Fiendish Games

Thoughts of a sometime board games designer

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A selection of songs I picked, played on Radio Caroline

Still alive. Still too lazy to post. Been on holiday to Greece, doing my bit to help their economy. While I was away Radio Caroline played my Top 15 selection. I had to get up at 10:30 (Greek time) to head to the bar in time to hear it. It is a hard life.

If for some crazy reason you decide to download the programme (see hyperlink above), be aware it is about 56mb in size. The radio DJ described the selection as eclectic: Fastball, Supergrass, Weezer, Ian McNabb, Icicle Works, They Might Be Giants, Alison Moyet, The Shadows ... I guess that qualifies as eclectic.

I love the fact that Alison Moyet, who used to be known as Alf when she was with Yazoo, was asked to do the soundtrack for the remake of "Alfie". Her version is much better than Cilla's, though many would argue Dionne Warwick's original remains the definitive version. Anyway, it is on the top 15 list and was included because it was played at my Dad's funeral.

My Dad's name? Alf, pronounced "Elf", as per East End tradition. Hence, the opening line should be sung: "Wot's it all abaht, Elfie?"


Scarier than Mr T

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Back in the mid-seventies, a friend and I went to see a "Battle of the Bands" at the Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch, featuring 12 local guitar-toting combos.

I can't remember why, but we had to leave before the last band, but we were convinced we had already seen the winners of the competition: an excellent band called Smiler.

Imagine our shock when we read in the local paper that the band we did not see - some outfit called Iron Maiden - had actually won the competition.

I wonder what happened to those guys?

I have just been reminded of the occasion because Radio Caroline has just played an Iron Maiden track. Also, on the telly last night there was a clip featuring Evil Incarnate (an infamous former British Prime Minister) in which she said she did not mind being called the "Iron lady" and likened it to the nickname given to the Duke of Wellington, the "Iron Duke".

Now, I could be wrong, but I am pretty sure the soubriquet she was given was the "Iron Maiden", not the "Iron lady". As students of history will know, the Iron Maiden was a most gruesome instrument of torture. If the Duke of Wellington's nickname had been the "Iron Nut-shredder", the analogy might have been appropriate.

I always got the impression that the woman never fully understood the speeches that had been written for her. Famously (though the story may be apocryphal), she did not understand a rather good joke that was written for her about then Prime Minister Jim Callaghan, who had confessed (to his son-in-law, if memory serves) that he thought of himself as being like Moses, with a mission to guide his people out of the wilderness.

The speech, as written, went something like: "All I can say to Mr Callaghan is: keep taking the tablets."

Mrs Evil Incarnate reportedly wanted to change this to "keep taking the pills". no

As my friend, the late lamented Kevin Warne once memorably said, if she is a vengeful woman she will leave instructions in her will to be buried far out to sea; that way millions of her enemies will die dancing on her grave.

Hmmm. This blog entry seems to have taken on a rather sour tone, especially about a woman who is apparently suffering from dementia. It has actually made me feel some sympathy for her two children.

Let's finish with a bit more name dropping, then.

When my band was auditioning for a drummer some time in the late seventies we actually auditioned the original drummer and founder member of Iron Maiden. Surprisingly, he played more like a jazz drummer, gently tapping the ride cymbal throughout each number. That probably explains why he was replaced and why he did not get the gig with us.

Hopefully, he is still playing in a little three-piece jazz combo somewhere on Canvey Island or where-ever.

Paul Merton in front of the curtain

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Went to see Paul Merton at the Cambridge Corn Exchange last night. If memory serves, he said it was a return to stand-up comedy after more than 20 -years, but it would be wrong to categorise this as pure stand up; it is as much a sketch show, with help from three other performers (including Richard Vranch, veteran of Whose Line Is It Anyway?).

