Hello!

Welcome to the new, improved Neil’s World! The blog is now on a different host, has its own domain name, and is now powered by Movable Type instead of Blogger. This means that:

  • The RSS feed is now hosted on the server
  • Comments are hosted on the server, so they should be faster and work better
  • Weblogs.com will be pinged every time I update, not just when I’m using w.bloggar
  • All posts will have a title
  • A list of recent posts is shown on the side bar, along with links to the monthly archives and a blog calendar
  • You’ll be able to remember the URL more easily!

I’m still setting this up, so I’d appreciate any bug reports, comments or criticisms you may have.

Settled in

Here I am, settled at University with my own (incredibly slow) internet connection. I would have posted here on Wednesday, but for some reason I decided to plug the modem cable into the ethernet socket (the fact it fitted is slightly worrying). I only discovered this on Friday morning as I was going out to buy a new modem cable.

So, what have I been doing? Going out a lot, getting slightly tipsy and watching my next door neighbour get hypnotised by a random Canadian bloke. And catching up on all of the emails I’ve missed.

I was hoping to write some entries to put in here but I only really got the first entry done, so here it is:

Got up and packed final stuff (music, razor etc.) into the car almost filling it (we had to abandon the stereo box and just take the parts in plastic bags – actually I think we took more stuff then we do when we go on holiday, but then usually cooking utensils are provided and we don’t need to take much food. Or pillows.

We set off at about 10:30am, and arrived at the hall just under an hour later. Me and my mum (unintentionally) left Dad with the car while we jetted off to the main building to collect my keys – all 4 of them, plus an access swipe card. The room is on the fifth floor – the building is 10 floors high I think. 5th isn’t bad, I guess, and there are 2 good lifts, plus two staircases.

The room itself is much larger than I expected – you could easily swing a cat in it, if you really wanted to. There’s a good sized desk, and adequate storage, though I wish the chest of draws were larger – I ended up hanging up some of my jumpers on coat hangers. Which reminds me – next time I’m home (October if all goes to plan) I’ll bring some more back… There’s also a washbasin in the room, which is handy – the showers are separate, and are okay. The toilets do leave something to be desired though – ah well, you can’t have everything.

The kitchen is better than I was expecting too – looks like it has been recently refurbished, and although there’s only one cooker there seems to be adequate storage space (although some stuff is staying in my room since I don’t want it getting nicked). The view is also good – it was built in the 1960′s so the windows are huge (and it’s okay to leave them open as I don’t think people are going to climb in and take stuff) – I get a nice view across to the centre of Bradford.

Although I seem to be on a mostly male floor (damn!) the guys that I’ve met so far all seem quite cool, especially the guy next to me (hi Anthony!). For dinner we went down to a local curry restaurant (oh come on, it’s Bradford for gawd’s sake!) called ‘Posh Spice’ (and yes it was quite posh, but cheap too) and got a takeaway which we ate back at the kitchen (there’s a dining area too).

From what I gather, I’m the only one out of my peer group at Bradford – a few of my friends have gone to Manchester, but most are spread around the country – so I’ll obviously have to make some new friends. Which isn’t too bad because everyone seems quite friendly – although I haven’t spent much time in the union bar I did go to play pool (I lost, btw). But hey, there’s a whole week to get stuff done.

The area is a little bizarre – whereas in York you hardly ever see people of other ethnic groups (bar the odd Japanese tourist), here whites are an ethnic minority. The bulk of people are of Asian or West Indian origin – usually the only white people are students. It’s not that I have a problem with that, it’s just… strange. Well, for me at least. They all seem friendly though, and I haven’t seen any threatening gangs of youths.

The hall is a 5-10 minute walk from the main campus where everything happens, which is good since it’ll give me some exercise and won’t be as noisy (in theory).

Overall? Yeah, I like it. I was certainly expecting much worse. Now if I could just get internet access….

Packed up and ready to go

Well, my laptop is packed away, so I’m back on my parent’s computer temporarily, which I’ve tidied up (removed redundant programs, replaced Tiny Personal Firewall with the latest ZoneAlarm, sorted my parent’s Start Menus etc.). Today we packed my clothes and anything that remained, such as my stereo and washing kit. Some stuff will have to go in tomorrow morning, such as my medication and razor, but other than that I’m all ready to go. Though I have to say I am dead nervous…

Since I wasn’t organised and never got around to paying for my internet access, I’ll be without it for the next few days so that’ll explain why this blog turns stagnant. I’ll be back when time permits. Toodles!

In brief

Bit of catching up to do, I think…

Friday

Went to Ikea again to pick up more stuff for university, such as crockery, cutlery and storage. Last time we went I didn’t know which university I was going to, and if I ended up at UMIST, I wouldn’t have needed quite so much stuff to take with me. On the other hand, most of the stuff I’m getting would have been needed in the second year at UMIST anyway (I’ll probably move into rented accommodation since I’m taking a sandwich year), and Bradford’s accommodation is £500 cheaper for the year :).

My auntie and uncle (from my mum’s side this time) arrived that evening to stay over for the weekend.

Saturday

The 5 of us went to Whitby for the day. Although I’ve been quite a few times recently, this was the first time I’d visited Whitby Abbey, which has recently seen the opening of a new visitor centre. It’s quite good actually – instead of reading panel after panel of information, they have touch-screen computers which play videos of actors representing people who were involved in the abbey’s history.

We then went back down into the town for a pub lunch, and then had a wander around the town taking photos.

