Sign posts

Street signs in this part of the world are often very inconsistant in their spelling

signs-1

These signs were back to back.  Another instance of this is Jaffa Street is also sign posted as Yaffo Street.   Looking on a map (on paper or off google maps)  spellings of road name vary wildly which can really confuse tourists.  Seems different English translations of Hebrew words are quite common.  Moshiach (Hebrew for Messiah) can also be spelt Mashiach or possible other ways as well.

As well as lot of graffiti I sometimes see, defacing signs for comedy and mischief purposes is something quite funny I see sometimes.

king kong

Look carefully and you can see this sign for King George Street actually has a sticker over it. 🙂  Maybe a B movie set in Jerusalem could actually quite interesting 😛

unusual businesses in Israel that make or mend things…

Something I really like about Jerusalem is the abundance of family based businesses, I have mentioned about the Shuk, the open market for fruit, vegetables, meat and bread, etc which often some bread will be made in the back of the shop selling it.   Of course, anyone who has been to Jerusalem will have checked out the Arab shops in the centre of the old city where its usually expected to barter for something, be it a Hebrew Coca Cola T-shirt, a Menorah, a wooden nativity set, a brass teapot or a pretty middle eastern multicoloured silk scarf.  The vendor will start with an absurdly high price which you normally aim to pay 10-50% of that, this is normal part of stores geared towards tourists in the middle east and other countries like Morocco.  These people are ultra pushy and aggressive in their aim to sell you something and its impossible to simply go in and take a wander and look at things without any intervention.

As well as the traditional types of shops you expect to find here theres some others that are more unusual types of store.

The shoemakers

I thought maybe these places sell hand made shoes but actually its more of case of the repair shoes but also sell other leather products.

Recently my trouser belt is looking a bit worn out.  The hole where the pin goes through has got bigger and the material has weakened so sometimes the belt will start to slip undone, so its time for a new one.

In the shoemakers you can buy a belt made to your preference, ie: there is a collection of 20 or so types straps in different materials and colours, traditional leather or man-made fabrics, and separately you can choose the belt buckle, again one of a couple of dozen types of metal fastening.   The gentleman in the store will make you up your new belt with your choice of the two parts, this will cost 90 shekels (£15)   This was a little more than I am used to paying so I told him I would maybe come again another day.  I did end up buying a much cheaper one from somewhere else, the only thing was is there wasn’t enough holes in it, so I got a colleague from the home repair team to drill a couple of extra holes in it.

The TV shop

Last week we had some audio speakers at work that were used for teaching and board meetings, but they got slightly damaged and the phono plug got stood on and the centre pin of the plug was broken.   Often people would expect to throw them away and get new speakers, but these were good quality and it seemed a shame to throw them away when I might have some time to fix them on some quiet afternoon.

Me being the geek and wanting to repair things as economically as possible I thought I could maybe pick up a normal 2 metre or so phono cable and snip off one of the ends and solder it into the back of the speaker.  So I went into a small electrical shop in Agrippas street.  Here there are large amounts of replacement remote controls, cables and batteries for sale, I speak to the shopkeeper but he had a better idea, he opens a series of drawers and found a loose phono plug and offered to solder it for me for just 8 shekels, bargain!   I was chatting to the man and his son and he mainly fixes TVs, even the modern flat panel units.

Amazing as I don’t think there are any TV repair shops back in my city in the UK any more, people are used to throwing away a TV and buying a new one, I guess its a case there is so few skilled people to do it any more.

King David Citadel light show

Went to an exciting outdoor show last weekend in the Old City.

Inside the David Citadel has a huge collection of illusions done with projectors. Check out this video.

Think of the castle with audio recordings of some people from hundreds of years ago speaking and shadows of the people of the time moving around. Once a group of 15 of us had walked around the edges of building we sat down for the main part of the show, this is an stunning piece of illuminated theatre which shows the walls on three sides of us were covered by moving imagery of Jerusalem’s history.  It was thoroughly enjoyable and unique way to show history in a spectacular way.  Even with the large group of us as were there early we managed to secure really good seats on a balcony.

Mount of Olives wanderings

wide moo pano

me on moo pano

The Mount of Olives.   Some day this the stage where Jesus will return as documented in Zechariah 14 : 3

Then the LORD will go out and fight against those nations, as he fights in the day of battle.  On that day his feet will stand on the Mount of Olives, east of Jerusalem, and the Mount of Olives will be split in two from east to west, forming a great valley, with half of the mountain moving north and half moving south.  You will flee by my mountain valley, for it will extend to Azel. You will flee as you fled from the earthquake in the days of Uzziah king of Judah. Then the LORD my God will come, and all the holy ones with him.


across moo pano

Can’t remember the name of this Russian church, these shaped buildings always makes me think of the game Tetris for some reason 🙂   Wonder if someone has to polish those gold coloured domes.   Brasso anyone?

moto_0498

Obligatory camel rides offered to tourists by some Arab teenagers, as well as big Jerusalem wall charts and post cards you can barter for.

absalom pano

Right: This is apparently the tomb of Absalom, the rebellious son of King David.

