So, this weekend, I ran in the Spartan Sprint, the event I and a few friends were training for over the past month or so. The Spartan sprint is a 5KM long obstacle course, which was tiring, but very very fun.

I had my Go Pro strapped to my chest and got some great footage, which I edited together into a little video (which I’m quite please with, especially as it was a first attempt put together in a hurry).

I am aware this post digresses from my usual technology focus, but watch the video and I’ll bring it back to the point in a minute.

Right.

I put this together with Apple iMovie on the Mac Mini I bought so I could do some iOS development. Previous attempts at editing video using FOSS tools had been painful, but iMovie was a total dream to use – simple and intuitive interface, I could add and edit the soundtrack, there was a bunch of handy effects. Obviously, it’s not a professional edit suite, but it was more than enough for me to hack together a little demo video on an evening.

However, I’m pretty pissed off. For two reasons.

Firstly, FOSS… pull your finger out! Video editing on Linux is absolutely horrific… sort it out.

Secondly, Apple have made the wonderfully intuitive and simple application that works really well. So what the hell is the excuse for iTunes?

You have none, Apple.

The UX is ropey and inconsistent, it is bloated and needs to be updated every ten minutes, and my biggest gripe; if you have your music library on a network drive and forget to mount it before starting iTunes, it’ll forget it entirely and then force you to factory reset your phone before it’ll let you do any updates.

I know this is down to the DRM Apple was forced to build to get music industry buy-in on the iPod concept, but it’s 2013 and if DRM went away tomorrow, the music industry would not pull everything out of the iTunes store. So, why are you making my life suck Apple? Why did I have to buy a new MP3 player just so I could update my playlist and avoid having to run iTunes?

You make some great stuff Apple, so why does iTunes suck so hard?

A long time ago, in a galaxy not too far away, I took part in a JISC funded research project. The purpose of the project was to investigate and develop solutions for some of the issues associated with securing email.

It was a fun project to be involved with (not least because I got to pretend to be a student again for a little while), and I believe the solution we built – the Secure Email Proxy – was a good one with a lot of potential.

The project finished in 2003, and the website (hosted on an old Sun Pizza box in my lab) has long since vanished, along with the code for the project. I think this is a shame, so I’ve stuck my old development code up on Github. The proxy was under active development since I left the project, but I’ve not go access to the code. If you do, then please feel free to fork and update it.

Anyway, the proxy works by sitting on your local machine between your mail client and your mail server. It manages keys on your behalf, and encrypts/signs/verifies/decrypts messages and attachments on the fly as email passes through it. This means that you don’t need to have any native plugin to work, and it’ll work with virtually any mail client.

Enjoy!

» Visit the project on Github…

Jurisdiction The other day, in response to Ben’s suggestion, I declared my data jurisdiction, so that those wishing to contact me knew exactly what risks their data could be exposed to.

It occurred to me that simply naming the jurisdiction wasn’t really much good unless I could also point to something that would explain the risks in plain English, so, the other afternoon, I took some time out and put together Data-Jurisdiction.org.

Data-Jurisdiction.org is a community project that anyone can contribute to (either by submitting a patch for, or raising an issue on, the GitHub project) so get hacking! It is my hope that as more people declare their data jurisdiction the site will become a handy source of information.

As a reminder of my jurisdiction; I am based in the UK, with servers in the US and Germany.