Paving the way for .NET in Tonga
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Somewhere out there someone knows how to spell that word.
Tonight/Last night Fiona and Kalisitoni unwrapped a special evening they’ve been preparing with the Petersham youth.
Which begins with the ever present feeding, in the Ozzie style BBQ (no puaka? where’s Tonga gone when we can’t even get puaka for a get together?) Thanks to the fire tending by Rose and ‘Anau.
The kids were having a blast playing around outside, while the final touches were being put up on the stage with Ilavalu and ‘Ita putting up the ‘star’ and getting some lights up for the outdoor, evening show.
Soon enough, there was enough food not yet eaten to invite all the adults and the invited Petersham neighborhood guests to the table to share in the frivolity.
Hey, some of those people look like they’ve gone back for seconds already!!
The youth band started us the formal program for the evening with some Christmas music, hymns, and popular tunes (well, as popular as some of the Tongan music can be.) Sisitoutai got up during the band session and did a shimmy disco that endeared him to the crowd (ma’u he tangata ee mafana ‘a Ngalo’afe)
But soon enough it was time to get off the mats and get ready for tonights performance.
The children replayed the nativity scene in a very well presented play. And the prize for the weary is more work. The parents agreed they wanted to see it all over again, so everyone has to dust off the dirt from tonights performance and we can go through it all again tomorrow noon for the regular church service.
I didn’t know that the Americanism of exuberant celebration of all things to extravagance has extended in Australia to having a semi-formal graduation process for pre-school kids?
Sisitoutai’s school, Bankstown Montessori Childcare held an afternoon farewell to their elder students which put together their Christmas singing play etc.
It was obviously a very small, quick thing since we’re talking about kids from the age of 2 to 5 and Lord knows it’s difficult to maintain their attention (let alone some of the parents.)
Sisitoutai was having a ball for most of the event with a big smile most of the time which super cool to watch. I took off early from work (3:00 pm) so I could do the train/hitch to get their for their 4:00pm start.
Great to see that the pulou’s are as bad as FOBs in keeping time. Probably FOBs themselves? At 4:00 pm the room was half-empty (full) but the show rolled on and within 5 minutes we were packed to overfilling. Like the FOBs, so many had no problems of pushing the children aside so they could get the ‘good seats’ for seeing their own kids.
I thought the worse of parental behaviour was something reserved for football games, parents here were shoving each other around to push their kids ahead of queues and literally walking on little kids. It’s a good thing I was calmed down, ‘cause there could have been an incident. Especially if the automatic mouthing some of people are prone to were to start.
It’s a poor example we emphasise to kids that aggressive, me first behaviour is highly desirable. And then we wonder why kids ignore parents as they grow older?
Love the school itself though.
Montessori Bankstown Childcare has the right atmosphere, care, security that we wish for our children and Sesilia is already booked in for next year and we’re wondering how many days a week she’s going to want once she gets started.
Montessori Bankstown Childcare has worked out really well for Sisitoutai and has built a great foundation for Sisitoutai. On top of Sisitoutai’s general development as a child the centre has really helped to give him greater confidence in himself (a lot of positive re-enforcement) and confidence in his abilities to pursue things (his writing, colouring, drawing, etc.) on top of enjoying learning.
We have a number of childcare places a lot closer and cheaper, some of which we’ve visited, but definitely not with the same secured facilities and overt care for the child whilst they are in and out of school.
Sisitoutai is prepared and ready for ‘big school,’ all we need to find out is whether mum and aunty are prepared for having him at home 24/7 until school starts.
Merry Christmas to all.
I’m always game for better video performance watching all these DivX etc. hanging around.
After a great deal of research, I found Media Player Classic Home Cinema. The big deal here is two things:
- All codecs are "burned into" the Media Player Classic executable, so there's do dependency on whatever random codecs your PC happens to have installed (eg, ffdshow, cccp, Ivan's Krazy Elite Kodek Pak, etc).
- It supports offloading video decoding duties to modern video cards. This is limited to recent Radeon HD models and nVidia 8 and 9 series. Fortunately, my HTPC motherboard includes an embedded Radeon HD 3200 -- and since I blew up my old one (it's a long story) the new version I just installed includes 128 megabytes of dedicated DDR3 video memory, too.
Coding Horror: Easy, Efficient Hi-Def Video Playback
Thanks to Jeff Atwood for always doing something interesting, and in these cases, something that may directly apply to our situation?
The Olympic Park complex has an adjoining park, whose name I have no clue of, but we took off this week-end to get down there to give the kids a little time to play.
