AirPods


I think that the case (not a pun) for their use is compelling.

Consider the morning commute to the city on a rattling, noisy suburban train or metro. It's good to zone out with music or your favourite podcast but the wires (you do have wired headphones don't you?) have a mind of their own. All wires have this innate desire to tangle, tie themselves into knots and to snag on to all possible likely objects (and some not so obvious).

The new Apple AirPods (if they fit my ears) may well be the answer I have been looking for.

  1. The battery life is plenty for my journey and when I arrive, I can just pop them back into the charging case for another 4 plus hours of listening pleasure
  2. The sound quality (though audiophiles may disagree) may well be good enough. It is after all, a very noisy environment that I will use them in. They do have noise cancellation built in. Only use on the metro will tell if they are as good as my Bose in-ear headphones
  3. No more stuffing the reluctant headphones and wire into the case as I get ready to leave my train seat. Just pop them into the case and the case into my pocket
  4. My iPhone will stay securely in my pocket … no more wires to pull out of the headphone socket by mistake
  5. When someone starts to speak to you (and they always do this as soon as you slip earbuds in) then just take one out, the playback is paused. Pop it back again and you are listening from where you left off
  6. Maybe they will be good enough to drown out the sound of my Hoover .. podcast heaven
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Salt of the earth

Lion lump salt
Lion lump salt

The Lion Salt works, adjacent to the Trent & Mersey Canal in Cheshire records the hey day of salt production in England. Salt has been extracted from brine since the Roman times and ever since. Enormous salt deposits from millennia ago lie in two separate layers under the whole of Cheshire. Waster pumped down has dissolved part of these strata and the land above quietly sighed and like a poor sad soufflé has deflated. Water poured into these slow landslips and now forms *flashes*. The Weaver river even flowed upstream for days on end when the land groaned, sighed and sank .
A post industrial landscape that is forever changed.

Go and see the museum and vote for it on the National Lottery website – UPDATE – it won! 6000+ votes and it came top of the list.

Now all it needs is an OO model of the Lion Salt Works railway wagon

Restored Lion Salt Works Wagon
Restored Lion Salt Works Wagon
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Deep Joy

Oh the humanity, or rather, oh the possibilities. Baby iPad Pro combined with Apple pencil and keyboard.
The pencil is just what I have always dreamed of. Fine lines in any colour, with no lag and the ability to circle words draw arrows underline and highlight without my large index finger terminal digit getting in the way.

I bought Procreate for drawing and now have to learn the interface. I have had several note taking apps, but all suffered from the large moving finger problem. Fraser Spiers recommended Notability — I have this already and will go back to work on this. I am also interested in going cross platform (Apple platform) with Notes. I have been looking for a replacement for Microsoft One Note for ages and this might be it.

I’m using an iPad Air case as my keyboard/cover has yet to arrive. They have all been sold out. Until then the mint green back cover is on my shelf and I will still have problems finding the black iPad in the house

Once the keyboard arrives, then I will publish from my iPad to this site

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PDF Expert, PDF to Text, Drafts & Workflow

PDF Expert, PDF to Text, Drafts & Workflow

What a cracking combination!

Here is the situation. I made a multi page PDF form for data collection about the trips on our shared narrow boat [^1]. This will be passed onto the other owners by email and also pasted into a page on the website. This information needs to be displayed in a simple but effective way, and because not all the owners run specialised PDF software, the best option is plain text. I have automatically embellished the report by the simple matter of adding some markdown formatting symbols ie bold to the PDF form.
This works well in our Word Press site and is easy to read in vanilla text in emails.
There are a couple of other formatting issues — I need to remove a header word, and to colour the “Date of Trip” field in a nice green for the website. This is done by a bit of added html. Unfortunately, this does not help with legibility of the message —

Date of trip:
31/10/2015 — 07/11/2015

It does work though with Markdown preview but not in email. It does work as I wish on the website — so I will keep this.

The problem arises in that is is difficult to extract text from a PDF form, and when you manage this, each page is handled on its own [^2]. The PDF form also needs to be saved as a flattened copy, otherwise nothing appears on the screen.
I used to do this with Good Reader, but each page needed to be extracted, copied and pasted to a document in turn.

PDF to Text app to the rescue [^3].

My workflow is now to populate the PDF form using PDF Expert[^4]
Then using ‘open in’ (flattened copy) copy it to PDF to Text. I can convert to txt with this and then use ‘copy to Drafts’.
The text is then displayed in the fantastic Drafts [^5] app[^7]

I can now adjust the text, delete words etc using a Workflow that is patched together from examples on the Workflow[^6] website. It takes the text, chews them up and spits them back into Drafts. Then one click on a workflow within the program — Command C and my text is copied to my Mac. One further click to paste into email or onto the website. Job done.


