Always outnumbered, never outgunned
Mon 10/03/08 23:24
People often ask me: "Rik, why on earth do you buy all that rubbish from the Oxfam bargain bin?" But that's another story.
What I want to talk about is when people ask me "Rik, where does a guy like you listen to music from these days?" After all, when you're an ex-teenage rave freak, used to work as a student DJ, have more than a passing interest in all things synth, and own a Jive Bunny album without shame, where do you go to satisfy that nagging urge for new music?
Well, the answer is that for a while, I didn't. Instead, I revelled in the warm neon glow of Radio Nigel. With the help of Nigel (run by a bloke called - wait for it - Steve), I rediscovered the 80s. Contrary to those "party classics" that immediately spring to mind, there's actually a lot of "forgotten" 80s music out there that's actually not terrible. Martika, anyone? The Other Ones, New Order, Wang Chung, Murray Head, The Assembly? I could go on, but I'd rather you tune in.
And slowly but surely, you make your way back into the land of the living, to find artists like Rex The Dog, Tepr, datA and Trademark keeping the dream alive, albeit with a 21st Century twist. (Who knew that the Human League were still touring, by the way? Blimey.) But where can you, the poor impoverished reader, find and listen to all these people before buying an album or three? Simple. Pig Radio is your friend. Merely visiting their website will guarantee your face is flushed magenta with excitement, and that's even before you wrap your ears around the eclectic mix of new new things that burst forth from their playlist.

Finally, I know I'm about a year late, but this has been making me smile all week. Whatever happened to the Hardcore Cleaning Sensation?

| Suhas: Inverted pyramid of web developers on a Segway :d.Rik: You're only saying that because you'd like to see a picture... ;) (Nice to see you, by the way!)Robin: Absence makes the heart grow fonder ,cHTsdfwmYyuvQfLV: doors.txt;10;15ejOhOEJKlqXXbhOLAX: fo069.txt;3;6 |
Mon 03/03/08 04:31(This isn't the blog post I was planning to post, but I thought I'd throw this up while it was fresh in my brain.)
This is the second time recently that someone I know has remarked about how Thunderbird is worse than Outlook Express. It was an odd enough coincidence that I thought it worth a quick mention.
Now, I've used a fair few mail clients in the past - Pine (mmmm) and Netsc(r)ape Messenger, for example - and I used to be an Outlook user, of both the Express and "proper" flavours,. Conversely, I was glad to see the back of it. The Express version felt fragile and flaky (not to mention its Swiss cheese-like nature), and the full version was too enterprisey. I just wanted to do email - surely it's not too much to ask! (Eudora at the time wasn't free.)
Mozilla Mail was my next stop of choice, and it struck the balance far better for me. It was, however - like the Mozilla Suite in general - suffering a bit from the all-in-one clunkathon syndrome, and you did get the impression that it could have been more, well, alert, and generally a bit better than Netscape Messenger. Mozilla had the same idea, and smashed it all into bits, which brings us circuitously to Thunderbird.
I like Thunderbird mainly due to it's Ronseal-like qualities. Simply, it's a solid, no-nonsense mail client. It reads mail and newsgroups*, and it does it well. Since version 2 in particular, it's had decent filtering and search capabilities, and it's uncluttered and responsive. It even integrates with Google Mail so you can avoid using their hideous web interface.
What is Thunderbird "actually quite poor" at, then? Well, it's not crap at reading mail, that's for sure. It is quite poor at having flowery email templates. (As a rule, I don't use HTML email, so that's fine by me.) Against Outlook, integration with other services is poor. There is an integrated Calendar plugin, but it's not finished yet. But then again, the same goes for the free version of Outlook, and there's no changing that at all.
Steve mentions a "memory leak" which I thought sounded interesting, so I left my copy of Thunderbird running for a while. It's been sitting there for quite some time at around 82MB (I've got some big .msf files), and it doesn't seem to be going anywhere. Thunderbird for sure has a larger memory footprint than Outlook Express, but I'm not yet convinced it leaks memory in the same sieve-like fashion that Firefox does**.
So... thoughts? What else is Thunderbird rubbish at? No doubt there's more, but I'm not awake enough to remember. Comments appreciated!
*If anyone does that any more, that is.
**Yes, I know that's not really a memory leak; it's the tab caching being enthusiastic.
| Steve: Thank's for reading my post, generally speaking, Thunderbird is ok'ish but the memory leak of both Tbird and Firefox is well documented and whilst there are 'fixes' around none of them actually work. I've had Outlook running in the background (obviously) for seven days now and it is currently using 8MB. I could at this point go on about how much I dislike Tbird (and yes I do have the integrated calender plugin) but end of the day I am using Outlook 2003 full and I do find it very useful for home/work integration. Read my short extract or, with enough requests, I can get a full blown discussion going. -Thanks Rik ;)Steve: Just another quickie, Outlook Express is extremely dodgy and given the choice I would use Tbird every day of the week and twice on Sunday's but end of the day, I do have a full copy of Office 2003 complete (and off the back of a lorry called eBay - got it a couple of years ago); but in the circumstances, I much prefer Outlook over Tbird, depends want you want really.Rik: "Memory leaks" in Mozilla products are indeed well-documented on the Internet, although unfortunately a fair amount of it is nonsense propagated by people who don't know what they're talking about. (The Firefox tab caching issue that I mention above for example, which did indeed take up a lot of memory, but wasn't a leak like lots of people said it was.) But hey, memory leaks make for better headlines. Indeed, a quick look at the official list shows a lot of reports with a status of New or Unconfirmed, and only a couple are still oustanding in the 2.x branch. Neither seem to be major. A couple of things: a) Are you including virtual memory in those figures? I'd be surprised if the full Outlook 2003 wasn't using any at all... b) Since you're a Windows user, then perhaps some trim_on_minimize action would help you out - leaves Thunderbird with a svelte 9MB of Memory when backgrounded for me.Rik: Whoops - that sentence in my previous comment should read that only a couple _of Confirmed_ bugs are still outstanding in the 2.x branch. |
Mon 03/03/08 01:32It's going to be a busy month, really. Turnmills is closing down, so I'm off to see Mr Ferry Corsten play there in a couple of weekends time, accompanied by a plethora of people named Steve. It should be pretty good, but there's always the problem that the headliner DJ is always on at about 4am, by which time you're invariably too shagged out to stay awake, let alone dance enthusiastically like a loon.
Also, I'm going to be leaving these urban shores to head back to the balmy rural paradise of home during the Easter weekend, which should make for a nice break. I have a fair inkling that what I'll be doing will include at least this:

