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iTunes has a bad day?

Typo…?

 

I saw this and thought of, er, me…

The pedantry that must have done into making this sign, when it would clearly be much more effective just to go with the Americanized spelling

 

Foam Party

It’s difficult to capture the sheer beauty of a leaky can of expandable filler in a two-dimensional photograph.  But here we go.  Probably the only highlight from my weekend of draughtproofing.

 

 

John Who?

Claire just asked me to print off directions for her to get to John Rhodes Way in Tunstall.  It’s just off Reginald Mitchell Way, the A50 bypass named after the creator of the Spitfire.  Mitchell was born and grew up in Stoke, although didn’t really do anything useful until he left the area.  That’s good enough though.

Wikipedia lists several John Rhodes, including a mathematician, a racing driver, a September 11th victim and a UFO expert (who said Wikipedia isn’t a real encyclopedia?).  The driver is the closest option to being likely; he was at least born in the same county – at least he was back when Wolverhampton was in Staffordshire.  His mostly raced minis and only grand prix was the 1965 British Grand Prix.  He began in last place on the grid and did not finish.  The connections to the area, and to fame, are tenuous at best, and I’ve now started to wonder whether he actually added the entry to Wikipedia himself…

So I must have the wrong guy here, making this probably the most useless blog post ever.  Sorry.  Really I’d hoped it was the UFO spotter but I’m thinking now it was probably a soldier awarded the Victoria Cross in World War I, but the only references I can find to him are the location of his grave and a rather bizarre list of why Stoke is apparently great.

However I genuinely did not know that I the place I live was also the birthplace of Meals On Wheels, and home to the composer of the theme tune from Neighbours.  Fantastic.

Winner of X-Factor Revealed!

The winner of this year’s X-Factor will be Ben.

The simple reason – he has the easiest name to type on a mobile phone. VOTE BEN.  It works just fine with predictive text, and nobody is going to come close to spelling it wrong. These things are very important.  Last week’s evictees, The Unconventionals, were doomed before they got going. VOTE UNCONVENTIONALS. Their voting details stood out like a sore thumb against all the other text keywords. Even though predictive text (on my old Nokia at least) finds its way there if you can spell it at the first attempt, you are really going to have to like these guys to be bothered to vote for them at all.  I actually thought they were OK, and with a shorter name they may just have survived.

Today we saw the dismissal of Wolverhampton’s finest boy-band-on-a-TV-show, 4Sure. Their pre-match interviews have given us plenty of enjoyment remembering how Claire used to speak, and she’ll demonstrate that she still can add a "Y" sound to pretty much every woyrd if she trieys. VOTE 4SURE.  It is actually possible to do this all in one go with predictive text enabled if you press and hold 4 then type SURE but their name choice could have been better. Voters have to remember the clever pun that makes up their name, and then have to figure out how to type it.

Next week it must surely be either the grimfully dismal MacDonald Brothers, or Nikitta that suffers. Neither of these acts spell their name correctly – having it the same way as burger clown Ronald, or the girl from the Elton John song would help considerably – and neither work with predictive text. We end up with VOTE MACE? and VOTE MILITU? respectively. The MacDonalds’ time is next week. Surely. Please?

As for the rest of the pack, Dionne has problems (VOTE DINOME), Eton Road will struggle (VOTE FUNN) and Ashley needs intervention in order for the message to be sent properly (VOTE ASHLEX).  Ray is not as safe as he looks either, despite being the most likeable character on the show. VOTE RAY does get there fourth time, after cycling through SAY, SAW and PAY, but many texters won’t bother to look at their screens before sending. Coupled with the fact that he’s introduced as "Ray" but the huge scrolling banner lights on stage and the X-Factor web site announce him as "Raymond" (possibly a better choice, with no alternative spellings in predictive text), he might just lose a few thousand crucial votes when it matters most.  Similarly, Kerry will come in second to somebody named Jerry who is not actually in the competition.

The final three will be Leona, Robert and Ben. Having said all that, it’s worth pointing out that I don’t actually vote for things like this. I still think the idea of being charged 50p a time to cast a vote or answer a competition question is ridiculous. Instead of paying for a stamp to send in your vote, you’re paying the price of two stamps you don’t need, on top of whatever your normal text message cost is.

