All posts by Mick
At the Backstrands
On Sunday Jeannie, me sister, and I went to Murvagh beach on a lovely sunny afternoon (or the Backstrands as me Dad used to call it). We spend about 2 hours paddling in the water and walking along the strand on a beautiful warm sunny day, with a big black cloud slowly approaching. I got, what I think are, some amazing photographs. I took so many now I have a hard time deciding which to post on Flickr! 🙂
Here’s a video I made of the tide coming in:
Old Donegal Town
A while back I scanned some old postcards of Donegal Town that I borrowed from my Aunty Isabel. They’ve been pretty popular on flickr.com, with this one getting over 900 views:
And this one getting over 1800 views:

Both of these were taken sometime in the 1970’s and I can’t take credit for taking the pictures, that would have been John Hinde or the postcard company he owned of the same name and sold in 1973 (right around the time these pictures were probably taken).
I really like these pics, they’re very nostalgic for me as the the postcard themselve remind me my childhood, as these were sold around the town up to the late 1980’s (even after the center of town changed they made the center into an open plaza with any cars on it). I can barely remember the town looking like, I would have been 3 or 4?
Presentations and Time
This is a common mistake that people do when given presentations, they run out of time. This appears to mainly be because they’ve written their persentation (usually on PowerPoint) and haven’t done a trial run to determine if it will fit into the time allocated. Today for example, someone gave a presentation in a meeting that lasted 2 hours and after 1.5 hours was only 1/3 of the way through their slides.
So either the subject they;re talking about is too complex for this format, or they (which is I think is the most common problem) under-estimate how quickly they can do the presentation (or how long it will actually take them to present it!).
Also, just because a meeting is scheduled for X length of time, it never means that you actually have X time to work with. First, people are always late*, or it takes time to get the screen-sharing working, dial into the conference call. Then people have to do the verbal handshakes Based on my experience where I work now, this is in the range of 5 to 20 minutes. Unless you have a meeting co-ordinator or chair who’ll promptly get things going and make sure all the tiddly bits, such as the screen-sharing … are set-up and running.
And, if your presentation doesn’t take all of the allocated time, you’ll get more feedback, and the undying gratitude of all the people in the meeting, who had to attend but have no interest in the meeting, they’ll get a few minutes of their day back so they can get back to work***.
* People are alway late: At least where I work. A lot of the time this is because if they have back-to-back meetings one meeting runs overtime (bad meeting management) so they’re late for the following meeting which won’t start until they show, which runs over cause they’re late and creates a snowball affect.
** Verbal handshakes: The banter at the start of meeting where people introduce themselves, or exchange pleasantries with peole they know at the meeting “How are you?”, “I’m so-and-so.” … and so on
*** Back to Work: Unless they have a laptop, which means they spend the whole meeting clattering away on the keyboard distrupting the people sitting near them.
Digging a hole
Sandy digging a hole at the lake:
Sorry if the music sounds a little wonky. Music extract is probably copywritted by the Estate of Jimi Hendrix.
Friends on Last.fm
Some friends from my home town in Ireland are in bands! So I’ve 2 Last.fm pages to refer to you.
First Pavesi:
http://www.last.fm/music/Pavesi
And Serial Twin:
http://www.last.fm/music/Serial+Twin
If your interested in what I’ve been listening to recently, here’s my Last.fm page:
NYC Irish Famine Memorial
A very unique design. It’s supposed to be a ruined house on a hill in Ireland.
You walk around the base of the memorial, towards the water.

Go through a short tunnel, which has speakers playing the voices of people talking about the famine (including Bono).

And your in a ruined house.

You walk out the front door of the house, and follow the path up the hill, past a grave, and a what to me looks like a fallow potato field (because of the mounds or ridges or riggs in the field).

Here’s a view from above, which should give you a better view of how it’s laid out.

There’s even an overgrown garden out the back of the cottage.
Really a very impressive memorial, hey was that’s Bono’s voice coming out the speakers. Sheesh, he’s on everything these days.
Key missing?
If you get this error message:
W: GPG error: http://people.debian.org unstable Release: The following signatures couldn’t be verified because the public key is not available: NO_PUBKEY 212253A4F641D1A6
W: You may want to run apt-get update to correct these problems
This is because you don’t have the public key for Randall’s Nvidia Debian packages! The following instructions are from
http://wiki.chrismoonlight.de/doku.php?id=wissen:computer:linux:gpgupdateerror
gpg –keyserver pgp.mit.edu –recv-keys F641D1A6
gpg –armor –export F641D1A6 | sudo apt-key add –
sudo apt-get -u update
However I would have thought that installing either the debian-maintainers package or the debian-keyring would have the required key as the description of each packages says it’s has the keyos of the Debian maintainers:
debian-maintainers – GPG keys of Debian maintainers
debian-keyring – GnuPG (and obsolete PGP) keys of Debian Developers
Boston JazzWeek Finale!
At Berklee Performance Center on Saturday the 3rd of May the finale of Boston’s 2nd Jazz week will be held. Tickets in advance are $10:
http://www.jazzboston.org/about/jazzweek2008-highlights.asp
JazzBoston’s second annual Jazz Week benefit concert, “A Kaleidoscopic View of Jazz in Boston,” will be held at Berklee Performance Center on Saturday, May 3. Former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky will read from his work accompanied by legendary drummer Rakalam Bob Moses. Pinsky, a Boston University faculty member, will be making only his second jazz appearance ever, following his debut earlier this year in New York with drummer Andrew Cyrille. Moses has worked with jazz giants including Herbie Hancock, Charles Mingus, John Medeski, and Larry Coryell.
Artists from Berklee College of Music, New England Conservatory, and the John Coltrane Memorial Concert (JCMC) Ensemble will also perform at the benefit, proceeds of which will go to three outstanding jazz outreach programs in the Boston Public Schools — the JCMC Educational Outreach Program, based at Northeastern University, the New England Conservatory Community Performances and Partnerships Program, and the Berklee College of Music City Music Program. Young talent from the Berklee program will be front and center when the Berklee City Music All-Stars Quintet takes the stage. Special guests including George Garzone and Friends, the Coltrane EOP Quartet, and the Marianne Solivan Quartet will also be part of the bill. Additional special guests are still to be announced. MC for the festivities will be Eric Jackson, host of “Jazz with Eric in the Evening,” weeknights on WGBH 89.7.
I went to the final concert last year, which was in aid of New Orleans Jazz Musicians, and it really was a good concert, and well worth the $10! 🙂
And maybe there’ll be another JazzFest too!



