Category: Uncategorized
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Touchscreen Take Two
Some time ago, I blogged about a touchscreen interface that had been developed by Jeff Han. Now there’s an article about him and the interface, together with a very impressive video.A direct link to the video is here (sorry, I can’t directly embed it into this post, and you’ll have to watch an advertisement first).However, as I said in my original post, the mode shifts in the interaction are minimised, and the gestures are emphasised so as to be the whole story. It’s not. We are clearly watching a master manipulate his instrument. How intuitive that will be, without some meta interface rules that span multiple applications, remains, for me, an open question. It looks good though, but then, so does a concert pianist playing a Beethoven piano concerto. Doesn’t mean to say that anyone can do it. -
All Things Must Pass
Today, I was pottering about, as is my wont, when I got a telephone call. "Clare? – Well, how lovely to hear from you". "I have some very bad news, I’m afraid. Mum has died". And with those words, the world changes in an instant. Clare’s mother is (was…) my oldest friend. Sue and I had known each other since we were children, forty-five years ago, back on the Isle of Man.She was two years older than me – a huge gap when we first met. She seemed then like someone impossibly worldly wise, and when she left the island to go to university, I longed to hear what it was like, because that was what I wanted to do as well. It seemed to me like an avenue of escape from a society that I instinctively knew would not be one that I would feel at ease in. She was the first person, apart from myself, to whom I admitted I was gay. It seemed like such a burden back then in those times. Sue helped me see that I should just be myself, and not be imprisoned by the homophobic attitudes of the time and place.Sue was diagnosed as having MS, and it was a cruel blow. But she made the best of it, and I never heard her complain, although of course she had regrets at losing her independence. We all watched the disease gradually build its bars of immobility around her. She became a prisoner in her own body, but she kept her spirits high. The thing that she feared most was to lose the keen edge of her mind. For her, the saying that "a mind is a terrible thing to waste" was absolutely her view, both for her and for those around her.I’ve lost a good person whom I was privileged to have as a friend. She’s gone far too soon, but at least the bars imprison her no longer. Her memory remains. -
Taking The P*ss
For non-British-speaking readers, the title translates as "having a laugh at someone’s expense". It seemed an apposite title for this rumination by Orac, over at Respectful Insolence. Look, just because Gandhi did it, doesn’t mean to say that it’s a good idea…
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The Theory Is Great, But The Reality Sucks
I’m really curious to see how the Great Terror Plot will actually pan out. My money is currently on it being a damp squib born of a couple of deranged losers (who bonded in the daffodils), with a few innocents caught in the police lasso.
Much has been made of the liquid-based explosives. However, this commentary on the known characteristics of the most likely constituents would seem to suggest that the practicality of successfully mixing up a brew in an aircraft in flight is akin to a snowball surviving in Hell.
The commentary leads the author (Perry Metzger) to entertain three possibilities:
- The terrorists had a brilliant idea for how to combine oxidizer and a ketone or ether to make some sort of nasty organic peroxide explosive in situ that has escaped me so far. Perhaps that’s true — I’m not omniscient and I have to confess that I’ve never tried making the stuff at all, let alone in an airplane bathroom.
- The terrorists were smuggling on board pre-made organic peroxide explosives. Clearly, this is not a new threat at all — organic peroxide explosives have been used by terrorists for decades now. Smuggling them in a bottle is not an interesting new threat either — clearly if you can smuggle cocaine in a bottle you can smuggle acetone peroxide. I would hope we had means of looking for that already, though, see below for a comment on that.
- The terrorists were phenomenally ill informed, or hadn’t actually tried any of this out yet — perhaps what we are told was a "sophisticated plot" was a bunch of not very sophisticated people who had not gotten very far in testing their ideas out, or perhaps they were really really dumb and hadn’t tried even a small scale experiment before going forward.
It probably won’t surprise you to learn that my money is on (3).
(hat tip to Schneier on Security)
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Thames Town
Prince Charles, eat your heart out. You may have been able to build Poundbury, incorporating your twee ideas of a fantasy British village, but I think Thames Town has trumped your hand. Being built by the Chinese in Songjiang, about 30 km from Shanghai, this is shaping up to be, in the words of Jonathan Glancey in the Guardian today, "a grotesque and extremely funny parody of an olde English town seen through Chinese eyes, and built by canny British developers".
The Guardian story claims that Thames Town is only one of seven satellite towns, the other six each have a national architectural style taken from a country as a theme. However, according to this story on designbuild-network.com, there are in fact nine towns being built, borrowing from the UK, the USA, Russia, Spain, Sweden, France, the Netherlands, Germany and Italy. I wonder what Holland Town will look like?
