Sydney FC won the inaugural A-League grand final in front of 41,689 spectators this afternoon, pipping the Central Coast Mariners by one goal to nil. I’m glad they won. Usually I’ll go for the underdog when I’m not obligated to support one of the competing teams, but the A-League is still a fledgling league, so I think it’s important that the club that forked out the big money from the very start was rewarded for their investment. They were prepared to bring in Dwight Yorke and procured the services of an excellent coach in Pierre Littbarski. Hopefully this will encourage other clubs to invest in players of a similar calibre in future seasons. Unfortunately, we don’t have Foxtel, and Karen was not feeling at all well so we couldn’t go down to the Queensland Lions club to watch on the big screen. From the highlights on the news it looked like a fairly exciting game.
RU486
With both houses of parliament voting to hand control of the drug RU486 to the Therapeutic Drugs Administration, women who choose to abort their pregnancy now have a choice as to how that abortion will be carried out. At least, they will soon be able to use RU486 to terminate their unborn child if they have made the choice to abort before the 6-8 weeks period during which the drug is effective. Given that the debate was not supposed to be about whether abortions should be allowed but whether women ought to have a choice about how abortions are carried out, sanity seems to have prevailed.
Some people of considerable influence, however, did their best to make the debate about abortion itself. Tony Abbott, the Health Minister, was one of these people. He made no bones about bringing his religious beliefs to the debate. This raises a whole heap of questions about separation/integration of religion into politics, but this post won’t be asking any of those questions. Rather, the object of this post is to highlight what I think is very valid point made by the Health Minister:
We have a bizarre double standard in this country where someone who kills a pregnant woman’s baby is guilty of murder, but a woman who aborts an unborn baby is simply exercising choice.
Although some have described Mr Abbott’s statement as "unfortunate" (notably Amanda Vanstone), to me, as somebody who is generally pro-choice, this poses a real moral dilemma, which cannot be dismissed and simply swept under the carpet. Unfortunately, I don’t see how this dilemma can be adequately resolved.
My new set-top box
I think many people observe that birthdays come around faster as they get older. For me, the last year seems to have flown past, despite the fact it has probably been one of the most eventful of my life so far. It started with an overseas holiday and ended with a new job as a researcher. Along the way, I submitted a Ph.D. thesis, began and ended a job as a software engineer, got engaged, bought a house, moved into said house (thereby leaving "home" for what was the last time), watched Australia finally qualify for the World Cup, and was awarded a Ph.D. (in something like that order). Needless to say, there are many, many people to thank for helping to make that year what it was.
So this year has a lot to live up to. It will start off well enough, for I’ll be marrying Karen in April. What else happens during the year remains to be seen, but I’m looking forward to it! I’m thoroughly enjoying my new job, and my interest in ubiquitous computing has been re-energised. On the one hand, I’m hoping for another eventful year (as long as the events are positive!). On the other hand, it would be nice to have a quiet year in which Karen and I can just enjoy being married.
Karen bought me a Humax set-top box for my birthday/Valentine’s day. It’s standard definition since we only have a standard definition 4:3 television anyway. It’s got an 80GB hard disk drive built into it for recording, and it has some nice features like being able to press pause while watching live television and having the stream buffered to the HDD. Handy for when you’re watching football and you get interrupted by a phone call. We used it last night to record Gilmore Girls, but I think we might have missed the end of it since the stupid Commonwealth Games swimming qualifiers went way overtime. Do television viewers really find it interesting to watch people swimming laps in a pool for so many hours on end? We were at Suncorp Stadium watching a highly entertaining game of football. :-)
The new job
Christmas was great. Karen and I hosted it at our house and it went really smoothly. Everyone had a great time.
I’ve started at my new job with NICTA. I’m working on autonomic networks and context-awareness as applied to disaster prediction, response and recovery. At the moment I’m familiarising myself with the work being carried out by a couple of students whom I will help to supervise. Working in the city rocks.
Goodbye global-roam Pty Ltd
Yesterday was my last day at global-roam. My time there was short and sweet. Being a small company, I got to learn a little bit about a lot of things: the most interesting parts of the job were probably not related to software development.
After a two week break over the Christmas period, I will begin work at National ICT Australia (NICTA). Looking forward to it.
Ben tells me he’s accepted a position at the QUT usability lab, so he’ll be back in Brisbane on a permanent basis soon. Congratulations Ben!
BBQ
Every year since we graduated with Bachelors degrees in 2000, my friends and I have got together at around Christmas time to catch up and remember some of the things we did in our undergrad years (because, let’s face it, there’ll never be a time like undergrad again, and there are some things worth remembering!). This year we had a BBQ at Karen’s and my new house last Monday. It was really great, because everyone was able to make it: Ben and Marice (sans baby Daniel), Anna and Will, Kai and Julie, Rhys, Ian, Matthew "Boggo" McGill and Nathan. Karen also invited her friend Belinda around. I think everyone enjoyed themselves. I always look forward to these occasions, and I’m looking forward to next year’s get-together already!
World Cup Draw
I was up early this morning to watch the World Cup draw. The atmosphere of that event always seems way too similar to the Eurovision song contest for my liking, but I digress…
- Brazil
- Croatia
- Australia
- Japan
Australia’s been drawn in a tough group. It’s probably the strongest group after the one containing Argentina and the Netherlands.
