ickledot is an ickle company
working and living in West Yorkshire. In Brontë
country, you might say. ickledot does graphic
design, digital imaging, writing and other
interesting stuff.
To my returning visitor in
Issy-les-Moulineaux (Google Analytics is so
useful). I am visiting your fair country
next week for my September break. Look out
Oleron! Tweets only from Saturday onwards.
So! The troubles grow in Thailand for former leader
and football fan Thaksin Shinawatra. As
protests become more intense in Bangkok, the
knock-on effects for the football club he
owns, Manchester City, are clear. A trivial
matter compared to the travails of a
country, obviously.
A wry smile from ickledot, however, as for the
second week running pundit Lee Dixon declared on
Match of the Day 2 that there was no better man
to be in charge of footballing matters in these
troubled times than City’s manager, Mark Hughes.
One cannot help thinking that the likelihood of
this crisis happening were plain to see when
Hughes took the job only a matter of weeks ago
and his ‘world-view’ radar may not be quite as
finely tuned as his football senses. The sensible
option might have been to remain in the
relatively secure waters of Blackburn. We shall
see.
A couple of days ago the BBC got their swimming
pundit and Bronze medal winner Steve Parry to
venture out into the crowds in Tiananmen Square
and report on proceedings. Unfortunately, he was
accompanied by a life-sized cut out of Michael
Phelps which had been in their studio throughout
the games. What fun ensued as an increasing
number of people began gathering round him,
mistaking him for Phelps, we were told. I suppose
it was a mildly amusing snippet of video to run
in between events.
By today, networks throughout the world must have
been running low on new angles to cover on the
Olympics, particularly as most events were over
and only there was only the closing ceremony to
come. So there was the BBC reporting on Parry’s
adventure once more, only this time with the
added twist that the story had been picked up by
one of the American networks and Parry was being
interviewed by what looked like a morning show
anchor team. For some reason they were trying to
get him to put on an American baseball cap,
presumably to see if he actually looked like
Phelps.
Talk about the media covering itself. BBC runs
the story. American channel picks it up. BBC
reports on American channel. Where will it end?
Rapidweaver 4.1 came out
yesterday and today there was RW 4.1.1. This
may have been as a result of some of the
problems pointed out by RapidIdeas whose post I
read this morning. Also, I decided to turn
off permalinks again. For some reason it
made all my posts appear as summaries which
I don’t really want.
Few tweaks tonight. Still more to do. Maybe a
little text on the home page to explain who we
are. Also turned on the permalinks. Tried this
before and everything stopped working. Here goes
once more.
Not too many people pass this way but those few
who have been here once and have returned for
some reason will notice a couple of changes.
Firstly, I have moved this blog off the home
page. Just wanted a pic or two to appear instead
of a load of text. Also, am trying out a new
design. It’s based on a Rapidweaver theme from
SeyDesign. Not getting
the best from it yet, but we’ll see how it
goes.
It’s difficult not to sound nationalistic, but
today’s successes for GB in the Olympics were
particularly exciting. Maybe it was due to us
having a few years where medals of any colour
have been a bit thin on the ground.
Particularly refreshing were the post-effort
interviews. First, they revealed just how much
effort and emotion had been expended, not only
during competition, but in the previous weeks and
often years and how much the subsequent reward,
the medal, was valued. In addition, whatever each
athlete lacked in interviewing technique was more
than made up for in sincerity. Having witnessed
the clipped comments of those pampered
premiership poseurs on Match of the Day last
night, it was so refreshing to hear it from the
heart for once.
Jus downloaded this latest offering from
the very nice people at Rapidweaver and posting
this using the very latest version of their
application of the same name. Am I one of
the first?
To celebrate, I am definitely, definitely going
to begin updating the website devoted to the
history of my local football club. As you can
see (but not for much
longer), it is desperately in need of
attention. And RW will be my weapon of
choice.
It’s finally been admitted. MobileMe was
launched too hastily, thereby causing much
confusion, inconvenience and a huge loss of
face for Apple. So when are they going to
get round to accepting that the problems
began with the crap name? Presumably it was
aimed at a younger generation, but surely
it’s too lacking in what constitutes ‘cool’
even for the most gullible teenager?
I realise they wanted something that did not
include the word ‘mac’ so as not frighten off the
PC crowd. But MobileMe is not the answer.
Hopefully, when all settles down and begins to
work smoothly, MobileMe will be quietly dragged
off to the place where bad tags go.
I’ve mentioned before how much talk there
is ths year of 1968. It’s as if those pundits who
were around then and remain today can hardly
believe it is all of forty years ago. This
morning there was an item on the Today programme
about the Prague spring, followed by the Russian
invasion of Czechoslovakia. For me this was a
stark reminder of a traumatic few days I spent in
Bridlington at the time when all this happened. I
was 11 and had only recently joined the St John
Ambulance Brigade - bit like the Scouts but with
bandages.
As with most other such organisations, a
highlight of the year was the summer camp.
Initially, this had seemed like a good idea to
me, and I remember being keen to go. On the day
of departure we were required to meet at Chester
Street bus station in the centre of Bradford. It
could have been the early start, or more likely
the fact that it was to be my first time away
without the family, but there were a few tears
were shed. Thankfully, this was done within the
privacy of home.
Don’t remember a great deal else about the trip
apart from going into Bridlington centre on the
bus to the cinema. And then came that news. The
Russians had invaded Czechoslovakia! There must
have been eight or nine boys of various ages in
our tent. Certainly I was one of the youngest.
