back from our kräftskiva (lit. crayfish party, a Swedish tradition) in Sågen, which is in Nås Finnmark in the region of Dalarna.

A lot of crayfish were eaten, a lot of akvavit was drunk, and a good time was had by all. We tried to relive the party feeling of nine years ago, but we’re all a lot older (as witnessed by the three kids L, L, and L, all grown up now and staring at their parents in horror as they disolved into mawkish sentimentality) so we made do with impromptu linedance lessons from M. And no, I did not reprise my infamous naked dance from 1997…

Friday, 2005-09-09


Finally

… ordered my examensring (graduation ring) from KTH.

The design is a white band with oak leaves and “KTH” inside two raised bands of red gold. The white band can be platinum or white gold. As my wedding band is white gold, I chose that option. I also chose the thinner band of the two available, because I’m planning to wear it on the same finger as my wedding band. This had the additional attraction of being the cheaper option.

Pics are hard to come by online, I’ll try to post one when the ring is finished.

Monday, 2005-09-05


Late

It’s 20 past midnight, Monday tomorrow*, what the hell am I still doing up? Especially as I’ve hit reload on Bloglines too many times already, there’s still isn’t anything new to read.

Random notes:

  • The cover of Zevon’s Keep Me in Your Heart with Jose Calderón and Jennifer Warnes rocks
  • I’ve already got a CD’s worth of email in my Gmail account
  • It should be easy to implement a “latest referrers” feature for this weblog, in the proverbial 3 lines of Perl — if I could be arsed to figure out a regexp for the Apache logs
  • Some sort of interface for these kinds of “random notes” would be cool: updateable via mobile phone?
  • Schneier critiques Hogwarts security. Whatever next? For what it’s worth, I reckon Sauron made a fundamental mistake in investing all his power in a single, easy-to-lose item.

* Actually, it’s already Monday. The horror.

Sunday, 2005-09-04


Splendid Isolation

I’m putting tinfoil up on the windows
Lying down in the dark to dream
I don’t want to see their faces
I don’t want to hear them scream

— Warren Zevon

Amusement park day

We spent a day at Gröna Lund (warning: Flash) with my sister-in-law’s family. The whole gang was there, and a good time was had by all. We met my cousin too and his son (my namesake), to L’s delight.

I tried the “Extreme” ride, which was less horrible than it looks from the ground. Another highlight was the “Pop-expressen”.

The departure was marred by H and V missing the last kiddie ride of the evening by 5 seconds, sending V into a paroxysm of grief, but by then it was time to go home anyway. SL showed an unusual humane side by letting L ride for free, and also by offering to let off half the passengers at an unscheduled later stop at the central station on the way to the garage.

Heavy Weather

The coverage of Katrina reminds me of Sterling’s novel Heavy Weather. Obviously, Sterling himself has made the connection too.

The whole situation is making me pretty glum. It’s really shown a dark side of the United States, a country that’s prepared to spend billions to invade and then “rebuild” a foreign country, but that apparently feels that if its own citizens can’t get out of the way of a hurricane, they only have themselves to blame. Sauve qui peut, indeed.

I thought the whole point of Homeland Security was the security of people in the homeland. But maybe the (black) South isn’t part of the homeland?

Update: none of this was unexpected:

In the aftermath of such a disaster, New Orleans would be dramatically different, and likely extremely diminished, from what it is today. Unlike the posthurricane development surges that have occurred in coastal beach communities, the cost of rebuilding the city of New Orleans. dramatically damaged infrastructure would reduce the likelihood of a similar economic recovery. And, the unique culture of this American original that contributed jazz and so much more to the American culture would be lost.

Should this disaster become a reality, it would undoubtedly be one of the greatest disasters, if not the greatest, to hit the United States, with estimated costs exceeding 100 billion dollars. According to the American Red Cross, such an event could be even more devastating than a major earthquake in California. Survivors would have to endure conditions never before experienced in a North American disaster.

Update: that’s not all, the survivors are now “insurgents” too.

Saturday, 2005-09-03


TPN Rock #24

The Rock Show #24 is out!

I had to burn this to a CD to listen at in the car on the way home: a podcast fits into a CD together with a normal music CD, leaving minimal wasted bits on the CD-R.

Also check out this interview with Ewan at Step Out of The Line.

Friday, 2005-09-02


Katrina and New Orleans

Charles Stross:

A couple of hundred billion here, a couple of hundred billion there — pretty soon we’re talking real money.

What are the likely consequences (locally and globally) of blowing a 5% of GDP sized hole under the waterline of the US economy?

(Via BoingBoing.)

Update: Before and after pics of New Orleans.

(Via DaveW.)

Tuesday, 2005-08-30


Mondays

Rui:

If Mondays were portrayed in shaving commercials, they would be the grating concrete surface the actor would use to sand off his beard.

Update 17:40: ‘Grating concrete surface’ is right. This has been a crappy crappy day. Even if it isn’t a Monday.

Sunday, 2005-08-28


TPN Rock #23

I’ve dissed the whole podcasting phenomenom before, but I must say that Ewan Spence’s The Rock Show is podcasting as it should be: one person with a vision and a goal and the time to hunt down obscure bands that won’t get a showing anywhere else.

I just finished up listening to #23 and it was really great. I started listening coming home Friday from a beer+dinner with the guys from work, and it really made the bus journey special.

The rock show is now rooted in my bloglines list, and I’m looking forward to the next installment.

Saturday, 2005-08-20


Hilarious

(Via Linus.)

Thursday, 2005-08-18


The (un)making of the neutron bomb

Very interesting article at BoingBoing about the man behind the neutron bomb.

Tuesday, 2005-08-16


Hmmm…

And Americans wonder why the rest of the world think they’re stupid:

Nice work lads, if you work for A9 here’s a couple of hints. London, UK: Population 7.4 million 20th biggest City in the world, bigger than every US city other than the septic sprawl of New York City. London, KY: Population 5.4 thousand, small enough to be considered a village in the real world, a tenth of the size of the small town I live in, barely big enough to appear on the map. Which one would you choose if someone said “I’m in London”?

Maybe these people think that Paris, Texas is the haute couture capital of the world…

Monday, 2005-08-15


Kitchen blues

Didn’t get squat done today (not from general laziness, as is all too often the case, but for other unrelated reasons). I tried getting some tiles off, but I only hacked big holes in the drywall instead. Also, I think I made a big mistake in trying to alleviate the mismatched floor level between the kitchen and the dining area. I think we need to remove a strip of the floor along the former wall; but this will mean we have to get a huge lintel to cover the gap.

Also, the new floor isn’t very durable. Some dropped plates have put blemishes in the finish. And there’s no way I’m ripping out the cabinets to replace the damaged planks…

All in all, not a good end to the weekend. And tomorrow is work day. Whoop-de-doo.

But I think I can handle the tiles with a better chisel and better technique. New chance next weekend.

Sunday, 2005-08-14


As who doesn’t?

Russ: “What I really need is minions.”

Saturday, 2005-08-13


Serendipity

I’ve never heard of the Robertson screw before today — I stumbled across it in Wikipedia while reading about drywall. And then in a totally unrelated blogcrawl (following the discussion on why OPML sucks) I found the following reference to Robertson in a scrumptiously designed blog.

Weird.

Kitchen renovation, day 11

This weekend it was time to go hack the kitchen again. I blocked up the door from the kitchen to hte old hallway with a sheet of drywall (gipsvägg in Swedish). Lessons learned: use the right tools ( I was missing a keyhole saw), and measure correctly.

Thursday, 2005-08-11


Last.fm rocks!

Last.fm is a site that provides personal radio channels. You can prime it with a Winamp plugin so that the service learns what music you like. Then you can download a little app that handles the channel selection and streaming for you.

All in all, a very nifty service. I’ve listened to channels based on my own choices, and on the choices of fans of Aimee Mann and Lloyd Cole, and already found some artists I’d like to listen more to (specifically Ricky Lee Jones and Paul Westerberg.)

Naturally there are links galore to the specific artists and albums, which is where I guess Last.fm’s profits come from. It’s all very low-key, with no intrusive advertising (unlike Yahoo!, who have a similar service). Also, the sound quality is very good.

For a person like me, essentially sitting in front of computers all day and with limited time and patience for browsing records stores, Last.fm is a great way to learn about new music and artists. Especially considering that my musical tastes gelled around 1992, and haven’t expanded since then. This means that there’s a long tail of music that’s not otherwise exposed through “normal channels” — radio and TV.

Have a look at my profile at last.fm/user/gerikson/.

Saturday, 2005-08-06


Kitchen renovation pics

Now at last on Flickr: my kitchen renovation pics.

View in reverse chronological order, dunno how to fix that.

Friday, 2005-08-05


Intelligent design

Doing my bit to spread the truth about Intelligent Design.

Update: the fight just got serious

Thursday, 2005-08-04


Scrap the Shuttle

I’ve long considered the Space Shuttle to be a useless drain of resources for the American public, but this post is much better than anything I could write. Scrap the Shuttle and devote the money to unmanned missions instead. We’re not going to be saved by space anyway.

