Wednesday, October 18, 2006

 

17 October 2006 - 'One Day in History'

 
This is a longer version of my blog for the National Trust/History Matters special one-day historical record based on my life yesterday. (The blog had to be a maximum of 4000 characters so I had to cut out a lot of the descriptive comment and just leave the basic events).

Personal profile: male; age 63; retired; living in a UK country village in a chalke valley.

6am: BBC Radio 4 came on automatically beside my bed. News about Thames Water being sold by German owners to an Australian company.

More about Madonna, a very rich pop star, who has just had one of her bodyguards fly to Heathrow airport overnight from Johannesburg with an 13 month old child from Malawi that she wants to adopt. The father is too poor to look after the child and seems happy with the arrangement but various child action groups are objecting and although she has been given temporary custody the paperwork in Malawi and UK may take ages to straighten out.

6.45am: BBC1 TV news: more about North Korea which seems to be organising a second nuclear bomb test according to US satellite photos. North Korea is a very secretive old-style communist regime with millions of soldiers. The dictator is not trusted at all. No one knows how to stop regimes like his and Iran from developing nuclear weapons. They are anti-western in outlook and sanctions never seem to work. The people are extremely poor and just get more isolated with sanctions. Military action is unthinkable against North Korea and Iran because of their huge armed forces.

Breakfast of Tesco's fruit and fibre cereal with milk. Looked outside where it is gloomy, slightly foggy, but still warm for mid October.

7am: turned on my computer to check emails and my usual websites. The emails were the usual pornographic spam and one purporting to be from service@PayPal about my account. I haven't got a PayPal account and emails like this are "phishing" for my account details and passwords with a view to committing fraud. Another email was from Citywire which sends an almost daily financial newsletter which I never get round to reading.

I checked my usual websites - computer help sites, pension and investment advice sites, BirdForum website and the website where I help people with their webpage construction coding problems. Later I looked at LOST (Land of Serious Topics) on TMF (The Motley Fool website) which is a forum for people to air their views on anything, often in intense argument.

I also checked blogs (web logs) from Internet Explorer as Microsoft is expected to release the final version of its Internet Explorer 7 on 18 October 2006. Some people want more warning of the release date as they have not recoded websites to deal with IE7 peculiarities and yet still keep the special coding (hacks) that they have done for IE6 as the general public will be using both versions for some time. Others complain that IE7 still has bugs or has not fully complied with the current CSS2 (cascading stylesheet) standards, let alone the future CSS3 standards that are being made public. Others want it released as soon as possible.

8.30am: the post arrived. Two items were credit card application forms with brochures in flashy colours and colourful envelopes. The other item was a huge red envelope addressed to my mother at my address which I opened by mistake. It confirmed eligibility for a prize of up to £20,000. My mother enters a lot of free prize draws and gets a huge amount of offers now that she is on hundreds of lists. It seems my address has got mixed up with her name somehow. I keep telling her it's dangerous. Some are just free prize offers and she has had some items like cheap manual (no battery) cameras, but sometimes the lists get into the hands of fraudsters who get you to contribute large sums as administration costs for getting even larger sums which never materialise. She said once she had been asked to send £2,000 to Canada and I said she would never see it again, let alone the prize. Another problem is that some ask for all sorts of personal details which a fraudster can use to set up a false identity or use to take money out of you accounts. In one case she was asked for next of kin and had put in my name and address so I am now a target too.

I didn't get what I wanted in the post which is a rent cheque for £165 pa for a 3 acre field rented out to the multi-millionaire local farmer who never pays until I remind him and I did that over a week ago.

9am: I went outside to see if Attila (the Hun) had cleared up properly after cutting my hedge yesterday evening. There are three Huns here at the moment, Zoltan, his brother Attila and a friend of Zoltan's called George. Attila has been here about two years working at any job he can find, mainly gardening or at the watercress beds, but he is going back to Hungary at the end of this month. They obviously benefit from a higher income than they could get at home. I pay Attila £6 per hour. He once asked me for a bank note saying he would give me coins in change rather than me giving him coins as he wanted to take bank notes back to this parents while on holiday. Zoltan started a few years ago after joining his girlfriend who had got a job caring for a disabled person in the next village. They both used bikes at first, then he got an old car, then a relatively new one, so they must be earning and saving quite a lot. They all work hard, trying to get a full-time job during the day and working in evenings and weekends as well.

