Tweets on 2008-06-10

  • Freewheeling down a gentle slope – and feeling awfully klutzy. #
  • @jamesgraham Eurostar fine for simple city-to-city journeys but gets messy fast if you factor in connections. #
  • @jamesgraham Next month I’ll be twittering my attempts at getting from Nottingham to Munich by train! #
  • Listening to Mark Lawson interview himself on Front Row. #

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Tweets on 2008-06-09

  • About to start Full Council. Today we’ll be hearing directly from young people about the issues that affect them. #
  • Our question to Council reveals 28,000 council tax summonses are issued each year – but 23,000 withdrawn. #
  • Oh dear. I misheard. Is actually only 5,000 summonses withdrawn not 25,000. #
  • Googling “david cameron slaughter of the first born” #
  • @meryl_f trying to remember who said “If David Cameron reported he was in favour of the slaughter of the first born, the press would say…” #
  • @meryl_f “… excellent news for second children” #

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Excellent news for second children

Guido reports that Mad Nad is saying:

The frenzied attack against Conservative MPs and MEPs, orchestrated by and emanating from the left wing BBC and press has equalled that of an animal in its death throes. The more terminal the position looks for Labour, the more desperate the BBC and left wing press become. The incoming Conservative government has many big dragons to slay, the BBC has to be the biggest.

I suppose we all have a view on the bias of the press and for many of us it’s related to our own positions.  If we’re left wing, we lament the right bias of the press and vice versa.

I am racking my brain trying to remember where I heard or read the following which I now paraphrase:

The right-wing press have given David Cameron’s policy vacuum an easy ride.  One gets the impression that if the Tories announced a new policy in favour of the slaughter of the first born, the Daily Mail would headline it “Excellent news for second children”

I can’t find it by googling, but I do keep coming across this beaut of a quote from Nottingham South MP Alan Simpson’s resignation letter.  I really ought to put this on an election leaflet at some point.

There are good people in the Parliamentary Labour Party; just not enough of them. Many MPs complain of a government that no longer listens to the party, but they dutifully walk through the division lobbies to vote for whatever regressive measures Downing Street asks for. At times I feel that colleagues would vote for the slaughter of the first-born if asked to.

My pointless battle with the Council

The Council has upgraded its email system.  Before it was using IMAP with Horde, and there were complaints.  The system was slow, people used up their mailbox quota in the blink of an eye, it wasn’t very user friendly.  If you were one of the favoured few allowed access to your email from home, you had to use a big RSA SecurID keyfob with an ever-changing 6 digit number on the front.  I’m not entirely sure what was in council email that could possibly need as much protection as internet banking!

Now that has changed, and they’re embarking on a rollout of Outlook Web Access, which I think is the same thing as MS Exchange.

And it’s pretty good.  Access from home is much better.  It has many new features, lots of which are ace.  It should help the officers and councillors be more productive, as it is simply easier to use, despite being more fully functional.  It’s more the sort of product other organisations use, so people joining us and leaving us will have useful transferable skills.

And like other Outlook versions, it also has a good group diary facility, meaning we can store our commitments and availability on the system, and it can help organise meetings by checking other people’s schedules for you.  This could really be helpful right across the council, where there is no shortage of busy people, and particularly helpful with councillors who have strange commitment patterns.

So, I was hoping it would integrate with the electronic diary I am already using on my Nokia E65, which for the past few years has been reasonably successful at managing my diverse commitments and making sure I turn up at most of the things I am supposed to do.

I was really hoping I could just make the Council system a third or fourth place where I can sync my data to.  If I did that reasonably frequently, the version of my diary on the Council system should be up-to-date enough to be useful, and could work as an extra backup just in case.  True it would mean sending details of my personal commitments too, but you can mark them as private, and it is useful to the Council because it explains when I am on other business and not available.

Technically, I think this is possible. There is a free download which connects Nokia business phones with the Outlook system.  Unfortunately, there is a policy in place which says this is a bad idea.  They don’t want personal devices connecting directly to the council system.

This is a little odd.  I am allowed to read my email and connect to my diary from any computer in the world.  That’s at least partly the point of the new system – easy, secure, remote access.  I can even use the web browser on my mobile phone to access the system, although the screen is a bit small for that to be really useful.  But it seems actually synching with the system is different, and not allowed.

The solutions suggested have been helpful, but stop short of what I want.  “Keep two diaries!” they suggest.  Which strikes me as a recipe for real confusion, not least because being a councillor is more a lifestyle than a job.  Council commitments can be any time from 7am-10pm six nights a week.

They have also offered me a Council mobile phone with data connection that would do everything my existing phone does.  On a one off basis, they don’t mind taking my existing data from my existing phone, putting it on the council system and from then on, only using a Council phone.

