links

AudioMasters Forum

bcontrol forum

BCR video

The catalogue of UK Entrances to Hell

digitalfishphones

electro-music

Electronic Music 411

energyXT

Freeware 2005 VSTi/VST Roundup

The Grey Commons – strategic considerations in the copyfight

How to take ownership of a file or folder in Windows XP

InstaJungle 0.3

i, robot by Cory Doctorow

KVR Audio

MIDI NRPN and RPN

mulch-discuss

SIR – Impulse Response Processor

Inspector and InspectorXL

smartelectronix

Synthedit and SynthMaker

Tech Talk with Exile

theoria: Zizek!

Tobybear Productions

Word

links

100 things we didn’t know this time last year

AudioMulch 1.0rc1

Behringer B-Control Presets & Templates

Dungeons & Dragons

Increasingly Clear

Stuckism

Traveller (role-playing game)

The University and the Undercommons

X-Men

My new toy

I bought one of these today:



It was a bit naughty of me as I’m supposed to be saving money, but Allans was having a sale and I’ve wanted one of these for ages. Now I’ll be able to use it for my performances at the NOW now. It’s so much more fun and useful than trying to make music with a mouse!

links

Disfiguring the ‘Means of Production’: Sound and Power in Late Capitalism

GamEnd and MamEnd

High-Definition Multimedia Interface

Humility and the Guest: Tarkovsky’s Critique of the Subject

Living Dangerously: Kierkegaardian Faith and Deleuzean Becoming

Oh Good

Overview of all HTML elements

Project Pterosaur

Reggaeton Flows Through Musical Genres

Zipf’s Law

YaCy

links

The Ars Technica Motherboard Guide

The Aussie Wordpress Blog

Bulk Rename Utility

Improvisor

Leiter Reports: Nietzsche etc.

Mothers Against Noise

The Neuroeconomics of Trust

Nietzsche’s Moral and Political Philosophy

Oddball Comics

Shannon O’Neill – Last.fm

Philoso?hy Talk

riaamix.com

Jonas Salk

Six Re-Views of Chris Marker: The Art of Memory

Big Brother loves your car

Britain will be first country to monitor every car journey
The Independent, Online Edition
By Steve Connor, Science Editor
Published: 22 December 2005
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/transport/article334686.ece

From 2006 Britain will be the first country where every journey by every car will be monitored

Britain is to become the first country in the world where the movements of all vehicles on the roads are recorded. A new national surveillance system will hold the records for at least two years.

Using a network of cameras that can automatically read every passing number plate, the plan is to build a huge database of vehicle movements so that the police and security services can analyse any journey a driver has made over several years.

The network will incorporate thousands of existing CCTV cameras which are being converted to read number plates automatically night and day to provide 24/7 coverage of all motorways and main roads, as well as towns, cities, ports and petrol-station forecourts.

By next March a central database installed alongside the Police National Computer in Hendon, north London, will store the details of 35 million number-plate “reads” per day. These will include time, date and precise location, with camera sites monitored by global positioning satellites.

Already there are plans to extend the database by increasing the storage period to five years and by linking thousands of additional cameras so that details of up to 100 million number plates can be fed each day into the central databank.

Senior police officers have described the surveillance network as possibly the biggest advance in the technology of crime detection and prevention since the introduction of DNA fingerprinting.

But others concerned about civil liberties will be worried that the movements of millions of law-abiding people will soon be routinely recorded and kept on a central computer database for years.

The new national data centre of vehicle movements will form the basis of a sophisticated surveillance tool that lies at the heart of an operation designed to drive criminals off the road.

In the process, the data centre will provide unrivalled opportunities to gather intelligence data on the movements and associations of organised gangs and terrorist suspects whenever they use cars, vans or motorcycles.

The scheme is being orchestrated by the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) and has the full backing of ministers who have sanctioned the spending of £24m this year on equipment.

More than 50 local authorities have signed agreements to allow the police to convert thousands of existing traffic cameras so they can read number plates automatically. The data will then be transmitted to Hendon via a secure police communications network.

Chief constables are also on the verge of brokering agreements with the Highways Agency, supermarkets and petrol station owners to incorporate their own CCTV cameras into the network. In addition to cross-checking each number plate against stolen and suspect vehicles held on the Police National Computer, the national data centre will also check whether each vehicle is lawfully licensed, insured and has a valid MoT test certificate.

