Blog Posts in "bass"

The band (first iteration)

Graham Binns posted a photo:

The band (first iteration)

Three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 143

UDS Intrepid, Day 5: Ubuntu All Stars

From left to right, Bill Filler, Jorge Castro, Tony Espy, Luke Yelavich, Jono Bacon.

Twang

Graham Binns posted a photo:

Twang

Three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 45

I broke a bass string tonight. This made me cranky, since I won't be able to get a new one for a couple of days and I don't have any spares (my fault).

So I took photos instead, obviously.

An Audience of One

Graham Binns posted a photo:

An Audience of One

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

This is my first attempt at doing something Rebekka Gudleifsdottir-esque (yes, I know, terrible English, sue me).

It was bloody hard to do, let me tell you. For one thing, even moving from one position to the other meant that the lighting conditions behind me changed. In such a small room, with only one reliable light source this was, perhaps, a bad idea. It tested my gimp-fu anyway.

I shot it in colour and desaturated it since it made the matching of edges and colours easier. Final wash of colour applied in Picasa whilst I was playing about.

(And I've just noticed the rather odd bulge in the standing-me's right buttock. It's my wallet, not a gimping error (though I should have removed it). Ah, well.)

Where's Santa when you need him?

Posted at 16:50:34 on Sat, December 29th 2007 by graham
in: bass christmas ranting stupidity

Christmas, as people have often remarked, changes a lot as you get older. For one thing you get less presents (mainly because you're more fussy, I think). For another you feel less excited about the whole thing (maybe because of the lack of presents that you're getting). All of which could lead you to thinking that Christmas should be a miserable time of year for everyone over the age of, say, thirteen. The truth is, of course, that as you get older Christmas, in fact, gets better.

I can explain why with two phrases:

  1. Spoil yourself! It's Christmas!
  2. January sales

The first one is, of course, the most insidious. It makes you think that sixty quid on DVDs here, a hundred and fifty quid on overpriced clothes there is okay because "It's Christmas!" And number two backs it right up. Not only is it Christmas! it's also January Sales time, which means that you can say to yourself "Well, I'll never be able to get this overpriced tat for that price at any other time of the year and, hell, spoil yourself! It's Christmas!" and somehow convince yourself that this is logically sound.

And so your bank account empties slowly with a noise not unlike an expensive bottle of red glugging down the plughole. And late in January, as payday is just out of reach enough to make things a stretch (especially if your nice employer brought payday forward for you so that you could spend even more of your wage over the Christmas week) you find yourself thinking "well, maybe I shouldn't have bought all that stuff on Amazon on Boxing Day. But it was Christmas! And January Sales! So I suppose it's okay," whilst your children turn blue with hypothermia and the cat dies because you haven't been able to afford it for a week and a half. Actually, strike the bit about the cat. They can sort themselves out.

And of course, dear reader, your humble blogger hasn't been able to avoid temptation this year any more than any other member of homo sapiens would when faced with a massive amount of price reductions and a seemingly large amount of disposable income (or in my case money that is given to me in lieu of presents by people who feel guilty enough to still want to give me something every year).

Which is why I'm currently waiting on deliveries of not only a new bass (of which more in a moment and to which the title of this post largely pertains) but also the entire collection of Buffy DVDs, £65 delivered, courtesy of Amazon, seasons 1 and 2 of Life on Mars, also courtesy of Amazon and seasons 1-4 of teachers, yet again from Amazon (but through Sarah's account rather than mine because, you know, she's the teacher and I just get to laugh at the show).

All of which is all very nice and pleasant and, you would think, would give us plenty to be watching on the great glass teat as we try to shrug off our post-Christmas torpor in time for the New Year (when we will, of course, replace it with a post New Year torpor or, quite possibly, a hangover). Trouble is, of course, it doesn't quite work like that.

The DVDs, which were ordered at various stages over the last seven days, are due to arrive sometime between next Wednesday and two weeks hence. The Buffy DVDs were supposed to arrive yesterday but have yet to show, and my bass... well, let's just say that I should have known better than to place an order for a bass with a company who uses TNT Express to deliver their customers' goods.

