Christmas Chords
/I had a really good Boxing Day. Spent a chunk of it re-writing the keyboard driver for the latest project. Great fun. I hope you had as much fun as I did (although you probably weren’t writing code)
Rob Miles on the web. Also available in Real Life (tm)
I had a really good Boxing Day. Spent a chunk of it re-writing the keyboard driver for the latest project. Great fun. I hope you had as much fun as I did (although you probably weren’t writing code)
I’d like to wish both my readers a very Happy Christmas. Above I present the instant pictures taken on a post-prandial (it’s a word - look it up) walk around Cottingham. This exclusive collection is the result of intentionally taking multiple pictures on the same frame, along with a bonus shot of the inside of a lens cap which was in no way intentional.
If you are looking for something to keep the kids occupied over the long Christmas holiday you can find a really nice, free, colouring book here. There are 20 colouring sheets with excellent images showing real people solving real problems. I’ve tested these with a proper small person and they went down very well.
I don’t put quizzes on my blog much any more. Mainly because it is a bit depressing when nobody answers them. Anyhoo. Anyone know what game this screen is from?
Following on from the scary burglar alarm of yesterday I spent twenty minutes or so this morning on the phone to Chris, one of the support folk for Ring alarms. Interesting to see how support works these days. I used the app to authenticate the phone call so that by the time I was talking to Chris he already knew who I was and presumably what my system looked like. i was then able to send him a picture of the broken device (not sure what that told him) so that he could send out a replacement. I reckon that the true measure of a system is how well it works in failure mode, and by that yardstick I think that Ring did pretty well.
So we were watching the BBC show “The Girl Before”. At the centre of the story is a spooky house which is totally controlled by a computer which is totally not going to turn out to be malevolent. And one of our burglar alarm sensors in our house started repeatedly muttering about being tampered with. Coincidence is a wonderful thing. The show is worth watching. We are half way in and pondering just where the evil lies. The alarm was much less fun. I’ve disconnected the offending sensor and popped its batteries out. If we get any tamper messages tonight I will be properly scared…
My PlayStation 3 ended up in my garage, not my loft. This is probably why it still works. Things I put in the loft tend to break. We got it out today and fired it up and were immediately transported back fifteen years or so. Mine is the first version of the machine, which means that it has memory card sockets, four usb connections and will run PlayStation 1 games. I think that PS3 was my favourite PlayStation iteration. It has a lovely glossy finish with just the right amount of black and shiny bits. The PlayStation 3 was the first thing we got with an HDMI connector, so it works just fine on our TV. Not sure what I’ll do with it, but it is nice to know that it still works. And Super Stardust is as awesome as ever.
To round off our nostalgia-fest we popped an XBOX 360 disk into number one son’s Xbox Series X. This just worked too. I think the game disk is just used to authenticate the download of a specially tweaked version of the software, but the experience was just splendid. Within a few minutes we had Dead Or Alive 3 running in what looked like very high resolution and even HDR. It was still extremely playable and a hoot. It’s interesting that the cut scenes now look much more dodgy than the in game action. I guess they can’t do much with the video, but with the game they can improve the textures and dynamic range.
Great fun.
These people are selling Snoopy Calendars. This takes me back. When I was a student we all had ones which we printed on the university mainframe line printer. The best time to print them was at night, otherwise you might get told off for wasting resources. Unfortunately they seem to have sold out. The good news is that I have written a program to create calendars (any year you like). The bad news is that I seem to have lost the punched cards I wrote it on…..
If I’d not held my hand half an inch too low as I reached over to the toaster I’d not have knocked my coffee cup over.
If I’d not knocked the coffee cup over I’d not have had to grab a cloth to stop the coffee from going everywhere.
If I’d not had to grab a cloth I wouldn’t have moved the milk jug I was holding in the other hand.
If I’d not moved the jug I wouldn’t have sprayed hot milk up the front of the coffee machine.
If I’d not sprayed hot milk up the front of the coffee machine I’d not have had to give it a good clean.
If I’d not cleaned the coffee machine I’d not have jogged a dial that sets the machine to expect ground coffee.
If the machine expects ground coffee it refuses to work until you give it some.
If you try to use the machine and it refuses to work you think it is broken and set about mending it.
If all attempts to mend the machine fail you eventually get around to reading the manual (last resort of the barely competent).
If you read the manual you find that the error display is telling exactly what happens and what you need to do to fix it. Hurrah.