The theme of the evening is the life and times of Paul Merton, starting with his time at Catholic school, encompassing the time he was sectioned under the Mental Health Act (gettng out of a mental hospital is not so easy when you are a compulsive gag-teller with a surreal sense of humour; it does not help when your doctor does not own a TV and thinks you are delusional when you say you appear on the telly), and, of course, his long stint on Have I Got News For You.

Considering he has had 20-plus years to accumulate material, his stand-up patter was no great shakes. It is almost as if he is so good at the impromptu stuff that he stuck with the first draft. His best gag is a quote from Max Miller. His delivery and timing is not top-notch, either - definitely not in the Max Miller class, that's for sure - with the result that some of the gags fall flat.

Luckily, there is a lot more to the show than just him telling jokes. There is a lot of clever visual comedy which makes good use of a black curtain, stage lighting and, presumably, blacked up performers behind the curtain (I still have not worked out how they did it), some tremendous improv with all four performers, a bit of inspired lunacy with a ventriloquist's dummy and a few well planted running gags.

Mrs Fiendish, who has been with me to the Cambridge Corn Exchange to see Merton, Dylan Moran and Milton Jones, said this show was the most enjoyable of the three; I thought it was the least enjoyable, and I suspect my ranking order (Jones, Moran, Merton) would be the exact reverse of Mrs Fiendish's, so there you go.

I will probably remember Merton's show longer than the other shows, though, and he is to be commended for constructing something which, at the certain risk of sounding pretentious, is a piece of theatre rather than just a stand up gig. Plus, he really sticks it to Russell Kane, though not by name, which makes a change from comedians taking easy pot shots at Michael McIntyre.

My first b&w silent cinema experience in ... ooh ... 25 years?

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I went to see The Artist last night and very enjoyable it was too. Clever, rather than mind-blowing, a solid 7 out of 10 film for me, but then I am a fan of silent film.

Those of you who are not used to silent film might find it a bit tougher going. Not because the material is dense; the story could not be fluffier, and in fact the makers have succeeded in making the sort of enjoyable "churn out one a month" film that was the hallmark of the silent era. No, what may take you by surprise if that you have to focus all the way through a silent film in order to derive maximum enjoyment or even, in some cases, keep track of what is happening.

There is a musical score to help set the mood, and - without wishing to spoil it too much - there are sound effects and a tiny bit of audible dialogue (think of Marcel Marceau's cameo in Mel Brooks's "Silent Movie"), but in the main the story is told through mime and a few dialogue captions.

It is a very affectionate homage to the era, and while you might notice the absence of sound I'd be surprised if you regret that it is in black and white.

It must be 25 or even 30 years since I saw the Buster Keaton season at the Barbican and it is probably time I started taking in the odd silent film at the cinema again. I've always had a hankering for Napoleon with the full orchestra, but I'll settle for a season of Fatty Arbuckle films, or Harry Langdon, or anything with Lillian Gish.

What's your attitude to cannabis usage?

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Number three son is doing some sort of social studies course at college. I am ashamed to say I don't know exactly what it is he is studying, except that if he gets a pass in the course it will be useful for him should he want to become a nurse, social worker or some other low paying but generally worthwhile occupation.

Any road up, part of his course requires him to do some research on public attitudes to the recreational use of cannabis, so he has knocked up an online survey via Survey Monkey. It is entirely confidential and it will take about two minutes to do, so if you can spare the time to help out number three son, I will be paternally grateful.

Pedantic Dad has already pointed out that the survey contains some inconsistencies and repetition, but it is his survey, and that's the way he wants it, so just do the best you can answering the questions even if queries like "Does short periods of cannabis use harmful to health and learning ability?" leave you questioning number three son's own learning ability.

Reminds me of a gag on Mock The Week along the lines of "Is education standards slipping?".

Many thanks.

A rare technological success reignites netbook ardour

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Back before everyone (apparently) went tablet crazy, netbooks were the thing, weren't they?

