May 18, 2012

Speculatio in impedimentum

Once the detritus of another Christmas had been cleared away, I started to read one of my gifts; for inevitably I had been given a copy of Steve Jobs’ biography and I found myself pondering the imponderabilia of innovation that optical fibre broadband presents and I am impelled to pen this piece, imperfect as it may be.

My inaugural blog [It’s the Law] on the impedimenta of copper-based broadband stirred up some debate over at www.ISPReview.co.uk, the first comment of which was the predictable imprecation by a “techy” of marketers; that I had been imprecise in my interpretation of the science, an imputation that my work was impure; that the real problem with copper when used as a physical medium to deliver broadband was not resistance as defined by Ohm’s law, but a more complex phenomenon known as impedance.

And I can’t deny an impudent sleight of hand. The broad theme of the piece was that fundamental laws of physics directly define real world telecom services and that the nature of these laws when applied to copper wire means that confusion rather than clarity is offered to consumers.

Rather inconveniently for my theme of “Laws”, there isn’t a “Joe Blogg’s Law of Impedance” as such, no nice, neat label to apply. In this sense, in the context and flow of the blog, impedance, although a more technically precise subject, didn’t fit, and neither did several other limiting factors of copper.

However, the impinging effects of copper as an impedor are well known and there are definitions and even formulae available to describe it, for those of a mathematical mind. Much effort is being invested to overcome these and other limitations; but even as millions if not billions of pounds of R&D is spent to wring every last possible bit out of this 19th century network technology, to sweat the asset as much as possible, the fundamental limits of copper are imprescriptible.

According to my ancient “Physics is Fun” textbook, impedance is defined as the effective resistance of an electric circuit or component to alternating current (AC), arising from the combined effects of ohmic resistance and reactance.

Reactance is the opposition to the flow of alternating current caused by the inductance and capacitance in a circuit, measured in Ohms. The total opposition to the flow of current in the circuit is the impedance, which is the sum of the reactance and the resistance in the circuit.

Or in other words, it’s Ohm’s Law plus.

One of the consequences of copper’s natural and indisputable opposition to the flow of electrical current of both varieties is the imprecision of broadband services that it delivers. When low frequency voice calls were all that copper had to deliver, service was ubiquitous and universal; the medium could deliver the message.

But now, it cannot; the high frequency services delivered frequently depend on your postcode. Precisely marketed with vague “up to” speeds, but with actual throughput not achieving anything like those advertised speeds, especially on the anemic uplink side of the service, leaving consumers disappointed, disaffected and dissatisfied with their service and distrustful of their service providers.

For example, here’s a Speedtest I just did on my own link at home in Maidenhead, 1 mile or 1.6Km (1600m) from the main exchange (although like the majority of consumers I have no idea what the copper distance is). The underlying technology is ADSL2+ and according to the graph in my previous blog I should be receiving circa 20Mbps on the download (which matches the advertised speed of 20Mbps).

However, I am receiving less than 33% of the advertised speed (a whopping 70%+ loss!) and even less of the theoretical maximum that ADSL2+ offers, yet I am paying 100% of the tariff of a 20Mbps service. And to cap it all, my download data volume is capped.

The upload speed is advertised as being a derisory 1Mbps and I have access to only 30% less than this limit, which is substantially less than the minimum recommended bandwidth for a SkypeHD video call. Skype cannot improve their service offering until the network can deliver more bandwidth.

My service provider isn’t BT by the way, but according to BT’s line checker, I should be receiving between 7Mbps and 11Mbps downstream, which while being a welcome improvement is still significantly less than the advertised 20Mbps “up to” speed on my service provider’s website. And it’s this imprecision, unacceptable in other areas of technology such as the processor speed of a laptop, which is the whole point of my previous blog. (Question: why doesn’t BT’s line checker also estimate upload speeds?).

The imprecise nature of copper-based services is caused not only by impedance. Other impedimenta of the copper network include, inter alia:

  • thermal noise
  • echoes
  • reflections
  • attenuation
  • crosstalk
  • surge protectors
  • radio frequency interference (RFI) filters
  • bridged taps
  • split pairs
  • bunched pairs
  • leakage to ground
  • low insulation resistance
  • battery or earth contacts
  • high-resistance joints

Copper is already impeding the service experience that consumers have from the internet and it will always do so. Rather like a giant, distributed, severely limited backplane of a computer, it is limiting the creativity, innovation and revenue potential of the internet and of the economy as a whole.

“Impedance” is a derivative of “impede” which is from the Latin impedire, “to shackle the feet”, ultimately related to “pes” or foot. And for most of us, walking pace is about all that can be achieved with copper, especially on the uplink.

