Author Archive.

Parish Notice

Posted by on January 31st 2012 in Health, or lack thereof

Due to post-op complications I shan't be online for some time.

If you send flowers, please ensure that they're wrapped in crisp new tenners.

Don't send grapes.

Good luck, stay safe, do some winter-walking for me.

In for a rebore

Posted by on January 25th 2012 in Health, or lack thereof, Just for fun

I'm hoping for a more modern procedure than this, but TBH almost anything's better than nothing.

🙂

See you later.

Observing Report 5th-6th December 2011 (Last year’s last cluster )

Posted by on January 9th 2012 in Astrostuff, Observing Reports, Pics

A belated report from the last observing session of 2011...

The seeing was OK but there was a thin haze of high cloud - hardly ideal conditions for this sort of stuff. Visual observations of Jupiter, Mars, Andromeda Galaxy and several star-clusters. Tried again to image M97 (Owl Nebula), got the settings completely wrong again, dumped the imaging data again. Same story for M95, M96 and C23.

The night wasn't totally wasted though - M50 was a fine sight:

M50 (aka NGC2323), an open cluster in the constellation Monoceros.
Subs: 11 light @ 300s, darks and bias frames, ISO400.
1000D on the 6" R-C, guided with PHD.

A neat little gadget

Posted by on January 8th 2012 in Shiny new kit

Just before Christmas we went into town to collect the pissy-laptop from the menders. They'd done a fine job of cleaning it out and replacing the keyboard, and the bill was surprisingly low considering the state of the thing before they fixed it.

Anyway, while Chris was settling the bill I was browsing the gadgets and noticed a lonely-looking Xenta Wireless Mini-keyboard. What attracted me to it was the rocker-pad and touch-pad arrangement. Duly fondled, it was put back on the shelf and I left empty-handed.

Last week I was back in town so I returned to the shop to give the mini-keyboard another fondle. After a chat about whether the thing would be suitable for my needs I relented and bought the thing for just £15 and some fair words.

Setting it up was a doddle - no faffing with setup CDs, this really was plug 'n play. I removed the USB dongle from it's neat storage place at the back of the keyboard and plugged it into the laptop. XP found and installed the drivers and then told me that it was OK to use. I slapped two "AA" Eneloops into the mini-keyboard, turned it on, and it worked first time (and has done so every time since).

The mini-keyboard has a UK key-set although some of the keys are in unfamiliar places - the "Del" key, for instance. The function keys aren't your standard F1 - F12 things but are assigned various other duties such as controlling internet, email, MCE and multimedia applications. The touch-pad is excellent with scrolling and zooming capability. Left and right mouse-buttons are nicely-placed on the top edge, just fine for two-handed use.

So, with this thing I no longer need a mouse (although I can have both this and my wireless mouse connected at the same time without conflicts), and can control the laptop from a distance of up to 10m. But that's not all... this gadget has one other main benefit for me - I can use the left rocker-pad and various alt-key combos to control my telescope via any of my ASCOM-compliant planetarium programs such as Starry Night Pro Plus. This means that when scoping I no longer have to use the mouse for the laptop and the wireless Rumblepad II for the scope. The Rumblepad II always worked well but there was no way that it would fit in my pocket and the joysticks were all-too-easily activated accidentally. With this new gadget I get all required functionality with minimal more user-friendly kit.

Result!

Parlez-vous NHS?

Posted by on January 6th 2012 in Rambling on...

 I just love forms...

especially when they're worded so well...

 

Now, let me think... would I ever do any of those things for 24 hours? Probably not, but the 24-hour drinking thing sounds interesting. Driving for 24 hours would be a waste of time and fuel seeing as I have no current plans to go anywhere far away. Carrying children as a defence against dizziness does seem to be an extreme therapy so I'm glad that I mustn't do that for a day and a night. Moreover, in the event of impaired judgement it's probable that I wouldn't lend any credence to any of these warnings anyway.

Oh, and the notion that a kettle is a machine is a tad daft, IMO.

Perhaps I'm reading these forms too literally.

Cheap trick

Posted by on January 5th 2012 in A bit of a rant
Tags:

Well, the WordPress/Jetpack helper monkeys have had a third go at my Annual Report.

It's still wrong.

But that's OK, apparently, because this time they've included some small print:

That's got to be one of the cheapest cop-outs ever.

Peanuts must be in short supply.