My top ten tweets of 2020

Last year I posted my top ten tweets for 2019 and I did the same in 2018, 2017 and 2016 which was interesting to see which tweets of mine were popular.

So the most popular tweet of 2019 was this one about keeping the old Twitter.

Alas the hack didn’t last too long so we have to use the new Twitter.

So in 2020, my tenth most popular tweet was this one, a response to one about signage in the libraries.

The photo was from an April Fool we did at the library in Gloucestershire College. What was interesting was that it didn’t work, no one noticed the new signs or paid them any attention,.

Though it should be said we never had a problem with swimming in the library again.

The ninth most popular tweet of mine was from an event I attended in February on trans national education and I posted a sketchnote.

The tweet at number eight was about the lack of a door in Matt Hancock’s home office.

The seventh most popular tweet was a picture of Buckingham Palace!

It was a response to an original New York Post tweet that has now been deleted. It talked about the UK Christmas covid-19 planning with a picture of Paris.

Number six, was a link to a story about how students realised they could game an assessment as it was been graded by an AI and not a person.

Wasn’t cheating, it was just doing what was required to get top marks.

Fifth most popular tweet was about shopping centre clocks.

Fourth most popular tweet was another tweet in response to that original New York Post tweet that has now been deleted. It talked about the UK Christmas covid-19 planning with a picture of Paris.

Luckily someone managed to get a screengrab.

The third most popular tweet was about The Sovereign Centre shopping centre, which appears to be chasing the title of the UK’s Worst Shopping Centre…

Back in January I misread a tweet from Stephen Fry and that was the most popular tweet at number two.

So my top tweet  of 2020 was me reminiscing when WHSmith in Bristol went all Dexter.

Televisual Advent Calendar #23 – Blackadder

As cunning as a fox who’s just been appointed Professor of Cunning at Oxford University?

Blackadder goes Forth
Blackadder goes Forth BBC

This is my 2019 Televisual Advent Calendar. I did a musical version in 2011 and a cinematic one in 2012. It is in no particular order and I make no apologies for the TV series that I am blogging about. These TV series have either made me think, I have enjoyed or have had some impact on me. These are scripted TV series, some are drama, some are comedy, some are both. I found it really hard to narrow this down to just 24.

I never saw the first season of Blackadder until much later, so really only started watching from the second season.  This was a wonderful piece of comedy writing and excellent acting from Rowan Atkinson and Tony Robinson. 

Rowan Atkinson as Blackadder BBC
Rowan Atkinson as Blackadder BBC

The second season was set in the Elizabethan era and Miranda Richardson played the part of the Queen superbly. I loved the machinations of Blackadder only too often to be foiled at the last moment.

The third season saw Blackadder as butler to the Prince Regent. Hugh Laurie was wonderful as the bumbling mad prince, though this time more often than not the machinations of Blackadder ended in disaster.

The fourth season saw our “hero” as Captain Blackadder in the horror of the trenches of the Great War. Could a comedy set in that period work, I think it did. The escapades  of our heroes as they try to avoid going “over the top” often worked, but not in the way they thought it would. I really enjoyed seeing the bumbling general staff looking at war as a game of cricket, Stephen Fry was particularly good at the, in some ways, horrifying, General Melchett.

Stephen Fry as General Melchett BBC
Stephen Fry as General Melchett BBC

That poignant final episode of season four, one of the most moving pieces of television ever, nothing more to be said.

Get Blackadder on DVD.
Get Blackadder on Amazon Video.
Get Blackadder on iTunes.

Televisual Advent Calendar #19 – Jeeves and Wooster

You bally well are informed, Jeeves! Do you know everything?

Jeeves and Wooster Title

This is my 2019 Televisual Advent Calendar. I did a musical version in 2011 and a cinematic one in 2012. It is in no particular order and I make no apologies for the TV series that I am blogging about. These TV series have either made me think, I have enjoyed or have had some impact on me. These are scripted TV series, some are drama, some are comedy, some are both. I found it really hard to narrow this down to just 24.

This was one of the first series I watched having purchased it from iTunes having missed it when it was broadcast on ITV. One of the nice features of purchasing it from iTunes was no adverts. I think having being really spoilt with boxed sets, iTunes, and today Netflix and Amazon Prime, when I watch live commercial TV I feel the advertising is really intrusive. I do realise that advertising is essential for commercial TV, as it pays for the programming, so I really shouldn’t be precious and complain, but…

I really enjoyed A Bit of Fry and Laurie when it was broadcast on the BBC, a classic comedy series with some really sketches. I have since then been a real fan of Stephen Fry and what he has done. Hugh Laurie, probably less so. It was first broadcast from April 1990, when I was still at university, so didn’t watch it “live”. I actually watched very little TV at university, mainly as I only had a small portable black and white television (remember those) and generally didn’t have the time to sit down and watch a TV series on a regular basis.

Hugh Laurie as Bertie Wooster and Stephen Fry as Jeeves in an episode from ITV's 90s series 'Jeeves and Wooster' ( Rex Features )
Hugh Laurie as Bertie Wooster and Stephen Fry as Jeeves in an episode from ITV’s 90s series ‘Jeeves and Wooster’ ( Rex Features )

Jeeves and Wooster was one of the first things I bought from iTunes when it was launched. We watched Jeeves and Wooster on a regular basis, trying not to binge watch the series in one go… restricting ourselves to a single episode only.

