Archive for April, 2007

Idiotmongers

Pell.jpgYou know, Catholics are supposed to be the sensible ones. We’re constantly reminded that we shouldn’t treat all religions the same: Catholics have embraced science, they’ve changed since Galileo’s times and shouldn’t be conflated with Evangelicals, Young-Earth Creationists and other Bible Belt fundamentalists.

But then, what should we think of Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell:

Christians don’t go against reason although we sometimes go beyond it in faith to embrace probabilities. What we were seeing from the doomsdayers was an induced dose of mild hysteria, semi-religious if you like, but dangerously close to superstition.

I am deeply skeptical about man-made catastrophic global warming, but still open to further evidence. I would be surprised if industrial pollution, and carbon emissions, had no ill effect at all. But enough is enough.

A few fixed points might provide some light. We know that enormous climate changes have occurred in world history, e.g. the Ice Ages and Noah’s flood, where human causation could only be negligible.

[…] The science is more complicated than the propaganda!

What a fucking moron! As if denying global warming just because “January also was unusually cool” wasn’t stupid enough, we have talk of Noah’s flood like it was a historical event.

Science is more complicated than propaganda, indeed. No surprise that Cardinal Pell cannot grasp it, if he is totally unable to even use common sense to see that his Bible is just a fairy tale for grownups.

(Via PZ Myers.)

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The unbearable suckiness of technical support

It all started when my iMac started turning itself off randomly and in the end it decided that it didn’t want to tun itself on anymore. I suspect a problem with the power supply, so right before Easter I brought it in for check and possibly repair. Haven’t heard anything about it, since then.

Then, right after Easter, my DSL connection suddenly became much slower. More like crawling, actually. Slow like a 56k modem that was losing a good deal of packets, which translates to being basically unusable.

Since I have three computers at home and they all have the same problem, I immediately excluded the possibility that all of them had started going mad at once. I also excluded the WiFi base station from the loop, to no avail. I replaced all cables, still no luck. I even got a new modem/router, since the one I had was left over from the previous provider and I couldn’t rule out the possibility that it had started malfunctioning during the Easter break. Same problem.

Calling technical support, of course, entails being kept on hold for 15 minutes on average, listening to an endless loop of Lily Allen’s LDN (I hate that song), then, if you’re lucky enough to be able to talk to someone, they will tell you that, for slowness problems, you have to execute an online speed test from their website (which I did but could not complete, since it times out at around 5%, when the average speed was measured in the vicinity of 0.1kbps) and report the results.

Incidentally, this is the same company that left me out in the cold for a week when switching providers. I’m tempted to switch again, but I’m afraid no company is actually able to provide a decent service.

Having ruled out computers, cabling, the router and the WiFi network as possible culprits, I’m starting to suspect some sort of TCP-related problem. A couple clues:

  • Speed seems to be extremely low only when downloading. Uploading is generally blazingly fast.
  • Downloads seem to start normally but then crawl to a halt after a few seconds or fractions of a second.
  • Some applications are apparently unaffected by the problem. Most notably, I can conduct a Skype convestation without interruptions. I even tried Joost and, even though it doesn’t play anything and times out and disconnects after a while, it is almost able to sustain an inbound stream of a few hundred KB/s for half a minute or so.
  • Ping times are absolutely normal.

This behavior makes me think that it’s not a line noise problem either, otherwise all types of traffic would be similarly affected, I think. It looks like what’s mostly affected is long running TCP connections, and only in the downstream direction. P2P applications, which probably use something different, I don’t know, are much less affected. ICMP stuff (ping) is not affected at all.

So I suspected some TCP fragmentation problem, and indeed, after mucking around with the MTU and MRU parameters of the router’s WAN (DSL) interface, I got somewhere: with MTU and MRU set at a value of 1000 (they were 1400 and 1492, respectively, before) my DLS line still feels like a 56k analog modem, but without packet loss. This means that I can at least navigate most “lightweight” websites and read email. Big deal!

Now, if anyone is reading this and has some clues about how to diagnose TCP problems and how to determine the optimal values of MTU, MRU and maybe some of the other, more obscure, configurable parameters in my router (D-Link DSL-G624T), I’ll be eternally grateful.

Last but not the least, last Friday the domain of this website disappeared completely from its DNS provider and I couldn’t get someone to resolve the situation until yesterday in the afternoon.

All in all, a very frustrating period.

The new popemobile?



Louis with car

Originally uploaded by Amy Watts.

After that bozo in a funny hat, Benedict XVI, spewed forth some incredibly ignorant and inane words on evolution and science, we cannot stop wondering whether the one depicted in this picture is going to be the next popemobile.


Tibetan Prayer Flags




Tibetan Prayer Flags

Originally uploaded by Ugo Cei.

Did we go to the Himalayas this weekend? Well, not quite. You can tell by looking at the map associated with this picture.