At this very moment, I should be about ¼ of the way through the Chris Brasher Memorial 10K run which is taking place in Richmond Park. As I related in an earlier post, this event has been the target I have been aiming for since I have begun running again. Sadly, I overdid the training two weeks ago and have been regretting it ever since, limping about and muttering under my breath. After lots of ice packs and ibuprofen, it is improving but not quickly enough for me to run 10k today – a tentative test run on Tuesday lasted all of 5 minutes. Although I am disappointed I can’t run today, I know that doing so would mean further problems so, for once, I will do the sensible thing and bide my time – especially as I am looking forward to some nice training runs whilst in on holiday in Cornwall in a month or so.
Archive for June, 2004
Not hitting the road
Sunday, June 20th, 2004Stormy weather over London
Saturday, June 19th, 2004A windless therefore fruitless kite flying expedition provided a nice opportunity to photograph the gathering storm cloud front that moved in over Hampstead Heath above London this afternoon – for all four shots, go to my photoblog.
To Do Lists
Friday, June 18th, 2004JojoLinkyBob has prompted an informative discussion thread over at Slashdot. Entitled Best To-Do List Software?, it doesn’t just encompass software but folk’s methods and systems too. Interesting reading for those so inclined.
My Mum’s half Swedish so…
Friday, June 18th, 2004It was as I was reading my Euro 2004 pundit‘s latest comment –
“I will take this opportunity to say that Sven needs his bumps felt. He’s talking about starting with the same line-up for the match against Croatia. How many times do I have to say that Michael Owen couldn’t hit a cow’s arse with a banjo.”
– that I cheered Ibrahimovic’s Keystone Kops-style backheel goal take Italy to a 1-1 draw. The phrase ‘goalmouth scramble’ was never more appropriate.
Weekend timewaster
Friday, June 18th, 2004Acno’s Energizer is a fun way to kill some time…and sports a catchy drum n bass music track.
via Melissa
And your commentator for the game is…
Friday, June 18th, 2004Andy Yates, whom I have decided to adopt as the Euro 2004 football pundit for bignoseduglyguy.com. Even though he’s a zillion timezones away in Minneapolis where the games cost him $20 on pay-per-view, his devotion to the English game and unflinching reportage make him the obvious choice.
To encourage some click-throughs, here’s a small sample of his style:
England v France
Heskey came on and couldn’t remain upright or for that matter keep anyone else upright (cough, free kick, cough.) David James is a bloody donkey although he did have some moments where he looked like he had seen a football before….So how did it end 2-1? Three names for you: James, Heskey and Owen. Leave them all out for the next game Sven or I’ll send Ulrika round to pick up her CDs.
England v Switzerland
“I’m starting to wonder if David James ever moves for set-pieces. Once again he stood there like a deer in the headlights…And what the hell was that [single] Owen shot? My eighteen month old son has a better right foot than that…Thank God Heskey didn’t grace us with his presence.”
And now back to the studio – Gary?
Shedding light on old news
Thursday, June 17th, 2004Ask any ultralight (no pun intended) hiker or extreme mountain biker worth their salt and they’ll tell you that this is one of the oldest tricks in the book, whether they be Photons or their homemade equivalents. I have made various pieces of hiking gear over the years and most are still in use, like the Pepsi Can stove I made like this one – mmm, maybe I’ll redesign and update my old ultralight hiking pages.
Think you work hard?
Thursday, June 17th, 2004Ray Charles, who will be buried today in California, played over 10,000 concerts during his 58-year career. If one allows just a couple of weeks off work each year, that means he pretty much played a gig every other day for each of those 58 years. Flippin’ Nora.
You’ve got (G)mail
Thursday, June 17th, 2004I had a small but pleasant surprise awaiting me this evening when I open my email to find Paul Boutin had kindly forwarded me details to obtain a Gmail beta account. Which was nice. The cherry on the cake was his three word comment “Big noses rule”. Let it be known I won’t hear a word against him 🙂
Please feel free to mail me at bignoseduglyguy@SAFETYPINgmail.com removing the safety pin to do so. I know there issues surrounding the privacy questions raised by Google’s scraping for target advertising but hey, you don’t entrust really private or confidential stuff to your email service…do you?
Why You Should Dump Internet Explorer
Wednesday, June 16th, 2004As someone who did so some time ago, I was interested to read Daniel Miessler’s ‘Why You Should Dump Internet Explorer‘ article over at Lockergnome. I have to say that he makes a fair and cogent argument, highlighting the issues that continue to bug folks about the world’s most used browser. Likewise, there are many good points made in the online discussions and forums that have taken up the story, like those in the thread over at Ecademy, pointing up the necessity of using IE to action Windows Updates (clever thinking, MS though one can configure auto-updates via Control Panel unless I am much mistaken) and to view those sites code-biased to it’s own non-standard display. In making this last point, one person commented that IE is pretty much essential for online banking sites. I beg to differ, as I regularly use The Cooperative Bank’s online banking service via the excellent Firefox browser without a hitch.

