Posts filed under 'Uncategorized'

Representative Plugs

The kitchen DIY project is proceeding slowly. Initially I was off work sick and that meant I was also off DIY too. I sensibly decided to follow the advice given by the news and not go spreading my winter vomiting bug to other people. It was only when I went back to work and actually caught the winter vomiting bug that I realised that all I had was a cold. So I was off last week too in a follow-up illness.

All this meant that my wife finally snapped yesterday and demanded that some progress was made. So I made some, by vowing to install some new plugs by the end of the day, including a fancy new switch for the outdoor light which it did not previously have.

I really feel that this project is representative of my DIY skills generally, so I would like to explain some of the key points of my plugs installation. You may wish to observe its finer aesthetic qualities in the linked photo above.

Please note:

  • The carefully cut hole that the plugs reside within, and the generous space surrounding it.
  • The crack in the light switch from the over-tightening of an over-keen electric screwdriver.
  • The stepped positioning, in terms of alignment, depth and angle.
  • The complete lack of an earth wire in one of the switches (I’m not telling you what one).
  • The hand-build wooden frame connecting the plug boxes to the brickwork. This is built (In part) from bits of old chipboard recovered from the garden, dried off the the oven at gas mark 1 and broken into random small fragments by hand.
  • The single screw holding it all onto the wall, positioned somewhere near the top so that pulling out a plug makes it all wobble slightly.
  • The two cables going to the extractor fan from the left-hand switch. I don’t know why there were two cables. It’s possible that when you switch on the fan, you’re also switching on something else too. I just don’t know what that is.

Needless to say, after a days work my wife has phoned an electrician who has agreed to come out and do it properly. I think I’ll stick to painting.

Add comment January 21st, 2008

Code Beauty

Had a meeting at work in which several huge changes to the way our software is developed were discussed, including (I shit you not) a move from CVS to SourceSafe in order to allow us to do file locking and avoid merging. As if that was an advantage.

But the change that shook me most was a relaxing of our coding standards with the view that if you write code and it passes tests, then who cares if your code is formatted nicely. I can see how that would have come up. The company where I work is fanatically anal about things like code reviews and coding standards. Reviews for even trivial changes need to get past two extra pairs of eyes before even getting close to the repository, and sometimes it’s hard to see the benefits behind the percieved delays to ever-present deadlines. If you forget to put a curly brace on its own line, then you can expect another half hour before your revised changes get passed by your reviewers. These new changes are born out of this frustration, but they are disasterously misguided.

Writing effective code is more than a conveyor belt of tasks that need to be completed. Finished code is more than a green tick on your unit testing app. Code-writing is a craft, and there are good craftsmen and bad ones. It takes discipline to write code that conforms to strict standards and doing it right becomes a kind of art form. Good code is a beautiful, wonderful thing.

So the next time you are writing code and think that it doesn’t matter where you break your long line, or wether your variable name takes the same form as your other variable names, think again. To have the discipline to create beautiful code is something worth working on and worth having. If you can have that discipline, which is the discipline to take pride in your work, then you will have the discipline to do everything else that follows - writing thorough unit tests, documenting decisions in the code as you make them and all the other hundreds of ancient good practices that developers often like to quote blindly.

It’s connections like this, between caring about correctly indenting your lines, and the quality of the final product, that are hard to see at first glance. I only hope someone high up in my company makes that connection before we throw away some very valuable pickiness when it comes to the appearance of our code.

1 comment January 8th, 2008

Frustratingness

Someone at work was selling an XBox 360 with hard drive, extra controller and four games for £160. I know I can barely afford to eat, but it was £160 for God’s sake. And he says it’s barely used. He says it’s nearly new - only been played like ten times or something. I had to buy it, you understand that, right?

So now I’m sat at work with an XBox 360 on my desk. Thing is, my desk faces a great big disused Samsung LCD HD panel. It just sits there, never getting used. Now that’s frustrating.

Only just a little frustrating though, coz I’m leaving at 12 today for the xmas hols. After that there is only the minor XBox impeding inconvenience of going to the cinema with my son to see Bee Movie. Maybe we’ll get lucky and he’ll not like it and want to leave half-way through.

