I suppose that this is really a blog, though I hesitate to call it that. The real bloggers seem so much
more interesting. I cover stuff which I find interesting, and I hope that you will too.
If you really want, you can get an RSS feed of Chateau Gladstone news here:
For more information about what I'm interested in, see the Ponding pages.
Logs to Burn
30 Dec 2003
My grandmother -- Honor Goodhart -- wrote a poem in 1926 entitled "Logs to Burn" that describes the burning characteristics of many different types of wood. The context was a coal strike that (presumably) restricted the supply of coal, and hence boosted the use of wood for heating.
Most references to this poem do not have the correct attribution, and this note (may) start to set the record straight.
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SPAM -- a modern scourge
22 Dec 2003
I have been playing around with SPF which adds a layer of verification on top of regular SMTP mail. The idea is prety simple -- mail coming from my domain should only be sent from a limited number of mail servers. A spammer or email worm who tries to forge the from address as me will get blocked.
To set this up, you just have to publish an SPF record for your domain in DNS. This record is a TXT record of a specific format, as described at the site above.
If you are also an MTA operator, then you can turn on SPF support in your MTA -- again, instructions at the site mentioned above.
Is this the solution to SPAM? Definitely not, but it is a piece of the puzzle.
You can send email to spftest@gladstonefamily.net
and the daemon will return a recommendation for your SPF record. It will also tell you if your existing SPF record looks good.
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Meatspace & GEOURL
25 Nov 2003
Somebody pointed me at geourl.org which is building a map of the physical locations that websites deal with. If you choose then you get to see who my virtual (physical?) neighours are.
At lot of them appear to be hosted on DeviantART -- which appears to be some sort of art site where you can submit your work and people comment on it. There is other weird stuff in this list as well. I found the Weather Pixie which gives you a small image that shows what the weather is like nearby. The bad news is that I can't see how to inject my own data......
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Beta Testing the Prismiq
21 Oct 2003 (Updated 22 Oct 2003)
I've been beta testing the new software (3.2) for the Prismiq Media Player. The good news is that Prismiq seem open (check out their forums) and the box runs linux. It is supposed to be a music, slideshow, video player where the media is stored on some other computer.
The bad news is that it doesn't meet the requirements. The Rio Receiver with JReceiver is a much better solution for audio. There are all sorts of possibilities with the hardware platform, it is just a matter of software to improve things.
For example, searching a large music collection requires entering text strings with the numeric keys on the remote. Tracks are not sorted by anything obvious. The use cases seem to revolve around using your PC to create playlists and then play them on the Prismiq box. However, I want an appliance that can be used by naive users.
Another gripe was that the slide advance button has no audible or visual feedback. Given that the next slide takes several seconds to appear (why isn't it preloaded?) there is the temptation to press the button again -- which causes a double advance.
Update for final release: It seems that there is now a visual indication of the next picture coming. This is a significant improvement.
Argh!
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Autofill addition
21 Oct 2003
I got fed up with adding water to the pond when it got low. I had a couple of close calls this summer when I had blockages and water flowed out over the side.
The solution was simple -- use a toilet fill valve from Home Depot for the princely sum of $6. With the addition of various bits of pipework and bent aluminium strip, I got it mounted in the pond and connected to the end of the soaker hose that waters the flower bed. The hose runs for an hour each night, and during this time it refills the pond. It appears to put in up to half an inch of water during hot weather.
Definitely a worthwhile addition!
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The big bad bird came baaack!
10 May 2003
On Saturday morning at around 8 o'clock, we saw the Great Blue Heron (aka Big Bad Bird) standing by the fish pond. It flew off pretty quickly, but the fish were nowhere to be seen. We covered up the pond with a net (and regretted not having done it earlier) and went out for the morning.
After lunch, we put the net on properly, and while we were doing this, the heron came back and sat in a tree overlooking the pond. It didn't seem peturbed by us waving our arms and gesticulating wildly! Eventually it flew away to the pond in the Christmas Tree farm and stood gazing into the water.
By now, the fish have reappeared from their hiding places, and it is not clear how many we have lost.
Update: The BBB came back again and walked around the pond, looking nournfully at the unreachable fish. It then flew off into a tree and refused to leave. The kids banged on the gong and generally made a big noise, but it refused to leave!
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The underwater camera sprang a leak
12 Apr 2003
I noticed on Friday that the picture seemed bad from the camera. I took a look at it this morning and the housing was half full of water! It is now out of the pond and hopefully will begin to dry out. I just hope that the water didn't cover the CCD -- otherwise I'll be left with a nasty residue on the surface when it dries out.
Before I put this module in the housing, I covered all the electronic bits with liquid electrical tape (though I got it at my local hardware store) to try and keep the water out! Foresight really does pay sometimes!
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Colour imagery available of Massachusetts
3 Apr 2003
I found that the state has made the colour ortho imagery available online. This was shot in April 2001 and so is much more uptodate than the monochrome images that were availabe before. The resolution is the same (0.5 meter per pixel), and they have a snappy viewer that allows browsing of the entire dataset.
The interface seems a little bit flaky, but it works well enough to find the house and see the ponds!
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The first flowers of spring appear, and then it snows again
31 Mar 2003
The snowdrops are coming up and adding a excitement now that the snow has finally melted away. We planted two sorts of snowdrop, Galanthus Nivalis and Galanthus Elwesii, and I'm not sure which one this is! I got these from Brent and Becky's bulbs -- however their website leaves a lot to be desired in terms of searching....
Of course, New England weather being what it is, the cold returned and it snowed overnight, and the weather forecast has more snow predicted. Will this winter ever end?
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Spring is here, the peepers are peeping and the water is falling
29 Mar 2003
We opened up the ponds today. We put the pump back in, cleaned up the filter, cleared out the muck, added some fresh water.... We found four frogs, one for each member of the family. Unfortunately we haven't yet learnt to tell them apart!
Some of the plants overwintered at the bottom of the pond, and some in a plastic storage box in the basement. They all did pretty well, except that the inside ones had a bunch of aphids on them. The fish enjoyed eating them after I submerged the plants back in the pond.
I just heard on the weather channel that we are expecting snow tomorrow night. Well, with a bit of luck the water will be warm enough not to form any ice, and the plants will all be in the warm(ish) water and not come to any harm.
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Rolodex
docsearls The Doc Searls weblog -- he seems clueful and I read him.
gunnera Neat description of the Gunnera Manicata -- a truly monstrous plant!
ffmpeg Open source audio/video streaming software -- this drives my pondcam
spf-pobox Information about SPF (Sender Permitted From)
cwop The Citizen Weather Observer Program is a loose collection of amateur weather station operators.
jreceiver Open source server for the Rio Receiver -- this is what I use.
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