Month: November 2006

On the political spectrum

It’s election time in Victoria. I’ve registered for a postal vote. I felt like I was out of the election loop so today, I visited The Age to see what was going on. When the hell did T3 get sold? There was a G20 Summit in Melbourne? Another series of Australian Idol?

Brad, a fellow Aussie at my college, sent me this link — Australian Politics Test. I’d be interested in your results, if you’re comfortable sharing.

Here are mine: joanium’s results

As I expected, really, although I’m surprised they picked it so accurately.

Milk Mondays

We get our milk delivered to our doorstep early on Monday mornings. Last week was our first week of deliveries. We had been hoping that the four pints would show up in ye olde glass pint bottles, and that we could put the glass out the next week for reuse by the milkperson.

We were slightly disappointed, though, when the milk arrived in the normal plastic bottles, quite similar to the milk we would by from Sainsbury’s. Nevertheless, it is quite convenient to have milk delivered and it is a good way to get rid of change.

Here is £4.22 for the 10 pints (5.7 L) that we want delivered tomorrow.

We leave this on the doorstep and hope that the milkperson gets to it before a Cambridge miscreant does.

It’s for a good cause

We were looking for a place to eat dinner and walked into a nice looking Spanish tapas restaurant.

“What’s with the Britney Spears outfits?” Jon exclaimed. All the waitresses were wearing white shirts, short skirts and pigtails.

“It’s for the BBC Save the Children fundraiser tonight,” our waitress explained. “We’re dressed for a ‘school’ theme.”

“I guess Britney was going for the schoolgirl theme too,” I said.

While we were looking at the menu, our waitress came around with a book of raffle tickets.

“Can I interest you in the raffle? The proceeds go to the fundraiser and the prizes are all from local businesses. It’s £2 per strip and will be drawn at 9 PM.”

“Sure,” I said.

“I never win anything in raffles,” Jon commented.

“Well, I don’t expect to win. I think of it as a donation, you know, a sunk cost,” I replied. Britney gave me a strip of six orange tickets, numbers 171 to 176.

Dinner was nice. A celebrity chef cooked a giant seafood paella in a pan of about one metre diameter. We donated £5 each to eat half-servings of it.

Just as we were paying the bill, they announced the raffle draw. We stuck around as the emcee call out number after number. We didn’t really listen, although every now and then, I would be distracted from our conversation enough to comment, “Oh, I need a haircut!” when a hairdressing package was raffled off, or “I don’t need that,” when the carwash was awarded.

And suddenly, I heard, “Joan? Is Joan here?”

I stood up slowly. “Yes,” I called uncertainly. Britney, who was standing next to the emcee, pointed up to where our table was. I wondered what I had won.

I walked down the steps and emcee handed me a large bottle of golden liquid. “Congratulations! You’ve won a bottle of whisky from CamTax.”

“That’s amazing!” Jon marvelled when I showed him my prize.

“I don’t really know what to do with it,” I admitted. I am definitely the person least likely to want a bottle of hard spirits.

Suffice to say, I was very popular with my housemates when I got home that night.

To Google (v.)

This is really interesting — Do you “Google?”

Google fears falling into the trap of the term ‘Google’ moving into generic use, such that it can no longer be used as a trademark. Here is an excerpt.

Usage: ‘Google’ as noun referring to, well, us.
Example: “I just love Google, they’re soooo cute and cuddly and adorable and awesome!”
Our lawyers say: Good. Very, very good. There’s no question here that you’re referring to Google Inc. as a company. Use it widely, and hey, tell a friend.

Usage: ‘Google’ as verb referring to searching for information on, um, Google.
Example: “I googled him on the well-known website Google.com and he seems pretty interesting.”
Our lawyers say: Well, we’re happy at least that it’s clear you mean searching on Google.com. As our friends at Merriam-Webster note, to “Google” means “to use the Google search engine to find information about (as a person) on the World Wide Web.”

Usage: ‘Google’ as verb referring to searching for information via any conduit other than Google.
Example: “I googled him on Yahoo and he seems pretty interesting.”
Our lawyers say: Bad. Very, very bad. You can only “Google” on the Google search engine. If you absolutely must use one of our competitors, please feel free to “search” on Yahoo or any other search engine.

Losing it

Di and I walked into the College Dining Hall and I reached into my pocket for my University Card. It wasn’t there. I checked the other pocket.

