• I was hoping to get some exercise in on Friday but it has been raining all day but if everything goes according to plan I’ll get getting up at 11am on Saturday and go for a walk – I might even go for an 8km walk since I’ll have some extra time up my sleeve. For dinner tonight I had some pumpkin soup and some fresh ciabatta that I ordered from Woolworths along with a few other necessities for the weekend.

    At the moment I’m still giving Chrome ago as well as Google services on iOS to see how well they perform. I don’t see myself going to Android because it would mean giving up the integration iOS has with the Apple ecosystem however Workspace does have the benefit of Chrome integration, cloud services appear to be better when it comes to Google Drive etc. but I’ll keep plodding along until I I can make a decision.

    I’m having a look over at Ubiquiti release candidates and I was hoping that the 5.0.16 firmware for the UniFi Gateway would be released but unfortunately it hasn’t. I guess what I’ll need to do is see what happens but then again when you have a large product portfolio you have to triage what are the most important things that need addressing.

  • Woke up this morning before the alarm and I had a look outside thinking “ooh, the weather is looking good for a walk today” and now it has suddenly started to rain. I have to remember next time not to excited about the possibility of good weather because all to often it starts to rain. I had a look on the Metservice website and it appears that it’ll be raining all today as well as into the night so I guess I can do some free weights, squats and other exercises inside.

    I checked for updates this morning and Google had released an update for Chrome which updated it from 146.0.7680.72 to 146.0.7680.76 to address security (link) however Edge hasn’t been updated. Microsoft tends to update Edge on a Friday (Saturday NZ Time) although since it is a jump from 145 to 146 it may not be until next week but given there are security fixes included with 146 I would say the most likely time would be sooner rather than later.

    Safari Technology Preview 239 has been released (link) – light on new features with a heavy focus on fixing up bugs. There was also beta 4 of 26.4 that was released a few days ago so it’ll be interesting to see whether a release candidate appears sometime next week and then the week after the stable version is released. It’ll be interesting to see whether some of the bug fixes snoted in Safari Technology Preview 239 will make their way into 26.4.

  • Back home from work and I decided that tonight I’ll have a night off because I had some exercise this morning and kept to my meal plan for today. The train ride back from work was good – I’m not too sure whether it is just me but I’ve noticed that the speed of the train appears to be a lot better in particularly when it comes to the stopping and acceleration between stations. These sorts of upgrades are long term projects that require sustained investments over the term so if there is one saving grace it has been the fact that both National and Labour have continued investing in rail even though I think National should be investing a lot more particularly when it comes to getting freight trucks off the road in favour of rail.

    I’ve been watching the news about the potential impact of oil shortages and although it is fashionable to beat up on the government of the day there is very little that can be done other than tweaking with the exercise taxes etc. What ideally needs to be done when it comes to insulating New Zealand from these oil shocks is to invest into public transport and alternative modes of transport such as investing into cycle paths particularly in parts of New Zealand where the population density isn’t sufficient enough to justify investing into a bus service but alternative forms of transportation could be build.

  • Arrived home after work, going to head out for a walk because goodness knows I need a way to unwind after dealing some interesting customers today. I updated Chrome today on all my computers along with installing the patch Tuesday update for Windows 11 – no regressions yet but then again I tend to have a pretty simply setup without any major under the hood tweaking so I guess I escape many of the problems some people report when updating.

    The walk before work this morning was refreshing – I was expecting it to be more difficult because it is the first time in a long time since I’ve done exercise after getting up but it was a good start to the day. When I did eventually get into work I was in a good mood, was able to focus on the day and being able to hit the queues and answer calls wasn’t as painful as it normally is when going straight form getting up to getting into work with very little ‘me time’ at the beginning of the day.

    Either tonight or tomorrow I’ll be writing a longish blog regarding the whole phenomenon of the ‘rock star CEO’ and where it originated from. What sparked it off was a video I saw on YouTube which relates to the McDonalds CEO video of him tasting a McDonalds product.

  • Back to work on Wednesday however it appears that the night train will be getting replaced with a bus but I guess it is the price one pays for having an improved rail network. I’ve set my alarm for 10am so I can get up out of bed, jump into my exercise gear and have a quick 1 hour walk before having a shower, some fresh clothes then off to catch the train into the office. Tonight I had 11.6km walk and during the day I had a 11.6km thus making the total distance walked today being 23.2km. I think getting back into some exercise, in particular a walk before work, will put me in a good state of mind before getting into work and having to deal with customers.

    It looks like parcel that is arriving from the United States on around 20 March and while I’m waiting for that to arrive there are a few more CDs I’ve got my eye on over on Discogs. It’ll be interesting to see whether there are delays when shipping things to New Zealand or whether we’ll see fuel surcharges like there was many years ago when the price of fuel spiked and courier companies had to pass along the increased costs.