[^1]:Oasis Too

[^2]:this really relates to iOS — many desktop PDF programs can extract text, but this is not true in iOS

[^3]:PDF to Text by PDF2Office – the PDF Converter by Recosoft
https://appsto.re/gb/K06CU.i

[^4]:PDF Expert 5 – Fill forms, annotate PDFs, sign documents by Readdle
https://appsto.re/gb/nGcwS.i

[^5]:Drafts 4 – Quickly Capture Notes, Share Anywhere! by Agile Tortoise
https://appsto.re/gb/BTL91.i

[^6]:Workflow: Powerful Automation Made Simple by DeskConnect, Inc.
https://appsto.re/gb/2IzJ2.i

[^7]:buy this at once — it is a no brainer decision

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Chirurgean

Why chirurgean?
It means “hand work” and acknowledges the fact that surgeons are skilled with their hands. Part of the arms of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh includes the “seeing hand” — a hand with an eye in the palm — useful when the hand is inside a body cavity with no direct line of sight to the area of interest.

seeing-hand

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The quote below presses all my buttons

Acta Parliamentorum Caroli II A.D. 1670

Our Sovereign Lord & Estates of Parliament vnderftanding that the Airt of Chirurgearie is ane ancient worthy & free Airt moft neceffar for the healths & Lyves of His Mãties subjects And that the incorporation of the Chirurgeans & Barbars of Ed^ are ane able & famous incorporation whereby the Leidges have found large experience of ther abilities in peace & warr to ther great advantage…….

They being as Nurferies in thefe Airts to this our Soveraign Lords ancient Kingdom & for preventing the dangerous practice of ignorant and vnfkillfull people that afsumes the practifes of thefe Airts to the Lofe of the Lyves of His Mãties good Subjects which have bein too frequent …….

 

 

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Ad blockers

I was looking forward to these in ios9 — some sites are not useable because of awful ads. As I scroll down the page, more ads load at the top and I retreat up the page. Vertigo inducing and unpleasant.
So what should I use?
1Blocker which has good reviews was not on the UK App Store. Crystal seemed good and surprise, was free for the first comers. It just works!
Shortly after, I noticed Peace from Marco Arment. I like him and his apps. The cost of £2.29 was well worth it. It did prove to be rather vigorous so that TheTimes.co.uk did not load, but I was able to whitelist this site and ads here are ok.
Then Marco gets cold feet and pulls the app. I did get a refund — the first time ever. So,the app was purged.
Today, & 79p later I also have Blockr. More stuff I can fine tune on this app than Crystal. It too is sometimes too blunt, but these are the opening shots in a new war and there is time for finesse to develop

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Human error




The dreaded OVLD reared its head again today on the model railway. What had I done wrong? I checked the connections, reversed the wiring to the Cobalt point motors 1 but to no avail. Back to basics and I found the reel of solder wire was lying across the tracks. Problem solved.
On to Point no 15 … this time, everything I did led to the OVLD sign. Reasoning that human error is the usual source of the problem, I found that I had used a non insulating rail joiner on the live frog. Basic error. Even worse, I had used my last irj. Oh well, off to the model shop in the am and continue to be thankful for a local model railway shop; not all people are so blessed.


  1. great little Aussie bits of digital wizardry. They take care of polarity on live frogs .. This is a good thing. Catch them at: http://www.dccconcepts.com/catalogue/a/Point-Motors-Cobalt-iP-Digital 


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Sunday afternoon films

The Thin Man

As so often, The incomparable 1 has come up trumps again


The first film is a hoot — perhaps more for the social observations 2


How can stacking up 5 martinis to catch up equate with the 1 glass of red limit that was plucked from the air by Dick Smith and colleagues from the BMJ 3


  1. The Incomparable— a podcast from the Jason Snell stable. One of the few to have women on the panel .. How refreshing.  

  2. after all the past is a foreign country 

  3. it’s well known that doctors especially physicians are sanctimonious and preachy. Surgeons are not.  

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Lightroom 6

The latest and ? greatest incarnation.  I was not sure whether to upgrade and certainly the sums for subscribing to Photoshop CC were not convincing. £102.84 per year vs £59 for the upgrade which I can keep forever.

You do get Photoshop CC included and lightroom mobile, but my heavy lifting on the Mac is now in the very capable hands of Pixelmator which keeps going from strength to strength.

What made up my mind to upgrade to ver 6? Simply —  security.

I noticed 2 photos of the Falklands that would work well as a pano, but when I wanted to export them to Photoshop CS3 (my old and trusted out of date version), I was told that I would need to load an old version of Java. Sadly, that is a no-no.  Java is so prone to hacking and thus your machine will be insecure.  

So PSCS3 is now off the menu bar and Pixelmator will do the job.

LR6 also will do HDR and panos – and certainly with panos, does a great job.  My HDR workflow uses Nik software effects and I can make lots of different flavours of HDR.  I will try out the LR6 HDR to see how that works in practice.

LR6 is also supposed to be faster – as it uses the graphics processor – not too sure if that is noticeable in real life. The change to Metal on OS X promises great improvements in speed.  Pity that Adobe were not on the stage at WWDC on Monday to show off their software with Metal

The Doctors Stout — a suitable logo on the earthen ware bottle I purchased at Tynemouth Station market
The Doctors Stout — a suitable logo on the earthen ware bottle I purchased at Tynemouth Station market
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