Neil Fairbrother
Interim Marketing

Slides are not the presentation

I’ve read a lot of stuff – particularly on twitter – from some presentation trainers pointing out that the slides you may (or may not!) use with your presentation are not the presentation itself – they’re called Audio-Visual Aids for a reason. Aiding your presentation – not the actual guts of it.

Well and good, they’re right. Slides are not the presentation. I can’t count the number of times I’ve heard people say they can’t make it to the meeting so “can someone email them the presentation”.

No.

They can’t be emailed a presentation – they could be emailed the slides, certainly, but that’s not the same thing at all.

But there’s something that bothers me in all of this. Presentation trainers are doing the right things by explaining to people that the presentation is bigger than just the slides which is good… but… but….

But I recently started to pick up on people saying things to the effect that slides were just an adjunct, an add-on and that they shouldn’t be thought of all all until you’ve written your presentation’s script.

Well, setting aside the idea that a script is, frankly, almost never a good idea, I’m not even convinced by the idea that the slides should be ignored until after the presentation is written. It’s taking things too far and putting a very powerful tool on the shelf.

By not even considering the slides and how to use them until after everything’s written you are, by definition, relegating them to just expensive, animated bunting in the background. So what do you do, if you do that, when what you need to present is essentially visual – or most easily explained visually?

I’d be interested to see the presentation that didn’t use a map, for example, where there was an issue of where things were on the earth relative to each other.

I’d be fascinated by a presentation that didn’t include slides when pitching an architectural project.

I’d be beside myself with curiosity to attend a presentation which didn’t include pictures of faces when talking about, for example, the effects of bone structure on attractiveness.

Or what about when discussing various forms of dance? Or the effects of sport on health?
See what I mean? Somethings are just so intrinsically visual that it makes no sense not to show them.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying that we should go back to the bad old days of mistaking the slides for the presentation but I am saying that cries of ‘ban powerpoint’ or ‘don’t write slides until everything else is written’ aren’t helpful.

For me, it’s all about the message and the audience. if slides get the message to the audience most effectively, use them.

Include slides as part of the designing and writing process – not the dominant factor and not a tag-on at the end.

photo credit: Phil Strahl via photopin cc

Stephen Hester: for the good of banking, take your bonus!

So, the great “get the bankers” debate has roared its head again, with the media-hyped uproar around the 2011 bonus of Royal Bank of Scotland Chief Executive, Stephen Hester.

Hester, on top of his apparent £1.2M salary – leaked by the Labour government who approved his salary and bonus package at the time of his appointment – has this year been awarded a £963,000 bonus.

Now, if you read the newspapers and media, you’d think that this had been delivered to him in cash or gold, via a courier driving a Rolls Royce he just bought with it. Ah, no. It’s in shares that he can’t get his hands on the first tranch until three years time, and the last tranch in five years time. In the mean time, because its in share options and not cash, he doesn’t pay tax on them either: bet your newspaper or website article didn’t tell you that either! Once he does divest them, then both income tax and capital gains tax at the appropriate rates will be due.

But here’s the problem on all this focus on one man’s bonus. He’s one man who was appointed after the banking crash of 2008 to both save Royal Bank of Scotland and not only get the tax payer their £45Bn back, but make a profit on it. In fact, if you had to pick a banker who was both “clean” and right to do the dirty job at RBoS in 2008, then you, I or then Prime Minister Gordon Brown, couldn’t have picked a better one.

At the time of the global credit crunch in 2008, Hester had been out of banking for 18months, appointed CEO of British Land. Having been appointed Finance Director of Abbey National in 2002, he had taken the CEO’s position in 2004 in an effort to save the former building society which had expanded into financial services far too quickly. After dividing it into a “good” and “bad” bank, he sold off the bad assets for what were later seen as above book prices, and sold the residual good bank to form the core of Santander UK. He then moved to British Land, where he led its conversion to become the first Real Estate Investment Trust in the UK. After the banking crisis, chancellor Alistair Darling appointed him to the supervisory board of failed Northern Rock, to effectively over see there what he had done at Abbey National. Then came the need to bailout RBoS to the tune of £45Bn. Sir Fred was gone, who was to replace him?

Gordon Brown then made his second great decision of the financial crisis: he appointed Hester CEO of RBoS. With a background like Hester’s, he was both one of the few bankers with a presently “clean” record in 2008, and from his Abbey National experience one of the few with the capability to do the same scale of job at RBoS.

So appointed by Gordon Brown on a Gordon Brown approved contract, Hester took a job which would pay him 50% less than he was taking at British Land, and one which was very high profile in both public and media minds. We could almost have predicted this present outcome.

