every friday

NTK


search NTK now

archive

  • NTK 2007
  • NTK 2006
  • NTK 2005
  • NTK 2004
  • NTK 2003
  • 2002-12-27
    MiniNTK #18
    Question Me!
  • 2002-12-20
    #271
    Seasonal Humbug
  • 2002-12-13
    #270
    Fear and Ignorance. Ignorance and Fear. Those are our watchwords.
  • 2002-12-06
    #269
    Lies, USENET lies, and government consultation periods
  • 2002-11-29
    #268
    thanks, but no thanks
  • 2002-11-22
    #267
    letters to the government, packets to the people
  • 2002-11-15
    #266
    changing our underwear, updating our risumis
  • 2002-11-08
    #265
    uk.gone, digital rag and bone, dance dance implementation
  • 2002-11-01
    #264
    Old Media Cheek, Currently Residing in The Event Queue File
  • 2002-10-25
    #263
    Hilary's term at Oxford
  • 2002-10-18
    #262
    the meetings will continue until morale improves
  • 2002-10-11
    #261
    zer0 day b33b and the Sinclair Brothers
  • 2002-10-04
    #260
    Google shark-jumping?, Perl and Cocoa
  • 2002-09-27
    #259
    Children of the Banned, Party poop
  • 2002-09-20
    #258
    LibDems, KidPr0n, DVDSync
  • 2002-09-13
    #257
    The claims of Acclaim, Perl world tour
  • 2002-09-06
    #256
    Cons and conmen, HARRIXOS will never die!
  • 2002-08-30
    #255
    Earth invasion postponed.
  • 2002-08-23
    #254
    EUCD2, Bayes Watch, PlayStation "cool"
  • 2002-08-16
    MiniNTK #18
    Summertime Squeak Special - in Dolby
  • 2002-08-09
    #253
    EUCD UK, Defcon Upshots, another W3C compliance test to fail
  • 2002-08-02
    #252
    Summertime Surveillance, No Orgasms for Kevin
  • 2002-07-26
    #251
    Movement down the Redbus, Sexy Torrents of Bits, No *I'm* Ploticus
  • 2002-07-19
    #250
    Back in the former USSR, Charlie the Angry Drunken Satirist, 8 bits enter a room 1K leaves
  • 2002-07-12
    #249
    Do y*u Y*h**?, Edge vs NTK vs KLF vs Johnny Ball
  • 2002-07-05
    #248
    man perlbeg, googlebucks, be the gipper of fipr
  • 2002-06-28
    #247
    careless talk, lies at the palladium, checking lilo status
  • 2002-06-21
    #246
    RIPA, mate; ooh UKUUG; and fizzy milk
  • 2002-06-14
    #246
    post-XCOM letdown, BBCing you, socat sogood
  • 2002-06-07
    MiniNTK #17
    a word from our sponsors
  • 2002-05-31
    #245
    Demons of the past, Extreme Pleading
  • 2002-05-24
    #244
    Phone bridge of sighs, but Outlook is rosy at last
  • 2002-05-17
    #243
    All Cons, No Pros
  • 2002-05-10
    #242
    Grammy Boots, Perl To Python, Emerging Conferences
  • 2002-05-03
    #241
    Everyone dress up as monkeys and run for mayor. Pass it on.
  • 2002-04-26
    #240
    CDR, EUCD, DPA, 1475!
  • 2002-04-19
    #239
    No^H^H Yes Minister, Computers Freedom Privacy, For Fsck's Sake
  • 2002-04-12
    #238
    invisible nets, unrecognised countries, zen differentials
  • 2002-04-05
    #237
    Going CYC-O, audioshopping, doubleplus unconvention
  • 2002-03-29
    MiniNTK #16
    Happy Mozday!
  • 2002-03-22
    #236
    Bad BT, Bad PPP, Bad BBC!
  • 2002-03-15
    #235
    Murdoch (probably) owns you, silly billing, haiku-fu
  • 2002-03-08
    #234
    Liberty requires eternal ebullience, love and reality both bite
  • 2002-03-01
    #233
    Grammy sucks eggs, Dead Men Posting, and get well soon Rob
  • 2002-02-22
    #232
    Codecon, Funky Dredds and "Life" is the name of the game
  • 2002-02-15
    #231
    goth bands, froups banned, bitmap of the heart
  • 2002-02-08
    #230
    Takedown's a bitch, creme egg *cones*?
  • 2002-02-01
    #229
    Booby prizes, dorkbot and dillo
  • 2002-01-25
    #228
    BBC basics, Ms Tron, more of .me
  • 2002-01-18
    #227
    It's always about .me, isn't it?
  • 2002-01-11
    #226
    Big Marc, Little Marc, Gopher broke, and get whitey chocolate
  • 2002-01-04
    MiniNTK #15
    "Happy New Warez" porn link round-up
  • NTK 2001
  • NTK 2000
  • NTK 1999
  • NTK 1998
  • NTK 1997
  • HARD NEWS
  • ANTI-NEWS
  • EVENT QUEUE
  • TRACKING
  • MEMEPOOL
  • GEEK MEDIA
  • SMALL PRINT

