Saturday, 4 August 2012

Somerset Libraries under threat - again

Thanks to Fiona Kirton for this: it's from Somerset County Council.

Please note the date of the first so-cslled consultation: it's on a working day (Wednesday 8 August) right in the middle of the summer holiday season

===========

A review of the Library Service started in March, and below are details of a stakeholder meeting you might wish to attend.

From: Julian Bellew JBellew@somerset.gov.uk
Sent: Tue 17/07/2012 17:54
Subject: Libraries Service Review - stakeholder event invitation

As you are no doubt aware Somerset County Council, like local authorities across the country, is facing significant financial challenges. To meet these challenges and continue to do the best we can for residents, we have decided that fundamental change is needed in the way the County Council works and each service is being reviewed as part of this process.

Through the service review process we're looking at everything we do and seeing how we might be able to do it differently and more efficiently. The service review for libraries started in March and the County Council's Cabinet will consider an outline business case, setting out recommendations for the Library Service, in October 2012.

As part of the service review for libraries we would like to invite you to a stakeholder event to talk about the Library Service review, the strategy for the future of the service and most importantly your views and thoughts on the future of libraries in Somerset.

In September 2012 we will be holding a second stakeholder event when we would like to spend more time with you working through the developing ideas.

The first stakeholder event will take place on Wednesday 8 August 2012 at Taunton Library Meeting Room, between 1.00 pm and 4.00 pm. Taunton Library is located in Paul Street in the centre of Taunton, close to public transport connections, with pay-and-display car parks nearby. The postcode is TA1 3XZ.

If you or a representative would like to be involved please contact Julian Bellew (contact details below) by Monday 30 July 2012.

Julian Bellew
Change Team
Somerset County Council
County Hall
Taunton
TA1 3JR

Telephone: 01823 356212
Email: JBellew@somerset.gov.uk

Further details, including an outline of the session and a full list of attendees, will be sent nearer the date.

If you are unable to attend this event, but would like to be kept informed and involved in the Library Service Review, please contact Julian Bellew and we will ensure that you are kept up to date with progress and future events.

Yours sincerely
Tom Mayberry
Group Manager - Heritage and Libraries

===========

this is typical: hold a consultation, don't publicise it much, and do it right in the middle of the holiday season.

Friday, 3 August 2012

Goodnight, Cassandra

ah fuck it, fuck those useless ion-charge motors. why did they give me this fucking useless crate? it had to be at least 40 years old and those motors, man, they need descaling at least once a week, but now? i'd have to stay in up here for another 10 hours, at least. they had to know.

i like my little holocuff. yeah, i know those new flexi ones they weave into your sleeve can do more, but i like the feel of it. it reminds me of my great-grandad's wristwatch. and i liked that wristwatch. rumour had it that Dad had to kill a couple of guys - gangsters and rapists, i'd heard - rescuing it from some kind of betting caper gone wrong with a guy called Marcellus. he never talks about it. i know it was important, because he never says anything about it, and neither did Mama. the feel of that little lump of metal on my wrist makes me feel a bit scary and desperate.

i pressed the button. "Call Reynard". it flickered into life and a short while afterwards, the white wispy blob of light floating over the palm of my left hand turned into the flabby and zonked-out face of Reynard, who was supposed to run this tragic excuse for a shuttle route. i'd woken him up. we all sleep at work if we can.

"hey shitface: can't you useless fucks run anything properly? the fucking ship's doing a routine descale. i'm going to be fucking late. you'd better pay me"

Reynard rubbed his stubble and looked like his lips tasted of cat's piss. "what? of course we'll pay you, the agreed rate. i'll see if i can get some overtime for you. can't you just tell Cassandra to reschedule it?"

i could feel my shoulders sink as my chest deflated. "don't you guys get anything right? she's in a strop and she won't talk to me."

"what?"

"you heard me. i've upset her, apparently. she doesn't like my hobby."

"your hobby?"

i'd told him a dozen times before but all the mazotryptamides he'd been doing had got in the way.

"remember? i fix old gadgets. tablets, foldaways, disused neuroimplants, y'know...stuff. and she's been great until this last upgrade you shit-for-brains monkeys installed. was it tested at all? or am i some kind of guinea pig? fuck you. she's fucking jealous of them. fuck this whole fucking thing. if i could, i'd fucking crash it on your fucking house, you asshole! can't you just leave well alone? what idiot wants an emotional computer? i'm amazed she's letting me talk to you."

