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Posts tagged ‘shopping’

15
Jun
pizza

Diet Diary: Starting all over again

I’ve got a bet with my wife – she doesn’t think I’ll be able to lose two stone by our anniversary at the end of August and I’m adamant I can.

When I was at school I was always a bit chubby, then when I left school and started working I lost weight bery quickly, possibly too much at one point – but then when I moved to Jersey and got married it piled on. Read moreRead more

12
Apr
android

In need of Android book library for HTC Tattoo

My most recent gadget acquisition is a HTC Tattoo, the low end small screen Android based handset from the Taiwanese-based manufacturer.

This is a great little phone, it’s easy to hold, fits in my top pocket with my iPod, feels great to hold and is actually pretty quick. Read moreRead more

27
Nov

A device for every purpose and then some

To fully understand this post you’ll need to appreciate that I’m a geek and so have the normal geek armoury hanging off my shoulder more or less everywhere I go.

Within that I have a camera, two mobile phones (one for calls one for internet), a NDS, a book, a notebook, a netbook, a video camera, an audio recording device and a few other bits and pieces.

That’s the reason I have a bad back BUT more importantly it’s the reason I rarely get bored – everywhere I go I carry a full on entertainment system with me and am ready to cover any news story that might break around me.

Because of always carrying a good camera I’ve managed to get photos of armed sieges, gas leaks, protest and more that I wouldn’t have got to in time if I had to go back and get a camera.

But I got thinking the other day – with mobile devices becoming more comprehensive in their feature lists and with each individual feature becoming more usuable – do I really still need all those devices.

I could get an iPhone or a new Android based phone that can take photos, video, get online, act as a mini computer, do video, let me read books, record audio and even let me send anything I gather straight to the internet.

But, it’s main purpose is the internet device, the mini internet device – it LETS me do all of the above but none of it to a standard a device designed with the purpose in mind can.

Do I think the dawn of the single device is upon us? No not even a little bit but I do think we’re entering an era where every individual device will be able to do many of the things every other device in my bag can do – to a limited extent.

It’s only a matter of time before my camera has internet access (some can already do video) and every other device can do a little bit of everything.

I see a world not so much built around one device doing everything reasonably well but a selection of devices each doing one thing really well AND a selection of other things reasonably well.

That was if you do forget one device there is something else that can fill in behind it – just not as well as it would have done on its own.

I’ll settle for mobile phone pics if I forget my camera, I’ll settle for reading on a netbook or browsing the web on my phone if I forget my book or netbook – but neither is how I’d CHOOSE to do it.

Interestingly – my wife who isn’t exactly a geek has a camera, mobile phone, iPod and NDS in her bag and carries them more or less everywhere she goes – even if they are all pink!

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19
Jul

What to do with books you’ve read?

What do you do with books after you’ve read them? Collect them on a shelf? Sell them to the highest bidder? Give them to a carity shop? Keep them in a box for future use? Or just hope they’ll go away?

We have a big bookshelf in our living room where we keep a selection of our favourite, or unread books – most of these books belong to my wife and re-afirm the ‘housewife’ stereotype. The bookshelf has five shelves, the first three are my wifes, the fourth is my babies and the bottom one belongs to me.

The top shelf is books about children and healthcare, things you apparently ‘need’ to know to bring up children. These sort of books used to fill up three shelves until we had our second child, then it was two shelves.

Now we have our third it is just half of the top shelf with the other half filled with bits and bobs we need to keep out of the children’s reach.

kailenbooks

Kailen poinnting to his books

In case you were wondering – the two older children have their books on a bookshelf in their bedrooms – we keep the toddlers (mainly touch and feel) books in the living room because he likes to help himself to them throughout the day.

The next two shelves are all cookery books and my wife tries to argue that these are there for both of us to use. But as my cookery involves throwing everything in and hoping for the best (including my pizza dough technique) I’d say they’re hers.

