31 March 2016
Bikejacker gets jacked
30 March 2016
For all those who think that their country has stupid laws
29 March 2016
THE BIG REVIEW: Defibrillatorgate
Following the removal of a defibrillator at Bunnings' Dunedin store, claims are being made that the company has insisted on the removal of the devices at two other New Zealand outlets. About three years ago, staff at the Dunedin store fundraised to buy a defibrillator after a co-worker died of a heart condition. Last week the company forced the staff to gift the defibrillator to a community group. Radio New Zealand is reporting that the company also insisted on the removal of a defibrillator at its Nelson store about a month ago, and at its Gisborne store before Christmas, citing claims made by First Union. The union's Nelson organiser, Rachel Boyack, said when staff asked why, they were told it was because of maintenance costs, RNZ said. "They've obviously done some sort of cost-benefit analysis on it at a nationwide level and determined that the small cost to replace the battery every year, and ensure staff have the proper training, isn't worth the benefit of having something like this in the store for their workers and for the public," she said. If that is indeed the case, I'd suggest a boycott would be in order. The money lost through people going to the likes of Mitre 10 for their hardware needs will in time add up.
28 March 2016
Shaking up the far south
A 4.5 magnitude earthquake was felt as far afield as Dunedin today. The quake occurred about 4.15pm, was 5km deep, and epicentre was 50km northwest of Wanaka. Reports of the quake being felt as far afield as Kingston (on the southern tip of Lake Wakatipu) and Dunedin were reported on geographical hazard information website GeoNet. St John South Island region communications adviser Ian Henderson said there were no reports of injuries, and no calls to its clinical control centre, resulting from the earthquake. People should always make sure they had emergency kits and other items ready in case of any emergency, and to remain in contact with friends and family, and especially any neighbours who may be elderly or alone, Mr Henderson said. But that wasn't the only jolt the people in blue and gold country were in for today: this morning a 4.2 magnitude earthquake struck, centred on the edge of Lake Te Anau. More than 50 people in towns in and around Queenstown reported feeling the quake, which Geonet described as light. As of this afternoon there had been a total of 60 reports of light shaking and 21 reports of weak shaking on Geonet's website. The quake struck at 9.22am and was centred 30km north of Te Anau, at a depth of 60km. There were two reports of light shaking in Dunedin. I'm sure glad I got out of there in time, and no, I do not plan on returning there anytime soon (maybe except for Christmas). And even if I did, Bunnings would definitely be off the list as a woman whose husband died of a heart attack in a Bunnings store has now become the latest critic of the company's stance to not have defibrillators in its stores. Wellington woman Sharron Gilmore, whose husband Peter died of a heart attack aged 62 in Bunnings Naenae in 2005, made the comments after the company's management "put its foot down'' and forced its Dunedin staff to give the store's defibrillator to a community group. Social club members from Bunnings Dunedin raised $1300 to buy the defibrillator about three years ago, after one of their colleagues died from a heart condition, but the company's management has since called for it to be removed. I got news for you greedy pigs sitting up there in corporate: defibrillators could save lives. They could save yours should you ever have a heart attack in a Bunnings store. But if you don't want them and someone dies, the blood will be on nobody's hands but your own.
27 March 2016
Easter is upon us all yet again
26 March 2016
Paint it, Cuban
25 March 2016
24 March 2016
Let's void the 'droids
At first glance, it’s easy to see why many people are overlooking the significance of Apple’s new iPhone SE. And no, it's not because of what happened in Brussels. It's because the device doesn’t feature a crazy new form factor nor does it offer up any technologies we haven’t seen before. In fact, the iPhone SE by all accounts is simply an iPhone 5 jam-packed with technologies Apple originally introduced on the iPhone 6s six months ago. Nothing special here, right Wrong. The iPhone SE is not only poised to be Apple’s sleeper hit of the season, it’s just the device Apple needs to breathe a bit of life into slowing iPhone sales. Another model of iPhone 4S could also do the trick. But whatever it takes to put Android out of business, Apple should just go ahead and do it.
23 March 2016
22 March 2016
THE BIG REVIEW: An important announcement
21 March 2016
United unites against City
20 March 2016
19 March 2016
18 March 2016
17 March 2016
Rodeos to ride on out
16 March 2016
Four years for being a jackass
15 March 2016
14 March 2016
It's soccer ball, not soccer bull
13 March 2016
And one more Yogi to start our seventh year
12 March 2016
We've made it to 6
11 March 2016
A dodgy meme for a dodgy trade deal
10 March 2016
Flagged for change
9 March 2016
8 March 2016
THE BIG REVIEW: Meldonium
7 March 2016
Baggies bag a Red one
6 March 2016
Fire OS burns encryption
5 March 2016
4 March 2016
3 March 2016
LVG for the WIN
2 March 2016
1 March 2016
THE BIG REVIEW: Awesomenessness like nothing before
29 February 2016
And the wait is finally over!