Oh, crap and I need to get some last minute shopping in too. It’s like the universe is conspiring against my XBox and me.

On an entirely unrelated note, I thought I’d do some unfashionable meta-blogging.

I used to blog quite a lot. Then I basically stopped. This time round though I seem to be having a different problem. I create draft posts and then never publish them. In the past I would post any old crap and then read it back later and wonder why on earth I made my ill-considered thoughts public. Now I write stuff but don’t publish it because I want it to be a little more considered and less ranting.

I know that this is bad for the blog. The secret to blogging is just to keep writing, even if what you put out there is crap. If you lose momentum, you lose the blog.

Perhaps over Christmas I’ll return to my drafts, consider them carefully and publish them anyway. If I’m not too busy with my XBox.

Add comment December 21st, 2007

House building

I don’t handle debt very well. I’m the kind of person who thinks that if you can’t afford it then you can’t have it. I’d much rather work out a way to save up for something. Until I was married, I really didn’t fully grasp how credit cards worked which led to some embarassment on holiday some years ago when I learned that a ‘visa’ logo on a card doesn’t automatically make it a credit card.

So anyway, the latest thing that I’m uncomfortable with financially is the addition of a few grand onto our mortgage to pay for home improvements. And when I say home improvements, I mean improvements that extend to almost every room and out into the garden too. If we can’t afford to move, we’ll just have to make this one much nicer.

It’s not that I can’t see the benefits, because I can. I can also see that it may even pay for itself in value added to the property. It’s just that I find it terribly easy to live in a hovel and not notice that it’s falling apart. My wife though, is much more sensitive to these things.

Anyway, there are bags of plaster in the kitchen. All sorts of materials an flooring piled high in the bedroom and the kitchen is chopped up into bits in the garden. A new kitchen has (partially so far) taken its place.

I shall update this blog with progress reports and financial grumbling as the work continues over the once relaxing festive period.

Add comment December 14th, 2007

A Brief History of Time Travel

Sorry, this is a long post. You might want to read it in bits or something. Without ruining the story, it gets freaky later on.

I’m not the sort of person to have ever taken drugs. It’s not that I have a hard moral line on the issue, it’s more of a fear of permanently brain damaging myself. I’m also quite unlucky and forgetful. I would be that one in a million case in the Daily Mail who forgot whether he was supposed to drink lots of water or try to avoid water and ends up spearheading some sort of campaign from beyond the grave. I can see my face now in some sort of newspaper campaign logo surrounded by the words “The remember Ian campaign”. The logo would be pasted onto photographs of loutish people on a night out and terrifying looking tablets.

Thing is, I have an idea of what drugs are low risk and what ones are high risk. It’s just that when I was a student, I classed them all as ‘high risk’ and so didn’t try any of them at a time when opportunities were rich. These days I have a better idea of drugs but ironically zero opportunity to try them.

So for last weekend’s trip to Amsterdam, I though that perhaps, if I have time, I might try some hash. It would satisfy a curiosity and tick off that item on life’s list of things to try out.

So we wandered around Amsterdam doing the touristy things (It really is a nice place, you should go there) and eventually came to a coffee shop, in some alley. We popped in and were greeted by a smiling man who offered us the ’smokes menu’. He really did smile an awful lot. In fact he didn’t stop smiling once. It became slightly sinister and in light of the fact that I’m alive and telling this story, the Daily Mail would be better with him for their campaign logo.

So anyway, we decided that rather than embarrass ourselves with naive touristy asthma attacks in response to the smoke, we would go for the hash-cake which would provide us with a simple, low-risk way of ticking off our ‘things to do in Amsterdam’ card.

So a slice of cake and a coffee later, we went on our way to see the sex museum to tick off something else.

After about an hour, we got slightly giggly and I lost just a little bit of hand-eye coordination. It was like being slightly drunk. “This is good,” I thought, “If you’re going to get giggly, then a sex museum is probably the best place to blend in”. And I was right, and it was fine, and it wore off.

