Archive for the ‘Uncategorised’ Category

Four years of blogging

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

A couple of days ago marked the fourth anniversary of this blog but I’ve been too busy in the evenings (doing irresponsible things like watching Slumdog Millionaire) to do anything about it. I don’t have a whole lot of analysis or navel gazing to provide on the topic, other to say that I can easily see myself continuing for another four years at the rate of a few posts a month. It doesn’t feel like a long time at all.

I was all set to upload a fresh new theme for the blog to give it a facelift but my ISP has seen fit to lock me out of my server-side access. I guess that will necessitate an acceleration of my plans to move to a new ISP. Any recommendations for web hosting providers very welcome.

Tweet on!

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

So, I’ve been wondering about Twitter and was going to wait until the fourth anniversary of this blog to sign up in some bizarre attempt to mark the occasion… and then Louise’s friend invites her to sign up and there was no way that I was going to let Louise beat me to the punch on that one, so we sat there and signed up together.

So — and incidentally I don’t think I’ve started enough clauses in this post with the word “so” so far — now you can follow me and also Louise in (potentially) tedious detail. Actually, the more I think about it the more I like the concept of micro-blogging. There are so many small, ephemeral thoughts I’d like to inflict on share with friends and family that never get as far as this blog.

Now my only issues are whether I should actually be publishing on indenti.ca and what picture to use on my profile.

Watchmen

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

To balance up yesterday’s gloomy post, here’s something I’m really looking forward to: The upcoming Watchmen film. Now, I know I’ve been burnt more than once in the past but from everything I’ve seen this is shaping up to be something special. The trailers seem to show that the original graphic novel is being paid due respect and I recently learned that Dave Gibbons is help promote the film, which I’ll read for now as a good omen.

So what’s all the fuss about Watchmen for anyway? Well, if you’ve ever wondered what the fuss about comics was or what makes one turn into a graphic novel, then this is the place to start. Read it and you’ll realise how much you know and love in modern “super hero” films is owed to it.

And that’s not all. It’s not like looking at pictures, it’s not like reading a book. Your brain has to operate on two tracks simultaneously. As you read the words you have to independently absorb what’s going on in the pictures and not let the narrative carry you away. This is because there’s so much important detail going on in the background that isn’t related to the words but is part of the story. Not infrequently the narrative will be accompanied by a different picture story but one that parallels the words.

When I first read it late last year it was unlike anything I’d read/seen before. If I have one piece of advice on Watchmen, it would be to take your time and digest every frame. On which note, I’m off to start re-reading it right now…

Gathering gloom (updated)

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

So far we’ve been lucky not to have been particularly affected by the credit crunch. I’m a generally optimistic kind of guy but as I start to see posts from friends about work drying up or disappearing I can’t shake the feeling of gathering gloom. Worst of all, there seems to be nothing that can be done about it, which leaves me feeling rather small.

Update: One thing I forgot to say was how frustrating this is. Despite our company doing relatively well and being in a relatively safe sector we’ve still battened down the hatches and stopped all recruiting. So, even though I’m in the same industry as many of my friends, I’m in no position to help them out.

Proper snow

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

For those of you in for’n parts who might not know better, today it snowed properly across large parts of old Blighty. This lead to an abortive attempt to get into work, which in turn forced me to work out how to set up a VPN connection to our corporate network on my home Ubuntu box (easy enough) and how to remote desktop into our servers (even easier).

Later, we played with the kids in the snow and Louise got out her family heirloom Swiss sledge. Ben fell off once but no bones were broken. I got to play with my new (and awesome) Nikon 18-200 VR lense. I’ll upload the pictures to Flickr when I get a chance but I’m building up a backlog of techy items to get done (get with the cool kids on Twitter, upgrade blog software, install anti-spam plugin on blog, install Twitter plugin on blog, fix up tags and categories on blog, move neworbit.org domain and email hosting, move blog hosting…) so I don’t know when that might be. Then again, here’s me wittering on about rubbish instead of tackling said list, so clearly I’m on the lookout for displacement activities.

Twit too?

