Urban wasteland
/Took a picture of a street near our house yesterday with the Rabbit. There are a few potholes I guess, but it is nowhere as dystopian as this…
Rob Miles on the web. Also available in Real Life (tm)
Took a picture of a street near our house yesterday with the Rabbit. There are a few potholes I guess, but it is nowhere as dystopian as this…
We had a very nice BBQ at home today. Perfect weather and plenty of ketchup. Apparently.
We took the Light Leak camera to the Humber Bridge today and took some leaky pictures. The one at the top shows the original shot with no leaks. The one in the middle has “benefitted” from a single pixel yellow light leak. The one at the bottom got a blue light leak from the entire pixel row.
I’m very pleased how these have come out. I need to work a bit on the level of the light. It turns out that colours which use more than one led are much brighter (who knew?).
This is what the Rabbit thought of our TV while we watched the Olympics opening ceremony
Made a little menu system for the leaky camera system today. It lets you bind Python methods to button presses and seems to work quite well. I’m using the lovely Pico Display from Pimoroni. I’ve got one of the very original ones, which doesn’t seem to work with their current Button code. It took me a while to discover this, what with my policy of always assuming that if something doesn’t work it is my fault. Anyhoo, it now works and will be going on GitHub soon.
They don’t actually put the eggs straight on the tray…
Went out for a drink at our favourite coffee shop today. Took the Rabbit and grabbed a magic picture. I think it has captured the essence of place quite well.
I was hoping that the Rabbit could tell me exactly what kind of pattern this is.
We had a nice Hardware Meetup tonight. We’ve made some patterns that could be used by a robot to determine where it is. It seems to nearly work, which is nice.
I’ve put my Minox Cassettes on Thingiverse so you can download them and have a go at printing your own cassettes. You can find my other Minox resources here.
It would have been so cool if this had been what you could buy
Today we had to head home, but before we got on the train we took a look in a few places, including the Microsoft Experience Centre on Regent Street. If you are ever in that part of town it is worth a look. They have all the new Microsoft machines on show (including the latest laptops and tablets with CoPilot) and upstairs they have a lovely gaming display including the original X-Box which was unveiled when the console was announced. This is interesting because it really is a giant X (see above). We had a look around the back and it has all the connections so, in theory it should be possible to plug it in and play it. They had lots of other XBoxes too plus a range of games and accessories.
this is about the best I could do on the day. Turns out that racing cars are hard to photograph
Formula E is a bit like Formula 1, except that the cars are powered by electricity and sound a bit like turbocharged hair driers. We went to the final event of the season in London today. We watched the practice, the qualifier and finally the race. In between these we wandered around looking at stands in the exhibition attached to the race, watched a mini-concert from Craig David and generally had an all-out wonderful time. I took a camera and the Rabbit R1.
I took a bunch of pictures with a proper camera, and lots with the Rabbit R1. I was lucky because for some reason we had good mobile phone connections and the Rabbit was able to take the shots and do “Magic Camera” type things with them. I really like the results. They are not photographs in the proper sense of the word, but they provide a lovely record of the event and I’m very pleased to have them. And if you bear in mind that a Rabbit R1 is a fraction of the price of a new camera lens I reckon it is a good investment if you want a quirky record of what you’ve been up to.
This is what the rabbit thought of the race
Some of the racing got quite intimate
A “Rabbit’s Eye View” of one of the cars on display
The Racers
Yes, there was a Costa
Tyre smoke at the start
From now on I’m going to be taking the Rabbit R1 with me to get its unique perspective.
This is what the Rabbit made of it
This is slightly more conventional
Today we were up early and heading for Hyper Japan, a celebration of all things Japanese. It was wonderful. Stalls with video games, figures, clothing, and all kinds of other stuff. We had a walk around, had a great lunch (a first time with squid for me) and then had another walk around. There was some splendid cosplay and loads of stands. Plus cars. I took a few pictures
Of course there was bonsai
Nice Car
Not sure what these are, but they sure are cute
I took a picture from the train with the Rabbit
We’ve planned this little jaunt for weeks. We’re heading for London to take in a few sights, along with HyperJapan and the Formula-E finals. Very excited.
The first image came out completely white owing to too much exposure
Above is the first successful test of the leaky camera. I fired the LEDS in red for a tiny amount of time and was rewarded with a nice red picture. I’m pleased that the colour seems fairly even. Now I have to get the camera itself working and then I can find out what happens if we add this to an existing picture. Rather exciting.
The PICO on the side of the camera controls the brightness and colour of the led lights
What kind of an idiot puts lights inside a camera? Er, this kind of idiot (and also Fuji Film with their Instax Mini 99). I was converting another Polaroid Land camera to use Instax film (it’s a thing - believe me) and I wondered what would happen if I put some leds inside and exposed the film a bit with them. Well, today I built the first version. I’m using a PICO with a little LCD panel to control a row of Neopixels inside the camera. I’m not sure how well this will work, and what level of exposure is required, but I’m going to enjoy finding out.
This is what the rabbit thought the boad looked like at the end. Note the cheating three-handed player on the bottom left.
Stationfall is a board game that plays out on a space station falling from orbit to the ground. On board are a totally motley crew, each with their own agenda. Some want everyone to survive. Some want everyone to perish. Some just want to have fun (or so it seems). When the game starts nobody knows which game players are assigned which game characters, and players can use their influence to move any of the characters and make them do things (for example release deadly killing machines from quarantine at a really annoying moment).
I think we are going to have to have another go at this because there was a lot of stuff to take in at the start. But we all did enough to agree that it is good back-stabbing fun.
Not sure if this is a life tip, but it is a good tip nonetheless. We spent a big chunk of today arranging a funeral (helped by the wonderful Kelly from the Co-op). This was made much easier because my father-in-law had taken the very sensible step of making clear exactly what he wanted to happen and sorting it all out in advance. Doing this really helps those that are carrying on.
Spent the afternoon watching a Spanish chap win Wimbledon and the evening watching the Spanish football team win the European Cup. Truly a good day to be Spanish.
This is what the Rabbit thought of the menu
Another trip to Leeds to day for a birthday bash. Had a Most Excellent meal at Hickory’s Adel. My menu tip: go for the frozen custard. It’s awesome.
I suppose it might just be me, but I really enjoy programming. I spent a big chunk of today writing code to drive stepper motors from MicroPython and I had a whale of a time.
We’ve got all kinds of activities and stuff planned for the next few weeks and we know that Rodney would have wanted us to keep going. So we are doing, starting with a trip to Leeds today. As is the way, I bought a new lens (although it wasn’t that expensive - honest). This one is an F 3.5 35-105mm zoom lens for my Pentax A which I’m presently using to take colour photos. Turns out it works a treat, as the picture above shows.
This is a blog mostly about frothy fun stuff and tech with bits of hardware and jokes alongside the occasionally useful aside. But every now and then real life intrudes. My father-in-law Rodney passed away on the 10th of July at the great age of 94, with his family by his side. He was a splendid fellow and will be sorely missed. I’m going to take a break from blogging for a little while as we deal with this, but I will be back..
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.
A proper developer conference in Hull. Find out more here.