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Home→Published 2009 1 2 3 >>

Yearly Archives: 2009

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The weather

Blasdale Home Posted on December 23, 2009 by SteveNovember 11, 2020

As soon as it gets a little cool, and that white stuff falls from the sky, chaos ensues. Here in the UK we have had some snow, I am sure you have all heard of  Eurostar and fluffy snow putting a hold on travel plans. The Eurostar operators blame a very cold France, where the weather has been the coldest for at least 15 years.  Interestingly I never realised how many people now traveled by Eurostar.

Closer to home Easyjet cancelled hundreds of flights from Luton.   I expect the cold will not last, and flights will be back to normal in January.  Important for me, because I have some work in Scotland starting in January.

Even closer to home, there are stories of people taking 2 hours to travel through Aylesbury.  I don’t understand that one, I see at most 2 centimeters of snow outside on the drive.

It is cool, last night was the coldest, going down to -6 Celsius on our thermometer.  (That’s outside, not inside our house.)   Google tells me Oxford was actually -9.  Rosemary’s brother living over in Canada sent a cutting from a local paper where the temperature had made a record low in the nearby city of Edmonton.  A minus 46.1 Celsius.  This record was 10 degrees colder than the previous record.  The previous record was set last year.

Europe is suffering the cold as well.  I suppose with global warming, there must be some places suffering incredible heat to make up for our record lows across Europe and Canada.

Christmas is now almost on us, so on a Christmas spirit thing, take a look at Santa’s check list.  This is suitable for children to view, as if I would put anything that was not 🙂  christmas-risk-assessment

Christmas is in a couple of days, rain is predicted for later today, so there will not be a white Christmas. 🙁

Posted in Buckinghamshire | Tagged weather | Leave a reply

Bradford Curry

Blasdale Home Posted on December 11, 2009 by SteveDecember 14, 2009

I spent two days in Bradford, one night.  I did not sample the Bradford curry.  I am told they are very good in that town.  OK I did have one for lunch in the canteen of the uni.  It cost £3.90, and was a mixture of several different curries.  Not hot, but very much better than the normal curry sold in a pub.  Rice was not Basmati, but for under £4.00 can;t expect the world.  Alas having that curry at lunch meant I was not hungry for tea, hotel restaurant was closed for Christmas party, so ended up with a takeaway from Tesco.

No matter will be back there another time, so will do some Asian restaurant reviews.  Now is Bradford better for a curry than Birmingham.

Posted in work | Tagged Curry | Leave a reply

On my way to Bradford

Blasdale Home Posted on December 10, 2009 by SteveDecember 10, 2009

Sitting here on the train to Leeds, the countryside looks so beautiful as the sun rises.  Yes the sun is shining.   Just about to pull into Leeds station on time, so better put away the laptop.  Then a quick trip to Bradford, where I shall spend a couple of days at the uni there.

Posted in work | Leave a reply

Commuting to Broxbourne

Blasdale Home Posted on December 9, 2009 by SteveDecember 9, 2009

Last couple of days I have been driving around the M25 to Broxbourne.  Working on applying some modifications to a system there.  I find it amazing how you can be in a quite leafy town just a mile off the rush of the M25.

Its also amazing how that at rush hour the M25 is pretty free flowing with no delays.  I expect that though won’t last, but I will be away up to Bradford for the rest of the week.

Posted in work | Leave a reply

Butterfly Days

Blasdale Home Posted on August 17, 2009 by RosemaryNovember 11, 2020

Despite the recent bad weather, we seem to have had some lovely butterflies in the last few sunny days, so Steve took their portraits and has posted an album of them –

http://www.blasdale.com/blog/picture-albums/blasdale-picture-gallery-2009/2009butterflies/

We have yet to add their names – Small Tortoiseshell, Peacock, Red Admirals (is one just faded into that “Orange” Admiral?), Comma, Painted Lady.

Posted in Buckinghamshire, home, wildlife | Leave a reply

Another Sadgits Reunion 7-9 August 2009

Blasdale Home Posted on August 17, 2009 by RosemaryNovember 10, 2020

The weekend of 7th-9th August saw us meeting up in Essex with friends from Steve’s university days.

This year from our base in a quiet country village courtesy of our hosts, Richard & Andrea, we visited Frinton-on-Sea and honed our sandcastle building techniques before a visit to Beth Chatto’s Gardens.  Richard & Andrea had done their usual brilliant organization, including a Community mini-bus, and had topped it all with wonderful sunny weather.

