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As well as my numerous sysadmin and coding tasks this week has seen me take up the new roles for organizing webhosting and domain registration. Three clients so far - not bad for something I started on Friday! Email me if you want an inexpensive website/domain which comes with plenty of decent services - if you really know me, you'd also know I wouldn't be suggesting this if I didn't think it was a good deal.

Took my first CCNA class at RMIT on Saturday. Made a cross-over cable (because I needed one), set up a LAN with a Cisco router and switch and played around with some basic TCP/IP connectivity tools. Not exactly complex stuff, but they assure me that eventually the course has a 65%+ fail rate.

Have been to two refugee related functions this week. The St Kilda branch of the ALP hosted a community event with the Brigidine nuns working with refugees and the Federal member for Melbourne, Lindsay Tanner. I took the opportunity to remind the meeting that once upon a time a person was required to sit a test in Scots Gaelic in order to enter Australia and John Howard has in the past opposed immigration in general and "Asian" immigration in particular (see his comments from August 1988. The second event was a the guest speaker at the Coburg branch meeting last night. I was introduced by the chair as the reason that he didn't resign from the ALP at the last Federal election. That statement was embarrassingly kind.

In related news, the Socialist Left in an attempt to avoid having to hold an election for the executive has requested that I withdraw my executive nomination and instead go on their selection committee, an act I'm quite happy with. I must say I'm impressed by the fact that Frans, with half of the former Pledge (i.e., about 5% of the SL) has managed to pick up two out of fifteen SL executive positions (himself and Jenny). He does do the numbers very well - but then again, he also has a degree in mathematics ;-)

Sunday's presentation at the Unitarians was from Dr. Tim Woodruff, National President of the Doctors' Reform Society. He highlighted on the main negatives of the so-called Free Trade Agreement, that of the threat to the Pharmaceuticaal Benefits Scheme which has been an enormous success story for Australia. His conclusion was very strongly worded: "The changes in the Free Trade Agreement are going to kill people" and in doing so he highlights two Achilles Heels in the FTA - health and intellectual property. Not surprisingly these are directly related to a proiri, axiomatic conditions to economic logic and therefore cannot be subject to the same logic as economic science itself (I wish more people understood Godel's theorom and applied to economics).

Tonight there's a Free Trade Question and Answer night at Trades Hall (7.30pm) organized by "Public First". It's chaired by Marcus Clayton (Public Interest Lawyer, Slater & Gordon) and speakers include David Ristrom (Greens), Senator Lyn Allison (Democrats), Senator Gavin Marshall (ALP), and Alan Moran (Institute of Public Affairs). The Liberals and Nationals declined an invitation (they really suck, don't they?).

Pythagoras would be proud. I have never been antithetical to the claim that all reality consists of numbers and as part of that process I consider myself someone who can budget better than a Scottish Calvinist. However, this week has finally seen me shake up my sedentary lifestyle and start a serious regime of physical activity in an effort to make my kilojoule output greater than my kilojoule input. You know what I mean. Let's see how I'm coping after a month.

It just gets worse. Four new "extremely critical" IE vulnerabilities found..Stop using it.

Brain breaker for the week is from, dammit, someone on my friends list posted this... Who was it? Anyway... Doom for sysadmins!

Date: 2004-07-20 09:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com
upwards of 150% more for medications than we do!

150% is a very generous figure. Take ventolin for example.. Pretty important for many, right?

Australian price $11 per month. US price $44 per month.

Date: 2004-07-21 12:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] monkeygirldiva.livejournal.com
this is just awful!

well... if it's all about the principles "free trade" maybe australians can import their drugs (at a reasonable but still cheaper price) from the local pharmeceutical companies in developing countries committed to producing low cost, accessable medication - there are several of these springing up in south asia and africa. these companies would then have more cash to play with in the development of new drugs.

i'm sure this idea is really bad on some level... but it's way too early for me, i haven't had coffee and with the disappointment of all this i'm not thinking straight.

oh... i liked the way you avoided actually usuing the "E" word :)

Date: 2004-07-21 05:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com

Hmmm.. You mean like a free trade agreement with Cuba? That would be nice... I know there's talk of an FTA with China and apparently we have one of some sort with Thailand now - causing the AMWU and manufacturing companies to claim that we'll be competing with sweatshops (this is true, but the solution is in internationalizing labour standards and labour organization, not tariffs).

The main bone of contention is getting rid of the PBS, which has the government as the single (and very tough) buyer on behalf of all Australians. The system works, and this infuriates pharma-business who would love to use their array of marketing techniques to foist their crappy products to an ignorant public (in a nutshell).

What's the "E" word that I avoided? I'm confused...

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