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Month: January 2003

TV: Tomorrow’s World comes to a close

[Tomorrow's World]I was saddened to hear via the Guardian’s Online Blog that the BBC’s science and technology TV programme Tomorrow’s World has been axed after 38 years on the air.

I started watching it when I was young (when Judith Hann and Howard Stableford presented it) and it really interested me and “had me hooked”. They covered a wide range of innovations – occasionally getting them wrong (where are the robots to clean our houses?), but others they got more than spot on. I remember them demonstrating a new printing method which allows information to be printed on egg shells – it had to be delicate so as not to break the shell, lasting (you don’t want the ink to be easily rubbed off or smeared) and yet not soak through the shell: nowadays it’s quite difficult to buy eggs WITHOUT the “use by” date printed on the shell.

They also did (I think it was covered in one of the “Prince’s Trust” shows which were supported by Prince Charles) a way of printing on one side of glass yet allowing you to see through the other side (sort of like a one way mirror but without the mirror). Nowadays, at least around Leicester, you see buses with this sort of advertising on their rear and side windows. Oh – and they also covered how Zaphod Beeblebrox’s “extra” head did (or, as more was the case, didn’t) work in the TV series of Hitch-hiker’s Guide To The Galaxy.

I stopped watching it when the BBC moved it off it’s (IIRC) 7.30 Wednesday night slot to make way for yet another episode of EastEnders. They then continually re-vamped it and seemed to dumb it down (and had less ‘in the studio’ articles which I really enjoyed). Shame such an “institution” has come to an end after so long, but my feelings are that the BBC alone are to blame for the falling audience figures.

Tomorrow’s World also gave me my first chance to operate a BBC television camera – it would then be many years before I next operated a broadcaster’s camera (Granada was the next company) and appear actually in front of a camera for a national TV show…

Net: Will You Marry Me?

Kev’s blog entry (which originated via Scoble) about this very sweet, quite long and quite large (in filesize, and hence, download time) Flash movie. Basically a bloke called DJ Haddadad (the Creative Director of Creative Priority) has found an original and lovely way of asking his girlfriend (of nine or ten years) Marissa if she will marry him.

It’s so sweet – good, suitable music (Marc Anthony‘s “I Need You“), nice photos, nice merges and fades between the photos and the thought and preparation that has gone into it really help shows how much DJ thinks of “Riss” – so much better than somebody just saying “Will you marry me?” without having so much thought of buying a ring…

Well worth watching if you’ve got the bandwidth to download it (it takes a few minutes on my ADSL connection – modem users – don’t even bother!).

Snippet: Why Not Lighter Than Air Packing?

*snippet* Why isn’t there somewhere that sells packaging materials that are filled with a “lighter than air” gas (such as helium)? I’ve found that I weigh something I’m going to send, package it up and then find out I’ve to pay extra for the postage. But if the packaging material was full of helium then the weight of the packaging materials might get cancelled out: saving me forking out extra on the postage….

Game: Spaced Penguin

[Spaced Penguin]I’ve now been awake for over 36 hours – too tired and busy to do much blogging, but I did find a Shockwave flash game which helped me concentrate when I needed to…

Spaced Penguin is a little (93k) game where you’ve got to help Kevin the Penguin get back to his spaceship using the highly advanced GP S(Giant Penguin Slingshot/Catapult). Click on Kevin and hold down your mouse button to ‘steer’ him, pull back to set his velocity and then let him go. The further he travels to get to his spaceship (and the more ‘worm holes’ he passes over) the higher your score – but be careful of the planets that attract you with their gravity.

I quite like it when you can go in orbit around a planet and make those nice little spiral pictures that you used to make when you were a little kid with a pencil and two ‘cogged’ wheels over a piece of paper.

My highest score (so far) is 497,815. Anybody beat that yet or have you left Kevin to be Lost In Space? But saying that – WTF is a penguin doing in the depths of space anyway? Flibblepenguin indeed!

Life: Ebay Sale: 15 Pop CDs

[15 CDs]After my earlier sale of 35 CDs via Ebay (I sold them for £19 – but since I only charged £3.54 for P+P and it eventually cost £6.16 to send, I lost a little bit), I’ve got a brand new sale on Ebay.

Yep, now available on Ebay are a further 15 Top Brand name Original CDs for you to purchase. I’ve even included a “Buy It Now” option to enable you to purchase the whole lot for £30 if you hurry.

With a low reserve price – why don’t you make a bid on such a bargain? 15 top performers (the total collection has a price of nearly £60 on Amazon) at a low low price – you can surely afford to place a bid (if only to buy it to keep me in food).