Football Tunes

Football and truly great music have never been the best of bedfellows, but there's something about the collective and dissonant tunerizing of thousands of semi-drunk supporter-spectators which can bring a genuine, warm smile to your face.

I'm not talking about the funny/rude songs which different supporters sing at each other or the players, but more the traditional "theme music" type of choral festival.

Everton have never had the best terrace songs, but they do have one of the more whistle-able tunes in 'Johnny Todd' (AKA "That theme music from that there Z-Cars programme, like") and, but for the fact that it has a weird time-signature switch in the third line, it could have become a terrace classic. Except ... that I caught some of the Carling Cup highlights mid-week and what should I hear? Johnny Todd blaring out from the Vicarage Road P.A. system. It was nice of yon hornets to commemorate the day you were handed your rears by a clearly superior outfit in the F.A. Cup Final, but, please: Where do the lyrics mention the M1 motorway?

In truth, though, as mentioned, Everton generally, like God, don't have the best tunes.

West Ham have grabbed a good one. I was once at a game between West Ham and Charlton and the way they sang "Bubbles" (frequently) was almost enough to make the neutral wish they were cockneys. I said "almost", capisce? Sheffield United's ditty always gave me a chuckle. Who can hate a team who so openly celebrate beer, lard and tobacco (of two types) with such abandon? In passing, I guess I can't really veer through this subject without a nod to a reasonably decent ballad sung by the unemployed; something about kerb-crawling, I think it was: "You'll never walk alone"; that's it. It's not a bad choice, in fairness.

Anyway, this subject came back to me with some force when I heard that a friend, who works for a super-huge corporation, had been asked to learn the company ditty.

I'm sure you can agree, it's a powerful and severely sinister image.

 

-=+=-

 

Emacs report, week #1

It has issues but, I'm sorry to say, I'm beginning to like the not-so-small beggar. I actually prefer its cut(copy)-and-paste mechanism to vim's, and its buffer handling is nicer, too. On the flip, lisp makes it sometimes unresponsive and there's too much CTRL-related action, really, but it makes a change from banging on the ESC key like a chimpanzee; that ain't working ...

 

-=+=-

 

Of Mountains and Molehills

... talking of which, there's no 'mountain of the week' this week (I know: you're all gutted) as I've spent what little spare time I've had toying around with the PFC (or rather with a tangential problem area spawned by the PFC).

Check this out:

The bottom lines are the standard deviations from all algorithms. Their colours match the lines higher up to which they apply. The 'middle' strata of lines are measurements from the proportional solution, AKA 'The Garlic Algorithm' (which I unwittingly copied unseen in a later comment). The top lines are from a solution I've been playing about with. The numbers on the x-axis are inputs to the function which produces those outputs (they don't apply to the Garlic figures, which are there for comparison's sake). The numbers on the Y-axis represent either mean averages, or standard deviations. The "jaggier" lines come from smaller sample sets. With those deviations, you have to crank up the number of iterations to really see the curve emerge.

Here's the thing: I don't know why my function works that way. Why there is a "zone of wickedness" between inputs 3.0 and 4.0 (with broadly decreasing std-dev as the figures get higher) is beyond me. It may be "emergent" or it may be that I haven't quite understood it (<-- likely), but it's pretty good at what it does.

The highest profit I've had so far is over 3 million: 3,331,724 to be precise. But that's after thousands of cycles; even the worst algorithms will throw that eventually.

[UPDATED]: At least a couple of people seemed to take a look at the dirty, ad hoc test script linked-to and discussed on the PFC page. This is just an update to say that it has been retro-fitted to take into account all the bugs and errors mentioned, and has had an upgrade in that:

  • It now uses the popen() interface (pipes) instead of system calls to get the value from the algorithm program. This means it's still using IO on some level, but at least it doesn't continually have to make hundreds of disk reads now, which was always the clunkiest part to begin with. It also means it should work on Windows installations of python as no unabstracted system calls are being used.
  • It's had a couple of [very basic] command-line arguments added. The number of cycles can be changed manually and there's the ability to suppress the primitive progress bars and the list dump (less IO etc.).
  • It'll calculate standard deviation.
  • It'll give a rough indication of the time (wall time) the entire process took.

As before, it's still horribly dirty code and assumes nicety on the part of the client program. Read the comments. Use at own risk, etc.

 

-=+=-

 

"And that's why I don't like cricket"

Hail, Australia. Looks like you're going to be getting that little jug back pretty damned soon. We apologise for large-ing it quite so classlessly last time.

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You fill up my senses | 19 comments (19 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback
+1 10cc reference by Phage (4.00 / 1) #1 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 10:27:48 AM EST
You can never predict the Ashes.

Founder member Golgafrinchan 'B' Ark


It was more by yicky yacky (2.00 / 0) #2 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 10:38:26 AM EST

10cc filtered through The Mighty Boosh, but there nevertheless.

I don't know; I can't see England doing it this time. The last series was terrific because it was a balanced struggle (on home soil, to boot). Without that late afternoon, English evening, reversing swing on their side (which took down something more than 20 australians last time, if memory serves), I'm not seeing it. If England can put the Aussies on the back foot early and turn the crowd against them, maybe, but ... hmmm.


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[ Parent ]

Either way by Phage (4.00 / 1) #3 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 10:43:25 AM EST
I think it will be closer than you think. It may lack the home soil nostalgic flavour, but it will be a great game. Both sides have something to prove I think.

Founder member Golgafrinchan 'B' Ark
[ Parent ]

Also by Phage (4.00 / 1) #7 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 11:26:53 AM EST
Sydney Morning Herald article.

