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Week 251: Fixed
The washing machine repair was booked for Wednesday with the company to which LG contract out warranty jobs. They said they give a window the day before, and they did: 07:00–11:00. I’m not a morning person, there are very few occasions when I’m up before seven, and I did not relish having to get up at a stupid hour.
The engineer came about 08:20, replaced the control board, and was on his way in half an hour. Then I took a nap. I woke up with the sun streaming through the window, feeling a lot better.
My big computer hasn’t been working well for a while. I used to have an Nvidia graphics card, but dealing with Nvidia’s crappy proprietary Linux drivers was a hassle. I sold that and replaced it with an AMD card, and everything was fine for a while.
However, after a while, it stopped booting, and the only way I could get it to work was to use an old kernel. The sound went weird sometimes, for reasons I couldn’t divine.
In case my installation was in a weird state, I reinstalled Debian 13. That’s
not a big hassle – I have /home on a separate logical volume – but I still
couldn’t get it to boot unless I stuck with a low resolution VESA graphics
mode. 1600 by 1200 isn’t so bad, but when you have an ultra-wide monitor it’s
almost unreadable. And now I didn’t even have an old kernel to fall back on.
I ordered a new graphics card, using a much newer AMD architecture. It’s way more capable (and thus more expensive) than I need, but graphics cards seem to exist in a bimodal distribution with no real middle ground between ancient and modern. I’m not a gamer, and I don’t have any real desire to run large language models, but I wanted something that was supported by the mainline kernel.
Anyway, it works, and now I don’t have to think about it any more.
Twilight over Peckham
I borrowed a stepladder off a neighbour and fixed the porch gutter. The clip holding up one end had come off in strong wind a while back, which meant that it hung down, which meant that it filled up with gunk, which made it hang down more.
It took me ten minutes to clean out the aforementioned gunk, drill new holes, and screw the clip in place.
On Thursday evening we watched Hamlet at the National Theatre, directed by Robert Hastie and starring Hiran Abeysekera. I’ve seen a lot of productions of Hamlet, in multiple languages. This wasn’t my favourite, but it was perhaps the most accessible in terms of how it was clear what was going on. I enjoyed the staging of the ghost and of the play-within-a-play. The thoroughly mad Hamlet is charming, and Francesca Mills is a phenomenal Ophelia and perhaps the real star.
We experienced more culture on Saturday at Musica Antica’s La Caxa di Vitio e Virtù, a recreation of the kind of musical soirée that one might have experienced at the house of a 16th century Venetian sex worker. In a church. They would once have been widespread, but we don’t see so many singing lutenists these days; Kristiina Watt did both, at the same time, flawlessly.
The clocks have gone back to winter time and I hate it. What’s the use of daylight in the morning? I’m only sleeping or getting up or eating breakfast. It’s all a plot by morning people, who are awful.
Must be time to switch on the SAD light.
A few links for the week:
- chd is a Unicode-aware hexdump utility.
- This website has no class.
You don’t have to use
classto match elements for styling. - Generative AI is a societal disaster. “In short, they’re sacrificing the wellbeing of their citizens and arguably the foundations of a democratic society for a chance at short-term investment.”
- OpenAI Says Hundreds of Thousands of ChatGPT Users May Show Signs of Manic or Psychotic Crisis Every Week. The massive plagiarism machine can also feed your delusions.
- I Made a Binary Search Tool for Videos To Embarrass British Transport Police Into Doing Their Job.
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Week 250: We are the washing machine preservation society
I’ve been having some computer troubles that distracted me from writing this week’s notes. It’s not sorted yet, but of course I have other computers. You should always have at least two computers so that you have one to debug the other one when it won’t start.
Week 249: To done
I started my first week of no work in a flurry of activity working through items on my to do list. I got up, dressed, polished the frets on a ukulele, took electrical waste to the electrical waste bin at the library, took the old bulbs and batteries to the recycling bins at Tesco, posted a parcel for L—, did the shopping, and it still wasn’t even midday on Monday.
Week 248: Demobbed
You might think that being freed from the time pressures of work would give me plenty of free time to write my weeknotes, but no. I have a long list of things to do and I’ve been working my way through the list steadily, and so these are late as usual.
Pennies (update)
Back in 2019, I did some comparisons on the historical value of coinage to show that the penny was by far the most worthless UK coin ever. Since then, inflation has made the situation worse, and a pound is worth about ⅘ of what it was in 2019, so I thought it might be interesting (/horrifying) to update the table.
Here’s what each of the previous smallest coins was worth in 2024 pounds (the latest data available) at the time it was withdrawn from circulation:
Coin Year withdrawn Face value £1 in £2024 Value in £2024 Half farthing 1870 £1⁄1920 £129.1 6.7p Farthing 1960 £1⁄960 £31.06 3.2p Halfpenny 1969 £1⁄480 £22.2 4.6p Penny 1971 £1⁄240 £19.06 7.9p Halfpenny (decimal) 1984 £1⁄200 £4.34 2.2p The value of £1 in £2024 is the real price taken from the Measuring Worth calculator.
A penny today is worth less than a quarter of a penny was at the time that the decimal halfpenny was withdrawn in 1984. It must be time to get rid of 1p and 2p coins.
Older entries can be found in the archive.