Posts from April 2003

Hat is the question

[Original Link] John has been discussing millinery. Actually, it isn't millinery, because that's women's hats. Is there an equivalent term for men's headgear? Hattery will get you nowhere.

Anyway, John and I have the same problem, which is a need to protect our heads from the sun, in much the same way as Cray supercomputers require substantial cooling systems. But we both have a natural aversion to baseball caps, and John, who has been experimenting with various options including a rather elegant panama asks whether I have a secret hat habit?

And the answer is yes. I also have a panama, which I bought one year at Henley Regatta, but I don't think I can carry it off except when wearing a blazer, which isn't often. My other hats tend to be sufficiently embarrassing that I don't wear them except when well away from my home turf where, let's face it, the heat of the noonday sun is seldom much of a problem anyway.

My first hat I bought in Ambleside because it cost less than the tube of sun cream I was thinking of buying. I call it my "guess which country I'm from..." hat because nobody but a Brit on holiday would be seen dead in it. Looking back through my photos, I don't seem to have a picture of it. Which is just too bad.

My main hat is made by the Henschel Hat Co. of St Louis, Missouri and was purchased in Georgetown in Washington DC.

Mmm. Works in all weathers, too. This is Brussels in mid-winter:

The trouble is that it doesn't fold, roll or collapse in any way and so takes up quite a bit of my suitcase, so I often don't have it when I need it, like last week.

So last week I bought this rather fetching little number:

OK, say what you like, but it's comfortable and fits in my pocket. Not sure any of these suggestions would be quite right for a man of John's standing, though!

Furtive phone photography spurs ban

[Original Link] As camera phones become more popular, lots of organisations are restricting how they can be used. [BBC News | Technology | UK Edition]

There are going to be some interesting socialogical issues here. Cameras will soon be common in everything from keyrings to pens to watches. What sort of new etiquette will evolve for dealing with them?

Getting at your data

Possibly the best aspect of OpenOffice is its open file format.. Here's a very crude quick and easy way on a Unix platform to get at something close to the raw text in an OO document:

   unzip -p mydocument.sxw  content.xml | sed 's/<[^>]*>/ /g'
This extracts the contents of the document as XML, then strips out most XML tags. Could be improved in many ways, but this is fine if you want to run the text through grep, wc etc or just want to get your paragraphs into a text editor. Is any normal user likely to do this? No, but it's important that it can be done, even on a machine which knows nothing about OpenOffice. (Here's why I think this sort of thing is important, by the way.)

Benefits of budget cuts

[Original Link] From Robert Cringely's article:

Sun Microsystems recently sponsored a major seminar at George Washington University in the Washington area and the federal government's IT people attended. One source said that the present administration has so strangled the budgets of government agencies, especially research and education, that they're now considering dumping Microsoft's licensing schemes and transitioning to open-source Linux.

Thanks to Scott Weikart for the link.

© 2026 Quentin Stafford-Fraser