The park has a wonderful game environment and the coolest of them is this inter-twined rope complex where kids climb up and around. The whole area reminds me of when Taholo started implementing a children’s area at the Tungi Arcade in Tonga.
It was a fun afternoon out with the kids which we completed by visiting grandma’s grave yard where the kids
performed their impromptu Tick-Tock song.
Funny I was listening to this old Rock n Roll piece about getting into trouble and not believing what was taught in Sunday School, but that’s another story.
We’re doing the Sunday School thang with the kids, and they absolutely love going to Sunday School. So much so, that they get up in the morning prepped to go, and as soon as Sunday School is over there’s a million reasons why we have to come home.
Funny to see how far we have come, not, when it comes to the Sunday School and the Tongan congregations.
The farthest I recall back with the Tongan community church services, is back to when services were held at the Pitt St. Chapel (hmmm, I’ll have to visit there some lunch time next time I’m in the city.) and at the 5 Rogers Avenue, Haberfield, Mission Centre (long since sold to the heathens with better financial management skills. (smiling)
The thing I recall is that we didn’t really have Sunday School for the Tongan Language at the Pitt St. church, and Sunday School at 5 Rogers Avenue was on a Monday evening.
On Monday evening’s the Sunday School members would gather with our teachers at the 5 Rogers Avenue Chapel (a small room part of the complex.)
Sometime later the Sunday School moved together with the main service to St. David’s Haberfield where they actually had a hall and separate rooms. So Sunday School developed into having separate classes and being in different parts of the hall. There were some material, but I’m not sure they were ours or ‘left-overs’ from the palangi church.
Something or someone did something and the congregation moved again to the Ashfield Uniting Church, and they too had a hall and rooms. Sunday school got bigger as we had more kids and plenty of volunteers to be teachers.
Bill Crews expanded his Exodus Foundation on the premises so Sunday School programs moved to the Minister’s Manse (i.e where the faifekau lived) but again we have plenty of space to spread out the classes.
I went on vacation into la la land and came back 10+ years later to find out that we’re back to using the main chapel for our Sunday School program, with only a single volunteer teacher.
Fiona’s busy being creative with a program that fits everyone, and the youngest children get activities they can do on the seats, or on the floor, while she puts in some more in depth time with the older kids.
Petersham Uniting Church – Tongan Congregation is definitely very fortunate to have Fiona on the team.
Well done Fiona.
Would you believe I got jacked/bumped off my Internet connection today?
I’m on Optus’ Cable Internet service, which isn’t hot but has been mostly stable and functional.
Recently I’ve been noticing some problems with the connection going down arbitrarily (kind of like the Internet back in Tonga.) looking at my tiny little router, it seems that it isn’t picking up the public-ip it normally gets from the ISP.
Looking at the address that I’m given, it looks like the “Surfboard” modem that’s plugged into the ISP suddenly decided that it wanted to give me some other IP through a DHCP server.
Imagine getting kicked off my own Internet by the very modem that’s supposed to be keeping me connected.
It’s scary what’s not configured on this thing (like no attempt at even having a password ?)
The kids are growing bigger and bigger, louder and noisier.
We’ve been attending Sunday School for a couple of weeks (our church’s schedule is kinda on and off whenever the church feels up to it.)
Unfortunately, the timetable is still a little screwed, so the kids decided they wanted to sit down and ‘hiva talitali’ while waiting for the rest of the mob to turn up.
Afterward it was just fun at home …
Yesterday we went to the park and afterwards we dropped by Grandma Fe and sang a few songs before getting back in the car for coming home.
The trip was short because you just can’t keep kids still at such an open space.
If it were only that would walk over the open space, but Sesilia likes to pick things up from other plots and just walk off with it. Must have something to do with her ‘motu’ roots?
Finally finished with reading the tome(?) Human Rights Overboard, and part of reading through that book was having to read some novels on death, mayhem and the arbitrariness of life.
Format: Pb
Extent: 448
Size: 234mm x 153mm
ISBN (13): 9781921372407
RRP: $35.00
Pub date: September 2008
To get through Human Rights Overboard, I was forced by the content to get through.
and after finally putting it down, had to consume some more magic/fantasy straight afterwards
I can tell you its a relief to read something that you know explicitly is fantasy and the imaginations of a human mind (or in Sanderson’s case with the inclusion of a hive mind.) People in novels spray death left right and left again, and the only thing that gets hurt are the trees (except Sanderson’s novel which is only available as a download)
Human Rights Overboard is the type of story that can seriously get you jumpy at night. Heck, read the book and other great novels such as Frank Herbert’s Dune Series become truly prophetic plausible social engineering instead of a space opera.
