Downstairs Plastering (19/Mar/08)

We are having the dining room and sitting room re-wired and re-plastered:

Before Plastering: Pic before plastering
During Plastering: Pic during plastering
After Plastering: Pic after plastering
After Painting: Pic after plastering

It’ll be nice to not have to look at the bare brickwork any more. Plus having more than one socket in the room will be a real luxury.

French Door (07/Mar/08)

Since we are having our dining room re-plastered and have stripped the wallpaper, it is the right time to have our window replaced with French doors. We have planned to do it ever since we were looking round the house when it was still on the market:

Before: Without French doors
After: Pic of new French doors

It has made the room much brighter. A big improvement which I guess won’t be fully realised till the rest of the room is done.

Progress with the new bathroom (Jan/07)

We’re raising the floor to get a better fall on the waste pipe.
  • Under floor plumbing will hide all the pipes.
  • We’re converting the radiator into a towel rail.
The new floor is nice and solid (25mm Ply)
The Bath is now fitted and ready. We chose quite a clever design: no taps and a shower hose that doesn’t hang in the bath.
We put down Ditra matting because we’re tiling – It’ll waterproof the floor and allow for the natural movement of the wood.

His Dark Materials Trilogy (Philip Pullman)

Northern Lights

Children’s Fiction, 8/10 – Dec/Jan 07/08

I love reading children’s books, you know you’re in for an adventure. I watched the movie at the cinema the same day that I finished the book – I can understand why they sweetened the ending because it’s horrible in the book. I find doing the comparisons interesting, for example for me, Iorek Byrnison was a much stronger character in the book but Lee Scoresby was a stronger character in the film.

My Thoughts:

  • I found the companionship of the daemons a lovely idea.
  • It was brilliantly eerie in the Arctic experimentation centre.
  • Excitingly dark ending

The Subtle Knife

Children’s Fiction, 7/10 – Jan 2008

The magical world that was created now gets rationalised a little with science (dark matter) and, as expected from the beginning, our own world is linked with the world from the first book with a new character, Will Parry.

My Thoughts:

  • I thought the soul-eating Spectres were a bit weak (certainly not as chilling as the Dementors from Harry Potter).
  • It turns out the golden compass is programmable on a computer and it’s possible to write a speech-to-dust-to-text plugin in one evening. P! Technology these days is so advanced.
  • There’s a funny section of sexual innuendo between Mrs Coulter and Sir Charles.
  • There’s a gruesome fight with the kids on the stone tower. Kid’s fighting other kids to the death is disturbing.
  • The ending is completely disappointing. It’s a cliff-hanger like an episode of Eastenders – not a fully rounded story!

The Amber Spyglass

Children’s Fiction, 6/10 – Jan 2008

For me, the Trilogy has weakened and is not so hard to put down anymore. The land of the dead and the Harpies didn’t work too well in my opinion but I guess “Live life to the full” is a nice message to give kids.

My Thoughts:

  • I liked the concept of the Mulefa even though it’s really hard to imagine an animal on wheels. They are good green role-models for the kids.
  • I liked the gruesome part where Iorek Byrnison feasted on his friend, Lee Scoresby’s dead body.
  • Childhood love is hard to pull off. “Their just teenagers, what do they know about love?”
  • The ending is sad. It’s also an anti-climax because Lyra should be treated as a queen now? and won’t Will just go to prison?

All in all, a wonderful trilogy, something I’ll be reading my kids along with Narnia and Harry Potter.

Cable Organiser Box (Jan/08)

We have a charging area in our house where the chargers for our phones, camera, Gameboy and Bluetooth stuff live. It’s always a mess of cables and adaptors so I decided to tidy it up.

A bit blue peter – But it’s better than before:

Before:

After:

1) I bought a box from B&Q that seemed the right size to fit a 6 socket power extension inside and felt quite sturdy.
2) I used a dremel to cut a plug-sized hole in the side of the box so I could fit the adaptor inside.
3) I used a drill to make a hole in the top of the box for each device I wanted to have a charger for.
4) I used sellotape on the inside of the box around the holes to stop the cables slipping back into the box.

The inside of the box can be as messy as you like:

Sony Vaio Laptop – 15/Jan/08

I feel sad that I’ve finally replaced my old PC which my dad gave me as a 21st birthday present. It was just too sluggish, even for browsing the web.

