Archive for April, 2006

Spare Change

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006 at 1:09 pm

I’m looking forward to the new coins coming in, as the current ones are so heavy they hole your pockets after a while.

Not sure what most people do, but when I get home I empty my pockets out and throw any spare change into a jar. Except my jar got full so I then used a spare drawer.

Now with the existing silver coins ceasing to be legal tender late this year, and noting my collection of coins had got quite big, I decided it was probably time to count it and bank it.

NZ Coins.JPG

Ouch. Turned out I had a total of 1,601 NZ coins. The exact breakdown being:

$0.05 389 $19.45
$0.10 283 $28.30
$0.20 351 $70.20
$0.50 340 $170.00
$1.00 121 $121.00
$2.00 117 $234.00

Total 1601 $642.95

I needed a knapsack to carry it to the bank, and you should have seen their face when I showed them what I wanted to bank. However when they realised I had pre-sorted and pre-counted it they were much relieved.

oseas coins.JPG

On top of the NZ currency, I also had leftover foreign currency. The foreign coins can’t be banked but they probably only come to $50 or so.

oseas notes.JPG

However the foreign banknotes can be cashed, and I was again surprised by how many I had once I counted them all:

US Dollars 100 = $286.18
Malaysian Ringgits 38 = $16.57
Thai Bahts 1,160 = $49.05
Sri Lanka Rupees 50 = $0.77
UK Pounds 30 = $85.18
Chinese Yuan 11 = $2.18
Australian Dollars 105 = 124.40
Euros 180 = $354.21
Canadian Dollars 55 = 76.92
Japanese Yen 6,000 = 83.17

Total = $1,078.63

So in total I had over $1,700 in that drawer. I suddenly feel richer. That gets me a trip the Great Barrier Reef :-)

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IP is back

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006 at 11:09 am

Insolent Prick is back, talking about whales. With both Cactus Kate and IP back, the world is a better place :-)

I can refute suggestions that CK and IP are both aliases for me, representing my X and Y chromosomes respectively. They are also not the same person.

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All systems go

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006 at 10:52 am

My Sky got installed this morning. All very simple and over in under 30 minutes.

It took me less than five minutes to set it up to record eight series (will record them every day or week even if times change a bit) and six movies or documentaries. The History Channel has some great stuff on it which will make for good viewing on raing days.

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Global Warming in Dunedin

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006 at 10:26 am

dunedin earth day1 - blog.jpg

The photo above shows the Greens for Earth Day highlighting global warming in Dunedin. If it wasn’t so cold that they had to be wearing wetsuits, then they may get a better response :-)

No tag for this post.

Repeat after me

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006 at 10:13 am

Okay everyone I want you to repeat after me:

The web is NOT the Internet.

The web is merely a service or protocol available over the Internet. The Internet includes e-mail, P2P, IM, NNTP and oh hundreds of other things.

So please NZ Herald sub-editors (I know it wouldn’t have been the journalist) please do not use a phrase such as “Telecom web rules change under fire“.

It’s the equivalent of reporting a change to road rules as a change to Honda Civic rules.

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Civil Unions

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006 at 9:53 am

There were 460 civil unions last year, of which 377 were same sex couples.

Some people have commented that the numbers are not very high, but the way I see it that is 920 NZers who have been able to have their relationships recognised – and for 754 of them they were unable to do so previously.

Plus there are people like me who plan to get married, not civil unioned, one day but am glad that civil union option exists for those who want to use it – especially those ineligible to marry.

No tag for this post.

Benign Strategic Environment

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006 at 8:34 am

As you read this article on rioting in East Timor, please do remember that we live in a “benign strategic environment”

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V for Vendetta

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 9:40 pm

A great movie. Best one I have seen this year. V for Vendetta has a plot I can relate to, excellent special effects and Natalie Portman!

I liked the message of not tolerating a totalitarian state, and the end scene was very powerful with all the masks (which I loved also).

I didn’t even know who played V until the closing credits.

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Lego PC

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 12:22 pm

lego_creations_1.jpg

Very cool! I’d love to replace someone’s actual PC with one.

From Techeblog

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Rodney on DWTS

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 11:57 am

Rodney has blogged on why he is doing Dancing with the Stars. I’ve not been convinced that it is a good idea politically but I admire him for having the guts to do it, and hope he does well.

And I do love his line about time away from parliamentary duties:

The truth is that even at half steam I do four times more than the average Labour MP.

This would be very true.

No tag for this post.

Labour’s new health policy

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 11:41 am

Tracy Watkins reviews the Government’s new health policy for elective surgery – finger pointing!

Helen Clark’s concern is “most other district health boards appear to be managing waiting lists in a way that doesn’t attract headlines.”

While Pete Hodgson says “I hope every DHB appreciates the consequences of promising more than they can deliver.”

See it is all the faulty of those naughty DHBs. Nothing to do with the Government.

