Tumbleweed

You may be won­der­ing what is going on with this blog since I haven’t pos­ted for a while.

Essen­tially, mov­ing abroad takes a bit of time ;-) . I will prob­ably get round to writ­ing or fin­ish­ing a post at some point but I don’t cur­rently have my own fixed Inter­net con­nec­tion. Right now I am typ­ing this on my iPad in a lib­rary in Denmark.

Happy new year to those who are still subscribed!

Why no smartphone?

I have twice almost bought an iPhone. I have never almost bought any other smart­phone. In fact, I haven’t bought a new phone since 2006, as I explained in an earlier post.

It is not simply a desire not to do the same as every­one else. I can def­in­itely under­stand the attrac­tion of hav­ing such a ver­sat­ile port­able com­puter, cam­era, music player and phone in one’s pocket at all times.

My gen­eral philo­sophy (if it deserves such a grand title) is to care­fully eval­u­ate any non-essential pur­chase with a long term view. I’ve gradu­ally come to the real­isa­tion that everything is a com­prom­ise, and that is true of mobile phones as much as any technology.

The advant­ages of own­ing a smart­phone for me are fairly obvi­ous to any­one who sees the col­lec­tion of equip­ment that one could replace. I will write in terms of the iPhone here because that is the product which I have spent the most time con­sid­er­ing. When I vis­ited York last week­end, I had a MiFi sup­ply­ing fast wire­less Inter­net for my iPod Touch and iPad. I also car­ried my cur­rent mobile phone, which con­tinu­ally frus­trates me with its slow reac­tion times, small memory and lack of Inter­net, apps and so forth. Whilst I am a keen pho­to­grapher, I did not bring my cam­era as it is simply not prac­tical for me to carry. Hav­ing an iPhone I would be able to do away with the iPod touch, ter­rible phone and would not miss a cam­era. I would not spend so much time look­ing up mobile num­bers on the iPod and typ­ing them in to the sync-less phone. I would be able to share Inter­net with the iPad and not need the MiFi. I would gain GPS nav­ig­a­tion and never again miss the abil­ity to tweet or take an oppor­tun­ist photo.

Whilst these advant­ages are attract­ive, do they jus­tify the cost? It is worth con­sid­er­ing altern­at­ive devices when cost is of import­ance. Unfor­tu­nately the gap in pri­cing between Apple’s latest model and the rival Android devices is not that great. I don’t find the lar­ger screens neces­sary, if they are accom­pan­ied by an inferior soft­ware exper­i­ence (hope­fully someone will even­tu­ally prove to me that there are high qual­ity equi­val­ents to my most used iOS apps). No smart­phone cam­era is as good as my cur­rent cam­era except in port­ab­il­ity. This is the mat­ter on which I feel most likely to be swayed in the future. Inev­it­ably I desire to take pho­tos when I don’t have a cam­era avail­able and this frus­trates me, but I would get far more enjoy­ment and use from a cam­era cost­ing sig­ni­fic­antly less than a smart phone.

What annoys me about the iPhone 4S is that I would fairly swiftly run out of space and regret not spend­ing more on a lar­ger capa­city model. Here is one point I con­cede to the myriad of Android and other non-iPhones with their expand­able memory. This helped jus­tify not buy­ing the iPhone when I was tee­ter­ing a few weeks ago. I could buy a per­fectly good iPod Touch with 32GB stor­age for less than half the cost of the 32GB iPhone, and while it doesn’t do as much it does enough to sat­isfy my needs.

Here is my real reason for not buy­ing any smart­phone yet: I don’t want to be per­man­ently attached to the Inter­net. I don’t want to be always avail­able, ready to respond to any email, con­stantly up to date with news. I find life more inter­est­ing when I have my head up, observing. I get more time to think when I am not absorbed by a little touch screen. I can actu­ally have a con­ver­sa­tion with someone next to me, and not waste time play­ing a silly little game. If I want to take pho­to­graphs, I can plan ahead and bring the real deal. I still have my iPod touch to play music and apps when I feel the need.

This free­dom from digital com­mu­nic­a­tion is becom­ing rarer, and it’s some­thing I want to cher­ish. I am never more than a few hours from the web, so I don’t see the need to be 10 seconds from my inbox. When I even­tu­ally earn enough that an iPhone would cost me a rel­at­ively small amount, I will prob­ably own one and enjoy it. But for now, a device that I can­not afford to replace and the costs of replen­ish­ing mobile Inter­net band­width every month, are not some­thing I feel are worth the fin­an­cial bur­den. I am about to begin a mas­ters degree fun­ded by my own sav­ings, and for now I’d rather have great exper­i­ences and nice food than be able to check my email wherever I am.