Ultra-portable devices - that's advertising speak for "dinky" - running a Linux operating system on low-specification equipment made them both cheap and handy for all the Tweeting, messaging, Facebooking, Internet browsing, film watching and mindless games playing that is now being done on tablets.

For a while, netbooks were the only fast growing part of the PC hardware business. Unfortunately, it appears that Linux did not really cut the mustard with a Joe Public weaned on Windows, so netbook manufacturers were obliged to offer Windows versions, but unfortunately - as I understand it - Windows Vista (the latest version of the Microsoft operating system at the time netbooks were in their pomp) does not run at all well on low-spec machines. I think even Windows XP does not even run that well on a stripped down netbook (I knew keeping hold of those copies of Windows 95, 98 and Me would come in useful, but can I get the drivers?), so the netbook phenomenon never really escalated to the next stage.

Now, I am a computer veteran from the days of DOS, well used to command line switches and frigging about with configuration files to get that game of 1830 or Star Control II to work, but even I found Linux hard to get to grips with, so I can understand Joe Public's reticence to embrace it.

Nevertheless, about three or four Christmases ago, I got an Acer Aspire One netbook from Mrs Fiendish, which used a locked-down version of Linux called Linpus Lite, specifically designed to run on the lowest specified machine which had the innards capable of lighting up a screen.

A techie at work got one around the same time and the first thing he did was to get rid of Linpus Lite and install a new Linux operating system on it. Smug techie, I thought at the time. Wise man, I think now.

I should just mention in passing that if you are thinking of buying an Acer netbook or, indeed, any sort of Acer laptop, my advice is not to do so. My netbook's keyboard has a mind of its own, and the cursor randomly leaps up or down four lines of text when I am typing, which is a pretty major drawback for a journalist such as myself.

Mrs Fiendish also has an Acer and her keyboard does exactly the same when she uses it (or I use it, for that matter). I appreciate that a sample size of two would not get market research firms excited, but a 100% keyboard cock-up rate does not bode well. Maybe the Fiendish family just does not get on well with Chiclet/Scrabble tile style keyboards).

Anyhoo, back to the Acer Aspire One and its Fisher-Price My First Computer style operating system.

Aside from the annoying keyboard problems, for a long while I was fairly happy with the netbook. It had four main types of application: Connect (browser, e-mail, messenger); Work (Word Processor, Spreadsheet, Presentation); Fun (media player, photo viewer, games); Files (a file system).

The browser defaults to Firefox, but I managed to get Opera installed. I could not figure how to get it to show up on the Desktop though - Linpus Lite likes to deter users from lifting the bonnet and seeing what's going on underneath.

I did not bother with the e-mail because I use Opera's e-mail client, but the Messenger app worked well enough.

The Open Office apps were, if anything, even better than Microsoft's efforts because they used the old MS Office menu system which with I am familiar. I did make the mistake of updating Open Office at once point, after which I could not start any of the apps from the Desktop. A bit of right-clicking on the desktop sorted that problem out, as it brings up a menu system.

The Files system was nothing to get too excited about, but I have not got excited about file systems since I discovered GEM on the Atari ST.

In the Fun section, the games were rubbish (says the man who has wasted about 1,000 hours playing Tetris), the photo viewer was never used and the media player was very selective in the file formats it would handle.

The operating system is based on the Fedora flavour of Linux, and armed with that knowledge, it was generally possible to add new applications to the system (e.g. Opera, new versions of Flash), but as new versions of Fedora came out, the incompatibility gap grew.

This year I have been unable to upgrade to the latest version of Opera (it was installed - somewhere - but would not overwrite the previous version) or Flash, As any Apple fan will tell you, a world without Flash is one not worth living in ... ahem ... so I started contemplating switching to a new operating system. (Actually, the main deal-breaker was no longer being able to watch my daily dose of a certain US satirical news programme which Channel 4 does not want us Brits to watch any more).

