Snow in my Back Garden

On Monday we had good thick unapologetic snow in Brighton & Hove. As I write, on Wednesday, it has gone but it might come again judging by the weather forecast. I took some pics. The one in this posting is of my back garden.

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I have really rather enjoyed it. I write from the very smug position of having spent the last few months working on various projects from home, so I have spent the winter in my house. I have been venturing out for various purposes but always at times that suit me which is much better than having to commute every day as I have done in the past.

So for me the snow has been very welcome.

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Giant Escape Mini Zero

There is a review of the Giant Escape Mini Zero at road.cc.

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What strikes me is that the image of the small wheeled bicycle is changing. Increasingly it is being seen as something that can be fast.

As a Moulton aficionado I can only welcome this.

The Giant Escape Mini Zero does look a bit like it might break in the middle. Maybe there is something special inside that roughly horizontal tube.

Personally I think that high quality low stiction suspension allied to an ultra-rigid frame à la Moulton is essential to a good design, but bicycles like the Giant Escape Mini Zero do help in changing perceptions.

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Dumping Printer

I was muttering about the wasteful nature of our throwaway society as I dumped my “old” printer. “Old” it wasn’t, in fact I’d bought it only a couple of years ago. However it had started failing to lift the paper from the tray. I phoned the manufacturer but it was out of warranty and it would cost more to fix it than replace it.

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It was an extremely cheap printer. It’s pretty rare for me to buy something very cheap, I tend to buy infrequently but carefully. When I do buy I get something more expensive which will last longer.

This printer was my first mono laser printer after having used an inkjet for some years. I wasn’t sure if I was ready for mono. I knew I hardly ever used the colour of the inkjet. However I did find that mono laser is the way to go for me now with this cheap printer so it had some value.

I don’t print anything like as much as I used to. The vast majority of creation on the computer goes into PDF files which get emailed.

I remember when the computer was all about creation for paper, but that is long ago now. I remember when getting a colour printer for the first time was so cool. It didn’t make sense to have a black and white printer when I had a computer capable of creating such superb colour.

Now the Internet in all its forms has come and so “output” means uploading something not printing it.

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I took the mono Samsung printer to the Hove district depot on my bicycle. It has been replaced by a more expensive mono laser printer the price of which confirms that I will never print in colour again.

Posted in Bicycle, Computer | 4 Comments

Hooray for the atheist buses!

I’m really pleased to read the report of the atheist buses at guardian.co.uk.

Hanne Stinson, from the British Humanist Association is reported as saying “People can lead a happy, enjoyable and rewarding life without religion”, how very true!

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Woolly Mammoths – I bet they smelled

Woolly mammoths (mammuthus primigenius) have been in the news a lot. A few weeks ago we were told that they were going to be revived by some ingenious insemination of elephants using woolly mammoth DNA.

Now we are told that space impacts may have wiped out woolly mammoths and early human settlers in North America according to this BBC News article.

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However, what hasn’t been considered is the smell. It was the illustration at that BBC News article that put this thought into my mind. It’s all that wool you see, on such a large animal. I bet they got pretty hot in the summer. It would have added up to a significant pong.

Maybe smelly mammoths would be more appropriate than woolly mammoths.

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Something to Fear in the Future

As if there wasn’t enough in the future to strike fear into our hearts what with global warming and marauding mammoths some German scientists (in fact the Fraunhofer Institute for Industrial Engineering and Organisation) have dreamt up what looks like the hotel room from hell.

In this bizarre BBC news report Steve Rosenberg tells us what a wonder it is. It is a wonder that Steve Rosenberg could go through that script without laughing.

The room reminds me of that lift in Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy which keeps trying to keep its passengers calm but its efforts only infuriate them.

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VIVA VIVA Exhibition

On Thursday I went to VIVA VIVA an exhibition of Audio Visual PhD submissions. This was held in an exhibition hall called P3, which is in fact under the University of Westminster, London. The P3 venue is rather wonderful in itself being an underground hanger once used to test concrete for Brimingham’s Spaghetti Junction and the (English) Channel Tunnel.

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More pics in the gallery

VIVA VIVA consists of nine multi-channel installations and thirteen films. At the time of writing there is information available on each exhibit here.

It is an absolutely huge amount of material to explore, especially when the written theses are available for reading as well.

I arrived at the exhibition at lunchtime and remained until nearly closing, 7 pm, and even then I felt I had only explored a tiny fragment of that which was available.

I took some pics which I’ve put in the gallery.

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Light Text on Dark Screen

Writing with lightly coloured on a black screen seems to be all the rage. Various Mac applications offer this possibility now, Scrivener and MacJournal are the ones I use most which will do it. There’s an application called WriteRoom which seems to exist primarily to facilitate the writing of lightly coloured text on a black screen. Ulysses also does this and I’m sure there are more.

Full screen has been around for ages, but in the same way that an open document looked like a sheet of paper with the type on it, so did full screen. These apps I’ve mentioned are abandoning the idea of looking at a page on screen when in full screen mode, instead having lightly coloured text on black screen.

