Sir Isaac Newton, 1643-1727

I share a surname with Sir Isaac Newton, and I like to think I’m that smart too. Joking! Or am I? :p

Anyway, there are a growing number of people hitting this website looking for information on “Izarc Newton”. First off, you really need to check the spelling of his name!

You will arrive on this site due to the fact I have previously reviewed “Izarc”, a compression utility similar to WinZip. This, added to my surname, gives you a broad match in Google.

If you ended up here looking for Great Uncle Isaac, please have a look at the Wiki. If you were looking for me……Hello! :)

Fun and the Necessity of Programming

Loading, loading, loading....R Tape Loading Error...I think when I write my autobiography, the title of this post will match the title of the book! I owe a lot of what I know about how computers work to the home computers of the 1980s. I had a (several actually) Spectrum, and later on an Atari ST (FM…then an E….then a Mega…). Lack of internet and (being around 10 years old) lack of money, along with a long held interest in taking things apart, led to learning how to write programs – games, utilities, whatever. I couldn’t just pop on the net to download a program to do something, I couldn’t go down the shops and buy one, so I wrote one myself. I wrote platform games, I dabbled in 3D, I wrote image compression algorithms that worked like JPEG before JPEG was popular…later on I wrote routines to compress audio in a similar manner. A few years later the MP3 explosion happened – I should really have profited from those two things…

The biggest thing for me about the whole experience was how much fun it was. The challenge of solving a problem. The thrill of actually seeing my solution working…then being able to save it tape or disc…and watch it work on someone else’s computer!

My kids have a foundation in programming. One is only 8, but knows the basics of application design and how to get the computer to do STUFF. Straight out teaching doesn’t work to well – but when they have a problem to solve, that’s when the magic happens. And the concepts and principles can be quite easily translated to PHP or JavaScripting, so that also keeps them amused.

Instead of looking for a pre-made solution on the internet, it’s a good exercise to get them to think it through and see if they can come up with their own solution. Obviously, there’s no point in reinventing the wheel – I myself am quite partial to some JavaScript libraries – but if it gets the kids to think rather than accept the solutions and ‘truths’ they are told, so much the better.

Now, must be off. Apparently I need to play Minecraft. The joys of parenting! :)

Point proved – Lampard, Chelsea and the Red Card

As I mentioned in a previous post, it pays to be one of the top franchises of the Premier League. Here’s why:

Case 1: You make a mildly dodgy tackle, that unfortunately results in a broken leg for another player. You should probably get a yellow card, but get a straight red – and because of the seriousness of the injury, you feel unable to appeal. No names – you know who this is!

Case 2: A player from Liverpool grabs your face, you slap him back. You get the red card – Jesus said turn the other cheek, and momma said “If someone hits you, don’t hit them back – come and tell me or you’ll be in trouble”. But in football, it’s one rule for one, one rule for another. Mr Aliadiere, for it is he, appealed – and was given an extra match ban for being frivolous! The other fella did just as much, but got away with it!

Case 3: Chelsea’s Frank Lampard pushed Luis Boa Morte of West Ham after another mildly dodgy clash, and received a red card – violent conduct, like Aliadiere. Mr Lampard appeals, and the card gets overturned for one of the top franchises.

See what I mean?