In 2010, Hester took a bonus of nearly £2M in shares: not much of a murmur from the media, plus the board of RBoS proposed to resign should their proposed £1.5Bn staff bonus scheme not be approved by their major shareholder, the new Coalition Government.

2011, and we suddenly have all this hype over one man’s bonus which is half of what it was last year: why? Personally I conclude its a reflection on the banking industry post-2008 and the lack of leverage that the coalition government are making of their large share holdings in the two major banks, and not Hester. Although to read the media now you’d presently think that Hester is Sir Fred Mk2.

Lets get to some facts here, which affect us all. Your contract of employment is your contract of employment. Its private, and between you and your employer. So if the Gordon Brown approved contract for Stephen Hester says he’s due a bonus, then he’s due a bonus: sorry, we might not like it, but facts and contracts are there in black and white. Secondly, his
bonus has:

  1. Been calculated and approved by the remuneration committee
  2. Approved by the rest of the RBoS board
  3. Approved by UK Financial Invest, the quango set-up to over see government bailout investments in RBoS/Lloyds TSB
  4. Approved by PM Cameron and Chancellor Osborne: better to pay him than see him walk away

Then how can we now say “sorry mate, but the DMail and Guardian say no!”

Yes, there is something wrong when people starve, others need food parcels and civil servants are expected to take pay cuts, in a country where someone from such a tarred industry gets such a huge bonus. But he is there to do a job for us the tax payer, and he’s doing it, under the contract which he/we (via the PM) signed and approved.

So take your bonus Stephen Hester, you are contractually entitled to it. But here’s the twist I would do, if I was in his position.

I think he should take the bonus on principle BUT donate an amount – between 20% and 50% – to a national level society banking initiative. Hester’s thing is gardening – he’s on the board of the Royal Botanical Society – so it could be an initiative to get young unemployed people into work through gardening. I can’t see that he can do this without Westminster push – it is banking bonus season – but we really do have this whole thing out of balance at present on the one guy who, if there is such a thing, is a pretty clean banker.

One guys bonus, however huge, won’t solve the problems of excess in the banking industry. Stopping him doing his job now will cost us the tax payer, in both a release package and the £30Bn loss we would currently make.

Plus, if Hester were to make one personal sacrifice and futile gesture to give up his bonus, what does that do except give RBoS £1M?

If there is to be a level of change in the banking industry that we the public demand, then £1M is but in reality a small singular gesture on one day. In banking terms, a proverbial damp squib. To ensure that it is not, to match the public outrage and demands it needs political support, and that’s the problem that at the core goes hand in hand with the failure of the bankers, and which so far since 2008 has also not delivered.

Good Luck!

photo credit: Mukumbura via photopin cc

Ian R McAllister is the founder of a UK group focused on recruitment and employment in skills-short professional employment sectors, presently covering IT, telecoms and project management. The group also provides professional candidate information and services via a series of online resources, including the Professional CV and Executive CV services

Internet Explorer 9 Insecure Browser Warning?

I.E. 9 is regarded as an extremely safe browser. When my latest P.C. arrived it came configured with Windows 7 and Internet Explorer 9. For many years I was firmly committed to Mozilla Firefox as my browser of choice. Going even further back in time I used Netscape Navigator too.

Why then have I continued to use I.E. 9. and why have I not installed Firefox?

Firefox was great when I first discovered it. Via the S3Fox Organizer plug-in it was for a while the most convenient way to upload and manage material on Amazon’s S3 storage system.

The problem with it was that as fast as people made useful plugins for it, the quicker it seemed to be upgraded so that they would no longer work.

There was a particularly nice plugin that enabled people to be able to automatically check boxes, which was a boon when Twitter changed its policy on what sites like unTweeps.com, who identify who is active, and who is following you, were prohibited from placing a ‘select all’ option in their results.

Two upgrades after installing this plugin and Firefox no longer supported it.

Now I must admit that I.E. 9. is a quirky browser. Some commercial websites, such as that of communications ‘experts’ Ogilvy.com won’t display properly unless something called ‘compatibility mode‘ is enabled. Closer to home it affected the opt-in form on the sites of a few of my I.M. friends, reversing the background colour so that black type appeared against a dark purple, nearly black, background. The message was unreadable.

The background was supposed to display as a welcoming shade of cream.

But it’s exactly due to these quirks that I’ve continued to use I.E. 9. You see I want to know how my pages look in a ‘hostile’ environment, and avoid these kinds of things displaying when people view my websites in I.E. 9. If I don’t use the browser, it’s difficult to understand its quirks.

Some bright spark at this stage is probably reaching for a one button mouse, and about to comment: ‘get a Mac and use Safari‘. They’re missing the point.