Rather a lot of talking, drinking & eating was done, but it made a splendid weekend and photos can be found at https://www.blasdale.com/blog/picture-albums/blasdale-picture-gallery-2009/sadgits/ The leading lady is Andrea and the house, in Frinton, is where Richard’s grandparents had lived and hence his knowledge of that quintessentially English seaside town.

Posted in holiday, University | Leave a reply

Sad git thought

Blasdale Home Posted on July 23, 2009 by SteveJuly 23, 2009

I have been reading some bits on the Intel Website.  (Whoever said we never click on the Google Ad words?)  An interesting topic with two points:

  1. We used to think of IBM mainframes and MIPS (Millions of instructions per second).   Then PCs came along and it was the clock speed.  This got irrelevant when Intel got the chips to do more and more in a CPU cycle.  Then came along duo chips and quad chips.  The word now is BOPS  – Billions of Operations Per Second.  So a Quad Core Intel chip Xeon E5345 can execute 153,500 BOPS, or 153,500,000,000,000 instructions per seconds.
  2. This chip that executes at 153,500 BOPS consumes 335 Watts.  That’s a lot of power, but compare that with a single core Intel processor which executes at 33,115 BOPS and uses 323.4 Watts.  Yes a 4.47x improvement in instructions per Watt.  Yes global warming and power consumption are now big issues in the compuer industry. 
  3. Now I see there are some CPUs with 6 cores,  are these called  Sex-Core?  At 2,700 dollars, I will have to wait a while. 
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a reply

Goodwood festival of speed

Blasdale Home Posted on July 5, 2009 by SteveNovember 10, 2020
Near Miss

Near Miss

Red Arrows

Red Arrows

Sunday we went to Goodwood to meet Rosemary’s niece Anne, her partner Peter, and Anne’s son, ie R’s great nephew, Colin. They were over from Canada on holiday and visiting various relatives. Robert (Anne’s brother & hence Rosemary’s nephew) and his lady Kirsty were there in attendance. Goodwood was running the Festival of Speed. This is a three-day event of cars and bikes hill climbing and vocalising their engines.  (Many engines sounded to me in need of going into a garage pronto, but I was informed that was not the case.)  Very clever “sculpture” in front of Goodwood House itself.

Red, White and Blue

Red, White and Blue

Red Arrows

Red Arrows

There were many stands, and many cars that motor heads could drool over. (There were also quite a few old sheep dressed as lamb, which weren’t worth drooling over.) Celebrities were around, Jenson Button and Chris Evans to name two. The Red Arrows performed for the crowds.

On the way back we stopped off at Biceser village for a set meal at Carluccios. Quite reasonable value thee course meal for two and a couple of glasses of wine for £35 including tip.

There is a car up there

There is a car up there

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Reply

Glastonbury Festival 2009 – Saturday

Blasdale Home Posted on June 27, 2009 by SteveNovember 10, 2020

Saturday arrived, and the sun was up, the tent was soon unbearably hot, so had to unzip the doors.  Eventually got up, made coffee and some bacon butties.  The topic of conversation with the neighbours was the death of Michael Jackson.  Quick browse on the Internet confirmed the news and the weather forecast for the day. Off then to find a loo without huge queues.  Some closed as they were about to overflow and needed to be pumped out.  Water was also a problem, as peak times the pressure is so low.

Today I decided to commit myself to one stage and that was the Pyramid stage.  So armed with my camping seat I headed off to the Pyramid, and set myself up just behind the path which crosses in front of it.

The first band I got to see were the Eagles of Death Metal, followed on by Spinal Tap.  With these two bands I relaxed back in the sun, drinking the odd pint of Gales Festival Brew.

The Path

The Path

Saturday at the Pyramid

Saturday at the Pyramid

Dizzee Rascal

Dizzee Rascal

At 4.00, it was then some rap from Dizzee Rascal.  Now I am not really a rapper, but I do admit this was not too bad, there were some highlights, especially the tributes to Michael Jackson who had only just died.

It was one of those mysteries, as I walked about the previous evening, all these people you come up to you and shout, Michael Jackson is dead. It took a while before I believed the story, it could have been one of those rumours that a few people could have started, and which would then spread like wildfire.

CSN

CSN

Crosby Stills and Nash

Crosby Stills and Nash

Kasabian

Kasabian

Kasabian crowd

Kasabian crowd

Kasabian crowd

Kasabian crowd

After Dizzee Rascal, we were back to the old timers, with Crosby Stills and Nash.  They went through so many more songs that I recognised, it was a real walk back down memory lane

Now a band I had never heard of called Kasabian came on.  Quick text to Selina to find out what I should expect.  Turned out to have a few songs you could dance and sing along too.  Great stuff.

