Petrol

reddalek

When writing this week’s (late!) DomSez, I considered doing something about petrol. The fact is, however, that there isn’t a lot to say. If there’s high demand, and low supply, the price will be high. Just like anything else. It may be ‘ridiculous’ to you that you have to pay £1 a litre, or whatever, but that’s the price the market will reach.

“But what about petrol duty?”

Yes – of course that’s true. But the underlying problem is that the cost of oil is rising because we’re going to run out of oil. And there’s nothing anyone can do about that in the long term. Apart from maybe buying a bicycle. We’ve got it easy at the moment, the government can reduce duty as a temporary reprieve. See you in 30 years…

(Oh, and hoarding petrol is, of course, counter productive. But if anyone is hoarding a perpetual motion generator, that’d be very nice to have.)

Edit – does road charging, instead of fuel duty, look so stupid now?

Does this bug affect everyone? Try installing said pathetic excuse for a media player, and then in ‘Player Preferences’ untick ‘Show Content Guide at startup’. Exit and reopen the program, then try to maximise or resize it. If you’re getting the same result as me, you’ll know instantly that Apple have screwed this one up pretty badly.

As Katie mentioned it was Queen’s Park Day today – which is my annual excuse to eat a bag of candy floss. (I did feel a bit sugary and nasty afterwards though.) The stalls and events are not particularly interesting themselves, especially since I missed the QPCS Jazz Band, but it’s more of a chance to wander round and see people you don’t run into very often.

Oh, and Tasha and Alex (Trafford) are both in big trouble for leaving their litter on the grass

Right – tomorrow I’m planning to actually buy the Guardian for once instead of reading it all for free online. It’s their big relaunch with the new Berliner-size format which I can say from experience on holiday is far easier to hold and read. I wonder if the Telegraph and the FT will remain the last stand of broadsheet bulkiness for long…?

Incidentally, for anyone interested in software user-interface design I found a great blog today. Check out flow|state. I’ve always found this kind of stuff fascinating for some reason, despite not being a designer at all.

It’s 1996. You’re the world’s largest software company and you’ve got a groovy new product fit for the information superhighway: MSN. It’s hip, it’s cool and it’s like, totally radical dude. So how will you get this across to the restless sport-obsessed youth of the day?

MSN Advert

MSN Advert

Enter these two! That’s right – it’s marketing, 1996 style. Download and enjoy for your viewing pleasure! You’ll never look at MSN the same way again.

And remember kids… Get on the ball, get MSN!

OK, I don’t know why I bothered with the whole ‘Year 7 – 11’ thing because Sixth Form is so, so much cooler in every single way. Here’s why!

  • Every teacher you have is great. They save them up for Sixth Form and tell them to be friendlier too
  • You get your own common room to eat in, instead of perching uncomfortably on the benches outside.
  • You also get your own room by the library, with its own exclusive computers, and no uniformed young people in sight!
  • Just in case one wasn’t enough, you get multiple teachers for each subject. In the case of History – three!
  • You don’t have to wait outside for the bell in the morning – you can go straight in and avoid the crush. That is going to become very useful in the winter.

Lessons are great too. New electronic registration is, ur, having a few teething problems but looks fancy. And I’ve already installed and customised Firefox on my user account (my special extra-privileges account I should add)… because if nothing else, tabbed browsing is vital for research.

Now I’m off – I’ve got a week to read Wise Children