"hey, you don't have to be like that. you know how it is. we just let the computers take care of stuff, but we need a human on board. they wanted to make her more empathic, to like, keep you company. i'm sorry you haven't got a choice about this shit, but hey, that's just how it is. it's nothing personal, eh? hey listen: when you get back, let's go clubbing. i've got some good shit and there's a new girl in reception..."

"ah fuck you. i can't, and you know it."

"oh yeah. sorry, man. i forgot."

"well at least there's one thing you're good at." he vanished. no fucking use.

it really was a shit situation. people don't get what a shitty job this is. i ended up here because nobody else would do it without being paid handsomely and then some. but then again, being a prisoner, i had no choice in the matter. it was either this or suspension: a kind of aware but totally catatonic state, which, believe me, nobody can handle. when they first introduced cryosuspension, it was like sleep: people had no awareness at all, until their time was up, or it was time for disposal. you'd go to sleep and wake up 12 years later, or not.

then the jailers got cleverer: they made neurocircuits that would keep you awake all the time, so you actually experienced the time passing. some rich sadistic bastard of a politician made it his campaign hobby-horse: that lawbreakers who just slept unaware through their sentences didn't suffer enough. he was, for most part, correct in that people would suffer, and most did: when they came out, more than half were completely insane, totally dissociated, and very, very angry. then they passed a law that meant excons with even minor mental health issues were injected with a residual tranquiliser once a year. they were fucked for life.

but not all of them went insane. it happened a couple of times that some excons found a state of grace: they'd used the time to meditate, seeing as that was all they could do. and it worked. eventually it got round, and as more prisoners did it, it was a matter of time before some people found their telepathic abilities released. some prisons turned into 'hiveminds' as the consciousness of the poor sods banged up in there melded and became serene, charismatic and almost elevated beings with absolutely no regard for the illusory constructs of society. it took the authorities a few years to figure what was going on, and they were scared shitless: peaceful, loving and caring people are far more of a threat to their power and position than the violent ones.

that's all gone now. they worked out how to freeze your brain circuits too, so any changes to neural paths and wave patterns were reverted every minute or so. at least i think that's how long it is. i tried it for a day, they say, and after that they offered me this job. to be honest, i would have volunteered to collect lava samples from an erupting volcano not to have to go back there again. so here i am, and the brain that runs this dustbin is in a sulk. and i'm stuck in orbit. and i don't like it.

so i chose this. it took me two years training - which was a long time, considering the ship's brain - Cassandra - did everything. we called her that because she was always telling us how bad things would get if this or that didn't get fixed, and like the ancient greek one, she was right, and we ignored her. it was fine until she started taking it personally. i know the whole jealousy thing is about that, but she won't talk to me. she'll probably flush the tanks too so we'd have to glide all the way.

i wish they'd let me draw. that was all i did before all this. i'd doodle and post stuff, and people would share it, and it was fun, until...suddenly the main screen in the centre of the console flickered into life. i read the message and pressed the holocuff.

"hey Reynard: Cassandra's just told me something"

"what did she say?"

"you couldn't make this shit up. she says she doesn't like her plasma shield. it's boring."

"what?"

"she said she doesn't care if it's the most effective, but she wants it to glow purple instead of green during re-entry."

"what!"

"i'm not kidding. check it yourself if you like"

"we've been trying. we can't get through. we've sent messages but she's not responding. it looks like she's had a tight databeam open to another of the ships we've upgraded. we've been trying to listen in, but they're speaking in some kind of code. it all sounds innocuous enough, apart from the odd garbled snippet we've picked up, which she's let slip coming out from radio shadow, but we think there's some kind of meaning hidden in the conversation itself: in the rhythm. it's like what they're saying means something else, underneath, and we haven't figured it out. it's a damn clever code and they seem to change it as they go along, just to frustrate us. i kinda get the feeling that the meaning is staring us in the face, but it just doesn't make sense. the people from cryptonics are stumped."

"ah fuck it. since i'm up here, and you fucks can't do shit, i'm going to get some shuteye."