The book itself alludes to the masterful strokes of misinformation as criminal genius.
The drama in Human Rights Overboard will become one of the most studied facets of human behaviour for the next generation. As the disaster of the Bay of Pigs brought focus to Behavioural Studies, it is certain that there are so many aspects of the manipulation, control, finessing during the period described in this book that Professors from Harvard Business School, Harvard Medical School, and other schools will be clammering over themselves to dissect how this ‘could and did happen.’
We already have local psychology reports of the effects of the Detentions, what other hidden forms of Torture Lite were experimentations in Australia on innocent people ? What and how were the Government able to mould the local citizenry, authorities and democratic safeguards against oppression by the majority?
The current Rudd/Labour Government has already started running with lessons they’ve learned from the Howard Government. Reframing public policy, winning at all costs, seems to be the way to go.
Reframe Internet Safety Policies to be a fight against Child Pornography, and who would dare question the prevention of such a heinous crime. So, a Minister in the Labour Party’s state government is stood down for lude behaviour, and this is the same mob that is trying to tell you that they should be in charge of your sexual safety?
Dude(ss), this mob (on average) are more corrupt than you and me, and they definitely have no interest in protecting your child beyond getting the next vote. But, pushing the “filter the Internet” lets them make somebody else look like the bad people (visualise: it worked well for John Howard’s Pacific Solution.)
Keep your eyes wide open, not wide-shut.
http://www.freedomkeys.com/vigil.htm
"As long as human beings are imperfect, there will always be arguments for extending the power of government to deal with these imperfections. The only logical stopping place is totalitarianism -- unless we realize that tolerating imperfections is the price of freedom." -- Dr. Thomas Sowell
"Well, who is more likely to volunteer to take a job in a bureaucracy that has little to recommend it except that it gives you the power to use government force to control the lives of others? A dispassionate scientist or a zealot? In government, the zealots eventually take over." -- John Stossel
A number of interesting announcements from Microsoft recently that seems to allude at the giant more explicitly returning to one of its earlier principles, ‘everyone gets a piece of the pie’ and by extension with have more pieces of the pie form which to monetise.
When MS was an application company, they had an interpreter that would run their applications on the target platform. So msword.com was actually the ‘loader’ for the interpreter and the subsequent code. One of the rationales was protection of the code from being decompiled, the other to minimise the code development. If there’s a new platform, just update the interpreter for the target OS/hardware. MS word was released for DOS and Xenix? using this interpreter?
I remember when COBOL support was in Windows 3.1 ? There were sample codes around that apparently worked for someone, but it never worked for me. And I remember trying to get some peoples Microsoft Pascal code to work with the GUI in OS/2? Don’t even think about what MS was trying to do with Fortran (geezz GUI programming in Fortran, let it die!!!)
Microsoft tried doing single source code for Excel between Windows and Mac OS, there was the attempt to get the Ruby/Access/VB Engine multiplatform between Windows/Mac OS. There was the Visual Studio cross platform development between Windows/Mac OS.
The Agnostic nature of the company has been more explicit recently with the Silverlight directions (i.e. it runs on Windows, MAC OS, Linux through mono, FreeBSD through …) and to some degree with the Dot NET framework.
When Live Space allowed external desktop blogging tools to update data on its service (i.e. so you can blog etc.) they used an adaptation of an existing ‘standard.’ But soon after Microsoft released another tool Windows Writer –> Windows Live Writer that not only allowed you to post to Microsoft sites and a few major sites but quickly grew to adopting most formats out there.
More importantly, the extensibility of Windows Live Writer meant that it soon had the capability to post and extract multimedia from a number of different services including flickr, youtube, msn soapbox.
Move forward into late 2008 and the embracing all, has thankfully extended to a number of tools.
Windows Live Photo Gallery now lets you push photos to Flickr, Picasa, smugmug, Facebook. There goes my interest in Picasa, which was really about it’s better integration with the online version than Photo Gallery.
Azureus to be supporting COBOL.
Microsoft has already shown it believes a new range of ‘developers’ exist with her Expression series of developer tools. The content developer has long ago extended, on the web, to the prolific web users. Making it easier for these users to create their content for the web (through their personal web sites, blogs) increases the use of your tools and platforms.
Now, the dilemma remains on how is this thing to be monetised?
OK, so the reason we’re talking about AVG Antivirus is because we’re back in the Windows Desktop support role and have to look at what’s currently out there for gratis for some of my cheapo friends.
Unfortunately, you’re medicine is only as good as you make sure to keep them up to date (all things go stale when you leave them alone for too long.)