 _   _ _____ _  __ <*the* weekly high-tech sarcastic update for the uk>
| \ | |_   _| |/ / _ __   __2002-07-26_ o join! mail an empty message to
|  \| | | | | ' / | '_ \ / _ \ \ /\ / / o ntknow-subscribe@lists.ntk.net
| |\  | | | | . \ | | | | (_) \ v  v /  o website (+ archive) lives at:
|_| \_| |_| |_|\_\|_| |_|\___/ \_/\_/   o     http://www.ntk.net/


        "The system does not store the actual fingerprint, but a map 
         of it which takes in the print's key features..." 
                          - Stephen Phillips, Micro Librarian Systems
                    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/education/2144188.stm
              ...UK schoolkids allowed to keep their "actual" fingers 
                 

                                >> HARD NEWS <<
                              where Stanford flew

         A public fight between former partners spills onto a Web
         forum - with accusations of poor hygiene, two-timing, and
         sex with goats. Well, even without that last one, the REDBUS
         vs REDBUS INTERHOUSE spat still promises to be the best
         online tussle this side of Watford FC. In the red corner:
         the directors of colocation corp Interhouse, the first and
         dearest of Cliff Stanford's startup firms after flogging
         Demon. In the redder corner - Cliff Stanford himself, trying
         to regain control after being unceremoniously squeezed off
         the board a few weeks back. Net veteran that he is, Cliff's
         revenge involves brushing off the forum software, kicking up
         the HTML, and spooling his side of the story to the
         shareholders on his Website. The punters, unused to this
         degree of corporate transparency, have been peppering him
         with questions - including at one stage requesting (and
         getting) a detailed breakdown of Cliff's use of the Redbus
         private jet. The incumbent board are a bit more taciturn.
         But even Bo Bendtsen, founder of cheapo webhosting co
         UK2.NET and newly minted Interhouse company director, has
         been popping in to fend off Cliff's criticisms. And
         stumbling, it appears, right into the paths of other
         Interhouse customers, less than happy to see the owner of a
         competing hosting company take an executive role in their
         coloc. That said, Bo's no stranger to BBSs: shame we've yet
         to see any of his old friends from the FidoNet days post
         their opinions.
         http://www.redbus.be/rise/
   - sign up for the forums. hell, buy a share and turn up to the EGM
         http://www.terminate.com/fidonet/
                                - Bo looking cool in his earlier days
         http://www.metafilter.com/mefi/18685
                                               - goatse.cx in Watford