  • “The first casualty of war is the truth”

    It is commonly said that the first victim of war is the truth and something that the neoconservatives (or what remains of them now) have learned from the collapse of support for the Vietnam War and the second war in Iraq is that if you don’t control the narrative then you lose popular support which then undermines the ability to keep the war going over long term (along with any other overseas regime change wars). We’re already seeing the Trump cult podcasters either taking one of two positions, the first position is that they’re defending Trump by claiming that this has been an ongoing war since the Islamic revolution in Iran and it is a continuation of what has already existed with the second position being the claim that Trump is being ‘blackmailed into it’ by some nebulous force (either the ‘deep state’ or antisemitic conspiracy theories). The second excuse also relies on the nonsense that when bad things happen it is never the ‘great leader’ that is at fault those who are around him (while ignoring it was the ‘great leader’ who choose those individuals to fill those positions) – apparently he is a big brained genius but simultaneously is either easily manipulated or so utterly clueless that he couldn’t locate his own backside using his own two hands.

    Outside of the lunacy of the Trump cult you have the new owners of TikTok that are deprioritising not only the reporting of what is happening in Gaza but also videos being uploaded from Haifa and Tel Aviv regarding Iranian strikes within Israel. Benjamin Netanyahu is desperate to maintain control of the narrative of being a war time leader, that the iron dome is impenetrable and that any missiles that do get through are having minimal impact. The US news for example isn’t reporting on the Iranian strikes in Haifa and Tel Aviv so many Americans are having to rely on overseas news services such as DW English, France 24, Al Jazeera, Channel 4 from the UK, BBC World and other broadcasters to find out what is actually happening in the middle east.

    If there is a silver lining I like to believe what my grandma used to say that the universe eventually balances out in the end – that eventually there is a day of reckoning. Benjamin Netanyahu has his own legal challenges and when Trump steps down the legal troubles he was experiencing before becoming president don’t magically disappear not to mention potential legal issues that may come about in a future Democratic administration doing an investigation into the Trump administration.

  • I’m feeling a lot better now after going for two walks totalling 23.2km – 11.6km in the afternoon then 11.6km in the evening. I think getting out in the fresh air and breathing in fresh air has helped my recovery and tomorrow then the next day I’ll be doing the same thing however when I go back to work on Wednesday I am tempted to get up at 10am so that I can go for an hour walk then come back, have a shower then head off to to the train station at 12:30 to be in the office by 1pm. I think the benefit of getting in some exercise before work is that it will get me in the right mood for the day and then when I come home from work I’ll go for my usual 11.6km followed by a shower then into bed.

    I’ve been using Chrome for the last week on my MacBook Pro, Mac Studio and Surface Laptop – I’m pretty damn happy with it so far and I’m going to keep using it for a long term evaluation of a much larger decision I am making. Oh, and the performance of Chrome running on ARM CPUs when it comes to Windows is really good – I’m always concerned when I see ARM support for software given that it tends to be an afterthought (aka ‘if it compiles, ship it’) in the world of Windows but I’ve been finding that the world of ARM software on Windows is improving which makes me wonder whether long Microsoft want to ship more ARM based Windows computers and x86 simply hangs around for legacy backwards compatibility.

    Chrome is very much a gateway into the Google ecosystem and I keep being drawn into the ecosystem because of the multiplatform nature of Google because I have a mixed environment. With iCloud the expectation is that you’re running an end to end Apple ecosystem and if there is support for Windows it is rather reluctantly rather than it being done out of passionate enthusiasm. When it comes to Google, yes they have their own platform but they really don’t care if you’re running iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, ChromeOS or anything else because at the end of the day as long as you’re using their service that is all that matters.

    One of the things I do like about the Google ecosystem is that the Google drive application or more specifically how a lot of the management of what is uploaded, downloaded, the caching of files from the cloud can be all managed from the app on whatever platform it is installed but with iCloud it is all hidden and no way to make such changes. I can understand for the sake of simplicity but it would be nice to clear the cache once it is uploaded, to be able to keep track of what has been uploaded through some sort of progress like how One Drive and Google Drive show on their app.

    Daily writing prompt
    What is your middle name? Does it carry any special meaning/significance?

    My middle name is Louis which is my father’s name, my brother’s middle name is Robert which is named after great grand parent and my sister has the middle name Louise which is the female form of Louis.

