Archive for March, 2005

HOWTO: Walk to the shops with more than one small child

Thursday, March 10th, 2005

The following is a guide for getting to the shops with children. Your partner is out, asleep or just plain lazy and you fancy a packet of crisps, a can of Coke or you’ve run out of milk for the coffee you desperately need to survive another day with the loves of your live, your children.

1) Don’t expect it to be a quick experience. Typically a trip to a shop that would take 5 minutes childless will take upwards of an hour.

2) Prepare at least an hour in advance before the time you want to leave for the shop. If you expect to be able to leave the house in 5 minutes you will fail.

3) Leaving time can be substantially reduced if you offer bribes of the sweet and comic variety. However, you are still looking at half an hour before leaving.

4) Isolate each child in turn and ask them to put on hat, coat, shoes, gloves and scarf (clothing required will obviouslly depend on the weather). Depending on age and temperament, the child will be able to achieve this to some level of competence. Aid the child with any remaining items of clothing that need to be worm. Wrestle with child any items of clothing they don’t want to wear. If you only have one child, well done, you are ready to leave (or so you think!).

5) Repeat the above for the second child. Warning, there is a time limit to this step. If you take too long the first child will have removed all the clothing you spent ten minutes putting on and you will have to start again. There is some debate as to whether to get the more compliant child ready first or second. If first, you have more time for the second child. However, even the most compliant child will get bored in about two minutes, so it is best to get the harder child done first and then rush the easier child through asap.

6) If you have more than two children, never leave the house.

7) It is pointless actually leaving the house at this point, but you must. However, approximately ten seconds after leaving the house, one or both children will need to go to the toilet and you will have to go back inside and start over again.

8) You should have experienced no more than three screaming fits or paddies by this point. If you have it is best to call it a day and do some internet shopping instead. It will come quicker, believe me.

9) You should remember to prepare yourself too. The worst possible mistake to make is to forget your keys. Then you have two annoyed children locked out of your house. Denied access to the TV and Spongebob Squarepants by a locked door. Another mistake is to forget money or cards. It is probably an idea to check that the shop you want to go to is open. Some shops have the audacity to close for lunch, Sunday or not open at the unearthly hour that your children wake up.

10) It is a very bad idea to let the children take toys with them. Small toys will be lost on route or in the shop. Drains are attractive to toys. Large toys such as a pram or a large cuddly bear have two negative effects. They will slow down the child; even slower than their normal walking pace. That, or you will also end up carrying them yourself.

11) Don’t let the child take their own method of transport. A bike or toy car is a serious pavement hazard, for the child, for you and for any other pedestrians. Old age pensioners are a particular target.

12) If you have to cross a road, pray to whatever deity you worship and if you don’t worship anyone, think about starting your own cult. Seriously, hold on tight to your children. Car drivers are dangerous, BMW drivers more so and 4×4 drivers are very dangerous indeed and have the added disadvantage of being so high up that they can’t see small children.

13) If you have managed to get any distance down the road, you will start to hear an odd whining noise, maybe multiple whining noises. Ignore it. It will be one or both children saying, and I quote “My legs hurt”. It is a simple physical rule that whilst a child can run around for hours and hours at about 30 miles an hour in the house; get them on a pavement going somewhere specific and they will start to break down. They will want picking up and carrying. Avoid this as much as possible. If one wants picking up, the other will too. It is very hard to carry two children at once. Perhaps one on the shoulders and one in the arms, but you then run the risk of falling over.

14) If, by some miracle, you make it to the shops, well done. Congratulations. That was the easy part.

Dealing with two children in a shop is a subject for another day.

The onslaught begins

Tuesday, March 8th, 2005

You have to hand it to Doctor Who fans on the Interwebnet (hi Aq), we have attention to detail. Via the Outpost Gallifrey News Page you can pinpoint to the minute the times of the various DW trailers on the BBC.

Mini Trailer 1 on BBC1 at 19:29, 20:00, 20:58, 21:58

Mini Trailer 2 on BBC2 at 22:30. (6 seconds inside console room)

Mini Trailer 3 on BBC2 at 23:52

I think one of the reasons that it took so long for Doctor Who to return to the small screen was that the BBC knew that Doctor Who fandom (erg, I hate that word nearly as much as blogosphere) will take the series and would give it as much attention as Sauron’s big eye did when Frodo popped that little ring on his finger. The BBC has put the Ring on.

I suppose I’ll have to include myself in this assessment.

btw, I was mightly disappointed by United in Meelan tonight. Even I turned over and watched Chelsea Barcelona.

New Dr Who leaked onto internet

Tuesday, March 8th, 2005

The first episode of the new Doctor Who series has been leaked onto internet apparently by an employee of an overseas TV company.

The episode entitled Rose after the name of Billie Piper’s character is available on all good file sharing networks and some rubbish ones as well.

I won’t be downloading it. Not because filesharing is evil and all that. Not at all. But because I want to watch it with millions of others on TV and witness the pure thrill of the announcer saying “and now, Christopher Eccleston stars as the Doctor …”

One critic who watched the episode complained that the dialogue was inaudible in places. He should get his licence money back. Who ever heard of a bootleg having poor audio quality? Maybe if he wrote to Points of View …

btw, there should be a trailer for the new series 8pm tonight on BBC1 (which means it will be after Eastenders). I’ll be watching ITV2, desperately hoping that Ruud gets over his rustiness and pops one in against Meelan.

New Doctor Who Series

Friday, March 4th, 2005

It’s reported that the Sci-Fi channel doesn’t like the new Doctor Who series:-

The word over in the US however isn’t so peachy. IGN Filmforce reports that major cable broadcaster The Sci-Fi Channel are NOT in negotiations for the new series with their sources saying “Sci Fi Channel has already had a chance at the new series and passed after viewing some of the completed episodes. Some of the executives at the network found the series somewhat lacking and didn’t think it would fit into the network’s schedule.”

This is good news and the new series promises to be very good indeed. I mean Sci Fi found Firefly somewhat lacking and that was brilliant. What the fuck would the suited executives at the network know about it? Shouldn’t the channel be asking their fans whether they want to watch it or not?

Looks like the US will pick up DW via the BitTorrent Channel

moosifer jones’ reading

Tuesday, March 1st, 2005

Anyone interested in how to put together web “services” into a useful system, should check out moosifer jones’ reading.

Mags has been using “del.icio.us”:http://del.icio.us tags to keep track of books she “is reading”:http://del.icio.us/magslhalliday/reading.current, “has read”:http://del.icio.us/magslhalliday/reading.read and is “waiting to read”:http://del.icio.us/magslhalliday/reading.to.be.read.

Then, it has all been put together on a blogspot weblog. As Mags points out :-

this lets me just google a book, tag it with delicious and the whole updating thing is done. Much easier, and not reliant on a book being on amazon’s lists.

I’ve been thinking of doing some sort of book recording system for ages and the answer is out there.

On a related note, is “outsourced”:http://erikbenson.typepad.com/mu/2005/02/using_bloglines.html where Erik Benson (of all-consuming, speaking of book recording systems) talks about how he uses various online systems to manage his online presence.

11) RSS is already normalized. Bloglines also does some cleaning up for me. What I get back from Bloglines is beautiful content that looks the same no matter which site I originally posted it on. Since everything goes through this filter, there’s really no need to have access to the database of content directly. I therefore decided to move all of them off my server and to make Bloglines the mesh net through which I collect all content.

Food for thought there too. I’m leaning towards doing something like this myself.