Monday, August 21, 2006

what was that about Rome?...

Yes, many know the oft-repeated "Rome burns while Nero fiddles", and I´m not sure who it was in some or other seminal Internet Age text (someone let me know the ref if you can -- my memory fails...and most of my book library still sits in SA) who had a turn on the latter w.r.t. the Athenian/Greek variation of the saying which rang "Rome burns and you´re busy combing your pubic hair"

Oops!
Now now, settle down...

Well, it is that the latter saying came to mind when I recently
a) read this report from Reuters SA, which began:

Consumers lose out as Zimbabwe cash swap ends
Mon Aug 21, 2006 3:04 PM GMT

By Cris Chinaka
HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's drive to replace its old currency with redenominated bank notes ended on Monday in a flurry of confusion, with rich and poor alike losing money in the process.
The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) last month ordered the swap to combat black marketeering and hyperinflation, loping three zeros off the local dollar and giving people until August 21 to adopt new, redenominated banknotes.
The move effectively devalued the Zimbabwe dollar by 60 percent against its U.S. counterpart and fanned panic across the southern African country, already deep in its worst economic crisis since independence from Britain in 1980....



b) More or less contemporenous to (a) above, I saw an e-mail message hailing from Zimbabwe. [Yes, remember that little South African neighbour? Oh, how easily we forget. What with all the other conflicts happening in the world, often there are situations less pressing, less instantaneously devastating such as that of Zimbabwe. In short, we grow accustomed to the situation, and watch, and wait, or resort to, wait for it "silent diplomacy".]

So, below I post a message from a Zimbabwean. Can I name names? Not sure really... But the message is authentic. And I post it if only as one little blip of a reminder of a dire situation that has been dragging on for far too long.