We decided to head back to the hotel, which involved a train ride to the airport followed by a shuttle-bus to the hotel. First stop though would be at the train station where we decided to get some snacks. Oreos, Toblerones and a bottle of water. At least I think that was the first stop since my memories of what happened next are kinda in the wrong order. The problem is that they don’t really connect back into any sensible order if I stop to try to make sense of it.

I know that we did go to a shop though, and I know that we put Oreos, Toblerones and water into a basket, and I know that that was early on. It’s just that the shop may actually have been in the airport, but the story makes better sense to me if it’s in the train station.

At the back of the shop, my wife came to me and said that the room was swaying.

“I think we’re on a boat”

“We’re not on a boat, we’re in a shop. We’re buying chocolate.”

“No, the floor is swaying.”

She took my arm and the room was indeed swaying back and forth like we were on a boat.

“Can’t you hear the water?”

I listened a bit, “Yeah, actually I can hear the water.” I heard the boat’s engines too, but I didn’t tell her that because there was still a part of my brain that knew that the water was someone pushing boxes about, and the engines were refrigerators.

“Where are we? What are we doing here?”

“Ok, we’re not on a boat. We’re in a train station. No… a bus station. We need to get a train. Or a bus.”

I put the basket on the floor and decided to make a conscious, controlled effort to get out of the shop.

At this point I’m a little confused about the order of events, because I remember us on the train to the airport feeling fine, and in fact a little disappointed by the lack of any effect from the cake. In my memory there are two places where things started to happen - once in the shop and once on the train. I can’t remember which is the true story because I can’t remember where the shop was.

So we’re sitting on the train, and I feel a peculiar sensation of being lifted upwards. It was as though my skull, my legs, my arms were all being pulled up to the roof by some sort of magnet. I tried to explain it to my wife, who looked concerned at my demented passion in trying to explain that what I was saying was true. I was being lifted out of my seat and was passionately explaining that this must be why it’s called getting high. We weren’t worried though, because we were both laughing too much, and it seemed to go away after a minute or so.

Then my wife had a strange sensation too. She drew lines on her head with her finger, indicating thoughts in her head traveling from the back of her skull to the front, and thoughts moving from the left to the right, blocking the other thoughts. She was concerned that she could only remember the thoughts at the front and not the thoughts at the back, but she couldn’t keep them at the front. She didn’t know what the sideways thoughts were doing.

Like me though, she became impassioned with an urge to convince me that what she was saying was true and she didn’t accept that I believed her.

Then there’s a blank bit. I can actually fill in the blanks by thinking about them, but without that additional concentration, they just seem blank. I’ll just skip to the next thing that I know happened.

We’re coming up the escalator from the train platforms into the main entrance hall at Amsterdam airport. From there, we need to walk across the hall to the exit, which is right next to our bus stance. Short and simple.

We started walking towards the exit in a straight line but the airport keeps changing, and time seems to be moving far too slowly. I look up to where the exit is. It’s not there, and I don’t recognise the wall in its place. I turn around and turn back again, and again the wall is different. I can spin 360 degrees and find that the airport looks different on every revolution. It’s impossible to find your way in an airport that changes its appearance and layout every time you turn your head.

Walking was like moving through treacle. It was as though time was slowed down, but at the same time was moving at the normal speed. I saw the burger king next to the escalator where we had started, its big round logo flashing into my vision for what must have seemed like the fifth time. In an effort to finally make sense of this labyrinth, I moved burger king to my right and checked the direction of the floor tiles, all the while with my wife becoming more nervous and paranoid, and all the while trying to convince her that she was going to be ok, and that I wasn’t yet affected by it and that she should trust me to get her out of there.

We were about halfway to the exit and the disorientation began again. We seemed to be walking towards a car rental place instead of an exit. Where were we anyway? Why are we in a bus station? Are we supposed to be catching a train? Amsterdam. We are in Amsterdam.

“We’re going to find the exit, we are going to get on a bus and then go to the hotel. At the hotel, we are going to get off the bus, we are going to go to our hotel room where we will be safe until this wears off”

With a memory that lasted no more than a second at a time, I found it useful to re-state exactly what was going on over and over so that I didn’t forget where I was.

My wife stopped, “Give me the camera”

“Ok, what for?”