You see it’s not about whether or not Safari is a better browser, Mac or no Mac, it’s about the fact that 22% of all Internet users use Internet Explorer as their browser of choice.

I am sure most Mac owners are very nice people. One of my former wives owns one, as does our son, and the man who comforts our daughter and they are all wonderful human beings.

But there are a small group of Mac owners who do get up my nose, such as my friend, so called, who one morning awoke with an idea that would save the world.

He rapidly turned his ‘idea’ into an Apple Pages  file, sent it to all his friends using an CC e-mail with addresses of all fully visible in the header, and appended as his ‘call to action’, ‘if you can’t read this get a Mac’.

I mean did he expect people to bother to read it, after that treatment?

Microsoft claim that Internet Explorer 9 is their safest browser yet. Indeed they believe it to currently be the safest browser commonly available.

I was surprised, therefore, when on upgrading one of my WordPress sites to version 3.31 a window appeared in the dashboard informing me that I was using an insecure browser, and that I needed to upgrade to I. E. 9., which is the browser I use.

Incredibly, similar warnings have appeared on various website I’ve visited over the past couple of months. My Yahoo Mail account being one of these. So why is this?

According to NSS Labs Internet Explorer 9 is an incredibly secure, and safe browser. It is able to detect up to 99% of the malware that it encountered.

That as good or even better than the other browsers out there.

Microsoft has also improved the smart screen url filter that comes with the browser.

And it stops you from downloading files from websites that are known to be dangerous. Indeed with the introduction of  Windows 7 security seems to be Microsoft’s first priority.

Why are these strange warnings appearing?

Could it be someone believes the new I/E. 9 really could be a threat, or is it simple incompetence?

Footnote: Since writing this I have, perversely, installed Rockmelt, which has improved considerably since I last used it. My productivity though is down to zero!

Stephen Bray writes in a stream of consciousness, but sometimes is a good read . . .

Why You Just Have To Love Athletic Bilbao

Those crazy Basques:

  • They want independence from Spain but want to be in Europe
  • They have sticky out ears except the ones that don’t
  • They are short and squat except the ones that aren’t
  • They have a different blood group except for those who don’t.
  • They have an unintelligible language. (They do so no arguments there)

Stereotypes and half facts (Maybe full facts in some cases) but you have to respect their desire to be different. Any region that purports to be a country based on a language whose only relative is a slight resemblance to Sanskrit and some blood cells has to be described at best as persistent.

And in football they are different too.

There are various football teams in the Basque country in Spain (Real Sociedad, Alaves, Osasuna). It is one of the traditional hotbeds of football in fact as the game was brought to the country by English sailors in the late nineteenth century. Bilbao wear the red and white stripes as a student brought over 50 Southampton shirts and gave them to the team after he couldn’t get enough of their previous color while in London, they had previously been wearing Blackburn colours.

Athletic Bilbao are a traditional club who stick to their traditions and this means they have that Basque desire to be different.

So why do you have to love Athletic Bilbao?

Well in a world of multinational, multilingual, multimillionaires Bilbao still stick to only signing Basque players. They have relaxed the rule slightly in the last decade or so and now sign players who have been brought up in the Basque country but may not have had “Basque blood” and they also sign players with Basque ancestry, the Jack Charlton rule of ancestry if you like, but essentially they are still a fully Basque team. This doesn’t come without its critics though. Within the basque country itself they are the big spenders constantly tempting younger players away from the other Basque clubs and they always have to pay over the odds in the transfer market because they can only buy the Basque players that come onto the market and are good.

When Celtic won the European Cup they famously didn’t have a player born more than 30 miles from the ground. That could never happen again could it?

Well this year Athletic Bilbao are currently fifth in the Spanish league and under the guidance of Marcelo Bielsa they are playing some of the best football ever seen at the Catedral with a young team brimming with talent. (Bielsa is not Basque of course, but then again neither was Howard Kendall but he managed them too)

As I write this they are playing away at real Madrid and losing 3-1 and they are down to ten players. However they could conceivably have been out of sight in the first half after a couple of awful misses before Real Madrid equalized.

If this team continues to develop as it currently is and more importantly holds onto its best players they could conceivably qualify for the Champion’s league this year. That would be an achievement in itself.

And then you would have to love Athletic Bilbao even more.

 

photo credit: txadonak via photopin cc

4G causes loss of remote control

The remote control for my Bang and Olufsen BeoCentre is cool. Very cool. Machined out of smooth matt aluminium, it’s perfectly weighted and shaped to fit snugly in the hand. It’s oval cross section tapers towards the top, the base forms a flat-bottomed sphere that houses the battery. The device therefore can be free-standing and not lost under a pile of cushions. It even goes well with some of No1 son’s sculptural pieces that artfully occupy various nooks and crannies of my living room.

