grahambinns.com

| Lancaster-based photographer, writer and developer
  • Home
  • Flickr
  • Tumblr

Posts in "writing"

<< Previous Page
Next Page >>

That ohshitohshitohshit feeling

Posted at 22:11:02 on Fri, October 31st 2008  |  Comment on this post
Published in friends, halloween, story, writing

Happy Goth Christmas, everyone.

I'm exhausted. It's been a long two weeks and, though I was supposed to be going to the the Canonical Halloween party at Canonical Towers tonight I decided that, due to lack of sleep and general grumpiness on my part, I would be better off concentrating on finishing the Halloween story that I've been promising everyone all week.

Incidentally, if I promised you this story, thank you for taking the promise: you've helped to keep me honest.

The story, The Girl, Death is available here and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK: England & Wales License. Please go and read it and feel free to send feedback to blog AT this domain. Alternatively, you can leave a comment on this entry (the stories section of the site is pretty rudimentary, thrown up in a hurry today; I'll fix it later and migrate any comments I receive).

Finally, I'd like to thank my fiancée, Sarah, for being my beta reader, guinea pig and editor. If it weren't for her this story wouldn't have been published, no matter how many promises I made to others.

Brain sucking internet sucks brain

Posted at 23:01:39 on Sat, October 25th 2008  |  Comment on this post
Published in douglas adams, neil gaiman, not writing, open rights group, photography, thoughts, wifi, writing

I came down to the mezzanine level of the hotel - about the only place I can get a semi-reliable wi-fi signal - with a plan to absorb some of the internet (or at least deal with some emails and try to clear some of the 1000+ unread Google Reader items) and I've managed somehow to find myself listening to the original Last Chance to See radio show about the Amazonian Manatee (Stephen Fry and Mark Carwadine are in the process of filming a twenty-years-on TV series for the BBC, which should be pretty interesting). This is not Getting Things Done. This is distinctly Not Writing.

I went to the Neil Gaiman / ORG event last night with a number of Canonical colleagues. It was a very interesting talk, especially considered Neil's jet-laggedness, and the Q-and-A session afterwards was excellent. Two things that Neil said resonated particularly with me. Quoting Douglas Adams, he said:

"Books are sharks. There were sharks before dinosaurs and there are sharks now. There is nothing in the world better at being a shark than a shark is - and there is nothing in the world better at being a book than a book is. They're portable, they're light, they're mostly solar-powered... Books aren't going to go away."

And responding to a questioner, who asked whether giving things away was a good way for journeyman writers to get their material out to the world (the question I had planned to ask, incidentally, but I got question-gazumped, not that I begrudge the gazumper), he said (I paraphrase):

Yes. Absolutely... When I started writing there were a very few ways to get things to the people who matter, and none of them really wanted to read what you had. Now there are many, many ways to get your work to the people who matter, and they all want to take on new authors (well, enough new authors). Of course, there are a lot more people making their writing publicly available these days, so now you have to be very, very good indeed.

And I found myself wondering why I've not put more - indeed, any, come to think of it - of my work online.

There's an immediacy about photography that writing just can't have, almost by definition. Writing is to photography what sculpture is to... err... photography (I can't think of another visual art that offers photography's instantaneousness - answers on a postcard please). I can shoot something, edit it briefly (a quick retouch in the Gimp or an adjustment of levels in Picasa) and have it up on the web within minutes of having shot it. If I write something it can take days, even for the shortest of stories, for me even to get to the point where I want someone else to take a look at it (I think I've written before about my not-being-able-to-show-people-stories problem so I'll not go on about it here). Getting it up there on the web is an entirely different animal.

But for some reason, call it a kick in the pants from a best selling author and philosophising with friends down the pub or whatever else you may want to call it, I find myself finally wanting to put work up online.

Halloween's coming. I've been promising myself a Halloween story for years (I did write one before, but it never felt quite right; maybe it's worth digging out the manuscript for that, too).

Anyway, the point was that I was supposed to be writing that now. Instead I'm listening to Douglas Adams, Mark Carwadine and an unhappy, bedraggled, three-toed sloth. Still, as displacement activities go, could be worse I suppose.

Message in the sand

Posted at 23:39:17 on Wed, September 03rd 2008  |  Comment on this post
Published in d300, fiancee, love, messages, morecambe, morecambebay, photography, september mass upload the first, three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, writing

Graham Binns posted a photo:

Message in the sand

Three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 247

Written by my fiance&eacute; on Morecambe beach.

If you're seeing this...

Posted at 15:19:42 on Sun, June 22nd 2008  |  Comment on this post
Published in blog, code, django, new design, news, new site, postgres, writing

... then the DNS records have propagated correctly and your RSS feed reader is now slurping from the new grahambinns.com server, which is just hunky dory as far as I'm concerned.

I've been working on this version of things for a while. Besides a re-skin - which taught me a lot about how I should be designing my templates and CSS, so it should be a bit easier next time - I've also tidied up the codebase a bit and added some new features. Most of them are under the hood, but here are some of them for those of you that care:

  • Each piece of content on the site has its own license. For example, all my photos are CC-BY-NC-SA, as is all the content here so far. But when I start adding stories here (and it will happen within the next few months, I hope) I'll be able to license them as I see fit.
  • I can now make posts using markdown syntax. This might not seem like a big deal but over the years I've come to loathe sites that simply turn linebreaks into <br />s (yes, Wordpress, I'm looking at you. You still do it, even with valid HTML posts). On this site I used to use TinyMCE as a WYSWIG HTML editor, which worked fine but was pretty horrendous to load on a slow connection. Now I just use markdown and let Django's markup app do all the work. Fantastic.
  • You can now post comments using markdown syntax. No more trying to post a link and having Django eat it!
  • I can now post to the blog by email. I thought about using gpg signatures to validate my emails but realised that it was too complicated (we do it in the Launchpad email interface and one look at that code a while back persuaded me to not do it unless I had to). Instead I've gone for generating single-use authentication tokens, which suits me fine and should hopefully - along with an obscure incoming address - stop spammers from doing nasty things.
  • The site now supports pingbacks, though at the moment it can only receive them until I iron out some issues with the pingback sending code.

There are a lot more things that I've fixed, added, tweaked and polished, but none that are particularly interesting.

So here, finally, are the vital statistics of the new site:

  • Server: Bytemark virtual server running Ubuntu 8.04.
  • Django 0.97-pre (to be upgraded to 1.0 stable when it comes out in September).
  • PostgreSQL 8.3 (the migration to which fixed so many problems it's unreal).
  • Apache with mod_python for serving the Django stuff.
  • Lighttpd for serving the static files.

The problem of getting things done

Posted at 20:53:35 on Wed, June 11th 2008  |  1 incoming links  |  Comment on this post
Published in not getting things done, not writing, optimism, photography, posts that started out differently, three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, writing

The trouble I find with projects, particularly daily projects, is that they're bloody hard to keep doing sometimes. Mur Lafferty has had the problem with The News From Poughkeepsie. JR Blackwell, who's doing a 365 days photography project has also encountered it. And now I'm really hitting a wall with my own daily project, 360-odd days of 2008. So far I've posted up to day 156 (June 5th) and I'm struggling to get round to doing day 157 or anything thereafter (for reference, today is day 162).

I have my reasons, to an extent, for not being able to get much done at the moment. For a start, I'm not able to go very far at present, which limits the things of which I can take photos. On top of that I'm not, unlike JR Blackwell or Rebbeka Gudleifsdottir or a dozen other photographers on Flickr, particularly photogenic and I'm not terribly fond of self portraits. I do have some ideas for shots in which I could serve as the subject but having the time to execute them is another matter entirely. Oh, and there's always the matter of what to say when someone sees you taking a self portrait and asks "what are you doing?"

And let's not even talk about writing. Well, okay, let's. But only insofar as to say I'm not doing any at the moment and haven't been for a while. And of course, when you're off the wagon for too long it makes it harder to get back on. Much, much harder. So even now, when I have the time to write, I find myself doing something else entirely whilst thinking "I should be writing."

All of which means I am made of FAIL.

Still, a night's sleep and who knows? I might get up in the morning, full of the joys of... er... Summer, and sit down and write 1000 words before breakfast and then, after breakfast, go out and take some photos.

In an infinite universe anything is possible.

About

Graham Binns is a photographer, writer, musician and software developer from Lancaster, England, with a bizarre imagingation, a penchant for odd t-shirts and a magnificent hat.

Latest tweet

Have to say Fursty Ferret, for all it sounds like an Ubuntu release, doesn't tickle my tastebuds much. It's lacking in punch somehow.

2010-03-12 21:46:55
Latest flickr uploads
Texture Out of frustration, a self-portrait More Katie Green
More Katie Green More Katie Green More Katie Green
More Katie Green More Katie Green More Katie Green

Categories

  • Photography
  • Writing
  • Ubuntu

Blogroll

  • Joe McNally
  • Bert Stephani
  • Chase Jarvis
  • Alan Pope
  • Launchpad blog
  • Tony Whitmore
  • Pieter Van Impe

Recent posts

  • One of life's little disappointments
  • In which I turn 29
  • Wailly wailly
  • Migrating to Wordpress
  • Brain porridge
  • fnarg
  • Brief request
  • The oncoming arbitrarily-measured period of time
  • That there decade thing
  • Why I Hate Freedom

Recent comments

  • Shamima Sultana on Simple
  • Lucena on And yet more photography gubbins
  • counterlord on Welcome to my humble abode
  • gvjj on Blog engines stuff and things
  • romaPlalase on Mumble
  • Frokostordning on Nonsense at 3am
  • WongCorina32 on Very quickly
  • Graham Binns on Response from Ben Wallace
  • Simon Regan on Response from Ben Wallace
  • Graham Binns on One of life's little disappointments

Popular tags

blackandwhite blogs buildings computing d300 d40x flickr general home humour in the news lancashire lancaster landscape links linux monochrome morecambebay nanowrimo news observations people photography planet ubuntu uk religion sigma1020mm stupidity thoughts three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008 twitter ubuntu water work writing writing ideas


©2005-2010 Graham Binns
Powered by Frabjous using the Gridline Lite theme by Graph Paper Press.