rashbre central

Thursday, 8 February 2007

Thursday Thirteen (V35)

Doing a Thursday Thirteen always takes longer than my normal ten minute posts. So I've missed a few weeks, but thought I'd give it a go again this week. Its still version 35!
trafficm25.jpg1) : I spent around two hours in a traffic jam this morning; then later I had to go to another location and on the way back was stuck in another one for thirty minutes. I'd driven for over three and a half hours on what would normally be around ninety minutes of travel.

2) : A side effect of the travelling has been the car turning a sort of matt colour with all of the salt and grit placed on the road because it may snow this evening.

3) : I was also in a long traffic jam yesterday in central London, between Earls Court and Marylebone. In the end I had to park the car at a hotel and take a cab for the last part of the journey along the taxi lanes, so that I was not too late for my appointment.

4) : As is the way in central London, I had to pay the £8 / $15 congestion charge for driving my car into the central London area. In a few days, the zone is being extended further to the west, covering Kensington and Chelsea.

5): I've been out in the evening a lot recently, which has stressed my time for writing any blog entries. Last week I was in Amsterdam, the previous week in Vas Vegas and the week before that in Franfurt. This week I'm home, but out for several evenings.

6) : The man came to take a look at the broken fence. Another few days and it should be fixed. I need a couple of panels and new fence posts too.

7) : The recent scaffolding has also come down as a consequence of the completion of some other work on rashbre central.
orange.jpg8) : I had a replacement credit card sent to me a few days ago. It doesn't become active until March. Something I pay for by credit card monthly then sent me a late payment bill saying my card wasn't valid. I called to explain but they said the original card didn't work. I said I'd pay with the new one, then. They said it wasn't yet valid. After my protest, I moved the payment to direct debit. They refused to refund the late payment saying I should have informed them about the credit card change. I explained the original card was still valid. They didn't care. That little £5 charge will have cost them a customer, because when I get time I will move my suscription to somewhere else.

9) : I checked all of the above with my helpful bank. They said there was nothing wrong with my credit card and the above supplier should not have acted in the way they did.

10) : I've been helping get some of the Theatre 503 information onto Wikipedia. It became quite complicated, because I referred to the recent play 'The Atheist', which then also required an entry. So I started to write that entry as well, but then had to 'disambiguate' 'The Atheist', which is also the name of a comic. Then the wikipedia authors said the description of the play wasn't detailed enough. And so it went on. Hopefuly its all okay now.

screenshot_01.jpg11) : I discovered some chocolates left from December yesterday. I wonder how long they will survive?

12) : I was asked to vote for a specific artis at the Brits a couple of days ago. I have been receiving emails about other artists ever since.

13) : Tonight's beverage of choice is Tetley's tea.

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Wednesday, 7 February 2007

OTA Wordless Wednesday

invasion
the bunnies heard about the banana
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Tuesday, 6 February 2007

let them eat cake

torte.jpg
The avian bugs from the continent arrived in Holton, in the east of England today creating an exclusion zone and poultry cull.

I've decided that there must still be some classes of food which are relatively safe, like the above torte. Made from chocolate, with its antioxidant properties, kirch, with its mildly medicinal alcoholic content, cream containing calcium, vitamins A, D, B12, and riboflavin and cherries as a source of fruit, this must surely be a better bet than some of the other foodstuffs on offer.

I shall consider whilst I have a slice. This is a twizzler-free zone.

Monday, 5 February 2007

bananas

geostationary banana over texas
There are some projects that are just off all of the scales. A great example is the mission to send an inflateable banana into geostationary orbit over texas for one month as an art installation. I am not sure if this counts as messing with texas, but it sure is bananas.

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Sunday, 4 February 2007

talking italian

carbonaraAfter the show at Theatre 503. we wandered back into Battersea Park Road and along a few doors to the Italian restaurant. It was already almost full, but in keeping with most good Italian places, they said they would find a way to squeeze us in. Sure enough, they did, resorting to a special folding chair for me to squish against the end of the table.

We then enjoyed some noble Montepulciano whilst we debated the play before turning to other matters. The food was fine and the evening was now slipping into the later part. Penguin had joined us, back from a recent trip to Barbados, and regaled us with stories of the rather snazzy resort he'd enjoyed during the last several days. And no soooner back in the UK, then he's off to Venice. I shall expect to see some photographs on the promised new blog. As if.

A joy of this part of London, and the subsequent return to Chelsea was that even at one thirty in the morning there are still quite a lot of folk meandering around the streets.

