Iron Sculpture
/As a result of yesterdays efforts we now have a new sculpture in our garden. I call it “Gone off the Railings”.
Rob Miles on the web. Also available in Real Life (tm)
As a result of yesterdays efforts we now have a new sculpture in our garden. I call it “Gone off the Railings”.
They say that the perfect is the enemy of the good. This causes me no end of problems. As an example, consider this blog. A perfect blog would have an entry every day with interweaving narratives which are sprinkled with humorous bon-mots and apposite pictures. But over the last few weeks I’ve not had the time to make a perfect blog. And every time I’ve considered writing a post I’ve thought about the effort needed to make my blog perfect, groaned inwardly (and sometimes outwardly) and gone off and done something else instead.
So I’m going to settle for good enough. When I get a bit of spare time I’ll go back and fill in the gaps and make everything my idea of perfect, but I’ll also stop stressing about having everything present and correct before adding the next post. Over the next week or so I’ll be filling in gaps and making things as perfect as I think I need. And I’ll be blogging when I get time.
As for today: I spent a bit of the morning helping to get rid of some iron railings and to celebrate the success I bought a movie camera for less than the price of a video game….
We went along to the Humber Marathon today. The middle of Hull was awesome busy and the weather was properly splendid. I think it was perfect running weather, bright and crisp. But then again, I’m not a runner so what do I know.
Anyhoo, we watched them all start off, had a coffee and a wander round and then watched everyone finished. I did take a bunch of pictures, but I wasn’t using my own camera, so I don’t have any to post I’m afraid.
Ligretto is a fast moving card game. It is a bit like multi-player simultaneous patience. The aim is to get rid of your cards by placing them in matching stacks of the same colour. Thing is, everyone else is doing exactly the same thing at the same time. Quite often you are waiting for another player to put a number down so that you can unload a bunch of your cards. As is eeryone else. It can get rather frantic. But it is great fun.
Headed home today. But first we had some pancakes….
The place we are staying has a zoo attached. It has a great selection of animals, including a really cool sloth.
After living in a tent for a few days I’m now in nice little place near Blackpool. Indoor plumbing. Yay! The weather is not presently optimal (horizontal rain does not make for great walks on the seafront) but we are finding places to have fun.
And that’s it. Time to go. I hate this bit. The tents around ours have thinned out. Quite a few folks went home last night. And now we have to go too. It’s been really great. We’re already counting down the days to the next one. And making plans…..
It’s the final day of the festival today. And the weather is perfect. Started the day with one of the best talks so far, all about the fun and games that were had when open-sourcing the Covid app. The good news is that Open Source is now firmly part of government policy when embarking on large projects. But it took a fair bit of pushing to get there. Then onto a talk about train timetabling. Then Jenny List did a great talk on her fun and games converting a Super 8 movie camera into a digital one.
After the session, in the speaker questions tent, there was a lot of discussion about analogue photography and how much fun it is. I left with two thoughts in mind. Firstly that the next EMF will have more analogue film content. And secondly that I’m going to try to track down a Super 8 camera to play with.
After a bit to eat it was a talk from the EMF badge team. The badge is a really nice piece of engineering, a lot of which is going to get carried forward into the next EMF event. This is a great idea. It means that we can work on apps knowing that they can be used at the next event. One problem with the badge is that there is so much going on at EMF - and you don’t want to miss any of it by spending too much time coding. Next time we should be able to turn up with a bunch of things that we will have tested on the real hardware before the event, which is lovely.
After the badge talk we went to one about 3D printing rocket engines and finally one about sending anything to anywhere. Then it was time for the closing ceremony (very sad) and another trip to the bar and Null Sector (slightly less sad).
One of the highlights of EMF is their “bring and buy” tent. You get all kinds of “tech junk” coming up and there are always folks at the tent picking things up and putting them down again. As we were walking towards it I joked that it would be rather amusing to discover one of my books on sale there.