Jon’s thoughts on P2P file sharing and the media

There’s been a lot of debate as of lately about file sharing and people downloading pirated material.

Peter Mandelson’s announcement on cracking down on file sharers this week has raised some groups raising opposition in the media, including things on Facebook. I thought I would write some thoughts here.

Firstly it was the Pirate Bay, a Swedish organisation who set up a search engine to find bit torrents (sections of files stored on individuals computers being shared around the world) that were in the news over their arrest.

Some years ago, there used to be a web site called Audio Galaxy, this came shortly after Napster. I got lured into getting free music on the advise off a friend. It was quite simple, it was just a plain web site and if you couldn’t find the artist or song you were looking for, ie: that artist’s record label had set it to be blocked you just deliberately spelt it wrong and you normally find what you were looking for. After a year of court cases or so, the judges decided Audio Galaxy couldn’t protect the rights of the musicians and it was shut down for good.

After this I decided not to download music any more, why? Because as a Christian I felt that it was stealing, it wasnt until a year I deleted all the music I had that I didn’t have on a CD or got from iTunes. Instead when using iTunes I could pay for songs but more often than not I would just go on their to go “window shopping” for music, ie: I could listen to 30 seconds or so of a song, but rather than buy it I preferred to stick to CDs, as sometimes a really great artist can have a album of consistently good songs and its nice to have all of them, and another coloured bit of plastic to stick on a book shelf. Yes my preferred way to get music I like is get second hand CDs of ebay. Why, as someone else probably has what I am looking for paid the full price and got tired of it, so as long as its in good condition, second hand is good for me, especially as probably most of the 50 or so CDs I have bought in the last few years were less than £3.

Also, if you created something for a living, a piece of music, starred in a movie or wrote software, its your bread and butter, you don’t want someone else taking your work for free. If you were doing pencil drawings on the sea front, you wouldn’t be very happy and someone suddenly coming up with a camera and taking pictures of your work, then finding out a copy of that drawing was in a friend’s house above their fireplace as the bought it cheaper from other part of town? I have worked for two software companies, I am not a programmer but I do provide a service of support and providing the tools (good maintained PCs, laptops, etc) to the men and women that write those software applications. If that company’s products ended up on bit torrent I could have no job and can’t pay my bills.

When the Pirate Bay got shut down earlier this year, there were massive rallies of people supporting those folks as the three men all got prison sentences. There’s even political groups called the Pirate party that specifically want to let people carry on downloading whatever they like without threat of legal action. Ok I admit record labels do not always work with good ethics, and the fact that Sony music put malware on music CDs to put stealth software on peoples computers without them knowing really should be illegal and someone ought to be fired and put in prison over that.

Let me get this straight, did the three Swedish guys set up Pirate bay for free as volunteers? Were they the Scandinavian Robin Hoods of the digital age don’t you think they made a bit of money from banner advertising and sponsors, actually quite a bit of money??? But a political party that is based against copyright? Huh? I thought the main priorities political organisations should rally around is improve our health services, schools, police and fire services, get maximum value for money for our taxes, reduce crime, unemployment and poverty, and help the environment not try to keep people fill up the computer hard disks with as much dishonestly obtained media as they can??? This doesn’t make any sense.

Hard disks are getting ridiculously cheap with 1 Terabyte of disk storage available for less than $100 or so, but internet providers are finding even with so called ‘unlimited download’ packages, they don’t have the bandwidth to sustain people 24×7 helping themselves to an inexhaustible supply of entertainment, and may have to sending threatening letters with the hint of cutting people off.

In this digital age, we all want things here and now, its exciting I find that I can hear a song on the radio of something I grew up with but never knew the name of the band, a quick google search of the lyrics and there it is, then listen to it on iTunes, then get it and pay for it there and then. This quick purchase to scheme ought to grow onto more mobile devices now. Getting more abilities to get music on the fly without some maddeningly complex DRM scheme you have to jump hoops through is a must.

I am quite a big fan of mainly 1980s-reformed for quite a few years lately-but now defunkt British band New Order, with their most recent album they offered a free MP3 download of a song which had 30 seconds of 5 different tracks of their album melded together, which was enough to convince me that that albums was worth buying. And it was! More of this kind of marketing please record labels. Also make all those nice rare stuff and B sides that impossible to find available buy or obtain as a bonus please!!!