Oh well, at least the coffee machine is cleaner now than it has been for a very long time.
I was going to write a post about how irritating it is that when I go onto YouTube I mostly see adverts for SquareSpace (which I’ve been using since 2006). Having thought about it though, I now rather like the idea. At least I won’t be encouraged to buy new things if all I see is messages about something I already own.
Spent today in PowerPoint writing slides. And fiddling with pictures of red leaves.
Today I discovered (after fifteen minutes of total panic) that using the wrong test code in a device you are building will cause that device to appear broken.
There’s a scene in most superhero movies where the would-be hero does something while unaware of the incredible strength they now have. The results are things like baseballs going into orbit, cars flying in the air and really unpleasant handshakes.
I’ve just had that experience myself. I was taking my morning row when there was an almighty bang and the rowing machine fell into two pieces. Obviously my super-strength was the problem. I tracked it down to the above bolt which I have managed to snap after only 9 years of regular use. It seems that every rowing stroke bent the bolt slightly and eventually it failed. I wasn’t too worried about this. I’ve repaired the machine several times. I looked up the availability of bolts and found a suitable replacement. Then I took a look at the fitting it goes into on the machine. The head of the bolt had been welded into place. I’ve no idea why. It makes it impossible to for me to replace and increases the chances of the bolt failing in the first place.
So, it was onto the internet and a search for a replacement machine (I don’t want to stop rowing). I took the old one down to the tip and bid it a fond farewell. The new machine arrived this afternoon (thanks Argos). I hope it lasts as long as its predecessor.
We went to Comicon today. It was great fun. Although the Covid protection measures were laughable. Our carefully printed COVID passes were checked by someone who could apparently read QR codes by just glancing at them. Social distancing was non-existent, the place was more packed than I've ever seen it and we were pretty much the only people wearing facemasks that weren't part of a costume. It seems that "mask friendly" means that they won't throw you out if you are wearing one. Oh well. To be honest, I wasn’t expecting much more. And we still went and had a good time.
The halls at the NEC are pretty big with high ceilings. And we didn't stay in one place for very long. With a bit of luck we’ll be OK. Although I'm not convinced that hope really counts as a pandemic management solution.
Google search is still broken for me. And a few other people too. Apparently the search team is looking into it. I just hope they can get access to their pages.
This really brings home to me the benefit of paying for services. If I was paying for a search service I’d have proper leverage with the supplier. It would be directly in their interest not to upset their customers. And I would know exactly how my service was being paid for. As it is, they seem to have made the call that giving the problem a proper level of priority isn’t worth it.
I don’t use Google search that much. The search built into Edge does most of what I want. And for really hard stuff I use duckduckgo. But recently I don’t use Google at all. When I go to google.com I get the above error. I’ve tried it on different machines and I get the same error. I think it might be something to do with my Google account, although mail works fine, as to other Google services.
When I was at Tech Week on Tuesday I made the mistake of trying to read my Gmail on a machine I hadn’t used for a while and when I tried to sign in it offered me the chance to complete the process on a device that I didn’t have with me. Which was tricky. The process failed, I got an email telling me that someone was trying to access my account (yes! it was me!) and ever since I’ve had this problem accessing the site. I think it is having a form of digital sulk.
I really like this way of authentication. To me it seems like magic. You try and use one thing (in my case Onedrive) and a message pops up on another thing (your phone) that lets you authenticate it.
I was limbering up to go and find my password and the laboriously type it in, and it just worked.
I found this camera that I really wanted. But I really shouldn’t buy it as buying cameras is a waste of money. Really.
So I decided to raise the cash by selling some stuff that I don’t need any more, which includes a couple of home entertainment receivers I seem to have accumulated. So today I spent a happy afternoon plugging them in, making sure that they work and then wondering why I replaced them in the first place……
They will be on eBay next week…. As for the camera, I’ve already bought it - so I really hope these things sell……
I like Iceland. I’ve even been there once. Windows 10 thinks I live there. For some reason all the weather forecasts and whatnot that I get are for Reykjavik. I’m sure there’s a way I can fix it, but I really don’t want to. It lets me think I’m out and about when I’m really stuck at my desk.
Rob Miles is technology author and educator who spent many years as a lecturer in Computer Science at the University of Hull. He is also a Microsoft Developer Technologies MVP. He is into technology, teaching and photography. He is the author of the World Famous C# Yellow Book and almost as handsome as he thinks he is.
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