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This return of lightly coloured text on black screen is at the same time retro and a look at the future. It is retro because it takes us back to pre-Mac days and it is looking to the future because it represents a movement away from using computers to create something that will be on a piece of paper.

There is now a large generation of people for whom lightly coloured text against a dark screen is how they first started typing anything, they did not start typing with a typewriter. For them this lightly coloured text against a dark screen thing might feel very natural.

When the Mac came along it was very much a black text on white screen device. It brought WYSIWYG to us all and for the most part was used for writing things to be printed out on paper. It was a very cool to get away from the light text/dark screen which let you know what you were actually writing but gave no idea as to how it was going to look.

When OS X came along it included Terminal application the icon of which in the dock is of a monitor, what we might have called a “Terminal” years ago, with black screen. The illustration has a cursor waiting for a command to be entered. I think this might have helped along this embracing of light text on dark screen.

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Destroying Old Hard Drives

I’ve been doing a bit of clearing out the clutter in my house recently. There’s a bunch of old hard drives which have been hanging around although I know I’ll never use them again. They are the full size ones physically but have too little capacity by today’s standards.

I was totally sure that the contents of the hard drives had been transferred to the hard drives I now use years ago. However I couldn’t remember if the old drives had been erased or not and I didn’t want to go putting them into cases and checking.

I did have a bit of a search of the web to see how other people had destroyed them. None of the suggestions I looked at seemed very suitable for me. Advice included driving a car over the hard drives. I don’t have a car and I think it’s quite likely that the discs inside the hard drives would survive that. Another suggestion was to use a sledge hammer on them. That was better but I don’t have a sledge hammer and even if I did I can imagine that with the hammering maybe some of the hard drive would go flying off around the place. I do have a black & decker drill and so I decided that I would use that. I clamped each one in my DIY workbench thing and then got to work with my drill.

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More pics in gallery

They put up quite a fight. It wasn’t too bad getting the drill bit to go through each one, but the casing on one side, I think the top as I view them, was always quite tough to get through. I’m sure I didn’t need to put a hole all the way through but I felt that if I could see right through the drive then I was sure that it was totally destroyed!

I’m trying to avoid getting into a “I remember when we were happy with 512KB” type of thing, but it is amazing how things can so quickly become of no value.

The hard drive unit is one of those internal components which has become recognisable to those with no technical experience. It is like the thermionic valve.

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I remember being surprised that Apple had used an actual illustration of a hard drive as the icon for the computer screen. Then thinking about it, it wasn’t so suprising. With the very first Macs the icon was of a removable disc, because that’s what they used. Then when they started using built in hard drives the icon became a rather anonymous box with what looked like a light or something on the front. So, they’d never extended that desktop analogy into displaying drives. I’m quite glad because I am not a huge fan of the desktop analogy. If they had extended it maybe they would have used a filing cabinet as the icon.

Posted in Computer, DIY | 1 Comment

Taking notes at a Seminar with an iPod Touch

I went to a seminar last week at the University of Sussex. For the first time in my life I did not take a pen, nor a notebook. I took my iPod Touch. I sat there listening to the seminar and when anything of interest came along I picked up the iPod Touch and thumbed in the notes. I felt a bit self-conscious about it. Everyone was sitting around a large circle of desks, I guess there were about thirty people there. When I picked up the iPod Touch I felt that maybe other people thought I was playing a little game or texting a friend or something.

I had changed the settings on the iPod Touch so that it wouldn’t make any sound whatsoever when, for example, an email arrives or if an alarm goes off from the calendar. Also because the iPod Touch has, well, a touch screen, then it is completely silent, there is no risk of clicking or anything that maybe could be possible with a Blackberry.

For the actual business of note taking I found it to be very good. I used the standard notepad application that comes with the iPod Touch and then just emailed the notes to myself when the seminar was over. I found it rather liberating not having to hang onto a piece of paper or worry about a pen leaking in my jacket pocket. You could say, I guess, that I have the iPod Touch to worry about but I think one reason why mobile devices are so successful is that we rather like worrying about them.

I’m getting into the way of thumbing which, of course, Blackberry users have been doing for ages. Once you get used to it it is pretty fast. I don’t take copious notes (funny how lots of notes is always copious) but rather I just take down a few things that I want to remember.

Oddly enough while I think I’m okay with using the iPod Touch in a seminar I don’t think I could use it in a meeting with, say one or two people. I don’t know and when I next have one I might try this out. I guess it might be okay if I was having a meeting with Steve Jobs. The funny thing is that while I feel that people give you the space to write notes in a notebook, they will sort of slow down speaking for you in a small group, I would wonder if they’d do the same if you were thumbing into an iPod Touch or a Blackberry?

When I arrived at the seminar all prepared to use my iPod Touch for the first time I sat down and the person right beside me got out what was either an iPhone or an iPod Touch. I thought maybe I wasn’t going to be the only one taking notes on my iPod, but in fact my neighbour just put the iPhone or iPod Touch on the desk face down, then got out a sheet of paper and started writing notes on that. Thinking about it all later I wondered if it was an iPhone and she was recording the seminar? I sort of doubt it though.

Posted in Computer, Madness | 4 Comments