Posts Tagged ‘phone’

To Be or Not to Be a Kiwi Dad in Emergency Situations

Friday, December 9th, 2011

Sometimes I wonder whether I did well when I decided to move to New Zealand. Occasionally I get a hint. Today I went to get my kid from school and, as he was coming from the indoor swimming pool with all his wet stuff tucked randomly in his backpack, a bright red box fell on the footpath. It was a pocket-size waterproof electronic device which combines radio (including two SW bands), LED torch and USB laptop/cellphone charger, a battery-free dual-powered (dynamo and solar) compact emergency unit. Initially, my Romanian-educated instincts made me believe that my son pinched it somehow and I was ready to take it to the ‘lost and found property’ area, then I realized that every single kiddo had one of them. The NZ Red Cross gave every single school-aged child in Christchurch this survival item in the wake of the terrible earthquake we had earlier this year. Yet sometimes I doubt I’ve made a good decision by coming to this country – in the end of the day I didn’t get a bright red solar radio to listen to my cricket when I have my beer pretending that I’m out fishing, boating or camping. This is age discrimination and I should complain to the authorities!

This is no advert, I really like it!

Oh, it seems that the Americans get a fake version of this device. Watch

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_10KXcTGV4g

only if you have nothing better to do. Mine (my son gifted it to me: ‘you can have it, Dad’) has better features!

A Different Perspective on the ‘News of the World’ Phone Hacking Scandal

Sunday, July 17th, 2011

This is something everybody seems to agree upon: the evil Murdoch Media Empire played dirty and must now pay the price. This article doesn’t intend in any way to condone the use of bribe, beach of privacy, or support any moral assault on people who are already victims. Yet there is another story behind this story and most media outlets seem to ignore it.

Cameron

Media and Power, Power and Media

More or less controlled by (and not necessarily 100% obedient to) commercial interests, in the free world Media is one of the few ways people can have access to what’s happening behind the closed doors of the various structures of Power. In some cases, journalists use non-orthodox methods to gather information. This information creates the modern panem et circenses. Bred for the journalists themselves and their bosses, yes, but also circus, fun, entertainment and, last but not least, knowledge for the masses.

Partnership between media and financial and/or political interests is common. Many politicians have been on the other side of the pen, microphone or camera not long before becoming who they are now. Normally, politicians and journalists don’t cut each other’s throats. Even less common is for a journalist to attack another.

Surely, there are many other dirty stories of dubious methods used by the media, yet they don’t usually surface. What makes this one special? It’s the timing.

Poor old Rupert looked like a granddad not yet out of his pajamas when the postman called in with the news and it took him days to realize what was actually happening. This proves he had no clue, which, in turn, proves there had been thorough planning into this. If the most powerful media magnate couldn’t get a hint of what was going to come, the information leak had to be sourced inside  circles that not even the many sources of the Murdoch Empire had any access to. This kind of information doesn’t just leak. If it leaks,it stops before hitting the front page.

So timing: why release this bombshell in July 2011, years after the hacking had taken place? The answer is, at a superficial level at least, obvious: the deal over BSkyB had to be prevented at any cost.

Sky TV

Who Is to Benefit?

Just ponder: if BSkyB doesn’t change hands, who is to benefit? Not only economically, but politically. Who so desperately needs the status qvo in British Media? Who’s hiding behind the smoke screen?

Egypt Crisis – Street Violence and International Confusion – Where to?

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

Ten days into the protest movements, there are more questions than answers around the Tahrir Square in Cairo and indeed in the whole Arab World.

The Egyptian popular uprising has the characteristics of a revolution, and a bloody one, too. Sides are starting to appear clearer out of the smoke of petrol bombs and a power vacuum is opening between the main three parts involved in this street conflict. But who exactly are these three parts and what are they doing right now?

  1. The anti-government protesters, conquerors of the Square, are turning from peaceful demonstrators to a more violent and better organized civil army – one can only assume they are representing most layers of the Egyptian society and that they would be mainly Muslims.
  2. The pro-government street movement, the anti-demonstrators, the ones who apparently created the first disturbances by blocking the entrance to the Square in an attempt to cut-off supplies to the protesters – they are thought to include policemen in plain clothes and to be acting on orders from the Mubarak regime, but it is more likely that they would be lower echelons of the power who ruled Egypt for sixty years, people who have a lot to lose once the 82 year old President steps down (or is ousted). The only proof that there was any government interference in organizing the anti-demonstration is Vodafone’s statement that its network was used to send certain messages (allowed by the mobile phone operator due to some legal implications).
  3. The Army – a bumper between the two belligerent parties, yet an overwhelmed, inefficient and undecided one, as the orders come vertically from the official structure of command while the soldiers in the street are, at an individual level, close to the mob around them. The Army holds the key for the future of Egypt as long as it exists as a monolithic entity, a force to be reckoned with and a potential partner for the foreign powers to negotiate with. As soon as the Army starts taking sides, the revolution can easily become civil war.

The situation is so complex and volatile, that international reactions have been shaky, to say the least. In the last couple of days, American and European leaders seem to have understood that Hosni Mubarak is a dead politician, like it or not. Some other Arab leaders in countries surrounding Egypt can see the end of their regimes approaching quickly. If the revolution is not contained in Egypt (and it seems it will not be), the movement will spread abroad. This is not a Revolution similar to what Europe had in 1848, leading to the modernization of the continent by expressing the national entities and creating national states. The Arab World is divided by purely administrative borders. In fact, one people/one meta-nation live in the area and will act like one. This is something that may elude the understanding of the Western politicians. The road from tribal to modern state has been detoured via artificial countries resulted at the end of the European colonization of Northern Africa and the Arabian Peninsula.

So, what’s next?

Forget Mubarak, who pledges not to leave the country. He is history. Good or bad, he’s played his part. The longer the unrest lasts, the harder the local economy will be hit and the deeper the conflict in the Egyptian society will grow.

Poverty and instability lead to more violence and violence spreads across borders with basic revolutionary ideology.

If countries like Yemen, Jordan and maybe Saudi Arabia get involved in this uprising, the Muslim will, by means of coup d’état  and/or the number game of the democratic elections, become potentially hard-line Islamic states and the regional power of Iran will grow.

The first to worry will be Israel and the US, and then the whole international community will suffer due to the effect of the crisis on the oil market. Countries like Russia, Venezuela, Norway and Nigeria may benefit straight away.

It is likely that other large Muslim countries, mainly Indonesia and Pakistan, will try to take advantage of the opening of this Pandora’s Box. The US will have to act in a military manner and Europe, very dependent energetically, will have to follow.

Communist China is the dormant giant to be watched for. They dealt with Tienanmen Square so swiftly, after all.

The Mockocast

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Soon our best mockoposts will be adapted for the Internet and mockocasted! (This be voice you can listen to if you can’t be bothered reading or if you just can’t.) No, at first there will be no pictures; just use your imagination. (That be the top half of your IQ.)

A team of webmasters, sound engineers, voice-over artists and some radio personalities, togehter with a few notorious bloggers, a bunch of ex-international journalists and many other equally important folk, one of them making a cup of tea, are working as we speak to insure that the mockocasts will be produced can be released soon. The very first episode will only be launched as a collectible edition!

In the future the mockoteam will present interviews with celebs incognito and even live mockocasts from our IP studios, but one step at a time!

Step one: mobile fone in hand or eyes on your PC screen! Step two: stay tuned! Step three: just stay there a bit longer, yes, slightly to the right! That’s it!