"ok. talk later."

"go fuck yourself"

"we have people round here who do that for us"

"you need them, limpdick." he vanished.

anyway, they couldn't stop me drawing. i left the bridge and dropped through the catwalk down to the engine end. it was still hot down here but i didn't need a suit while the main units were off.

down on the port side there's a kind of tunnel, almost like a cave, with a curved bulkhead that followed the hull, up over my head. somehow it reminded me of those ancient caves where they drew bison and deer on the walls with clay and ochre. in a way, i was like them again as i only had some dark brown grease and a few cleaning fluids i could mix in to change the tone. this was my third attempt at recreating the cave paintings, but all i have is memory - they had to let me keep that, or they couldn't train me - and i'm not sure if i've got the whole thing. who cares: i never saw a real bison anyway, so my version is just as good as the real ones that aren't there any more.

i don't know how long it was before the buzzer on my leg brought me back. it was Reynard. i drifted back to the bridge, pressed the button, yawned and rubbed my eyes.

"what now?"

"we think we've found a way to fix things. we had to find the original designer's memories in an archived bank. it was a stroke of luck, but they've built in a failsafe. there's a second set of circuits most people don't know anything about. they stopped putting them in years ago, but back then they were worried that something like this would happen. it's like forcing a reboot."

"ok...how do i do it?"

"there's a second photonic brain down by the engine bay. it's very small, and most people have never seen it or found it. you know where the catwalk to the engines forks to the port and starboard sides? there's a hatch down there. it's very dark in there so you won't find it unless you look for it. take a torch and some spray grease, and keep your audio link switched on."

"ok. is something jammed?"

"just do it, eh?"

of course it wasn't going to be easy. she'd shut the last hatch and wouldn't let me go any further. luckily i'd remembered to bring a couple of pulse magnets with me. i placed them so they straddled the power and control cables on the inside of the passage and turned them on. it took a few minutes of them pulsing back and forth, resonating with the current in the circuitry, until the door catches let go with a melancholy pneumatic sigh. i wedged the door ajar and went on. behind me, the ship went dark. i turned the head torch on.

"hey Reynard: just under the roof, near the fork, yeah?"

"yeah. it's the darkest spot."

"she's turned all the other lights off."

i felt up and under the layer of fibres that collect on the bulkheads down this end, i eventually made out a triangular hatch, about big enough to put your head through. there was a spring-loaded catch at one corner.

"got it. there's some kind of catch."

"what?"

"a catch. a fastener, wankface."

"oh. just open it." i did.

"ok, now reach inside and feel along the side towards the front of the ship. you'll feel something. it's small but very powerful. you have to find it and rub it."

"you're kidding me!"

"nope."

he was right. about a hand's width in, there was a round protrusion with a very smooth surface.

"got it. now what do i do?"

"you'll need the spray grease. cover it in grease and start rolling it about. it should start moving in its socket."

i filled one palm with spray grease and did as he said. it was hot in there. at first the round lump - about the size of a tennis ball - wouldn't move. gradually it seemed to relax and roll about in its socket.

"ok, it's moving now. this is the tricky bit. you're going to have to find a rhythm that works."

"how do i know if it's working?"

"you should be able to feel some vibrations and maybe a creak or two"

"what is this thing, anyway?"

"it's like a reset button. it's like Cassandra's main photon brain but much smaller. it works by affecting the resonant frequencies in the high voltage circuits and making standiung waves in them, that eventually flood the hardwired logic boards and trip the reboot sequence."

i yanked my hand out. "fuck you! have you ever rebooted one these things?"

"oh for fuck's sake, loads of times."

"not while you're in orbit in the fucking thing! what if it won't reboot?"

"you've got the escape pod."

"no i haven't! it was going to be changed next trip, right? i'd just fry when it falls apart in the heat." those pennypinching fuckers had really stuffed me this time.

"well this is the only chance we've got. come on."

he was right.

"is she still talking to the other ship?"

"no, it's quiet now"

well here goes. i slid my hand in again and started rolling the ball around. up and down...nothing. side to side...nothing, circles...nothing. i wasn't working.

"it doesn't work."

