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Week 249: To done

I started my first week of no work in a flurry of activity working through items on my to do list. I got up, dressed, polished the frets on a ukulele, took electrical waste to the electrical waste bin at the library, took the old bulbs and batteries to the recycling bins at Tesco, posted a parcel for L—, did the shopping, and it still wasn’t even midday on Monday.

I have ordered this year’s Christmas Tree. I’ve also had my first mince pie of the year, as they already have them in stock in Lidl.

In order to sort out my CDs I wanted to buy a couple more 18 L Really Useful boxes (they’re the perfect size for holding about 90 CDs). I checked the local shops that might have them, and cycled down to B&M on the Old Kent road. It’s one of the saddest shops I’ve been to: it looks run down inside and out, not helped by a desolate overgrown car park in front, bounded by a collapsing wall. And after all that, they didn’t have any in stock.

But I checked, and Argos also sell them. I didn’t go through all the hassle of ordering and paying online, I just walked in and ordered using the terminal. Within about thirty seconds, they called me up to the counter to collect.

This caused consternation among the other punters stuck in a queue waiting to collect their online purchases. One complained to the person who was serving me, who explained that there was a separate desk for online purchases and in-store purchases.

And the moral of the story is that purchasing online is slower than just turning up at Argos.

I have catalogued all my CDs in MusicBrainz, and with a bit of scripting I was able to dump a CSV file (with the sort order name for artists), assign albums to boxes with approximately 90 per box but without splitting an artist across boxes, and print out an index sheet for each.

I then spent a few hours sitting on the floor moving everything around to its correct place. It was a useful exercise, because I discovered a couple of CDs I hadn’t catalogued or even ripped, and because I now know where they all are.

I disassembled a couple of palettes for wood, and removed all the nails. Once the wood has dried properly I’ll plane off the splinters, and then I’m going to make boxes for our Bromptons. They will just be simple four-sided carcases that make it easier to stow them in the cupboard under the stairs.

Thursday was forecast to be warm and sunny, so I planned a day walk. I took the train down to Uckfield in East Sussex and walked a circuitous route to Buxted along a route that included the footpath once infamously blocked by notorious criminal Nicholas van Hoogstraten. Through the trees I caught a glimpse of the massive copper dome atop his gaudy and never-finished palace.

A signed footpath across a field. In the background is a big sign.

The famous van Hoogstraten welcome. The sign in the background announces that the High Cross Estate is private property, forbids trespassing, and warns of 24 hour security patrols, shooting in progress, and dogs running loose.

I had intended to walk via Blackboys (Wait! It’s OK! Despite appearances, it refers to a wood, as in French bois) but found my way blocked by hundreds of cattle making their way up the road to the pasture, so I turned back and took a shortcut to Framfield for lunch. I ended up walking 16.5 km in total, which was plenty anyway.

The train line to Uckfield doesn’t have much traffic: it’s a single track with one train per hour (the same train) in each direction. That made the unusual pedestrian crossing across the railway cutting a little less worrying than it might be elsewhere.

There’s an old 13th century church at Buxted with an even older – well over 2000 years old – yew tree in the churchyard. The tree is older than the church, older than England, and older even than Christianity itself. Yew trees must have had a religious significance long ago to end up in the grounds of so many establishments of this young upstart religion.

This time, I remembered to bring a spare T-shirt, so I washed myself with some wet wipes and changed so that I didn’t stink all the way home.

The Book of Guilt by Catherine Chidgey is the best thing I’ve read all year. I bought it on the strength of a staff recommendation in a bookshop, and I absolutely loved it. It’s a mysterious, dystopian, alternate history (although nothing so trite as “what if Germany won the war?”) and I’d thoroughly recommend it to anyone who enjoys that kind of thing. Don’t read any reviews beforehand; it’s more fun if you go into it not knowing anything. I finished it in a day and a half, and I missed it when it was over.

I gave blood again for the first time in a couple of years on Friday. It was the first time since I had had to stop due to low iron levels. After a lot of tests, it turned out that there was nothing wrong with me, except, perhaps, giving blood more frequently than I could replenish my stores of iron. I’m taking iron tablets and I’m going to donate less frequently and hope that that keeps everything balanced. I had to answer all the first time questions again, but it was otherwise uneventful.

As I was at the donor centre in the Westfield shopping centre at Stratford, I treated myself to a vegan boba tea and bought a load of new socks to replace my worn-out pairs.

I realised later that I can go all the way to the blood donor centre and home again without ever crossing a road. But that’s just a corollary of being able to get to the underground station without crossing a road. I could get to Edinburgh or Paris or Tokyo without crossing a road, either.

The Online Safety Act is not going great, is it? After 25 July, a number of websites introduced age verification for users in the UK. Discord’s system requires users to upload their ID to a “third party service provider”.

On 3 October, Discord revealed that said “third party service provider” had been hacked and images of the IDs of 70,000 users leaked.

Meanwhile, I can’t even see innocuous pictures of ukuleles on forum posts because popular image host imgur is no longer available in the UK due to the onerous requirements of the OSA. They already ban explicit content, so it does seem to be that compliance is the part that is too much work just to support one dismal peripheral country.

I imagine I’ll just be routing all traffic through a server in another jurisdiction before much longer.

No links this week. Must be a good sign that I’ve not been spending much time on the computer.

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  • Week 248: Demobbed

    You might think that being freed from the time pressures of work would give me plenty of free time to write my weeknotes, but no. I have a long list of things to do and I’ve been working my way through the list steadily, and so these are late as usual.

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  • Pennies (update)

    Back in 2019, I did some comparisons on the historical value of coinage to show that the penny was by far the most worthless UK coin ever. Since then, inflation has made the situation worse, and a pound is worth about ⅘ of what it was in 2019, so I thought it might be interesting (/horrifying) to update the table.

    Here’s what each of the previous smallest coins was worth in 2024 pounds (the latest data available) at the time it was withdrawn from circulation:

    Coin Year withdrawn Face value £1 in £2024 Value in £2024
    Half farthing 1870 £11920 £129.1 6.7p
    Farthing 1960 £1960 £31.06 3.2p
    Halfpenny 1969 £1480 £22.2 4.6p
    Penny 1971 £1240 £19.06 7.9p
    Halfpenny (decimal) 1984 £1200 £4.34 2.2p

    The value of £1 in £2024 is the real price taken from the Measuring Worth calculator.

    A penny today is worth less than a quarter of a penny was at the time that the decimal halfpenny was withdrawn in 1984. It must be time to get rid of 1p and 2p coins.

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  • Week 247: Folk festival

    This was my last full week of work before my contract ends at the end of the month (plus one day, but that’s for next time). I’ve been trying to tie up loose ends, write down things that were in my head, and make sure that I’m not the single point of failure on anything.

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  • Week 246: Summer’s last stand

    I took Wednesday off to take part in the protest against Trump’s visit. I avoided the milling around at the start and took a direct route to join the head of the march around Piccadilly Circus, so I didn’t really get a good sense of how many people were behind. It felt smaller than last time, but it was in the middle of a working day, so you wouldn’t expect a huge turnout. The Met deployed 1600 police, which seems rather a lot for a peaceful march and rally.

    More …

Older entries can be found in the archive.