         Still, it's not all pain and strife. To rollback through a
         few bits of good news from previous weeks: Yahoo turned off
         their medieval -> medireview autoconverter, depriving the
         English language of another synonym for "old and busted";
         the JPEG committee has, like our anonymous contact, also
         spotted Lucent pursuing patent claims on JPEG/JBIG codes,
         and is pursuing it. And, going back a bit further, you may
         remember ROSS ANDERSON getting het up about the UK Export
         Bill, which would have placed export bans on a bunch of
         dangerous items, including some ideas and code. After five
         months of lobbying, Ross and his cohorts this week got the
         government to include an amendment that excludes scientific
         research, material being published, and work in the public
         domain. Which means you can still write letters about crypto
         to your friends outside .uk without being convicted of
         thoughtcrime and ten years in jail. Truly a week in which
         things got worse slower!
         http://www.jpeg.org/newsrel1.html
                              - Joint Photographic Experts, Assemble!
         http://www.ntk.net/2002/02/08/#HARD_NEWS
                                               - early Export rumours
         http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/rja14/exportbill.html
                                   - Ross actually scarier when happy 

         Bram Cohen, the flaxen-haired hacker behind CodeCon, has
         been beavering away on BITTORRENT, his P2P obsession,
         fulltime and unpaid, for eight months. It's nearly ready to
         ship at DEFCON next week, but it needs a mite more testing.
         But there's a problem: how *do* you stress test a "swarming
         downloader"? BitTorrent's a helper app that's designed to
         allow servers to redistribute the download burden of
         slashdottings amongst the audience. Download a big
         BitTorrent-enabled file, and you'll simultaneously upload
         chunks to your fellow downloaders. It's a nice practical
         application of P2P. Except how do you simulate a
         slashdotting? Especially when you've already shrugged off
         one bona fide, slashdot.org appearence? Cohen sensibly
         thought of two words here: free pr0n. So he's got a 700meg
         porn file on his site he'd like you all to download. All of
         you. Preferably at the same time. If you're curious about
         network scaling issues, realworld Python applications, or
         you're just filthy, follow the link below. Preferably within
         a few minutes of getting this mail. You can always delete
         the file after you're done - hell, with production values
         like this, and copyright laws like that, it'd probably be
         best if you did. And maybe best if you didn't do this at work.
         http://bitconjurer.org/BitTorrent/download.html
                  - for Windows and UNIX (including a Debian package)
         http://www.debian.org/CD/
          - no, *Deb*ian - talking of which, why not go hardcore, and
                              distribute the Debian 3.0 ISOs instead?



                                >> ANTI-NEWS <<
                             berating the obvious

         starting to run out of the PUERILE GOOGLE MISSPELLINGS: 
         http://www.google.com/search?q=scientits , cocunt, phpinfo(), 
         http://www.google.com/search?q=%22DO+NOT+QUOTE+OR+CITE%22 , 
         and top of the list for "replace this text with title", it's 
         NASA: http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/budget/fy96/table.html - 
         c'mon guys, it's hardly rocket science... what's she pointing 
         at?: http://www.ntk.net/2002/07/26/dohoo.gif ... alarming new 
         BULL line: http://www.ntk.net/2002/07/26/dohbull.gif ... "We 
         ALL need a bilingual tag line": http://www.caerphillycu.co.uk/ 
         ... the public face http://www.netmgt.com/ of "public design": 
         http://www.netmgt.com/public_design/ ... recommended by top 
         amnesiacs: http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/0340742313.html ... "To 
         evict Narinder": http://www.bigbrother-online.co.uk/ ... BBC 
         covers Worldcom crash in pioneering Point/Counterpoint format: 
         http://www.ntk.net/2002/07/26/dohpoint.gif ... latest EDGE 
         reviews ailing, Edge-sponsored "Game On" show at Barbican -
         "well worth a visit", Edge concludes... 