It was a marvellous period piece, beautifully acted and very funny. The interaction between the bumbling Wooster and the rather suave (and clever) Jeeves combined with excellent stories (from the pen of P G Wodehouse) made for an engaging and delightful television series. 

Hugh Laurie as Bertie Wooster and Stephen Fry as Jeeves in an episode from ITV's 90s series 'Jeeves and Wooster' ( Rex Features )
Hugh Laurie as Bertie Wooster and Stephen Fry as Jeeves in an episode from ITV’s 90s series ‘Jeeves and Wooster’ ( Rex Features )

I stopped buying iTunes videos, well we moved house and I lost my fibre broadband. You couldn’t really use iTunes films and TV programmes on a slow 1Mb/s ADSL connection. Even when I got a 4G contract, because it wasn’t wifi, iTunes wouldn’t let you download or stream content. In the end I moved over to Amazon Video and Netflix, because they would work over 3G and 4G. Now I have fibre again, I have started to buy videos again from iTunes, mainly when they are on special offer. As I like to stream stuff over 4G when I am on the move or staying away, I have started more to purchase films and TV shows from Amazon. Trouble is I now have a film library in iTunes, one in  Amazon and due to the demise of Flixster I also have a film library on Google Play. This along with the physical film library (DVD and Blu-Ray) means it can be challenging to remember what I have already, but also where it is. As a result I have duplicated purchases more than once.

One of the challenges with digital purchases are when titles are withdrawn, are you still able to access your films and TV programmes. As it happens at the time of writing Jeeves and Wooster is no longer available on iTunes to purchase, nor is it available on Amazon Video or Google Play. It’s not on the new Britbox service either. I have checked my iTunes library and it is still there and I am able to download it, so I haven’t lost it.

So if you want to watch Jeeves and Wooster you’re going to need to buy the DVDs…

It’s the bally ballyness of it all that makes it all seem so bally bally.

Get Jeeves and Wooster on DVD.
At the time of writing Jeeves and Wooster is not available to buy on Amazon Video.
At the time of writing Jeeves and Wooster is no longer available on iTunes.

100 Greatest Gadgets

Tonight on Channel 4, that Stephen Fry will be presenting his 100 greatest gadgets. In a recent blog post I did think that we would see a couple of Apple items in the top ten, but if this recent tweet from that Stephen Fry is anything to go by, his number one won’t be an Apple product.

Ha! All those who are convinced it’ll be an Apple product might just be a bit shocked *tightlipped*.

Stephen’s blog post about the programme makes for interesting reading. It looks like the programme will not be covering just recent gadgets, but will be looking back over the last thirty years or even longer.

There are some gadgets that I have used and have always liked and would be in my list if Channel 4 ever asked me to create a list (like that’s ever going to happen). In my list would be the first HP PhotoSmart digital camera, this 0.3MP camera used proprietary memory cards, didn’t have a LCD on the back, went through batteries real fast and as for picture quality, well it left a lot to be desired, though outside shots weren’t too bad!

I always loved the concept of the HP CapShare, a portable document scanner that didn’t need a computer and stored the scans in them, you could then transfer them to your PC by infra-red where they could be OCRd. It could also be used to scan flipcharts.

I always liked my Compaq iPAQ that I had in a previous job. Even without internet connectivity and relying on syncing for e-mail and calendars it was a revelation to be able to have access to my diary and respond to e-mails on the move. After I added a card reader in a slide on jacket, I was able to use the iPAQ to watch videos on a IBM 1GB Microdrive. Always took hours to encode videos for using on it though.

Using a MacBook Air now made me reflect that Sony use to make some fantastic (if expensive) small laptops (well they still do). I once had a VAIO SRX41P which had a 10″ screen, a useful keyboard, wifi, Bluetooth and a built in memory card stick reader. With an extended battery it would last quite a few hours compared to other laptops of its time. Though the memory stick was only used by Sony as I had a Sony digital camera, that meant it was really quick and easy to move images from the camera onto the camera and online.

The Sony Cybershot Camera was a superb camera, yes it was only 3MP, but the Carl Zeiss lens certainly made for some great digital images. I remember printing one as A2 on the office printer to put on the wall.

I bought my wife a Sony digital camera recently and I don’t feel that it was as good as the old Cybershot I had.

Another gadget that was a real eyeopener at the time for me, was a 3COM wireless 802.11b access point. To be able to go into the office, open up the laptop and connect to the network and the internet without plugging in cables was like “wow” and really (well at the time) amazing. Of course I did need to plug in a wifi PCMCIA card into the laptop, but generally I left that in there. Wifi was really useful in the office, so much so that in the end I bought an Airport base station for home, though we didn’t have broadband, the Airport base station at the time came with a built in 56K modem, which was really useful as ADSL wasn’t available in our area for what seemed years. ADSL in itself, can you call that a gadget, was fantastic, now though I have BT Infinity FTTC , this is so different from the old 56K connection I use to have to work with.

I think the one other gadget that made a real difference to me was a Vodafone 3G Datacard.

To be able to have internet access on the move, at conferences and events, made a huge difference to the way that I use to work .

Of course today I could talk about the iPad, the iPhone and the MacBook Air, but sometimes it is nice to reflect on what we use to use and to see how lucky we are now on what kit is available and what it is capable of.

So what would be in your list of gadgets?

Stephen Fry’s 100 Greatest Gadgets

I am not normally a fan of these 100 thing shows, but on Monday 29th August, but that Stephen Fry will be presenting the 100 greatest gadgets on Channel 4.

Could be interesting, expect to see a couple of Apple items in the top ten though.