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Snapping
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Being The
Geekly Diary of Waider
(may
contain traces of drinking, movies, and sport)
- May 16
- Toys, toys, toys. So last Thursday we replaced our long-serving
(7 years!) petrol-engined car with a fully-electric car. Driving
it so far has proven to be fun, at least as much for discovering
seven years of upgrades to the state of the art as anything else.
Arrived today in the post: a chip-reading cat feeder. One of our
cats has an eating problem - he likes to, and a lot - and the
other is a grazer. The eater wound up with a bit of a weight
problem, so we've had him on a diet for a while, and part of the
diet enforcement protocol is putting the grazer's food where the
glutton can't reach it. Alas, the newly svelte and definitely
hungry piglet has discovered his inner ninja and is now able to
jump to the previously safe perch. So, electronics to the
rescue. Insert food into feeder; insert cat into feeder to program
the chip-reader; go through tedious acclimatisation programme to
get cat to use the feeder. Or, in Bonzo's case, wait a few hours
while she figures it out and gets used to it. It wasn't cheap, but
it's definitely working quite well and we (so far) haven't had to
engage the Thieving Cat Defence or the Shut Lid Quickly
feature: LardCat is simply freaked out by the thing and eyes it
suspiciously from a safe distance.
- May 10
- We've had Airprint functioning in the house through judicious
application of a Raspberry Pi and some open source software, but
it's rarely used because we don't actually print that much. This
past weekend, however, we had need of printing something from an
iPad. Sent it to the printer and ... nothing. I spent probably an
hour tinkering with various things, upgrading things, restarting
things, rebooting things and eventually stumbled across
the problem: the thing being printed was a password-protected PDF,
and the server didn't have the password. I don't know how this is
supposed to work, but it sure as hell was hard to
debug...
- May 08
- Hurrah, it turns out my React bug is actually a bug in the
library I was using, and rolling back a couple of point releases
fixes it. While investigating this I found a few other problems
that were my fault, mind you.
- May 07
- Picard S2 also wrapped up nicely, albeit just a little
bit anticlimactically. On the whole I enjoyed this, so I really
can't fathom people saying it's the worst Trek ever (have they not
seen the TOS?) - something you'll find not a little of with a
quick Internet search. Maybe what they really wanted was
ST:TNG Season 8? I don't know.
Noticed that Harry Bosch had reappeared in Bosch: Legacy;
I'm not sure why the name change as it still seems to be almost
all the same people, but whatever. I thought the season
opener was going to wrap up as a standalone episode at one point
(not sure why; maybe just the pacing?) but no, it's good for both
ten episodes and a second season, it looks like, so YAY!
- May 01
- Slow Horses
wrapped up nicely in six episodes: didn't feel rushed, didn't
feel dragged out. I know there were some changes in the ending,
but I wasn't keeping track throughout and feel like it's worth
going back through the book now both because it's fun to read and
also to see what was actually changed vs. what I remember
/ was aware of. Cast-wise, I think they pretty much nailed it,
although Min was a bit more hapless than I recall, and Judd was
way too far from who he's supposed to be a caricature
of - they could have at least cast the dishevelled blonde hair
correctly!
I'm now debating whether we cancel the Apple TV subscription until
the next season comes around, or not, since we haven't watched a
single other thing with it.
- April 28
- Oof, long time no update. So, let's see.
Last things first: the ongoing question over whether Twitter will
become Muskville caused me to spend a bit more time on Mastodon
where I've had an account for a few years largely lying
dormant. @waider@octodon.social if such is your thing. Given that
there are a number of accounts I follow / support on Twitter that
are only on Twitter, I won't be deleting my account there
any time soon, it'll just be a bit less noisy.
Related, a day or so after I returned to my Mastondon account, the
iOS client I was using for it (Amaroq) started crashing on
launch. Turns out the author EOL'd it
about ten months ago, and it looks like it's just broken. Weird
coincidence - maybe the increased traffic to the site I use
resulted in them changing something that Amaroq can't deal
with. Anyway, there's an official Mastodon client which isn't
great but works well enough for my uses.