                               >> EVENT QUEUE <<
                         goto's considered non-harmful

         At least three non-London-based events taking place in the 
         world next week: Finnish demo party THE ASSEMBLY (from Thu 
         2002-08-01, Hartwall-Areena, Helsinki, from 35 Euros) - now 
         with Nokia 7650 programming compo; and of course the rumoured 
         last-ever DEFCON (from Fri 2002-08-02, Alexis Park Hotel, Las 
         Vegas, US$75). Rounding off this faintly Nordic trio is of 
         course the Edinburgh Festival, at which we have the pleasure 
         of recommending consumer-goods home-delivery homage THE 
         MEASURE OF A MILKMAN (3.15pm, from Wed 2002-07-31, The 
         Pleasance, Edinburgh, from UKP4), a one-man masterpiece from 
         Andrew MacKay, best known as "The Professor" from pub landlord 
         sitcom "Time Gentlemen Please", "Pie Man" from "Lee And 
         Herring's Fist Of Fun", and a former "Michael Faraday" (and, 
         we think, "Nikola Tesla") at the Science Museum. 
         http://www.assembly.org/content/compos/rules_nokia_24h.html
          - Symbian OS not to be confused with http://www.sybian.com/
         http://www.defcon.org/
                                  - coffee, guns, and cannonball runs
     http://www.edfringe.com/searchshows/detail.php?type=show&id=MILK
                              - love these NASDAQ-style stock symbols 
     http://www.edfringe.com/searchshows/detail.php?type=show&id=TALK
                                             - id=COCK not available?
    http://www.edfringe.com/searchshows/detail.php?type=show&id=JSPRI
                            - Lee also launching his "Pea Green Boat"


                                >> TRACKING <<
               sufficiently advanced technology : the gathering

         The problem with chart-drawing programs is the same as their
         big brothers, presentation programs: the more powerful they
         are, the more of your precious life you spend tweaking. At
         what angle and shade of puce, I wonder, should my 3D
         pyramidical scattergram of our accounting discrepancies over
         time be? Sometimes you just want a barchart. Well, for
         simple-living Unix folk, old PLOTICUS may be the answer.
         PLOTICUS takes in data and config info on the command line,
         wipes its hands on its denim overalls, and belches a
         barchart (or linechart, or scatter graph, or whatever) in
         SVG, PS, PNG or somesuch. It's been around for years. It
         isn't in Java or PHP, and doesn't use XML. When things go
         wrong, it doesn't raise an exception, it segfaults. The
         built-in scripting language looks like something you wrote
         that time, drunk. But most data sources can be shovelled
         into it with a bit of Perl massage, and there's a great big
         pile of built-in (and hackable) scripts that cover most
         eventualities, and you want a quick-and-dirty chart of your
         logfile? It's yours. And if you want baroque, you know where
         the PowerPoint is kept.
         http://ploticus.sourceforge.net/doc/Welcome.html
                                               - ooh! bioinformatics!


                                >> MEMEPOOL <<
                ceci n'est pas une http://www.gagpipe.com/

         http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/2151754.stm imitates 
         http://www.theonion.com/onion3626/hersheys_pay_obese.html ... 
         http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99992572 imitates 
         http://www.theonion.com/onion3631/christian_right_lobbies.html 
         ... ambiguity in the (figurative?) use of "WE DISHONOR GOD BY 
         TOLERATING THE LIKES OF THESE": http://www.christocracy.net/ 
         ... future Al-Qaeda steganographic strategies revealed: 
www.google.com/groups?q=hihihi&selm=3d2daef8.31075143%40news.btinternet.com
         ... also from our upcoming "dumb search engine tricks" special: 
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22self-referential+google+link%22&btnI=1 , 
         and, of course: http://labs.google.com/sets?q1=hugh&q2=pugh
         ... semi-literate slashdot-comment found poetry of the week: 
         http://features.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=36274&cid=3908805
         ... top 100 "best singles ever" - for fans of novelty hits and 
         TV themes: http://tv.cream.org/arksingles.htm ... well, that 
         settles it: http://www.simulation-argument.com/ ... you'll go 
         blind (again): http://www.newsqueak.com/gawking/animatrix/ ... 