Sunday, 2005-07-31


Kitchen renovation, day 10

Whoohoo! Halfway mark. We have a working sink and dishwasher. We also have an oven (not sure if the wiring can handle it though, must check) and the old hob cabinet is still working. So it’s a functional kitchen, although with almost no storage.

I’m off to Halland for a week, but the next step is to close off the little door, redo the tiling, and install 2 long cabinets of drawers. The hob will be in the work surface above them.

Saturday, 2005-07-30


Kitchen renovation, day 9

My brother-in-law Niclas came by to help, and together we got the fridge, dishwasher and sink installed. Unfortunately some critical parts were missing, so nothing is fixed to the walls yet. Tomorrow we be finished with the water-related parts at least (sink and dishwasher). This means that the unsightly heap of dirty dishes standing outside the bathroom will vanish, at least.

Friday, 2005-07-29


Kitchen renovation, day 8

Finally finished the floor, and started on the furnishings. First out was a cabinet for the oven.

Wednesday, 2005-07-27


Kitchen renovation, days 1 to 7

Time to detail what we’ve been doing with the kitchen the last week.

  • Removed a large part of the wall separating it from the dining room. This wall was perhaps not structural, but it supported a wall above it consisting of 1x3” planks, horisontal planking, reeds and a whole lot of plaster. So we installed a 1x5” beam to hold it up.

  • Ripped out all the old kitchen furnishings — we’re keeping the fridge and the dishwasher.

  • Removed the old laminate floor, laid a new subfloor consisting of board, and we’re installing a new laminate floor with tile pattern.

Todo

  • Finish the floor

  • Install the new furnishings: sink, dishwasher cabinet, and oven/hob.

  • Board up the wall between the kitchen and the old hall.

Thoughts

  • Removing walls is hard — probably should have got a professional to do it. Also, plaster is a bitch to remove.

  • Tiling patterns use up more of the planks than a wood pattern does. Also, you have to be more careful where you start.

Pics will be up as soon as I can remove them from the phone.

Update: I would have finished the floor today, if the blade to the electric jigsaw hadn’t snapped while sawing the last effing plank… and did I think to pick up a new one when I was at the hardware store today? Noooo.

Sunday, 2005-07-10


Home again

Home after a leisurely trip north, with stops at IKEA in Jönköping and Burger King in Linköping. Tempers were frayed at an unexpected queue south of Södertälje, but now we’re here and settled in. Even got some breakfast for tomorrow. Phew.

Now I have 2 weeks worth of feeds and comics to browse…

Wednesday, 2005-06-22


One day left

Just one day left at work before vacation. w00t!

Tuesday, 2005-06-21


Gack

After our bath, I found that the bathroom drain was blocked. Not pleasant to fix.

Sunday, 2005-06-05


Distractions

Two brightly shining candles in the general gloom: Star Wars Jedi Knight - Jedi Academy and Star Trek: The New Generation. Some kind soul has provided the latter as umpteen DVD images on The Pirate Bay, and another even kinder soul has downloaded them and provided my with the discs. I’m now nearing the end of the first season.

I had a little trouble enabling lightsaber dismemberment in Jedi Academy. In the previous game in the series, Jedi Outcast, there was a simple console cheat which made slicing stormtroopers into salami possible. This option is gone in JA, maybe to preserve LucasArts’ squeecky clean image. But you can still enable it by following the instructions below (%install% refers to where the game is installed, on my system it’s c:\Program Files\LucasArts\Star Wars Jedi Knight Jedi Academy).

  1. Open the %install%\GameData\base\jaconfig.cfg file in a text editor

  2. Enter the following lines ( or replace them if they exist ):

    • seta g_saberMoreRealistic “99”
    • seta g_saberEntMarks “99”
    • seta g_dismemberment “99”
  3. Save the file

I have a autoexec.cfg file in the same directory containing the line helpusobi 1, the cheat mode enabler in JO. I don’t know if it’s necessary, though.

Another cool option seems to be g_saberpickupabledroppedsabers 1, which is supposed to give you the ability to pick up other lightsabers. Haven’t had time to test it yet though. Update: doesn’t seem to work.

The French and Dutch No

I agree with Frank. The Dutch and French No’s are a symptom of what’s wrong with the European project: a feeling that it’s an elitist project, a plaything for (ironically) Gallic and Teutonic empire builders in Brussels. The EU seems incapable of explaining to its citizens what it is for.

Update: I read The Economist’s analysis of the French debate — published before the referendum — and heard some more about the Dutch premises on the radio. Predicably, the vote was not really about the EU per se, but rather on the internal political situation in those countries.

The French debate had three parts: worry about the dilution of French influence abroad now that EU has been expanded to 25 members, many of them pro-American; concerns about the economy and the erosion of a “social” Europe; and anger at the political elite, who have too often used “Brussels” as an excuse to push through reforms that they consider necessary, but which were unpopular at home.

Wednesday, 2005-06-01


It was twenty-eight years ago today…

Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band was released June 1, 1967.

Saturday, 2005-04-30


Ninja Me Down at Fryshuset, 2005-04-29

Yet another live act tonight! My co-worker Daniel is the lead singer and guitarist of Ninja Me Down, destined for rock greatness! Another plus is that now I can officially call him Röck-Daniel, to differentiate him from the other Daniel with the same initials.

Friday, 2005-04-29


Kathleen Edwards at Debaser, 2005-04-28

I saw Kathleen Edwards at Debaser yesterday. Really good show.

The opener was some soporific Swede calling himself Leslee. Opener’s can blow, and this one sure did.

After that, Kathleen opened with Pink Emerson Radio from the latest album Back to me. She was awesome. Only regret is that I didn’t get a signed CD afterwards.

Friday, 2005-04-22


Digital camera specs

I’m planning on buying a digital camera. This is just a list of things I should think about.

  • Rather cheap: ~300 EUR
  • Resolution: minimum 3 Mpx, 5 or more preferred
  • Cheap storage per Mb => CF
  • Optical viewfinder
  • Good battery life
  • USB/mini USB 2.0 interface
  • Good startup time

Frenzied reading of The Luminous Landscape have led to more esoteric criteria:

  • Histograms
  • RAW mode
  • Photoshop :-)

Watchlist

  • Canon PowerShot A75
  • Canon PowerShot A85
  • Konica-Minolta Dimage Z2
  • Panasone DMC-FZ5

Wishlist

These cameras are much more expensive, I’ve included them here as wishful thinking.

  • Konica-Minolta A2. L-L review
  • Pentax Option 555 (recommended by CalleM)
  • Pentax *ist DS — inspired by this article.
  • Canon G6
  • Olympus E-300

Newsweek on Patty Hearst and the SLA

Scanned Newsweek article about Patty Hearst (via Boing Boing).

This story fascinated me when I was younger, mostly because it was in that awkward timeframe where it was still “news” and not history, and I didn’t know enough about research to find out enough about it through traditional channels (the Vietnam war was also part of the same “blind spot”). Now of course, there’s more info than you can shake a stick at.

The eternal Thompson gunner, still wandering through the night
Now it’s ten years later but he still keeps up the fight
In Ireland, in Lebanon, in Palestine and Berkeley
Patty Hearst heard the burst of Roland’s Thompson gun
And bought it

— Warren Zevon

Wednesday, 2005-04-13


Brilliant scam

SaveToby.com is a site where a guy demands $50,000 or he’ll let kill and eat a helpless baby bunny.

According to his own accounts, he’s already got more than $18,000.

At first I was a bit shocked — not that someone would eat a rabbit, or even that someone would demand money not to eat it — but that people would actually pay him the money to not eat the rabbit.

After some thought, I’m still shocked. That I didn’t figure this out myself. Problem is, he’s hard to copy-cat. If he’s smart, he’s patented the “give me money or I’ll eat the bunny” method of relieving clueless idiots their hard-earned cash. And what’s cuter and more edible than a bunny? Nothing, that’s what!

I wish him the best of luck. At best, he gets a heck of a lot of money. At worse, he still gets a lot of money, and a nice, tasty meal! Tip: don’t forget the garlic.

Update: This as a hoax, according to Snopes.

Tuesday, 2005-04-05


Kids these days

I was walking through the Sabbatsbergs hospital area this morning when I met a gaggle of 9-10 year olds coming in the opposite direction. When I’d passed one of them called out to me.

“Can I ask you a question?”

“Sure.”

“Who’s most known (mest känd in Swedish), the Beatles or Abba?”

This question through me. Stupidly I said “Abba, I guess.”

My triumphant interlocutor turned to his friend and said “See?”.

I turned to go, but the vanquished Beatles proponent ran after me. “Are you sure?”

On second thought, I had to concede that the Fab Four had the edge over Abba in global mindshare.

The first kid said “Aaaww, you always have to persuade them!”