Since I have already switched to Ubuntu as the operating system on my desktop PC, switching to a different flavour of Linux held no fears for me. Ubuntu works brilliantly on my ancient desktop machine. It is easy to understand, comes with a very decent applications download package and, bottom line, I do not have to frig around worrying about one lot of files being situated in one place and another lot of files from the same app being located somewhere else; I just put a tick in the check-box next to a piece of (free!) software I want - e.g. the Star Control II knock-off "Ur-Quan Masters" - and it just installs it successfully.

What really sealed the deal in terms of switching to a new operating system was the erratic behaviour of the Acer over the last year. It would just lock up for minutes at a time, making browsing a painful experience, streaming utterly pointless and shutting down/booting the system a breath-holding 20-minute experience on many occasions.

Now, I wasn't sure if the freezing up was hardware or software based. If it was a hardware problem then I was knackered anyway, but if it was a software problem - which the occasional 20 minute boot-up session suggested it might be - then it was time to bite the bullet.

Linux is more than a bit susceptible to the "Judaean People's Front? We're the People's Front of Judaea!" syndrome, so I was tempted to try a different Linux flavour on the netbook.

All I knew was that I wanted a system that ran really fast on a very, very low-specification system, and in the end I decided on Peppermint, which, as it happens, is based on Lubuntu, the light version of Ubuntu. So, I am not straying too far from the familiar.

Having backed up every bit of data on the Acer I ever thought I would need, and tried, unsuccessfully, to take a disk image of the hard drive (just in case), I installed Peppermint after first giving it a spin on a "live disk", i.e. running it from a USB stick.

The installation was as smooth as a baby's bum. Everything worked out of the box - crucially, the wi-fi worked, though I am not sure the wi-fi on/off switch works any more - and it was easy to understand, seeing as it uses much the same "Start" button motif that Windows users have been familiar with for almost a decade now.

Changing the default application choices - Opera instead of Chromium, VLC instead of Guayadeque, Pidgin messenger for X-Chat, Libre office for Google Docs - was a piece of wizz and, in an horrific development, I have discovered a number of life-destroying games which I have foolishly installed, namely a Civilisation 2 clone and a Die Settlers Von Catan Internet client. Aaaaaaaaaaargh!

More to the point, the PC has stopped freezing up. In fact, the damn thing is flying like Concord on steroids. The keyboard problem is still there, but you can't have everything. Count me as one very happy customer.

I have now started using the thing more regularly again - got lots of satirical news shows to catch up on - and I really cannot see why I would want to use a tablet in preference to a netbook.

To my mind, the netbook has two main advantages: a keyboard (OK, a shitty keyboard, but I can work round its problems) and a hinged screen.

I know you can get stands for tablets so you don't have to sit there gripping the thing all the way through 133 minutes of Moneyball but they look a bit faffy; with the netbook, I just open the lid, adjust the angle of the screen to my satisfaction, tap away on the keyboard and then sit back to enjoy the show.

If you have an old PC sitting around at home not doing much, and it is destined for the tip, give Linux a try. If you are happy with altering the BIOS on start-up so that the PC boots from a USB stick, you can even "try before you buy" - except there is no "buy" in the world of Linux; it all seems to be free, though I confess I have come to like Ubuntu so much I would probably pay for it.

Oh gawd, what have I said?

Peppermint operating system

Ubuntu

Blackberry singing in the dead of night

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I got Mrs. Fiendish a tablet computer for Christmas. She is a bit of a gadget freak but I was not sure whether she would find a use for a tablet PC, so I chickened out and bought her the cheapest one I could find, which was a Scroll Essential.

I think I paid just under £70 for it. I should have spent the extra £60 and got the next model up, the Scroll Excel. (Note, the price of the Excel has come down a lot since Christmas.)