                                >> GEEK MEDIA <<
                                  get out less

         TV>> near non-stop nudity in the movie adaptation of the 
         Register-recommended spyware screensaver VIRTUAL GIRL (9.55pm, 
         Fri, C5): http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/20169.html 
         ... Madeline from TV's "La Femme Nikita" breaks a few other 
         taboos in David "Three Kings" O Russell's debut SPANKING THE 
         MONKEY (12.20am, Fri, BBC2)... while BIG BROTHER - THE "LIVE" 
         FINAL (from 8pm, Fri, C4) is intriguingly juxtaposed with the 
         Richard Burton Eurythmics-themed movie of NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR 
         (2.45am, Fri, C4)... following her popular series of Lloyds 
         TSB ads, Saturday is Joely Richardson night, as she lezzes up 
         with Saffron "Deep Blue Sea" Burrows in ART THAT SHOOK THE 
         WORLD: VICTORIA WOOLF'S ORLANDO (7.05pm, Sat, BBC2), and - 
         inexplicably - tries to have a child with Hugh Laurie in Ben 
         Elton-scripted abortion MAYBE BABY (9.05pm, Sat, BBC1)... so 
         thank heavens for ITV's now-annual showing of SPECIES 
         (11.30pm, Sat, ITV)... INDIA CALLING (11.05pm, Sun, C4) goes 
         behind the scenes at an English-language call centre in 
         Delhi... MAYBE IT'S ME (7pm, Mon-Fri, E4) is the teen sitcom 
         made by the Pop-Up Video folks, but the title's already been 
         toned down from "Maybe I'm Adopted"... and, after carting a 
         fridge around Ireland etc, the supremely irritating Tony Hawks 
         takes on another pointless bet in ONE HIT WONDERLAND (8pm, 
         Mon-Fri, Discovery) - stick to skateboarding, dude!... this 
         week's prurient factual programming includes unsurprising 
         historical revelations in SEX BC (9pm, Mon, C4), a nice 
         advertising opportunity for Norton Utilities in the breaks 
         between THE REAL GARY GLITTER (10.35pm, Tue, C4), a would-be 
         transsexual Buffy The Vampire Slayer fan in MAKE ME A MAN 
         (9pm, Wed, C4), and Chris Tarrant parlaying his "Is that your 
         final answer?" reputation into a voiceover spot on AMNESIA: 
         TRAPPED IN TIME (8pm, Tue, C5)... Rutger Hauer stalks fellow 
         USAF pilot Robert "Terminator 2" Patrick in TACTICAL ASSAULT 
         (9pm, Tue, C5)... and the competition to find terrestrial TV's 
         worst presenter gets a lot more interesting, as POP (5pm, Fri, 
         C5) provides a primetime slot for ex-Kenickie vocalist and 
         PlayUK veteran Lauren Laverne... 
         
         FILM>> Crikey, Stevo - looks like you've cut out a couple of 
         "wanker"s to get a PG rating for deranged talking-to-camera 
         film-of-the-year contender CROCODILE HUNTER: COLLISION COURSE
( www.screenit.com/movies/2002/the_crocodile_hunter_collision_course.html :
         Steve finds and smells dried lizard "poo" and then puts some 
         in his pocket to save it; Steve playfully pats Terri on her 
         clothed butt; Terri shows some cleavage in a tank-top; we see 
         a dog urinating on a man's hat)... otherwise there's yet 
         another chance to see the maestro flaunting his crude period 
         humour and novelty wigs - but that's enough about the added-
         nudity director's cut re-release of Mozart genius AMADEUS 
       ( http://www.suntimes.com/ebert/ebert_reviews/2002/04/041401.html :
         The one brief scene of Constanze's breasts, in medium-long 
         shot, has inspired the flywheels at the MPAA to re-rate the 
         movie R from its original PG. Thus high school students are 
         discouraged from seeing this movie)... Mike Myers increasingly 
         overstretches himself in basically the same fricking identical 
         film, but with a bigger budget, as AUSTIN POWERS IN GOLDMEMBER 
   ( http://www.screenit.com/movies/2002/austin_powers_in_goldmember.html :
         we see that Britney Spears has a navel ring and a small 
         tattoo; Beyonce Knowles plays [Myers'] foxy female sidekick 
         who fights with some people, uses some brief profanity and 
         wears various styles of revealing clothing)...
         