I bought a widescreen Sony Vaio. It’s interesting to compare the specs because it shows how much technology has advanced in the last 7 years:

  Mesh (Elite P4) Sony (VGN-AR51E)
Date April 2001 Jan 2008
Price £1750 £700
Size Desktop Tower – 20kg Widescreen laptop – 3.9kg
CPU Intel 1.4GHz Pentium 4 Intel 2GHz Core2 Duo T7250
RAM 128MB (RDRAM PC800) 2GB (DDR2 SDRAM, PC2-5300)
Hard Disk 20GB 7200rpm 200GB 4200rpm
Video Card 32MB NVIDIA GeForce2 MX200 128MB NVIDIA GeForce 8400M GT
Optical Drive 16 speed DVD ROM 24 speed DVD+-RW/+-R DL/RAM
Screen 21″ CRT 17″ LCD
Other Zip drive, floppy drive Card reader, Wi-Fi a/b/g, built-in webcam

Kix also bought a Sony. She chose one quite a lot smaller and lighter so it wouldn’t be uncomfortable on her lap (VGN-FZ21S). It only weights 2.8Kg’s but she has a smaller screen (15.4″ instead of 17″). Hers has a Blu-ray drive, bluetooth, Wireless N, faster HDD, extra 0.2GHz CPU and a extra 128MB of Video memory.

Old PC:

New Laptop:

I was very impressed at how well Ubuntu 7.10 runs on the laptop. The webcam, memory card reader, headphone jack and hibernation doesn’t work but the wireless, battery indicator and everything else works fine.

Moved ISPs to bethere.co.uk (Dec/2007)

The bethere broadband logo We Changed ISPs from “Freedom2surf” to “Be” because it is a faster and cheaper connection.

The connection details that Be supply are minimal to say the least. This is because they expect you to use their pre-configured “BeBox” that they send you for free. We didn’t like the way the BeBox looked and we didn’t like it’s web interface and we didn’t want to have to re-configure our whole network and firewall – so we messed around with our existing Netgear DG834G until we got a working connection. These are the settings you need to enter:

  • Basic Settings
    • Does Your Internet Connection Require A Login? No (then leave “Account Name” and “Domain Name” empty)
    • Internet IP Address: tick Use Static IP Address, then enter the numbers supplied to you in the intro letter from Be. For me, they were as follows: IP Address: 78.86.193.198, IP Subnet Mask: 255.255.240.0, Gateway IP Address: 78.86.192.1
    • Domain Name Server (DNS) Address: tick Use These DNS Servers (then enter87.194.0.51 and 87.194.0.52)
    • NAT (Network Address Translation): leave Enable ticked.
    • Router MAC Address: leave Use Default Address ticked.
  • ADSL Settings
    • Multiplexing Method: Select LLC-BASED
    • VPI: 0
    • VCI: 101
    • DSL Mode: Select ADSL2+ (but this option was only available after I upgraded the netgear firmwhere to “V4.01.28” – It worked before without this option)

With these router ADSL settings, you won’t need to change anything on your machines (Ubuntu or Windows). What’s Be’s speed like? Disappointing considering it’s supposed to be 24MBits! (although it’s better than before).

screenshot of our connection speed, 12MB down and 1MB up

We started messing around with the Netgears firmwhere and the MTU and RWIN size but didn’t have any better results.

The “In Rainbows” Radiohead experiment

Screenshot of Inrainbows webpage The 7th Radiohead album, “In Rainbows”, is freely downloadable from their website till today only. After today it will only be available as a CD – Or, of course, from file sharing sites.

Since it is a free download (they let you chose how much you want to pay – including £0) I had a really difficult time understanding why anyone would get it from any non-official source. Ethics, freedom, rights, trending-setting are at stake – Jolly well support the cause! That was until I tried to buy it myself. The site is REALLY poorly designed:

  • The splash-screen on the main page of the site doesn’t work on my Ubuntu 6.06 machine – I had to Google around to find the URL that gets past the splash-screen (BTW, it’s http://www.inrainbows.com/Store/index3.htm).
  • Clicking the “ORDER” button doesn’t order anything – you need to then click the “VIEW BASKET” button.
  • You have to name your price, in U.K. Sterling. OK for me but a bit dawning for 90% of the world?
  • After choosing your price, you click “PAY NOW”, at which point you set up an account enter some personal information (including your email address and mobile phone number) and agree to some terms of service (which are benign, but it’s more time and more clicks to verify that).
  • Finally, you get to download the music.

After, jumping through all the hoops, I now understand why it wasn’t being lazy to get the album through the file-share networks. Since this is the first time a big band has snubbed the Record Labels in such a massive way, it is important that the experiment is a financial success (or at least a break-even) for Radiohead. Otherwise other bands won’t try following suite. They have a lot of responsibility. This is why it’s so wrong that they messed up the user-experience of the site. They reduced the availability to a level that is below what most teenagers are used to. Shame on them.

If people normally choose P2P over authorized channels because P2P is cheaper, we would expect customers to shift toward the authorized channel when it offers a zero price. But if people choose P2P for convenience, then we’d expect a shift toward more P2P use for this album, because people have fewer moral qualms about P2P downloading this album than they would for a normal album. (from Freedom to Tinker)

BTW, I paid £5 for it. Fair?