  • I was watching a video from ‘Amanpour & Co’ on YouTube where David Frum was interviewed regarding the recent military operations being carried out by Israel and the United States:

    I have to prefix this that I am not a fan of the Iranian regime nor am I a supportive of the military operations taking place but David Frum did make an important point. If you are going to carry out such a military operation then you need some sort of plan, some sort of goal – what are you tryign to actually achieve and then creating a plan on the milestones you need to hit to get to that goal and then in turn the objectives that there needed to get to reach milestone. The problem with Donald Trump is that he half asses it and quickly loses interest

    With a military operation it is either an all or nothing, you’re either all in on it or you don’t do it at all because when you’re indecisive there is almost a guarantee that you’ll leave the situation in a worst situation than when you found it. Btw, let’s also stop with this nonsense that Trump was available the war in Iraq and Afghanistan (link) – the guy is a weather vane where he takes both sides of the issue depending on the audience and whether it benefits him. If you are going to do regime change then be straight with the American people about what the goal of the military operation is but then again I don’t even think Trump has the slightest clue because either he is utterly clueless or that the person or persons making the decision have kept Trump out of the to avoid him saying something stupid on his social media platform.

    What happens if the United States leave the country in a half finished state? a power vacuum with various factions vying for power, ethnic groups pushing to have parts of the country to break away, oppressed religious minorities and victims of state violence wishing to seek revenge against the remnants of the state etc. Long story short the outcome isn’t good no matter which way you look at it and something I think far too many fail to appreciate is the fact that many times in life it isn’t about choosing the ideal but rather choosing the least worst option from amongst a list of potentially bad options.

    It reminds me of online leftists who have this romanticised vision of a revolution – storming the winter balance, overthrowing the bourgeoisie, making promises that the system that’ll replace it will be better than the last…then reality sets in and you realise that society doesn’t run on promises and good vibes, that a lot of statecraft is a lot of boring drudgery. A good example of that is like what happened when the Taliban took power they quickly realised that there is a whole lot of boring bureaucratic work that needs to be happening behind the scenes to keep a government functioning and meeting the needs of its citizens.

  • Today I spent the day at home recovering – I really wanted to avoid having time off from work but at the end of the day there is little to no benefit working if as a result you’re not as productive along with prolonging the recovery. I installed Chrome on my MacBook Pro to see how much different it is when compared to Safari and I noticed some improvements in terms of responsiveness such resolving host names, rendering websites and the browser remaining responsive when dealing with complex webapps that make extensive use of JavaScript.

    I’m going to give Chrome a try and see how well it performs although I am looking forward to seeing Safari 26.4 and whether some of the issues I’ve raised in the past are addressed. Anyway I’m heading off to sleep and hopefully I’ll be feeling a bit better in the morning.

  • Still got a sore throat and I’ve lost my sense of smell and taste – I think I may have COVID but I’ll need to get a testing kit to see whether that is the case. I originally thought that maybe it was due to a cold or seasons changing but apparently it is quite common at the moment and there have been reports of an uptick in COVID going through the community because of the regular waste water testing that is taking place. I’ve been vaccinated and don’t have any underlying health issues so I’m all good when it comes to not getting too sick but it is a bit annoying that here we are – I guess it is one of those things you have to learn to live with.

    Once again I’m following the Iran-United States/Israel war and once again we have the usual suspects in the ‘conservative moment’ (influencers, online activists or what ever terminology you’re interested in using) who are trying to save face by claiming that “this isn’t what I voted for!”. Yes, this is exactly what you voted for just as those who are complaining about Republicans slashing the social safety net and defunding the department of education – Republicans are doing what they’ve talking about doing for decades. The Republican Party have had a 90+ year old plan of dismantling the welfare state ever since FDR started building it (and subsequent Democrats building upon that foundation) – they’ve never made it a secret, you just chose to ignore the evidence.

    Getting back to the issue of the Republican Party, this whole idea of ‘neoconservatives hijacked the party’ is to ignore history or more correctly to invent a history of the Republican Party that can sooth people’s egos but not based on reality. The reality is that this whole nonsensical phrase of ‘peace through strength’ is like saying ‘fucking for virginity’ – it is completely illogical. If you’re claiming ‘peace through strength’ what you’re actually saying is that your whole policy is a giant bluff – an empty threat, a ‘wait until your father gets home’ because ultimately if you are going to use force rather than a bluff then you’re simply a neoconservative but with more flowery language.

    Oh, and not to be left out – the antisemitic conspiracy theorists are coming out in full force in defence of Donald Trump by crafting conspiracy theories in defence of Trump by claiming there is something occuring behind the scenes involving Israel and the ‘Deep State’ (a term that Trump keeps invoking as an excuse to his followers why everything is going pear shaped). I tend to subscribe to Occam’s razor which can be simplified to ‘the simplest answer is usually the correct one” and at the end of the day Trump doesn’t believe in anything other than what benefits Trump and the Republican establishment saw him as an empty vessel that is unwed to an particular ideology. There was no mind trick done on Trump to convince him to take the action he did, Trump saw it in his own self interest and he did it and then all his cadre of sycophantic influencers did a complete 180 on their ‘deeply held conviction’ and realigned with Trump’s new position while rewriting the past by claiming that Trump had always held the position he is now advocating for.