April 16, 2007Has anyone seen our Universe?
Last night we went to Cafe Scientifque and heard Bob Nichol talking about cosmology.
It was quite a complex subject to talk about but Bob Nichol was excellent, very engaging, enthusiastic and able to explain things to those of us who haven't studied science in over 20 years. I'm still too baffled to consider either the supernova that will cause earth to vapourise, or the fact that there might be 11 dimensions. It was also the biggest crowd I've seen at a Cafe Sci since it moved to the Branch Tavern from the Terraces.
It was also good to catch up Dom, Sophie and Tom.
Labels: Brighton, cafe scientifique
Posted by Jane at 9:28 PM
April 15, 2007Fabrica: Beneath the Strides of Giants
We popped into Fabrica yesterday to see what was on display at the moment and found Beneath the Stride of Giants by Brian Griffiths. It is a wooden boat, made from other people's junk.
Fabrica is such a lovely place to stop, it's always peaceful and cool and its often hard to remember it is in such a busy location.
Posted by Jane at 12:02 PM
- Junk?
It was a boat made with other people's junk? Interesting.
Posted by Nintendo Wii on 2007-04-18 05:41:53
April 13, 2007
It may be fake, but this weekend The Guardian printed an article on global warming (Sat 4 April, p. 26) which I like very much. Of course, liking it doesn't make it right....
The gist of the article is this: there's a lot of worry about global warming, and the cause, but "Earth's resources are finite; the planet is doomed to die [...] and the solution is clear: we must seek other planets to colonise. Earth may be good for 10,000 years or so; then it will be time to find a new home, or homes—a literal New World."
Original? No. I first heard this from the mouth of Bart Simpson: " Aw, recycling's useless Lis. Once the Sun burns out, this planet is doomed. You're just making sure we spend our last days using inferior products."
Anyway, the thing about new worlds that troubles me is this: pretty much any planet that's habitable is going to be inhabited, because life's like that. So any new world we colonize is going to be one of those SF moves here the aliens come to take over the Earth, except, we're the bad aliens. More funding for terraforming, I say.
Posted by Richard at 9:36 AM
Apple Store coming to Brighton
I've just been catching up on some BNM posts from ages ago and Mat posted a link to a Mac Genius job opportunity in Churchill Square, Brighton
A bit of careful googling finds the following image, taken from the Apple Store (United Kingdom) page
I am going to have to hide Richard's credit cards!!!
Posted by Jane at 5:47 PM
April 12, 20072600
Here's an example of why I like the writing in 2600 magazine: "We all love 2600 for its highfalutin articles on port knocking, Caller ID spoofing, Walmart self-checkout hacks, etc., but sometimes we lose sight of the obvious stuff. Sooner or later, the North Koreans or Iranians are going to bomb us. When that happens, how are you going to pay for doughnuts and beer from the 7-11?" (from the Winter 2007 issue, which goes on to describe how to hide things inside a cut out book).
Posted by Richard at 11:31 AM
April 11, 2007
Two thumbs up to Robert Harding Computers. My MacBook battery was going all wrong and had started to swell, and I was getting nowhere with AppleCare. Robert Harding gave me the clues and phone numbers which has resulted in a new battery arriving 24 hours later. They're goooooood.
Posted by Richard at 2:02 PM
- eek
Did they say why? More than a little worried. I had assumed it was stupid Americans doing clever things like putting there battery in the microwave or the like.
Posted by Jono on 2007-04-12 22:55:09
- Battery
They said my battery wasn't one of the Sony batch that was exploding or catching fire, so nothing to worry about: I'd just had a "once-in-a-lifetime" freak battery failure.
Posted by Richard on 2007-04-13 07:36:10
Walk-thru McDonalds
During our weekend visit to Hull to see my folks, we took a day trip to Skegness and up the coast past Anderby Creek (which was beautiful) and up to Mablethorpe. In Skegness I spotted this Walk-thru McDonalds - looks like it was originally built as a drive thru.
Labels: photos
Posted by Jane at 7:47 PM
- Walk-thu!
That is the first time I have ever seen a walk-thu drive-thu. Awesome! LOL!
Posted by Nintendo Wii on 2007-04-18 05:43:49
April 03, 2007Tivo Crash
How about this for reliability. Our TiVo has been running more-or-less non-stop for 9 years. I was setting up a recording last night and we received our first ever proper error.... with hex and everything.
TiVo still rules.
Posted by Richard at 6:59 PM
- Tivo!
That's no surpise. It's been on for Nine years straight.
Posted by Nintendo Wii on 2007-04-18 05:45:53
April 01, 2007Temporary shutdown message
When doing a recent check on all the blogs at Brighton Bloggers, I spotted this message at the Brighton and Hove councillors site. Amongst other things it says "During the six week period prior to local and general elections, there is a ban in place on publicising the work of councillors to unfairly influence votes. Because of this, all of the pages and councillor blogs on this website are to be temporarily suspended until after the elections have finished."
Labels: Brighton
Posted by Jane at 9:19 PM
Bouldering in Hove Park
Since Jim broke his wrist, I haven't been to the climbing wall, and I've missed it. A couple of weeks ago I stumbled across information that there is a boulder park in Hove Park, and so today we went for a cycle ride to take a look.
It is about 3 metres high and probably about 12 metres long with areas ranging from scramble, to slight overhangs. We spent half an hour there climbing, traversing and doing the odd scramble. I am really impressed to have something like this so close, and available for free. I'm hoping to start visiting on a weekly basis to have a play.
Labels: Brighton, climbing, photos
Posted by Jane at 3:56 PM