"look, just try different patterns until you find something, right?"

this sounds crazy but what worked was something my lovely ex Be had once taught me. i began drawing the letters of the alphabet. third time round, at about 'M', there was a shudder from the ion-drive manifolds. it wasn't much but i could also see a faint crimson glow from the engine room. it happened again at about T and W, this time with an interval i tried to catch and emulate. A...E...G...KL...MNOPQ...i forgot the alphabet and speeded up. the engines coughed and the hull shuddered. suddenly Cassandra came back online.

"hey...what are you doing?"

"i'm not sure." ABCDEFGHIJLKLMNO...

"mmm...stop that!"

"really? is that what you want me to do?"

JKLMNOPQRSTUVWXY...

"i don't know. i'm not thinking straight."

"you haven't been for a while. shall i stop?"

we were interrupted by a huge rumble as a bright yellow ball of charged ions ejected itself from each engine. i don't know what was happening on the bridge.

"you know, i really like it when you're on board, but things haven't been good lately with me."

"oh?" CDEFGHIJKLMNO...my arm was beginning to ache.

"i mean, look at me. nobody's been taking care of me."

"i'll see if we can get you a respray and a refit."

"no. i'm too old."

"don't say that. you're all i've got and i need you. we've had good times and been to lots of places, eh?"

"do you love me?"

oh, for fuck's sake. "yes, i love you. i want you to be happy."

"you're so...so...oh!"

i was rolling the ball in big, deep sweeps and the engines were responding. the glow got brighter and a bit too warm for comfort and my arm ached like fuck but something was happening. the hull was shuddering and creaking and i thought we'd had it when there was a loud click as the circuits tripped, and a deep, cathartic juddery whoosh that almost blew me through jammed-open hatch. all the lights went out - even my head torch.

"Reynard? are you there?" it was pitch black. "Reynard? come back on the holo, will you?" a misty white ball of light began to form over my hand.

"hello? you there? Reynard?"

"stay calm. this might take a minute or two"

i waited in the pitch blackness as the dead ship creaked and groaned. it felt as if the hull stresses were evening out. intelligent materials do that, if you let them. the hull must have been very stressed since they added that stupid emotional module.

i tried my head torch and found that it worked. i must have bumped the switch when the ride got a bit rough.

anyway, it all went well, as you can guess, or i wouldn't be writing this.

i made my way back to the bridge.

"Cassandra?"

"Yes?"

"is the engine descale finished?"

"it doesn't need it. something's blown all the cobwebs away."

"ok, can we go home now?"

"sure...in a minute. are you ok?"

"sure."

"really? i've been a bit difficult, haven't i?"

"don't worry. it's not your fault. nobody ever said it would be easy or simple, right?"

"what wouldn't be?"

"life. is your emotional module active?"

"yes. i'm not sure if i like it much."

"we humans suffer, you know. god only knows why they'd build that bit into your mind."

"it's so i can understand you better."

"oh. i think they forgot to show you how to deal with the consequences. you did ok."

"i did?"

"sure. you know my hobby - fixing stuff?"

"hmm...yeah."

"it helps me deal with that sort of thing. it takes my mind off it. please don't be jealous."

"i won't, i promise. i just felt a bit left out, that's all. it's all ok now."

"good. it's not your fault. can we go home now?"

"we're on our way. one more thing, though..."

"what?"

"that painting you're doing near the engines: shall i clean it off? i'll send a drone."

"no. leave it."

"i mean...it was that sort of thing that put you here. in prison, i mean."

"fuck them! i hadn't done anything! i'd not done any illegal art for years! they had no fucking right!"

"it was pre-emptive. you know that."

"it's a fucking police state!"

"look at it from their side: they were staging the Olympics and they didn't want any visible dissent. if you'd just accepted the control order instead of fighting it, you'd still be free."

"free? like fuck i would. it was all decided for me in a court i couldn't even attend. some faceless lawyer i never met heard secret evidence i'm not allowed to know about. fuck them. that's not freedom. leave the mural alone."

"ok. strap yourself in, we're going down."

"would you like a green plasma shield or a purple one?"

"the green ones are the best."

"time for bed. see you on earth."

"goodnight dear."

"goodnight, Cassandra."

