Blackpool Zoo

Ring-tailed Lemurs

Happy new year everyone!

I spent the new year with Christine in Blackpool and on Sunday went to Blackpool Zoo. It’s open 364 days a year (seeing as the animals there need caring for all year round) and is nice and quiet outside of the busy summer tourist season. The weather on Sunday was bright and sunny (if bitterly cold) so it made an ideal day to go, and to give credit to the zoo staff the educational talks during feeding times were still going ahead despite there being probably no more than 50 people in the park all day.

Naturally I took my camera and 40 out of the 100 photos I took are on Flickr. The above picture of the ring-tailed lemurs is probably my favourite, but I was also impressed with this picture of a red panda (or firefox) and this pair of magellanic penguins.

Having done the Sea Life Centre before Christmas (which has a £5 discount per adult out of tourist season), the next big Blackpool attraction on my list is the Blackpool Tower. I’m sure I’ll get chance to do that soon.

Lowdown on London

So, London. We caught a late train out of Bradford (one of the direct Bradford-London trains) and got into the capital about 10pm on the Friday night. The great thing about London is that the public transport systems don’t stop at about 7pm, like they do in most other places. So, after meeting a friend in a pub near Euston, and leaving at closing time, we could still get to our hotel. The hotel was near Canning Town and is a good half hour away by tube/DLR.

We had intended to do some sightseeing over the weekend, but when we mentioned to various of our friends that we’d be in London, they were all keen to meet up with us. So, we ended up spending the afternoon socialising. We went to the Bloomsbury Bowling Lanes, again near Euston, which is an awesome place. It’s a pub which does nice food and decent beer, but also has a 10-pin bowling alley and karaoke booths, as well as retro arcade machines. Very easy to kill a lot of time there.

Saturday evening was the main reason for going to London – to see a musical in the West End, which is something neither of us have done before. We’ve seen musicals at theatres before – we both went to see Jerry Springer: The Opera when it came to Bradford in May last year – but there’s something special about seeing it in the West End (which for those unfamiliar with London is a bit like Broadway).

The musical we went to see was Avenue Q – I bought the soundtrack late in 2005 as the songs are hilarious, but it was only last year that it came to our shores. You may remember a song called “The Internet Is For Porn” being passed around the internet a lot some time ago – that’s taken from the musical and is quite a good example of what you can expect from it. If you’re easily offended then you’ll hate it; if you’re not then you’ll be rolling in the aisles laughing. Even though I knew most of the songs off by heart, to see it live was an awesome experience.

We went to the matinée performance, which had the benefit of being quite a bit cheaper than the later Saturday showing. We didn’t buy the cheapest seats since they were right on the balcony, and didn’t have a good view, but the ones we did buy were quite good for the price that we paid.

Afterwards, we went out for dinner – we had to walk around quite a bit before we found a restaurant which was in our price range, but we settled for a nice Italian restaurant just off one of the main streets which was actually very reasonable. We then had another late night tube journey – it’s surprising just how busy the Jubilee line is at 11:30pm on a Saturday night.

Sunday was also supposed to be a sightseeing day but we didn’t really do any – instead, we had lunch at Yo! Sushi (which I’d promised Hari as she has taken a real liking to sushi) and perusing the food court at Selfridges, which is the only bit of the shop we can actually afford. We came away with a big box of Krispy Kreme doughnuts and Oreo cookies – believe it or not, these are considered premium brands here and are hard to get hold of, with a standard packet of Oreos costing up to £3 (which is about US$5.50). They’re expensive, but sooooooo nice.

The journey back was okay, bar the fact that the train was 20 minutes late leaving London. All in all we had a really good weekend and although we did spend a lot of money it was worth it.

Unfortunately we’ve both been ill with colds since getting back 🙁 .

Open Tech 2005

I’m sat on the train back to Bradford (another direct one with wifi, woohoo!), ready to leave King’s Cross. The verdict on Open Tech 2005? Possibly the best £5 I’ve spent in a very long time.

There was wifi at the event (and indeed lots of geeks with Powerbooks reading their Bloglines subscriptions) however for some reason I couldn’t get it to work with this PDA. Damn Windows Mobile…

Anyway, what follows is my take on the days events.

Despite it being only two days after some wannabe terrorists tried to blow up the tube, the underground seemed surprisingly normal and I had no problems getting to where I needed to be. The event was being held in the Reynolds Building, part of the Imperial College London’s medical school in Charing Cross Hospital, and the talks were in a couple of the teaching rooms there. The first talk I went to was by Danny O’Brien on the issues surrounding privacy amongst those in the public eye, especially bloggers. It was very interesting (even if it did take a while to start due to internet access problems, eventually sorted with an impromptu SSH tunnel); Danny is a good speaker and kept the audience interested.

At 12:30 I moved over to the seminar room where I saw a Linux-powered iPod for the first time (and even watched a video on it), learned about scripting in iTunes and about MythTV, along with the BBC’s open source project Kamaelia. I also bumped into Sven from Blogwise and Gia who vaguely remembered me from the London Geek Dinner last month.

