Sunday, 16 October 2011

What I Did On My Day Off

Some days you take off to fulfill some long held plan. Other days you take off to recover from the execution of some long held plan. Some days, though, you just take off to chill out and relax and see where the day takes you.
In this case it took me up Ivinghoe Beacon with a picnic largely consisting of cheesy biscuits, carrots and cake. Given the alliterative nature of lunch, you probably think we should have been drinking cherry coke, but in fact we had ginger beer. The weather was yet again unseasonably warm and beautiful. So we took a few photos of the views from the top.




Tuesday, 4 October 2011

Do I need an ebook reader?

With the recent news about Amazon's new ebook readers I got to thinking.
I love reading. Admittedly I don't get as much time as I used to but getting lost in a good book is still one of life's greatest pleasures.
The aforementioned lack of time means that there is a backlog of books to read. A couple of large volumes are awaiting my attention and there are a handful of second hand books I also would like to peruse in time.
I am hoping to catch up with these books over Christmas. A couple of flights and some sitting around in the sun should be extremely conducive to reading. But as already pointed out some of these books are large and heavy. Wouldn't it make a lot of sense to buy some form of ebook reader and read them on that?
However I have the books to read already. So using an ebook reader would involve me purchasing them yet again. Not to mention the more than eighty feet of shelf space in my house, full of books I have read and will sometimes read again.
How, also, would I share books within my family as I can with a bookcase where everyone can freely help themselves? Would it mean too, giving up browsing in second hand bookshops for books you might never have read if they had been full price? What of flicking through the pages to determine whether a book is worth buying, whether it catches the imagination in a few paragraphs or pages?
To be fair I can imagine some technical solutions to these challenges but I wonder if they will ever be implemented in a way that feels natural and easy to use.
And, anyway, sometimes it's just nice to touch the paper.

Sunday, 25 September 2011

Opening A Banana

How do you open a banana?
I'm sure most people will say that they hold it in their (non dominant) hand, take hold of the stalk with the other hand and bend it backwards. If this action fails to succeed in opening the banana they may then resort to a knife or even teeth. Eventually though the banana will be opened.
Now the next question is why do you open it like that? The answer is again, almost certainly, because your mother taught you to.
In a recent conversation somebody pointed out that monkeys open bananas from the other end. The initial suspicion was that this involved wasting a chunk of fruit but a further question exists too. Why on earth would they do open them that way? Well probably because their mothers taught them to!
But this then raised the additional question, what is the best way to open a banana? So in the spirit of investigation I gave it a try and this is what I found. If you take hold of a banana upside down, and place your thumb and forefinger either side of the black spiky bit at the end and roll your fingers against it then the end will split neatly leaving you to easily remove the slightly woody bit if required and enjoy your banana. No mess, no fuss.
In a similar vein I taught myself as a child to do my ticks backwards. Why? Well I realised that ticks were used because they were a quick, easy to make mark - for right handers. Turn it round and suddenly ticks flow easily across the page for a left handed writer.
Sometimes we do things in a particular way because they've been taught like that and we assume that this must be a long optimised solution. Sometimes this is true. On the other hand, sometimes it's worth trying a different way of doing things.
Why not start with your banana?

Sunday, 18 September 2011

Lightsaber - BT Tower


So somebody thought that it would be a good idea to turn the BT tower into a giant lightsaber for a night. Luckily we were there to get a picture of it.

Thursday, 15 September 2011

It's Been a While

It's certainly been a while since I blogged here. It's not that nothing has happened in the past two years; on the contrary lots of things have happened and that's largely the problem. First you get busy actually doing things and forget to write them up and then, well, you just forget the blog entirely!
So having rediscovered it I shall try and write in here a little more often from now on.
Let's see how I do.

Saturday, 19 September 2009

Javascripting and spelling

Well this week I've been busy working on websites.

The first is the local CAMRA branch website (for those of you who can't spell, that's Campaign for Real Ale, not anything to do with photography). I've been having a lot of fun creating a map which shows all the pubs in the branch. Google provide a lot of libraries to help with this, but it does mean creating rather a lot of javascript. Then of course, two hundred odd pubs looks rather cluttered so I turned to the MarkerClusterer library to help. This is absolutely fantastic, and magically clusters all the pubs nicely. However, it did rather annoyingly draw the cluster markers under the branch outline. A little hacking later and the clusters are now above the map. I've even added the local breweries too.

The second website I've been working on is for my daughter. The original idea came from the fact that her school appears to believe that they've taught 'times tables'; and certainly Louisa can count her way slowly through any times table given enough time and fingers. What she can't do is answer a multiplication question without resorting to her fingers, so to help her we figure she needs to keep practising.

Naturally, she enjoys playing games on the computer (check out the millions on the BBC website) so this is an easy way to help her practice.
This thought was still developing when we went to a school meeting where they told us the plans for the year. Apart from general homework, they're also giving the children spellings to learn each week. Obviously another opportunity for an online game.

For me, this feels slightly surreal, as some of the earliest games my mother wrote on our BBC computer, were a spelling game and a tables game to help my sister practice!

Still, I've put something together and it's met with an enthusiastic response so far. So lets see if it helps her to learn to spell 'germination'.

Yes, that really is one of her spelling words this week!

Sunday, 19 April 2009

Lucy got Married (so did Ben obviously)

Ok, the being busy thing...

Well in the week since Easter, we have been ill (yuk) while simultaneously making service sheets, bookmarks and writing a speech.

All of which was more than worth it, to watch my sister get married yesterday.

The bride had the most gorgeous dark blue dress, while the bridesmaids were resplendent in light blue (that means Louisa and me). As Herring was the best man (hey, family wedding!), he didn't get to take a single picture, so nothing to show yet.

The sun shone, the children (there were lots) were all adorable and everyone had a good time.

Congratulations to Lucy & Ben!