Monday, 2005-03-14


KP duty

I spent the morning at my sons daycare, preparing food for about 50 people. It’s a parent’s cooperative, rather common in Sweden, and as a parent you have to do stuff sometimes. Our place is pretty lenient, you have a week a year when you’re on standby for if someone is sick or on vacation. Then you’re in the kitchen, where you do the least harm.

With the help of the excellent instructions by the regular cook, I managed to produce quite a nice meal. A nice change of pace from the regular grind.

Wednesday, 2005-03-09


Happy (belated) birthday, Jim!

Jim’s birthday was yesterday. I missed this… I blame the voices in my head.

Sunday, 2005-03-06


Lost weekend

(The weekend was far from lost, but I can’t say the word “weekend” without associating to the Lloyd Cole song. That’s how far gone I am — Lloyd Cole overdose, indeed.)

Taking a break from the stress of daily life, we left the kid at his aunt and his two cousins and took a room at Torpa Pensionat in Södertälje. Heartily recommended. Our room was the one on the bottom right of this page. Respect four-poster beds, baby!

After a good dinner at Glashyttans Wärdshus we vegged out in front of late night TV. Breakfast was in a large, sunny room with a view of the frozen sound outside, brilliantly light by the morning sun. Stockholm is beautiful in this weather, strong March sunlight shining on snow-covered ground.

“English genius”

I took The Commonly Confused Words Test (after a tip from Michael’s blog), and received the following score:

English Genius

You scored 93% Beginner, 93% Intermediate, 87% Advanced, and 88% Expert!

You did so extremely well, even I can’t find a word to describe your excellence! You have the uncommon intelligence necessary to understand things that most people don’t. You have an extensive vocabulary, and you’re not afraid to use it properly! Way to go!

There’s only one thing an English genius can say after getting this score: w00t!!!

Saturday, 2005-02-05


Project Pluto

An unshielded nuclear reactor, flying at Mach 3 at treetop level and designed to drop hydrogen bombs was nearly constructed in the 1950’s.

From the article:

Like Hula Hoops and Slinkies, Pluto is now an anachronism, an all-but-forgotten remnant of an earlier — but not necessarily more innocent — era. At the time, however, deadly as it would have been, Pluto had the almost irresistible appeal of any radically new technological innovation. Like the H-bombs it would carry, Pluto was “technically sweet” to many of the scientists and engineers who worked on it.

The “technically sweet” explains a lot. The technical challenges were enormous, but could be overcome. I guess this explains why many engineers can work with weapon systems — even though they’re to be used for killing people, the technical challenges are often cutting edge and really interesting. Project Pluto would have been fun to work on.

(Via Boing Boing)

Update: Charlie Stross has read his history and incorporates Project Pluto in A Colder War.

Thursday, 2005-02-03


Hultsfred!

In a hopefully succesful repeat of last year’s visit to Arvika we’re planning on heading to Hultsfred this summer.

Hultsfred is the bigger scene, and is more often colder and damper. But what the hey…

One thing that bugs me is that the signed acts page doesn’t have a syndication feed. Of course, you can pay for an SMS service instead, which is probably more youth-friendly, not to say more profitable for the organisers (at 3 SEK/SMS).

Hmm, can’t be that hard to screen-scrape that page…

Monday, 2005-01-31


A good watch

I ended up looking at an Inspector Morse DVD last night before going to sleep. Nothing remarkable really, Morse and Lewis go to Italy to investigate a strange death and Morse gets it on with some opera soprano. The story was pretty thin, with the bulk of the energy going into showing gorgeous Italian landscapes and villas.

Not bad, sez I. Eye and brain candy. Competent actors. A story that pulls you along. In a word, a good watch. I see too little of that nowadays.

Wednesday, 2005-01-26


Salsa!

I attended my first lesson in LA salsa[1] today. I need to get some exercise, and I enjoy dancing, so when Josefin said she was going to go I hopped on too.

There were three guys and about 14 girls, who all seemed to have taked ten lessons. I could not follow the rhythm, mostly because the moves aren’t automatic yet, but I have no problem with that. I just need to work them into the brainstem and then start working on the finer points.

Of course, I may never get that far, but until then I think it’ll be great fun.

[1] There are apparently different versions of salsa. Cuban salsa is rotationary, while LA salsa is danced in line. There’s also New York salsa, but it’s not as big.

Monday, 2005-01-24


Different meanings

I’ve always regarded the acronym ASAP as a “do it now!” But I’ve been using it a while professionally in the intended meaning, as soon as possible. I sure hope everyone understand that that means I really will look at it as soon as possible, but that other things may have precedence.

Sunday, 2005-01-23


Parking hog

The parking lot at the Globen shopping centre was almost full this afternoon, which is why the sight of this big fat Porsche Cayenne taking up two spots was a bit startling.

He’s damn lucky no-one had keyed him already.

The tax wasn’t paid either. I took down the license number, any free-lance parking offence vigilantes are welcome to contact me or to use their 3l337 hacking skills to find it in this very blog entry!

Thursday, 2005-01-20


Windfall

I got an offer to withdraw my shares of an employee-benefit fund (maintained by the bank I worked with on and off during my university years). It’s a tidy little sum that’ll come in handy to plug some holes in the household budget the coming months.

Sometimes you don’t just get bills in the mail!

Happy Birthday, Russ!

Russ is 33 today!

Happy Birthday!

(The file is a .3gp movie recorded from my phone. I honestly don’t know how to view it without Nokia’s tools, but I’m betting Russ can.)

Wednesday, 2005-01-19


Is Iran next?

I heard on the radio that the Bush administration is considering attacking Iran this summer. Have they learnt nothing of the debacle in Iraq?

Iraq was a brutal dictatorship, Iran at least has the rudiments of democracy and a form of rule of law. The liberalising influences are fighthing an uphill struggle against the hardliners. The clerics would welcome an American attach with open arms — it would legitimise their rule in the eyes of the disillusioned people of Iran. Any chance for a pro-Western government from within Iran would be lost for decades.

Of course Iran’s possible possession of nuclear weapons is a serious issue. But if the US was to attempt to disable that threat through military action, it would create a threat to itself far worse than any atomic bomb.

I can’t believe Bush and his cronies are even thinking about this.

Update: Seymour Hersh’ article in the New Yorker, which was the basis for the radio programme.

Saturday, 2005-01-15


Pictures from Titan!

Pictures from the Huygens probe to Titan.

This is huge. This is fantastic. Pictures from a moon orbiting Saturn. After 7 years, the probe reaches its goal and produces pictures that look exactly like those from Mars.

(Via Ned Batchelder.)

Update: Ken MacLeod lives the first chapter from Cosmonaut Keep.

Hendry survives

I note with relief that Kai Hendry survived the South Asian earthquake.

I only know Kai slightly via IRC, but he’s the only person I know who was directly affected by the catastrophe. Although I’m happy to learn he’s OK, it’s small comfort when so many others have been killed or bereft of loved ones.

Wednesday, 2005-01-12


Getting going

Finally started doing something I should have done a long time ago (Mobitopians will know what it is exactly). As always in these situations, I wonder what took me so long.

Tuesday, 2005-01-11


Cubicles

Where I work, we dream of having this working environment.

And no, I’m not kidding.

Sunday, 2005-01-09


Tricks of the trade

Ned links to the Tricks of the Trade blog.

As an ex-physics student, the fact that I haven’t thought of this before annoys me no end.

This tip is perhaps overtly cynical, but I guess it’s true too.

Thursday, 2005-01-06


Catatonia

I’ve messed up my circadian rythms. I can’t get to sleep until 2 AM. Last night I went to bed upstairs, thinking I’d be awakened by the kid at 9, but everyone slept until 12. This isn’t good.

Monday, 2005-01-03


Back to work

Back in the office after the holidays.

Well, that wasn’t fun.

At least there seems to be consensus that we can’t carry on exactly as before. And perhaps we can do something about the seating arrangments.

Sunday, 2005-01-02


Cashing in

In the last few weeks, a few of my favourite artists have had songs in highly visible spots:

  • Lisa Loeb, We Could Still Belong Together in the movie Legally Blonde

  • Aimee Mann sings Driving Sideways in the commercial for the Audi A4

  • Matthew Sweet’s Girlfriend in the movie Crossroads with Britney Spears(!)

Some corporate shill of a A&R hack somewhere in movie/ad-land has some good taste. I hope that these appearances at least send some money in the creators direction.

Note Checking out Sweet’s IMDB entry I find to my horror that he has co-written songs with the Hansons… dunno what to make of that.

Friday, 2024-12-31


Looking back on 2024

2024 was not a good year for our family. Two members have illnesses, one acute, one chronic. None of them are deadly, but they affect us all, leading to a high level of stress and uncertainty.

Yet for others the year has been much, much worse. For the thousands of Swedish tourists in Thailand these holidays, the year was ending in ease and comfort — until the tsunami came. Whatever problems this family has had and still has, we are still together, all of us are alive. Our differences and disagreements can be addressed and perhaps resolved. Bitterness and anger have a chance of being confronted and assuaged. Rifts can heal, if we let them.

