consistent eclecticism

When Mood Music
2005-08-13 20:34:00 content Astronomy Domine-Pink Floyd-Ummagumma

Er, I seem to have had a mad moment in the iTunes music store last night: When I woke up this morning, some music was nestling on my laptop:

The Stranglers

  • Rattus Norvegicus (1977)
  • No More Heroes (1977)
  • Black and White (1978)

Pink Floyd

Stiff Little Fingers

tales from Leckie-la-la-land

When Mood Music
2005-08-12 21:07:00 drained Mr Hankey the christmas poo-Cowboy Timmy-Mr Hankey’s Christmas Classics

Today was possibly the most emotionally draining day yet at the fun-palace we know as Leckie Towers. There’s probably no point in reading this because the only thing more tedious than reading it would have been living through it!

Our production director had set a target of my team getting files for 40 books (of 70 in this project) finished by our repro-house and into our printer’s hands by the end of today. (That was silly enough since the raw manuscripts for some books only arrived on my desk this week.) As of close of play last night, we had signed off on 33 and the final changes to another 7 had been posted by Special Delivery to arrive at the repro-house this morning.

First hassle: the production director emails to say that only 25 sets of files had arrived at the printer so far: what’s happened to the other 8? Then my immediate boss (who is a very decent bloke) phoned to ask if I knew what was going on and which 8 were missing. I was a bit baffled by his request: how can I tell what X has posted to Y unless I am X! As far as I could tell, only 4 could still be en route from repro-house to printer: the other 29 should have been posted the day before yesterday or earlier and so should already be at the printer.

So I made a quick check through my records for proof that we had indeed signed off 33, and then contacted the repro-house. It turned out that 8 sets of files (4 for books that had been signed off yesterday and 4 of the 10 that had been signed off the day before) were en route by Special Delivery to the printer, so they would arrive by lunchtime today.

Nevertheless (and as instructed by the director and my boss), I told the repro-house to FTP the files to the printer so we could be sure they would arrive today. The repro-house argued against FTPing, which wasted more time. It’s not as if they don’t regularly FTP files to printers. I insisted and my immediate boss diplomatically explained that we were their clients and that we had deadlines to make, so it wasn’t out of order to ask them to use an easily-available faster delivery system.

In the middle of this, the client for whom we publish these books phoned with final changes for a few more. I added these changes to those already noted by our proofreader, photocopied the pages that needed changes so we would have a means of checking that the repro-house implemented them correctly and packaged the changing pages to be posted to the repro-house.

So by noon I was sure that the 33 signed-off titles were at the printer to be able to go out for lunch, all the while hoping that the repro-house would now get on with the final changes to the other 7 books they would have received. A lunch-time appointment with my bank was interspersed by my cellphone voicemail trying to give me yesterday’s news. I would have turned the cellphone off but I had told the repro-house and my colleagues to call me if any further hassles occurred. At my bank, I learned that business deposit accounts pay hardly any more interest than the the cheque account in which the Community Council’s £27,000 currently resides. Considering the major hassle I’ve had setting up an account for the local Fairtrade campaign and changing the signatories on the CC’s two current accounts, I’m not going to bother moving the cash anywhere. I also learnt a lot about mini-cash ISAs and maxi-ISAs.

Back to Leckie Towers: just when I got back, I remembered that today is one of my team’s 28th birthday. He went off for lunch and then I got the other member of my team (that’s right: 3 of us produce 70 books in 3 or 4 months!) to nip out and purchase the a suitable choccy cake and card. Around now, proofs of the final changes for two more books spewed out of the printer that is networked to our repro-house (who are in Suffolk). One one set of proofs, all the final changes had been done correctly but the repro-house had missed some changes on another. By the time I’d checked this, my other colleague had returned bearing bearing birthday supplies, so I got her to phone the repro-house and diplomatically explain where they had erred and that they were to ensure fresh, correct proofs had to arrive this afternoon.

Then I photocopied the repro-house proofs so we would have something to check the printer’s proofs against, emailed the repro-house to say they should FTP this book’s files to the printer and packaged the signed-off proofs to post to the printer. Also, a proofreader had delivered more proofs she had checked so I booked them in, ready to add in any other changes the client might want and the client phoned with yet more changes to another two books.