Anyway back the point, or at least the debate I was trying to have with myself in blog form – my shelf.

As well as those three shelves of books my wife also has about eight large banana boxes of books somewhere in the back of the garage come storeroom – she takes the ‘store for later’ option with the odd ‘give it to a charity shop’ when I push her.

I have all my books on that one shelf at the bottom of the living room bookshelf. That isn’t because I don’t have very many books – over time I’ve had as many boxes of books as my wife – but I get rid of them when I’m finished with them.

But my most recent book clear out has left me in a little bit of a dilema over what to do with the books.

Normally I read a book and then dispose of it – sometimes that involved giving it to a charity shop, sometimes I give to family or friends and occasionally, when it is a more unusual (or at least less well known) book I’ll leave it in a hotel room, on a park bench or even on the bus for other people to discover.

I put the question in the title out on Twitter and asked my tweeterers what they do with books when they’ve finished. Two responses at the time of writing this said:

squawkbox@upyourego Pass them onto friends/family… Once they have read them, then they can deal with disposal!

spicysaurus@upyourego Do you have Half Price Books there? That’s where my unwanted books go. I do keep and reread many of them, though.

However, the books I’ve just got round to sorting through are ones I’ve been hoping to ‘collect’ and so didn’t want to get rid – but I came to the conclusion that I need the bookshelf space for what is an increasing number of books and less time to read.

My bookshelf

My bookshelf

I’m talking about my Doctor Who books.

I’m a geek and one of the ways you can identify my geekyness is my obsession with ‘completing’ collections. I have every vanilla Doctor Who DVD, every episode of Yes, Minister and dozens of other TV series – including Red Dwarf, Bottom, The Young Ones and Fawlty Towers.

And I’ve tried to apply the same obsession to the Doctor Who and Torchwood books – at one point or another I have owned them all. But they are a lot bigger than the DVDs and aren’t as re-usable – you really wouldn’t want to read it more than once in a couple of years.

So I’ve read it and passed it on in one of the ways I mentioned above. But now I’ve got two children reading and one obsessed with books. Both the older children love Doctor Who (although they’re not quiet up to reading the DW books yet) and my eldest loves the Sarah Jane Adventures books.

In a couple of years, possibly even less at the rate she seems to get through books, my eldest will be up to and interested in reading the Doctor Who books and a couple of years after that my middle child will be looking towards them as well.

So I’m now left with a) a slightly guilty feeling at getting rid of all those Doctor Who books over the last few years and b) wondering what to do with the ones I’ve got now that I’ve read – or at least heard in Audiobook form.

And that’s another thing – yes I might have listened to it in audiobook form but what have I missed by not reading it and capturing the imagery for myself? Will I want to read it myself in addition to the audiobook or will the magic have gone by the time I get around to it?

I’ve decided to hang on to the books for now and just put them in the garage in a box – if my wife can get away with it then so can I. Although if I could convince her to give me another shelf – they would look pretty cool on display.

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22
Jun

Top Gear 100: Missed it

Previously on my Top Gear obsessed blog – I wrote suggestions for Top Gear 100 – that was last series and it came and then went away.

Not that the Top Gear team noticed – Andy Wilman, show executive Producer, asked the crew to work out the number of episodes and tell him when it gets to 100.

He said: “Count up how many shows we’ve done since we came back on air with Top Gear because that has got to be a landmark show and we don’t want to miss the bugger.”

Andy then went on to explain that: “I’ve just worked out that the actual 100th show was the really shit one with the Renault Avantine so I’m sorry.”

So there we have it – no leaping over caravans, burning caravans – in fact no caravans at all – just a poor to middling, if not utter turd car. Oh well.

Here is a link to a great behind the scenes video from Top Gear 13×01 to take your mind off it. I can’t embed it though. You can watch what I think is episode 100 here.

However, something I can embed for you is Top Gear 13×01 as my tip of the week.

Embed code generated using the Up Your Ego PIP tool.