I have no way of imagining how it is to lose a loved one — a wife, a son. My mind filled with the horrific images of children swept out to sea and drowning. I hope I can do something to help, but fear the inadequacies of my response to any requests for it. At least we have made an economic contribution.

Today, New Year’s Eve, we will be setting the house in order and preparing a meal for us and our friends. The pressure to make everything perfect is there, as is the possibilities for anger and irritation. I’ll try to keep perspective, not get stressed, and take the time to play around and have fun. Because that’s the one thing many many people are wishing they could do right now, and can’t.

Why should I be one of them?

Wednesday, 2024-12-29


Back online

We’re back from Halland — I’ve trying to unwind from staring at headlights in the dark for six hours.

It’s been a very nice Christmas for us personally, but hearing the news from South Asia kind of puts a damper on the joyous tidings.

Wednesday, 2024-12-22


Offline Christmas

Tomorrow morning, weather permitting, me, the wife and the youngest will be heading south to my parent’s in Halland. We won’t be taking a computer with us, and connectivity in the boondocks can be a bit spotty. So I’ll probably be offline until just before New Year’s Eve.

Merry Christmas or (insert appropriate pagan ceremony here) to all!

Saturday, 2024-12-18


Mobi-meet!

Jim and his wife were in Stockholm this weekend, so we hooked up and had a lunch/beer in a vegetarian place on Söder. Unfortunately, I was still affected by the Christmas party the night before, and was a bit under the weather. I’ll have to go to Whitstable to collect my pint from Jim.

Update 2024-12-18: here’s Jim’s write-up of the trip.

Thursday, 2024-12-16


Eating my words

Humble pie time. A few months back, I said I wouldn’t buy a 6630 (on Mobitopia no less!) Well, I have to retract that. Publicly. In full.

In addition I’ve slammed podcasts several times. But I have to confess I’ve started listening to them. Mostly to the excellent ‘casts from IT Conversations, but also to Adam Curry. I’m trying hard to stay away from Dave Winer, but it’s like a scab that you have to pick — disgusting, yet strangely irresistible.

Flickr!

Now that I have a cameraphone, I can use Flickr as ghod intended. Check out my output at http://www.flickr.com/photos/gerikson/.

By the way, Telia’s SMTP server is mail1.telia.com. I tried finding it from their site, no dice. Google is your friend.

Wednesday, 2024-12-15


New phone number

A new phone and a new network. My phone number from now on is

+46 (0)70 257 7860

I’ll be carrying my old SIM around for a while, and will be listening to messages for a while after that.

Sunday, 2024-11-28


The Ukraine splitting up?

The eastern parts of the country are seeking autonomy.

I must admit I’ve totally missed the whole run-up to this.

Saturday, 2024-11-27


Beer night out

David and I went to Akkurat yesterday to sample their extensive assortment of Belgian and British beers and ales.

We started with a Carolus Tripel, followed by a La Chouffe to the meal. Afterwards we each had a pint of real ale. Akkurat has a certificate on the wall saying that they’re at least as good as a British pub in pulling pints, so there was no doubt it was as close to the real thing that it was possible to get. Mine was a Sneck Lifter by Jennings.

I could use more practice in drinking British ales. The prescribed temperature is simply too high for my enjoyment, raised as I am on a diet of cold lagers. And the essential foodiness of the Sneck was a bit much after a full meal.

I’m looking forward to trying more, though.

Thursday, 2024-11-25


Too good to last

After nearly a week of heavy snowfall and subzero temperatures — i.e., real winter — the temp is back over zero, and untold tons of snow is melting into slush. The sound you don’t want to hear this side of April is the sound of water, dripping from the eaves…

Wednesday, 2024-11-24


Happy birthday, Ewan!

Ewan is 30 today! Congratulations!

Tuesday, 2024-11-23


Model railroad

My dad came up from Halmstad to help out a bit with the house. In the car he had two boxes of old toys from my childhood. Among these were a Fleischmann HO model railroad (starter set + station expansion). Viking had a great time playing around with that.

He’s a bit too young for model trains, but I figured that this particular set is already payed for, so a little toddler vandalism can’t hurt.

I’m going to get a big sheet of plywood and screw the tracks in place so that he won’t knock them askew. I’m also planning to glue Lego plates around the tracks so that he can build tunnels and houses.

For my future reference, here are the track parts.

Starter kit (6315)

  • 8 x 6024 curves R1
  • 2 x 6001 straights (204 mm)

Station kit (6090)

  • 2 x 6044 turnout
  • 2 x 6032 curves R2
  • 2 x 6005 straights (165 mm)
  • 11 x 6001 straights

Update 2024-11-23: I laid out the tracks again today and found out that one of the turnouts didn’t work anymore — must have taken a hit when someone stepped on it. Also, minimally laid out, the tracks cover our dining room table, and that’s not a small table. I’m shelving the plans for a board for the time being.

Friday, 2024-11-12


Buyout

The company I work for has been bought by a much larger American company. No drastic changes are expected in the near future. Maybe the new owners will feel that flat screens are vital for the corporate image, but I doubt it.

Tuesday, 2024-11-09


Fifteen years

Has it really been that long since the fall of the Wall? Already the memories are fading. My clearest are visiting my friend Björn in his student home in Lund, on a typical Skåne November evening. The fog was yellowish-orange from the streetlights, and Björn, who has a German mother, was dancing around in excitement.

In today’s DN there’s an article describing the bewildered reactions of the Swedish elite, confortable in the realities of the Cold War, suddenly adrift in a new unknown world:

Berlinmuren har varit öppen i nästan ett dygn. På kontinenten är det karneval med flygande champagnekorkar och segerdruckna DDR-medborgare som gör v-tecknet på Kurfürstendamm.

Men svensk nyhetsjournalistik, känd för sin nolltolerans mot allt som är uppsluppet, jublande eller partiskt, följer sin egen dramaturgi och därför ska vi nu höra vad en säkerhetspolitisk expert från Militärhögskolan har att säga om den hotfulla situation som uppstått i Europas mitt.

Han sitter där i sin uniform och är tämligen lågmäld, men hävdar ändå med viss skärpa att murens fall är början till slutet för Warszawapaktens dominans och Sovjetunionens herravälde över Östeuropa.

Halvt häpen, halvt chockerad utbrister reportern: “Men det är väl ganska farligt, det? Det är ju många som funnit ett slags trygghet och ro i kalla kriget. Man visste ändå var parterna stod. Nu är det slut på det och många känner sig villrådiga.”

Experten: “Ja, många längtar tillbaka till kalla kriget. Men det tycker jag är en idiotisk inställning. För då längtar man tillbaka till en tid då halva Europa hade ofrihet.”

Stämningen blir snart mycket infekterad, och intervjun slutar i osämja.

(Jens Christian Brandt, DN 2024-11-09)

Update Quick and dirty translation of the above:

The Berlin Wall has been down for nearly a day. On the Continent, it’s a carnival with champagne corks flying and victorious citizens of the GDR making V-signs on the Kurfürstendamm.

But Swedish news media, known for it’s zero tolerance of everything wild, crazy, or partisan, is following it’s own internal dramatic logic. We therefore have a foreign affairs specialist from the National Defence Institute who’s going to tell us about the new threatening situation in the heart of Europe.

He’s sitting there in his uniform and is quietly insistent that the fall of the Wall is the beginning of the end of the Warzaw Pact’s and the Soviet Union’s regime in Eastern Europe.

Half surprised, half shocked, the reporter exclaims: “But it’s rather terrible, isn’t it? Many people have found a sort of security and peace in the Cold War. You knew where the players stood. Now that’s to an end, and many feel bewildered.”

The expert: “Yes, many people are yearning for the Cold War. But I think that’s an idiotic feeling, because in that case you’re yearning for a time when half of Europe wasn’t free.”

The ambience soon becomes antagonistic, and the interview ends in acrimony.

In our disregard for the rights of East Germans, we showed the same callous attitude that has bedevilled Swedish realpolitik since the Second World War.

Leo, 12, asked me today about the picture showing people attacking the Wall. He didn’t realise it was ancient history. I felt wholly unable to explain the concept to him. I hope his school does better.

A visit to the dentist

I have bad teeth. Part of it is simply bad saliva, or at least saliva that’s less hostile to caries bacteria than the norm. Another part is all the fillings I got in Malaysia as the result of that sub-standard saliva.

Luckily, my dentist Jörgen Brandell is an old buddy and former lodger. He’s opened a new clinic, Gubbängstandläkarna, a mere 5 minutes away by car, and rightly sees my teeth as a sort of gold mine.

I’m going to try to cut down on the snacking, and to chew flourine tablets after eating. I’m also going to keep a close eye on Viking’s teeth and try to prevent him from having the same problems when he gets older.

Wednesday, 2024-11-03


The Shrub prevails

So it looks like four more years of everyone’s least favourite Yale graduate. I know a lot of people who are shocked and disappointed at the result, but, barring any nasty surprises coming out of Ohio, the outcome looks legitimate.

