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I'm working on it... honest

Graham Binns posted a photo:

I'm working on it... honest

Three-hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 13

A stack of stuff that I should be working on, or that I keep meaning to deal with at any rate.

From the top: eight old hard drives, still in working order, which I need to wipe before disposing of somehow (there are more scattered about the place; I've managed to corral these together); The heavily-edited (in pen) draft for Muse (a.k.a. novel the first); a folder that I used to use for carring said manuscript about; notes for said manuscript written before and during the writing thereof.

I will get round to them one day. Honest.

Hope Springs

Posted at 21:30:43 on Sat, January 12th 2008 by graham
in: d40x home pens photography three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008 writing

Graham Binns posted a photo:

Hope Springs

Three-hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 11

Note the lack of a sunset. Weather happened. This is north west England: weather often happens.

So I left the camera and tripod pretty much alone and picked up the pen and paper for the first time in about two and-a-half months. It felt okay. Scary, but okay.

In Search of an ND Grad Filter

Posted at 22:00:42 on Thu, January 10th 2008 by graham
in: d40x home photography polarised sky three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008

Graham Binns posted a photo:

In Search of an ND Grad Filter

Three-hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 9

The horrendous weather finally began to break up and bugger off today, much to my relief. The fields at the foot of the hill are flooded by what is still technically the river Lune, and I was trying to get a shot of that. Unfortunately, the bright sky, which I didn't want to lose, mean that I could expose one or the other but not both. Lacking a grad ND filter I couldn't do much about it, so I exposed for the sky (with a polariser) and cropped out the dark treeline.

There'll be other chances, anyway. The river floods at the drop of a hat.

The End of Christmas

Posted at 22:05:03 on Mon, January 07th 2008 by graham
in: christmas d40x desaturated home photography three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008

Graham Binns posted a photo:

The End of Christmas

Three-hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day six

Christmas is gone, the tree is down, the needles have been vacuumed and thrown out. All that's left is the stand and one forlorn bauble that couldn't quite bring itself to let go of the holiday spirit.

'Twas the night before

Posted at 22:57:45 on Mon, December 24th 2007 by graham
in: christmas computing home thoughts

It's almost ominously quiet in my office right now. Normally there'd be the low, rattling hum of my PC filling the room, masking all the little creaks and burps that the hot water tank, which sits, fenced off in a cupboard in the corner of this fairly tiny work space, makes all through the day and night. Normally I don't notice it. Normally, I have my PC for company.

But tonight there's no PC. That's because when I came home I discovered to my consternation that the office was filled with a smell of burning PCB. The power supply on my PC was overheating, smelling noxious and, I suspect, wasn't too far away from going BANG in spectacular fashion.

So, no PC until at least Thursday, which is when our local PC hardware shop will re-open for business.

There was a time when this would be a major ballache, but not any more. I don't have to worry about accessing my email - it's on Gmail these days and the web interface does just fine for my needs most of the time. I don't have to worry about internet access - my router and the wifi access point are working fine and dandy. I don't have to worry about accessing my data, photos, music - they're all backed up to an external hard several times a day, and I can always just plug that into the laptop to get at what I need. I don't need to worry about work (okay, I'm on holiday, but bear with me) because DVCSes like Bazaar mean that I can work remotely, pushing and pulling branches from Launchpad as needed.

It's only just struck me how disconnected, technologically, my life has become. And I don't mean that in the sense of not having a connection (though it's nearly new year so I'm expecting BT to royally screw me over any time in the next week and a half). I mean that, despite how much I rely on technology to get my work done, to keep in touch with people, to manage my memories and all the reset, I don't need to be tied to my desk to do any of it. Right now, I'm working without cables (we'll gloss over the ones that connect the wifi AP to the router or the router to the phone line or...). I can put my photos online, on Flickr or Picasa or a jillion other photo-management apps. I can keep in touch with people without having to fart-arse around with desktop email clients and suchlike.

But tomorrow, I think, the laptop's going to stay off. Because it's Christmas (this is a clumsy segue, I know, but it's late and I'm bleeding tired) and I'm going to spend the day with Sarah, eating far too much, watching too much TV and probably drinking more than I really ought.

Happy Christmas, folks. Have a good one. 

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About

Graham Binns is a writer, photographer, musician and software developer from Lancaster, England, with far too much hair, a penchant for odd t-shirts and a magnificent hat. He has been making things up for as long as he can remember and has been making code work for long enough to make a living from it.

He has written one novel, which is in the process of composting, and is working remembering how to write before embarking on a second. In the meantime, he photographs things, since it's easier not to have to make the world up in his head all of the time.

From the gallery

Corners No entry Tramway Smash Wasteland