Next thing, the printer that’s networked to our repro-house started spewing out what they thought were the finished versions of final changes to another 5 titles. Part of the joy of working this way is that pages arrive in random order. If the repro-house sends several titles sequentially through their software and thence to the networked printer, then all the books get mixed up too. So my colleagues and I separated the pages into the different titles, sorted them into order and checked whether the final changes had all been done. On 2 they had: some pages for another hadn’t come through and some changes on the other two had been missed.

So another round of phoning the repro-house to tell them what they’d missed and that they were to put it right this afternoon. My immediate boss then phoned to say that that the repro-house had complained to the production director that we were sending them new changes. Not true (except for 2 tiny changes): the vast majority were where they had missed clearly marked-up changes the first time round. I suspect my immediate boss then phoned both the production director and the repro-house to calm them.

A wee pause ensued. My colleagues who haven’t been involved in this project had emptied their offices so that they could move to new offices in Edinburgh. Our finance manager, administrator/receptionist and two dispatch/customer-service colleagues are hanging on here with my team until the bitter end but the publishing team are away. I tidied up the cables and other bits they’d left left behind and tried not to be affected by the near-empty Leckie Towers. After all, I’ve worked here full-time for only 11 years, preceded by 3 years of part-timing during the latter stages of my PhD. I’m so looking forward to commuting to Edinburgh for the next few months!

Around 4pm, new versions of the pages our repro-house hadn’t previously got right started coming through: back to checking, signing off, photocopying, posting and recording progress in a spreadsheet and a word document. Around 4:20 all but 2 books had been signed off and it was time for choccy cake. More fun and games getting “birthday-boy” out of the way while other colleagues gathered and candles were lit. Then I called my colleague down to our meeting room by saying that more proofs were emerging. As he came downstairs, true enough, more proofs arrived. We ignored them for 20 minutes of calm and calories, then my team and I went back to checking, etc, while all but one of the rest of our colleagues finished for the day. My dispatch/customer-service colleague took the signed-off proofs to the post office and then he too finished for the week.

Around 5pm, the lead worker on this project at the repro-house phoned to ask whether the titles we’d signed off had been actually been signed off. I’d erred and emailed the sign-offs to her boss, not directly to her. I confirmed that all but one title had been signed off. This took much longer than should have necessary because our email system can take up to 3 minutes to open an email – or any other file – on our local server. (It’s in the room next to my office and is reputedly connected by 100baseT ethernet, although it often feels like it’s serving files by semaphore through a white-out. Step forward any Windows 2K or Microsoft Exchange experts who can offer a solution, please before I put my boot through the Dell box that claims to be a decent server!)

Around 5:30 the final corrected page arrived. Birthday-colleague had left for the evening – he has a 90-minute drive to his home. I phoned my immediate boss to let him know we’d made the target and emailed the repro-house to confirm they had done all that was needed today and that they could FTP this final book’s files to the printer and up while my remaining colleague photocopied the proofs and packaged them for me to post tomorrow. She then departed and I updated my records, then emailed a sitrep to my team, my immediate boss and the production director and emailed the repro-house’s ‘to-do’ list for the weekend.

I took a final look around Leckie Towers and came home, almost in tears. The difference between yesterday and today was that these were tears of relief, not tears of mourning for my laptop or from stress.

I’m going to work tomorrow morning to check any more ‘final’ versions that our repro house might get done tomorrow and to post out any first proofs to proofreaders and our client, then I’m going to get hammered!

mutter mumble

When Mood Music
2005-08-10 23:44:00 sleepy Paranoid Eyes-Pink Floyd-The Final Cut

Life goes on its usual round, namely work and Community Council getting in the way of other things I need to do (and as for thing things I want to do…)

Today was a good example:

