Saturday, 25 February 2023

Locked out on a Saturday morning and my 40 year journey to purchase a MacBook

 I often write of my newfound love for my MacBook M1 Air. Last Saturday, I was up early and sat with the MacBook open. I checked a blog site for the latest post and clicked out of it with the intention of writing on Day One, my journalling app. A splash screen came up to say that an update was available and being careful, I clicked off and went to the software update screen in the system settings. Sure enough, there was an update ready to be run. I clicked install, and within seconds it was asking me to restart, which I did. This MacBook has a fingerprint ID system on the keyboard, but after a restart, the restart requires you to input a password. It's a password I often use to access apps on the MacBook. To my horror, the MacBook remained locked out after several attempts. The password was correct, without a doubt. By this time, I could feel an expensive trip to the Apple shop coming on. With that thought in mind, I decided to take Murphy for a walk to mull over the problem. I got back and gave it a go without any luck, but then I saw a question mark and saw that there was a way to reset the password. It's a laborious procedure involving your Apple ID, which I also had to reset, but the result, thank goodness, is a fully unlocked MacBook. 

Having been a Microsoft user for years, I scoffed at purchasing a Mac. My distrust of the Apple Mac stemmed from the late 80s and early 90s when certain bosses in the RM Band Service saw favour in the old box-shaped Macintosh Plus computers. The Macs were acquired because they were 'better' with music composition software.
The Bandmasters course used them for their coursework.


At about this time, I was getting into programming languages and studied at the Open University. I used an old Amstrad PC2086 D with twin 3.5-inch floppy disk drives. Even then, that was old technology as the quickly emerging Pentel Processors of IBM, and its clone versions were starting to take over the market. I managed to get the first version of Microsoft Windows onto my Amstrad but fell foul because I didn't have a mouse then. At the time, I can remember writing to Computer Shopper magazine complaining that the new Graphic's User Interface (GUI) was hopeless without a mouse. How embarrassingly misinformed could I have been!



The following PC I had was a Compac tower system, in which I installed a dial-up modem. I used to sit in the dark in the spare room in my flat, with the modem whirling away, the phone bill clicking over, surfing the first steps of Tim Berners-Lee's world wide web. Unfortunately, the lady who ran the Chinese restaurant opposite thought she could see a ghost from two stories below! She never let me forget that moment, even when she came to my wedding years later.


Then came the great fire of Dartmouth, and I lost about everything. If I remember rightly, I bought a tiny notebook from Asda for about £130. That kept me going for quite a while. It had the sturdy Windows 7 loaded. For the first of my ThinkPads, I upgraded to Windows 7 Professional. I think that Win 7, apart from the excellent Windows XP, was the best Microsoft operating system I have experienced. 


The Great Fire of Dartmouth of 2011 was a seminal moment for me, and it took another year before I could say that I had rebuilt my life and was truly happy. By now, my Thinkpad was on its last legs, and my girlfriend, then fiancé and now wife,

worked for an IT company. They recommended a site with refurbished laptops and PCs at highly reasonable prices. I got a very high-spec Thinkpad with the latest SSD hard drive installed, enough memory to sink the Titanic and all installed with Windows 10. That laptop is still with me, stored upstairs. It is creaky around the edges and out of date with the operating system.


With the ThinkPad near the end of its days, I was in a position to look for a new laptop. I had been thinking about moving across to Apple for a few months and had been doing some online research about them. I found two channels on YouTube that were very informative, especially as one was very focused on writing and getting as much out of Apple products as possible. That led me to get to know William Gallagher and attend one of his online workshops during the pandemic, and he is someone who has encouraged me to write more daily.


I trotted off to the Exeter Apple Shop, with the full knowledge of what I wanted to buy, much to the annoyance of the guy in the shop as he couldn't go through his sale spiel. I came with my MacBook M1 Air 512, 8 GB of unified memory and 512 GB of memory, of which a vast amount remains available. The battery life is fantastic. I only have to charge it up one or maybe two times a week. It is so light I take it with me almost everywhere I go. It's the best tech purchase I've very made.


It may be fanciful, but I'd like to make more money from writing to purchase an M2 Mac Mini, extended magic keyboard and mouse and an ultra-widescreen monitor and set it up in our box room. I would really be undisturbed for an hour!


