Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Why is it that…

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

… I always seem to pick the expensive hobbies? Seriously. Sailing, skiing and shooting are the three primary sports in which I participate. None of these sports come cheap – both in terms of costs associated with purchasing boats/skis/guns, but in actually doing the sport – you need to pay for mooring and fuel costs for boats, you have to pay for flights and accommodation when you go skiing and you have to pay for cartridges and other costs when shooting.

I’ve recently taken up photography as a new hobby – if one shoots with a digital camera, the cost of a new camera is more often than not over £500 for a half-decent one. Let’s not even think about the lenses, which can easily sell for multiple hundreds of pounds for relatively “basic” models, and over £1000 for the “pro” models. If one shoots film, one has to pay for film and development costs. These all add up in a big way (not to mention the cost of the high-end film cameras – especially MF (Medium-Format) cameras).

One “hobby” I’ve been involved in since a really young age is reading. Okay, so at first glance reading isn’t that expensive. But when you’re finishing a £6-8 novel every other day or so (as I tend to do during the holiday season when I attempt to take a break from computers), it gets really fucking expensive. Since coming back from Aberystwyth on the 19th July (less than two weeks ago), I’ve read £73.91 worth of books. That’s almost three quarters of a hundred pounds. My wallet is crying (as is my bank account). It doesn’t help that I have another £49.95 worth of books on order… And that’s for five books alone.

I think my main issue is the fact that I like to buy my own physical books. And I like them to be new. This leads to two major problems:

  1. I can’t buy books second-hand (well, I can. I just don’t want to and would probably refuse to do so)
  2. I can’t borrow books from the library (see above)
  3. I can’t read eBooks (they “feel” wrong)

Buggeration. Anyone want to recommend some cheaper hobbies for me? Pretty please?

On a side note, I’m starting the Infinite Summer project when my copy of the book arrives tomorrow (albeit about a month and a bit behind schedule), Infinite Jest is apparently about 1000 pages long and relatively difficult to read. Hopefully this means I’ll put buying new books on the backburner for a wee while – especially as I’ll have another 3 books to finish after it.

Explaining my planned move to a Mac.

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

As most of you probably know, about 2 months ago, I retired from Gentoo. I have been using Fedora as my “distribution of choice” on my laptop since that time, and I have been very impressed with it on the whole.

However, there have been a number of niggles which have been putting me off using Linux for a laptop. It’s highly likely that less “advanced” users wouldn’t experience the same issues I’ve been having, but none the less. I’ll outline the issues I’ve been having, then expand upon each of them in turn.

  • Photo management software (F-Spot) is not particularly feature-rich, is slow and relatively buggy
  • Need to fiddle around with things to get, for example, VPN connections working
  • Hibernate/suspend doesn’t work
  • Not much in the way of “set and forget” backup solutions

Although F-Spot does what it needs to do (mostly), it is extremely basic, and doesn’t offer solutions such as colour curve adjustment, converting images to black and white, scaling images, cropping images, and so on (unless I’ve missed something). It also doesn’t allow you to organise your photos quite as well as other photo management software, such as Aperture and Lightroom. I discovered a bug in my installation, which left both the F-Spot developers and me scratching our heads: attempting to export photos to Flickr crashes F-Spot if I launch it from Gnome’s menu. If I launch it from the terminal, I have no such issues… The options haven’t changed, and I can’t work out any way to pipe the error messages from when I launch it from Gnome’s menu to a file…

I use the VPN functionality quite a bit these days to connect to the University’s VPN whilst not on the University network. Although I have managed to get the VPN working thanks to one of my friends, I had to fiddle around with adding and modifying keys in the GConf editor, which I really should not have had to do. It might be possible to do it all through NetworkManager’s interface (I know that some of the options were available in the “Advanced Settings” dialog), but it was still a nuisance to sort it all out (and it was also undocumented. DO NOT WANT.)