And to finish off a few words on this weeks Top Gear ratings – a pretty impressive one for Top Gear and BBC Two – but not the highest of all time.

The opening episode of Top Gear 13 saw an audience of 7.1 million and a share of 30.4% reaching a peak audience of 7.8 million by 8:45.

It was hte most popular show on BBC Two by a long way – with James May on the Moon taking the second spot with 3.2 million and a 13.8% share.

In fact Top Gear also gets the award for most watched show of the day by some margin – with BBC News at 10 getting 5.2 million in second and Stephen Fry’s Kingdom on ITV 1 getting 4.6 million in third.

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19
Apr

Time to get out the plasticine

Every Saturday I have to come up with ‘something new’ to do with my son. He’s five, a little on the hyperactive side and gets bored easily.

My wife takes our daughter (8) and baby (15 months) into town to go shopping and visit the library – but Jaden needs a bit more attention than that.

Normally we’ll watch a little TV, go on the computer, read, play games, make puzzles, draw pictures, go for a walk and when the weather is nice we’ll spend a couple of hours in the park.

But thanks to James May I’ve now got something else to do with him today. Watch this…

I’m a BIG fan of James May’s top toys series – in fact one of my favourite televisual moment was when he brought a model train at an auction in front of ‘enthusiasts’ and threw the box away – priceless.

Now as part of his mission to celebrate Britains best loved toys. He is going to build a full sized garden out of plasticine for the RHS Chelsea Flower Show.

This means he will have to make thousands of plasticine flowers – not an easy task. The making isn’t that difficult, in fact its a lot of fun – but the area he’s calling for help is the inspiration.

He wants people to e-mail him with their suggestions or to post a video response on YouTube with instructions for making your flower design – that is what I’ll be doing with my son this afternoon.

Now to dig out the plasticine.

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21
Feb

Over to you audible

This blog post inspired by a comment from Andy Ihnatko on MacBreak Weekly 128.

My booksI love to read, I have a pile of books so high I can barely reach the top, I also love to listen to audiobooks – I like the way an actor or author can put emphasis in places I didn’t expect it or play a character in a way I hadn’t imagined.

Of the two formats though there is still nothing like reading a book yourself. Curling up on the sofa, book in hand and just reading and immersing yourself in it.

When I listen to audiobooks it is always while doing something else – while walking, while working on the computer, while washing up or while avoiding people in town.

It doesn’t give me the same level of immersion that a paper book does – but its for that very reason that I use audiobooks a lot more than I use paper books.

It’s for that reason I get through three or four audiobooks in a month and maybe one paper book in two months.

Don’t get me wrong though – although I mentioned paper a few times – I’m not a paper purist I’m just waiting for the Kindle to come to Jersey.

But even if I do get my hands on a Kindle I’m going to have the same problems that are in place with paper books – time.

I don’t have time to sit and get completely immersed in a book – I get about an hour a day to myself where I don’t have to do anything else and that isn’t enough time to properly read.

I would start reading, get a few chapters in and then I’d have to put it down when my time is up and I need to walk to work, change a nappy, do the washing up or … well write something.

However, If I could have an audio version (unabridged) and a text version of the same story on my Kindle (owned by Amazon who also own Audible) and then have that audio version and text version linked – I would be extremely happy.

amazon-kindle
Image by MARQUINAM via Flickr

Let me explain.

The text version has chapter markings, the unabridged audio version could easily have chapter markings – if you could link both version together I could finish reading the text version in the evening and then, when I walk to work the next day have the audio version take over from where I left off.

I could then get home again that evening and finish reading (have the Kindle automatically open the story where the audio version left off) during my spare hour.

That way I get, as my daughters favourite TV personality would say, the best of both worlds.

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5
Mar

Lunchtime ‘Window Shop’ Challenge

A while ago I wrote a post called ‘ten things to do on a rainy lunchbreak‘ and one of the ideas I suggested was the Lunchtime Challenge.

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