Picard Season 2 continues to be excellent, as does Slow Horses.
We started into The Blacklist
as something to watch during the week (criteria: must hold our
interest, episodes must be an hour or thereabouts, and it'd be
great if it wasn't a series that got cancelled with unresolved
plotlines) and it's ... not bad. It's a bit bumpy in places, and
James Spader's mannerisms are all sorts of odd (the way he
constantly angles his head left or right for no apparent reason,
for example). A recent episode had us pretty much yelling at the
TV because everyone in the episode was picking the most stupid
available course of action ("I'm on my own at a dangerous location
where there's a pile of guns and evidence of very recent
occupation by someone I suspect to be a killer... how about I just
walk on in by myself and not tell anyone at all where I am") so
hopefully that's not a continuing trend; on the plus side, it's
apparently still in production but I've slightly
spoilered myself for a recent season because I accidentally read
the season synopsis. I guess we've a few dozen episodes before
that crops up, so it probably doesn't matter.
Started reading "The Science Officer" series. Dropped it after a
couple of books because of the protagonist's constant references
to a female character's physical characteristics. Pick a different
running joke, dude. (of course it's a dude). Ate my way through
Stephenson's "Termination Shock": that was honestly one of those
books where I'd have been happy for it to continue, and not
because of everyone's favourite hobby horse, that Stephenson can't
stick the landing; it was just good. Also devoured Caoimh
McDonnell's latest. Then I picked up Becky Chambers' "Monk and
Robot", which I liked, and was fun, but oh GOD another "book 1 in
an ongoing series that hasn't been completed" - when will I learn?
And finally: Ulysses. I'm not reading it, but I've found the
e-book equivalent of buying it and then leaving it unread on your
shelf; I picked up an ebook made from when it was (briefly) out of
copyright, and have left it uninstalled on my reader.
Nerdery: the aforementioned React fix isn't quite right, but it's
working well enough for now. I will admit to mild annoyance that
parity with equivalent JQuery/JQuery-UI functionality isn't high
on someone's list of boxes to tick, and of course using React
means engaging at least partially with the whole world of hurt
that is NPM, even if you're not actually using any of the NPM
stuff "for real" (I've used a kludgy combination of
create-react-app and some scripting to turn my React code into a
Webpack-whatever-it-is bundle that gets served to all and sundry
by my somehwat creaky Django-based system).
Phew. That's enough for now.
- April 19
- I've made no progress on the React porting for the last month
due to getting stuck on a problem, halfway solving it, and then
being somewhat disheartened with the fact that I couldn't complete
it. I dug up an alternative solution this evening and wired it up
and, wow, I think I've just completed the thing I was stuck
on!
- April 16
- The Actors:
saw this in 2005, thought it was pretty good. Watched it tonight,
nearly hurt myself laughing. It really is such a great movie. I
mean, Michael Gambon as a toupee'd small-time Dublin
criminal (and owner of what I believe to be a made-over
PorterHouse? I think I'd previously thought it was a bar in D8
that I no longer recall the name of) who drives a beat-up Toyota
Hiace? How can you not immediately want to watch
this?
- April 15
- I spoke a little too soon: restoring to a sparsebundle appeared
to work but crapped out at the "verify" stage. No matter, I've at
least cloned the data off to an external drive and started
stripping the Drobo.
- April 12
- Plan E looks like it might actually be the one. tl;dr: Apple's
Disk Utility can "restore" one volume over another without
requiring a memory-hungry scan of the entire source (which the
other imaging attempts I made wanted to do) and much to
my surprise it accepted a sparsebundle as a destination for the
volume copy. I have no idea if this will actually result
in a working backup drive, but that's ok: it will at least allow
me to put the bits somewhere other than the Drobo, which will in
turn allow me to strip the Drobo for disks to load up into the
Synology. And it only took me several months to accomplish!
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