She started recording a video of us in our sorry state.

“Ben, Mummy loves you and wants you to know that. I don’t think we’re going to be ok. I’m convinced that I’m going to die tonight.”

I put the camera away and saw some chairs back the way we had come. We should walk to the chairs somehow, if we can find them, and wait for it to wear off a bit. No! Wait! There’s the exit.

The exit was right next to the car rentals, and we were standing right by it.

“Of course! Here it is! The floor tiles are horizontal, we were in control the whole time! Let me see your feet as you walk”

I looked at my wife’s feet and was relieved to see that her stride was of a normal length. This meant that the time distortion wasn’t a result of us walking incredibly slowly like a pair of lunatics, and that we’re probably not attracting too much unwanted attention.

Outside we waited on the bus and felt happier that we seemed to be getting somewhere. Once the bus came we climbed on board and noticed that there was ten minutes before it was going to leave. Half an hour passed and I looked at the clock again which had only moved five minutes. It was then that I realised were were in for a long night.

“That man is looking at us”

“No, he’s not”

The man was standing because the bus was crowded. He did seem to be glancing over, but I thought that he had a squint, so I didn’t share my wife’s paranoia. I was concerned that she didn’t tip over the edge and start a scene.

“He is, he’s looking over at us. Why is he looking at us?”

“He’s not. I think I heard him humming a tune while he did it. I don’t think he’s really looking at us”

“Ok. That wasn’t hash in that cake, was it?”

“No.”

“What was it?”

“I’m not sure, but I think it was LSD”

My wife’s face gaped open in genuine shock.

“Oh no. Oh my God”

My wife’s face was twisting around. Not a hallucintation - she was just pulling it into weird shapes and writing her hands around. She was rubbing her twisting face with the backs of her hands like she was a squirrel trying to clean its ears.

“Oh God, what if this is permanent? I don’t want to be stuck like this.”

My mind went back to the coffee shop, remembering that the menu had simply said “Cake”. I wondered idly about what was happening to my Shatner’s Bassoon.

The only other thing I remember from the bus journey was a genuine concern about being able to put my hand through the straps of my bag when the bus stopped. The bag was on my lap, and the straps were easily graspable, but for some reason this concerned me greatly. In the end, I managed to pick it up just fine.

In the hotel room we went to the bathroom where my wife watched worried at her contorting face, panicking about being left alone. I remember wanting to video it more to document the experience, but the camera was on the edge of the bed. I stood outside the bathroom where I could see the camera and see my wife. I knew that the journey to the bed could take several minutes in this new universe, but I thought that if I dashed, I could be back quickly. I reassured my wife that I would only be a moment and reached forward to get the camera.

On the way I noticed the giant painting of a rose on the wall and turned away from it. I really didn’t want to look at anything that might trigger an unpleasant hallucination. I returned with the camera and was relieved that I hadn’t been subjected to some sort of time warp along the way.

“Everything is… broken. Broken up”

I knew exactly what she meant because it was the same for me. Thoughts were fragmented into little pieces, barely tangible, only to assemble themselves together for a moment, making sense briefly before being shattered into forgotten memories a second later.

“Why is it all broken?”

The answers to questions would come out of my mouth before I’d heard the question. Only when I heard the question would my own answer make sense. Several times I decided that I was experiencing what time travel must be like.

I won’t bore you with the rest of the evening. Let’s just say that it continued in that vein.

The following evening, when the effects had fully worn off, I asked my wife if she regretted eating the cake. We both agreed that it was an incredibly stupid thing to do, but neither of us could really regret it. It was certainly a new and fascinating experience.

I can see also how people often link drugs with spiritualism. Although what I experienced was undoubtedly extreme confusion, it didn’t feel like that at the time despite being fully aware of what was going on inside my own mind and how I’d got like that. It felt more like I was looking at the universe in a different and unfamiliar way. It wasn’t that I was looking at the universe through confusion-goggles, it was as though I was looking at familiar things in a way I hadn’t been able to see before.

This is of course nonsense, but it made all the spiritualistic shops that pepper Amsterdam’s streets fit right in so much more logically.

