I woke up this morning at around 9:30am although I laid in bed hoping that the 30 minutes before the alarm went off would last as long as possible but I had to face reality and get out of bed then get ready to start the day with a walk. Although I came back with enough time to spare I’ve decided to set my alarm to 9:45am so then it gives me 15 minutes to get up and out of bed so then I go for my walk at 10 so by the time I come back I have over an hour up my sleeve where I can cool down, watch some YouTube videos and then have a shower then head off to work.
When 26.5 beta was released I couldn’t find Safari 26.5 beta but it has now been released with the notes available here (link). It isn’t a substantial list of improvements but I have noticed that some of the changes that were documented in recent Technology Previews have made their way into the mainstream release of Safari such as the bug fix for web extensions noted in the change log. I was expecting Chrome 147 to be released but as of the time of writing this blog post it wasn’t been released although there was an update which updated Chrome from 146.0.7680.165 to 146.0.7680.178 – so far I haven’t had any issues on either my Windos laptop or any of my Macs.
I’ve been following politics and I can see why many people disconnect from politics when politicians are more interested in trying to score cheap political points that pandering to their base, who treat politics like supporting their local sports team, rather than having a productive discourse. The problem is made worse when you have the media reward politicians with attention every time they say or do something stupid – the latest example being a politician claiming that the Broadcasting Standard Authority (BSA) as being “bordering on fascist” in regards to whether their authority extends to online services.
Don’t get me wrong, I think there is a productive discussion to be had around the legislation regarding the scope of the Broadcasting Standard Authority (BSA) and whether it is fit for purpose given how broadcasting has changed. The problem is that to start throwing around accusations of “bordering on fascist” tells me that you’re not actually interested in having a productive discussion other than saying the most outrageous thing you can dream up and then hope that the media give you a whole lot of free advertisement.
New Zealand, like many other countries at this time, are going through a difficult period in regards to fuel supplies and let’s also be blunt about the fact that neither party have done a good job preparing the country for these sorts of events. The problem is that during the good times there is a lack of political motivation to make investments to insulate the country from economic shocks relating to geopolitical events and when those events do occur we then see politicians spending most of their time pointing at each other for not doing enough (in many cases the ones doing the finger pointing were the same ones that down played the need for contingency planning during the good times).