Mix in some Six Nations matches, a birthday lunch or two and some mates visiting from back home, and suddenly the old Moleskine is practically brimming with appointments.
Right, I'm off to do some late-night flat-scrubbing. If I get back in time, I'll blog about some of the software stuff that I've been looking/hacking/swearing at recently.

Wed 20/02/08 19:52I'm writing this blog entry from something really quite shiny. Yes, after all this time, I've finally bitten the bullet and bought a new home PC. A completely new one, rather than my usual tactic of cobbling together any old electronics to produce some semblance of a working system, replacing any item that's completely knackered with one that's merely slightly broken.
Now, for the first time in a long while, I'm the proud owner of a PC that:
- Has a PS/2 keyboard socket that's not inexplicably broken and doesn't prevent the mouse from working when anything's plugged into it
- Has a soundcard that doesn't arbitrarily stop playing sound and crash the whole system
- Is running an Operating System that doesn't date from 1999
- Doesn't have all of its drives held upside-down in using gaffer tape
- Can reboot without randomly losing at least one harddrive when starting back up
- Doesn't have a non-working floppy drive stuck in it because it won't come out
- Has a proper case that's not fallen to pieces, or been dropped countless times
- Doesn't have the speed and urgency of a snail in treacle
This, ladies and gentlemen, is the future.

Tue 05/02/08 23:20After all this time, I've finally got past the stage of just thinking about blogging something here to actually doing it. Quite an achievement, considering the size of the interim period in which I've done, frankly, bugger all.
For the first time ever since this site started, for example, I didn't wish all my friends Merry Christmas from here on Shinypixel. So for that I apologise, but then again given the amount of texts that I sent out over Xmas and New Year, I don't think I missed many people. (If I did, then... bugger.)
To continue in the usual vein of posting stuff that I've knocked up, here's an extremely rushed flyer for something that I produced in December:
Now, the more astute among you might have noticed that the 14th December wasn't on a Saturday, nor the 15th on a Sunday. How could a stickler for perfection such as myself make such a stupidly obvious mistake (and not notice until a whole day afterwards, no less)? Cast your eyes toward the right-hand side of the flyer, and squint a bit. If you still can't read it, then here's a translation: Flyer whipped up the morning after the office party by a seriously hungover DJHC.
And damn, was it a good party.
Before I bid you adieu, with fleeting yet teasing promises about exciting events to write about in future - that flashy-looking CD compilation in the top-right corner of the page, for example - here's an excerpt from some code which I'd written last week late at night, forgotten, and found again just moments ago before deciding to write this blog:
// Any one X needs at least 7 Ys to work as my extremely
// dodgy code doesn't seem to work with less. No idea why.
// Maybe it's because I'm coding it at 2 in the morning while
// listening to Phil Collins.
// *sigh*
See ya around!