I am big music fan and since passing 30 few year back my musical diet as grown more and more widely, collecting all the missing albums of the artists I like, songs from TV commercials, music from movies (getting quite into John Williams and Ennio Moricconi especially) stuff I group up with and new talent that might not so far have got recognition deserved.

The basic thing I am saying is here, if you live music, movies, games and applications, please pay or them, and keep the people employed in those industries in jobs. You can’t moan that music isn’t like the good old days if you just rip it off of Bit Torrent. Some organisations have sprung to provide better more direct ways for artists to get paid for their work, I have bought two CDs from Cdbaby.com who are good example of this.

Using applications like Limewire or Bit Torrent not only is illegal and hurts jobs, it also is a BIG security risk for your computer, as spyware is usually bundled with Limewire, and you could easily accidentally configure both apps to make some other the folders on your computer shareable to the outside world, possibly compromise a business’s IT security to hackers, or mean (probably not likely) you could be prosecuted. I spend a lot of time removing spyware and malicious apps which convention antivirus software cant always touch and needs specialist tools to remove, even then with modern techniques like root kits, criminals are more determined to find ways to get your computer to deliver spam or find financial information without you knowing. Software on torrents is often poisoned with nasty side effects. Mac users are non immune, the new Mac OS X 10.6 ‘Snow Leopard’ has been discovered interfered with malware.

When I get back to the UK I want to be able to know that my possible future employers isn’t in danger of having their products being ripped off.

If you cant afford to pay for software, especially things like Microsoft Office or Adobe’s graphics applications, there’s always free open source alternatives which might need a bit of retraining but much of the free software these days is becoming extremely high quality. If anyone feels that Bit Torrent etc does have a legitimate uses for things feel free to comment below.

 

Office Live – A review

Since someone told me about this at work, it sounded interesting.   Microsoft now offer a free template style web site which they host at no charge, a domain name is even thrown in.

When I needed to get an online presence to promote my plans to volunteer in Israel this seemed like a great solution.

Microsoft being the all conquering software mammoth are of course criticised, and using this service wasn’t going to win me respect with my fellow geek peers but I decided to go for it, seeing as free as good, and HTML and web design isn’t my thing and starting learning in this field isn’t on my priority list seeing as there’s other aspects in IT that more relevant to my interests.

During the registration process I was required to be a fee of GBP12 (this computer doesn’t have a pound sign 🙂 )  for my domain name, ok its not too much money although I would preferred them to be upfront about this though.

Once I started editing the site, there are some premade templates (about XYZ company, contact us, various similar things) that enable to drop pictures into the suggested layouts which is quite nice.  The editing suite uses Microsoft Office 2007 ribbon style interface which works quite well here, the editing functions do seem logical and pleasant to use.

Then I found out the not so good factors.  I was using a mixture of Microsoft Office 2003 and Open Office Writer 3 to write the text in different style and colour text and copy and paste it into the site.  Because of this I think some information got corrupted cause certain pages to hang.   A typical instance of this would be that when bring up the office live site to edit it, I would just get a permanently spinning please wait symbol.   The way to get round this would be to simply delete the specific page and make a new one with the already save text in hand.   On the main page which would be the default.html site though, it was impossible to delete or edit this.

The really bad point came when I showed a church leader about my plans to go away and the web site came up mostly blank on his Vista based PC running IE7.  This was quite embarrassing, although my fault I should of checked it under several browsers in advance.   It seemed using it on different browsers and different screen resolutions would give a very different view, the neatly tiled collection of photos on my home 20” monitor would become an odd mess on a smaller display.

On the forums of Office Live there’s quite a few other people with this issues, the documentation and a response back from a support agent told me about checking for cookies and other browser settings, (which I had already done.)

Unfortunately these issues remain consistent if I change any aspect of the site on my home or work computers using different browsers or versions of Windows.

I would recommend that businesses do not use this free application it is too unreliable and not standards compliant (like a lot of Microsoft’s other products) making it not easily manageable.

I am finding since updating this blog, I really like WordPress, I can have a web site in a blog format with easily changeable themes and layouts and where as the dashboard interface takes some getting used to and some menu features are not always where you expect to find them, its perfect for any individual or business for casual writings or any kind web site that revolves round a updateable blog.

If you are curious, you can check out the Office live web site maker here www.officelive.com

Useful links

some interesting links I will update from time to time

Links

Bridges for Peace, the Christian charity I will be working for
www.bridgesforpeace.com

Pictures and blog of biblical locations
www.bibleplaces.com

Online bible in multiple languages and different translation
www.biblegateway.com

Walid Shoebat, an ex-Palestinian Terrorist who found Jesus.
www.shoebat.com