9.30am: I put out some crushed nuts and cut-up grapes on my birdboard. Recently I have only seen a quiet, insignificant dunnock and occasional blue tits. In the winter and spring robins and a pair of blackbirds came several times a day but since then have only come occasionally. The blackbirds have my neighbour's fallen apples now anyway. The blackbirds loved the grapes and hardly touched the nuts while the robins were the reverse.

10.30am: I had a mug of coffee and a piece of chocolate-covered shortcake. I don't like real coffee or tea, too much caffeine I suppose. I drink Camp coffee essence which is concentrated coffee and chicory with sugar. I mix it with two-thirds boiling water and one-third milk and it makes a sweet, sticky, warm, comforting drink.

Morning generally: There were only two questions on the web development forum that were within my capabilities to answer. Both questioners seemed to have pages showing alright and the sound on one was working so I think they were worried about something relatively unimportant. Certainly another viewer agreed with me. Sometimes I spend hours or even days trying to correct bad coding but today I found nothing that was actually causing a display problem although some of the code could be much improved.

12 noon: I watched Channel 4 TV News while having a banana, some watercress and a malted granary roll with margarine, ham and home-grown tomato.

1pm: I signed an application form from a broker to transfer a unit trust into an account with them. It was bought via them originally when it was a fund they started and managed, then they hived it off to a unit trust manager, now they have offered to take it back to add to my portfolio but it will still be managed by the unit trust. They have promised a 0.25% pa loyalty bonus.

2pm: I read a few articles in The Countryman March 2005 which shows how far behind I am in reading these monthly magazines. I used to read all the magazine within a month before the next one arrived. Computer work, learning about webpage construction, making my own, answering coding queries and recently producing my own online tutorial for XHTML and CSS (beginners level) has kept me very busy for several years.

Americans post questions in their evening while I am asleep so there are usually a few to be answered from 7am when I start. At about 10am or 11am I am tired so I try to get out on my bike in the summer. After lunch I usually have some query still not sorted out, or I improve my online tutorial based on answers I've given. Sometimes questions arrive from the Far East or Eastern Europe. In the evening the Brits start posting queries and just as I am about to go to bed the Americans start again so I occasionally work until after 11pm although I prefer to stop at 9.30pm.

2.30pm: I pruned rambler roses and clematis on the walls of the cottage. It was just dripping rain but soon stopped; still very gloomy and warm.

3.30pm: Tea of two slices of malt loaf, margarine and marmalade with a mug of water.

6pm: I watched the BBC1 news and had dinner of salad, sweet and sour chicken ready-meal and a bit of cold pre-cooked apple pie.

7pm: I've been working on one of this morning's coding queries most of the day in fits and starts. The page in internet Explorer 6 (IE6) seemed to create a bit of blank space and extra scrollbar to the right side while another browser, Firefox, did not. It didn't make the page display wrongly, it was just an oddity. It's taken me until now to find the cause in a row of menu links that had javascript drop down panels and one of these, although displaying inside the page container, must have had some padding or margin created by the javascript that was creating a hidden extra page width which caused the scrollbar under nothing. I've suggested moving the row of menu links a bit left where they still display alright.

7.30pm: A Microsoft IE blog confirms that IE7 will have its final release to the general public tomorrow for manual download. I hope they've set up enough server capacity! I will probably wait until Thursday morning when the internet is less busy.

8.30pm: I downloaded five Microsoft Office updates totalling nearly 31MB. Last month I downloaded seven totalling 38MB. They are nearly all security updates. Last week I downloaded five updates for the XP operating system. They come thick and fast. I wonder if the new operating system Vista will need fewer updates; it is due for release in November.

10pm: I went to bed and listened to BBC Radio 4 until the timer turned it off.

Comments: Post a Comment

<< Home

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?