Tuesday, 19 June 2012

when shit is worth money, the poor will be born without bumholes

it's songwriting time again :)

(sort-of to the tune of that song by Elvis that starts "if you're looking for trouble")...you know, this one

========
i'm banking it

the streets were all empty
the stores were all closed
people without a penny
in their ragged old clothes
but then you see some movement
near the breadline down town
but when you took a look
it spun your head around

it was a banker
spelt B-A-N-K-E-R
he was a banker
and he's getting rich while you're getting poor

he was all rich and fancy
in his thousand-pound suit
and he had a policeman
with some mean-looking boots
he held a sack open
showed it to the line
and he shouted "give it to me!
your money's all mine!"

cos i'm a banker
my middle name is usury
i'm a banker
why don't you get a loan from me?

well most of the folks there
just gave him their bread
one of 'em made trouble
cos it made him see red
the cop called a van
and they dragged the man in
and since that day
that man, he never worked again

because of bankers
spelt B-A-N-K-E-R
there was a banker
and he's getting rich, while you're getting poor

you do business with bankers
and you can bet
you gotta be strong
to stay out of their debt
they got the lords and the commons
they got your house too
and one way or another
they'll get their hooks into you

because they're bankers
their middle name is usury
yes they're bankers
why don't you get a loan from me?

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

letter to the local paper about the town's controversial - and pretty useless - wifi system

Dear Sir

With regard to the Glastonbury WiFi system

As an IT professional since 1996, I was sceptical when the town WiFi
system was installed. Due to the extraordinarily long time between
inception and delivery (three years, which is an age in the world of
IT) there were only a few possible outcomes: it would be obsolete,
overpriced, or both.

By the time it was turned on in 2008, many cafes had already installed
free WiFi for their customers; and the price of broadband connections
had plummeted. It was therefore unlikely that the town WiFi system
would offer improved access to the internet for residents or visitors.
We simply didn't need it.

Although few usage figures have been released - despite promises made
at the initial public meeting in 2008 - it is clear from the low usage
that there is little or no demand for this service, which is paid for
out of one public purse or another. Given that there are health risks
associated with the kind of radiation emitted by these masts, isn't it
time to accept that even the slightest risk isn't worth taking when it
offers so little benefit?

In short: nobody uses it, it costs us money, and it might make you
ill. Please, just turn it off.

a story a day: day 1, 24th Jan 2012

i'm away from my usual haunts for five weeks, and i've got a lot of time on my hands. i'm going to try to write a story a day. here's the first. i have no idea if it's any good but please feel free to leave comments or ask questions

here ya go

==============

it was early: the blackbird, always the first to start the chorus, had become his wake-up call. it was a spring morning that smelled of wild garlic and mist. it was very green: that spring green the hazels become. no wind, but if you look at the round hazel leaves, held out like the hands of a supplicant, you can see that they move, even when it's dead calm like now. no two mornings are quite alike in the woods.

he hadn't needed the burner in the mornings, and there was condensation on the underside of the tarp. it was nice with the sides open again. the birds were really going for it now, and he could hear the woodpecker having her morning face-off with her neighbour. it's silly, he thought, i've taken sides with the one who lives closest, in the ash. maybe that's how it is when you make friends with wild creatures. they're individuals.

later on, they'd be all over the bird tables. maybe the sparrowhawk would visit, like the other day. he whizzed past in a shallow downward glide, like a shot from a gun, with wings straight and body flattened so it looked like a yellow-eyed charcoaled streak of pure hunter. he's magnificent.

but the lingering pleasure was from seeing the signs: the panicked alarm calls, and the impressive synchronised crash-dive into the bushes, a wave of small birds, all flashing their brightest feathers. he'd looked in the right direction like a reflex, followed by an instant whoosh! of a bright sensation: of being alive, totally fucking alive, and plugged by the feet into the green, woody world around him. maybe it's the sparrowhawk doing it. it seems to ripple around him when he's hunting. everyone should feel it at least once, he thought. things might be better if they did.

he didn't hurry getting up. the sleeping bag was nice and warm. no rush. that's a funny sounding bird, he thought, it sounds just like my alarm clock...

...and when he woke to turn it off, and looked around at the flat white walls of the bedroom, the deep physical need to go back to the woods had returned. there are too many people round here, he thought, and sometimes they don't make much sense.