Founder member Golgafrinchan 'B' Ark
[ Parent ]

I know by yicky yacky (2.00 / 0) #9 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 11:38:08 AM EST

Flintoff as captain is a whole other argument; it's like Beckham all over again.


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Please note by debacle (4.00 / 1) #4 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 10:55:02 AM EST
PFC = Photo Fun Challenge.

This diary was fucking confusing.


"I'm very responsive to certain stimuli, and pain is pretty much at the top of that list." - BadDoggie



Heh by stark (4.00 / 1) #17 Mon Nov 13, 2006 at 05:02:57 AM EST
PFC = Programming Fun Challenge
PhotoFC = Photo Fun Challenge
--
U.S. Patent 5443036 concerns a device for encouraging a cat to exercise by chasing a light spot.
[ Parent ]

The US is isolated by cam (4.00 / 1) #5 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 10:58:43 AM EST
from rugby, aussie rules and cricket goodness. I am so far out of touch I would probably complain about Geoffrey Boycott slowing down play.

cacm
Freedom, liberty, equity and an Australian Republic


The BBC usually by Phage (4.00 / 2) #6 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 11:00:53 AM EST
Have a good semi-live text commentary on major matches. I dip in and out of it at work.

Founder member Golgafrinchan 'B' Ark
[ Parent ]

He still is by yicky yacky (4.00 / 1) #8 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 11:32:14 AM EST

Well, since Rupert Murdoch swooped in and nabbed the rights in the wake of the last Ashes series (for about £257 million IIRC), we're pretty effectively isolated too, unless you subscribe to the SKY crowbar*. We get a highlights show but, as visuals go, that's about it. I know of at least three households who try and scope out all the 1-month-free-trials every time the Ashes or the world cup come around.

As Phage mentioned, you can often get radio coverage through the Beeb, but their commentary team frequently irritates me. After Channel 4 did so much to modernise the game's presentation, they seem stuck in the '50s sometimes.

[*] - And that's no real solution unless you're prepared to pay for the top-rate tier of coverage and for extra pay-per-views ad nauseam. With football, you can always wander off to the pub once in a while: With cricket, not really.


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To be fair by jump the ladder (4.00 / 2) #10 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 11:42:37 AM EST
All the overseas England series since the early 90s have been Sky only. It's only the domestic rights that have been nabbed off Channel 4. Still shit though.

[ Parent ]

True by yicky yacky (4.00 / 1) #11 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 12:00:55 PM EST

But it was the last refuge. It wasn't even Channel 4's success as it's a third-party production. I'd be curious as to how many UKian HuSers subscribe to SKY, though. Might run it in a future poll. Among my friends it runs about 15% at a guess.


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I do by jump the ladder (4.00 / 2) #12 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 12:14:28 PM EST
But not over the summer. Telewest is good that it allows to take Sky Sports on a month by month basis. I'm not paying £22 a month to watch a sport I'm only mildly interested in.

[ Parent ]

Ahh Rupert by cam (4.00 / 1) #14 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 01:02:09 PM EST
and if it wasn't him then it was Kerry Packer buying everything up. No cricket makes it on free to air or cable television in the US, I have seen PPV packages advertised for test series and one-dayers, but, they are only ever for when India or Pakistan play someone. Mainly India, which suggests the Au/Uk/NZ/SA expats are in too much of a minority to make any money off but the Indian expats are in sufficient numbers.

Fox Sports World used to have Rugby and Rugby League on, but since it became the Fox Soccer Channel, no more rugby or aussie rules. I used to watch the State of Origin games live, but not anymore. One of the public channels shows the Aussie Rules highlights on a saturday night, but they only ever show Melbourne teams, not the new ones like Sydney, Brisbane, West Coast or Fremantle - which happen to the good teams. So I get to see wooden spooners like Hawthorn and Carlton fight it out - blech.

Au doesnt have a strong bit-torrenting sport culture yet either, so sports events making it onto the internets is sporadic too. For a globalised world it is a bit sucky. Then again if I was in Au I would probably be whinging that Au TV doesnt show the NY Giants enough.

cam
Freedom, liberty, equity and an Australian Republic
[ Parent ]

Holy zone of wickedness batman by TPD (4.00 / 1) #13 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 12:25:40 PM EST
NT

Rock Hard Abs are just a sw-sw-swivel away!


pfc by garlic (4.00 / 1) #15 Fri Nov 10, 2006 at 02:42:43 PM EST
I've been looking at it some more as well. With everyone throwing up fast and dirty responses, I figured I had to get something out quick since my idea was so simple.

I looked a little into a save some of your winnings algorithm, and that reduced the std deviation, but also decreased winnings.

at this point, i'm looking into what you should bet when you think you'll lose. I got some interesting results if I cheat and truly know whether I'll win or not, but I haven't translated that back into looking at the odds yet.



emacs by martingale (4.00 / 1) #16 Sat Nov 11, 2006 at 04:37:25 AM EST
It's true that Emacs has a lot of control action, but on the onter hand, there's 3 control keys and only 1 escape key on most keyboards.
--
$E(X_t|F_s) = X_s,\quad t > s$


No MotW? by TurboThy (4.00 / 1) #18 Mon Nov 13, 2006 at 09:47:10 AM EST
Boo!
__
You can't fix anything, you can't change anything, so just tell them that everything is A. The Fuck OK. —Rogerborg


Well by yicky yacky (2.00 / 0) #19 Mon Nov 13, 2006 at 10:07:08 AM EST

It's kind of mountain-shaped ...


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24 days left ...
[ Parent ]

You fill up my senses | 19 comments (19 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback