Archive for May, 2008

As is my wan’t (to quote the great Billy Conolly) I am fond of reading the news and keeping up on what is happening in the world. I usually read the Irish Independent, English Times, English Daily Mail, New York Times and the Sydney morning Herald; But by far my favourite news site is the BBC News website. I was reading this article on turning Busses into mobile sensor traffic platforms for traffic monitoring when I had this thought …. “How long will it be before someone in the police/home-security/MI-5 suggest turning busses into mobile CCTV and other sensor platforms”. Britain is one of the most CCTV ridden places on earth… no doubt adding forward, rear and side camera’s would help no end in public – no I mean criminal and subversive element – monitoring.

Big brother is here to stay unfortunately – and we have only ourselves to blame.

Took these two photos when Maeve was three months old – I can see that she is a “natural” software developer…
Looking intently at a bug on screen, trying to figure out why things are going wrong…

Some bugs are harder than others

And then all those late nights coding catch up with you….

After a hard nights coding

I really enjoy being a Dad.

A life time ago I was in the army – basic grunt, but I specialized as a combat signaller. There is barely anything I remember from those times (the early 1980’s) about signalling; but there is one-thing I do remember (and is not covered by the official secrets act) which has stood by me with the passing years and is useful in situations where you have to report or analyze; These things are covered by the labels:

1. Who
2. What
3. When
4. Where
5. Why (optional)
6. How

This is especially true in an ambush situation where you need to tell your superiors what is happening in as accurate and succinct way as possible. What these labels mean is:

Who is making the call/being observered.
What is happening.
When is it happening,
Where is/will it happen,
Why is it happening, and finally
How did it happen, and how are you going to respond.

For example as a member of a section being ambushed I would say for example:

“Hello X this is Y, Ambushed by Enemy Infantry at 12:10 zulu grid reference A, retiring to point B”

Nothing that interesting in a military context, or in a civilian one? Well don’t be too hasty since it is useful in providing succinct reports or preliminary analysis on a subject or research paper. For example regarding reading a technical paper:

Who is the author
What are they writing about, and
what are the circumstances in which it was written (external effectors) including what sources influcenced the paper/idea.
Also what are you going to do as a response to this paper (ignore, cite, incorporate ideas etc).
When was the paper written.
Where was the paper written (location, company etc – and how would that effect/influence the paper and its impartiality/content),
Why is this paper important/interesting,
why was it written,
why am I reading it.
How will/did it influence you, the company, the field, global events.

It can be more mundanely applied to status reports:

Who is making the report
What did you do and what are you going to do next.
When did you do it.
Where did you do it/make-changes.
Why Did you do it/make-changes

On a side note one thing I always found disturbing as a combat signaller was being told that the first person an enemy kills (especially in an ambush situation) is the signaller – that said it was always a better job than carrying a heavy machine gun or anti-tank weapon around.

Names are funny things. You rarely have any control over what you are originally called. Love it or hate it (mine has never felt right, and I understand from my parents it was a compromise choice intended not to insult either side of the family) you are stuck with it unless you want to go down the route of legally changing your name.

Anyway Bernie and I chose our daughters name Maeve because we wanted an Irish name, and we liked the sound of it. Yesterday we were doing our weekly book shop in the excellent Borders Bookshop in Blanchardstown when a book on Irish Baby names caught my eye. I looked up what Maeve meant in Irish (never my strong point in school) and was pleasently surprised to discover Maeve means “Intoxicating One”; Never a truer phrase has been uttered, since everyone who meets Maeve is boweled over and Intoxicated with her happy, beautiful face and joyous nature.

Coincidently Maeves middle name is Grainne which in irish is “Love”. So Maeve Grainne Leeson means Intoxicating Love :)

Just went to see Iron Man the movie at the local cinema with my wife and baby Maeve – and we really enjoyed it. Iron man has always been my favourite super-hero. Unlike spiderman, the fantastic four, or the Hulk, Tony Stark has no “super powers” granted by genetics or some experimental accident; Tony Stark only becomes a Super-Hero when he don’s the armoured suit an becomes Iron-Man; An Armoured suit I may hasten to add that is the product of his genius and whose design evolves over time.

One thing I like about Iron Man is the thought (however improbable) that “I could be Iron Man” – if I was a genius and a multi-billionaire that is. Tony Stark in comic history was revolutionary in its time in showing the “downside” or human nature of hero’s – for example Tony Stark is an Alcoholic, an affliction shared by many millions of people on earth.

I won’t spoil your enjoyment of the movie except we thoroughly enjoyed it, and I will be going to see it again next monday. One thing to mention though, if you go to the movie please stay to after the credits since there is another scene.