Americans will have to accept that their country is pretty deeply divided on a lot of issues. The Democratic Party hasn’t really risen to the challenge, while the Republicans have rallied around the leader with a “say no evil, hear no evil, see no evil” attitude. Both sides will have to develop their arguments and politics in the years ahead.

Tuesday, 2024-11-02


When you’re a jerk, you’re a jerk

And no amount of legal blustering will change that.

Sunday, 2024-10-31


Mobiles and daylight saving time

So the switch back to normal time was last night, and I’ve reset my wristwatch, the two most visible wall clocks, the alarm clock, and two mobile phones, both Symbian based.

My computers, all 3 of them, are automatically correct (well, except for the Stinkpad, but the CMOS battery is flat on that one).

Why the hell can’t my phones get the correct time from the network, or at the very least keep track of when DST starts and ends?

Saturday, 2024-10-30


More questions for Bush supporters

Diego has more questions for Bush supporters.

The sanction of torture, “disappearing” of people perceived to be a threat, the skirting of the Geneva conventions and the creation of a shadow prison system in facilities worldwide doesn’t really match the rethoric of the Bush administration about “freedom and the rule of law”, but more importantly, it doesn’t match at all, in my opinion, the principles on which the US was founded.

These questions really articulate a lot of things that I’ve been thinking about too. I suggest everyone reads them.

Wednesday, 2024-10-27


Any takers?

Diego has some questions for Bush supporters.

The new isolationism

The incumbent president has denied the rest of the world access to his official website www.georgewbush.com. Putative Republicans in lands not yet conquered in the war against terrorism thus cannot find more information on their future Leader.

However, his minions forgot to include the HTTPS port in the block. So the curious can visit https://georgewbush.com/ instead, secure in the knowledge that their perusal will be unnoted by Echelon and other agents of the New World Order.

Tell him Hi! from me.

Swedish media not impartial in US election

I catched the beginning of a segment in Swedish Radio’s P1 this morning where Johan Norberg, a “liberal” debater debater (this is translated as a right-winger in Swedish terms), said that Swedish media was overwhelmingly pro-Kerry.

This is true. Reading Swedish newspapers and following Swedish ether media would have one believe that George W. Bush was some kind of Svengali, holding the US and the world hostage through sheer force of will and some kind of evil emanation.

I don’t particularly like Dubya, but still, he has the support of half of the population that bothers to vote, and that has to count for something. But this fact is largely ignored in Sweden. Only yesterday, a large interview was published in DN with a nurse living in New York state. She was a Kerry supporter. No sh*t. Why are there no interviews with Texan doctors or Florida businesswomen? Because they might be Bush supporters, and these people simply do not exist in Swedish media.

Anyway, the person debating Norberg, Cecilia Uddén, has been removed from the coverage of the election. Because she came out and said the truth, that Swedish radio is not impartial in the coverage of this election.

Whatever one feels about George W. Bush, we deserve better better reporting.

Monday, 2024-10-25


Satanists in the navy

Wow. The Royal Navy has recognised Satanism as a religion its sailors can practise. The days of “rum, sodomy, and the lash” are long gone — or are they coming back?

Predictably, the Tories (in the guise of Anne Widdecombe) are fuming. “Let’s hope this doesn’t spread” she says.

Well, if I were an aspiring Satanist, the fact the fuddy-duddy Royal Navy thinks my religion is legit would be a major turn-off. What will the angst-ridden youth of today use to shock society next?

(via Boing Boing.)

A mystery explained

I found out today why US elections are held on a Tuesday.

In Sweden, elections are always on a Sunday. I felt that the US was much more observant of the day of rest than Sweden, so that’s why Sunday was ruled out. But the additional historical titbits are interesting.

Isn’t it ironic…

that Britney Spears of all people has released an album called My Prerogative?

Does anyone who listens to her music know what that word means?

Can they even pronounce it?

Update I’ve since been informed that it’s a cover of a Bobby Brown song. But that merely thickens the plot. Does he know what the word means?

Saturday, 2024-10-23


October cruise

The alumni gathering went to sea this weekend when we were invited onto Johan’s 32-footer based in Värmdö. We set off into a chill (around 10C) but sunny archipelago and set course for Sandhamn. The crew was Johan as captain, David and Calle as able seamen, and Jonas and yours truly as ballast.

After one and a half hours leisurly cruise we docked at Sandhamn and had lunch in the cockpit. After a coffee in the yacht club bar Jonas left us to go back to town, while the rest of the gang headed east, out to open sea.

The wind being more or less aft, we decided to hoist the spinnaker. This bumped our speed up to around 6 knots, but when we turned up into the wind to make the return leg to our planned overnight anchorage we had to take it in.

The route to the west was strewn with those reefs and boulders that make the Stockholm archipelago such an interesting place to sail in, but we managed by dint of having 3 lookouts and a GPS. With the sun setting we thought of checking the coming weather, which of course we did by visiting SHMI with a mobile phone. Based on this information we decided to lie in a bay facing south, as the wind was going to be northerly.

After some backing and filling we managed to find an anchorage. Calle made the first course, asparagus wrapped in proscuitto with mozarella. After we’d eaten this, Johan and David ascended a steep cliff with the help of a rope to barbecue the steaks. We ate them with rice and a sallad of ruccola and tomatoes. The dessert was pear halves with dark chocolate and some nice cheeses.

Replete with food and three bottles of wine, there wasn’t much else to do except go to bed. Despite the cold, we slept well.

Morning was early, cold, and full of dishes. But we managed to get underway quite soon and made good time make to the harbour.

All in all a very nice experience. Maybe a yearly tradition in the future?

Update 2024-10-18: pics are online at Mr.X.

Wednesday, 2024-10-20


Happy Birthday Leo!

Leo is 12 today. Congratulations!

Tuesday, 2024-10-19


Out of sorts

Sigh, it’s that time of year again. Autumn is segueing into winter, and the luminous light of the early period has turned into the grey, gloomy ambience of the late.

Driving home is a chore, there’s not enough contrast between light and dark to distinguish pedestrians and bicyclists, who all seem to think that dressing like a ninja is de rigeur. The office’s lighting scheme is revealed as the flashy fashion-driven abortion that it is, and I’m spending more and more time squinting at a screen that’s too bright for the surrounding room.

The air seems drenched with cold, suspended water. The day starts and ends in gloaming.

Oh well, got to try to find the happy place for Leo’s birthday tomorrow. In a while we’ll get real winter, and leave this half-measure behind us.

Tuesday, 2024-10-12


Brilliant plan

Truly great plan.

(Via Frank).

Sunday, 2024-10-10


Junilistan wins big

Perhaps being excluded from the final debate helped Junilistan. They’ve captured 14.4% of the EP votes, and a new political party is born.

Hell no, I won’t vote

Even though I’ve picked a candidate for the upcoming elections to the European Parliament, it’s increasingly unlikely that I will even cast a vote.

I haven’t heard anything that the EP has decided that has affected me as a citizen of the EU. The only thing I can recollect is a number of stories about MEPs collecting travel expenses and pocketing them. This is the body I’m supposed to elect?

“Ah, but if you’ve read more about the EU, you’d know that…” — well, guess what, I read the editorials of Sweden’s biggest daily newspaper every day, listen to P1 often, and subscribe to The Economist. I’m as clued-up politically as a citizen who’s also working full time and has a 2-year old at home can well be asked to be, and yet I still don’t know more about the EP. How can I make an informed decision then?

“But you have to vote, otherwise the extremists will…” — yeah right, a vote for a body that has no real influence will give extremists a voice. Get real. Political extremists are smarter than that.

“Democracy is a right and a privilege, your vote is precious…” — no it isn’t. I’d rather save my energy making decisions that will affect me and my family. The MEP doesn’t do this, nor should it. It’s a tacked on band-aid that the technocrats behind the Union have slapped on to give their tired, bureaucratic, mega-project some democratic gloss. The EU is not a democratic project. It’s an artificial counterweight to the USA that doesn’t have a deep popular support and probably never will.

Some parts of it are good: the free movement of trade, capital, and labour. Most parts are bad: the CAP, the intrusive bureaucracy, the Gallo-Teutonic haughtiness of its unelected leaders. If, by denying this patchwork of idealism and self-serving nationalism the legitimacy of my vote, I can help undermine its foundations and bring about a serious re-evaluations of the whole project, I’m glad. But my vote won’t count, whether I cast it or not.

another gathering of the faithful

Jonas hosted the next installment of our semi-regular alumni gathering. This time, he had a digital camera and was not afraid to use it.

Tuesday, 2024-10-05


Bad air

I’m feeling unusually stupid right now, and I’m not alone. The fact is that the ventilation in our building sucks. It’s a converted turbine hall, very dramatic, but there’s no provision for providing fresh air to everyone who works here. Expedients of opening windows simply lead to draughts of Force 10 intensity and a rapid drop of the ambient temperature to Arctic levels.

Monday, 2024-09-20


Berlin 1936 — Beijing 2008?