Bruce Springsteen

Bruce Springsteen

The crowd watching Bruce Springsteen

The crowd watching Bruce Springsteen

Finally at 10.00 Bruce Springsteen and the E band came on.  He performed for 2 hours and 40 minutes, never stopping at any time.  He not only sings well, but must be fantastically fit.  One image sticks in my mind, Bruce standing there in the cold air, lights behind him steaming away in his sweat.  One or two of the youngsters with attention defecit thought he was on for too long.  And no “Born in the USA”.

Ah well all good things come to an end, made my way back stopping off for a green Thai curry.

Posted in Entertainment, music | Leave a reply

Glastonbury Festival 2009 – Friday

Blasdale Home Posted on June 26, 2009 by SteveNovember 12, 2020

Thursday had ended with a few showers and the odd flash of lightening.  Friday I was awoken at 4.00am by the persistent sound of falling rain, which went on until 10:00.  I had to move stuff around the tent; it didn’t seem quite so waterproof these days.  At the sound of the rain easing, I was up and out in my underpants making a spectacle of my self in front of my neighbours.  Then it was on to making bacon baps and coffee, and chatting to my neighbours, the three girls who had materialised  in a tent next door overnight.

Glastonbury MudThe grass outside was wet, and no sign of the Glastonbury mud on the campsite.  Still boots on today, and waterproofs would probably be good insurance. I walked over to the Pyramid Stage through quite a bit of mud.  Wet fields and thousands of footsteps; always result in the generation of mud.  As one compere over in the Circus Field said, stop walking about, come in and sit down, you are only making it worse for yourselves.

Bjorn Again

First stop for the day at Bjorn Again on the Pyramid Stage, where I had an excellent sing along to Abba’s greatest hits.

Most of the bands after Bjorn Again I had not heard of, so decided to try something a little different.  Went to the Circus Field and got drawn into a tent with rush matting by Circus actsthe comper who had said, stop walking about, come in and sit down, yeou are only making it worse for yourselves.  Oh and it had started to piss down with rain as well. Spent over an hour or so listening to a couple of shows which were mixtures of comedy and circus act.  The themes were juggling on top of monocycles, and getting the audience to participate in one way or another.

Doing the emu with Jonathan KayMounted police at Glastonbury 2009Moved on to the large tent, The Astrolabe in Glebeland Arena for an audience participation show by Jonathan Kay where eventually we were persuaded to go on stage, and were trained to sing and do basically silly things.  This was the training and indoctrination part of the show, because we were next taken into the outside world (it had stopped raining) and as a group had to accost strangers and act oddly.  Yes we went to one The Art Cafe Glastonbury 2009The is always one better at Glastonbury 2009stage which was warming up for a gig, cheered and appeared as a big audience to a small band, and when we where acknowledged we all walked off to target someone else.   This time some poor targets at a coffee shop received our attention.  Yes we walked around as a co-ordinated team, singing, forcing others to sing and participate in stupid antics, forcing the mounted police to walk down our funnel of people.

When not having a specific target we walked around doing emu impressions.  Amazingly, a substantial part of the team stayed together for this hour of audience brainwashing.

Walked on up the hill and to the bar by the acoustic stage and cinema, and participated in a well-rewarded drink and then something to eat.  Had something somewhere to eat and then tried to walk from the other stage to The Specials at Glastonbury 2009the pyramid stage, and got stuck entirely as two groups of people walking in opposite directions tend to do.  I was aiming to see The Specials play.  Managed to make it there through the people and the mud in time to see the second song.   Afterwards it was Neil Young, but decided to see the Blockheads play over in Avalon.  Stopped by the Jazz Stage to pick up some grub.  Decided on some Arab food, chicken cooked in some kind of crust. 

Made it to the Avalon Stage with time to spare, but first popped into Trash Trash City Glastonbury 2009City.  It was open and looked fantastic, with robot creatures, flame jets synced to the music.  It looked like some futuristic set from a scifi film.  Harrison Ford would not have looked out of place.  Really should have stayed, but the Blockheads at Glastonbury 2009 were calling.  Listened to all the classic hits, “Hit me with your rhythm stick”, “Reasons to be cheerful, part 3” and “My name is Trevor”.  Enjoyable.  The reason why The BlockheadsI had to see the Blockheads was because Ian Dury was going to play Glastonbury the last time I went, back in 1999, and alas he never made it because of ill health, and he died the year after.

Back to the tent, against the tide of humanity who were exiting the main stages for the delights of the night clubs of Trash City, Avalon , Arcadia and Shangri-La.

Posted in Entertainment, music | Leave a reply

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