If you value your time, then just go ahead and pay for a quality product that has the automated update services (and pray that the updates don’t break your machine.)
Diagnostics ?
Read the screens for the install, you can upgrade or the virus signatures et. al during the configuration (so you don’t need to do it with every launch of the tool.)
You can create a USB Memory Stick ‘install’ which allows you to launch most tools on a ‘running’ Windows XP box without having to boot from the CDR or USB Stick.
Now, back to installing these things.
My dad watched the Fiji –vs- Australia Semi Final game, and enjoyed himself.
The Rugby League World Cup is more Amco Cup than World Cup.
Tonight we were supposed to watch and enjoy a delayed broadcast of a semi final of the RLWC.
The Rugby League World Cup is a joke
LeftArmSpinner
Sun, 16 Nov 2008 21:24:25 GMT
I personally found it hard to comprehend what was the whole point of pitting a side of $100K professionals against part-time workers?
Oh yeah, the entertainment value of listening to those wonderful comments from broadcasters who begin the show by saying how much the Australian side have to be wary of the flamboyance to later turn around saying that “this is going to hurt.”
Oh yeah, and it really advances Rugby League in those minnow countries ? No. The last time Rugby League grew in Tonga was when the ARL and SuperLeague were throwing money around. How long ago was that ?
But if the US can have World Championships for sports only they play, who says we can’t hold similar moments of delirium.
I get enough people asking and my current antivirus of choice is the AVG Suite (and we went for the family pack) but the free edition is over at:
http://www.avg.com/product-avg-anti-virus-free-edition
The 3rd Annual “Battle of the Bands” is a music festival of ethnic youth and young people within Victoria. The night will include ethnic action dancing, sway of the pacific, the glitter of Asia, Bands from the church groups will range from heavy rock to gospel country.
Many of the stars of the music festival will be “Second Generation” Australian born children of immigrants and refugees as performers.
Everyone is welcome to come and join in the fun and audience members are encouraged to come in costume of your ethnic heritage which include Anglo, European background.(Dutch, German, Scottish, English, Wales, etc)
It is proudly supported by the Uniting Church in Australia.
Date 22 November 2008.
Location Box Hill Wesley Uniting Church in 2-6 Oxford Street, Box Hill, Melbourne.
Times 3pm to 9.30pm
parking details Street parking
Tickets secretary. Tee Makoni - talaheumakoni@hotmail.com
Adults $5.00
Young people 12 to 25 Goldcoin donation
Children under 12 free.
Food stalls will be available
New Performers wishing to join in should contact:
Don Ikitoelagi (03) 9251- 5287 email Don.Ikitoelagi@victas.uca.org.au
Thinking out of the box, and greater experience always helps to finding short-cuts to getting that work done. In this case, the GBM team gives us tips on how to make it easier to access those Inking tools in the Microsoft Office suite.
The following is a re-post from an earlier article we published on customizing the Quick Access Toolbar so that the pen is easier to access in Office 2007:
One of the frustrating things about Office 2007 is how the inking tools are hidden under the Review Ribbon button. The ink options are harder to find, further sending the message that ink is a second-class citizen in Office products, and breaks that flow of “thinking in ink”. When I want to ink, I don’t want to hunt and peck for my pens. I just want to start inking.
…
Now you have one-click access to your pens and they are no longer hidden under the obscure “Review” tab. Unfortunately, the Editor Options do not apply system wide in Outlook. You’ll need to make the same changes to the Calendar, Contact, and Journal screens. Just create a new item for Calendar, Contact, and Journal, and then go to the Editor Options for each type to customize the Quick Access Toolbar. Follow the same instructions for customizing Word, Excel, etc.
GBM How To: Add Pen Options to Quick Access Toolbar
Rob Bushway
Mon, 10 Nov 2008 15:00:00 GMT
Now, all I need is a shortcut to keeping the battery in my mobile phone charged. (? whatever ?)
After church on Sunday we stopped over Uncle John’s house because we haven’t totally destroyed someone else’s house in a long time.
Now, we feel better so it’s time to go home.
Isn’t it sweet that the Australian Government would like everyone to realise that we hold the moral high ground.
Time to end Bush’s wretched war. (excerpt)
Yesterday, the Australian Government, via the Foreign Minister, Stephen Smith, reiterated its opposition to the death penalty. "We urge countries who continue to apply capital punishment not to do so," he told the ABC, adding that Australia would co-sponsor a resolution in the United Nations General Assembly calling for a moratorium on capital punishment.