The trademark Bang and Olufsen minimalist design is indeed exemplified by the remote control, which features just five buttons, rather than myriad multi-coloured mosaic-esque chaos of lesser remotes. Despite the simplicity of the device, I can control all the features of the integrated Beocentre: the TV, the Radio, the CD /DVD player and even rotate the TV screen on its motorised brushed aluminium stand to get the best possible viewing angle.

The remote control is cool, not just because of its unique appearance, but also because the design is so well executed that the tactile nature of the device enhances the home entertainment experience; the remote was one of the reasons I bought the Beocentre in the first place.

However, the cell phone industry is causing me a problem; it is going to end the relationship I have with my remote and hence disrupt my viewing pleasure. This I find particularly irritating.

As I’m sure you’re aware, there has been a massive increase of bandwidth since the inception of the cell phone. According to Ofcom, the widespread take-up of mobile data services, including dongle-based mobile broadband and smartphone use, has resulted in an increase in global data consumption of 159% in 2010 over the previous year. Cisco Systems’ Visual Networking Index found that UK data volumes increased by 124% to an average of 266MB per mobile connection per month in 2010 (other Ofcom data says 240MB).

Ericsson reports that mobile data traffic will multiply ten times over by the year 2016, and that mobile data demand will be divided almost equally between mobile devices such as smartphones on one hand, and PCs and tablets on the other:

O2 were the first mobile operator to retail the iPhone in the UK and they have tracked traffic usage since then, leading them to conclude that data traffic is doubling approximately every 6 months:

This massive increase in the use of mobile data is one of the reasons the mobile industry is rolling out the next generation of infrastructure, 4G, or as it is more accurately known Long Term Evolution (LTE). Both LTE and 4G offer significant improvements in bandwidth, with 100Mbps headline speed being offered for download by the former and 1000Mbps to a suitable handset by the latter, albeit asymmetrical.

I think if I were a copper-based landline operator (this includes coax cable, the core of which is copper), I’d be distinctly worried by the emergence of these new ultra-fast mobile networks. Why, for example, would I need to rent a copper line for voice just to get a derisive 6.7Mbps/0.7Mbps asymmetric DSL service when I could get better bandwidth by using my cell phone as a network access device?

In the UK, LTE requires a reallocation of spectrum. And herein lies the cause of my problem. The “Digital Switchover” as it’s called is shifting broadcast TV from antique analog to delightful digital, releasing the part of the radio spectrum previously used by analog TV (800Mhz). Later this year, this and more of the radio spectrum, up to 2.6Ghz, will be auctioned off by HM Government to the mobile carriers so that they can deploy LTE services (also known as 3.9G).

Naturally enough, the new digital TV signals necessitates all TVs to be capable of receiving these new digital signals, either by replacement or by adding a digital-to-analog converter box. As I previously stated, I regard my TV and its remote control as design icons and I had no intention of replacing either of them anytime soon. But the requirement to add a digital converter between the aerial and the TV has rendered my remote redundant.

This means I will have to resort to whichever dire and dreadful plastic affair, that I’m sure will look as if its been less designed than congealed, that comes with whichever Freeview box I end up buying.

Unless there’s an iPhone app. Now that would be cool.

Source:beophile.com

Neil Fairbrother
Interim Marketing

The Sailor and The Train Driver

When Your Actions Cause an Unequal And Opposite Reaction?

We all make mistakes in life, some of us more than others.

There are always consequences, sometimes for better and usually for worse.

We don’t all captain a cruise ship or support Rangers!

English: Costa Concordia Polski: Statek pasaże...

Image via Wikipedia

Let me elucidate.

The first one is easy. You make a little mistake when trying to salute a mate onshore and end up ploughing your cruise liner into a pile of rocks and losing the ship and many lives. You are lucky that you came so close to shore that people hadn’t got far to swim to save themselves.

As I said we all make mistakes.

The second one may stimulate an all out strike by the ASLEF union in Scotland. You are a train driver and you phone in sick one day. It happens right? What doesn’t usually happen is that you are then photographed at a Rangers European match in Germany the same day. Whoops!

So what are the consequences. The train driver has been demoted to a level below his skillset and with 18000 pounds less a year. This means that over the 20 years he has left in his job he will earn 360000 Pounds less than if he hadn’t been to watch Rangers.

Now for me there is nothing in this wide world that could convince me that going to watch Rangers place 11 players along the goalline in an away european tie is worth 360 grand of anyone’s money but the point is, does the punishment fit the “crime”?

That is where ASLEF comes in.

They have stated that their driver has an unblemished 21 year record of service and the punishment is much too great for making a mistake. (Unblemished or just never caught?)

