Archive for September, 2003

Brent East by-Election

Friday, September 19th, 2003

I was up late-ish (later than Gill, anyway) coding tonight - and as I was about to go to bed, the News 24 coverage of the Brent East by-election results swung into action. I couldn’t help hanging around to see a little bit of what might just be history. But I was knackered, and at around 1am I drifted into sleep…

By some quirk of fate, I woke from a dream (which I don’t remember at all, let alone as clearly as this morning’s) 30 seconds before the returning officer stepped up to start reading the results at 2.30am. This being a by-election, and the first in a long time, there were plenty of bizarre candidates to step up onto the stage. One of the first up, dressed something like a laughing cavalier, yelled as he arrived on stage “they think it’s all over, it is now”. I cringed in my seat - it felt like one of those things which people think up in a moment of apparent clarity, then spend months planning for, only to find that, when their moment of glory comes, it wasn’t one-tenth as funny as it seemed inside their head. So I was a little surprised when I found out that this person was Aaron Barschak, whose main claim to fame was succesfully gatecrashing Prince William’s 21st birthday party dressed as Osama bin Laden, but who also claims to be a comedian. This, and Barschak’s antics throughout the count, were so unfunny they were painful. I can only think that he must’ve been being post-post-post-ironic, or something.

Anyway, the elections were decent viewing, the Lib Dem’s win a deserved one, and I realised that funnily enough there are few things I enjoy more than watching politicians get their moment of glory and jubilation (the night of 1st May 1997 was one of infectious euphoria and regrettable dancing).

Buildings of Disaster

Thursday, September 18th, 2003

Bad taste? Possibly, but these souvenir replicas of buildings such as the World Trade Centre, the Unabomber’s cabin and the Paris tunnel where Princess Diana lost her life are surely destined to become collectors’ items.

Cool Proverb

Thursday, September 18th, 2003

“Even if a man chops off your hand with a sword, you still have two nice sharp bones to stick in his eyes.”
Kendo proverb

(thanks Phil! Thanks Scot!)

Messy Nightmare

Thursday, September 18th, 2003

I just awoke from a horrible nightmare. It started as a pleasant, if occasionally slightly anxious, dream. Jo was having a party. Gill and the kids were there with me. I was a little intimidated by the crowd of freaks, but they were OK really. There was karaoke - Katie and Lucy were there too and they sang “Don’t Go Breaking My Heart” by Elton John & Kiki Dee (I guess it was last week’s Canterbury Tales that put that into my head). As soon as Katie struck the first note, rather warbly and out of tune, there was a ripple of laughter and I felt sorry for Katie and annoyed at the rest of the partygoers, but then her and Lucy settled into a very weird but moving way of singing the song, using some kind of frog-like high-pitched fast vibrato, both of them singing the entire song rather than taking parts. Everyone was mesmerised.

My turn to sing was soon afterwards, but I needed the toilet. I went but it was occupied. People were starting to call for me “Dan, it’s your turn to sing, don’t chicken out”. I was slightly chicken - I’d never done this before, and I still hadn’t decided what to sing - but I was also excited at the prospect, and didn’t want everybody to think I was trying to wriggle out of it. I needed to go to the loo quickly. Then I remembered another toilet in the (very weirdly laid-out) flat - I went in there and relieved myself, before realising that the toilet was like no other I’d seen before. On investigating more closely, it turned out to be a bowl made of two halves of earthenware leaning against one another, and a carrier bag full of the night’s shit suspended inside. There were more parts underneath, and I moved bits to have a look and - oh damn, the bag’s spilt. Shit, shit, shit (literally). There was also a load of washing up and some clothes and stuff stored underneath, and the whole was resting on one of those little kiddy-sized chairs with a seat made of woven straw. Underneath it was a similarly woven straw mat. Most of the shit was easy to retrieve, but the little that had escaped had mainly seeped into the fabric of these two items.

