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Monthly Archives: March 2008
Tweets on 2008-03-23
- Not a whisper of snow in Nottingham. #
- Out with my camera taking photos. #
- Can’t find any lemons anywhere. Might have to make grapefruit drizzle cake. #
- Making cake #
- Shouting at radio. We do NOT need more sport on Radio 4 when they have an entire channel for that on MW! #
- @libdemjo depends what you think of trickle-down economics #
- Looking at both cakes I made and wondering whether six people can eat all that tomorrow. #
- Wondering if you can count "parliamentarian" as a double dactyl, if you don’t pronounce the first a. #
- @pinkdog you can’t go back and correct your spelling, or those of us getting texts get two. You got "preteneding" but missed "neigbours" #
- Can’t believe I’m teaching a dog to twitter. #
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Gay scientists discover Christian gene
This came hot on the heels after this link of seriously disturbed quotes from religious fundamentalists talking on bulletin boards.
Linky linky II
I’ve been spending a scant half-hour on the Flickr blog and found several interesting things.
Mainly Photojojo, which has lots of interesting tips, tricks and tutorials.
They also have Time Capsule, an interesting gizmo that delves into your own Flickr photos from last year and emails interesting ones to you. I signed up and it sent me this, from last March when I was up to my neck in leaflets for the elections in Nottingham and Chesterfield.
There was also a link to Postcrossing an interesting idea that has obviously grown from Bookcrossing. On Postcrossing, you register your name and address and then click a button to get addresses from other users around the world. You send a postcard to someone on the other side of the planet, and in return the website will have a postcard sent to you from somewhere else. I’ve registered, and got addresses in Finland, France, Spain, Germany and Canada. Should keep me busy for a wee while!
Obviously, Flickr’s great for photographs, but I’ve been paying a bit of attention to the social and discussion sides too, since discovering there’s going to be a national Flickrmeet in Nottingham. We’re also having a little local meet in Newstead next Saturday.
Stuff white people like
Post of the Week this week flagged up, amongst other worthies, “Stuff white people like” which is quite entertaining. POTW suggested #90, Dinner Parties was good, and I rather like #88, Having Gay Friends. Judging by the huge, huge numbers of comments, other people rather like it too.
It’s a rather jaundiced view of white guys, and if you’re not prepared to admit it’s you, you will at least know people like that.
I’m going to have to read it back through time, and add it to the blogroll.
Tweets on 2008-03-22
- Solar panel has recorded a max of nearly 50deg today – in spite of the snowstorms! #
- @iaindale but would you do anything? #
- Wondering who else I’ve offended with my LibDemVoice twitter psot #
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Congrats to Lynne Featherstone
Lynne Featherstone thinks she has become the first MP to use Twitter. She’s not entirely right, Alan Johnson had a go during his Labour deputy leadership campaign, but stopped when he didn’t get in, so that probably doesn’t count.
I’ve written about this at length over on Lib Dem Voice, so I’m not going to duplicate it here.
In the process of writing the piece, I signed up for Barack Obama’s twitter feed, and I’ve just received an email from the Twitterbot:
Hi, Alex Foster.
Barack Obama (BarackObama) is now following your updates on Twitter.
Check out Barack Obama’s profile here:
http://twitter.com/BarackObama
Best,
This means I can now send him direct messages. It’s nice to know I have a direct line to one of the most powerful men on the planet.
Speaking of the most powerful men on the planet, I did try and send a direct message to Iain Dale whilst writing the LDV piece, but unfortunately, unlike Barack Obama, Iain doesn’t follow me. I was trying to find out if any Tory MPs twitter, figuring if anyone knew, it would be Iain.
While I was trying to google Twitter Conservative, I did find this reaction to this post about a guy live-twittering his wife’s er, accouchement, which I found entertaining. My friends who had a baby ten days ago have blogged about it in lots of fascinating gory detail, but not quite to that extent!
New high for solar panel
Today’s weather has not been great, with a maximum temperature of about 11 degrees. There has also been a very brief period of snowy sludgy noisy rain that made a huge racket on the conservatory roof.