Now, there’s problems with this approach.  Nottingham City Councillors are offered a fair amount of kit if they want it to help with the job of being a councillor.  You can have a council telephone extension in your home, which I do have.  They offer mobile phones, a laptop or a computer.  I’ve resisted all of those because I already have one of each, and I don’t want another.  I don’t want two computers on my desk where one can only be used for council work and one for private, not least because the boundary between the two can be blurry.  This weekend, a Council director kindly came to a Lib Dem meeting to brief Lib Dem local party members about regeneration in Nottingham. Was that encouraged Council work or verboten party political work – or really a blend of the two?

So I have resisted taking on Council tech, because in almost all circumstances, I can use my own equipment to do the same job, and not have to worry about whether I am abusing council facilities when I also use it to do all the things I normally do with the internet, which if I’m honest consumes almost all of my leisure time.

The point at which this approach doesn’t work is when the Council ban personal machines from connecting to their network.  Which is an understandable position – their own machines they are responsible for keeping secure, virus free, and legal in terms of software licences. Other people’s machines are a different kettle of fish – close to Rumsfeld Unknown Unknowns.

But where that leaves me with my diary is uncertain. Hopefully this will be resolvable.

My crockery is judging me

The dishwasher is sitting there, and for the last few days it has been smugly concealing all the teaspoons we have.  Side plates ran out this morning, and bowls are nearly out, and yet the dishwasher is still not ready to run.

This is because I have had one of those bad, bad weeks where I have eaten out or had takeaway food nearly every night.

I’ve had a series of run-on meetings, where you start in the Council House at 10 or 12 (I’m back to nocturnal again this week, so there is no time to do anything before a noon meeting) meet, have maybe an hour off before another 4 or 5, followed by a resident or local party meeting in the evening starting at 7 or 7.30.  There isn’t time to get home before meetings, and certainly not time to cook.

So, I’ve been taking the easy way out.  I know I can sit in the carpark of a residents meeting, phone the chinese takeaway round the corner from me, and they will have delicious unhealthy food all ready for me to swing by the shop on the way home.  There is no waiting, no Nigel Slater syle 30 minute fast food, it’s just ready, and tasty, and convenient.

And expensive of course, comparatively. Although in a city like ours, there’s enough competition to make sure there isn’t too much in it.

And because I’ve not been using pots and pans, it’s taking forever to fill the dishwasher and we’re running out of the important things.  So there is yet another appliance sitting there telling me I am not running my life quite the way I planned to.

Tweets on 2008-06-07

  • @willhowells the teacbles will be fine if they pass visual inspection #
  • Collecting Lembit Opik from Nottingham airport where he’s flying himself to. #
  • Rather amazed how little security there is at the airstrip compared to EMA #
  • Watching G-TIGA, a little green plane with two wings and an open cockpit practice touchdowns. #
  • Misreading an email, and wondering how to celebrate “dentistry and bike week” #
  • The Opik has landed! #
  • @dr_nick it sounded like lembit said he was flying a 4 seater single prop Boney M #
  • Nearly ended up getting parking ticket. Was 12 mins over, traffic warden writing when I ran up. #
  • Watching G-OONE do preflight checks, set flaps and taxi. #
  • @jamesgraham whatever, it sounds suspiciously like a lawnmower with wings. They’re off! #
  • Aha. A bit of a fiddle with the internet suggests the plane was a Mooney M20J, not a Boney M. #
  • Watching last week’s Dr Who. Cor blimey, this is one of the greats! #

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Tweets on 2008-06-06

  • Sitting in my office thinking about doing exercise. Why not buy a kayak? Or go running? Bike man cometh soon #
  • Cycle man says my bike is fine, if a little heavy. Apparently his success rate with adult learners is 2/3 so far. #
  • Giving the cats early tea, because the poor dears are starving – and they’ve actually cleared their bowls for once. #
  • Signing up for a “walk a maraton in a month” challenge on mapmyrun.com #
  • Battling with council about diaries. Syncing my phone with council diary is technically possible but not permitted. #
  • Honouring author Alan Sillitoe at a special meeting of Nottingham City Council. #

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Tweets on 2008-06-05

  • Up at the crack of 10am for the fourth day running. Urgh. #
  • I don’t wanna go and leaflet, baby, no, no, no. #
  • Hoping to avoid another long conversation with my group leader about the longevity of dog poo. #
  • Council switching to Outlook Web Access. Anyone know if that can sync with my Nokia diary? #
  • @jamesgraham we’re switching FROM something open-source that was crap and hated! #
  • Absolutely must get to bed before 3am today #
  • Trying unsuccesfully to encourage the cats to eat the spiders #

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