The question for the captain of the cruise ship should be, did he make a simple mistake or was this negligence? He has been sailing for well over 20 years and has probably made plenty of mistakes. However the consequences of our mistakes differ according to our responsibilities right?

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Leveson Inquiry: After Desmond It’s Time For Hislop!

Ian Hislop image via Wikipedia

If you’re in any way interested in the British press, publishing, or the ethics of journalism this Tuesday promises a treat at the Leveson Inquiry. Ian Hislop, Editor of the Satirical Magazine ‘Private Eye’ is called to give evidence.

In pure entertainment value he will have to work hard to upstage one of last week’s core witnesses.

The owner of Britain’s most successful magazine publishers, Richard Desmond, was giving evidence. His company Northern and Shell PLC own not only a stable of magazines but also other media interests including The Express, The Sunday Express, The Daily Star and The Daily Star on Sunday.

I confess that I enjoyed Desmond’s testimony, and not simply for its novelty. In his gravelly North London accent he put across his interpretation of the publishing business. His manner was that of a streetwise uncle chatting about business down the pub. He was outspoken with the Inquiry.

It was clear that Desmond is expert in turning businesses from loss to profit. He is no asset stripper, believing he saved the Express from extinction at the hands of its rivals.

But at The Express anyone doing jobs that couldn’t be defined were out. This is how he put it:

“. . . one of the things I remember is walking around the floor and there was a room with a lot of scruffy geezers and I said to the editor, “Who are they?”  “Oh, I can’t tell you who they are”.  “What do you mean, you can’t tell me?”  “Oh, it’s the investigative department.”

So I said, “What is it?” “I can’t tell you.”  So Paul, [Ashford, Northern and Shell Group Editorial Director], who is in charge of that area, found out what they did.

They were special investigators, you know, sort of ‘Bugle’ stuff, ‘Dan Dare’ stuff. And then the final thing was I think the first week they asked for £5,000 or £10,000 of cash, or the editor at the time asked for that, to pay these geezers, shall we call them, to do their private investigative work.

My reaction was the last thing we’re going to do is to start paying out cash to people, we don’t know what they’re doing, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.

So I said to Paul, “You know what?  I don’t like the whole thing”.  Paul didn’t like the whole thing.  “You know what, cut the whole area.  No one knows what it is and it seems a bit dodgy.”"

Over the days that I’ve been watching this Inquiry I’ve developed an affection for Robert Jay Q.C. a counsel to the proceedings.

At first he seemed simply like a dog with a bone, but as time has passed he has become not just any dog, but rather like a Yorkshire Terrier, that breed of small, highly intelligent, aggressive, hunting dog bred originally to catch rats in factories and sometimes put down the lairs of ferrets, weasels and other much larger predators to drive them into the light.

I grew up with this breed and greatly admire them.

Last Thursday though the good Mr. Jay could hardly get a word in edgeways when Richard Desmond gave his evidence. Nevertheless a few spirited exchanges took place.

When Mr.Jay asked: “What interest, if any, do you have in ethical standards within your papers, or is that purely a matter for the editors?” Mr. Desmond’s reply was amazing.

“Well, ethical, I don’t quite know what the word means, but perhaps you’ll explain what the word means, ethical”, he said.

Many no doubt hearing reports of these words for the first time out of context, perhaps in reportage from rival media, perhaps on T.V. will hold the opinion that any being who says such things must be an unethical person.

I don’t agree.

Years ago, when I worked with Gavin Fairbairn, who is now a professor of philosophy at Leeds Metropolitan University we attended a conference in Manchester. In the discussion I was getting hot under the collar on the subject of people’s ‘rights’. His response was to ask me dismissively ‘What is a right?’

He went on to demonstrate, at least to my satisfaction, that although we attribute generic meanings to such terms as ‘right’, and I would suggest also ‘ethics’, they have no more validity than when we pronounce something to be ‘nice’ because we’re too lazy to identify the essence of the thing that we consider attractive, or useful.

Long ago sociologist Raymond Baumhart asked business people, “What does ethics mean to you?” Here are some typical replies:

“Ethics has to do with what my feelings tell me is right or wrong.”
“Ethics has to do with my religious beliefs.”
“Being ethical is doing what the law requires.”
“I don’t know what the word means.”
“Ethics consists of the standards of behaviour our society accepts.”

These replies might be typical of our own. The meaning of “ethics” is hard to pin down, and the views many people have about ethics are shaky. The last statement is particularly difficult because what ‘society’ expects depends according to a number of variables at the time, and even that presupposes that ‘society’ is a homogenous entity.