" Let my people go.
The story of Moses in the Old Testament chronicles the time when the people
of Israel liberated themselves from slavery in Egypt. In the story, Moses
goes to Pharaoh and demands that he allow the Jews to leave Egypt and travel
to a land that has been promised to them by God. Seven times this demand was
made and in an unusual aside, the Bible says that God "hardened Pharaoh's
heart" and he denied them their freedom.
There was more to that of course - there were nearly 3 million Jews in Egypt
and they formed the backbone of the indentured labour and much of the
administrative skills needed to run the country. It was only after every
Egyptian family had lost a child that the Egyptians drove the Jews out and
they were able to flee into the desert and eventually enter to Promised
Land.
I do not want in any way to draw a parallel to this story and the struggle
for freedom that we are engaged in here, but there are similarities. We have
prayed, our people have suffered and we have had no outside help and indeed
cannot expect any help. We are virtual slaves to Zanu PF who run a
kleptocratic State that keeps the rest of us working hard and poor.
The conditions under which we are living are pretty horrific - all our civil
liberties are being violated, we are short of all the basic foods, our
average life expectancy has halved in a decade and is now one of the lowest
in the world. We live in a country where the GDP has halved since 2000,
exports are down by two thirds and 80 per cent live in abject poverty. Yet
those in power live the life of Pharaoh - luxury homes, every convenience,
frequent first class travel and ample supplies of all that they need - in
the process stealing a third of our annual GDP or more. They also control
the armed forces and the State and are willing to use both in the ruthless
pursuit of power and security. If you want to escape their grasp, you must
swim the Limpopo and live in the desert of our neighbor's inhospitable slums
for what will seem like 40 years.
We have raised up leadership that has demanded our freedom - first in the
late 90's when they demanded some say in how we were governed, then in 2000
when we demanded a new constitution of our own choosing, and then in 2000,
2002 and 2005 in hotly contested elections on a totally subverted playing
field. We have demanded our freedoms in the Courts, fighting successive
battles to get the Courts to hear our case for freedom - after each of the
past three elections and been denied justice by a subverted legal system.
I make that 6 challenges - one remains and that is now rapidly approaching.
We could say that each time we have challenged Pharaoh he has simply
hardened his heart and increased our burdens. Will this final challenge be
the one that breaks the back of Pharaoh's will and sparks a willingness to
let our people go? Perhaps it is that point in our story.
Certainly if God was working behind the scenes you can see the results. On
Monday we see the old bearer cheques lose their value and there is consensus
that this will lead to chaos. People in the remote rural areas have not even
heard the news, the Banks are simply swamped, there are not enough of the
new notes available to exchange with the old. Trillions of dollars will be
wiped out and fortunes lost on Monday - and it will not be the rich and
powerful or the crooks who suffer, they have their positions well covered,
it is going to be the millions of the poor and disadvantaged who will be the
main victims.
Right now, just to compound the problems of the people, there is no maize
meal available. I think Zanu PF actually believed their own fiction that we
had grown 1,7 to 1,8 million tonnes of maize. We have stated as often as we
can that this is pure fiction and make believe. If, as I estimated some
months ago, we have only grown about the same as last year (750 000 tonnes)
then this will have already been exhausted as people will have held onto
stocks for their own use and what little surplus would have been traded or
eaten by now. The price of this basic staple has doubled overnight - if you
can get some. We brought a truckload of maize meal into town yesterday and
it was sold out in 30 minutes.
I bought some Rand for a trip to South Africa last week - at 65 000 to 1.
When I came home 6 days later, the price was 90 000 to 1. Fuel is in very
short supply and prices rise daily. The army officer who runs our Energy
Ministry declared this week that fuel prices would be fixed at half or less
their present value and that they "had plenty of fuel to meet our needs".
The immediate reaction of the trade was to simply stop trading. The Minister
of Industry weighed in and declared a 3-week price freeze - in an
environment where our prices are doubling every two months. He was ignored.
We must pay our staff on Friday next week - 850 000 workers expect to be
paid their pittances, 10 days later we must pay school fees for three
million kids. Nearly all of these transactions will be in cash. We simply do
not have the smaller denominations needed for these payments. There is no
sign of them being available. I will try to draw change on Monday, but I
have little expectation that it will be available. Yesterday we were still
trading at about 90 per cent in the old notes.
The Egyptians had everything on their side - armed forces, control of the
State, regional hegemony. They felt that the Jews constituted no threat and
would never rise up against the authorities. They were regarded as being
compliant and subservient.
In the end the Jews won - without arms and without fighting and the price
paid be Pharaoh and his cohorts was terrible in every way. They were
virtually wiped out and never again really recovered. All the Jews had to do
was walk and trust God. I have a strong sense that this time something
extraordinary is going to happen and that when it is all over, Zanu PF will
be no more. The Promised Land - that is quite a way off, but at least we
will be free and walking in the right direction!
"

Friday, August 18, 2006

remind me: why i hate social networking s/ware

okay, so friends send me these invitations from time to time. i received one from a friend to sign up to WAYN (where are you now) -- www.wayn.com
I sent her the standard "if i´ve got your e-mail that´s enough for me for us to stay connected, and if i ever need to track you down: there´s google". well, in spite of that little "aviso", i thought to go along and see what WAYN was all about. And yes, as soon as i´d gone through the standard first page re sign-up, the very next page rang: import your contacts. well, of course, import contacts, that´s why you use the service after all. but wait, here´s the irritating part, as soon as you import contacts, your contacts are also automatically sent an invitation to join the network. i guess that´s convenient. but what if i want to be more selective, and more especially, do not want to annoy friends with a silly e-mail soliciting a sign-up? Qstn: how do I get my contacts into WAYN without incurring the hassle-factor of the solicitous e-mail that that entails? Well, folks, you can´t have one without the other! And WAYN indemnify themselves with the following little bit of fine print:

Import your contacts Hotmail, AOL mail, Yahoo!, or GMail and invite them to join WAYN. This will help you to keep track of each others whereabouts. By inviting your friends you are confirming that you have obtained consent from your friends to send them an invitation.
(My emphasis)

Well, that´s a fine how-do-you-do.