For the record my fiancée will be barracking for the Netherlands (because she’s half Dutch, although I secretly think she’s just being difficult) and Harry Kewell (because she thinks he’s cute).
Everything days
It’s been another one of those days when everything happens at once. Already today we’ve had a fridge, dishwasher and BBQ delivered. A guy is currently putting Cool or Cosy insulation in our ceiling (I don’t envy that man: he must be frying). At work this morning I also received delivery of our new ADSL router/modem/switch/wireless access point from iiNet. Karen and I have been using the free dialup account that comes with any iiNet ADSL account. It’ll be good to have a fast connection again! In addition, I collected the permanent copies of my Ph.D. thesis (I was awarded my Ph.D. on the 29th of November), collected graduation ceremony tickets and had my sunglasses fixed.
On the way back from the University I ran into Bill Segall (from Mantara) and had a bit of a chat with him. I’ll be catching up with a lot of former DSTCers this Thursday at the DSTC Xmas reunion party.
Nguyen hanged
Today Singapore executed a man because the drugs he was smuggling to Australia may have resulted in the deaths of many people. Nguyen was caught. The drugs seized. The drugs never even reached the streets of Sydney. I will never understand how any country can justify putting someone to death because something they might have done had they not been caught might have resulted in people dying.
Number of people killed by Nguyen’s drugs: 0.
Number of people killed by the Singaporean government: Nguyen plus countless others.
Joseph Koh, the Singaporean High Commissioner in Australia was quoted as saying:
We respect Australia’s sovereign choice not to have capital punishment. We hope Australia will likewise respect Singapore’s sovereign choice to impose the death penalty for the most serious crimes, including drug trafficking.
The sovereign choice to impose the death penalty is one thing; having a mandatory death sentence for a crime which may have resulted in the deaths of some people were it not foiled, is quite another, especially when the means of execution is a barbaric relic of the dark ages.
In this instance, Singapore asks for respect where there is none to be found.
It’s been just over a week since the momentous day Australia qualified for the World Cup. Reading the various news articles and blog posts relating to the Australian victory has been interesting. The overwhelming majority of the writings have been very positive. There’s one somewhat less favourable blog post that I find I just have to respond to.
The idea that no sport other than football faces the problem of crowd violence is completely and utterly laughable. Every sport faces the same challenges, from basketball to rugby league. That football is by far and away the most popular team sport in the world is a blessing and a curse to the game. Even cricket is not immune from the phenomenon. If cricket, basketball, rugby or any other sport was more pervasive than football in the world, it would be these sports under the crowd violence spotlight instead of football. Football is a game in which two teams try to kick a round ball into the other team’s goal. There is nothing in it that should make it inherently more susceptible to crowd violence than trying to kick an oval ball into goals of a different shape or bowling a hard red leather ball at somebody’s head. I will not refute, however, that there is something about football that seems to arouse emotions in spectators and create suspense on a level that some other sports fail to emulate. Football is exciting precisely because there’s not a point scored every thirty seconds. Some of the most fantastic matches I’ve had the privilege to watch have been nil-nil draws. However, to say that football, the game, is the cause of violent behaviour amongst some of its fans is a non-sequitur.
As for football’s apparent lack of aesthetic appeal, they say beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Well there are billions of people worldwide for whom football is and always will be the beautiful game. It is the sport that brings more joy to more people in the world than any other game. With all this talk of violence in football, it’s easy to forget that there’s probably no other force in the world doing as much as football to overcome discrimination, racism and so forth at street level where it really matters. Football takes the brunt of the criticism in this respect simply because it is out there throwing ordinary people from different cultures and religions together on a scale that other sports can only dream of, so of course there will be the odd crowd brawl. With the number of football matches being played in the world every day, and the number of people watching those matches, it’s quite amazing there’s not more crowd violence.
To address the slur that there is a lack of courage in the game of football, I surely need only to ask my readers to imagine the pressure John Aloisi was under when he stepped up to take that final penalty in the World Cup Qualifier. What about the fact that our Australian football team just beat a twice World Cup winner? Is that not courage? On the other hand, the number one Moment of Madness according to 20 to 1 on TV last night was when two of the Chappell brothers conspired to bowl an underarm delivery to prevent New Zealand from having a chance to tie a one day match in 1981. Greg Chappell’s decision to ask his brother to bowl underarm certainly doesn’t strike me as a courageous one. Admittedly, there’s a bit of dishonesty in football (trying to con the referee and so forth), but to think this doesn’t go on in other sports is completely naive. I never saw Steve Waugh walk. And don’t even get me started on the match fixing scandals of years past. Still, I love my cricket as much as the next Australian. It just totally irks me when people dump crap on football as if it is the only sport whose players exhibit ungentlemanly behaviour. In Australia, where football is considered a game played by Sheilas, Wogs and Poofters, it’s all too easy to hurl abuse at the game, and overlook the very same undesirable traits in those other sports we consider to be Australian. Thankfully, that won’t be the case for much longer.
To end off, I don’t think cricket is threatened by football (which is why I never mentioned it in my post of last week). They’re generally played in different seasons for one thing (although the A-League is being played over the summer). Cricket and football happily co-exist in England, and cricket and AFL already live side-by-side in Australia. Personally I can’t wait for the day when football and cricket dominate the sports shows on Australian television, but that’s just me. :-)