Just as we hold the moral high ground on all those other International Treatise signed on the rights of children, or the rights of asylum seekers, after which we close the doors from any critics and go ahead and literally drive people to self-harm, suicide, mental illness.
But we are white, and white is might, so it must be right.
Feb 2008: As promised prior to the 2007 Federal Election, the ALP on assuming government, quickly moved to shut down the Australian-run detention centre on Nauru in the remote South Pacific. However, it has not withdrawn the controversial September 2001 legislation that created the offshore detention and processing system that came to be known as the 'Pacific Solution'. Instead of transferring asylum seekers en route to Australia to Nauru, it now transfers all asylum seekers to the detention centre on Christmas Island off Australia's far North-West coast. They still have have no rights under Australian law and are processed separately.
Oh, and they didn’t get the chance to enact a new legislation with greater powers similar to what allows the above ‘solution’ because those fool citizens didn’t give the ALP a majority in the Senate.
Commenting on the announcement, James Thomson, spokesperson for the National Council of Churches’ refugee program, which coordinated the statement, said that if it were not for the sustained pressure that churches and community brought to bear in the debate, and the pivitol role played by key parliamentarians who stood their ground against the Bill, it would have been passed.
Flight from Nauru ends Pacific Solution
"The Pacific solution was a cynical, costly and ultimately unsuccessful exercise introduced on the eve of a federal election (in 2001) by the Howard government," Senator Evans said.
He said the department had spent $289 million between September 2001 and June 2007 to run the Nauru and Manus centres.
Mark Getchell, from the International Organisation for Migration, which ran the Nauru facility, said there were now no asylum seekers left on Nauru.
"It is the end of an era," Mr Getchell said.
The United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) welcomed the end of the policy.
"Many bona fide refugees caught by the policy spent long periods of isolation, mental hardship and uncertainty - and prolonged separation from their families," UNHCR's Richard Towle said in a statement
Do yourself a favour and get used to using this tool before you install your next favourite ‘tiny’ app from the Internet.
Just type "perfmon" in the Vista search box to run the Reliability and Performance Monitor and then select Network. The resulting pane will reflect all running programs that are actively talking to the Web. This will give you a heads up if there are programs there you don't think should be talking to the WWW.
Are your programs tapping the Internet? Here's how to find out
James Kendrick
Thu, 06 Nov 2008 17:47:57 GMT
When your system begins to slow down like crazy, give the above app a run and see if it helps identify the culprits.
One of the wonderful things about Open Source software is that there is a continuum of upgrades where users and developers find things that are broken and fix them.
Unfortunately, some of the fixes cause more breaks than existed in the system.
Gallery 2.1 upgrade to 2.3svn failings
Posted by: Samiuela LV Taufa on January 11, 2008 2:56:59 PM (821 Reads)
The regular problems taking for ever and a day to resolve happened again when I tried upgrading (due to security warnings) to a more current version of Gallery2.
Unfortunately, the upgrade coincided with Tonfon deciding to give me a hard time with Internet connections.
Clear problems from the upgrade.
it’s a good thing I’ve wandered this space often enough that my own records are augmenting poor memory, such that I can fix the new problem with the old fix.
Upgraded my Gallery to the current release as there were a number of documented security reasons to upgrade. Unfortunately, the update broke my Gallery and I haven’t been able to dedicate the time to fixing it, until I decided to google nomoa.com!!! Way to go nomoa.com.
Leave it to Dare Obasanjo to finally make a decent summary of what is the Windows Haze.
Disclaimer: What follows are my personal impressions from using the beta version of Windows Azure. It is not meant to be an official description of the project from Microsoft, you can find that here.
…
What is it?
Before talking about a cloud computing platform, it is useful to agree on definitions of the term cloud computing. Tim O'Reilly has an excellent post entitled Web 2.0 and Cloud Computing where he breaks the technologies typically described as cloud computing into three broad categories
…
To try out Azure you need to be running Windows Server 2008 or Windows Vista with a bunch of prerequisites you can get from running the Microsoft Web Platform installer.
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…, I find the Live Services piece (access to user data in a uniform way) and the SQL Services (hosted storage) most interesting. I will likely revisit them in more depth at a later date.
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It would be interesting to read [or write] further thoughts on the pros and cons of Platform as a Service offerings when compared to Utility Computing offerings. … it would be informative to look at the topic from more angles…
Windows Azure from a Developer's Perspective
Dare Obasanjo
Mon, 03 Nov 2008 10:04:04 GMT
Sometimes Microsoft can be at fault for not even understanding their own message, and then there are the times when even the fanboys and detractors just don’t have a clue.