28 February 2016
27 February 2016
26 February 2016
Decryption? Not our future
25 February 2016
The iPhone even Apple can't hack
24 February 2016
No beta, it's pronounced Tokoroa
23 February 2016
22 February 2016
21 February 2016
20 February 2016
Go Set a Tombstone
Harper Lee, who wrote one of America's most enduring literary classics, "To Kill a Mockingbird," and surprised readers 55 years later with the publication of a second book about the same characters, has died at the age of 89. A statement from Tonja Carter, Lee's attorney in her hometown of Monroeville, Alabama, said Lee had "passed away early this morning in her sleep" and that the death was unexpected. For decades it had appeared that Lee's sole literary output would be "To Kill a Mockingbird" and the July 2015 publication of "Go Set a Watchman" was a surprising and somewhat controversial literary event. In the first book, Atticus Finch was the adored father of the young narrator Scout and a lawyer who nobly but unsuccessfully defended a black man unjustly accused of raping a white woman. But in "Watchman," an older Atticus had racial views that left the grown-up Scout greatly disillusioned. But what is disillusioning right now is that idiots like Donald Trump and Justin Bieber are still alive while all the wrong people are dying.
19 February 2016
Fallout no longer falling out with the German authorities
Having been banned in 2009, Bethesda has successfully overturned Fallout 3’s German ban. IGN reported that Bethesda "initiated a difficult and rarely-successful trial" with the Federal Department for Media Harmful to Minors (BPjM) to de-list the title ahead of the end of its statutory ten year sentence. Doing so would have cost it ‘several thousand Euros’ and involved presenting evidence to a delegate of German officials. "In the case of Fallout 3 the request for de-listing was granted even though only seven years passed since the game was banned," the BPjM said. "The Big Council decided at its meeting on February 4th that Fallout 3 will be removed from the list because its content is no longer classified as harmful to minors from today's perspective." The question, of course, is why did Bethesda bother? And the most obvious answer is that it’s planning a re-release for the game, quite possibly on PS4 and Xbox One. When pressed on this question, Bethesda said it would be able to provide an answer “in a couple of weeks”. But Fallout sucks. I grew up in a time when they made real games like Spyro and Crash Bandicoot.
18 February 2016
17 February 2016
16 February 2016
15 February 2016
14 February 2016
Goals but no glory
Manchester United fell to an agonising 2-1 defeat at the Stadium of Light as a late Lamine Kone header was diverted into his own net by the unfortunate David de Gea. Whabi Khazri opened the scoring for Sunderland with a third-minute free-kick, before Anthony Martial equalised, but United's defence was breached for a second time as Kone's powerful downward header from a corner rebounded off De Gea to send the Reds home pointless. United boss Louis van Gaal made one change to his starting XI as Morgan Schneiderlin replaced Marouane Fellaini, but there was a new and quite aptly-named youngster on the bench with 21-year-old defender Donald Love included in the matchday squad for the first time on this Valentine's weekend trip to Wearside. Will Keane was also among the seven substitutes as a reward for his recent fine form in the Under-21s. But it takes more than just fine form to win matches - it takes goals and lots of them.
13 February 2016
12 February 2016
Internet Archive becomes 3.Fun
For retro gaming fans, the Internet Archive is the gift that keeps on giving. Last year, the Archive started hosting thousands of DOS classics, all playable in the web browser. On Wednesday, the Archive opened up its digital doors to Windows 3.1. Yes, '90s kids, this means that you too can now spend copious amounts of time playing Ski Free, Pipe Dream, and Wheel of Fortune: Deluxe Edition in your favorite web browser. More than 1,000 Windows 3.1 games are available. The search functionality for the archive isn't great — mostly because many of the games are named based on the filename and not the game name, but it's easy to browse and peruse some of your favorites. Nearly 300 utilities and business apps are available in the browser too. But I'm more excited about the upcoming Crash Bandicoot game on PS4. Don't screw us, Sony.