“Where’s my card? I had it in my hand!” I vividly remembered taking the card out of my wallet. “Did I drop it?”

“No,” Di assured me. “There’s no way you could have dropped it on the way. Don’t worry, it’ll be sitting on your desk at home. I’ll pay for you tonight.”

I knew she was probably right. I’m very absent-minded. I could have easily taken the card out and put it down straight away without realising it. But I could have sworn I had been holding my card…

We finished dinner and started walking back towards our house, which is a few minutes off-campus. Di was saying something but I wasn’t fully concentrating because I was scanning the footpath for a flash of white plastic. Luckily or unluckily, I didn’t see anything.

A taxi was waiting for Di at our front door when we arrived.

“See you later!” she said, as she hopped in.

I hurried upstairs to search my room. My eyes darted to all the obvious places. No card. I rummaged through my coats and the papers on my desk. Oh no. Please, no. I had already lost my watch this week.

I was miserable. Di had been wrong. I was such an idiot.

But the misery only lasted three minutes because I did find my card! Do you know where it was?

It was in the back pocket of the jeans I was wearing!

A nail file for a screwdriver

One of the first things they made us do was attend three safety briefings. Working in the Cambridge University Engineering Department is a hazardous pasttime, what, with all the cutting surfaces and acid lying around. But apparently, the most dangerous thing we will be doing is working with a DSE or VDU — Display Screen Equipment or Video Display Unit. That is, a computer.

“Look at this,” Mr Joseph, the safety officer, said solemnly. “This is severe spinal damage at zero miles per hour.”

“Do you believe me?” he asked.

I did believe, indeed. I was so frightened that I bought a keyboard and mouse and propped my laptop up on a ream of paper so that I could get the recommended neck angle.

After working at my computer for less than an hour, my shoulders started hurting. I went back to the safety pamphlet and was able to diagnose the problem: my chair was too short (or I was too short for my table, one or the other). No, no, no, this would not do. I did not want severe spinal damage at zero miles per hour.

The next day, I visited our College’s Domestic Bursar.

“Excuse me, hello,” I said. “How would I go about getting a computer chair? You see, I’m quite short and it hurts to work at my desk for too long.”

The Bursar seemed quite taken aback. She looked uncomfortable as she explained that the college could not provide me a computer chair because then it would have to give one to every student.

I remembered what Mr Joseph had said about England’s new health and safety legislation. “Don’t you have an obligation to provide me with a proper chair?”

The Bursar assured me that the legislation only applied to College staff, and not students.

There was nothing left for me to do but to buy my own chair. I found one on sale at Ryman for £14.99.

When I got home, I assembled most of it before realising that I needed a screwdriver. I don’t have a screwdriver. It’s one of those things that I’ve been hoping I could live without for a year. I kind of needed one when I was installing my bike lights earlier on, when the cupboard door fell off its hinge and when the shower head got too loose and couldn’t stay up.

Something tells me I will eventually have to buy a screwdriver.

Anyway, that was something to deal with tomorrow. In the mean time, I was so keen to finish the chair puzzle that I screwed it together as best I could with what I had at my immediately disposal. And all I had was a nail file.

By the time I was done, the chair looked complete and solid but there was no way I was going to sit on it. It was being held together by little more than willpower.

The delicately balanced chair sat in the corner of my room for a day or two before I found a friend with a screwdriver. Just as I was going to leave the house to pick it up from my friend’s house, the College computer technician arrived to fix one of my housemate’s network connection. Phil the computer tech kindly lended me a Phillips head screwdriver and I was finally able to finish assembling the chair.

And now I am sitting here in my ergonomically perfect workstation doing lots of non-work.

Internationally roaming while half asleep

I have two phones: one has my SIM card from Australia and one has my English SIM. I used to keep both of these on because I thought people back home might want to send me a message.

One morning, at 3 AM, I was jolted out of sleep by my mobile ring. I fumbled around my bedside table until I found the vibrating, flashing, squalling thing.

“Hello,” I said blearily.

The lady on the phone said something.

“Huh?”

She repeated it. “This is Marion from the optometrist. I wanted to let you know that you can pick up your glasses now.”

“Wha?” I had no idea what she was talking about.

“This is Marion from the optometrist on High Street Road.”

In my daze, I recognised the name of a street back home in Melbourne. I started getting annoyed. “Do you know you’ve reached a number in England? England overseas?”

“Can I speak to Jason?” Marion asked.

