November 26, 2004

On the draining-away of authority theme, a round-up via Der Standard (note-German speaking) of state organisations changing sides. Apparently at least 400 Foreign Ministry staff have signed a declaration to that effect. 6 generals are reported to have come out for the opposition, as well as a former minister of defence, 40 employees of the…

Read More Ukraine – slow rot gathers speed?

It appears that negotiations have begun in the Ukraine under (heavy) EU/OSCE mediation. Probably a good thing, but as stated below, I think it’s of limited relevance. The only result of negotiations that would have decisive effect would be if the government agreed to resign or to a solution equivalent to their resignation (for example,…

Read More Negotiating – and burning the files…

The Guardian covers Tony Blair’s much-blogged “text conversation” set up by a mobile phone company. Just like most articles about this, it entirely misses an important point by sniggering about Blair’s familiarity or otherwise with technology. What I find more worrying is his evident lack of familiarity with his own policy. In the text of…

Read More Prime Minister apparently ignorant of own policy

The Department of Work & Pensions (for non-UK readers, the government department that administers Britain’s social security system) has confirmed what everyone knows about the government’s technological blind spot by throwing up what might be Britain’s biggest-ever computer failure. It all started when they tried to update from Win2K to Windows XP…..then, before they knew…

Read More Government….Computers……heh heh heh heh…..