No tag for this post.

Miracle Cure

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 11:29 am

If you suffer form any of the following, a miracle cure which will help is now available. It is effective against

* obesity
* colds
* heart disease
* depression.
* high blood pressure.
* stress
* bad sense of smell
* bad posture
* bladder problems
* headaches
* migraines
* arthritis

On a very selective basis, I am available to assist with bookings an hour apart :-)

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Who is this?

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 10:52 am

2000.jpg

This girl was world famous around six years ago. Can anyone guess who she is without checking.

I would have never guessed it.

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West Wing Transition

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 10:42 am

Now don’t read over the break if you want to wait to see it yourself in a few months or years!
(more…)

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Truth in Sentencing

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 9:10 am

Somewhere in Wellington, Stephen Franks is yelling into his cornflakes “I told you I was right”.

After advocating “truth in sentencing” for many years, he has had no less than the Law Commission join his call for it.

Labour greatly enlarged the number of crimes and sentences for which one could get parole after one third of the sentence. And listen to this quote by no less than Sir Geoffrey Palmer:

“The present sentencing system was based on something that bordered on deception,”

“We think that probably there needs to be a closer relationship between a nominal sentence which is imposed by a judge and the actual time served by a prisoner,”

The Commission has also called for the Parole Board’s activities to be narrowed. This is getting pretty close to National’s policy of abolishing parole. Now they have said that they think sentences should be shortened to compensate for a reduction in parole, but there I disagree.

Overall though looks to be a sensible move in the right direction. It will be interesting to see if the Government endorses it, as doing so will be a major major backdown for them.

No tag for this post.

Solomon Islands

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 8:44 am

I’m starting to get nervous over our involvement in the Solomons. I am sure we are there with excellent motivations and like the Aussies probably figure we have to get involved or it will be even worse.

However when I see ANZAC troops arresting Opposition MPs, I wonder how certain we are we are on the “good guys” side – if there is one.

Are we certain the election results were 100% legit?

Who ordered the arrest of Opposition MPs for involvement in the riots? Will the arrested MPs be able to vote on the no confidence motion in the Government? Was it an independent prosecutor or police force or the Government? Did we ask to see proof of involvement before our troops helped arrest people?

I’m hoping the answers to all these, and more, questions are fine. But when we place our troops under the effective control of a foreign government, just days after a contested election – well it is no surprise you see opposition figures on the TV news saying they regard our troops as partisan etc.

This has the potential to get very messy.

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ANZAC Day Coverage

Tuesday, April 25th, 2006 at 6:48 am

Reminder that Maori TV (Chan 33 on Sky Digital) has all day coverage of ANZAC Day ceremonies and events.

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Female Israeli Soldiers

Monday, April 24th, 2006 at 11:09 pm

Rachel Papo has a superb photo gallery of female Israeli soldiers. Captures them in a massive variety of scenes and tasks. Quite fascinating to flick through the 100 or so photos.

36.jpg

Hat Tip: Dr Helen

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Dancing With The Stars

Monday, April 24th, 2006 at 4:30 pm

The official line-up has been announced

* Christine Rankin
* Angela Bloomfield
* Beatrice Faumuina
* Lorraine Downes
* Rodney Hide
* Danyon Loader
* Steve Gurney
* David Wikaira-Paul

Some pretty popular people there. Beatrice could well be a crowd favourite. I have a long-term crush on Angela Bloomfield so will be supporting her :-) I will of couse be hoping Rodney does well also.

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Sex

Monday, April 24th, 2006 at 4:20 pm

The world would be a much happier place if politicians and the like stopped trying to regulate sexual behaviour. The latest stupidity is from South Carolina where a bill has been proposed to ban the sale of sex toys!

So guns will be legal, but not vibrators! I won’t even suggest vibrating guns as the answer :-)

Meanwhile the Vatican shows a small glimmer of common sense. They are considering saying it is okay to use a condom for sex, if you are a married couple, and one partner has HIV/AIDS.

If you are single with AIDS though, it will still be a sin to use a condom!

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Fisking Telecom

Monday, April 24th, 2006 at 10:30 am

The SST had an interview with Telecom’s Bruce Parkes on broadband. Now Bruce is a very smart guy, and is very careful with what he say, so has done an excellent job in promoting Telecom’s views.

However I think it would be useful to put some context around some of the comments and assertions made.

In an apparent effort to stave off drastic regulation, Telecom has introduced better services this year. First, there was the raising of its broadband speeds to at least 2 megabits/second this month

The theoretical maximum speeds have been raised. The necessary capacity to actually achieve those speeds has not been increased and many subscribers still only get speeds of less than 256 kb/sec. Telecom are refusing to reveal their contention ratios at exchanges which determine what speeds will be achieved at busy times.

then the announcement of next generation ADSL2 services from June, which will offer up to 24mb/s.

