Car-jacking a Roller

Road_RollerParked outside my flat is this road roller. I mention this because: (a.) to drive a road roller one needs only a standard car license, (b.) it’s the most ludicrous form of transport covered by said license, (c.) consequently, I’ve always wanted to drive one, and (d.) this one is parked right across the road. The picture is the view from my desk, where I’m typing this post.

Oh, the temptation.

About The Daily Grind and its author

Five years. That’s how long I’ve been blogging, and that’s how long it’s taken me to get around to writing an ‘About…’ blurb for this site. This is more than a little ridiculous, and probably a tad counter-productive given that some really rather interesting people have cropped up in the comments here on occasion, and they’re quite likely to have thought ‘who the heck is this oik and why am I reading his ramblings?’ Well, now they can find out.

But equally, most of you know full well who I am, what I do, and all that (and yet still you’re reading… maniacs). In the interests of helping both audiences, the actual ‘About’ bit is after the break:

Continue reading “About The Daily Grind and its author”

*Camp

Somewhere in a parallel universe, there’s a Jonathan that can be bothered to follow the argument about MashupCamp and BarCamp. That Jonathan would point out that, in the very early 90s, a similar sort of concept was held by the student section of the British Association. He knows, because he helped organise it. A fairly random group and number of people met up in a spare field near a museum of buildings (yes, there really is one), and spent a weekend doing random stuff that people turned up with. Including, but not limited to:

  • Building a fabulously beautiful 9-metre-high paper sculpture. OK, so this bit was sort-of planned in advance, and it accounted for most of the weekend.
  • Building a wireframe computer model of said sculpture, that moved in a spookily similar way (using a PowerBook Duo, some 3D object modeling code left over from an attendee’s surgical training simulator project, some nasty polar maths, and a guy who’s now tech head of EA Europe).
  • Fire walking, sans any of the ritual claptrap
  • Giant bubble blowing
  • Boomerang throwing
  • Extreme campfire cookery
  • Geodesic structure construction

We’d probably have done more computery stuff, except that this was only about a year or two after the PowerBook was invented, and the Web was still something only TBL knew about. We still managed an impromptu peer-to-peer campfire network, but I can’t for the life of me remember what we did with it. Bolo, probably.

Anyway, this parallel-universe-gives-a-fig Jonathan isn’t trying to suggest that he invented the (Mashup|Bar)Camp model. Rather, he’s suggesting that there’s nothing remotely original in such (lack of) organisation. People getting together to do things they find mutually interesting isn’t new now, and it wasn’t new then. It’s simply what people do.

Structuring such endeavours in the form of a conference, industries, and ‘work’: that’s new, and it’s taken a few thousand years for us all to feel comfortable with those social structures. But coming together to ‘do stuff’ was where we differentiated ourselves from the chimpanzees.

Three-ball air guitar

Mark linked to this a few days ago, but somehow I missed it: tremendously skillful three-ball juggling with a bit of a twist. Most jugglers pride themselves on smooth performance, on it being a technical form – this is quite the opposite, and all the better for it. Gob-smacking to watch, and you don’t need to be a juggler to realise just how clever it is.

As for the juggling snobs who think anything less than five balls is trivial: get over yourselves.

Convenience hifi

Playlist magazine (which I think is part of the MacWorld family) have an excellent review of Apple’s new ‘audiophile quality’ (sic) iPod HiFi speaker set. It’s an interesting read, in part because it explicitly avoids the rabid audiophile rantings – ’53Hz! That’s not a bass floor!’ etc – but does a proper listening test against similar products from Bose, Monitor Audio, Tivoli et al. There are several features noted that are classic Apple, like the volume ramping up smoothly when you drop an already-playing iPod in the HiFi’s dock, and the comparative test is useful. The HiFi is said to offer excellent bass and volume, but to lack a smidge of treble detail. Which to my mind is probably the correct compromise for people who listen to more rock/pop/hip-hop/etc than piano concertos. Plus, let’s face it, smoothing the high end should help disguise compression artifacts a little – better to blur it all a bit than reveal the flaws?

What I find really interesting is comparing today’s ‘iPod + HiFi’ model to the ‘cheap separates from Richer Sounds‘ approach we all took back when we were students. You can’t beat the convenience of the iPod set-up, and while I’m sure you can beat the sound quality for similar money – particularly if you factor in the iPod itself – the real question is whether the HiFi and similar products are ‘good enough.’ My guess: absolutely. Which would explain why the audio shop in which Matt and I were listening to amps costing more than a Mac also sells iPod-specific Tivoli and Bose kit.

If I was doing it all again, I’m not quite certain I’d bother with separates. Lugging them around between all the places I’ve lived has been a pain, and I’m now stuck with a stack of aging kit that sounds only ‘OK.’ Swapping out the speakers would help enormously, but I’ve not done that partly because my amp will only drive two of the things… and of course I’d really like to do surround-sound for movies. Which is an entirely different kettle of fish.

And that, I think, is the only real weakness of the Apple ecosystem. In picking their targets and tailoring their products oh-so-smoothly, they rather prevent the mix-and-match approach that works for people like me. It’s a conscious decision on their part, of course – hit 85% of the market with something that’s utterly wonderful for them, the remainder aren’t worth the hassle of chasing – and I rather applaud them for it.

I’ve a nagging doubt, however, which is this: to get the most out of the Apple way, one really needs to fit their profiles and market segments. Doesn’t that rather clash with the whole ‘think different’, pirate flag, renegade Mac users spirit? As the iPod dominates all, can Apple maintain their customers’ joyous free-spirit ‘alternative’ atmosphere? If Apple’s new niche is ‘all of us’, what sets them apart from everybody else?

It’s simplistic to say ‘nothing – they’re just another business.’ Of course they are, but they’re more clever than most in choosing what not to do (tablet PCs spring to mind…). They leave features out – even features their customers claim to want – if including them compromises the product in other ways, like ease of use, which is an unusually bold/principled/enlightened/stupid approach (delete as you see fit).

What interests me is that we, their customers, have given them a license to be quirky because we fitted that profile of ‘different.’ That’s fine, but it doesn’t transfer to a situation where everybody is wearing white earbuds.

(for completeness: I’d probably plump for a Tivoli iSongBook over Apple’s HiFi. Bass is less important to me than Radio 4. On the other hand, I already have a Tivoli PAL, and apart from the entire lack of stereo imaging – it’s a single speaker – I absolutely love it).

Feed icons

When I finally get around to refreshing the template here on the The Daily Grind (noticed how the individual entry pages have weirdness? Yup, the bitrot has set in…), I must remember to use this new came-from-Firefox-now-used-by-Mozilla-and-licensed-by-Microsoft-for-IE7 icon to flag up my feeds. Hopefully some future version of Safari will swap this in for the blue RSS thingy that appears in the address bar, and then we’ll all be reading off the same page.

Personally, I got bored with the whole RSS 0.9 / RSS 1.0 / RSS 2.0 / Atom thing months back, and would much rather call all of them ‘feeds,’ and let the user’s software express a preference, if they really care.