Sunday

It was a nice day so we went to Brimham Rocks and then had lunch at The Half Moon Inn in Fell Beck near Pateley Bridge, before coming home to a barbecue.

Monday

Didn’t really do much…

Accommodation Offerings

Bradford have offered me some accommodation, and ironically it’s in the same block that my dad stayed in when he was an undergraduate (Revis Barber Hall). What comes around comes around, I guess.

What I’m slightly annoyed about is that the restrictions on internet access in the rooms – it is supposedly only for academic use. The items listed as being disallowed didn’t include weblogging or general surfing (just chat and high bandwidth activities), though I’ll need to take a look at the full list first. And ironically, to be able to access the list on the intranet site I need to have a user name and password from the university, which I won’t get until I sign up with the scheme. Oh the irony.

The phone charges also seem a little steep. Specifically, 8p a minute for calling home is a bit harsh – hopefully my rhubarb card will sort that out though.

Not done much at home today, other than tidy up and do some ironing (that great masculine activity…). Next door are having their new fence extended, so we now have a shiny new (and reasonably stable) fence down one side of the garden. Now if only our other neighbours would get new fences too.

Tonight is Ventures – we haven’t planned anything specific though.

See ya tomorrow

Reading the bumpf

Friday

Bradford sent me the welcome pack, with a huge pile of leaflets and brochures that I need to read and digest before I go. I also filled out a form to update my status with reference to my student loan – I doubt there’ll be any changes in the amount of money I’m entitled to, but at least they know where to send the cheque.

My auntie and uncle also came over – they’re based down in Norfolk but are doing a ‘northern tour’, visiting friends and relatives, and wanted to stop over for a night and see how we were doing. The weather was awful, so we wound up going to the designer outlet after lunch, and spent the evening watching Dad’s slides from when we went to France a few weeks ago.

Saturday

My auntie and uncle moved on across the Pennines, so we went out to the twice-monthly farmers’ market at Murton (note to self: must ask if they want a website…) and then went into town to do some shopping. Since I’d hardly been near a computer for the past 24 hours, I spent the rest of yesterday catching up with what I’d missed in terms of emails and ODP stuff.

Sunday

Another quiet day, mostly spent editing. Now you can see why I haven’t updated much.

You may, however, been interested to know that Trillian is vulnerable to security attacks. This was reported earlier in the month, but as yet there has been nothing done about it. Hmmm…

Mind you, today I downloaded no less than 4 security updates from Windows Update.

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.

Releasing the pressure

Well, I rang UMIST, and have now been ‘released’. I’ll probably get confirmation from Bradford on Monday. I’ll also need to let the bank and the Student Loans Company know that I’ve changed university. Fun, eh?

Been to Driffield today – my mum buys her bread flour from the nearby Bell Mills Garden Centre and she was about to run out, so she dragged me over there and bought 12Kg of the stuff. But it does make really nice loaves of bread…

Anyway, we didn’t spend long in Driffield (it’s a typical northern market town so there isn’t all that much there), but we did have lunch at The Bell Hotel, which I can thoroughly recommend; the staff were very friendly, the food was made to order in front of you and you can choose what to have in your sandwiches (including what extras), and they served real ale to boot. It’s a 3 star hotel in the Best Western chain – if you’re in the area, consider staying there.

Me = Not going to Manchester

The letter from UMIST came today – I definitely don’t have the place, due to my A-level grades. I’ll ring them up later today – they have offered me alternative courses, but in something completely different (Textiles). Erm… what? I applied to do Computer Science. All of the other degrees on my UCAS form were Computer Science (or related). Why do I want to study Textile technology? Talk about adding insult to injury…

So, I’m going to Bradford in 4 weeks. Okay, so Manchester is a nicer city, and the accommodation at UMIST was better. But Bradford isn’t bad, and at least I’ll have free internet access in my room (albeit on 56k dial-up). And it’s closer to home.

Last night, we went out for a meal as a kind-of ‘getting into university’ celebration. Okay, we only went to the local pub, but we had a nice meal nonetheless (and I was absolutely stuffed afterwards).

The waiting is over

The waiting is over – I now know my A-level results. But to be honest they weren’t really worth waiting for – I didn’t do nearly as well as I had thought I had done.

The best result was a ‘C’ in Geography, but I only managed dismal ‘D’ grades in Maths and French (of which I achieved ‘A’ and ‘A*’ respectively at GCSE only two years ago), and a ‘D’ in Computing AS.

What was really annoying was the fact that I would have got a good ‘C’ in computing, if it weren’t for the coursework – that didn’t even make ‘E’ grade. And apparently, my coursework was one of the best in the group. Doesn’t give you much faith in the York College computing department, does it?

But every cloud has a silver lining – I was still able to get a place at Bradford University on the course I applied for. I’m still waiting for a response from UMIST, but I doubt I’ll get in – by my calculations I was at least 60 points short of the 300 they were asking for. There is the opportunity of internal clearing at UMIST, but I’m unsure whether I really want to do the other courses that are still on offer in the Computing area. One is based around electronics – not good because I’m more of a software junkie – and the other was Computing with Geography, which might be worth it considering I did well in Geography, but do I actually want to do it?

The reason why I’m still waiting for confirmation is down to the fact that the UCAS website appears to have gone down, probably due to the huge numbers of people trying to access it. Fortunately I got in early while it was still working, which is why I know that Bradford accepted me.

Still, I’d find it incredibly annoying if I was trying to find information about clearing, or to get my results, only to find that the server isn’t working.