“Every time you make a car journey already, you’ll be on CCTV somewhere. The difference is that, in future, the car’s index plates will be read as well,” said Frank Whiteley, Chief Constable of Hertfordshire and chairman of the Acpo steering committee on automatic number plate recognition (ANPR).

“What the data centre should be able to tell you is where a vehicle was in the past and where it is now, whether it was or wasn’t at a particular location, and the routes taken to and from those crime scenes. Particularly important are associated vehicles,” Mr Whiteley said.

The term “associated vehicles” means analysing convoys of cars, vans or trucks to see who is driving alongside a vehicle that is already known to be of interest to the police. Criminals, for instance, will drive somewhere in a lawful vehicle, steal a car and then drive back in convoy to commit further crimes “You’re not necessarily interested in the stolen vehicle. You’re interested in what’s moving with the stolen vehicle,” Mr Whiteley explained.

According to a strategy document drawn up by Acpo, the national data centre in Hendon will be at the heart of a surveillance operation that should deny criminals the use of the roads.

“The intention is to create a comprehensive ANPR camera and reader infrastructure across the country to stop displacement of crime from area to area and to allow a comprehensive picture of vehicle movements to be captured,” the Acpo strategy says.

“This development forms the basis of a 24/7 vehicle movement database that will revolutionise arrest, intelligence and crime investigation opportunities on a national basis,” it says.

Mr Whiteley said MI5 will also use the database. “Clearly there are values for this in counter-terrorism,” he said.

“The security services will use it for purposes that I frankly don’t have access to. It’s part of public protection. If the security services did not have access to this, we’d be negligent.”

links

Anarchism and Political Theory

Anarchism, or the Revolutionary Movement of the Twenty First Century

Blogging for Independent Artists and Creatives

The Chappelle Theory

Deleuze and Pop Music

EFF’s Jason Schultz explains how Sony BMG is about to be so pwned!

GWEI – Google Will Eat Itself

M/C Journal – Affect

Minimalist menace: The Necks score The boys

The Night Air – The Wire

Vidomi

The Visionary Art of Luke Brown

resync

ok, being noisy was fun for a while (i got as far as find candace – you’d have known that things were serious if i’d pulled out making orange things) but now it’s time to chill out with the cricket until my frenz arrive (soon please!). (there are also some cockatoos and baby magpies around atm which are making more annoying noises than even i’m capable of.)

i love cricket. i make no apologies for that, even though it’s just about the only sport that i follow these days. i know it’s a relic of the british empire, but as a game, i think it’s beautiful (i could go on for hours about the aesthetics of wrist spin alone…). especially test cricket: it has such a meditative rhythm, with room for as much or as little engagement or analysis as one wants. i like nothing more than having the cricket on as i go about my business.

like most real cricket fans i prefer to listen to the abc radio commentary while watching the television coverage.

one thing that foxtel doesn’t advertise is that if you get digital cable, the tv signal is delayed by a few seconds compared to the analogue broadcast, and if you get one of their iq pvrs (as i have) the delay becomes even longer, which ruins the radio simulcast.

fortunately i can patch the radio through my virtualizer pro (which i also use for this – at a street price of approx $180 it’s a great audio swiss army knife – highly recommended) with its 5.5 second delay, which makes the sync close enough to not be a problem. but it must be a pain for any cricket fan without this option. after all, sports fans are one of the target audiences for cable tv. it’d be great if radios had a buffer (like the iq, and other pvrs) which one could adjust in order to delay (and rewind) live audio – are such radios already available?

btw, the problems i was having with my iq box (randomly rebooting, recordings failing, etc.) have finally (touch wood) been solved. the signal strength was insufficient. a foxtel tech rectified the problem last sunday (at 7am). so hopefully my plans to use the iq as an a/v uber sampling device will now be practicable.

i was in a meeting all day today

and drank too much coffee

OmniFlop

OmniFlop is a ‘universal’ floppy disk reader, writer, and tester for the IBM PC or compatible which can handle alien floppy disk formats not normally supported by DOS, Windows and Linux.


AFAIK OmniFlop is the first and only Windows XP app that can read & write Ensoniq floppy disks – something Ensoniq users have been waiting a long time for. As soon as I have time, I’ll test it with my ASR-10.

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