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Random stuff, randomly updated.

Archive for May, 2006

Absorbant and yellow and porous is he

Sunday, May 28th, 2006

Yup… I have to admit it. I’ve been watching a lot of Spongebob Squarepants lately. Yes, really. Stop laughing.

Seriously though, it’s one of those cartoons, like Animaniacs or Rocko’s Modern Life which is for more than just kids. There’s certainly plenty of slapstick and sillyness for kids to enjoy, but I can’t help but feel a lot of the jokes would pass kids by, but adults get them and laugh anyway. I love how the show mixes the odd bits of ‘live’ video with the animation too, sometimes in the same scene, other times flicking back and forth. It’s a nice concept, and it works well. The characters are good – there’s a depth to them that many other cartoons miss.
I saw The Spongebob Squarepants Movie the other day too, and was pleased to see it was basically a long normal episode – often when something is made into a film it loses something, but the movie was just as funny.

It really is great. Go watch it now!

Stringy II

Saturday, May 27th, 2006

Yesterday, during a rather energetic strumming session, I managed to break a string on my acoustic guitar. I wasn’t overly surprised as I hadn’t changed the strings for some time. It was starting to have the “elastic bands over a shoe box” sound that often happens when they get old.

I didn’t have any spare strings, so I went and bought some new Elixir strings. I thought I’d give the guitar a little clean too whilst I was at it. I considered shoving a vacuum cleaner into the soundhole as there was a lot of fluff and dust accumulating in there, but I gave it a quick go with the air duster instead.

I started putting the strings on, one by one. I was winding them all up fairly slack, when I got to the high E string. I started winding it, but it was making an odd noise. I wound a little more and then – it snapped. I sat and stared at it for a little while, then realised quite how annoyed I was at having done that. Unfortunately, the Elixir strings aren’t sold seperately, so I either had to find another E string of a similar gauge, or replace the whole set. Having spent £13 on the set I had, I didn’t fancy doing that, so I found an old string in the drawer I’d never used. Luckily, it has gone on OK, and sounds fine, so I’m not too worried.

After I’d sorted everything out, I had a look at the string I’d broken and it looks a lot like I managed to twist it when I was winding it on, the net result being that when I’d added some tension to the string, it bent the twist and snapped. So it was my stupid fault for not looking at what I was doing. Even so, I was still annoyed at having done it. It’ll teach me to look what I’m doing!

Irony? I Hope So!

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

Last night was the final of the 51st Eurovision Song Contest. The last couple of years have been a bit disappointing in terms of entries, but this year saw a better spread of acts and song genres than before. The UK entry was OK – it felt like a Eurovision song, but not a winner. Lithuania’s “We are the winners” was fantastic though. I loved how optimistic/arrogant it was compared to every body else’s song. Still, it was a catchy song. Finland’s entry with the heavy metal band Lordi was quite interesting, especially considering a few days prior to the contest people in both Finland and Greece were campaigning to have them removed for being ‘satanic’. They didn’t seem any more or less satanic than any other band there in my mind. Just a bunch of people in funny masks and costumes really. Overall though, this year’s contest was a good one.

The Great Shoe Chase

Sunday, May 14th, 2006

I’ve been looking for a couple of months new for a new pair of shoes. My work shoes failed a while back – the uppers split at the back from the heel. I tried to get them repaired but was told it wouldn’t really be possible to do. I wasn’t overly surprised, as although the split was clean, it was a bad place.

Since then I’ve been trying pretty much every shoe shop I can find. I remember when a town would have quite a few shoe shops – a major chain, a manufacturer store (Clarks usually) and a local independant. Nowadays that’s changed. Here at least, there’s Brantano, who are usually very good, but they don’t have anything I either like, that fits me, or is comfortable. Clarks have been hopeless, and the other option sells shoes that are so cheap they aren’t worth buying. I’ve been, admittedly, very picky about what I want – round-toed, chunky soles with a nice deep tread, and a decent support round the ankle. Very few places seem to have anything that really fits that requirement very well. I’ve tried here, High Wycombe and Milton Keynes, and found next to nothing so far. The closest I got was Barratts in Milton Keynes, but they were out of stock of my size.

I seem to be in a difficult size bracket. My feet are size 12 (UK size). Most places stock massive amounts of size 8 – 11, but 12 is usually very sparse. Clarks have next to nothing in size 12. The usual ‘oversize’ stockists tend to carry size 13 and above, as you can get 12s in ‘normal’ shops. It appears that size 12 is just on the edge of the mainstream sizes, and so hardly anybody seems interested in stocking it in great volumes.

So here I am, still sans-shoe, and getting increasingly frustrated with it all. I’ve emailed Barratts, as their website is useless, but I know their shop had what I wanted. Here’s hoping!

