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  • NTK 2007
  • NTK 2006
  • NTK 2005
  • 2004-12-10
    #350
    Patents, presents, privacy
  • 2004-11-26
    #349
    Google recruits, history refuted
  • 2004-11-12
    #348
    Geowanking for plugins
  • 2004-10-29
    #347
    McCandless and Brooker - together at last
  • 2004-10-15
    #346
    Web 2.0, Stirling Albion - Nil
  • 2004-10-01
    #345
    Jumping the shark, gun
  • 2004-09-17
    #344
    Foo, Foo, Alan Sugar, McGrew
  • 2004-09-03
    #343
    Piracy good, not bad like you thought
  • 2004-08-20
    #342
    Google boner, kick out the MD5
  • 2004-08-06
    #341
    Yo Robot, Carry On Camping
  • 2004-07-23
    #340
    from Odeon to Od-Iain
  • 2004-07-09
    #339
    Browser Wars II - Electric Boogaloo
  • 2004-06-04
    MiniNTK #30
    Not the NotCon final Schedule
  • 2004-05-28
    #338
    Peek-a-boo Barney, Charles III "in charge"
  • 2004-05-21
    #337
    Hey, Hey, Software Pa(tents) - slight reprise
  • 2004-05-14
    #336
    A wip-woawing Widdecombe wollercoaster wide
  • 2004-05-07
    #335
    A prawn sandwich and a BBC Micro
  • 2004-04-30
    #334
    Eternal Sunshine of the Wireless Find
  • 2004-04-23
    #333
    PayPal, piracy to "destroy society"
  • 2004-04-16
    #332
    Loads more Gatesions, all-geek radio
  • 2004-04-09
    #331
    Easter NotCon speaker hunt
  • 2004-04-02
    #330
    The mass Onion-isation of pretty much everybody
  • 2004-03-26
    #329
    LOAFs of spam, wifi settees
  • 2004-03-19
    #328
    state of the "nanny state" nation
  • 2004-03-12
    #327
    EU Ew-yew, pseudo- edutainment
  • 2004-03-05
    #326
    SCO bandits, eBaywatch
  • 2004-02-27
    #325
    Tidgy fridges, didgeridoos
  • 2004-02-20
    #324
    ConConUK, Space 0.64 miles per second
  • 2004-02-13
    #323
    All Tim O'Reilly, all the time
  • 2004-02-06
    #322
    info on ebay scams only $10
  • 2004-01-30
    #321
    the site now running on platform - well, whatever platform you like...
  • 2004-01-23
    #320
    spam vs spam, Lisp to Perl
  • 2004-01-16
    #319
    Name-calling, nuclear lan parties
  • 2004-01-09
    MiniNTK #24
    Even more unpopular answers
  • 2004-01-02
    MiniNTK #23
    Unpop quiz
  • NTK 2003
  • NTK 2002
  • NTK 2001
  • NTK 2000
  • NTK 1999
  • NTK 1998
  • NTK 1997
  • HARD NEWS
  • ANTI-NEWS
  • TRACKING
  • MEMEPOOL
  • GEEK MEDIA
  • SMALL PRINT

 _   _ _____ _  __ <*the* weekly high-tech sarcastic update for the uk>
| \ | |_   _| |/ / _ __   __2004-05-28_ o       join! sign up at
|  \| | | | | ' / | '_ \ / _ \ \ /\ / / o    http://lists.ntk.net/
| |\  | | | | . \ | | | | (_) \ v  v /  o website (+ archive) lives at:
|_| \_| |_| |_|\_\|_| |_|\___/ \_/\_/   o     http://www.ntk.net/

         
        "Iran has mastered between 60 and 70% of the technology needed 
         for the production of nuclear fuel, a former Iranian 
         representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency 
         (IAEA) said..."
http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,6119,2-10-1462_1532374,00.html
             ...at 90%, they'll have enough energy to start building a 
                Battle Lab, Spy Satellite, army of Chrono Legionnaires