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Writing a blog post, even a short one like this, is a time consuming process for me. This is mainly due to my obsessive-compulsive disorder, which requires I re-read everything I write three times over to check for mistaeks.

Because of this, there has been many a short thought that has never made it onto this fine blog. And it’s for this reason that I’m considering joining Twitter. It kind of feels like Facebook status updates without all the other bullshit.

I’m a bit behind the times on this one but that’s not the point. Anyone else out there tried it?

Maybe they will

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

I know I should have a relatively high level of cynicism by my age but I just can’t help but feel optimistic now that Barak Obama has taken office. I’m sure, just like the Labour government, things will look less rosey in the future but when he moves to close Guantanemo on day one it does look hopeful.

Charlie Marshall

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

This last year seems to be trying to teach me a harsh lesson in the fragility of life. Just a couple of weeks ago my friend Charlie Marshall died, entirely unexpectedly. Today was his funeral.

I knew Charlie through playing badminton. My abiding memory is of him cracking jokes and us laughing. I wasn’t surprised that it was standing room only during the funeral service.

I don’t really know what to add at this point. To be petulant for a moment, I don’t want to have to write another blog post about someone dying. But then I can’t let this moment pass without note. So, rather than bang on pointlessly, let’s have something that Charlie would appreciate, a fishing joke:

An Irish priest loved to fly fish, it was an obsession of his. So far this year the weather had been so bad that he hadn’t had a chance to get his beloved wadders on and his favourite flies out of their box

Strangly though, every Sunday the weather had been good, but of course Sunday is the day he has to go to work.

The weather forcast was good again for the coming Sunday so he called a fellow priest claiming to have lost his voice and be in bed with the flu. He asked him to take over his sermon.

The fly fishing priest drove fifty miles to a river near the coast so that no one would recognise him. An angel up in Heaven was keeping watch and saw what the priest was doing. He told God who agreed that he would do something about it.

With the first cast of his line a huge fish mouth gulped down the fly. For over an hour the priest ran up and down the river bank fighting the fish. At the end when he finally landed the monster size fish it turned out to be a world record Salmon.

Confused the angel asked God, “Why did you let him catch that huge fish? I thought you were going to teach him a lesson.”

God replied “I did. Who do you think he’s going to tell?”

Baby it’s cold inside

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

I’m kind of sad the cold snap is over. After a couple of years of warm winters I was enjoing the crisp blue skies and frosty mornings. That was until our hot water boiler broke early on Tuesday morning and we woke up to a decidedly cold house. Even with a foot of loft insulation and brand spanking new cavity wall insulation, when it’s minus five outside and you’ve no central heating you’re going to get cold.

It only took two days to get it sorted — a corroded flue that needed replacing — but they’re right when they say you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone. Especially on some of the coldest days in the last decade!

We had something like eight or nine kilowatts of electric heaters on the go at some points. Modern houses really aren’t designed to cope in these kinds of situations. A real fire place was what we wanted. Plans of moving to a country cottage with a fireplace in each room, stockpiles of food and fuel, a well, wind turbines and a fully self sufficient farm started to form in our heads.

Fan heaters, emersion heaters, hot water bottles, bed socks… it was like some strange time warp for two days in our household. I’m certainly going to be more appreciative of what we have as we move into 2009.

Last blog of the year

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

I haven’t done a lot of blogging recently, but thought I should make the effort before the year is out. So here it is; a little round up of the year. Hopefully it will not end up sounding too much like one of those hideous letters that old ladies write to everyone they know at Christmas, outlining all the medical conditions they, and all their neighbours, have had throughout the year, or the letters you get from old schoolfriends, whose soul aim it is to make you feel inadequate with stories of their wonderful life, glamourous, well paid job and intelligent and good looking children (probably named Jocasta and Tristran).

January did not get off to the best of starts with Jessica coming down with chickenpox on New Years Day. She was followed by Ben, two weeks later.  My dad underwent emergency surgery for a ruptured stomach ulcer.

February was Jessica’s third birthday, and Andrew and I spent the day in London at a friends wedding. We celebrated Jess’s birthday the next day, she didn’t seem to mind too much.

