Old Posts

Age. Hope.

Age.

It's featuring a lot in the forefront of my mind lately. Thinking about age tends to lead to thoughts about death, and vice-versa. From time to time I think that it's healthy to remind yourself that the meter's running. After all, what is there but death? It's what makes living all the more worthwhile - I suppose that would make a slogan.

Sometimes it is all too easy to allow yourself slip into character and forget that there's stage, forget that the curtains eventually come down and it's already eight forty-nine.

Two friends of mine recently found out they have cancer. One old friend, one new, both within spitting distance of 40 and, thankfully, both with as good a prognosis as you can probably get in the circumstances. I've come to learn that you don't get training on how to deal with this, what friend-some words to offer to toughen their resolve, to steel their nerve or just to show them hope.

But then you realise there are no 'right' words. Just words.

At the weekend I transferred a video tape containing old cine footage, taken by my grandfather in the 60's and 70's, onto my PC for editing and, ultimately, preservation on DVD and other less perishable, less mortal media.

And I find that every day since, I've been utterly drawn in by it, replaying scenes over and over and analysing in studious detail the too few precious scenes containing the father I lost on new years day this year, of my dear mother and several fascinating minutes of film showing me and my sister as babies and young children.

Looking back at the footage of myself I can clearly recognise my baby daughter Cameron in my own face as a baby. At certain angles, or when certain facial expressions flash past, as much as can I recognise my own face today in the eye-lines and expressions of my twenty-something father as he held and played with his baby son.

And so, the connection is made between images of ghosts from random moments in a time long since faded and the promise of the future memories yet to be created.

Four score years and ten. And now, approaching my thirty-fifth birthday next week, I find myself sitting at the centre of this generational equation, a biological pivot-point. Symmetry.

It's as if I'm standing I'm at the top of a mountain, able to see the valley behind me from where began my ascent, equally as well as the I can sense the distant promise of the valley ahead, and into which I'm about to descend.

It's a unique and beautiful viewpoint and I'd like to sit here for a while and enjoy the view if I may. But I know that soon I must continue on with my journey, and then I'll take my wife's and daughter's hands in mine and we'll walk off into our future.

I hope. That's all there is.

Hope.

DAB - Digital Audio Broacast

We have a mini HiFi in our kitchen, I bought it some time ago but when we received a Sony home cinema amplifier as a wedding gift (how convenient was that - I mean, how could they know that would be the ideal gift!?) and it was kinda made redundant. So now it lives in our kitchen and we can listen to HiFi audio whilst making a cup of coffee or whatever. But some months ago the radio component stopped working properly and we can't get radio stations to tune.

So, yesterday I decided that this was all the justification I needed to invest in one of those new fangled digital radio things, not least because I felt that the wooden box design complimented perfectly our wooden table-top HiFi speakers.

Broken radio, HiFi going to waste, wooden speakers; it was a match made in heaven.

So far I'm very impressed with the audio reception, most music goes out at about 160kbps and so, higher than most MP3's and certainly good enough to listen to in awe when pumped through the hifi, plus you get a little scolling line of text telling you what you're listening to or the title of the track playing.

Plus, now we can listen to traffic reports again at 110db. What an interesting and varied life we lead.

Connecting With The Past

I found an old company Compaq notebook I used for my job between 1995 and 1996 the other day. I was supposed to have given it back to my MIS dept. in the summer of '96 when it was replaced with a new one but I hung on to it for a while just in case there was anything I needed from it during the transition period. That was seven years ago. Oops.

It's a Compaq Contura 410c for those who are interested, 486-50, 12Mb RAM and a 340Mb disk, Windows 3.11 For Workgroups. Hot spec! Anyway, it's like a time capsule because everything is just as I left it back in June 1996, using it is just like being in a bloody time warp. Plus I forgot just how seriously bad pre-95 Windows was, euch. Back in those days we used Microsoft Mail for email and I'm itchin' like mad to get into my seven year old inbox to see what was going on, it's really like peering into someone else's PC and in a way I suppose it is.

When I last booted that PC up I was 27 years of age, unmarried though well entrenched with Fiona, no daughter, small house, so-so salary, so-so Ford Mondeo company car, analog mobile phone and no idea that I'd be sitting rooting around my old PC seven years later and then telling you guys about it whilst blogging wifi on my notebook, sprawled across a leather armchair (actually the same one that we had in 1996), in England, 350 miles from 'home' whilst Fiona - now my wife - dresses our seven month old daughter upstairs in preparation for our day out before I return to work (same company as 96' only now I'm the general whereas then I was a foot-soldier) on Monday after a short break.

However, two problems present themselves in my quest to get in and about my seven year old inbox and consummate my nostalgia;

1) I can't remember the password I used for MS-Mail though I've found a password cracker that will let me in in return for $40 - I've downloaded the trial version which exposes the first letter of the password and I'm hoping that will be enough to jog my memory or at least set me down the path of what I might have chosen as a password seven years ago.

2) I need to transfer the mail file to my current notebook because the password cracking software only runs on post-Windows 3.x kit. The old compaq has no USB or Infra-Red ports, only serial. My new Dell notebook has only USB ports, no Infra-red (I just discovered!) and no serial port. Now there's a thing. So I dug out an old laplink cable and I'm going to have to get under the desk and plug the old notebook into my main PC box and trip off into a world of how the hell do I get an eight year old windows 3.11 machine to talk to a Windows XP machine using only a serial cable and an empty packet of cornflakes.

I forgot just how challenging and wonderful olde worlde computing used to be, think of me while I'm gone.