E11, HE, cats, photos, wrangler of big computers. let's face it, paid up liberal metropolitan elite

Joined October 2010
250 Photos and videos
Tom King retweeted
I'm about to go submarine. Under the rules, TV journalists aren't permitted to say anything material about politics on election day. So this is my last chance to offer a few reflections as the most maddening and absurd election battle of my life draws to a close. Here, in no particular order of importance, is a list of just a few of the events I never expected to see in an election period but did. 1) Revelations that Tory candidates and officials bet on the date of the election, rather than concentrate on winning the election, and that a Labour candidate bet he'd lose 2) A PM turning his back on free publicity that campaign money can't buy, through his early departure from a D-Day gathering of world leaders that was held to celebrate our brave war veterans 3) A wannabe Tory leader, Suella Braverman, saying that Rishi Sunak's attacks on racist remarks by Reform leaders and candidates have less force because the Tory party kept millions of pounds from a donor who made racist remarks 4) A Tory leader seemingly conceding defeat weeks before polling day by saying that the vote is all about making sure Labour wins only a normal majority, not what Sunak calls a "super" one 5) A prime minister drowning in the pouring rain when announcing the dissolution of parliament, for want of an umbrella And here are the big issues that would have been discussed in a healthy functioning democracy but were downplayed or ignored by Labour and Conservatives 1) how to manage the risks and rewards of the most far-reaching industrial revolution of modern times, the generative AI industrial revolution - that will require radical changes to our schools, welfare system, healthcare, employment, media rules and taxation 2) what kind of military and defence capability is necessary to protect ourselves from the military threats of Putin, China and the wider cyber threats of other bad actors 3) how to avoid deep cuts in public services after 2025, that are baked into spending plans underwritten by the Tories and Labour, at a time when prisons are overflowing, waiting lists for NHS treatment are still rising, teachers remain demoralised 4) whether it's sensible to commit to freezing all rates of direct personal and business taxation, when rates for those on average incomes are lower than they've been since 1975 and when public services are crying out for investment 5) how to end the strikes in the health service once and for all I could go on, and on, and on. It was in keeping with the systemic displacement activity of the campaigns that the final argument just before polling day has been about whether Keir Starmer should be allowed to have Friday nights with his kids if he becomes prime minister. In what universe do Rishi Sunak and the Tories believe that voters who are thinking of voting Labour, Reform, LibDem or anything but for him will be swayed by Starmer saying he wants to preserve space to be a dad? Anyway here is the nutshell of the two parties' arguments, if we can dignify them in that way. Tories: "Labour will put up your taxes and we'll cut them. Don't ask us how we'll fund public services, or our confidence levels in our plans to cut immigration." Labour: "We won't put up taxes and we'll encourage investment by promoting economic stability and dismantling planning restrictions. Don't ask us how we'll fund public services, or our confidence levels in our plans to cut immigration." Does any of what we've witnessed matter? I suspect not. The die for tomorrow's vote was probably cast long before Sunak announced 4 July would be the day. My thesis, which I will discuss with you after the votes have been counted, is that if history is made in this election - and that looks likely - the big causes go back to 2015, and there have been a series of sub-causes and triggers in the past few years. I'll explain more in coming days, as a special treat
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Tom King retweeted
We recently acquired a couple of nodes with the new Nvidia Grace Hopper GH200 superchip and have been trying it out. Blog: blog.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/benchmar…

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Tom King retweeted
The Telegraph is advising migrants on how to beat immigration law. Reflect on that a moment…
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3 Mar 2023
At last!
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Tom King retweeted
Celebrating in style at our #RougeRestaurant! 🎈 Congratulations to our Catering and Hospitality student Isaac King who was awarded a Bronze medal in the World Skills UK national competition! Great news for a great student. Go NCC!πŸŽ‰ow.ly/JfLj50LQWC5 @worldskillsuk
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Tom King retweeted
25 academic positions in the Science and Engineering in QMUL in all academic levels including all experts in in Green Energy and Sustainable Engineering. I encourage all who are interested to apply. jobs.ac.uk/job/CTX620/lectur…

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19 Nov 2022
woah I thought @ThePeripheralPV were predicting my death for a mo. Had to check with a different Amazon account that it wasn't customised content!
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Tom King retweeted
By age 30, You Should Have a Drawer with a Raspberry PI you don't use and a dozen USB cables.
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9 Jul 2022
Managed to get birdnetpi.com up and working orangepi zero 2 easily. Will fight with a separate Bluetooth microphone eventually. Only problem, don't tell the kids how it works otherwise...
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26 Jun 2022
Today is car collision detection, "I see no cyclists, that's just leaves. let's plough on" Twenty minutes later, "I slammed on the brakes and saved your life from some leaves"
18 Apr 2022
Spot the slowworm
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Tom King retweeted
Today while canvassing a man told me I was wasting my time because we'll all be annihilated in a nuclear war before 5th May. And I mean maybe he's right, and I'll wish I had more lie ins in the second before I evaporate, but it made me wonder why he was wallpapering his hallway.
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12 Apr 2022
To even attempt to associate this to NHS and teaching staff is insidious, the accuracy of the comparison risible.
"I don't think at any time he thought he was breaking the law... he thought just like many teachers and nurses who after a very long shift would go back to the staff room and have a quiet drink" Tory MP Michael Fabricant urges Boris Johnson to apologise bbc.in/364xut5
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11 Mar 2022
Grrr... Wordle 265 X/6 🟨⬜⬜⬜🟨 🟨🟩🟨⬜⬜ ⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩 ⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩 ⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩 ⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩
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Tom King retweeted
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3 Feb 2022
Wordle 229 2/6 🟨⬜🟩⬜🟨 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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23 Jan 2022
Wordle 218 3/6 🟨⬜🟨⬜⬜ 🟩⬜🟩🟨🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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2 Jan 2022
Wordle 197 3/6 🟨⬜⬜⬜🟨 🟨🟨🟩⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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29 Dec 2021
🟩🟨🟨🟩⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 Wordle 193 2/6
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22 Dec 2021
Haha wathamstow not at all relevant to leytonstone or wanstead πŸ™„ open.spotify.com/episode/36T…