All kitted up

April 24, 2008

For Dublin on Saturday:

GPS bike

Yes, that is sellotape.


Frisco, redux

April 18, 2008

Coming back to San Francisco makes me think I should never have left it. Stepping out onto the street, I found the city basking in glorious sunshine. You can’t help but be happy here.

After dropping stuff to the hotel, I decided to go to one of the best places to eat ever - Pluto’s. San Francisco is the kind of place where you choose to walk this two miles rather than use the ridiculously good public transport (50c to anywhere!) because it’s just so damn enjoyable. Walking down Van Ness though, I realised that the city didn’t just become eclectic and awesome spontanously. It’s the people who live here who give it this vibe. With this realisation, I decided to contribute however I could. I took out my harmonica and harped away as I strolled towards Lombard. It feels like you’re in a movie as you peddle your blues while leaning against a lamppost, waiting to cross the street.

Went to Starbucks this morning. Americans really are funny with their coffee. Turned up at 8.30 - bad time to come. The guy in front of me ordered a quad venti - a drink with a quadruple shot of espresso. Shouldn’t you need a prescription for that? I then mistakenly took another guy’s drink and ended up with - I’m not joking - a tall non-fat hazelnut soy latte. I’m pretty sure there’s so much crap in there that they don’t bother actually adding any coffee. The lead story on my SF Chronicle was Americans bitching about $4 per gallon for gas. Poor things have obviously never been to Ireland ($7.50/gal) or Britain ($8.50/gal).

Speaking of price comparisons, everything seems so affordable with the current dollar rate. I’m going to encourage Tommy to invest in a house here with his Confirmation money.


Saturday project

April 5, 2008

A few days ago I bought a harmonica for all of 8 euro. Of course, the real way to play it is with the guitar (like this guy). So:


Harp brace

Guitar with the brace


The difference between Bebo and Facebook

January 6, 2008

Just came across this browsing earlier, sums it up brilliantly. In matters relating to tea:

Facebook group:
 Facebook Tea

Bebo group:
 Bebo Tea 2


Who needs an AppleTV?

November 18, 2007

We got a new (HD!) telly which has a VGA port, so I finally got to hook up my new Linux media server: dsc03281.jpgOf course, I didn’t just leave the various parts strewn around: dsc03282.jpgNice and neat. Note the special enclosure design to allow maximum airflow: dsc03283.jpgAnd a closeup:dsc03284.jpg Clever design allows all the parts to fit in the basket. Well-placed Vodafone box stops the power supply’s metal case short circuiting all the twiddly bits on the motherboard. Overall layout:dsc03285.jpg All in all the project was a great success. I envisage many uses:

  •  Media hub
  • Modern art
  • Fire hazard
  • Tux Racer console
  • Accident waiting to happen

Irish comprehension of the week

November 8, 2007

Here. Patrick has made it big! Some would say I had an unfair advantage in class today.


Plank’s constant

October 25, 2007

Plank’s constant is a constant used to describe the time you must allow for delays when planning. It is the multiple you must use to compensate for people acting the plank and doing things like taking two car keys or posting your runners to Canada.


5th year - one month in

October 3, 2007

Long time, no post. So I’ve pretty much finished working on Auctomatic since August, and gone back to finish my education :)

Impressions of subjects so far: 

English: Much more fun than Junior Cert. Have a ninja teacher. Macbeth is gripping.

Irish: Improved vastly since I got a new teacher.

Maths: Easy and mostly enjoyable. Most interesting occurence so far has been school asking students to get new fancy Casio calculators, which can handle algebra and fractions. This of course means they refuse to give answers as decimals. Result? 7 * root 3 = 7 root 3. 2 pi = 2 pi. Many frustrations ensue.

Spanish: Would be great if they didn’t keep it at a 2nd year level. Why not just throw us in at the deep end and we’ll learn more? Example: the teacher speaks English rather than Spanish to us. I mean come on!

Physics: Currently covering stuff we’ve done to much more depth in Applied Maths, so I doze through most classes. Ask me again in a month.

Chemistry: More learning than I had anticipated. It also turns out JC chemistry told us many, many lies and half-truths. Have concluded giving squirty bottles, fire or acid (or all three) to students of any age is a risky idea.

History: Didn’t think I could enjoy this as much as I am. Course is fascinating (Bismarck ftw!), a four page essay is almost an enjoyable task. I’ve started comparing friends to 19th century diplomats subconsciously.

Applied Maths: The intersection of Maths and Fun. It’s like they took what you knew in maths, and made cool problems for your enjoyment. They of course left out all the ugly, messy stuff like trigonometry. It’s kind of annoying though when you remember that none of your calculations will ever be right because of that prick air resistance.

Design and Communication Graphics (i.e. dressed-up Tech Drawing): New course has 40% for a SolidWorks (CAD) project. SolidWorks is surprisingly easy to pick up and looks great. Most of my computer time I’m not actually working, just rotating my piece and watching the light bounce off it.

All in all, being back at school’s pretty enjoyable. Doing other stuff like student politics, debating, chess etc. on the side. Life is good.


Meteor web texts

July 16, 2007

Sick and tired of using Meteor’s webtexter. Yeuch. Building my own pretty and useful one (think Ajax phonebook) in Rails now. It shall be the pinnacle of elegance!