Talking Italian - thanks, Holly

spinning jenny

P1000679
Yesterday evening's show at Theatre 503 was excellent. The evening went to plan. We arrived first in Chelsea to meet for an early shot of expresso before we started the evening. Then to the Latchmere pub in Battersea for a pre-show drink. The pub was kinda busy, what with the rugby as well and the group of us moved to the Theatre lobby where we managed to bag a comfortable sofa before the show started.
screenshot_05.jpg
And then to hear the trials and tribulations of Augustine Early, played with sharp tongue, Southern drawl, pyrotechnic energy swings and deep engagement by Ben Porter, in Ronan Noone's rapier wit of a tale of an amoral journalist who'll stop at nothing to get that front page headline.


Augustine Early is a despicably conniving, viciously scheming reporter who claws his way up the greasy pole of the Fourth Estate. There are maybe ten seconds of goodness about him in the entire play, but he soon snaps out of that.

Sex, Sleaze, Corruption, Politics and Death all play a part in this analog of the human condition. "I may be responsible, but I'm not culpable", he explains as he describes the morbid interest of his readers in the latest spinning that he has created with the gullible self interest of Jenny, his partial love interest in the piece.
benporter6.jpg
Ben Porter, as an edgily psychotic Augustine, paces the piece with great assurance and timing, revealing the latent energy of a coiled spring, which every so often explodes across the stage. "Why be mediocre?", he implores, as he demonstrates every way to stay away from the middle ground.

Set in America, tightly scripted, adapted for the European audience, and set in a theatre modified to resemble...no I'd better not say...it adds to one of the twists in the piece. Highly watchable and easy to be drawn through fascination into this otherworld of deceit.

Great theatre, acting, script. I'd watch and enjoy again!

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(Extensive tagging at request of Mel and Christina)

Saturday, 3 February 2007

showtime

pub.jpg
Off to see a play in Battersea this evening, supporting the renaissance of Theatre 503. There's more about the venue across at Christina's and I'll know more for myself after tonight's show.

Its quite an endeavour getting a theatre up and running and tonight's play is the first 'under new management'.

So I guess I'll be in the Latchmere first, for a pre show drink.

Friday, 2 February 2007

fenceless

unavailable fence
I shall just have to admire this picture of fencing. Since the storms and winds in England a couple of weeks ago, there has been a run on replacement fence panels. So I shall be without borders for a little longer.

mu mu

waiting for the mu mu warrior
Some people have a way with words, blending daily occurence with the sweep of gods. Today's humble post is for one such sprite who can flitter between Eris the goddess of confusion and chaos, the last train to transcentral and weightier matters which sometimes require an axe.

Thursday, 1 February 2007

broken glass

Vista on OS/X
I'd been using Microsoft Vista Beta with Parallels on an intel Mac for several months. Now I see the new Vista Home Premium which I bought today actually forbids this.

Microsoft has reworded its End User License Agreement to say: “USE WITH VIRTUALIZATION TECHNOLOGIES. You may not use the software installed on the licensed device within a virtual (or otherwise emulated) hardware system.”

So unless I want to turn my Mac over to Boot Camp dual boot, I can no longer use the product inside the terms of the agreement unless I dig deep for Vista Ultimate edition. The whole point of something like parallels is to be able to run Windows in a pane on the Mac. Microsoft say that "Home users have rarely requested virtualization and so it will not be supported in Microsoft Windows Vista Home Basic and Home Premium.”

As a side note, one of the fun things about Vista under OS/X is the way it can be dynamically resized on the screen like a browser pane. Click my screen shot above to see a big picture of Windows in a small pane on OS/X. Or watch this three year old Apple trailer about iLife back in the olden days.

Microsoft Vista on Apple Mac OS/X

After my Vista post (above) I had several emails about the base install of a Vista upgrade on OS/X. I have several spare WIndows XP licenses from defunct systems and assumed the upgrade would work with either an original XP CD or XP serial number before the Vista one. But no.

Here is my Vista install to OS/X with Parallels.

1) Get a modern licenced version of Parallels and install it on OS/X
2) Create a Vista partition in OS/X with at least 512Mb memory and 20 GB disk space
3) Boot the legitimate Vista DVD from the Parallels partition (when the Parallels session boots, it trys to start the DVD in any case)
4) Click "Install Now"
5) Do not enter a Product key when prompted - if you try to you will get an ACPI, BSOD or can't upgrade error.
6) You will see a list of Vista editions. Select the one you have bought.
7) Install Vista normally - though it will be a trial copy with no serial number, only valid for 30 days.
8) Once the install is complete after circa 30 minutes, restart the DVD-based Setup from within Windows Vista.
9) Perform an in-place upgrade.
10) Enter your Product Key when prompted
11) Let Vista go through the upgrade a second time.


This procedure is much faster than installing a copy of XP and then upgrading to Vista. In fact, the upgrade after the original install completed in about half an hour on my iMac.

Wednesday, 31 January 2007

OTA Wordless Wednesday

amsred2.jpg
red sky over a red part of Amsterdam
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