TNT have, allegedly, tried to deliver my bass twice. Except that they haven't been trying very hard because not once have they actually knocked on my door. The first time I could have understood, since ours is not a house that's easy to find even with GPS (GPS, incidentally, will plonk you right on top of us but there's no indication of which house is which on our little site). But I would have thought that after I'd had the whole "here's my phone number, get the driver to call me" conversation with them I would have at least got a call to say "I can't find your house," or "Are you actually in." Better still, they could have done what DHL and UPS do, which is to call first and say "I'm on my way... can you give me directions please?"

I offered to go and pick the bass up from their depot (if the mountain won't come to Mohammed...), which all seemed fine and dandy until the depot, which I had been assured would stay open until three this afternoon, magically closed at twelve. Apparently I can go on Monday to pick the thing up - but only with the right ID and paperwork (funny, they seemed perfectly happy to deliver it to my house without any ID whatsoever). All of which leads me to wonder if some minor deity or other hasn't decided to toy with me for the sake of amusement over the period between Christmas and New Year, when too many people have become virtuous and not enough people are getting drunk enough to be interesting.

Next weekend, though. Next weekend, I think, might be a geeky DVD-fest of epic proportions.

Juiced

Posted at 13:25:59 on Sun, December 16th 2007 by graham
in: bass i should be writing jeos launchpad linux ubuntu virtualisation work writing

I'm waiting for Ubuntu JeOS (pronounced Juice, by the way) to download at the moment so that I can do some virtualised stuff. Well, more accurately, so that I can do some virtualised stuff without having to wait for ever and ever and ever for X to start when I don't need it. Since JeOS is only 151MB of ISO as opposed to the server install's 600-odd MB, I figured that it might make things slightly quicker all round to just download the new, no-bells-or-whistles flavour of Ubuntu. I'll let you know how it goes.

It's not just the unwieldy nature of, say, the Gnome desktop when running under VirtualBox that concerns me. Just half an hour ago I had to power down my machine and do some fairly hefty maintenance with a can of compressed air and some thermal transfer paste to ensure that my backup script, which runs once every six hours, didn't make my CPU overheat. Something tells me that it's getting close to the time when I'm going to want to build myself a new PC. Maybe I'll see if I can get this one to last 'til April and then stick Hardy on the new one as a fresh install. Yes, that sounds like a good idea. (And also, by having just written that, I've talked myself out of spending the money that I was thinking of spending on a new bass on PC bits; it's always nice to be able to talk myself out of things I don't really want to do).

Right. The JeOS install is running in a new VirtualBox instance. The CPU is currently running at 61° C; let's see how it does (it got to 70° last time around).

"So what news from the wilds of Lancaster?" I hear you ask. Well, dear reader, once again I have been consumed by work, work and a bit more work. It seems like I haven't done much besides hack on Launchpad since I returned from Massachusetts last month. Not that I'm complaining about that - after all, hacking on Launchpad is what keeps me in new bass money - but it's been nice this weekend to not think about it, at least for a while. Launchpad version 1.1.12 will hopefully be rolled out this week. After that we as a development team will be taking time off for Christmas, ready to start on the next development cycle in January. I think that in terms of improvements Launchpad 1.1.12 is going to be a pretty good release. I've managed to get quite a few bugs fixed and new (and in demand, I might add) features added this cycle, and I'm absolutely certain that other members of the team will have done that and more besides.

All of which means that, once again, I haven't had much time to write. Normally, not having written anything would have seriously pissed me off by now, but I've been enjoying my work so much (apart from the bits where I find myself still hacking at 11 o'clock at night and unable to make sense out of what turns out in the morning to be the simplest of problems) that I haven't really had time to get annoyed at myself. I plan to do some scribbling over Christmas (I did have an idea for a Christmas story which I might try and jot down this week if I have the time).

Other than that, life continues pretty much as normal chez Binns. Tomorrow night I'm going to be at a wedding party, which means that for the first time since I joined Canonical I'm going to have to get my hair cut. Whether I get it cut short or just shorter I've yet to decide. Part of me wonders what I look like under this great shaggy mass; another part is glad to have a warm covering in the winter months.

And finally, dear reader, the JeOS install is more-or-less complete. Bon. And the CPU temp never went above 61°. Très bon.

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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