                               >> HARD NEWS <<
                          henceforths and hithertos

         Last time the purple T Rex made a flailing-armed assault on
         the Net, it was to demand that a parody song be removed from
         a site for trademark reasons. The site in question? The EFF,
         who did what you'd expect: sighed a little, then pulled back
         a curtain to reveal sixteen thousand First Amendment/
         Copyright Jedi attack lawyers. This time, scenting easier prey,
         BARNEY THE DINOSAUR went for a smaller, crunchier, victim: the 
         owner of barney.co.uk, six year old Barney Loosemore. Latter
         Barney was of course maliciously hoarding the domain under
         the ridiculous pretense that he had as much right to his own
         Christian name as said fictional corporate entity. Mmm, good
         multinational branded dinosaur eats here. Unfortunately,
         Barney L.'s dad is Tom Loosemore. Tom is an old school
         netizen, ex-Wired UK refugee. He helped set up FaxYourMP,
         and various other NTK favourites. Tom sat down and
         explained, in words that even dinosaurs understand, why you
         can't steal domains from little children. Nominet's dispute
         arbiter agreed, spattered HIT Entertainment's plea with
         corrective "[sics]", and kicked it out of pretend domain 
         name court as fast as its stubby little, reptilian little,
         vexatious little extinct legs could stumble. Jesus, even the
         real dinosaurs didn't go *picking fights* with meteors.
www.nominet.org.uk/DisputeResolution/Decisions/Drs01544Barneycouk.html
                        - worth reading for the ill-concealed contempt
         http://www.hitentertainment.com/portal/flash/player.asp
    - can someone cause some kind of worldwide Wiggle-extinction event?
  
         There probably won't be much of an NTK next week; we'll most 
         likely send out a schedule for the ground-breaking UK NOTCON 
         taking place the following Sunday (2004-06-06) - which might 
         still be useful even if you can't make it to London, due to a 
         "more than token" effort to webcast and IRC-dissect as many 
         sessions as possible. Then we're hoping to take off most of 
         the rest of June for essential site maintenance, and perhaps 
         even a redesign as controversial as 2000's slightly greyer 
         border on the website and 1997's ditching of the "Culture" 
         section. Please continue to send us stuff, however, especially 
         if it might still be funny in a couple of weeks' time, or if 
         your reminiscences of the last 7 years are as poignant as 
         those of reader BEN SCHOFIELD, who must speak for many of us 
         as he recalls: "Jesus Christ, I've been reading this every 
         week for seven years. I've no more money than when I started, 
         and my main leisure activities still consist of getting drunk 
         and sitting in front of computers. Where has my life gone?"
         http://www.notcon04.com/
            - just a thought, Ben: maybe it's gone to South Kensington
        

                                >> ANTI-NEWS <<
                             berating the obvious

         that's a *lot* of <form enctype="multipart/form-data"> tags: 
         http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/28/dohcgi.gif ... double negative 
         o' the week: http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/28/dohieee.gif ... 
         Transport for London's political incorrectness gone mad: 
         http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/28/dohdefect.gif ... Widdy of week: 
       http://halfpricewebdesign.co.uk/?f=The%20Whole%20Fricking%20World
         ... not quite his original goal of retaining both American 
         continents for the Spanish empire, but still keeping his hand 
         in: http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/28/dohincharge.gif ... those 
         missing millions: http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/28/doh2e.gif , 
         http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/28/doheco.gif ... guess why we 
         didn't run the last line of the main text as a Google search: 
      http://www.antiquerestorer.co.uk/sbs/clockbase.htm ... reassuringly 
         expensive: http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/28/dohhar.gif ... for real 
         completists: http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/28/dohwing.gif ... enjoy 
         "Various Artists"?: http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/28/dohvar.gif ... 


                                >> TRACKING <<
               sufficiently advanced technology : the gathering

         By some freakish act of omission, we've never mentioned
         TWISTED, Python's own event-driven based-on-a-MUD became-an-
         appserver-cum-package-installer-cum-IRC-bot framework.
         Similiarly, we've never banged on about JYTHON, the Python
         that runs in the Java VM. Allow us to address both these
         failings by talking about two funky web-testing applications
         built upon each. Python Browsing Probe (PBP) is a web
         session scripting tool built on Twisted and Python's
         "mechanize". It lets you script and record a set of Pythonish
         commands for clicking on buttons and filling in forms,
         letting you automate a whole Web session in a text file.
         Mechanize can't *quite* cope with Javascript (yet): so if
         you want to use Python to, ooh, say, automate your bank's
         javascriptastic statement-downloading Webpage, you might
         want to try Jython with HTTPUNIT. HttpUnit is Java's own
         browser emulator, which, thanks to the Mozilla project's
         Rhino javascript-in-java, is pretty down with the .js. If
         you're a Pythonista looking to test your own flaky website
         (or spider someone else's), and/or you like Javascript 
         implementations named after funny animals, give them a try.
         http://pbp.berlios.de/
               - also linked to buildbot, a neat Python tinderbox lite
         http://httpunit.sourceforge.net/
                              - pretty easy to get running with Jython
         http://www.jython.org/
                                             - Jython now up to 2.2ish
         http://wwwsearch.sourceforge.net/python-spidermonkey/
                      - Javascript in Python. Now my head really hurts.


