Beware...

Grumpy bastard roaming free! 

It's a fucked up world after all


This is the story of how I became a prisoner in Qatar. Consider it my Twitter SOS.

Philippe Bogaert, previously active as Broadcast Manager at Dialogic, has been held captive in Qatar since October 2008. What happened? Both his company and his sponsor have betrayed him, making him a victim of Qatar's deeply rooted corruption.

The paragraphs below are taken from the press release :

“I am being held hostage in Qatar with a ransom of QAR16 million on my head,” says Bogaert. “I could never have imagined, when I signed on to help organize a marine festival, that I would find myself captive to a medieval system in which a corrupt young man could hold me prisoner on a whim.  This is a cautionary tale for westerners who come to work in the Gulf. You have no rights.”

Left with no salary or accommodation, Bogaert has taken shelter at the Belgian Ambassador’s residence since early December.

The Belgian company, Dialogic SA, which ceased supporting Bogaert financially after he resigned, cut off all communication with him in March 2009 and no longer answers his calls.

The latest we've heard is that Philippe's court case has been delayed and the next hearing has been scheduled for November, 1st 2009.

Help out where you can: retweet Philippe's tweets, read up on Philippe's blog , join the Facebook group and make as much people aware of Philippe's situation as you can! You can find all the information you need using the links below:

Filed under  //   Belgium  

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Movies I've seen: The Dark Hours (2005)

Again, a thriller/horror movie. Not a bad one, although it's kind of strange towards the ending which leaves you wondering if they didn't forget part of the movie whilst editing. Still if you like horror and have some time to spare, this one is worth checking out.

A psychiatrist finds her vacation time rudely interrupted by one of her patients in this creepy horror flick. Escaping from an asylum, the former sex offender is convinced that the doctor has experimented on him with less than honorable intentions, and goes searching for blood.



IMDB / Rotten Tomatoes 

Filed under  //   movies  

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Engrish fail

Filed under  //   fail  

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Spelling fail


Filed under  //   fail  

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Scorpions & Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra - Rock You Like a Hurricane

Filed under  //   music   video  

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Movies I've seen: Vacancy 2: The First Cut (2009)

Time for some horror, as I was home alone and had the TV all to myself. Hadn't seen the sequel to Vacancy - aptly named Vacancy 2 - which I thoroughly enjoyed. Alas I can't say the same for its sequel. While it isn't half bad, it isn't able to create the same atmosphere and suspense as the first one did.


Filed under  //   movies  

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Movies I've seen: The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008)

Saw it this afternoon. A so - so movie, nothing to get excited about. Careful viewers will spot the plugs for Microsoft products: both Vista as well as Surface are clearly visible.

More information:

Filed under  //   movies  

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Latest App Store purchase: Air Sharing Pro

History

Probably long after everyone else heard about it, I got wind that Air Sharing Pro had been released by the good people at Avatron. I've always preferred Air Sharing (the regular version), feeling that other file sharing applications just fell short. 

Take for instance File Magnet: this is one of the first apps of this kind (correct me if I'm mistaken), but it made the error of forcing the end-user to install a desktop program to be able to send and retrieve documents to/from the iPhone. When the product was just released only a Mac client was available. In my opinion, Air Sharing felt the most robust of all. 

What's new?
The only problem I had with the regular version is that it used the built-in iPhone PDF viewer, which is clearly not designed to open large, resource-intensive PDF files. Product manuals weighing several megabytes caused a few problems from time to time. Not so with the Pro version: Avatron has created an in-house developed PDF version, which can easily handle such documents (although there's only so much it can do with a limited amount of memory of course). But that's far from the only change between the regular and the Pro version. Here's a small list of things that are new or have been improved:
  • Email files (uploads to free drop.io server)
  • Print documents
  • Basic file operations (rename, delete, create folder, ...)
  • Access to remote volumes (MobileMe iDisk, FilesAnywhere, MyDisk.se, Generic WebDAV servers)
  • Zipping and unzipping of files
  • Supports password-protected and encrypted PDFs
  • Advanced auto-detection of character encoding in text files
  • Easy file sharing between Air Sharing users on the same WiFi network
Nobody's perfect
Everyone makes mistakes, and bugs are prone to happen. Such is the case with version 2.0, where I've been able to spot two bugs:
  1. PDFs are rendered incorrectly if the first page of your PDF has different dimensions than the rest of your document (e.g. the book's cover as an image). This can be solved by removing the first page.
  2. The "Sort by kind" setting in the File Browser is ignored.
The bugs have already been reported to the developers and a fix should be available in the next release.