Bloaty

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

It amazes me how bad some software can be. I’ve seen all sorts of applications, utilities, drivers and other doodads and bits and bobs that can be installed. Some are very simple and slick, like uTorrent. It’s a single .EXE, it has no installer, and it just works from running it. It barely has much of a RAM footprint whilst running also, less than 10mb in my experience.

Others are comprehensive, but worth the space, such as Microsoft Office 2003. It takes a fairly reasonable slice of space and does what it needs to do. Most of Office is shared core components. Adding or removing a single app (say Excel) will only be about 10mb, so you may as well just install the lot and have done. Office is a very capable suite of applications though and has a comprehensive set of features, so is worthy of the space it uses. Each Office application uses a fair slice of RAM whilst running.

Once upon a time, applications were written to fit within very strict confines. Processor speed usually wasn’t a major factor, but memory certainly was. Early 8-bit computers had tiny amounts of ram, usually 64kb or 128kb. A fairly capable word processor could fit into that footprint, because the programmer knew the limitations, and made his application fit. With the onset of the 16-bit computer, larger amounts of memory were available, sometimes a whole megabyte! In some cases, such as the Apple Mac, or the Commodore Amiga, this could be used for graphics. Not many extra features were added, but the processes by which you could work with the application were better – WYSIWYG or point-and-click GUIs needed more memory and disk space to perform well, but programmers still knew the limitations. Even then, sometimes the user had to find memory for themselves. Many Amiga games would only run from their own boot disks – running Workbench in the background used too much RAM. Similarly the PC only had 640k base memory, which most often a game or application would use most of, and that was without any CD-ROM drivers or sound drivers loaded.

Now were into a world of PCs with gigbytes of RAM. A realistic spec these days is a whole gigabyte of RAM. The Operating System (OS), say Windows XP in this case, could be sitting in approximately 200mb of that. Other applications will be sitting atop that – background bits and bobs. Some, like I mentioned earlier will be using just what they need. Others will be hanging onto whatever comes their way.

I noticed from looking at my system today that some apps are using silly amounts of RAM. I run Sophos Antivirus, and it’s core service SavService.exe is using 38mb of RAM. Quite for what, I don’t know. Some other apps I can understand why they use so much. iTunes is sitting in 33mb, which I think is reasonable; my library exported is a rather large XML file, so that, along with a lot of other meta data will be sitting in RAM, plus the GUI, graphics, and other bits to make it run.

Until recently, I was running the Nokia suite of applications for my phone. I only used it to pull the odd file off the phone now and then. I noticed that it started a handful of applications which sat resident in memory doing not a lot really. They added greatly to my boot time, and really didn’t do a great deal.

It appears that some big businesses are putting speed of producing apps, and how quickly they can add features ahead of the performance, reliability and resource requirements of the application. Some companies seem to forget that not everybody has a current spec PC. There’s a lot of people out there running £199 Dell special or Tesco computers, which really aren’t great specs. They choke under pressure, and seem to be a new trend. I have nothing major against these – if it opens up computers to more people than it’s a great thing, but what does worry me is the lack of understanding some project managers and companies have for good performance. I wouldn’t blame programmers directly as most are highly talented, but they are pushed so hard, they are churning out stuff they just don’t check, or apply much thought to. Here’s hoping it changes, but I somehow doubt it will.

Good news everybody!

Saturday, May 6th, 2006

I got this in an email the other day:

Hi guys,

We just wanted to let you know that Barenaked Ladies will be releasing a
new album later this year. This will be followed by a UK tour in mid-2007
with lots more happening in-between!

If you would like to know how you could be one of the first to hear the
new music – drop us a quick email back.

Thanks for your time – look forward to seeing you soon!

Steve, Jim, Ed, Kevin & Tyler

Barenaked Ladies http://www.bnlmusic.com

Short, sweet, and very cool! I’ll be watching my seetickets newsletters intently for the next year! There’s supposed to be an acoustic session in Toronto by the band soon, where they will play all the new songs. I’m hoping it’ll be recorded and put up on the live bootlegs site. I’ll be there with my download!

Fings

Tuesday, May 2nd, 2006

Not posted in a while. It’s not like I’ve been busy – there’s just been plenty on the TV.

I’ve yet to get the camera. I’ve found a good deal of a camera plus a load of extras, so I might have a look into that deal. Finding stock for this camera is hard – it seems pretty popular.

I had a few internet problems this evening. I couldn’t get online, and no amount of resetting the router made any difference. I eventually phoned Zen support, and they sorted it out in no time. Well – after a 20 minute wait listening to music, but the problem was fixed in no time. Apparently a strange issue with the exchange. It’s nice when things work out though!