11 February 2016
Crashing his way onto the PS4 (I hope)
The last time he was in the hands of its original creator, Naughty Dog, was in 1999 with Crash Team Racing. He’s been in a few other hands since then, published by Activision and developed by companies like Radical Entertainment. Now, Sony seems to be teasing some sort of return for the anthropomorphic bandicoot. Is this little more than a community manager gone rogue? Or, is Sony really starting to hype the world for the return of Crash Bandicoot? Since Crash is currently published by Activision, maybe we’re looking at some sort of remaster for the originals before a proper new entry. If Naughty Dog is set to take a break from the likes of Uncharted and The Last of Us in favor of making a brand new Crash game, I might lose my mind. In fact, Insomniac should take a break from Ratchet and Clank and Sunset Overdrive because the world needs a brand new Spyro game (Skylanders doesn't count).
10 February 2016
Straight Outta Life
A 1-year-old girl lying in her crib has been fatally shot by a gunman who opened fire outside her family's house in Compton. Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department officials said the gunman got out of a car, walked up to the residence, and fired in the direction of a converted garage where Autumn Johnson, who had just celebrated her birthday last week, lived with her parents. One witness, who declined to give her full name, described hearing several gunshots followed by a woman screaming: “They shot my baby. They shot my baby.” The witness said she called 911 before walking outside, where she saw the baby's sobbing father emerge from the garage with his daughter in his arms. “Someone take my baby to the hospital,” the father said. Deputies who responded to the home near Holly Avenue and San Marcus Street took Autumn to St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood in their patrol car, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Sgt. Ulysses Cruz said. She was pronounced dead at the hospital. Come on. She was only one. What if that was your kid?
9 February 2016
8 February 2016
Reds draw Blues
Manchester United secured an entertaining 1-1 draw at Stamford Bridge, although one point could easily have been three for Louis van Gaal's unfortunate Reds. Jesse Lingard scored the biggest goal of his flourishing career with a superb effort that flew past the impressive Thibaut Courtois, but a potential victory was cruelly taken away by Diego Costa's 91st-minute leveller for Chelsea. The result leaves United fifth in the Barclays Premier League and six points behind fourth-placed Manchester City, yet the spirit that underpinned this performance suggests progress can be made. That can be started by putting the ball in the back of the net while stopping the opposition from doing the same.
7 February 2016
6 February 2016
5 February 2016
4 February 2016
Wikileaker to Wikileak himself out at long last
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will leave the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where he took refuge in June 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden, and accept arrest on Friday if a UN panel investigating his case rules against him, he said in a statement. Assange is wanted in Sweden for questioning over allegations of rape in 2010 which the Australian denies. "Should the U.N. announce tomorrow that I have lost my case against the United Kingdom and Sweden, I shall exit the embassy at noon on Friday to accept arrest by British police as there is no meaningful prospect of further appeal," Assange said in the statement posted on the Wikileaks Twitter account. "However, should I prevail and the state parties be found to have acted unlawfully, I expect the immediate return of my passport and the termination of further attempts to arrest me." Assange fears Sweden will extradite him to the United States, where he could be put on trial over WikiLeaks' publication of classified military and diplomatic documents, one of the largest information leaks in U.S. history. The U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention is currently considering a request for relief by Assange, who argued in a submission that his time in the embassy constituted arbitrary detention. Assange argued that he had been deprived of his fundamental liberties, including lack of access to sunlight or fresh air, adequate medical facilities, as well as legal and procedural insecurity, not to mention all the taxpayer pounds spent on the siege. He should stay in there for as long as it takes for the British and Swedish authorities to buckle.
3 February 2016
Another three goals, another three points
The current crop of Manchester United players scored three goals the Busby Babes would have been proud of as the Reds sealed an impressive 3-0 win over visitors Stoke City. On a night when the club remembered the Munich Air Disaster of 1958 with various tributes, Louis van Gaal's men - wearing black armbands - produced a suitably exciting performance. A couple of fine first-half finishes, from Jesse Lingard and Anthony Martial, put United in the driving seat at the break, before Wayne Rooney added an excellent third soon after the restart and edged just five goals behind Sir Bobby Charlton’s long-standing club record. But it takes more than just breaking goal records to make a great team - it takes putting the ball in the back of the net, and there seems to be a lot of that recently.
2 February 2016
THE BIG REVIEW: Sevens in Dunedin
Southern rugby fans are smelling blood after seeing the half empty stands at the Wellington Sevens. They believe the tournament could get a new lease of life in Dunedin and their campaign has come at just the right time. One particular group of Otago rugby fans are mad about their sport, following the Highlanders all the way to last year's Super Rugby final. They've also enjoyed the festivities at the Wellington Sevens, but reckon it's time for a change. "Landers Army invaded the capital for the Super 15 final -- obviously took the treats up there, and you know now we want to take their event, the Sevens," fan Andrew James says. Once a massive party weekend in the capital, crowds for the tournament have fallen steadily in recent years. Sevens fan and "Bring the 7s to Dunedin" founder Hamish Walker believes moving it south could help reinvigorate the event. I agree - when you look at it, Dunedin's a huge rugby city. Lots and lots of rugby supporters, a lot of students - we've got all the fun happening with all the students. And we've got the perfect stadium. Wellington already has the southernmost of the tournaments, but it can be brought further south, even if just to Christchurch.