If I think back to when I used to enter competitions on Saturday morning kids TV, this would be like Philip Schofield asking me to send in my answer in on the back of a postal order.

Wash, go, get stuck in infinite loop

File this one under small things that get inside my head for no real reason.  This one grabbed me whilst I was in the shower and just wouldn’t let go.

 Now, bearing in mind that I definitely have the geek gene, it almost makes sense that I read this as if it says:

10 PRINT "HELLO"
20 GOTO 10

I am having mild flashbacks and my head rather hurts.  The first computer program you ever learn as a junior nerd in the early eighties is a horrible infinite loop and on any home computer that wasn’t invented by the great Sir Clive Sinclair you are stuck.

At least on the good old Spectrum it would fill up one screenful and then ask "break?".  And you’d say "yes please", and life would go on.

Best voicemail ever?

A genuine voicemail left on my work number.  I have no idea who this is, but he obviously doesn’t like the strategic call avoidance system…

Click here to play [EXPLICIT]

New blood drive

I thought it was time that I got myself a couple more readers and double the readership.  I have been posting regularly for four months now, so that should be plenty to get myself listed in some blog directories.

If you find this page from a random search or a link on a directory, drop me a line or post a comment!  If you have a blog of your own and want to exchange links let me know too.

iTunes is taking over my life

Last weekend I impulse-bought an iPod nano.  This is actually the first thing made by Apple I ever bought.  I’ve had a portable MP3 player of some kind before the word (?) iPod was invented, harking back to a 6Gb Creative DAP that was as big as a CD player.  I did have one coat that it would fit in the pocket of, but it wasn’t exactly portable.  The Creative Zen I replaced it with three years ago was the tinyest thing you’d eveer seen at the time.  It’s about three times the size of a standard iPod now, let alone making the nano look like like an ickle tiny baby.

My move to the white side has been on the cards for some time, but amazingly I’ve shown enough discipline to actually wait until the new 8Gb version came out.  I didn’t quite have the discipline to go through with my plan of actually getting something useful with my PokerStars FPPs though.  I just checked this, and they do have it in stock, and I actually do have enough points, dammit.  Hey if anyone wants to buy an iPod let me know 🙂  Otherwise I guess I could order a few dozen stress stars

So of course now I have to use iTunes to get my CD collection back onto the thing.  Which is pretty nifty – I particularly like that it will find album artwork automatically (When Claire got her iPod last year this wasn’t a feature and she spent days downloading pictures…!).  And I’m impressed at just how much of my music finds a match straight away.  With the exception of Radiohead (who are clearly too good to be downloaded) and a few early Saint Etienne albums, I think it’s all there.

I knew getting everything I wanted into 8Gb would be a squeeze but I hadn’t quite prepared myself for how long it would take to rip all this stuff again. After a marathon session last night (after dumping out of the Poker Dome satellite in unspectacular fashion, and trying to clear $750 in stacked up bonuses on PokerRoom.com) which it had to tell me resulted in 1006 tracks being transferred, I twice thought I’d cracked all my regular CDs leaving only some dodgy MP3 downloads and whatever compilations I want to chuck on there.  Apparently not, and I’ve still found yet more.

Maybe I’m going overboard – it tells me I already have about five days worth of music to listen to already (why tell me that?!)  But it’s not over yet.  Must … keep … ripping.

Vroooooom

Thousands of motorists in Stoke rejoiced and a million sat nav units simply sighed as the New Improved "D Road" was finally opened today.

This extract from The Sentinel, explains why it took so long, and why it’s been worth the wait, and the endless queueing.

Two-and-a-half years of traffic gridlock in Stoke-on-Trent came to an end today as the 40 million overhaul of the A500 was finished and the road was opened .… The complex project, which was started in March 2004, has involved diverting two rivers and a canal, building two 20-foot bridges and laying of 56,560 tonnes of new road material such as tarmac.

Journey times are expected to be cut by an average of four minutes at rush hour – and up to three minutes at quieter times.