I set to washing everything up before anyone noticed - a foolish endeavour. Everyone was still baying for my karaoke performance, and they soon realised that I was scrubbing flecks of diarrhoea from a mug. Once Gill found out, she very graciously stepped in to help, but there still seemed to be an eternity of poo-caked things to get clean, and hanging over me the knowledge that the last thing to clean would be the cack-ingrained straw of seat and rug. By the time we reached that stage, we really needed to be heading home (we had a drive back to Sheffield), and so I rushed it somewhat, doing a far less than satisfactory job - ironic really, as it’s the only part that really needed a good clean - the mugs only took a few seconds under a jet of water to free them of the few lumps clinging to the side. By this time Janet Street-Porter had appeared at the party, and Gill got to chatting to her. Jo’s boyfriend was walking menacingly with two of his friends, out of the party crowd and into his bedroom. I wanted to stay and meet Janet but, no, we had to go.

I wanted to spend a few moments saying proper goodbyes to everyone, but Gill, after letting people know that we would be buying the girls bags of crisps on the way home (Rowan had started moaning) because motorway service station food is crap, breezed out of the door taking Rowan (still moaning) and Lola with her. I kept my goodbyes as brief as possible and followed down the road 30 seconds after her.

Outside, the streets of London suddenly looked menacing. I couldn’t see Gill, but remembered that the car was parked two streets away, so I set off at a trot. There was a red-and-white Porsche 911 parked near the corner - just as I was admiring it, a lorry came thundering out of nowhere and drove straight over the top of it, leaving it looking a lot flatter than a moment before. Directly behind the lorry, a bus came out of a depot and also treated the Porsche as if it weren’t there. I turned the corner, saw the lorry ahead of me and suddenly realised that this was a crime and, despite the fact that the Porsche owner may well have deserved having their car flattened, perhaps I should report it. I tried to commit the lorry’s number-plate to memory (the distinctly un-memorable A-reg number was scrawled on the back in black paint over a patch of yellow paint). As I was repeating it over and over in my head, I heard a piercing woman’s scream from not far in front. It took me moment to realise that this was the kind of desperately scared scream that indicated another crime was taking place, another moment after that to realise that Gill is a woman and she was just in front of me, and yet another moment to remember that the kids were with her. I jumped into somewhat-inneffectual-feeling-action, and didn’t have to run far to stumble on a pickup truck, Gill, Rowan and Lola tied into struggling bundles in the back, Jo’s boyfriend and his two mates reaching over the side to further incapacitate the noisy Gill. I didn’t have any choice in the matter, I attacked them, feeling wretched and useless as I knew that my puniness was no weapon against three muscularly-built men, but having to go through the motions anyway. One final heart-shattering scream threw me out of my sleep and upright, panting, into bed, and I awoke, realising too late that I should have taken a less immediate, but more likely to be succesful, form of attack (for example… did I have a penknife in my pocket?) but that also willpower alone could not have made me wait another second before attacking these men, as that could be the second in which the truck drove away.

My Type is Moveable!

Wednesday, September 17th, 2003

You may notice something a little different about this page. Yes, I’ve moved to Moveable Type. It’s been a bit of a pain in the butt - getting the Perl installed on the server, exporting all 561 or my blog posts (yes, that’s how many I’ve posted between 15th February 2001 and now - good thing it wasn’t more than 999, as that’s the maximum Blogger will let you stick on one page), importing them all into Moveable Type (I had to syntax-check the 800k HTML file exported from Blogger first, and then try to find and fix all the nesting errors, and remove long strings of minuses, as MT uses them to delimit entries).

Moving will have screwed up all sorts of other things, no doubt. For starters, any existing comments will have been lost (but on the plus side, I automatically get to move to MT’s much better commenting system). More worryingly, any existing cross-links to blog items won’t work any more (I’m thinking of going in to fix all of these - but not right now). The template, you will have noticed, is the blog-standard (sic) MT one - I’ll update it to something a little funkier once I’ve got my motivation back. And… erm… I’m sure there were a couple more “and”s - but my brain is absolutely fried after 14-hours near-solid coding on this and my XML problem.