1 February 2016
31 January 2016
Nothing but the tooth
The Bellend of the Month for January 2016 is Mark Walewski, a British dentist who splashed out on sports cars while conning the NHS (National Health Service) out of hundreds of thousands of pounds. 68-year-old Walewski, who pocketed almost £223,000 with a ‘systematic fraud’ at his surgery in Surrey over six years that may have involved more than 6,000 patients, pleaded guilty this month to carrying out a scheme known as ‘double claiming’, whereby he charged private patients for treatment and then billed the NHS for the same work. The dental surgeon, who had a NHS contract worth almost £350,000 a year, enjoyed a lavish lifestyle, living in a £2million six-bedroom country home with its own lake in the affluent village of Churt, near Farnham, Surrey. An investigation led by NHS Protect, which safeguards the NHS against fraud, uncovered the extent of fraud after questioning Walewski’s patients. It found the dentist had been ‘systematically defrauding the NHS’ between 2006 and 2012. The investigation also uncovered evidence that as well as double claiming the dentist may have been ‘up-coding’, whereby he submitted claims for a higher value treatment. His fraud may have also included ‘splitting’, which involves making several claims for a patient’s treatment which should have been submitted just once. Walewski was initially charged with 21 counts of fraud, but this was reduced to four in a plea bargain at Guildford Crown Court yesterday. Judge Stephen Climie warned the smartly dressed defendant his crimes could carry a custodial sentence. He said: ‘This is an offence of enough seriousness to warrant a prison term.’ I hope he gets such a sentence when he re-appears at the same court next month. Right now, he is on conditional bail.
30 January 2016
Baby cut his teeth on wedding rings in an X-Ray
You never know where that misplaced thing will end up. A Seattle-area woman learned that the hard way after she noticed her wedding ring was missing on Thursday. But who was the culprit? Their 14-month-old baby. Imaging done by doctors at a hospital revealed a platinum wedding band lodged inside the baby's gut, according to Reddit user, iamclarkgriswold, who posted the story on the social media site. After being under observation for eight hours, the tiny tot was discharged and the parents were instructed to wait for nature to take its course. That means poop, people. "We were allowed to go home. If it doesn't pass naturally in two weeks, they will go get it," iamclarkgriswold wrote, explaining that doctors would have to perform surgery or use other medical methods to extract the ring if it didn't come out naturally. After leaving the hospital the family was officially under "passing" watch. This means everyone - husband, wife, the couple's other two kids - was monitoring the toddler. As the great baby-watch unfolded, Reddit users were abuzz with excitement. The couple dissected each diaper like a grade-school science project in hopes of finding the ring, and after much anticipation and bemoaning, the couple fished out the wedding band and posted a not-suitable-for-work photo of it as proof. But I wouldn't wear it knowing where it had been.
29 January 2016
28 January 2016
Boxing Kangaroo? Why not Bombing Kangaroo?
Australian prosecutors allege a teenage suspect discussed with a British accomplice ways to pack a kangaroo with explosives before setting it loose on police officers. Sevdet Ramadan Besim has been ordered in the Melbourne Magistrates Court to stand trial on charges of planning an ISIS-inspired terrorist attack at a Veterans' Day ceremony that included targeting police officers. The 19-year-old pleaded not guilty to four charges relating to a plot to attack commemorative services in Melbourne or the neighboring city of Dandenong to mark ANZAC Day, the annual April 25 commemoration of the 1915 Gallipoli landings in Turkey. The campaign was the first major military action fought by the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps during World War I. Besim faces a potential life sentence in prison, and he deserves it because quite frankly, we have had enough of this crap. Terrorism has no place in our society.
27 January 2016
26 January 2016
THE BIG REVIEW: Phone crashes
A URL, which is said to be an iPhone crusher, has recently made its way to social media where most people are posting warning messages about it while some others are using link shorteners to trick their friends into opening it. The warning messages are asking iPhone users not to visit crashsafari.com on an iPhone because it will crash the browser or even the device itself. “We tried this and can confirm that the website will indeed crash an iPhone 6S and an iPhone running iOS version 9.2.1 and a regular iPhone 6 running iOS 9.2,” The Huffington Post reported. Further, smartphone users have been warned that if they are using a recent iPhone or one running the latest version of iOS they are probably at risk. But what actually happens when you tap the URL, I hear you ask? Here's what: it will load for a moment and then crash Safari or force a reboot of your iPhone, sending you back to the home screen with everything else intact. Depending on your settings, you might lose some tabs, but it won’t do anything to damage your device otherwise, the newspaper claims. However, 9TO5 Mac, a technology website, claims that although the crashsafari.com is annoying but will not compromise the user’s personal information. It explains that the site relies on JavaScript to create a loop with the History API which means it will not compromise your personal information, adding the glitch works on desktop version of Safari, though not many people use that. Seriously, guys, don't open it.