Not being a smartphone owner, I did not appreciate the difference between a resistive screen, which the cheapo Essential has, and a capacitive screen, which the dearer Excel model has. The difference is down to touch sensitivity; with a capacitive screen, your fingers can glide over the screen, whereas with a resistive, there is a lot more hard pressing going on. With the latter, you might want to think about using a stylus.

A bit more research also would have revealed that the Scroll Essential, although it has an app which can play YouTube videos, cannot play flash files. Now, as any Apple fanboy will (not) tell you, any Internet browsing device which cannot play Flash media files is a worthless bag of shite, at least until the market dominance of Apple forces sites to use an alternative technology, which, if it has not already happened, must be fairly imminent.

For now, however, the inability to play Flash is a real drawback to the Scroll Essential, because although it has brilliant connectivity options to modern TV screens, even 3D screens, I can't watch Jon Stewart and the Daily Show on it, which is virtually a deal breaker for me since Channel 4 took the bone-headed decision to stop broadcasting the show,

(You can watch it online on the Comedy Channel, using the Firefox browser, but you have to frig around with the headers to convince the comedy channel that you are not watching it in Britain; Channel 4 may not want to broadcast the daily episodes, but it does not want you to watch them online either if you are based in the UK, because they have the UK rights).

Another drawback was the Scroll Essential's inability to access the official Android App store. That wasn't a big deal for me, but Mrs. Fiendish was irked by it. Once I found I could listen to Radio Caroline on an app called Tune In Radio I was as happy as a pig in shit, and when I also discovered an Internet Movie Database app, I nearly came in me keks.

Apparently, the dearer Scroll Excel would have satisfied Mrs. Fiendish's requirements, and I was about to pull the trigger and buy her one, and keep the Essential as a glorified dedicated Radio Caroline listening device, when I noticed that Research In Motion, maker of the looter's favourite smartphone, the Blackberry, had again slashed the price of its tablet device, the Playbook.

Carphone Warehouse and Dixons were both selling it for £150 which, at the time, was only about £20 more than the Scroll Essential and some £300 cheaper than the iPad 2 (the iPad 3 was not yet out at that time).

Overcoming my reluctance to buy anything from Dixons, I ordered a Playbook for Mrs. Fiendish. I would give you a quick review of it but since it arrived, I have been unable to prise it from Mrs. Fiendish's hands, and when she is not using it, number two son is hogging it.

Apparently, the screen is fantastic, it handles Flash, the app store has everything Mrs. Fiendish needs (it may not be as extensive as the Apple store, but do you really need 42,000 fart noise apps, for instance?), and she is so happy with it, she has not eoise ven bothered to download version 2 of the operating system which, apparently, is a huge improvement over version 1 and which improves the e-mail experience no end.

So, a big thumbs up from the Fiendish household for the Playbook, then, and unless you have been utterly brainwashed by Apple - and I should note that I am the only person in the Fiendish household who has never had an iPhone - then I see no reason why you should pay an extra £300 for the Apple tablet. OK, the iPad is bigger - i.e. it does not fit into an inside jacket pocket like the Playbook or Scroll Excel - and the Apple app store is no doubt more extensive (though I understand Android is fast catching up), plus Apple is still going to be in business this time next year, whereas Research In Motion (RIM) ...

Well, if RIM is still in business next year, Mrs. Fiendish is talking about getting a Blackberry when her next phone upgrade is due (every two weeks, isn't it? I would not know about these things).

In any case, even if RIM does go belly up, I don't think it matters much. For £150, if Mrs. Fiendish gets two or three years worth of watching Downton Abbey in bed out of it on iPlayer or whatever the ITV equivalent is, she will have got her money's worth.

As for the Scroll Essential, it suffers in comparison with the Playbook and the Scroll Excel, but for £65 or so, it is a decent browsing device. You can read e-books on it, use it as an MP3 player without having to go through the seven circles of hell known as iTunes, and you can use it as a media device plugged into your LED TV screen.

