JDM Skyline GTR

Black on black sure looks good!

Celica GT Classic

If only I was as cool as this guy...

Awesome Classic Celica GT

Gotye – Somebody That I Used To Know (Feat. Kimbra) (Joe Caraoca Remix)

Great remix of the popular track!

Seasonal Tyres and Insurance Renewal for the Impreza

Ah it’s that unfortunate time of year that seems to come all too frequently. The war on the motorist is apparent as ever with the current cost of petrol, road tax and insurance. Driving an Impreza at 25 is quite fun, though my renewal quote of £1500 fully comp with two years NCB it’s certainly evident that I’m not trusted with that kind of power quite yet.

With reports suggesting we are in for another white Christmas, I’ve decided to get rid of my REO70′ for some Vredestein Quatrac 3′s all season, which are supposed to be decent in wet and icey weather. They should be arriving today and on the car this weekend. I think I’ll have the front alignment looked at while I’m there.

Liverpool vs Manchester City [Preview]

Lucas and Milner

With Liverpool coming off a relatively impressive display at Stamford Bridge, spirits should be high going into the clash on Sunday. Especially as City lost midweek to a valiant Napoli team.

In his pre-match press conference King Kenny said that he expects City to put up a good fight at Anfield where they were convincingly beaten 3-0 last season, seeing a brace from £35m man Andy Carroll who has yet to find his feet so far this season.

Liverpool fans can be hoping for a starting role for Maxi Rodriguez who hasn’t featured much up until now to the bafflement of most as he was in great form towards the end of last season and has produced the goods when given a role this season. While Downing expected to start most matches as he provides natural width and on occasion great deliveries from the byline, hasn’t produced consistently to date.

The competition for places can only do the team good as Kenny shows he is willing to change things up if players are not performing. With Luis Suárez in scintillating form as always, we’ll be hoping to secure a convincing home victory.

Mario Balotelli appears to be fit after recovering from a fever, another striker on great form with 6 premier league goals this season, he’ll be one to keep an eye on for our centre backs along with Dzeko and Aguero who have 10 goals each.

While the big spending Manchester side appear to be unstoppable this season, we do have a habit of raising our game against top opposition, hopefully we’ll be able to show that we are progressing and deserving of a top 4 finish this season.

Barbagello Raceway Drift and Attack Party

Great video for you import and drift fans.

Worlds Most Expensive Villa – Villa Leopolda

This property is not sold. the puschase agreement was signed at 350M€. the 35M€ deposit was lost by the buyer for not proceeding into the final contract with the fullpayment.

Tints Done At Last

Wagon Front

Dennis Ritchie: the other man inside your iPhone

1960's Computer

It’s funny how fickle fame can be. One week Steve Jobs dies and his death tops the news agendas in dozens of countries. Just over a week later, Dennis Ritchie dies and nobody – except for a few geeks – notices. And yet his work touched the lives of far more people than anything Steve Jobs ever did. In fact if you’re reading this online then the chances are that the router which connects you to the internet is running a descendant of the software that Ritchie and his colleague Ken Thompson created in 1969.

The software in question is an operating system called Unix and the record of how it achieved its current unacknowledged dominance is one of the great untold stories of our time. It emerged from Bell Labs – the R&D facility of AT&T, the lightly regulated monopoly that ran the US telehone network for generations. Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson were two ferociously bright Bell programmers who had been assigned to work with MIT on the design of an impossibly complex multi-user operating system called Multics. In the end, the plug was pulled on the project, with the result that Bell Labs found itself with two pissed-off hackers on its books. Ritchie and Thompson badly needed a new operating system to provide an environment for their own programming, had hoped that Multics would provide it and had greatly enjoyed working on the project. Back in the lab they decided that they would just have to build the operating system themselves. So in a fantastic burst of creativity (and without asking anyone’s permission) they wrote Unics (as a counterpart to Multics). Inevitably the ‘cs’ became ‘x’ and Unix was born.

Thus did AT&T find itself the astonished proprietor of a uniquely powerful and innovative operating system. The problem was that it couldn’t sell it, because under the Consent Decree that gave it the telephone monopoly AT&T was not allowed to be in the computer business. So the researchers in Bell Labs did what geeks do – they gave it away to their peers in university research labs, under a licence that permitted the recipients to modify and improve it. In doing this Ritchie and Thompson unwittingly launched the academic discipline of computer science, because university departments were suddenly able to give their students software that was not only powerful (and malleable) but also free. The result was that virtually every computer science student in the world became a Unix geek in the course of his or her education. Unix was to computer science what the Bible is to divinity students. The difference was that geeks were free to modify and improve their bible – which is what Bill Joy and his fellow students at Berkeley did when they created their own version of Unix, codenamed BSD (for Berkeley Software Distribution) – of which more in a moment.

In due course, AT&T escaped the shackles of the Consent Decree and started to assert proprietary rights over Unix. This spurred an MIT programmer named Richard Stallman to embark on a project to change the world. He founded the free software movement, invented a clever way of using copyright law to preserve the freedom of programmers to modify software, and embarked on the GNU project to create a functional clone of Unix that would be free of proprietary constraints. (GNU stands for “Gnu’s not Unix” which is the kind of recursive joke only programmers enjoy.) Stallman, who is one of the great figures of our time, built most of the software tools needed for his great project, but before he could write the kernel of the operating system a Finnish hacker named Linus Torvalds did it – and released it in 1991 as Linux.

The rest, as they say, is history. Linux became one of the greatest collaborative ventures the world has seen (second only to Wikipedia), in which geographically dispersed programmers collaborate over the internet to debug, improve, extend and enhance a complex operating system that is not only remarkably stable and reliable but is also free. Because it’s free and malleable, every manufacturer in the world who needs a stable and flexible operating system to run an electronic device tends to use Linux – which is how your TV’s set-top box and your broadband router and maybe also your smartphone comes to be a Linux box. The same goes for the millions of PCs that make up Google’s server farms. In that sense, we are all now Linux (and, by inference, Unix) users.

The neatest twist of all, however, involves Apple. OS X – the operating system that now powers every Apple product – is actually built on the Berkeley distribution of Unix, so if you hack into your iPhone what you’ll find is BSD 4.2. You could say, therefore, that what Apple really did was to give Unix a pretty face. I’ve often wondered what Dennis Ritchie would have made of that. Now that he’s gone, we’ll never know. What we do know, though, is that we owe him more than we realised.

Full story: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/oct/16/john-naughton-dennis-ritchie-unix

The Highwayman

Quick plug for a great restaurant in the Ipswich/Needham Market/Stowmarket area.

The Highwayman Ipswich Entrance

The Highwayman Ipswich

Restaurants near Ipswich

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