There we are, then, for this week's piece. I hope you found it interesting. I've wanted to write an article like this for a while.


I've been able to post a blog piece regularly each week so far this year, and I intend to continue doing so. Please let me know if you want me to write about anything. Writing about different things, including those you may need to learn more about, is an excellent exercise.


Links:


The Great Fire of Dartmouth: https://youtu.be/UHu8568eh6c



Saturday, 18 February 2023

61? cough cough and many other ramblings

 Tempus Fugit, Time Flies, was the motto of my Primary School back in the 1960s. Indeed the time has flown. It was my birthday on Thursday, and this year I was 61. How did that happen?

I was thinking about what to write this week and got to thinking about these balloons floating around North America and Canada. Really what we should all be thinking about is the terrible situation Turkey and Syria found themselves in after the two massive earthquakes last week. Nearly 200 hours after the events, they are still managing to pull people alive out of flattened apartment buildings. 

Thankfully, the balloon story is all bluff and bluster; however, the earthquake area problems will continue for much longer.

I shouldn't look at news sites as it makes me anxious about world affairs. For instance, February 24th will mark the anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The Ukrainians have fought with fierce dignity in defence of their country. Ukraine expects that the Russians will launch a spring offensive to save face.


After all that, sadly, I had to miss this month's Ottery Writers meeting as I was working, but there are to be many exciting things happening at our meeting over the next few months. I'm sure I have bored you with this news before, but I am excited about might 'Novel in a Year' workshops starting next month. I've tasked myself with some work on the premise of my book and some on the characters. Even though I have written nearly 20,000 words so far, it is about now that I should be looking at the premise, plot and characterisations. It is about finding the time and a quiet place to work, but that is probably prevarication.

As you know, I have a MacBook M1 Air, which I use to write. The great thing about MacBooks is the number of useful apps for writers. I have several in everyday use. Scrivener is a writing app for all writing styles, from Novels to Screenplays. It can do it all. I find it to be much more versatile than Microsoft Office, i.e. Word, and it is also a fraction of the price. It is excellent for organising your novel and keeping all your research and characterisations in one place.

The other app that I have recently started to use is Day One. Day one is a journalling app. I immensely enjoy writing a journal. Indeed, during the pandemic, I wrote four or five notebooks of daily ramblings over a year or so. Day One has made it easy to write a daily journal, even though I have only been using it for a short while. As always with journalling, it is writing for yourself and will only become available to read once I'm a famous writer and have been dead for several years. With these journals, reflecting on what you have written is excellent—exciting reading and a mine of ideas for stories and articles.

Drafts is another app that I use. I have it on my MacBook and iPhone. It syncs between the two. It is like a notebook, and I often make notes for stories and articles there. You can also save links to sites of interest.

I have a few planning apps I have skirted using and should use a lot more. I will use them more during the 'Novel in a Year' workshops. The app that I currently use is MindNode. You can create a mind map and task list, which has helped me when writing short stories and for several chapters of my novel.

The most important app I use, apart from the app that I am using to write this piece, Pages, is Grammarly. This app, embedded in my browser's bar, will check my writing for grammar, punctuation, spelling and syntax. I will be putting this piece through it once I've finished.

Friday, 10 February 2023

A Novel Idea for Spooks and a new Ghostbusters?

Next month I will embark on a series of workshops entitled 'Novel in a Year'. I feel chuffed to have gained a place in this workshop, as numbers are limited to just five people. There will be workshops over twelve months, and we will be able to have up to 20,000 words of our work critiqued during that time.

I currently have about 20,000 words in my novel already, but there are several things that I can learn about that will change and improve my work. I'm looking forward to getting stuck into the novel and the workshops.

Another area of writing that I would also like to study is screenwriting. I have previously reported that I am reading a lot of scripts to learn how to write screen/radio plays. I may be on my own in learning this, but I know who to get hold of for any advice I need.

For scriptwriting, I'm currently reading through the scripts for the BBC series, Spooks. I have already picked up a few terms, and I'm getting used to how the writing scripts appear on the page. Interestingly, in the first episode of Spooks, the script describes the characters that we will come to know over the episodes. One of the main characters portrayed in writing differs from how the character is depicted on the screen. I thought this was strange, only to be told that in the pilot episode of the American series Fame, there is a character that is a central part of the story, only for that part to be written out of the remaining episodes and subsequent success of the show. It must be brutal in the world of screenwriting! 