It is not a device for prolonged data entry, in my view, and if nothing else it encouraged me to try to fix my netbook, which had become very temperamental since about mid-2011, locking up for long periods. Touch wood, I've fixed the netbook's problems now, and unless you behave I will tell you how I did it ... quite probably in the next blog entry.

The rise and fall of the man who invented the Internet

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Selling access to the PM has probably always gone on so I don't really know what all the fuss is about with my old boss, Peter Cruddas. Oh, yes, hang on, I do: he got caught.
~

Read more...

Ping! I am joined in middle age ...

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Yes, I am still around, just not blogging very much at the moment.

The wife and I are now officially middle-aged. I've been middle-aged time for a while, but Mrs. Fiendish is now resigned to having that status as well, as all three of our "kids" are now officially adults; number three son turned 18 yesterda7


None of them has turned out how we expected but in the main we are pretty proud of them. No world beaters among them, but no wife beaters either.

Number one son showed a lot of artistic skill at an early age and I also had hopes he might carry on with the music after taking the trouble to learn the bass, but does no one want to play in bands anymore? Even to pull birds? (Not that I ever pulled birds - plural - when I was treading the boards; I met one woman through gigging and went out with her for about two years). Number one son is now studying Marketing & Business Studies at Kingston Uni. He seems to have inherited my gift for the gab and attention deficit disorder.

Number two was supposed to be the maths genius, but two or three years bouncing around "special schools" put paid to that. That might not have happened had he been diagnosed with ADHD 10 years earlier, but, hey, que sera, sera. Turns out he is the talented artist. Fine singer too. He seems to have inherited my laziness; one day it may dawn on him that when it comes to things in which I am interested, I am far from lazy, and willing to put the hard yards in. (Having trouble convincing him of the need to show he can do the basics in his art course work - i.e. get out of the four wheel drive he has just driven round the wall of death and prove he can ride a tricycle).

Number three son is the introvert of the group so naturally I have devoted far less attention to him during his teenaged years than I should have. Even with all my experience as a father I have still not twigged that because a teenaged son does not want to communicate with his old man that I should not make the effort to interfere with his life and make it as miserable as possible. Little bastard puts his headphones on and listens to his own music when I give him lifts in the car, as well, rather than listen to my 1970's blues-based macho rock.

Looking forward to grandchildren now, although not too soon, I hope. Might be interesting to see how I would react to having a grand-daughter; experience suggests I will redefine the word "doting".

Been up to lots of stuff recently but had no time to write about it.

Gigs: Nick Lowe (v. good), Ian McNabb (v. average), Milton Jones (genius, but best in small doses), Dylan Moran (triffic).

Plays: The Mousetrap (a box ticked, an afternoon wasted), Jersey Boys (give us a 4-page bio and then do a 90 minute concert)

Conventions: MidCon (new hotel is fantastic), TringCon (hang on, that's next week).

I've also been playing a game by post (OK, e-mail), which I have not done for a decade or more. I am playing in a United league, having taken over a team (Fameless Fish) from United colossus Peter Stanton. Season one, I could not buy a win and was promptly relegated; season two, straight back up, thanks to sparkling contributions from Luka Codric and Robin Van Perchie. I fear an existence as the new WBA beckons ...

TTFN,



John

Time for one more sick gag before you go, Kevin?

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OK. Looks like that you can cancel plans for that anniversary edition of Take That You Fiend! I've just heard that my erstwhile co-editor and loyal friend of more than 40 years, Kevin Warne, died this week. I am really upset, because he always rubbed it in how he was younger than me, and now he always will be.

If the above sounds callous, well, those who knew him will appreciate that it's the sort of approach he would have wanted. Let's imagine there is a colour that's blacker than black. Let's also imagine that black is a colour, so the fecking pedants don't write in. Let's call this colour that is blacker than black "sprdoink".

Kevin was a master of sprdoink humour.

It's a sprdoink day.



Regards,



John
May 2013
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