         THE VICTORIAN AFFECTATION>> and well done to the following NTK 
         readers who've taken advantage of the recent downturn to write 
         that book they'd always wanted to. Though obviously XCom02 
         lightning presentation stars JAMES BERESFORD and CHE PAULA 
         DUNLOP didn't write all of THE ALT.CYBERPUNK.CHATSUBO 
         ANTHOLOGY (UKP16.99) http://www.accanthology.com/ themselves - 
         they downloaded their favourite stories (and poems) - with the 
         authors' permission - off Usenet, where some of the highlights 
         - eg David Palmer's "Bugs" - can handily still be found: 
     http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=1lpq23INNch3%40gap.caltech.edu
         ... former GEEK PRIDE organiser TIM MCEACHERN has collected 
         the wisdom garnered in his years working with the mighty 
         Andover keiretsu in "yet another clueless business manifesto 
         for the post-digital age" THE NEW NEW ECONOMY (UKP13.99) 
         http://www.geeknation.com/ (love that lossy jpeg!), though he 
         admits that he "wishes he'd thought of" a promo piece like: 
         http://www.satirewire.com/news/june02/economy_of_errors.shtml
         ... while ADAM WISHART, who makes those "Blood on the Carpet" 
         and "Back to the Floor" TV shows, provides an impressively 
         even-handed account of the "Toywar" row over the etoy.com 
         domain in LEAVING REALITY BEHIND: INSIDE THE BATTLES FOR THE 
         SOUL OF THE INTERNET (UKP16.99), which is apparently only just 
         appearing in shops now because the litigation-crazed etoy 
         artists collective - who are supposed to be the *good guys* - 
         tried to injunct it for alleged negative portrayal of them: 
http://amsterdam.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0203/msg00050.html
         ... elsewhere in dead tree publishing: MARK BENNETT proudly 
         announces that you can now buy Brit cyberzine BLACK ICE (from 
         UKP5) online: http://www.blackicemedia.net/ , which is useful, 
         because it's almost impossible to find in the shops. Internal 
         NTK fanboy opinion maintains that Marvel's THE ULTIMATES  
         http://persiancaesar.com/continuity/ultimates.htm is "the new 
         Authority", while this month's must-not purchase - in case you 
         were tempted - is the suspiciously titled 16-page (+CD) CRAZY 
         PC (UKP3.95), whose occasional lapses into French lead us to 
         fear it's a very poorly revived version of CRAZYNET from 1999: 
         http://www.ntk.net/index.cgi?b=01999-07-16&l=278#l ... 


                               >> SMALL PRINT <<

       Need to Know is a useful and interesting UK digest of things that
         happened last week or might happen next week. You can read it
       on Friday afternoon or print it out then take it home if you have
     nothing better to do. It is compiled by NTK from stuff they get sent.
                       Registered at the Post Office as
                 "the t-shirts are so you can see where we are"
              http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=36782&cid=3957114
    


                                 NEED TO KNOW
            THEY STOLE OUR REVOLUTION. NOW WE'RE STEALING IT BACK.
                         Archive - http://www.ntk.net/
              Unsubscribe? Mail ntknow-unsubscribe@lists.ntk.net
                Subscribe? Mail ntknow-subscribe@lists.ntk.net
 NTK now is supported by UNFORTU.NET, and by you: http://www.geekstyle.co.uk/

                          (K) 2002 Special Projects.
             Copying is fine, but include URL: http://www.ntk.net/

                    Tips, news and gossip to tips@spesh.com
             All communication is for publication, unless you beg.
              Press releases from naive PR people to pr@spesh.com
     Remember: Your work email may be monitored if sending sensitive material.
       Sending >500KB attachments is forbidden by the Geneva Convention.
              Your country may be at risk if you fail to comply.




    
  • HARD NEWS
  • ANTI-NEWS
  • EVENT QUEUE
  • TRACKING
  • MEMEPOOL
  • GEEK MEDIA
  • SMALL PRINT