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Windows Live Writer
Microsoft has released the beta of a Windows-based tool to prepare blog entries and then upload them into Windows Live Spaces or other Blog environments (e.g. Blogger, LiveJournal, TypePad and WordPress). This blog entry was prepared using it. You can get it from here.
Apparently, it’s extensible. Someone is working on a plug-in to link it with photos held on Flickr, which is something that I would find useful…
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Happy Birthday, Cecil!
On a personal note, I’d just like to wish my uncle a very happy birthday. Today he has reached the grand age of 101… -
Eight Years and Counting
Today Martin and I celebrate the eighth anniversary of our official tying of the knot. On the 12th June 1998 we said "Yes" in the Gouda Townhall. At the time, the law was opened only to civil partnerships, but we upgraded to the full civil marriage a couple of years ago when the law changed again. While we’ve been "official" for the past eight years, we actually started living together 21 years ago, so we’re really an old married couple by now… -
An Addition to the Family
As I’ve mentioned before, Martin had his heart set on owning a dog once more once we moved to the country. The original plan was to sign up for a puppy. However, a breeder contacted us saying that she had had a three-year old Labrador returned to her, because the owners were no longer able to keep it, and were we interested?Naturally, Martin was excited, and so we went to view the dog. Signs were good, and thus we became the owners of the dog last week. So far, despite my rationalism, I find myself reluctantly becoming fond of the beast. Martin is, of course, besotted. The dog is, of course, just a dog. But when it gazes up at you with those big brown eyes… then there’s obviously some deep genetic thing going on between humans and dogs about which I am powerless to protest.Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Kai van de Beckenkamp; offspring of Just Brown van ‘t Meijelicht (father) and Fresh Fields Makaya (mother)… -
Country Living
Well, it’s now a week since we took possession of the farmhouse. We arrived last Friday afternoon at 13:45 for an inspection of the property before trooping off to the notary for the signing of the contract. The previous owners were at the house, together with representatives of their estate agents and ours. Neither of the reps had seen the house before – the people who had been involved in the sale had now moved on. The new reps were duly impressed with the farmhouse. One pointed out that in the attic, where you can clearly see the roof construction, that the original roof timbers have been left as an internal skeleton when the roof was enlarged some 35 years ago.Then it was off to the notary, where the notary – who was in his twenties (I really feel old) – went through the formal proceedings. Everybody signed. Why is it that notaries have such flamboyant flourishes that they pass off as their signature whereas I have a miserable spider crawl? The previous owners presented us with a basket of local produce from a neighbouring farm and then sped off to their new home in Friesland.We returned to our new home to find that the entrance had been decorated with streamers and balloons in our absence by a welcoming committee of friends. One of them had also painted a welcome sign, and on the back of the sign hung a series of eight nesting boxes for various species of bird. That evening we were seven for dinner (provided by the mother of our painter friend) – and quantities of champagne and wine were consumed.The following morning we were expecting a visit from the plasterer and the carpenter so that we could discuss our redecoration plans. At 11am, they arrived, but so did their families, a dog, a large cake, coffee and beer. It was yet another excuse for a celebration, and Martin was kept busy with guided tours of the house and grounds – everyone was curious to see what we’d bought. Finally, we were presented with workmans’ clothes – a pair of workman’s jeans for Martin and a pair of overalls for me – together with Dutch farmer’s caps and scarves (mine were both in a fetching shade of pink). Toasts to our arrival were drunk in “Achterhoekse Champagne” (beer), and a good time was had by all.Sunday, we visited some of the neighbours to say hello and to present them with Stroopwaffels (a sort of biscuit that is a speciality of Gouda). That involved a 2km walk passing four farmhouses in the vicinity. All the neighbours seem most pleasant and welcoming to the strange birds that have descended upon them.This past week we’ve had a series of appointments with workmen to discuss what needs to be done. If we do this sort of thing in Gouda, it’s pure business. Here, we discover that they will expect to sit and chat with you about life in general. We’ve just had the attic space in the main house and the roof space of the outbuilding sprayed against woodworm and deathwatch beetle. It was a little worrying to see some of the ravaged timbers in the attic – in the course of nearly 200 years, deathwatch beetle has chewed away some sizable chunks. But then again, as the workman pointed out, the building is still standing, and there’s no evidence of recent activity.Today, we’ve had the plasterer working on the living room – bare brick walls in the living room may have been the fashion in the 1970s, but it’s not to our taste. We will leave some of the original beams exposed as a testament to the history of the house, but walls will be plastered, thank you very much.Next week we have the painters in and the main floor will be polished. We still have to get some wooden floors installed in some rooms, and I doubt whether we can do that before the removal men bring all our stuff from Gouda, so I expect that we will be living out of boxes for some time to come.This is a real change of pace of life for us both. It is amazing to wake up at night and listen to the stillness. Equally amazing is that I’m writing this while gazing out at the front garden with a neighbouring farm off in the distance. To my left I can see the local woods – a 10 minute walk. A pheasant has just run across the lawn, and I see that a pair of hedge sparrows have started nesting in the nesting box in the tree 10 metres away in front of the window. I must find suitable places for the rest of those boxes. -
Service Slowdown
My blogging is likely to be somewhat sporadic for the next month or so. We’re entering the final phases of the house move, and I’m somewhat preoccupied with that. Once the move occurs, I shall also be returned to the dark ages of a dial-up connection for a couple of weeks until broadband is installed in the new house. Normal service should resume mid-April, with a bit of luck. -
Happy New Year!