Jason is my brother. “Oh, um… let me give you his mobile number… It’s…” I recited the first seven numbers, then stopped. I had forgotten my brother’s phone number. I guessed the last three numbers. “I think that’s it. Yeah.” The numbers didn’t sound quite right but it was the best I could do at three in the morning.

Marion seemed to realise that this was the most she would get out of me so she said thank you and hung up.

I took the phone away from my ear and looked at it. Only now did I realise I had my Australian phone in my hand. I remembered that the phone number used to belong to my dad, who must have registered the number with the optometrist. No wonder Marion was confused.

I turned the phone off and went back to bed. I haven’t turned it on for a month now.

I pressed the button

It was night time. I was sitting in the kitchen working on my new laptop. Di and Alex eventually came in and we started chatting.

We were having a good time and at some point, I pulled up my music player, cranked up the volume and we were singing the Elephant Love Medley from Moulin Rouge

“Love lifts us up where we belong!” we bellowed. “Where the eagles fly! On a mountain high!”

With ten seconds to the end of the song, the music got stuck. The laptop sat there, blaring out one loud and terrible note.

“Aargh!” We blocked our ears. “Turn it off!”

I tried to exit the program. Click, click, click. The exit cross didn’t work.

Control, Alt, Delete. Nothing popped up.

“Try the external volume control! There must be a mute button!”

I found it eventually and pressed the keys but the screeching wouldn’t stop.

“Turn it off! Press the power button!”

I held the power button for five seconds and finally, the blaring stopped.

I waited a couple of seconds before I pressed the power button again. The computer woke up and scrolled through the set-up. It got to the screen that told me that Windows hadn’t shut down properly and I should probably try safe mode.

Well, I tried safe mode, and I tried ‘Previous settings known to work’, and I tried ‘Start Windows normally’. With every option, the computer paused then flashed me the Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) for half a second before it reset. I didn’t even have time to see what the messages were. Something about ‘unmountable partition’.

The computer was stuck in a reset loop.

Alex forced the computer off. “Let it rest,” he said, hopefully. “Sometimes computers just need to rest.”

I looked at him and Di, stricken. I had a month’s work on the computer and all my photos since arriving.

“I’ll wash the dishes,” I mumbled. “Washing dishes will make me feel better.”

I put on the yellow gloves and started scrubbing at the charred rice stuck in the rice pot. I moved onto the saucepan, working at the egg and tomato residue. Behind me, I heard Alex boot up the computer again. I kept scrubbing and scrubbing, all the while, listening to the whirr of my laptop. I turned around to look at him when the whir stopped.

“Nothing?”

He shook his head sadly. “Do you have a recovery CD? If it’s just a problem with the hard drive, we can start it up again. But… I think it will format your computer.”

I bit my lip and was silent for a minute.

Di said, “You can try and rescue the hard disk with the computer service tomorrow. Or wait until morning. Maybe it needs more time.”

I looked down at my feet. Di and Alex looked on in sympathetic silence.

“It’s really just my photos,” I said slowly. “I had some work on it but nothing that I can’t recreate in a day. But my photos… There are copies on the internet but they’re small.”

I wrung my hands and thought about all the time I had spent on setting up the computer and all the work I needed to do. I really didn’t have time to get my computer fixed.

“I’ll get my recovery CD,” I decided. “I just want to know that it’ll be all right.”

I got the CD and handed it to Alex. I sat down next to him as he loaded it up.

WARNING: Your hard disk will be completely erased. Do you really want to continue?

It almost made me cry. Or maybe it was laugh.

“Are you sure?” Alex asked.

“Yes. Do it. Press OK.”

“I’m not pressing it! You have to, Joan.”

I gritted my teeth, reached over and pressed the button.

Guy Fawkes

Guy Fawkes Day in Cambridge is a big party. There were fireworks, a fun fair, toffee apples and cotton candy. I went on a ride. It was unexpectedly exhilarating.

We watched the fireworks from the college boathouses. There were signs warning people to only watch the fireworks from the Midsummer Commons (a big field) or from inside the boathouses. We joined the hundreds of people ignoring the safety warnings. I did get rained on with debris. The danger added to the thrill.

Owen, a coursemate, said, “England is the only country I know that celebrates the failure of a revolution. It’s like, every year, the Government sponsors these fireworks and a huge bonfire to burn the effigy of Guy Fawkes so that our leaders can remind people, ‘This is what will happen to you if you try to revolt!’ “