  1. no lunch (a) cos I’m a fat git, (b) cos stuff coming in thick and fast.
  2. Got out around 6:30.
  3. Went to local store.
  4. I have no cash on me and their card machine accepts neither my credit card nor my switch card.
  5. panic-struck phonecalls to bank and credit card company confirm that I have the amount of cash in the bank that I’d calculated and under £100 owing to the credit card.
  6. home, “cook” a quick sausage sandwich
  7. trudge to CC meeting, where we discuss yet again how to sort the Hon Cit scheme so that the Jack Nicklaus scenario has much less chance of recurring.
  8. Since this is only a committee meeting, we can’t make any decisions, just recommendations to full CC
  9. Then we discuss other stuff but again, can’t come to decisions.
  10. Then Chair, Secretary and I launch into paperwork to do with one of our bank accounts
  11. This reminds me I still haven’t replaced the main account’s signatory who has resigned from CC
  12. Finally escaoe before 10.30

Now I’m home, trying to sort out other random crap but seeming no nearer to being ready for the massive changes that are coming up. Oh well, maybe some sleep will help. G’night

difficult come, easy go

When Mood Music
2005-08-05 00:55:00 sleepy Paranoid Eyes-Pink Floyd-The Final Cut

I wrote my second-biggest cheque ever tonight: £1850·04 for the new boiler. All that remains now is for me to paint the surrounds.

(The biggest cheque I ever wrote was for £2300: the deposit on Mycelium Mansion.)

Why do I feel so underwhelmed?

Human Virus Scanner

When Mood Music
2005-07-26 23:39:00 content Devon-Dr. Didg-Out Of The Woods

Viruses I suffer from.

Virus Cure Bruce says
Sci-fi Stop wearing the stick-on ears. Mine are big enough without stick-ons
BBCB CTRL-Break, and get a real computer. Repeat: “Mode 7 was not a good thing.” Just cos I recognise the icons doesn’t mean I owned one! But Ewan did and he loved it at the time
British No need for cure. Benign virus. Hah! dual nationality rocks
Southampton Move to the Isle of Wight. Stuff that! My movement vector won’t terminate at Vectis for any reason
Politics Stop caring! I recognise the signifyers: I don’t like the signified.
Brand Names Having a well-known name doesn’t make it good.
Hippyism Free love is passé and potentially dangerous, and patchouli smells like cat piss. Too jaded to comment
Environmentalism Consume more stuff! It’s easier to buy new stuff than to recycle.

 

Viruses I might suffer from:

Virus Cure Bruce says
Linux Install the latest version of Microsoft Windows. Learn to love it. Just as soon as I’ve had a lobotomy and allowed Bill Gates to perform a walletectomy
Junkfood Eat some real food. Something which you can identify the source of every ingredient, not the point of manufacture. They all come from the big bang
Industrial Everyone likes folk. No, really. Maybe you should listen to the Incredible String Band.
Religion Read God’s Debris by Scott Adams (yes, the Dilbert guy)
Discordia Buy a suit. Invest your money. Eat hotdog buns on a friday. Robert Anton Wilson is RAW
X11 I hear Mac OS 10 Aqua is nice at this time of year. Just cos it’s unix under the hood doesn’t mean I have to be a complete propellorhead
Computer Games Stop staring at the screen and get some fresh air. You should see a doctor about the RSI in your thumbs. Recognition doesnot imply usage
Conspiracy Theory Face it, the elected government is in control. Actually that’s quite scary. After GWB’s first ‘victory’? I don’t think so
Macintosh Use a mouse with more than one button. All mice suck: get a graphics tablet
Prog Rock Long hair looks dumb with a bald spot. Listen to CDs: they don’t crackle.

far to late at night for rational comment

When Mood Music
2005-07-20 02:07:00 content The Post War Dream-Pink Floyd-The Final Cut
Bi/Slightly Straight
You scored 8 (-52 being completely gay, 0 being bisexual, and 52 being completely straight)
For the most part, you are bisexual. You have a slight preference for the opposite gender, but either gender would suit you. If you are sexually inexperienced, it is possible that this will change after you do some experimenting.

 

My test tracked 1 variable How you compared to other people your age and gender:

"free "free
You scored higher than 40% on Orientation

 

Link: The Sexuality Spectrum Test written by tall_man_54 on Ok Cupid

Interstellar impulse drive

When Mood Music
2005-07-17 02:47:00 content The Post War Dream-Pink Floyd-The Final Cut

This entry is as long as Voyager‘s journey home…

Well, a lot of stuff has happened since I last posted. I’ll wibble about most it later (like when I’ve slept) but I’m pretty pleased to have my Pismo up and running – mostly.

