Hull PPE Facebook Group for Covid19
/If you’re in Hull, have a 3D printer and want to get in on the visor making action there’s a lovely Facebook group you can join here.
Rob Miles on the web. Also available in Real Life (tm)
If you’re in Hull, have a 3D printer and want to get in on the visor making action there’s a lovely Facebook group you can join here.
I dropped off a few test visors at Dove House Hospice today (with some stickers). I gave them a call and they said that they would find them useful. They do fantastic work. It amazes me (in a bad way) that services as important to the community as this are not routinely provided by the health service. But they aren’t, and so Dove House has to exist as a charity, depending on donations (which have dried up a lot recently). If you can help I know they’d appreciate anything you can give them.
They were very pleased to have them and so I’m going to just keep Una the Ultimaker printing them out and I’ll drop some more round when they are ready.
I’ve been self-isolating now for a couple of days and so I now feel that I have acquired sufficient experience to be able to give out a few tips to you, dear reader. After all, it is only a matter of time before you have to do it too.
My biggest tip so far is to do something that I’ve been doing for a while anyway. When I stopped having a “proper” day job a few years ago I found that it was hard to focus on things that I was working on. So now I have a diary that I fill in every day. Some of the items are under headings for particular projects, but others are just things that I want to keep track of having done. If I have a bunch of things that need to be done I put them on the day as a series of bullet points and then tick them off when complete. I then carry any left overs onto the following day.
I find that this gives a nice structure to what I’m doing and means that I can see what I’ve achieved going forwards. I’m sure there are some good programs for this (what I really want is one that I can use to tag items to make it easy to search for entries on a particular topic) but for now I’m just using a Microsoft Word document. I keep the master copy on OneDrive so that I can update and view it on any platform, including the phone.
I’ve found it very useful in real life too. I don’t have to try and remember when I ordered those tickets or whatnot, I just look up the event in the diary. And of course when historians want to find out just when the great Rob Miles did all his mighty deeds they will have just one place to look…
I thought that the Facebook Portal TV was an interesting device when it came out, but at the time I didn’t think that I had a particularly good reason to own one. That changed this week, with the prospect of spending a while unable to meet up with people in person. So I’ve got one.
It works rather well. You clip it to the top of your TV and plug it into your TV and the mains adaptor and away it goes. One real annoyance is that it needs an HDMI cable to connect to the TV but one is not supplied in the box. Facebook are not selling this device cheaply, and to leave out a crucial cable is just annoying penny pinching.
The setup is easy (although the firmware update took ages) and the calling to other Portal owners works smoothly. You can call people via Facebook Messenger or Whatsapp. Since the device is made by Facebook (the clue is in the name) I think it is unlikely that they will be adding Skype or Zoom capability in the future. But what there is works well. And there is Amazon Alexa integration too which is a strange inclusion, but works well. There is even a little speaker in the Portal itself so you can hear responses without having to turn your TV on.
The camera will try to find the people in the room and frame the image around them. It is not a particularly high resolution device and when it zooms in the picture can get a little bit blocky. It also has an annoying habit of occasionally heading for interesting wallpaper patterns or book cover that it finds interesting but in general it works very well. Audio is picked up by a bunch of 7 microphones and is quite clear.
There are some very neat Augmented Reality features on show with the “Story Time” applications. These let one party in a call read a story to everyone else with animated graphics and sound. Sometimes the narrator is given a dynamic costume or mask overlay in the story which is both impressive and amusing. There are also a bunch of fun environments that you can overlay on your room and a picture frame mode that you can use to view photos.
As a way of keeping in touch with family it works very well. We’ve had a few calls drop out, but this is not necessarily something we can blame the Portal for.
The biggest problem that I’ve had with it is that it is a very “needy” HDMI device. Plug it into a TV and turn it on and it will automatically tell the TV to connect. This is useful if you want to just switch to an incoming call, but at the end of the conversation it will frequently refuse to give you your TV back. You end up having to manually select the TV input which makes using it a bit more fiddly than it needs to be.
The fact that the device is produced by Facebook is mildly concerning, although I’ve always thought that a faceless multinational corporation with thousands of shareholders might not be entirely on my side anyway. If they can find a way of making commercial use of what happens in my living room then good luck to them. I’ll live with the lack of privacy for now. And later, when we can go and see people in person I might relegate it to the spare room. But for now I think its usefulness outweighs the risk.
If you’re really concerned about your privacy you can cover over the camera with a little shutter and press a button to turn off the microphones.
If you can get one I reckon they are a good buy. Having a call on your TV does really seem to open up a window into the world of the person you are calling. I think the smaller devices are less compelling; if I want a small device to make video calls then I’ll take a look at the Echo Show.
These are the strangest times that I can remember. And I go back a long way. Today we discovered that one of our family was showing some symptoms that meant that we have to go into “self isolation” mode. The good news is that self-isolation doesn’t stop you from sitting in front of a computer for multiple hours a day, and so I think I’ll be just fine.
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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