                                >> MEMEPOOL <<
                contains a source of http://snackspot.org/

         come on, you were all thinking it: www.martian.fm/artburn.htm 
         ... not the not-safe-for-work "derriere" the Renault ads had 
         in mind: http://images.google.com/images?q=megane&safe=off ... 
         Future launch "paperless", potentially "readerless" magazine: 
       http://www.indiemagazine.co.uk/cgi-bin/news.cgi?id=2593&section=3
         ... Oxfam http://www.bignoisemusic.com/ rebadge of Peter 
         Gabriel's OD2 service requires IE5, Windows Media Player 7, 
         "doesn't even display in Opera", apparently... handy IQ test 
         - by seeing how many stupid diallers you're dumb enough to 
         install: http://www.personaltest.co.uk/ ... spoof "fan" mail?: 
         ftp://ftp.bbc.co.uk/pub/sketch/monkey.txt (semi-anonymised 
         mirror: http://www.ntk.net/2004/05/21/dohmonkey.txt )... 
         together at last: http://sam.zoy.org/fun/goatse/ ... webcams - 
         were they the "blogs" of the 1990s?: http://www.biddycam.com/ 
         ... amazingly, it's all just "concerned citizens" helping out:
http://www.google.com/groups?selm=c7sa0t%24prj%241%40FreeBSD.csie.NCTU.edu.tw
         

                                >> GEEK MEDIA <<
                                  get out less
 
         TV>> BIG BROTHER (10pm, Fri, C4) "gets evil" in its new 
         series, an intriguing development for anyone who thought 
         TV's most exploitative glorification of CCTV surveillance, 
         presented by cackling bully Davina McCall, might have gone 
         some distance down that path already... Andrew Gilligan has 
         clearly moved on from all that recent unpleasantness when he 
         asks "Do Our Spies Sex It Up?" in 30 MINUTES (6pm, Sat, C4) 
         ... and despite apparent inaccuracies in the opening explosion 
         http://www.intuitor.com/moviephysics/swordfish.html , we still 
         have a soft spot for anti-terrorist hacker curio SWORDFISH 
         (10pm, Sun, C4)... the Digital Spy forums claim that HOW 
         FRIENDS CHANGED THE WORLD (3.55pm, Mon, C4) was previously 
         pulled from transmission due to Warner Bros "rights issues" 
         http://forum.digitalspy.co.uk/board/showthread.php?t=125420 
         ... Arnie erases a painful relationship using memory implants, 
         an Uzi in relentless "Eternal Sunshine" companion TOTAL RECALL 
         (10.20pm, Mon, BBC1)... C5 takes its second look at STRANGER 
         THAN FICTION: THE TRUTH BEHIND THE MOON LANDINGS (9pm, Wed, 
         C5) http://www.ntk.net/index.cgi?b=02002-08-09&l=208#l in less 
         than 2 years... as science and sensationalism satisfactorily 
         combine in new three-part embryology docu HUMAN MUTANTS (9pm, 
         Thu, C4)... 
         
         FILM>> wisecracking audiences will enjoy the long gaps for 
         sarcastic comments after almost every line of the daft dialogue 
         in largely enjoyable low-key ID4 remake THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW 
         ( http://www.ahafilm.info/movies/moviereviews.phtml?fid=7580 : 
         Production told American Humane that these scenes were filmed 
         using real wolves, and then later, in post production, CG 
         wolves were substituted [...] The director was disappointed at 
         how calm the wolves were; Emmerich wanted them to snarl and 
         fight with each other, but the wrangler said that they would 
         not behave that way since they were from the same pack. Scenes 
         of the wolves walking through snow and chasing Sam and the 
         other men were computer generated, as was the wolf that jumped 
         against the window)...
                                              


                               >> 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
                       "for every sparrow that falls..."
     http://pants.heddley.com/2003/12/01/2003-12-01.html#1070280672.720354
     

                                 NEED TO KNOW
            THEY STOLE OUR REVOLUTION. NOW WE'RE STEALING IT BACK.
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  • HARD NEWS
  • ANTI-NEWS
  • TRACKING
  • MEMEPOOL
  • GEEK MEDIA
  • SMALL PRINT