Richard Desmond is, in my view, wholly correct to proscribe discussions of ethics within his organization, if what he means is that defined issues such as privacy, consent, and doing no harm are talked about more specifically, by name, as they impact day-to-day processes.

Mr. Jay went on to afford Mr. Desmond the opportunity to make virtually this point:

“You make it clear everybody’s ethics are different: “We don’t talk about ethics or morals, because it’s a very fine line.

” . . .  The very use of that term or language would suggest that certain things are on the right side of the line and certain things are on the wrong side of the line.  Can we agree about that?”

Mr Desmond replied: “As I say in my statement, we don’t talk about ethics or morals because it’s a very fine line and everybody’s ethics are different.”             Mr. Jay in respnse asked: ” It may be you don’t talk about ethics or morals because you simply don’t care less about them, or it may be, as you say, that there’s a very fine line and it’s often difficult to say what falls on which side of the line. . . . One should go on, in fairness to you: “We do, of course, care about the title’s reputation and so would not run a story if we thought it would damage that or seriously affect someone’s life. . . . So that is an ethical consideration, isn’t it?”

To which Mr Desmond replied: “Of course it is!”

Not many newspapers reported that full exchange though, did they? Instead they took their usual stance of sticking pins into Mr. Desmond. One article went so far as to question his sanity!

Lord Leveson is unlikely to read these words but were he to do so they would not be meat to the process he presides over. It’s not that his Inquiry is so much a ‘dog’s breakfast’ in the sense the term is commonly understood, indeed the proceedings under his stewardship are conducted very professionally.

The fact remains, however, that this whole time consuming, expensive process where counsel gnaws laboriously over the bones of how the newspaper business conducts itself can’t really be in the country’s best interests, unless the agenda is it break the publishing industry?

Lord Leveson has repeated on many days, using different phrases, that this is emphatically not his agenda. One hopes that the government shares it?

Mr. Desmond admitted in his evidence mistakes were made by staff on his newspapers. It is a fact that The Express published more defamatory comments about an unfortunate family who lost a child in Portugal than any other British newspaper. He apologised to the family perhaps as many times in his evidence as he acknowledged the mistake.

A deadly cocktail of systems and understandings seems to have occurred at The Express. Its editor at the time Peter Hill chose to feature the story over a 17 week period. But the trouble was that the information coming out of Portugal was inaccurate and as a result 37 of the articles proved to be grossly defamatory.

In a report by Mr. Hill made to a Government Select Committee referred to by Mr. Jay in his examination of Mr. Hill, earlier on Thursday,  he stated:

‘”It certainly increased the circulation of the Daily Express by many thousands on those days, [when stories about the missing child], were being published without a doubt.

“It also massively increased the audiences on the BBC as their Head of News has acknowledged.  It did this for all newspapers.”

Mr. Desmond in his evidence inferred that the then president of the Press Complaints Commission made an example of Mr Hill, and thus scapegoated the Express, and the Northern and Shell Group, when to some extent many, if not all British not to mention the foreign newspapers, were to some degree culpable.

Sadly, despite the shadow cast over the press by Lord Leveson’s bonhomous presence, many editors have failed to fully appreciate that he is not a ‘pussy cat’.

On Tuesday 6th December, 2011 The Independent hinted that Richard Thomas CBE, a former Information Commissioner, had mislead parliament as a result of information revealed in the evidence to the Leveson Inquiry. This he strongly denied in his evidence later in the week.

On 15th December Lord Leveson felt he needed to comment that reports in the press about the proceedings should be accurate. On 11th January he complained that as a result of questions that he had put to witnesses speculation had been raised in the press about possible conclusions he had reached with respect to findings. He said:

“I would not want it to be thought that I have reached conclusions, for I have not!”

There are also numerous examples of Richard Desmond’s evidence being selectively quoted in a way to support a view that he is pariah within the industry. This may be an opinion, but it’s not true reporting.

What is clear is that Desmond is someone who understands the newspaper business sufficiently to make a profit where many, more experienced within the field, predicted huge losses. Unlike some I don’t care if, as reported by Mathew Norman in the Telegraph, his butler brings him a banana on a silver tray twice a day. So what?

I would care, however, if one of his newspapers wrongly accused me of killing a child, and spread the story out over a number of weeks. Having written thus, surely I won’t be the only person outside of the official record of the Inquiry to note that in his evidence Richard Desmond stated: “Nothing would give me greater pleasure than to find [the missing child referred to earlier on this page]“.

As Nick Cohen wrote in The Spectator back in November: “The Leveson Inquiry has all the makings of an establishment disaster.”

The press themselves, however, may also correctly be regarded as part of the U.K. establishment and continue to make gaffs and enemies that they can ill afford.

Let’s hope Hislop will bring something to the table.