After watching a Channel Four program interview on Sunday morning with a writer/screenwriter, I sat down to catch a couple of episodes of Lockwood & Co. The Netflix series has a bit of Ghost Busters about it. The exciting thing was that whilst I was watching it, I thought about how the scene would appear in the script. I was almost writing a script in my head. I am starting to pick something up from the screenwriting books and blogs I'm reading.

Those two projects will require a bit of writing over the next year. I intend to keep writing for this blog and migrate it to another platform. The migration may have started by the time this piece is published.

I will be continuing with my short stories. I'm on the lookout for more competitions to enter. The results of the last one that I entered should be out in the next couple of weeks. There are £49,949 writing prizes in this month's Writing Magazine for starters.

My letter to the Rugby Paper was not used in the following week's paper, and neither were any others, as they didn't publish a letters page that week. I expect they were overwhelmed with reader's letters that week and after the RFU's latest missive. I will check if it gets used in the coming weeks.

Just a thought; is there going to be anytime for work?


Saturday, 4 February 2023

Purifying, weight loss, dentists and the blindingly obvious from our Prime Minister. It's been a week!

 As many of my friends and colleagues are aware, about 12 years ago, I lost a large amount of body weight. It was eight stone or 50.8 kgs. To say that was life-changing would be an understatement. I started work as a Slimming World Consultant, met Kathy, moved to Stoke Fleming with Kathy and, two years later, we were married.


Over the intervening years, my weight has been a yoyo. At the moment, I'm heavier than I would wish to be at my age, especially as I'm coming up to my yearly MOT with my GP.  


Having been a Slimming World Consultant for a couple of years, I know it is one of the best ways to lose weight successfully. Slimming World, however, taught me to have an open mind, and with this open mind, on Monday, I started something very different for the next three weeks. On Monday, I started a 21-day Purify Programme.


The first morning started well. I would typically load coffee beans into my grinder and heat the water in my swan-naked kettle to just the right temperature. Instead, the big kettle was out on, and in my mug was a peppermint and liquorice tea bag. I'm usually good at having breakfast each morning, and this morning, although different, I started with dairy-free coconut yoghurt with frozen fruits and added chia and sesame seeds. Surprisingly, that was very tasty and filling, and along with the tea, it was a satisfying start to the day.


Lunch is always a challenge where I work within the NHS. Almost every day, we end up having our lunches at our desks. That is not ideal and happens as there are no welfare facilities where we can be away from our desks for breaks. We bring it up regularly at meetings and with our Unions.


Ok, what did I have for lunch? A mix of fresh veggies, bean sprouts, and hummus provided a filling lunch. Snacks throughout the day were fruit and a mixture of pumpkin and sunflower seeds toasted with Tamari sauce.


Dinner was a lovely and hearty Mushroom soup made by my beautiful wife with some Buckwheat bread, a collaboration between us. The bread is a bit of an acquired taste, but with a lick of a plant-based spread on it, it was passible. The rest of the evening, I snacked on fruit until nine o'clock, which is chocolate time in this household. Murphy dog knows what time it is, and he's ready for his Scooby Doo Chocolate. For the humans, it was a square of 80% chocolate.


Tuesday morning…disaster. 


 Sadly, my wife had a horrendous toothache. A trip to the Dentist confirmed that root canal work was urgently needed. She had to wait until Thursday before the Dentist could complete the required work. Although not pain-free, Kathy is at least in a lot less pain than she was. As she is now on antibiotics and the purpose of the purifying programme is to put new probiotics into our diets, we decided that it was best to pause for a week or two. We kept to our planned diary and gluten-free diet, and we have both lost a substantial amount of weight, which is a very positive end to the week.


I started this piece earlier in the week and hoped it would be a chronicle of the week of changing my eating habits. I achieved that in a small way. I do not intend to blog about any weight loss over the coming weeks, but I will come back to write about the purifying programme in a couple of weeks.


After a busy week at work, in which we had the Prime Minister urging us to provide the services that we have been doing for many years, It has been nice to sit quietly and complete another week's piece for the blog.