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The Highlights
A really icky day, all told. Our corporate roadshow hits the the road for the first time in some months, but there's a sizable pothole. The computer I lovingly prepared last week is refusing to output to its monitor. Worked fine here, it did. Check with a laptop plugging into the monitor - it's fine, so the super-duper all-singing all-dancing 17" monitor is not the problem. Must be the PC. Ask our chap there to whip the top off the PC, extract the video card, and replace it. Bingo. One working computer. One relieved Weaver. Add to this the regular output of guff and bobbins, and an unusually large number of customers having trouble trying to get into our restricted website. They don't know their own names, that's the problem. Remember the database that I set up a couple of weeks ago? It swung into action last week, and Eris has employed two people to staff the phone lines well into the evening, expecting a flood of calls. At the end of one week, we've had fully 31 calls. The cost to the company is going to be something like GBP 40 per call. That's fine for Eris's pet project, but that sort of money buys three PCs, or a clerical person for a month and a half. Add to this my physical state: I've been feeling under the weather for the past couple of weeks, and the cold snap has begun to make breathing more difficult. Not good at all. A quick quiz, which (allegedly) is part of the tests for 11 year old kiddies. jaeda: |
I'm feeling a tad better this morning, so head off to work. Bad move. There's a steep hill en route, and I'm really short of breath by the time I reach the top. Coughing appears mid-morning, just to add to the fun and games. I should have stayed home today, my concentration is shot and I'm feeling fluey. An inch better in the afternoon, well enough to spot the problem in our training room. The computers there have a dial-out connection to the internet, and are dialing out for no obvious reason every half-hour or so. A good look with netstat shows they're connecting to a local address, which turns out to be our new anti-virus server. Whip that from the PCs. This anti-virus stuff has been no end of trouble - our field users are still experiencing problems, and it's caused no end of trouble in the office. Basically, the cure may be worse than the problem. That could also be said of my cold. It finally explodes into life late afternoon, sending me packing off to bed early evening for the night. Tori jaeda: |
Fitfully awake just after midnight, then wide awake sometime around 3am. Hacking and coughing all the way. Not a chance of going into work - I wouldn't manage the hill, never mind that I'm unable to concentrate. MTV awards follow-upNews reaches Chateau Weaver that Damon Albarn was at the ceremony (er) last week, and had been tipped off that the Gorillaz had won the MTV2 award. They had even made an expensive animated acceptance video. Albarn sat there smug and expectant. They opened the envelope. Someone else had won. Rumour has it Damon became so furious that smoke was emerging from every single orifice. |
See Saturday. Victoria: |
See Saturday. Jaeda: |
Getting over the worst cold in ages. Couldn't breathe Wednesday, couldn't eat Thursday, couldn't concentrate most of yesterday. Finally back on top of things today. There's a new page containing responses to this week's events in New York and Washington. |
Janet Jackson continues to rule the roost right across the planet. Jennifer Lopez retains #1 single in the US, System Of A Down rescue the #1 album with "Toxicity."
It Came From Afrika is the first Chemical Brothers release in a couple of years, and returns them to the fate of attracting zero radio play. They deserve better. Sam Mumba's Baby Come On Over is hot on the radio, but on its fourth release, Set You Free is still not troubling programmers. Dig out the Lost Souls mix, which made #39 in 94, not the Original mix, which made #2 the following year and is subtly tweaked this time around. Alicia Keys is at a new peak. Bubbling under: Hunter the third release from Dido's massive "No Angel" album is new at #25. New peaks for Jacko and Lopez: You Rock My World and I'm Real are 35 and 36. Just behind, at #38, Let Robeson Sing is the fourth release from the Manics' album "Know Your Enemy", and their smallest hit in ten years. Enya's Only Time is Deemed Appropriate, and enters at #43 after commercial release ten months ago. Things That Go Bump In The Night is the second release by the Allstars, and is better than the S Club 7-lite tag they've picked up somehow. Weaver 21 Matchbox Twenty (Mad Season, 2000) the highest entry, with a record that is just *so* appropriate for this week. That's also the call for Sinatra (Greatest Hits, 1963) Crowded House (epon, 1987) Sarah McLachlan (Sweet Surrender, 1998) and Alisha's Attic (Alisha Rules the World, 1996.) Blondie's comeback video (No Exit, 1999) has been attracting heavy play, in spite of its espionage theme. Current hits from Nelly Furtardo and Little Trees mosey into the top end. |
This week, it's Nottingham versus Keele. An unusual outbreak of kindness from Paxo, who allows "Gulliver" as an answer, shorn of the given name "Lemuel." He's close to the knuckle in refusing "imaginary" as the numbers illustrated by an Argand diagram; "complex" is the correct answer. (A maths grad writes: A complex number has both a real and an imaginary part. An imaginary number would be somewhere on the vertical axis of the diagram. Not quite precise enough for the points.) Both decisions are on Keele questions, and the team has the best of the early exchanges, leading 80-20 after the first picture round. Identify the Womble. They all count. Paxo has a good giggle as Keele's Rob McElroy tries - and fails - to remember an answer. Ian Shepperson has a great night on the buzzer; his only blot a momentary lapse during a biography of Cleopatra. But this is his only failure, as Shepperson goes on to score 100 points before the second picture round. Keele is a mile ahead, and though Nottingham closes the gap slightly in the closing minutes, 215-125 is the final score. Shepperson's contribution: 128, the highest of the series so far. Keele made 18/39 bonuses, Nottingham 9/30. Andy Foinette of Nottingham has the lowest individual score of the series, four incorrect interruptions giving a grand non-total of 0. |
This feature is suspended this week, for obvious reasons. |