The eldest must have been in their late teens,
and they immediately began speculating on the
events that would surely follow: World War Three
was imminent. The Americans would not tolerate
such behaviour and Britain would have to support
their allies. They would all be called up and
everyone was doomed! For the first time in my
life I was away from parental reassurance and if
these older boys were saying these things then
they must be right! I remember being petrified. I
might even have blubbed. In public this time.
On my return home, the adults didn’t seem so
bothered about the international crisis, perhaps
because that generation had seen it all before.
After a few days, my world returned to normal.
Not quite the same for those in Czechoslovakia, I
suspect.
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Spooks Spin-Off
12/08/08 08:04
Last comment on this programme. It doesn’t
deserve more. As one comment said on the BBC
site, the very fact that it’s on 3 is in itself a
kind of quality warning. Anyway, I watched the
recorded second episode last night, originally
shown on Sunday in a double bill with the opener.
It took a bit of a sinister turn. When the
goodies start doing violence, torture and being
first to shoot people, I worry. A negative
influence on the young? Probably not. I doubt
that many of the young will be watching it. Too
busy out enjoying themselves.
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TV Dilemmas (2)
11/08/08 06:55
Ended up watching Long Way Round ‘live’. I’ve
really come to like this repeated series. At
first I was somewhat sceptical, feeling that such
a high profile film star could go thrugh true
adventure and danger a la Ted Simon. But the
pictures don’t lie, and last night’s episode
showed our two heroes and their support team in
some hard and arduous scrrapes.
Then I watched the Spooks spin-off (recorded).
Had the production values of the original
although there was something about some of the
chase scenes that looked wrong. Don’t know
whether it was the youthful cast or the
futuristic setting, but it somehow lacked that
feeling of seriousness and danger, despite quite
a high death count. Overall a bit like Threads
meets the Double Deckers.
So, might have a look at Britain From The Air on
iPlayer tonight.
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TV Dilemmas
10/08/08 17:05
Every now and again something pops up to
remind me I am no longer young. Not old, mind
you, but certainly long past the first (or
second) bloom of youth. Like sometimes when I’m
going out and I think ‘Seeing as it’s warm and
I’ll only have trouser pockets, shall I bother
taking the mobile?’ And then I think ‘Stupid.
It’s a mobile. That’s what it’s for. If you don’t
take it out with you, there’s no point having
it.’ For someone younger, the mobile is a part of
their being. They wouldn’t venture as far as the
next room without their mobile, let alone the
vast outdoors.
A similar thing has happened just now with the TV
schedules. At nine o’clock tonight there’s
Britain From the Air on Beeb One, the repeat of
Long Way Round on Two (which I’ve been watching,
having missed it the first time round) and a new
Spooks spin-off on Three. My first reaction was
one of disappointment at having to miss at least
one of these. Split second later remembered the
Sky+ thing but that only records one programme
while another is being watched (I think). Then I
remembered the iPlayer. If I’m bothered enough to
remember, I can watch the third one through the
iPlayer!
I suppose the point I’m making is that having
grown up in the days when the only opportunity to
see a programme was at the time of broadcast, it
is still something of a novelty to realise we are
now in the new age of viewing on demand. OK, I
know the video’s been around for many years, and
I’ve owned several. But I have never reached the
point of taking the recording facility for
granted. And I still feel more comfortable
watching a show when it is put out - always have
the nagging feeling that if I watch it later, I
could be missing something more interesting.
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So! Michael Vaughan.
Gone.
04/08/08 17:03
I have to say, I could see it coming. That rather
petulant interview with Jonathan Agnew on the
Today prog last week. Obviously the lack of form
and defeat against South Africa didn’t do any
good. But overall it seems to have been the
pressure of the job that finally took its toll.
This is at least the second England captain we
have lost to ‘burn out’.
People should be worried. There is no way on
earth a sporting person should be forced to an
emotional edge such that he breaks down in a
press conference as did the admirable Vaughan
yesterday. No country had been invaded. No murder
committed. If this kind of scene has become the
norm then we as a nation need to address our
priorities.
That was a bit heavy, wasn’t it? Totally out of
character.
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Wheelie bins
04/08/08 07:58
To the Today programme:
So! There's a shortage of wheelie bins.
I am so pleased! There is nothing so ugly
as a straddled line of these things along roads
and streets, waiting to be collected.
We never asked for them and so they are living
proof that we do not actually live in a
democratic society.
Bring back the humble dustbin!
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Firefox 3 and
Delicious
02/08/08 11:15
Not too many years ago, if anyone has asked
ickledot about bookmarking, he would have thought
it meant sitting down for a few hours with a pile
or two of exercise books and a red pen, ticking
and crossing his way through the night. Now, of
course, red pens are hugely non-pc, ickledot’s
life has changed completely and bookmarks have a
whole new meaning.
Internet pioneers have been on about Web 2.0 and
the social networking revolution for a number of
years now, and the fact that ickledot is becoming
aware of its power shows it is moving into the
mainstream. The principle of storing all ones
stuff away from your actual computer and into
‘the Cloud’is spreading to all aspects of
computer usage and storage. This not only
includes blogs, photos and movies but also
bookmarking, most notably through delicious.
Delicious now has a new look and domain name:
delicious.com.
ickledot downloaded Firefox 3 web browser a
couple of weeks ago after it was recommended by
friend Tim (who runs an excellent site about
food in West Yorkshire).
One of few disappointments was the loss of
the delicious tagging option. Thankfully
this has now returned with added options.
Now all my bookmarks are stored in the
aforementioned ‘Cloud’ as well as on my
machine.