Entries Tagged as 'ireland'

George Lee- It’s my ball and I’m going home. #glee

george-lee-resigns
George Lee has resigned from Fine Gael and has resigned his seat in the Dáil for the most petulant, self-indulgent reasons. Quitting the party is one thing, but to resign the seat after 9 months spits in the eye of the Dublin South electorate. I’d be surprised if there’s more than a 40% turn out in the inevitable by-election to come.
Quitting a Dáil seat in frustration at not being able to change things in 9 months is a complete contradiction in terms and a copout that Sarah Palin would be proud of.

Thinking of buying a laptop? Steer clear of Dell Studios.

caricatures-ireland-desk
Round about this time last year I bought a Dell Studio 1735. On the experience of that purchase I’ll never buy Dell again: this badly designed, unresponsive piece of plastic has expunged me of any trust in any other Dell products.

Firstly, the keyboard has the most dreadful action of any keys I’ve ever pressed, including toy mobile phones from a Two Euro shop. It squashes down in the middle when you’re typing, and it’s got the clackiest keys, sounding like the spokes of a BMX bike in the 80s. Recently the F4 key just popped off the board. I secured it again, but I use secured in the same sense that the Beverly Hillbillies “secured” their belongings on the back of their car.
Some designer decided that the touch sensitive controls for DVD playback should be invisible too. They do become visible once they’ve been touched, but if you want to adjust your volume using them you must first run your finger along where you think they are so that some will light up, and you can remember the one you want once you’ve closed the DVD programme that springs open even if you just brush of that part of the keyboard.
The soundcard is dreadful. Sound playback even on external speakers clicks and hisses the whole way through. If I want clear playback I’ve to use a USB soundcard, then it works fine, but I shouldn’t have to shell out more money for something that should work in the first place.

It came with Vista installed, which isn’t really a hardware issue, but the whole thing packs up if I try to use data CDs and has to be rebooted, and then I have to eject the disc before Vista boots fully. I put this down to shitty Vista conspiring with shitty hardware.
The touchpad is about as sensitive as bark on a tree that died from an overdose of anaesthetic. For some reason it’s set off to the left rather than being placed neutrally in the middle. You might think this would be to the exclusion of left handed people, but no, it would be a more comfortable experience for a lefty; right handed users will find it takes a lot of getting used to, at least, once the cramps have passed.
No, I never returned it to Dell. The reason is the same one that most people would have: I had to buy a new computer because the old one packed up, and once I had it, I had no window in my work schedule to send it off for in indefinite period for repair.

Or to put it simply, you can’t repair bad design.
UPDATE: looks like Pat’s having Dell problems too.
UPDATE 15/03/10: Now the screen’s getting loose and shaking.

Lisbon II- Just vote.

lisbon2-II-cartoon

As seems par for the course these days both sides in the Lisbon debate made an absolute pig’s ear of it, basing campaigns on irrational fears and an aversion to facts as strong as a rabid dog’s aversion to water. Heart strings and purse strings have been pulled on by either side to the detriment of debate. Wages, job creation, economic recovery, abortion, euthanasia and the salty tears of children have all made their way onto a stage that is hazardously slippy with bullshit.
Europe being good for Ireland in the past does not create an entitlement for Europe to expect a docile Yes from Ireland. Nor would that make us less European. The treaty in the form of a European Constitution has been rejected by the French and Dutch.
Nor does a Yes vote pave the way for abortion, conscription, euthanasia, floods of immigrants and a minimum wage that’s lower than the dole. Anyone peddling these on your door should be distrusted.
Don’t accept poster slogans of either side at face value. Don’t vote based on NAMA or government dissatisfaction. Don’t let anyone confuse the issues of Lisbon and social policy in Ireland- that’s a very seperate debate, one that’s needed soon, but isn’t in this treaty. It’s not too late to inform yourself: the Referendum Commission has a dedicated website and Labour are answering any and all questions online today.
I don’t have any party affiliations nor do I seek to influence your decision. I want to remind you that a decision needs to be made and as a citizen it’s your obligation and your privilege to take part in the decision. Ireland’s a banana republic, corrupt at every level, but barring count fraud that corruption can’t touch the one bit of power left to us as Irish citizens.
The right to vote. Yes or No. You get to call it.

Spam- 85% of all Irish emails.

spam tin

From RTE: “Spam, or junk mail, now accounts for over 85% of all email traffic in Ireland.

The figures are based on the monitoring of more than 13 million email messages, sent to over 1000 domains, during the month of July.”

Sounds about right judging from my inbox. If I’d taken up a fraction of what I’ve been offered I’d be tripping over myself all the time. If you get me. *ahem*.


Dolphins in Carrigaholt!

Was down in Carrigaholt in Co. Clare to see the dolphins in the Shannon Estuary with Dolphinwatch. It’s a great experience, you spent two hours all over the Mouth of the Shannon watching the dolphins in their feeding grounds. There’s plenty of other wildlife in the air and on the cliff-face to see as well. The crew are very friendly and knowledgeable and I really recommend getting down there before the summer’s out!