Pro version? Why?
Some users are a bit upset that they have to pay twice to get the additional features that differentiate the Pro from the regular version. CEO Dave Howell has been kind enough to explain the reasoning behind it:

We love our early adopters, whether they got Air Sharing for free, as over 80% did, or bought it. You guys are awesome! And your suggestions and enhancement requests are extremely valuable, which is why we have this suggestions forum. 

Soon after releasing Air Sharing, we planned to have two versions: Air Sharing and Air Sharing Pro. Air Sharing would feature a file server and a file viewer. Pro would add Printing, Emailing, access to remote file servers, a custom PDF viewer, zip & unzip, and a host of other features. And we planned to price them at $5 and $10. 

But we also wanted to offer a $5 paid upgrade for Air Sharing users. Unfortunately, Apple has not yet added a mechanism for paid upgrades to the App Store. So we decided to simulate such a mechanism, by offering Air Sharing Pro for only $5 for a brief period. It's something of a blunt instrument, this method, because we have to offer everybody the $5 price, not just current Air Sharing users. But that's okay. If a universal discount is what it takes to reward our customers, that's what we're doing! 

So in effect, if you bought Air Sharing for $5, you can get Air Sharing Pro for $10, which is its regular price. If you got the classic version for free, you get Pro for $5, a Right Bargain. If you bought Air Sharing for $7, you'll have paid a total of $12 for Pro. 

I hope this clarifies things. One other point: we also fixed some bugs in Air Sharing Pro that we do plan to fix in Air Sharing. For example, we made enhancements to the UI, made the PDF viewer much more stable, added support for viewing iWork '09 documents (as long as they're saved With Preview), Our intent is NOT to make people pay for bug fixes. We absolutely plan to roll those bug fixes back into the classic version of Air Sharing as soon as possible. This would already have happened had we not gotten ensnared by the sudden requirement to support iPhone OS 3.0 before Apple will approve apps. But it will happen soon. 

Best regards, and thanks for your support.

Dave Howell 
Avatron Software, Inc.

Conclusion
It's great. 'Nuff said ;-)

Filed under  //   app store   iphone  

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Google Labs updated the Gmail Multiple Inbox feature

I stopped using the Multiple Inbox feature in Gmail some time ago, as I felt that it wasn't quite there yet. Just now, I discovered some interesting changes have been rolled out that make this feature much more usable that it was.


You can now name your inboxes: the search query can be replaced by a custom panel title.



Empty inboxes appear completely "folded", they no longer take up unnecessary screen space.


Filed under  //   google  

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Latest App Store purchase: PCalc (on sale!)

Created by James Thomson, PCalc is a calculator on steroids. James describes it in a more professional way:


PCalc1.5Main.png

PCalc is ideal for scientists, engineers, students, programmers, or indeed anybody looking for a feature-rich calculator for the iPhone or iPod Touch. 

It includes an extensive set of unit conversions, a paper tape, an RPN mode, engineering and scientific notation, as well as support for hexadecimal, octal and binary calculations.

If you're a cheapskate like me, you're in luck: PCalc is available now for half the regular price! And if that isn't enough to convince you, try PCalc Lite. It's completely free of charge (for now) and has many useful features. Great for a testdrive.

Why are you still reading this? Get over to the App Store  and buy this gem!



Filed under  //   app store   iphone  

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