The Olympics in Beijing 2008 will present a golden opportunity for the Chinese leadership to demonstrate the resurgent power of China. Expect the regime to pull out all the stops in the medal race, with Chinese athletes competing not just in the traditional events — swimming, acrobatics, table-tennis — but in the “real Olympics”: athletics.

Also expect ruthless crackdowns on any people or organizations that might try to harness this opportunity to challenge the leadership: Tibetan separatists, Falun-Gong, Muslim separatists in Western China…

Sunday, 2024-09-05


Long weekend

As Viking has started at a new kindergarten, I spent Thursday and Friday with him on inskolning.

On Saturday I travelled north to Djursholm to go to a kräftskiva at David’s parents place, he being the last of the gang to reach the arbitrary age of 30 (me, I’m counting my age in hex from now on…). A very nice time was had by all, especially considering that a Swedish crayfish party is where more alcohol is consumed per calorie food eaten anywhere outside Siberia. Pics can be seen here.

A nice surprise was that Martin and Ulrika have named their firstborn Frans Gustav, which is my first names. Their naming him that was entirely coincidental, though.

Sunday was spent nursing a light hangover, picking up fallen apples, and going to Margaretaparken in Enskede to hang out with Niclas, Lina, Teodor, and Pelle. Nice to see Viking and Teodor getting along so well.

Wednesday, 2024-08-25


On tea

I found a link to George Orwell’s essay on the perfect cup of tea on Libby’s blog.

Reading the essay reminded me of why I drink coffee nearly exclusively nowadays. I don’t care much about how my coffee is made — hot, strong, and with milk, but otherwise I could care less about how it’s made. My taste in tea, on the other hand, is so outré, so outside the bounds of acceptable tea-drinking behaviour, that I can only prepare and enjoy a cup of tea that I’ve made myself, in a peculiar manner.

I make tea like this: I put a pinch of Lapsang Souchong in a big cup. Then I pour boiling water in the cup. I wait a bit. Then I add milk.

The part about the tea and the water mixing without a strainer or a bag seems to freak people out most, although it’s endorsed by Orwell (in a kettle, but nonetheless…). In fact, I only break a few of his “rules” for a nice cup of tea.

I was reminded of all this when we woke up this morning without coffee grounds, and had to make do with instant. Also, something in the neighborhood smells exactly like Lapsang. So I’ve bought a packet of Twinings Lapsang for the first time in ages. Maybe I can kick to coffee habit, at least at home.

Tuesday, 2024-08-24


Kudos for share

clevercactus share, the brainchild of Mobitopian Diego Doval, has won the “Site of the Month” award by the Swedish magazine InternetWorld.

A scan of the article is available here.

Quick and dirty translation:

Share files with your buddies

Brand new site Clevercactus Share combines two of the hottest trends right now — file sharing and buddy networks — in one package. Imagine an Orkut or Friendster with file sharing, or Kazaa with buddy features.

After registration, you download a client (available for all platforms) and start inviting friends and acquaintances to a private file-sharing network. The point is that you only share files with people you know, thereby keeping pirate hunters and other unwelcome elements away. Additionally, all transactions are encrypted. In the client, you can decide who gets to download what, and you can also chat with your contacts. You can also categorise your contacts as “Friends”, “Family”, or “Co-workers” and grant different permissions for each category.

Clevercactus Share is still in beta, and there are some issues with it, but the concept is so insanely well-timed that we can only applaud.

Monday, 2024-08-23


A great weekend for Sweden

Wow! Three gold medals in two days:

  • Karolina Klüft wins the heptathlon

  • Stefan Holm wins the men’s high jump

  • Christian Olsson wins the men’s triple jump

Go Sweden!

Friday, 2024-08-20


Anders Fredriksson

Article from Örnsköldsviks Allehanda (in Swedish).

I especially like the way Agero is mentioned.

File from David, put here for all those TT/TU and ExAgero types out there.

Thursday, 2024-08-19


Wedding pictures

More than one and a half years late, here are some pictures from our wedding.

In our defence, we have had the pics since two weeks after the event, but now, thanks to Terje, they’re online.

Wednesday, 2024-08-18


Idiots

This so-called “linking policy” says that you can only link to the athens2024 site if you write (by snail-mail) and ask permission first.

Here’s some more random linkage, without permission.

  • Medals
  • FAQ
  • Youth 2024

Oh, and Athens 2024? My cheque for your Google-juice is in the mail.

Is synchronized diving a sport?

I don’t think so, and neither do these guys. I also agree with the rest of the list. The Olympics have way too many sports as it is. Cutting out all the subjective judging events would magically reduce the number and preserve the Olympic ideal.

(via Dave.)

Update: of course, thinking about this gives another answer to why these sports are popular: lots of half-naked teenage girls.

Sports in the Olympics are subjected to television Darwinism: too few viewers and the event gets the chop.

Tuesday, 2024-08-17


A visit to Åland

Viking and I went to Åland this weekend to visit Petter and Alva together with Björn and Egil. We were a trio of dads with two-year olds traipsing around the bush having picnics. Thank god the kids didn’t synchronise their bad moments — there was generally only one child pissed off at a time.

Åland is a beautiful place in a harsh kind of way. There are lots of fields and deciduous trees, but the dominant feature is rock scoured smooth by the latest ice age, thinly covered by moss and stunted pines.

Petter and Giséla have a very nice place in Björnhuvud, about 15 minutes from the harbour and 20 minutes from Mariehamn, the capital.

Åland is closer to Sweden than to Finland, both geographically and culturally. The signposts are all in Swedish, none of the inhabitants have to serve in the Finnish army (the islands have been demilitarised since the 1920s), and only persons with citezenship can buy property there. Much of the income of the region comes from the sale of tax-free liqour to thirsty Swedes, although Åland also provides more than 40% of Finland’s onions.

Björn had a digital camera with him, which we shamelessly borrowed, snapping away at our kids wandering around picking blueberries. We quickly realised his wisdom of investing in half a gigabyte of memory. As soon as he gets the pics to me I’ll post some.

Update: pictures are now up at my album on MrX.no. Thanks Terje for giving me some space on his site!

Monday, 2024-08-16


Friday the 13th

I don’t suffer from triskaidekaphobia, but today I’m having doubts.

  • I have the beginning of a cold, with headaches.
  • It’s raining after a week of fine weather — and we had washing out.
  • Our phones at work stop working.
  • A key component of our site has stopped working, and the only one who can fix it is away.
  • The coffee machine is broken.
  • The database reports SIGSEGV.
  • The mailserver reports “bus error” when you grep.

I’m wondering whether it’s a good idea to visit Petter on Åland today.

Update: the mailserver did in fact crash, but I was on my way by then…

Friday, 2024-08-13


Amateur relics

You don’t have to be an amateur to compete in the Olympics anymore, but some restrictions remain. According to a radio show this evening, athletes can’t write a column or act as commentators for money.

Fair enough you might say. But the athlete who told us this is Stefan Holm, a high jumper competing on the Swedish team. He has an active home page/blog, which also has a lot of links to sponsors. If he wins a medal and writes about it in his own words, is he making money then? Could he be disqualified for that post?

No one knows. Understandably, athletes are reluctant to test the IOC on this matter. But with blogging gathering traction everywhere, someone, somewhere will post a ecstatic entry on his or her blog. Let’s hope it doesn’t cost them their medal.

Tuesday, 2024-08-03


So true

You know you’ve been too long in Sweden when…

Sunday, 2024-08-01


Over

Vacation ends tomorrow. I’ve done quite a bit with the house, so the lack of good weather hasn’t been a determining factor. Saying this, a few more weeks wouldn’t have been unwelcome.

Wednesday, 2024-07-21


“A bunch of guys on IRC”

… is the modern equivalent of “a couple of guys in a garage”.

Inspired by the latest “hush-hush” biz discussion on #mobitopia.

Cold beer, you wish

In Sweden, you can’t buy alcoholic beverages anywhere but in the state monopoly’s stores, Systembolaget. This is to restrict supply and prevent us Swedes from descending into a permanent alcoholic stupor. For a long time, you couldn’t buy booze on Saturdays. You still can’t on Sundays.

The last couple of years, this company has moved away from lines in front of counters to self-serve style stores, where you can walk around and choose what you want instead of asking a clerk for it. This is because it’s now cheap and legal to bring in lots of alcohol from other countries, so the monopoly needs to move with the times.

Well, things have moved in the right direction, but there’s still some way to go. For example, I’m going to swing by “Bolaget” for some Kirin on my way to pick up some take-away sushi. But I can’t buy the beer refrigerated. How would that look? Anyone could buy a beer and then go to the nearest park and enjoy a cool one! No way that would work. In Sweden, you have to carry your beer home first and put it in the fridge, then get drunk.

How long until we get cold beer, huh?

Wednesday, 2024-07-14


Away to Arvika

Tomorrow I’m going to the Arvika festival with Hanna and her friend.

It’s my first rock festival, and while I’m going primarily as a chaperone, I think it’ll be fun.