25 January 2016
24 January 2016
Header takes the points
A late Charlie Austin header sent Manchester United tumbling to a first defeat in five games as Southampton snatched all three points at Old Trafford. Debutant Austin, a second-half substitute for Sadio Mane, nodded home from another Saints' substitute, James Ward-Prowse's, 87th minute free-kick to snatch the three points for Ronald Koeman's men. United boss Louis van Gaal made one change to the side that beat Liverpool at Anfield with Cameron Borthwick-Jackson replacing the injured Ashley Young who requires surgery on his injured groin. Adnan Januzaj made the substitutes' bench after scoring twice for the Under-21s against the Saints' second string in midweek. David de Gea made his 150th Premier League appearance for the Reds. But a loss is still a loss. The Reds are better than this.
23 January 2016
22 January 2016
Bus lounge cause to loiter
As if the TPPA wasn't already a huge skidmark on the underpants of New Zealand society, large groups of teenagers are intimidating people, causing fights, and hurting businesses near Christchurch's new Riccarton Rd bus lounge. The city council has beefed up security at the depot, but shop owners say this has only moved the problem into the street. One Division St business owner fears getting his sign from the street. Another says he has "zero revenue" after 3pm, when the teens – gathering in groups of 30 to 60 – arrive. Police and a city councillor acknowledge the problem has arisen since the bus lounge opened on December 14. CopyPrint owner Selwyn Bradley said up to 60 teenagers could loiter in Division St during the afternoon. The new bus lounge facilities attracted them to the area, he said. Since the council employed security guards for the building, they had spilled on to the street. He and other business owners said they warned the council of such problems at various meeting, but their pleas were ignored. "It's a major detraction for customers now to come into the street in the afternoon. Everyone's talking about intimidation, even I'm intimidated to walk down the end of the street to get my sign. As I walk past the shop, the smell of dope [marijuana] would almost knock you over." There is a way to get those unruly yobs off your back: the Mosquito. Just push a button and it will emit a high-frequency sound that only they can hear. Or you could just get a gun and start firing shots. Classical music has also been known to work.
21 January 2016
20 January 2016
Booze without consequences
Scientists in North Korea claim to have invented a hangover-free alcohol, the Pyongyang Times reports. According to the newspaper, despite having 30%-40% alcohol, this new creation will "spare you wincing when you wake". The drink derives from a natural herb - Kaesong Koryo insam, which is thought to have medicinal properties. According to reports, the drink is made from "a type of indigenous ginseng called insam and glutinous rice, and cultivated by an organic farming method". The Pyongyang Times, reports the liquor is made of six-year-old Kaesong Koryo insam, and instead of adding sugar, it is replaced with scorched rice. Finally something good from North Korea.
19 January 2016
THE BIG REVIEW: The wrong people dying
Over the last week, David Bowie, Alan Rickman, and Dan Haggerty have checked into the great hotel in the sky. And now, another has joined them: Glenn Frey, a founding member of The Eagles whose solo career included songs connected to "Miami Vice" and "Beverly Hills Cop," has died at the age of 67. Frey, a guitarist and singer from Detroit, moved to California as a young aspiring rock musician, and fell in with a group of songwriters, including Jackson Browne and Don Henley, the latter of whom became his main partner in the Eagles. During the Eagles' long, successful run through the 1970s and early 1980s, Frey wrote or co-wrote some of the Eagles biggest hits, including "Take it Easy," "The Best of My Love," "Desperado," and "Hotel California." After launching a solo career in 1982, Frey made a cameo appearance in an early episode in the popular 1980s police drama "Miami Vice" and penned a song associated with the show, "Smuggler's Blues." Another of his solo hits, "The Heat Is On," was featured in the 1984 comedy "Beverly Hills Cop." He died from complications from rheumatoid arthritis, acute ulcerative colitis, and pneumonia, the Eagles announced on Facebook. "Words can neither describe our sorrow, nor our love and respect for all that he has given to us, his family, the music community, and millions of fans worldwide," the band said in a statement. So why oh why can't Bieber be next?