During a much needed lunch break Phil Wilson came to chat to me (it’s great to be recognised :) ), and we then headed back to the lecture room for the official launch of BBC Backstage – effectively the Beeb’s developer network, with APIs and syndication feeds galore (see BBC News Online article). There’s already some people doing cool stuff with it, like taking the BBC’s travel news feed and plotting the problems on a Google map, or a ‘changelog’ of the BBC News Online home page – Ben Metcalfe, who was presenting, used the archives from July 7th as a good example of why this was so cool. Ben Hammersley was the ‘master of ceremonies’ – he’s even more mad than his blog depicts him as. He was wearing a skirt

Ben H also MC’d the next session which was with Jeremy Zawodny from Yahoo!. Jeremy’s talk focused on openness in technology – RSS, APIs etc. and how it benefits companies (and the problems it can create). Obviously being from Yahoo! the focus was on Yahoo! and Flickr but it did show how Yahoo! is ‘getting it’. While it didn’t make me as excited as the BBC talk it’s still good to see big companies opening themselves up, as it were.

It was at this point that I found out I’d won the third prize in the prize draw, so I picked up an O’Reilly USB flash drive (256MB!), along with a 1-year subscription to Make magazine. I also bought a copy of Ben’s ‘Developing Feeds with RSS and Atom(sponsored link), which he signed.

The next session I went to was called Blogs and Social Software, and was chaired by Gia. Tom Reynolds, who works for the London Ambulance Service, did a talk about how to blog and not lose your job, which included lots of cat pictures, as any blogging talk should. He was followed by Paul Mutton, creator of the PieSpy IRC bot, about creating diagrams showing how individuals interact. He used data from Digital Spy’s Big Brother site to create an interaction map of the Big Brother housemates, which was pretty cool. Finally Paul Lenz talked about his Who Should You Vote For? site and his new project What Should I Read Next?, which lets you type in a book you have read and recieve suggestions for other titles to try. You can also add books that you like and help to extend the data set.

There was one final set of sessions after that but in tne interests of getting home at a reasonable time I left early so as to catch the 18:30 train from King’s Cross. All in all I had a great day and it was well worth the journey – I just wish I could have gone to all the sessions. That would have required some kind of cloning device though.

As well as those that I met (I also met Lloyd Davis in the last session), I saw but didn’t really have chance to meet Cory Doctorow, Tom Coates, Simon Willison and Matt Webb, amongst others.

Yikes, it’s taken me over an hour to write this. If I ever buy a PDA (this one is borrowed) I’ll be buying a keyboard for it. I’m in the Lincolnshire wilderness between Grantham and Newark now, by the way.

Update: Back home, so I’ve added links to some of the stuff I was talking about.

Food on the Tyne

Today we went to Newcastle. We were intending to go to Scarborough, but it was rather foggy this morning, and since the weather forecast reckoned the fog would linger on the coast, we decided to go elsewhere.

Despite making two visits to Newcastle in the space of a week back in January (see this and this), I haven’t been up since, and have never been down onto Quayside – the “happening” area of the city. The transformation this area has seen in the past 5 years is amazing. What used to be a huge selection of rundown warehouses is now one of Britain’s classiest places to live, with high rise flats going like hot cakes at top dollar prices.

The quayside itself is now home to some very contemporary bars, on the lines of Pitcher & Piano, Casa and the like (similar, I suppose, to the City Screen area in York), and even has a Malmaison hotel with its Paris Metropolitan-style cast iron at the front. And, of course, there’s the millennium bridge linking it with Gateshead, which we walked across to take a look at the Baltic.

For those that don’t know, the Baltic used to be a flour mill, but has now been converted into an art gallery, with free admission. The art is… interesting, to say the least. The top floor has Meccano models of some of the world’s great bridges, including the Tyne Bridge – the model had been lined up so that it was at the same angle as the real one, which gives an interesting effect. Another gallery consists of a series of gongs that you can hit with soft mallets (provided), giving a very eerie effect.

There’s also plenty of art outside along the quays – you can see more at art-on-the-riverside.co.uk. We had lunch at a Spanish tapas bar called La Tasca – they have restaurants all over the country though this is the first one we’d come across. The food was excellent, and since by now the fog had cleared and the sun had come out, we were able to eat outside. Even the staff were Spanish – in fact they spoke Spanish to each other. Overall, we were very impressed – if you see one of these you may like to consider visiting.

We then headed back up to Grainger Town, the main shopping area of Newcastle, to pick up some bed linen for me (since Bradford don’t provide it) and a few other things. While we were in Bainbridges (part of the John Lewis chain), we had a look at the computer section, and I was surprised to see just how much space they were now devoting to Apple Macs. In the past they’ve maybe had 3 machines at the most, but now they’re taking up similar amounts of space to IBM compatibles – most of which were laptops, actually. They seem to stock the full range – iMacs (both old and new), eMacs, iBooks, PowerMac G4s; even the iPod. They also sold extra keyboards and mice for them too.

Though in retrospect, it’s probably not quite so surprising since about 15 minutes walk away is Northumbria University, where Jonathon Ive, the guy who designed most of Apple’s range, was a student.

Anyway, it was a very enjoyable day, and an interesting one too.