I’ll see if I find anything interesting enough to moblog about.

Tuesday, 2024-07-13


Legacy

Someday, some future owners of our house will tear down the wall in the new alcove, and blurt out in astonishment: “what the hell did he think he was doing?!”

A break in the ritual

Usually I get The Economist on Mondays, but not today.

Damn.

Update It arrived today, so I could enjoy my post-prandial coffee with it. (Yes, snail mail usually arrived at 11:00 here in our part of Stockholm.) Nothing really attention-grabbing, though.

Saturday, 2024-07-10


Evening out

After a long day fixing windows, we went down to Enskede Värdshus for a meal.

Both Jan and Joanna wanted fish (rolled lake perch), while I opted for lamb. To compromise on the wine, we asked for rosé. There was none in the wine list, but they had a bottle left since a wedding. This cost as much as the house white and was very nice.

Afterwards, we took a walk through Stureby and looked at other peoples houses and windows. This was also nice, until we came home and could once again note that we have Stureby’s ugliest house.

But now at least the windows will look better.

Wednesday, 2024-07-07


Finished

… with the bedroom.

Well not quite, but I’m sick and tired of the damn room, so I’ll fix the rest later (famous last words).

We’ve

  • ripped up the plastic floor, exposing a nice pine parquet,
  • demolished a closet and created an alcove instead,
  • painted the ceiling and walls
  • planed and sanded the floor,
  • and oiled and polished it (today).

Oh, and we spent a day at Ikea. Fun.

The alcove’s left. But I’ll do that later, I promise.

My father’s come up from Halland to help out with the windows and the garden. Phew! I could use a vacation from the vacation…

Monday, 2024-07-05


Klara

Mail from Anna: they’re now proud parents of Klara, Jonatan’s little sister.

Also, they’re moving “back” to Sweden — to Lidingö.

Sunday, 2024-07-04


Greece wins!

Amazing result. Methodical, defensive football. Boring, but effective.

This is definitively Greece’s year — first this, then the Olympics.

Saturday, 2024-07-03


Working

Even though I’m on vacation, I’m doing more work than usual (I hope my boss doesn’t read this…).

Why? Well, we’ve finally taken gone to work on our bedroom (mini-diary in Swedish), and the nice thing about this kind of thing is that you see results. We’ve ripped up the ugly plastic carpeting and revealed a very nice pine parquet, started painting the ceiling and walls, and today we rippd out the old closet and turned it into an alcove instead.

I’ve also discovered that I have a critical mass of knowledge, tools, and materials to attempt quite ambitious projects. No last-minute , time-wasting trips to the hardware store. If I need something, I can usually do something else before going to the store — thus enhancing efficiency. And the fact that I’m on vacation means that there’s no time pressure.

A nice change from sitting in front of a computer all day.

Thursday, 2024-07-01


Greece in the final!

Wow!

A very surprising result. The same teams that started this tournament will end it.

IRC funniness

: Good news: Saddam Hussein is to face death penalty Bad news: David Beckham is taking it

From irc.freenode.net/#mobitopia.

Wednesday, 2024-06-30


Holland out

Good riddance to bad rubbish.

Portugal — Czech Republic in the final, that’s my bet. Greece has played well, but the Czechs will win.

About the “huset” category

This category has been created to keep a diary over the work we’re doing on the house and garden this summer. I’ve also added a subcategory for the colours used inside the house.

I’m writing it in Swedish, as it’s more a personal memory for me and my family, and also a resource for friends. That’s why I’ve excluded it from the main page display, although it’s visible in the category tree.

Anyone who doesn’t read Swedish and has a burning wish to know more about how I’ve renovated our bedroom can drop me a line, and I’ll provide a translation.

Monday, 2024-06-28


We was robbed!

Scandinavians cry foul at Euro 2024 match-fixing

Sunday, 2024-06-27


Millie

Kate sent us a message last night telling us that Tim and Sarah have had a daughter called Millie. Unfortunately she was a bit early, but apparently they will be going home soon.

Update: got an SMS from Tim, they’re home (and not sleeping much). Also got some pictures from Kate via Nan, she’s so small

Saturday, 2024-06-26


Sweden out

Damn. We lost.

Good game though, pity it went to penalties. That’s never fair.

Midsommar

Midsommar, the unofficial Swedish national day, has come and gone. We spent it at home in Stockholm, instead of traditionally at Josefine’s place in Sågen. This gave us the opportunity to repay her and Lotus for all the nice times we’ve had there.

Mårten, Maria, Vera, and Conrad joined in, and brought food and booze with them. Lunch was eaten on the top balcony, and consisted of sill (pickled herring) from Melanders, Västerbotten cheese, new potatoes, and knäckebröd. Of course we drank snaps and beer.

After lunch we went for a walk in a deserted Stureby. The sun was shining, although it was very windy. Rainclouds were gathering to the East, so we abandonded plans of eating dinner outside.

Main course was barbecued pork filet with potatoes, salad and grilled haloumni cheese. More beer and wine was drunk.

We wound up the evening watching Greece eliminate France from the Euro championship. Nice!

Updated. Chatting with Craig after writing this entry I realised I really should be more informative about Midsommar. Well, I don’t have to, because Ben has more info.

Thursday, 2024-06-24


Last post before vacation

Today is my last day at work before vacation. As a Swede, I may not be payed much, but I do get five weeks of paid vacation. Hah.

We’re planning on doing a lot of work in the house and garden. The closet in the hall is first, then our bedroom. My father is coming up for a week, I hope we can get the windows scraped and repainted while he’s here.

We hope to level out the biggest patch of lawn in the garden, but I have no idea of how to do that. We’ll see.

Other plans are a visit to the Arvika rock festival with Hanna and her friend. Should be … interesting. Let’s hope it doesn’t rain too much.

We’ll also be visiting my parents in Halmstad for a week.

All in all I hope to be as far away from a computer as possible.

Have a nice summer!

Sunday, 2024-06-20


A productive weekend

Friday, Sweden played 1-1 against Italy and now have a shot at advancing to the quarter-finals.

Saturday, I helped Petter and Giséla move all their stuff to Åland, where they’re moving into a house. Basse and Anders were there to; the usual gang in other words. I tipped Petter off about weblogs and stuff, so that he can document the freezing winters in the middle of the Baltic Sea.

That evening we went to Josefine and ate a thank-you meal for helping her move a couple of weeks back. Nice to hook up with Georges and Johanna again, and always nice to see Åse and Madde. Unfortunately, Viking flipped out on the way home, and even if he cooled down when we came home and watch Czechoslovakia beat the Netherlands 3-2, he didn’t go to sleep until late.

Today Sunday, Joanna’s brother Love has with moving the washing machine from the cellar to the spare bathroom. We’ve also started on the windows facing the street. Hopefully we’ll have them done this week.

Wednesday, 2024-06-16


High school blues

Reading Simon’s weblog after he mentioned it on #mobitopia generated flashbacks to my own high school experiences.

Of course, the internet didn’t exist back then, at least not in the part of Sweden where I went to school. So I didn’t blog about my feelings, just wrote about them in a diary. (Must remember to find that diary and burn it.)

Anyway, I was a year younger than everyone else, and very shy, so I had no chance of explaining my feelings to he object of my affection. I was crushed when she started going out with someone else. I’ve since learnt that this guy stood up in a bus on a school trip and publicly recited a love poem to her. This showed major cojones, and proved to me that she probably wasn’t my type anyway.

I then when on and was unlucky in love with yet more people until I met my present wife, and was thrown into the deep end with a relationship involving kids and buying a house. So far, it has worked out. But life was more simple then, when I was 17.

Monday, 2024-06-14


Sweden - Bulgaria 5 - 0

Sweden has had a flying start in Euro2024, beating Bulgaria 5 - 0. With Denmark - Italy 0 - 0, this really gives Sweden a nice start in the tournament.

Friday, 2024-06-11


We don’t need any new parties

The EU-critical party Junilistan won’t be given a place in SVTs final debate before the EP elections on Sunday.

The reason: they don’t have a seat in the Parlaiment.

And pundits wonder why people won’t bother to vote in this election.

Wednesday, 2024-06-09


Magic and puzzles

Good piece by Ewan on the difference between “magic” and mere puzzles.

In the age of the internet, it’s easy to google the solutions to many tricks. The hard-earned mastery of the magician can be “exposed” by anyone with a web browser and zero sense of wonder in their lives.

Information wants to be free, and most information should be free, but the mechanics of magic should perhaps be hidden from view, lest we lose yet another of life’s pleasures.

Sunday, 2024-06-06


Swedish media and criminals

There has long been a gentleman’s agreement in place in Swedish media that a suspect will not be named until he or she has been convicted of a crime. With the latest spectacular crimes in Sweden, such as the murder of foreign minister Anna Lindh and the bizarre happenings in Knutby, this has changed. Now, some media outlets name the suspects when they have been charged with a crime.

In the Knutby case, the tabloids never mentioned the minister’s name, but both his wives (whose murders he is charged with) were named with their married names, Fossmo. And as he has Norwegian background anyone can read his full name in the Norwegian newspapers, or on the web.