A happy new year and all the best for 2006! Here’s hoping there’ll be some laughter amongst the tears on the way…The Dutch celebrate the New Year by letting off millions of euros worth of fireworks – supposedly (according to the Citizenship test) to scare away the ghosts – but most Dutch believe it’s just an excuse for a party.More from last night’s festivities here.
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Service Interruption
Just to note that I’m travelling again for a few days, so blogging will be thin or, more probably, non-existent for a while. I’m sure you’ve all got better things to do with your time anyway. -
Gosh, That Was Quick…
It looks as though we’ve sold our current house. We had four viewings of the house yesterday, and two people immediately put in bids – and we’ve accepted one of them. The formal contract gets drawn up this week, and once it’s signed, we should be well on our way to moving to the country next March. -
Phase 2 Complete
Yesterday we completed phase 2 of the House project – we signed the Koopovereenkomst – the draft contract to buy the house that we’ve found. The signed contract now goes to a notary, who will draw up the formal papers, and do a few other bits of work (for which, no doubt, he will expect to be handsomely rewarded).Champagne was drunk last night.Our current house is on the market, and the first viewers turn up at the weekend. Fingers and toes are crossed. -
Househunting
Phase 1 of our househunting is completed. After looking at a number of candidates, we found a house that we really liked. This week we put in a bid, and after a bidding round, our second bid was accepted by the current owners.So we move on to phase 2 now – the drawing up of the contract to purchase. That phase will be completed in a few weeks when we and the current owners sign the contract. In parallel with that, we’ll now be putting our current house on the market. Our neighbours have all said that they’ll be sorry to lose us. We suspect that part of it may be that the peace of the cul-de-sac might be disrupted if a family with children buy the place… We’ve suggested that the neighbours might like to take out an advert in the Gay Krant (the Dutch gay news magazine) offering the house to a gay couple with no children…Phase 3 will be the completion of the contract, when we formally take possession. That will be no later than the end of March, and may be before if both parties are able to complete beforehand, e.g. if our house sells quickly, and the current owners have found their next house.The house we’ve found is a converted farmhouse (a woonboederij) in Gelderland. It’s out in the country, down a lane, and has a large garden. So Martin will be able to carry on with his love of gardens, but on a much bigger scale. I suspect I’m going to be roped in to help, which is fine. Despite being in what passes for The Netherlands as "the middle of nowhere", it does have an ADSL connection – so fast Internet access is still possible. As you might imagine, this was a somewhat important consideration for me… -
Apologies, Apologies
…that I haven’t been blogging much in the past week. Various items in real life have been claiming priority.On the positive side, we’ve been house-hunting again, and we are currently pursuing something that looks interesting.On the negative side, some worrying news about the health of family members.Service is likely to be reduced for a little while. -
Back Again
Sorry for the slight hiatus in posting over the last few days. We’ve been househunting in Gelderland. We visited four houses (and saw more to be added to the "to do" list). So far, none of them has made us go "wow".The visits have been useful, though, because it helps us refine what is important to us in a house. It’s also helped to confirm that the connection between an estate agent’s language and reality is tenuous at best. For example:– "Picturesque" means "it needs a lot of work doing to it"– "Original features" means "it needs even more work doing to it"– "Unique features" means "kitsch beyond belief"– "Tasteful conversion" means "kitsch beyond belief"– "Child-friendly neighbourhood" means "lots of screaming kids"– "Views of Montferland" means "if you lean out of the attic window and look to the left you can just about see it"– "Quiet location" means "there’s a dirt track, which will require you to have a 4-wheel drive vehicle in the winter" -
Service Interruption
I’m going to be travelling for the next ten days, so blogging is likely to be infrequent. I’m off to see my brother and his family in Scotland, and then going to the Isle of Man to celebrate the fact that my uncle will be 100 years old on the 14th July. See you.