#7 — An older one

Today I took a few pho­tos but noth­ing dif­fer­ent enough to the earlier images. Instead I dug out a photo from July and did some edit­ing with Snap­seed, a handy but fairly lim­ited photo editor which has Nik’s con­trol point tech­no­logy for local adjust­ments.
The sub­ject is a glass­winged but­ter­fly in Chester zoo. It was a couple of weeks after I had pur­chased my macro lens and my first encounter with an inter­est­ing sta­tion­ary insect.

20111106-201042.jpg

This com­ing week I won’t be post­ing every day. I will try to write some­thing but I don’t intend to sub­ject myself to a daily post­ing sched­ule just yet. I’d like to write some­thing about my quest for a new mobile phone and per­haps a dis­cus­sion on cre­ativ­ity and pro­cras­tin­a­tion, but we shall see if I can avoid the lat­ter ;~p.

#5 — Exhausted

 

 

It was tough to think of what to do today. Fri­days are always tir­ing and involve a rush to get things fin­ished before the week­end, then a 3 hour trip from Hinxton to home. This image is of the last thing I see before my Fri­day night slum­ber (no, my vis­ion is not that bad, I just thought I’d delib­er­ately not focus so you can’t really tell what it is). Con­tinue read­ing

#4 — Mushroom

I really don’t like the piece I uploaded yes­ter­day. At the time I felt like I was unlikely to think of any­thing more inter­est­ing to draw, so I just doodled a bit. One of the reas­ons for this ‘week of images’ is to force myself to cre­ate some­thing every day. It doesn’t have to be some­thing I think of as great, but the more time I put in, the more reward­ing it is.

I wanted to draw a “thing” today. I tried to draw my iPod using just 2 col­ours, but that was a little dull. So I skimmed through the pho­tos on my iPad and was inspired to try a mush­room and con­tinue with Monday’s theme of smallish nat­ural objects. This was a chance to prac­tice using the brushes and smudge tool in my favour­ite draw­ing app, Pro­cre­ate. I don’t feel it’s quite fin­ished, but it might be inter­est­ing to come back in the future and improve things.

Con­tinue read­ing

#3 — Abstract

Work­ing as a pro­gram­mer involves think­ing at mul­tiple levels of abstrac­tion. You might be cod­ing a web applic­a­tion, but at any one point it could be data mod­el­ling, present­a­tional markup or low level archi­tec­ture changes. Some­times it is hard to think of some­thing to draw or pho­to­graph. It shouldn’t have to be a real or obvi­ous sub­ject all the time. There­fore I just let my stylus wander and this is what came out.

Con­tinue read­ing

One year on

Here I am, a little over one year since I star­ted writ­ing journal posts every two weeks (or so). Recently my tempo has dwindled thanks to work­ing full-time. That doesn’t mean I’m going to stop, just that with only so many hours avail­able each day I can’t always do everything.

At the moment I am liv­ing in Cam­bridge for 5 nights a week. I com­mute by bike, which takes about an hour each way includ­ing a shower and get­ting changed at the work end. When I get back after work­ing I brew a mug of tea and spend a bit of time cook­ing and wash­ing up. Once or twice a week my even­ing com­mute is diver­ted via a shop to stock up. By the time I sit down at the com­puter (my old laptop — not a fun machine to work on) it’s often 20.30 and I spend the a while surf­ing the web. After­wards I am pretty much exhausted for the day and all I want to do is watch a TV epis­ode or go to bed with a book. And so the cycle goes on…

It’s nice to be work­ing again, but I for­got how much your free time becomes valu­able. The week­ends, pre­vi­ously a time to con­tinue with all my hob­bies and interests, have become a time to recover and basic­ally avoid sit­ting behind a com­puter. My wrists and eyes are not fond of being parked at a desk for so many hours of the day, yet that is what I sub­ject them to.

Mov­ing for­ward I hope to catch up with some of my draft posts. I don’t know who reads this (espe­cially when I write too much in one go) but I shall con­tinue and strive to come up with new things to write about and per­haps man­age shorter, weekly posts.