Other pluses - the tagging and scripting system for MT is hugely better than Blogger’s - I can actually do macros and stuff, and I’m really looking forward to trying out the MTAmazon plugin and posting some little pictoral Amazon links all over my blog - who knows, I might actually sell something off here (that would make it two sales in two years), I might even manage to save enough credits to buy that Edward Tufte book I’ve been wishing for these last few years. Now all I need is time…

Today’s synchronicities (a limited selection of)

Wednesday, September 17th, 2003

Curiouser and curiouser - today is turning into a bizarre day for synchonicity. First, I spent much of the night working on my XML site-mapper (below) and then I discovered that Guy spent his night the same way - he had to create a site map, couldn’t face using Visio (just like me) and started building something to do it in Flash.

Then, I turn on the radio and hear that Jonathan Sumption QC, who my grandpa once told me was a very distant relative (well, he would have to be - a while ago the Evening Standard branded him “the most intelligent man in Britain”, and I wouldn’t stand for anyone who’s not at least a bit related being so labelled), is
cross-examining Andrew Gilligan, who is an old school friend.

Another Sleepless Night

Wednesday, September 17th, 2003

Can’t sleep can’t sleep can’t sleep la la la. I’ve just got over two weeks of what seemed like asthma, something I have hardly suffered like this from since I was a child (except when we went to France two years ago). I went to the doctor’s today and she said it was probably some form of hayfever combined with a mild asthma attack - next time it happens I’m to try anti-histamines, and if that doesn’t work then I go back to her for an inhaler. So now, I’m over that, but it’s been replaced by a common-or-garden cold - not a severe one, but my nose is streaming and my chest, while much better than the last couple of weeks, is still not on top form. Shame because I want to go cycling and stuff, but I feel too breathless.

Anyway, I don’t think that’s the cause of my sleeplessness. It’s probably partly down to the fact that I slept too much yesterday, but also because I’m excited and I want to get on with things - learning more Movable Type, for starters, and the whole XML->XSLT->SVG thing too. I’m also very (very) tempted to get a Safari subscription so that I can read and reference a whole bunch of O’Reilly books every month (I’m not too keen on the idea of reading on screen, or printing out reams of stuff, but there’s just so much there that I want to get hold of, and I’m spending so much on computer books at the moment that the $5 per month basic subscription fee seems like a drop in the ocean).

Website Map Using XML/XSLT/SCG

Wednesday, September 17th, 2003

This site map from XML business is harder than I thought. But it’s damn fun, and I’m gonna crack it sooner or later.

Halva is Delicious

Tuesday, September 16th, 2003

Mmmm… just polished off a kilo pot of Halva. OK, not all in one go, but close enough (when I was at university, and vegan, every lunchtime I would go to the Fry Haldane health food shop in the Student Union’s and buy a huge bag (about half a kilo) of bombay mix and a similarly huge lump (maybe 250g) of halva. That was my lunch (I’m sure I must’ve drunk a lot to wash it down as well - you’d have to, wouldn’t you?)

But the weekend’s Observer Food Monthly special on Nigel Slater’s autobiography got me thinking more closely about my relationship with Halva. It is one of the earliest foods I remember, and one of the greatest treats, although like many such early treats when I rediscovered it after many years away it didn’t seem quite so magical as before. Whenever I saw my grandma from my earliest memories or earlier she would bring me and my sister the same treats - crystallised rose and violet petals, pine nuts, and halva. Pine nuts were also, on rediscovery, quite lovely but rather cloying to eat more than four or five in one session. The crystallised flowers I haven’t yet re-discovered - probably be a disappointment when I do, but I’m very tempted to try tracking them down.

First Ever Computer Bug… a Moth

Tuesday, September 16th, 2003

Last week was the anniversary of the first ever computer bug. At 3.45pm on September 9, 1945, while testing a failure on the Mark II Aiken Relay Calculator at Harvard University, operators found a moth trapped in a relay. It was removed and sticky-taped to the log entry: “First actual case of bug being found.”