Hibernate and suspend do not work on my ThinkPad T61. I’d suspect that this has something to do with using discreet nVidia graphics, but I would still like such features to work out of the box. I’ve had this laptop since Feb ‘08, and I’ve *still* not managed to get it working. With the MacBook Pros, you can just close it and wander off: everything just works.

Linux doesn’t really have a “set and forget” backup system such as Time Machine. With Time Machine, you set it up to backup to $external_harddisk, and it does it all for you. You just plug your MacBook in, and it automatically starts backing up in the background. You don’t have to think about it at all until you need it, at which point, you just fly back in time through their shiny interface, and you’re sorted. It really is quite nice.

I guess that I’m just “shifting” my expectations somewhat now that I’ve been at university for a year. At the beginning of the year, I was happy to fiddle around with things to get them to work. I was happy to make tarballs and scp or rsync them to remote locations to back things up. I was using Gentoo, and happy to sit through long compiles and reinstalls. Now, though, I just want things to work. I don’t want to have to fiddle around with obscure settings to make it work. I don’t want to have to sit through long compiles. I guess I want to be able to use my computer for what I want to use it for, without being side-tracked along half a dozen different mini-projects to be able to complete my main goal.

On top of that, Macs are shiny. I think that the Apple LED Cinema Display which has been designed specifically to go with the MacBook Pro is amazing, and just perfect for what I want. It allows me to compromise on the display resolution on the MacBook Pro itself (the MacBook Pro has a 13″ screen which operates at 1280×800. I’m a huge fan of portability, so I want to get the smallest model I can.), as I can just plug it in to instantly upgrade my resolution.

I think I shall probably write a number of blog posts about the software which I currently use and compare it to what I plan to use. Doing so should help me confirm the “upgrade route” I’m going to take, and how I’m going to manage my files and hobbies.

Home, Rotterdam, Home and Photography

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

So I came back home from Aberystwyth on the 4th April. I apparently now have a sofa in my room, and there’s another one downstairs… This is new. But anyway, I must digress! Kate is into photography quite a bit, as is another good friend of mine, Steffy. So I decided that I’d jump on the bandwagon and get snapping! Admittedly with a film SLR which they started manufacturing in around… 1975 – the Olympus OM-2n. The camera works well, and I found it with a 50mm f/1.8 lens…

So, off to Rotterdam I went! Steffy and RhiRhi almost didn’t make it, because Steffy bought the tickets for the wrong month… But we all made it over in the end, they just had to get a different ferry home, which was fine. Steffy enjoyed eyeing up my Olympus OM-2n, and he brought along some film for me to use in it. So I started taking a couple of photos on the ferry, and decided to save the rest of my film for Rotterdam.

Rotterdam itself was good fun! We stayed at a 5-star hotel: I was with Kate, RhiRhi and Steffy had a room, and fragalot and slightlymad had a room too. Service was excellent :) We went to the zoo on the second day, and I took plenty of photos there, some of which I deemed Flickr-worthy, and uploaded on there. Some… weren’t so good, but overall, I’m quite pleased! I really, really enjoyed the stay, especially spending time with Kate. I think a good time was had by all :)

Just before I went to Rotterdam, I went on eBay and purchased a 35mm f/2.8 lens to play around with. Steffy reckons I’ve got an eye for architecture, and that I’m quite good at portraits, so I’ll probably be focusing mostly on those two genres. I got my hands on the 35mm last night, but am out of film… I’ll probably buy a roll later today, and take some photos in Aldeburgh later on. I have 5-odd rolls of film being delivered on Monday, some colour, some B&W, all of varying speed. So I’ll be able to experiment with different ISO speeds, different exposure times, and different aperture sizes… should be fun! I do however, make no promises as to the quality of my photos… :P

Oasis

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

Is waaaaaay too addictive. Seriously. Narcissus and I cleaned out my room yesterday evening, and there were twenty two bottles of Oasis in my room. >.<

I think I should stop drinking Oasis, but it’s just too nice! :( And it tastes much nicer than water. I don’t care what additives it has, it’s just… nomnomnom!

Update: It’s 3 days later, and I currently have something between 7-9 bottles of Oasis in my room. Fail.