There will probably be no ADLS2 services in June. All Telecom have announced is they will start deploying gear in June. It is quite possible one will not have any customers on ADLS2 until 2007.

“What’s on offer to our customers in New Zealand compares favourably to other countries you instinctively look at.”

If one takes price, speed, data limits and contention ratios into account we are well off the mark.

In price we’ve always had attractive residential offerings and our business offerings now are very competitive globally.

Now this is a revealing statement. Bruce says their residential offerings have always been attractive and their business offering *now* are competitive.

Up until a few weeks ago Telecom was charging up to $2,400 a month for business broadband, a service with a wholesale cost of around $27 a month. They have reduced their prices to $90 or so which shows how monopolistic their previous pricing was. And it was only a successful regulatory outcome at the Commerce Commission which saw those prices drop.

“In terms of speed there’s been a lot of ill-informed comment. We’re in the process of rolling out the second generation of (digital subscriber line) technology. That has yet to be deployed by Telstra. In the UK, BT is only just starting. So in terms of incumbents our deployment of next generation broadband is more than respectable.”

Here Bruce is careful to only compare themselves to other incumbents. What he skips over is that in those countries non incumbents are offering faster and cheaper services as they have local loop access.

The introduction of ADSL2 might look like a response to regulatory threat, he said, but the company had been working on it for at least 12 months.

This is true, but I bet you the timing was partly determined by regulatory threat.

“(Fibre to the node) will be a big determinant of how New Zealand performs in the broadband stakes,” said Parkes.

Yes it will, in fact fibre to the home is the future. And one of the big decisions ahead for the Government is whether it wants a fibre to the home network owned by one company, or available for all companies to use (such as roads, airports, water supply electricity lines etc).

The risk for Telecom’s competitors, such as ihug, is that their multimillion-dollar investments under an LLU regime could be stranded when Telecom installs more fibre. They therefore need some assurance that the government will give them access to the fibre as well as the copper loop.

Yes local loop unbundling will only deliver short-term gains. The issue is whether the wholesale arm of Telecom which owns the infrastructure should be vertically integrated with its retail arm or separated out so that it has an incentive to treat all retail ISPs equally.

“It’s impossible for Telecom to make long term decisions when the regulatory environment is so uncertain,” said Parkes. “We’ve been asked by the government about our investment plans and we’ve indicated that those investment plans are heavily linked to the outcome of their stock-take.”

This is a fair point. That is why a one-off change to the environment to separate wholesale and retail will be superior to continuing regulation. Once you get the incentives right, then regulation will be lessened and *all* players will be able to make more certain investment decisions.

UPDATE: Similiar comments on InternetNZ blog by Colin Jackson

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Good journalism

Monday, April 24th, 2006 at 10:08 am

Cactus Kate lists her five favourite journalists. They are:

1 Jane Clifton
2 Helen Bain
3 Deborah Hill Cone
4 Chris Trotter
5 Russell Brown

Read her column to see why.

Talking of good journalism I though Michael Field in the SST did a good job of going through declassified US cables from the 1970s to do a fascinating article on what the Wellington US Embassy was talking to the State Department about.

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1st Australian spam conviction

Monday, April 24th, 2006 at 10:04 am

Australia has convicted its first spammer. By coincidence I was in Perth when the case was being heard. I didn’t have time to go to the court but got daily reports back from the enforcement agency head.

Spam sourced from Australia has dropped from around 7% to almost 0% since their anti-spam law was passed. This is the only business which refused to comply with the new law.

NZ’s anti-spam law is currently with the Commerce Committee and will be reported back to the House in June.

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Is the Herald on Sunday legally a pimp now?

Monday, April 24th, 2006 at 8:44 am

I reported yesterday on how the Herald on Sunday had a reporter and photographer lie to and/or deceive Mick Jagger for four days, just so they could get a story. Now there is no doubt that they would have planned for a situation where Jagger hit on the girls and tried to sleep with them. I mean if one is prepared to cajole Jagger into posing for a photo *after* he has just said he has got burnt in the past by them appearing in newspapers, and then you go ahead and of course publish the photo, there doesn’t seem to be many ethical considerations at play.

What I am more interested in is the legal status, if we assume that the Herald on Sunday and their staff were prepared to sleep with Jagger for the sake of a story. Let’s look at the official OSH regulations for the NZ sex industry.

Commercial sexual services, in terms of the Prostitution Reform Act, means sexual services that:

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Forgettable MPs

Monday, April 24th, 2006 at 8:15 am

Oh dear – poor Kim Beazley. Just at the time that Australian Labor is lambasting John Howard for not recalling a couple of diplomatic cables over several years, Beazley forgets the name of one of his *own* Senators.

I suspect Beazley will be gone soon.

UPDATE: It appears that Kim couldn’t actually name even a single one of his South Australia Senators correctly. Not *one* of them.

Hat Tip: The Currency Lad

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