There has, however, been lots and lots of sun. And bright sunlight, whatever the air temperature, means good performance for the solar panel.
Today’s new high – I believe – takes the solar collector up to 47 degrees, edging closer and closer to the 70/80 degrees I would need to get a full tank of hot water at the right temperature.
Here’s a screenshot of the controller:
Dr Who Double dactyl
Forget the limerick and the haiku, I have been reading today about double dactyls, an extremely structured comical verse form. A dactyl is three syllable word with the stress on the first syllable, like “blankety”.
The double dactyl verse form is 8 lines
Blankety blankety
Blankety blankety
Blankety blankety
Blankety blank
Blankety blankety
Blankety blankety
Blankety blankety
Blankety blank
But there’s more rules than that!
- The first line has to be nonsense – hickory dickery and higgledy piggledy seem to be favourite;
- The second line has to be someone’s name
- One of the lines in the second stanza has to be a single word
- The last lines of the stanzas rhyme.
The example given in UMRA, where I’ve been reading about this, was by Wendy Cope:
Higgledy-piggledy
Emily Dickinson
Liked to use dashes
Instead of full stops.
Nowadays, faced with such
Idiosyncrasy,
Critics and editors
Send for the cops.
A quick google finds a page for the form on Wikipedia, with a few elegant examples – I liked Brian Flanagan’s:
Hey-nonny, ho-nonny,
Penis Van Lesbian
Entered the bus’ness that
no biz is like.
Keen on increasing his
marketability,
he took on the stage name
of Dick Van Dyke
Further googling finds the Braden Files, with three pages of double dactyls here, here and here. So enamoured of the format is the writer that the “about” page is also in the form. Each of the examples is brilliant, many of them about figures I know nada about. One particularly brainy one is in Latin, but of all them, my favourite is
Pitter pat, pitter pat.
Noah of Ararat
Heard the rain cease on the
Fortieth night.
Shem, Ham, and Japheth said
Antediluvian
Meteorologists
Called it just right.
It’s an extremely dense format, and the challenge in writing them for yourself is the dual problems of finding a double dactyl name, and a single dactyl word, and then putting the lot together with enough other stuff to make sense. Limericks and haiku are trivially simple by comparison.
Here’s my first attempt:
Diddledy-diddledy
Christopher Ecclestone
Famously portrayed a
Doctor named Who
Flying about with a
Relativistically
Capable copper box
Without a loo.
I’m not the first to attempt a sciffy double dactyl. Further googling finds this wonderful discussion thread with many further fabulous attempts – some clearly baby-steps, some extraordinarily well honed.
The sciffy one, by a poster called Badger, takes us to a galaxy far, far away
Foolishly, Ghoulishly,
Anakin Skywalker,
Took his light sabre from
Light side to Dark,
Known later as Vader,
His son fell his caper,
Paterfamilias,
Losing his spark!
Midway down the thread is a huge list of double dactyl words, culminating in the quite possibly solitary quadruple dactyl word paradichloroaminobenzaldehyde.
Finally, the thread is taken over in style by Chris Doyle, who has had numerous verses published under various names:
Higgledy piggledy
Little Red Riding Hood
Skips to a fate that she
Doesn’t deserve.
Lying ahead is an
Anthropophagical
Wolf for whom Grandma was
Just an hors d’oeuvre.
and this one, where every possible line is a single double dactyl word:
Flappity clappity
August von Wassermann
Bacteriologist.
Germany’s best.
Extracurricular
Heterosexual.
(Overpromiscuous.)
Flunked his own test.
Tweets on 2008-03-21
- Rats, it’s a lovely sunny day. Forecast was icy rain. Now I have to go and deliver leaflets. #
- Confusion between gay and icy in txt-spk causing hilarity. Mind the gay roads. Gay storms forecast. #
- Looking at horizontal rain and maybe deciding against more leafleting #
- Just finishing leaflet. Stopping off en route home to buy beer and chocolate. #
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