March – my dad died on the 10th. Not much more to add really. Almost a year has passed and I am still filled with anger that he died so suddenly, and so unfairly.

After Easter in April, Ben started Reception at Infant School. He was, and still is excited by going to school. In fact most mornings I have to call him back out of the gate to collect his lunch and book bag, and say goodbye to me. Jessica started pre-school and absolutely loves it. She had been raring to go for some time, and so far the excitement and enthusiasm has not worn off.

May was my birthday and saw Andrew and myself, my sister Jayne and her then bf Mark, and our neighbours Wendy and Gary (whose birthday it also was, and who happens to be Marks brother) having a very nice meal, and far, far too much alcohold. The party continued at home until mostly all of us of the female persuasion were unconscious.

The first week of June was one of the only two sunny weeks of the year, and was when we had been due to go on holiday. However, because of Ben starting school we postponed the holiday until the end of July.

The second sunny week of the year, the last week of July saw the four Smiths and my mum travelling to the Isle of Wight for a week in a caravan. With our newly acquired roof box, we did actually have a fair bit of room. We all enjoyed the holiday, I think we wore my mum out, and the children both enjoyed the ferry rides. The journey home for me was not entirely pleasant, as before we boarded the ferry to leave, in order to kill time, Andrew taught Ben to skim stones over the sea. Sadly Ben made up in force what he lacked in direction, and a rather large stone (rock!) hit the side of my head with quite a lot of power. Cue me falling to the beach with my head bleeding. Nice. At least it was on the way home, and not the start of the holiday.

In August we went to both a wedding and a christening, both of which were very nice, and blessed by good weather. I also signed up for a GCSE in Biology, a step nearer to starting a PGCE, a plan a few years away yet.

September, the children both went back to school and pre-school, I started my Biology course, which I am greatly enjoying, and I also got a tattoo, cunningly planned for when my mother was out of the country in Seattle.

In October the children went to two Halloween parties. Jessica went as various combinations of cat and princess, Ben attended both as an actually quite scary skeleton. At the toddler group party, he had groups of small children running screaming from him. Success. We also had the first, and only, snowfall of the year, just about enough to scrape together a small snowman. Andrew missed this as he was out of the country.

November would have been my mum and dad’s wedding anniversary. A couple of days before the date, mum, Jayne and I went to a tree planting ceremony that a local gardening charity had arranged in honour of my dad. Dad had helped raise a lot of money for new greenhouses, and they wanted to plant a tree for him, to say thanks. It is an oak tree.

And now to December. Again, this month did not start well, with Tilly, our cat of 8 years dying. The month did get better though.  Both children had very busy social calendars with school plays, carol services, sing alongs and birthday parties to go to. Frequent readers of the blog will know that after a few false starts from me, Ben did manage to complete a competition entry for the School Fair programme cover, and his was in fact chosen as one of the winners. Christmas this year was quite strange without my dad, although I think we managed to enjoy the day, with two excited children it was hard not to. I think my dad would have had a bit of a laugh at Jayne and I, as we attempted to set fire to the Christmas pudding. This was normally Dad’s job and involved a small stainless steel jug and brandy, which he carefully warmed before setting it alight and pouring onto the pudding. Jayne and I had a large stainless steel teapot, with lid, and a large quantity of vodka, which I heated until boiling point, swirled around for good measure (releasing lots of alcohol fumes), and which then Jayne set fire to. The mini explosion almost cost us our eyebrows. The pudding was then lit, as was the plate and surrounding tablecloth. The vodka in the teapot continued to burn for some time, the flame coming out of the spout looked very pretty.

So one year ends. and another begins, and we start all over again. I am hoping this year is better than the last. It is looking good so far. Andrew’s job seems to be in an area if not of growth, then of steadiness, Ben and Jess both look set to continue enjoying school and making friends, Ben is continuing his judo, and Jess is progressing with her swimming. My GCSE course is interesting, and I am quietly confident for a good result. Building work and landscaping have finished on mum’s house, which is certainly less of a worry for her.

I think all is left is to wish everyone a healthy and happy New Year.