Anyhow, what I did find impressive was that when choosing South Africa as home base, the drop-down list for the provinces was complete. Ditto for if I chose Spain as home base. That attention to detail I found notable. Anyhow, my rant is not about WAYN per se, rather that these services are just always a pain because
1) I always forget/misplace my username/password combo because I use these kinds of services so infrequently, since
2) they are a pain to keep updated (hey, it´s a pain keeping the info flows updated that i already have: my homepage; blog; flickr)
3) they connect you potentially to friends-of-friends but somehow that never realises

oh, one more thing that i found troublesome: WAYN allows for you to track your travels. So, I can log upfront where I´ll be when. I have some serious misgivings about that. It´s one thing for me to post stuff of trips online after the event, but for anyone in the greater public to have some kind of upfront view of my travel agenda... I don´t think so! Ain´t gonna happen.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

RFI by 31 Aug: design of African Science & Innovation Facility

From e-mail circulated:

At its second conference in September 2005 the African Ministerial Council
on Science and Technology (AMCOST) decided that the New Partnership for
Africa's Development (NEPAD) should explore the options for creating an
African Science and Innovation Facility (ASIF) to mobilize the continent's and international technical and financial resources for the implementation of Africa's Science and Technology Consolidated Plan of Action (CPA).

The Office of Science and Technology (OST) of NEPAD has commissioned a
consultation to seek views about the proposed ASIF, its mission, functions and governance.

If you are interested in participating in this consultation we would be
grateful if you would send your responses to the following questionnaire by email to asif@nepadst.org, following the numbering system. We would also be grateful if you would indicate in which country you currently reside and the sector in which you work. For example, government, university, business, NGO, aid agency, other (please identify).

View the questionnaire here:
http://www.nepadst.org/doclibrary/pdfs/asif_questionnaire.pdf

The deadline for responses is 31 August 2006.

Thank you for your collaboration.

Yours faithfully,

The ASIF Project Team


---

From web site http://www.nepadst.org/:


A team of international experts have been commissioned to review other regions' experiences, consult widely with stakeholders, and to develop and propose specific options for the mission, objectives, organizational configuration and governance of the proposed African Science and Innovation Facility (ASIF). The questionnaire is aimed at eliciting your views and ideas about the proposed ASIF. The deadline for responses is 31 August 2006. Download the questionnaire in English or French.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

all things google(?)

i was browsing Lessig´s blog the other day (which is what i do; i batch process) and came across the reference to a new book titled "55 ways to have fun with google", released under (cc) license and downloadable from http://www.55fun.com/book.pdf I jumped ahead to the chapter 30 on "Top Ten Signs You Are Addicted to Google" and didn´t really identify wiht these (I guess I´m not addicted to Google), except for the most compelling reason (number one of the 10) was something that rang true viz. "You are completely clueless without a computer." I was specifically reminded of an e-mail I had sent one of my professors where I i.a. opined that "how on earth was I supposed to find a legal resource when it´s not automated?". where was i supposed to start looking for a judgement that dates back to the early 1980s exactly??? now, part of the problem, i should mention, is that i am not completely familiar with all of the offline legal resources here in spain. i pretty much know how to go about finding archival legal stuff in south africa. but that was funny when i´d written that to him, since i thought to myself, this problem will happen more and more. we will get to a time when an entire generation of scholars won´t know what a scholarly life offline would have meant. "oh, that´s obvious", you say. yes, but realise the potential for open access scholarship. but even so, a mere transplantation of print habits to digital habits re dissemination will not be a good thing per se if we are still stuck with the high prices of the conventional journal subscription model.

Then, some google-isms that I liked titled collectively as "What would Jesus Google?" from Brian Mingus, contained in the above book:

In the beginning, there was Google
I Google, therefore I am
It was the best of Googles, it was the worst of Googles
You Google my name, and you know wherever I am.
I can’t get no Googlefaction
Love in the time of Google
I was lost, but now am Googled
And I took the road less Googled, and that has made all the difference
Google is my co-pilot
Sometimes a Google is just a Google