Of course, the state television holds the moral banner high, and will not name the suspects. References to them in the court audio feed are replaced with beeps.

The privately owned TV4 has no such scruples. So the secretive “Christ’s Bride”, Åsa Walldau, is named as such in the news. 2 hours earlier, in SVTs news, the court sketch has the title “andlig ledare” (“spiritual leader”). This puts her on the same footing as the Dalai Llama.

These efforts, although honourable, are doomed to fail. Anyone who wants can find the details, not on some shady website, but on BBC and CNN. The media is global, at least if the news is big enough. Perhaps it’s time to rethink the whole thing?

Ronald Reagan, RIP

So Ronald Reagan has died. My first political memory is going to a US international school in Kuala Lumpur and seeing the big board with election results between Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter.

This thought also occurred to me.

Wednesday, 2024-05-26


boyfriend needed

Mildly amusing (in Swedish).

Quick-n-dirty translation:

Hi! I’m going to a yearly dinner with my relatives at the end of May and need someone to play my boyfriend. Long story… You should be around 25, “normal”, and be polite. Free food ;-)

Tuesday, 2024-05-25


mall reflections

Some thoughts after a visit to the mall:

  • You can now get a SIM-free taco for SEK 1 349, 1 100 less than what I paid for it four months ago. And that was with a subscription.

  • Electronic stores now run a DVD on all their TV screens with commercials and snippets from coming releases, instead of just showing MTV.

  • Kids and sugar don’t really mix.

Also, IE doesn’t handle entities very well. I used them to format the prices above. Removed for now.

Monday, 2024-05-24


random linkage

Thomas C. Greene on Abu Graib

High school teacher fired for not censoring poetry

The ultimate timewaster for the taco

democracy in action

Ho hum. MEP elections are coming up. Booooring.

I feel strongly about one thing in the EU: that the CAP must be abolished. No-one I can elect to the parliament will make this happen. Probably only a combination of global warming and a massive die-back of French farmers will bring this about, in a century or two.

I feel less strongly about software patents. They affect lots of people and the future of free software, but compared to growing food they are unimportant. However, they maybe can be banned in the EU by the EP.

So I’m looking for a candidate who’s opposed to software patents.

I’d like to vote for Christofer Fjellner (m), but his party supports software patents, and who knows what kind of hold they have over him.

So I’ll probably vote for Olle Schmidt (fp) instead.

Wednesday, 2024-05-19


the islamic century?

I first encountered the belief that Europe was heading for an inevitable Islamic takeover in a most unlikely place: this post by Philip Greenspun.

This entry shocked me, because from what I’ve read of and about him, Phil is a smart guy. If this is how well educated Americans living in Boston view Europe?

I couldn’t really put my finger on what was wrong with his analysis. This article does just that. Recommended reading.

Tuesday, 2024-05-18


things to do in stockholm before you’re dead

dwlt will be in Uppsala/Stockholm this weekend. Here is a short list of suggestions of things to do.

  • Uppsala: visit the cathedral (Domkyrkan). The town itself is a very nice place, Sweden’s Oxford.

  • Stockholm: the Vasa Museum is well worth a visit.

  • The museum is on Djurgården, a park to the east of the centre of town. Waldermarsudde is an art gallery at the other end, with a very nice walk in between. Fans of Edvard Munch and Nietzsche will enjoy Thielska Galleriet in the same general area.

  • Visit the Stockholm Archipelago with a trip on the Vaxholm boats. Many different destinations for different timescales.

  • Stockholm Old Town, Gamla stan, in the middle of the city. The Royal Palace is here. South of the Old Town is Söder, literally South, the more Bohemian of Stockholms neighborhoods. Lots of bars, galleries, parks…

  • Eat traditional, if expensive Swedish food at KB or even more expensive seafood at Wedholms Fisk.

Friday, 2024-04-16


skiing

First day skiing since 1997. I’m whacked.

Tuesday, 2024-04-13


mirrorshades

First sunny day in the city, the Sisters of Mercy playing on the Taco, and the irresistible urge for new sunglasses came over me. So now I’m the proud owner of a couple of Ray-Ban Sidestreets. Mirrorshades. I’ve wanted a pair since I read Neuromancer in 1985.

Of course, if Ray-Ban didn’t have an all-Flash site, I could link to them. But they do, so I can’t. Less linklove for them then.

They will adorn my handsome mug when I go skiing in Åre this weekend.

Wednesday, 2024-03-24


a global market for TV broadcasts

Funny how things come together. Today, I was discussing the following things IRL and on IRC:

  • Automatically grabbing TV broadcasts from the US and distributing them as BitTorrents for consumption here in Sweden.
  • Getting HBO to send to the EU.
  • Paying a fee to see shows that are shown in the US but not in the EU.
  • The lack of EU soccer coverage in the US.

Bottom line: there is a market for TV on both sides of the Atlantic. Who will exploit it? Or will this fill the gap?

Rightsholders in TV space are accustomed to wholesale marketing. They sell programming to networks, and the networks are in the mass market. To enable the scenarios above would entail retail marketing and pricing. Where are the new business models coming from? Or is everyone in the music, TV, and movie business more interested in protecting their profit margins than giving people what they want, and what they are prepared to pay for?

Tuesday, 2024-03-23


how not to panhandle

Generally, I appreciate that people who want my money in the subway do something for it. Selling the Stockholm version of “The Big Issue” is the best, I usually buy that.

Music is a distant second in my wish for something to reward.

Outright begging is at the bottom.

However, I’ve had to build a cellar. Playing the accordion and singing on the subway will never ever be rewarded by me.

Saturday, 2024-02-07


boy’s night in

Yesterday I had five friends from KTH over for dinner. We had herring (“sill”) sandwiches with akvavit and beer for starters (thanks Henrik), followed by lamb roast with rice and Chateau Musar 1997. This pretty far-out wine (astringent I guess you could call it) went along famously with the lamb, and made the Haut-Médoc that followed taste like it was watered.

Calle and Jonas had picked up a selection of cheeses. We drank a bottle of my birth-day port, a 1960 vintage. Famous taste, like a really rich and alcohol-drenched caramel.

For dessert, David made strawberry- and plum knödel. Johan bought cigars, accompanied by rum and whiskey (Talisker). Altogether a very nice evening.

Wednesday, 2024-02-04


new phone

I got to use an [1] MP3-player a few days ago and re-discovered the joys of riding the subway with a soundtrack.

But I couldn’t keep the player (a nice, but DRM-crippled Panasonic) and instead looked around to buy one. There are lots of USB-stick form-factor players around, but I’ve been thinking about a Series 60 phone for a while, and most models can play audio too.

The Siemens SX1 was my first choice, but then a local phone store had a deal on an N-Gage for an extension on my plan. So I picked one up [2] today.

First impressions are mixed. I discovered too late that you need a Bluetooth connection to sync and install files, but that can be fixed pretty cheaply. I already have a 64-MB MMC card, so I can listen to at least one album at a time. And bigger cards are pretty affordable too.

I got 3 games included, but none of them were in stock, so I’ll get them later. Until then, I enjoy the music and the radio.

So now I’m a kid wannabe. All the guys at work figure I’m having age-related anxiety.

[1] “a” or “an”? Probably “a”, but “an” sounds better.
[2] I love this phrase — carefree consumerism!

Wednesday, 2024-01-28


the lonely espresso machine

We’ve got an espresso machine on the counter, but I don’t use it as much as I’d like. Workdays both J and I want lotsa hot coffee, so it seems a waste to spend precious minutes fiddling with the machine. You never know when Viking needs more sandwiches, so the savouring of the perfect espresso is far away in the mornings.

In the evenings, an espresso is a bit on the strong side for easy sleep. So the machine just stands there, slightly accusing.

I need to add “drink more espresso” to the list of Things To Do each day. “Dagens i-landsproblem”, as Tobias would say.

Tuesday, 2024-01-27


Coldplay everywhere, all the time

Sometimes Swedish state television (I love saying that — it sounds as if I live in a third world dictatorship) has a couple of minutes to spare in their schedule. Every time, without fail, they play a paralysingly boring Coldplay video.

Coldplay must be the most overrated band in the Western hemisphere. Why does my hard-taxed license money go to them? (To be fair, the dough probably goes to some paid-up member of the RIAA, which doesn’t make it any better.)

Updated: Patric at work confirms that Coldplay are in the cusp of sellout. First they were underground. Now they are “hip” to people choosing music on state TV channels. Next their music is in commercials.

Monday, 2024-01-26


rude site design

I believe that other people should be able to benefit from my organs if they need it. (Obviously I’d like to be dead first.) So I went to livsviktigt.se to sign up in the national organ donor registry.

I nearly left in disgust when the site kidnapped my browser and resized it — for no apparent reason! Just because they felt their site appearance was so important… more important than the time and convenience of the people they’re trying to persuade to donate their organs to total strangers.

This antic is so 1990s.