Don’t do drugs kids, it’s not big and it’s not clever. Especially when you don’t know what you’re taking.

Add comment December 10th, 2007

Bollocks to this

I’m off to Amsterdam.

Add comment December 5th, 2007

Projects

I’m one of those sorts of people who has ideas of projects he’d like to do. Those ideas tend to mount up into a big pile and go not much further. Examples include “Write a blog”, “Write a book”, “Do a comic strip of some kind”, “Paint a picture” or a hundred other software related ideas, some of which even have empty code repositories sitting embarrassingly on the public internet.

Ok, so admitedly the blog writing one seems to sort of be working, but if I’m honest I kinda have to force myself sometimes.

The one which has been taking up most of my thoughts right now (They take it in turns) is the book writing one. I was somewhat inspired by Alex’s novel writing efforts for the recent NaNoWriMo event thing. It kinda made me think that if he can do it, then so can I. And the thing is, I’ve been toying with the same story idea for over three years, tinkering with it in my head yet never getting so far as putting a single word on paper.

Part of the trouble is that I’m a terrible one for meta-working. Working around work without actually doing the work itself. For example, the one time I did get close to starting a book I downloaded a piece of software for managing plots and piecing your story design and characters together. I got slightly absorbed into the software itself, tinkered for a while before getting bored and not touching it again. Net result: zero words written.

Ok, new project. My evening time is somewhat compromised by actual money-making work at the moment, but once that’s done (And Christmas too come to that) then I shall start my book. And I shall post progress reports on it as I go on this very blog, which will also be updated more frequently, honest. And the updates will be worth looking at on the new blog template I have in mind too…

1 comment December 4th, 2007

Kitchen

We have come to the conclusion that we will never be able to afford a bigger house, ever. In light of this we have made the decision to spend as much as we can afford on doing up the current family abode. The waiting has gone on too long. The tiles have been smashed from the walls and the wallpaper removed from the kitchen. That makes it official.
In fact, much of the plaster that was being held in place by the wallpaper has been removed too, so there ends all plans for our naive budget to control the madness.

Our plans are to do up the kitchen with new worktops and cupboard doors, replace the bathroom, put up a new fence and tidy up the garden and basically replace our bedroom with another one. The current bedroom has a kitchen worktop in it which the original owners somewhat bafflingly decided would be a good idea. It isn’t. It’s one of those things that you look at when you buy the house and think ‘Yeah, we could just get rid of that’, and then you don’t.
I’m mostly looking forward to the garden changes, though that will need to wait for warmer weather so that the grass isn’t frozen solid. The plans include a fence to keep the dog in. At the moment you need to go with him while he pees so that he doesn’t jump over the crappy old fence and run away to scare children and shag lady dogs. Then he comes back at 4am and cries on the doorstep. It’s just not responsible dog owning, and frankly a pain in the arse.

Add comment November 28th, 2007

Poster

This is a post for the purposes of testing poster, as written by the industrious Alex.

1 comment November 24th, 2007

Santa Chocolate

Last night my two-year old son was fully indoctrinated into the spirit of Christmas consumerism.

There was a Christmas market at the local primary school, complete with Santa’s grotto for which we patiently queued for a surprisingly long time indeed. He learned Santa’s name straight off the bat, pointing at him, smiling and saying “Santa!” a lot. This was a huge improvement on last year’s tears.

Santa then gave him a selection box and the bond was formed. The kind of unbreakable childhood bond that can only be forged with lots of free shit, delivered on a predictable schedule.

His first words when he woke up this morning were “Santa Chockit” (Which is “Santa Chocolate” in his dialect of elvish).

Santa himself seemed particularly on the ball by knowing his name and street without having to ask. He even inquired about how we were doing and proceeded to strike up a conversation with us. It was a bit embarrassing since Santa’s white beard and wig managed to cover his entire face, even his nose. Neither of us had the faintest idea about who he was, yet he clearly knew us. Sorry Santa.

Add comment November 23rd, 2007

Next Posts Previous Posts


Categories

Links

Recent Posts

Calendar

August 2008
M T W T F S S
« Jun    
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Posts by Month

Posts by Category

Meta