Turns out that fate has a sense of humour too. There on the table was a copy of the first book I ever had published. Way back in 2007 myself and Donald Thompson from Microsoft wrote a little book about C# development with the .NET Micro Framework. It wasn’t a best seller, but they did ask me back to write some other books, which was nice. I decided to get it because I didn’t like the thought of it languishing there for the entire festival, waiting for a buyer….
After that it was time for some sessions. Started with a very good talk about why gas boilers suck. I’ve resolved to do something involving measuring the flow temperatures of the boiler. And possibly something involving peltier devices and radiators. Then on to a talk about how awesome the BBC Micro Elite game code is. Then a scary session about the way influencer-based techniques are being used by being used by governments. Then a session about fiddling with tech and finally something about making my projects more professional. All very good stuff.
Then, after tea, we took a wander around Null-Sector trying to take pictures with an old Polaroid camera. Such fun. Today I switched to a digital camera and grabbed a few shots..
I’ve written before about EMF shower etiquette. And this morning, as I stood in the shower soaking wet, with the my towel at the bottom of my bag and my jeans in a puddle on the floor, I wished I’d read my notes before I set out. But once I was clean and presentable (ish) it was time to head out for breakfast (crepes) and the opening ceremony.
Then on to some great sessions. Saw a childhood hero (Tim Hunkin) do a talk, along with sessions about coffee machine hacking, living off the grid and small production run artworks. Then tea (a burger) followed by a screening of the Hackers movie. This film is an EMF tradition, I remember seeing it at EMF 2018. This time they actually had the director present for a discussion afterwards, which made it even more special. I’m looking forward to watching it again in 2026.
Heading to Electromagnetic Fields 2024. I’ve been looking forward to it for ages. I managed to get packed and on the road by 9:30am. Go me. Nothing quite like blasting through the countryside with Supertramp on full volume. I’ve taken a bunch of cameras, including my current snapshot favourite, the Canon Dial 35. When I arrived I found that number one son had already put the tent up. Which is either good luck or good planning. You choose.
Grabbed a pizza for tea and then watched the David Lynch version of Dune – which was as good as I remember. Nothing like watching a movie with a bunch of like minded folks. The next few days are going to be awesome.
We had a nice little Hardware Meetup this evening. There were robots wandering around and also a bit of surface mounted soldering action. We’ve decided to take a look at RFID tags as means by which robots can find their way around the arena. So for the next meeting I’ll bring some along and we’ll see if we can get them to work.
I was in the wonderful WEX shop in Leeds today stocking up on film. I’m off on my travels soon and I want some good stuff to record things on. I ended up buying Ilford HP5. The thinking is that it is just fast enough to take pictures inside without a flash and just slow enough to take pictures outside in the daylight.
We’ll see how it goes.
Turns out that no matter how many times a seven year old promises not to spray you if you hand them the hosepipe, they still end up spraying you. Although it was apparently “accidental”.
However, it was extremely funny and great fun. And we do now have a much cleaner car. And I did get my own back…
Many years ago I got a robot guinea pig. He’s been languishing in the conservatory with a broken battery for a while. Today I thought I’d order him a replacement and we could see if he could live again.
Captain Flip is a fun little board game where you add crew members to a board that represents your ship and try and maximise the number of points. Each crew member confers a specific advantage and the trick is to get the most profitable mix. You crew turn up on random tiles that you pick out of a bag. If you don’t like the one you got, you can “flip” it to the one on the other side. This is a bit chancy, but adds a lot to the fun. And gives the game its name.
You’re not going to play this all evening (although the game comes with a bunch of different board designs so you probably could). However, we certainly had fun with it.
I’ve been enjoying playing Yakuza Zero. Right up to the point where they had this car chase shooty bit which I just couldn’t do. Fortunately I’ve just persuaded number one son to get past that bit for me (and the next massive boss fight) so that I can continue the battle.
Turns out that the Animal Crossing Lego sets are a satisfying build and make really nice models.
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.
Make your own programming language. Find out more here.