Category: diary

  • Racing Little Cars

    Another day, another diversion. Since I was a kid, I’ve always wanted a Scalextric layout set up in a loft. I was very kindly bought a set for my last birthday, so I’ve taken the first step towards this (the loft will have to come at a later date). This evening I was idly looking around Youtube, and happened upon a clip of a great layout:

    What I like about this is that it isn’t the largest of tracks by any means, but it’s set up for racing and overtaking, it looks like a racers track. This clip shows an experiment they made to see just how many cars they could run on this setup at once. A lot, is the simple answer.

    Now this led me onwards elsewhere, and I noticed a Japanese equivalent to this, where they race battery-powered cars around much larger tracks:

    I think I had one or two of the Tamiya models when I was young, but I’d never seen them raced before, without the track they will chug along a carpet in a straight line. This looks a lot more exciting. I also suspect that you find a difference between the British and the Japanese approach to model car racing here, where with Scalextric it’s mainly about the racing itself, the interaction of the driver with the car. With these Tamiya cars, I suspect with the racing it’s more about the tuning and the engineering, I can instantly picture a whole culture of tuning and building of the larger models that dwarfs the tuning possible with Scalextric (I do know that does go on, but you’ve got less to work with I think).

    To further this theory, the next clip I watched was of a three-wheel car being raced on a similar track in China, at something approaching an insane speed:

    Now I think my loft of the future may need the space for both…

  • Christmas can now start

    The turkey is in the fridge, the presents are under the tree, the heavily discounted champers and wine are in place. So I guess this must mean I’m prepared. All I have to do tomorrow is find cloves (and I’m going to be stunned if the food shops of the Cowley Road fail me), and meet my wife in the pub around 1ish.

    It should be a nice chilled Christmas Day, just the two of us for nice pressies and lots of good food. We’ve already treated ourselves to our main present, a nice big HD telly, and I’ve already been making the most of this for Rock Band 2 playing, and World Championship darts viewing. I suspect the Boxing Day tradition of 4 Hills Ski-Jumping is going to look lovely on it too.

  • Worst Journalist of 2008

    Goes to Max Hastings of the Daily Mail.

    What the sacking of Posh Ed tells us about the BBC’s hang-ups over class

    Now it’s a pretty shoddy piece of journalism all round, but my attention was particularly drawn to the following paragraph:

    In the case of Stourton, BBC gossip suggests that he has been dismissed from his role as a presenter at the Today programme because he sounds too ‘toffish’. I have no idea whether this is true. But it is very believable.

    This is astonishing for a journalist to admit. He has no idea at all about the premise his whole article is based on? He made no effort whatsoever to investigate it? Hastings is a former editor of the Daily Telegraph and Evening Standard, so it isn’t as if he doesn’t have any contacts at all he could try to speak to. I just think it is stunning for a journalist to admit he hasn’t done any work, and that he’s making massive assumptions for the sake of his snotty little article. At least most other columnists pretend they made an effort.

  • Back on the bus

    Don’t worry, I will tire of the marvel that is bus-based blogging soon. Well mentioning it at least.

    Homewards now, thinking sweet bus-bound thoughts of pasta, of comfy chairs and of sweet sleep. Really fancy a good long sleep for a while, maybe a few days.

    Starting to think about Christmas and next year now. We’re hoping that we will get over to Norway to see my dad in the spring. Slightly lost for ideas of what to do for a summer holiday, maybe that is just too far ahead at the moment.

  • On the bus

    So I can now write blog posts on the way to work. The iPhone is truly a thing of wonderment. Every day I seem to find something new for it that can potentially damage my productivity slightly.

    It also is helping to up my social status. Yesterday I filled out a survey online about my iPhone, and at the end I was asked “how many people live in your house,excluding servants?” I’ve never been asked if I had staff, so clearly I’m moving up in the world.

  • Museum and Rock

    Chilled weekend, had a walk into town, followed the city wall round a bit, and wandered through some of the more quiet streets to find our wafer to the Ashmolean museum. Looked around there, took a few photos:

    Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
    Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.

    Then on for a pint at the newly reopened Gloucester Arms, which was a bit barren as they’ve just taken over, but was still very rock, and was starting to fill up nicely when we went home for dinner.

    Took it very easy on Sunday, feeling nice and relaxed now.

  • Idle thoughts

    • Am feeling happier and happier to be back using iTunes, after a couple of years using Amarok in Linux. Just find it that slight bit more searchable, and it hooks up with the iPhone a treat, just finding and listening to a lot of different things, both in terms of podcasts and music.
    • New Xbox Live is, err, live. I’ve actually had it a week or so, managed to slip onto the final beta that Xbox podcaster Major Nelson launched. It’s very pretty, definitely better looking than the previous interface. Have yet to use it to play with friends, hope to do that soon.
    • Going to try and nip into the Ashmolean museum this weekend, catch it before it closes for a year for a major refurb. Have found out I can take photos there (no flash though), so will try and get lots of images of how it was before, and hopefully after in a year’s time.
    • Need to make more time for reading. I’ve slunk down to almost zero reading of books at the moment apart from on hols and long journeys, must change this.
  • Over at timmaughanbooks.com

    My friend Tim is visiting Japan at the moment, and is blogging his trips around Tokyo each day. He’s taking a lot of photographs of a wonderful city, well worth a look: timmaughanbooks.com.

  • Lewis Hamilton is F1 World Champion

    1976 – Last race of the season. Wet race. Late tyre change. World championship won in the last few laps. British World Champion.

    2008 – Last race of the season. Wet race. Late tyre change. World championship won in the last few corners. British World Champion.

    Just a spectacular race, most exciting end to a season ever. Massa went over the line thinking he was champion. He’d “lost” it by the time he got to turn 3. Amazing stuff, and hopefully this is the first of many titles for Hamilton.

  • Movember – Day 1

    Welcome to Movember! I, along with several colleagues at work, will be growing a Mo (moustache to the rest of us) during November in aid of the Prostate Cancer Charity. Today I am clean-shaven for the first time in nearly a decade.

    The money raised by Movember is used to raise awareness of men’s health issues and donated to The Prostate Cancer Charity which will have an enormous impact on many men’s lives and the awareness will help to fight prostate cancer on every front – through research, support, information and campaigning.

    Did you know…

    • Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men in the UK. 35,000 men are diagnosed every year and one man dies every hour.
    • 1 in 11 UK men will be diagnosed in their lifetime.

    If you’d like to support me, please go to my Mospace, where whatever you can spare would be greatly appreciated.