[Note: This post relies heavily on data from the official Leveson Inquiry website and is used here under the terms of its conditions of  copyright.]

Stephen Bray writes in a stream of consciousness, but sometimes is a good read . . .

Is It Worth Your Trouble?!

Let’s try not to make this boring. There are lots of formulae you can use to calculate how much your time is worth. Here’s one of them:

Einstein via Wikipedia

Where A = The money you want; B the expenses you will incur; C = the % profit you propose to make and D = your billable hours.

That wasn’t too bad was it?

But I rarely use such formulae. The reason is that I’m a bit of a hands on kid. Give me a new box of Meccano and I’ll make one thing according to the plans, then once I understand the pieces I’ll build something original.

Whilst from a creative standpoint this may be excellent it must be said that from a business perspective it’s poor management.

I was reflecting recently about why it is that often my businesses take far longer to build than the time it took to renovate this house?

Although I’m capable of hitting a nail in straight, and like all men love to use a hammer drill, those kinds of activity won’t turn me on for more than half an hour.

When I rebuilt the house I designed all the rooms, and furniture, supplying drawings and examples, but I engaged professionals to knock down walls and build furniture.

They did it in a fraction of the time I would have taken, and they had far more skill at destruction and reconstruction.

It follows from this example, and the formula above, that any tasks that you can pay someone else to do, at least as efficiently as you would do them, at less than your billable rate should be done by someone else.

So why, oh why then have I spent the past week attempting to teach myself digital typesetting?

Simple, I want to know the challenges so that when I outsource the task I can be more specific with my instructions.

I also want to ensure that the finished product has my stamp upon it, even if that imprint may eventually be improved considerably by someone else’s facility at the task.

This morning, were you here, you would have heard me cuss.

My brand spanking new Professional all singing all dancing, anti-virus, anti-phishing, anti-malware, wotsit pack went barmy when I tried to look at my own web site. Naturally I tinkered for about half an hour, upgraded the WordPress installation, hit return and the freakin’ thing wouldn’t even let me look at the site on my screen!

Do I blame my anti-virus program? No I think it’s doing a good job, and especially so since the product was given to me for a year free by my Bank.

Will I spend the rest of today personally removing all the malware that’s infected my web site?

Frankly, I was tempted, and you too may be tempted too, in similar circumstances, if you’ve nothing better to do with your time.

But I do have something better to do, so I hired a firm that specialises in monitoring web sites, and removing threats, to monitor and mind all of my web sites.

I’m going for a walk in the sun now, then it’s back to magazine layouts!

Stephen Bray writes in a stream of consciousness, but sometimes is a good read . . .

High speed rail in the uk

32 billion for high speed rail and 17 years to build it. They are actually taking the mick aren’t they?

Let’s compare and contrast.

Spain has high speed rail of course. Probably the best high speed rail system in the World actually. It started because of the Expo in Seville in 1992. The government of the time built a railway on a different gauge to the rest of Spain that finished in Madrid over 500km away from the nearest international border with that same gauge just so Madrileños could get to Seville for the expo.

Oh how we laughed.

I remember cutting out an article from the front page of the Guardian with a description of what a huge white elephant it was written by John Hooper, (the guy who wrote the definitive guide to the Spanish “The Spaniards” and later the update “The New Spaniards”).

Yes we laughed. And then there was a gap of a few years until Spain decided we actually wanted some more high speed railways as it would be able to connect the original line up to the French border. Now the obvious thing is to connect Madrid up with Barcelona of course. Then from Barcelona to the French border. And so on and so forth.

AVE Barcelona-Madrid

Image via Wikipedia

The tentacles of the high speed rail system now go all over Spain. It arrived in Valencia last year and everybody who uses it loves it. Just an hour and forty minutes to Madrid and as it is city centre to city centre it has actually put the airlines out of business because it is quicker.

But (you knew there was a but coming didn’t you?)

Not one line in Spain makes a profit.

None.

In fact the costs of maintenance of the lines are huge. Apparently it costs 20000 euros per year just for the upkeep of each kilometre of line. There are so many kilometres now, more than in China and Japan combined, that you could almost solve Spain’s huge unemployment problem, 23% and rising, by employing people to look after a kilometre of line each for the same price.

I won’t go through the figures but can you imagine any scenario where that 32 billion pound is going to be paid back?

Ever?

How much will people be charged to travel on this train that will only connect up London and Birmingham and then Manchester and Leeds.

Look on the bright side though people will get from Birmingham to London in half the time they currently do. This means that some people will be able to commute to London every day and enjoy the benefits of living in Birmingham. Whoops I think I am stretching a point too much. I cannot imagine one person taking up that option. Living in Birmingham (Shivers)!

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