You may recall that I bought the Pismo at the beginning of the year for £200. This seemed a bargain because they tend to sell for over £300. However, the vendor posted it with a CD in the CD/DVD-ROM drive. This may well be the cause of this drive ceasing to function within an hour of receipt. Emails to the vendor proved fruitless and so I was stuck until gave me a suitable CD-ROM drive which at least allowed me to install OS9 and other software. I was also able to use an external CD-RW via a SCSI/PC card I’d bought ages ago in preparation for when I’d be able to obtain a Pismo.

I then bought a wireless card which turned out only to work under OSX (or Windows) and a new power cable because the cable that came with my Pismo was broken. I also bought a docking station on eBay and a second-hand 30GB hard disk, a bit more RAM and a second-hand CD/DVD-ROM drive from Powerbook Fanatic.

However a couple of misfortunes occurred: I couldn’t take the housing off the dead CD/DVD-ROM drive to fit it on the new one and something stopped the battery from charging. The new power lead was giving out the right voltage so I became quite concerned that I’d fried something when installing the RAM and hard disk. At this point my boiler died: arranging to borrow money, getting quotes and other related impedimenta took far longer than desirable.

One result of having to borrow an exact number of thousands of pounds meant I had a little spare to sort the Pismo. So I sent her off to Powerbook Fanatic. More delay because electronic funds transfer took a week rather than the day both of us expected. (The funds were transferred to his account but his bank wouldn’t let him access the cash!) The week before last he got hold of the cash and so was able to buy the needed bits… My Pismo rejected several CD/DVD-ROM drives before he found one that behaved. I also bought an 80GB 5200 RPM hard drive (so I could use the 30GB as a back-up), more RAM and a real Apple wireless card that would work under OS9 and OSX.

So last Friday my baby came back to me. The wireless card works as expected (I’m sat in bed typing this, unplugged from everything but a power socket), the gigabyte of RAM is very welcome and the 30GB backup disk works fine (if a little slowly through the Pismo’s USB 1.1 ports). However, the CD/DVD-ROM drive is not fixed! It plays DVDs (apart from Being John Malkovich) but doesn’t mount music, original data or burnt data CDs.

Then a few crashes under OS9 messed up the hard disk so that I had to format and reinstall from scratch. I found that installing any OS via the CD drive doesn’t install DVD software. I could install OS9 with DVD software via ethernet from my desktop Mac but the OSX installer CDs have to be run from the machine they’re installing.

I’ve copied the DVD software from my desktop Mac and it seems to work. However I can’t play CDs in the CD/DVD-ROM drive and OSX doesn’t support hot-swapping of drive modules. (OS9 does!) Instead swapping over the drives necessitates a shut-down. This is rather annoying so the drive is going back to Powerbook Fanatic for a final try. It behaved in his powerbooks so I suspect that either my Pismo or I are doing something wrong.

In the meantime, I can revel in the following:

as bought as of now
optical drive not working CD-ROM or DVD-ROM
RAM 128MB 1GB (1024MB)
hard drive second-hand 10 GB, 4400 RPM brand-new 80GB, 5400 RPM plus second-hand 30GB 4400 RPM in external USB enclosure
networking/internet ethernet and modem ethernet, modem and wireless
add-ons graphics tablet, docking station, SCSI card, wireless card that works under both MacOSes

Upgrade steps left:

  1. Get the CD/DVD-ROM drive repaired.
  2. If it can’t be repaired, replace it urgently with a brand-new CD/DVD-RW drive.
  3. If it can be repaired, the replacement will happen after 31st December 2005.
  4. Move up to OSX Tiger (MacOS 10.4)
  5. Upgrade the processor to 900MHz.
  6. Sell my desktop Mac to retro-fund some of this.

Even without these, my Pismo rocks: enough RAM and a big enough disk never to choke and I finally get to watch Pink Floyd Live at Pompeii in bed.