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All Webbed Out

I’ve spent the last couple of afternoons trying to make WordPress work as a CMS for the Oakleaf Circle site but the instructions for creating separate category pages that would work as directory lists don’t seem to work for me. So I’ve spent all this afternoon looking at free CMSs. Gahhhhhh…. PostNuke, Drupel, e107, Etomise….. There’s just too many out there, and none of them seem both simple to use and capable of creating a directory site with an events calender.
And I’ve got loads of work to be getting on with – astro reports and Transit. Finally heard from the printers – their deadline is 10 working days before publication date, which in practice puts it at around the 15th of the month. So I have three weeks to get a magazine together.
Another thing that’s been bothering me is that the Oakleaf Site hosting and domain name are both up for renewal in a few weeks. We have the money (just) but Supanames will only accept plastic – which of course we don’t have. I want to transfer the site to 34sp, which will save at least £20 and which I can pay with a cheque, but I first have to get something called an EPP authorisation code out of my registrant. I emailed them two days ago, but they haven’t deigned to reply yet. The domain name doesn’t need renewing until May; the hosting runs out next month. I suppose I could just wait until the Supanames hosting runs out, then get both hosting and renewal with 34sp. It will mean having the site offline for a while, but it would solve a few problems.

I seem to be adjusting to my new pills – I was very tired and breathless for the first few days, so much so that I almost decided to chuck the whole lot in the fire (I get so bloody angry with having to swallow pills all the time 🙁 ). But things appear to be sorting themselves out now.
And it wasn’t all slaving over a hot computer. I made a terrific loaf of bread this afternoon; thick slices spread with margerine and pickle and served with cheese – mmmmm…..

Updating…

Saw the doc today, told him about my continuing tiredness and breathlessness. He gave me a higher-dose version of one of my pills, reassured me that my blood pressure was fine, my blood test hadn’t shown anything amiss and that he’d write to that dammed hospital cardiologist to get more tests for me. So I have to wait and wait some more and keep taking the bloody pills. When I just want to feel healthy and strong again.

Been trying to import the old blog posts, but without success. I think the problem may lie with the MySQL version that 34sp.com uses – it may be older than Supaname’s version, so I keep getting error messages. It looks like I’m going to have to copy and paste after all; and the text from the old blog is stuffed full of escape characters that have to be edited out, so it’s taking an age.
Oh well…

Hello world!

Well, got this new blog up and running. Wasn’t too difficult; like The Man says, installation really is a five-minute job. Haven’t worked out how to transfer all my old posts and links over yet. I could just copy ‘n’ paste, but that’s going to take forever.

It’s getting late and I’ve faffed with this for long enough.

Today’s News

Went walking down to the village this morning. It was raining, but only a little, and surprisingly warm. I got some milk and a paper, got B’s pills from the surgery, bought an electricity token, started back. I was going slowly, as usual, but getting hotter and hotter. I unzipped both my jackets; after a couple of minutes, I looked down and saw a large white stain across the front of my shirt – probably from last night’s milky cereal snack. So up went the zip, for the rest of the walk. And damm the sweat.
Before going out, I’d spent a good five minutes in front of the mirror despairingly unteasing the knots from my hair. Why hadn’t I noticed the stain then? There’s a limit to being casual about what you wear; clearly, I’m turning into one of those mad old women who walk around with skew-wiff hair and last Thursday’s tomato soup all down the front of her dress.
But – something to cheer me up – my website is now live! Yes, folks, you can go to www.valdobson.co.uk and gaze upon – well, my “site under construction” holding page that’s there at the moment.
I’ll start uploading the new blogging software today and try it out. When I’ve got it working, I’ll back up all these blog files and move them over. By-by Oakleaf Circle…..

The China Syndrome

Phew! Just finished writing an email to some woman telling her all about Chinese astrology. She’d contacted the Astrological Association because she’d had her Chinese horoscope done, notice that there were 12 animal signs in the Chines zodiac and wondered if we’d noticed that Jupiter had a 12-year cycle and that there might be some connection. And the AA had passed her onto me. (Why??? Oh yes, I’m the local font of knowledge, aren’t I?)
So I told her yes, some astrologers had already noticed that but we couldn’t be certain of the connection. And also that Chinese astrology was a bit more complex than that and gave her a 50-word rundown on it.
Hope that keeps her quiet!

In other news… I won’t be bothering to work on a design for valdobson.co.uk. Not yet, anyway. I’ve just remembered that I’ll be using the new version of WordPress, which comes with a choice of skins; it also comes with the ability to generate more than one page, which means that it can be used to set up a whole multipurpose website, not just one blog page. So I shall go for that, and experiment with the design once it’s up.
Once I’ve had a chance to play around with the new version and find out what it can do, I may very well convert the Oakleaf Circle site to it. From what I’ve read about the new version, it could be used as a complete CMS for adding content – which is exactly what I need for the OC site. All those pages and pages of HTML and CSS tags are so easy to get borked, when you’re adding little bits of content on a daily basis, like I do.
In fact, I’m hoping that I’ll eventually get offered the webmaster post for the whole AA site. I already have lots of ideas for streamlining it, so I need to have my techniques and software ready…

tNeptune opp nPluto

1 Comment

That’s the transit I’ve got right now. Ho hum, another bummer time to deal with. Don’t feel up to explaining about it, except I’m not handling stress at all well.

Anyway, at least I’ve got some chance to relax. The Elfin stuff is nearly wrapped up – just got to wait for Caro to send me the corrections. I don’t have to worry about Transit for a week or two, just churn over ideas for the design.
Suddenly, I haven’t got much to do. Except sit and worry about my health. And about money. And about my blood pressure – which obviously makes my blood presure go up!
So I’ve been getting on with some reading. At the moment, I’m on M. John Harrison’s Light. It’s SF, but I’m not really enjoying it – it’s too dark. The central character is a serial killer, for a start, and extremely unlikable. I’ve skipped to the end chapter so I know he ends up dead, but even so, I don’t really want to read about him or his doings any more. But I suppose I’ll struggle through.
I must have read Harrison’s earlier stuff – I’m an SF nut. But I can\t remember any of them. There’s at least one other SF writer named Harrison, so I’m probably getting the two of them mixed up.
Also, I keep wondering if I’ve ever met the bloke. He’s British, and from his photo he looks around my age. There was a John Harrison I once spent a night with in Hull, way back in 1971, and I keep wondering if it’s the same bloke. Not that I was in love with him or anything – it was just a one-night thing for both of us while I was passing through the city. But I have this curiosity about him.
Around 1990, I did come across a John Harrison in Yorkshire, publishing a ‘zine (it was called “Ambassadors Or Infiltrators?”). I wrote to him and asked if he was the John Harrison from Hull. He wasn’t, but we started up quite a pleasant correspondence and exhanged zines for a while. I think I still have one of his letters, where he drew pictures of his rotten teeth for me. Then his girlfriend left him and he went a bit weird, sending me all sorts of stuff about the Illuminati and conspiracies and David Icke and shape-changing lizards from Eridanus 49. So I stopped writing to him, he stopped writing to me, and I don’t know what happened to him.
Neither do I really know why I have this urge to know what happened to that bloke in Hull.
Oh well.

ETA (at 15/03/05): Just finished the Harrison book, and I must say that it gets better as it goes along. I was still slightly cheesed off with it, but for a different reason – halfway through, I noticed that several of his names (character names, ship names etc.) were anagrams of each other. So, being a crossword nut, I just had to try and unscramble every name I subsequently encountered. Somewhat annoying.
But it turned into a very imaginative work, quite different from the average run of SF. It didn’t entirely work for me – it just didn’t quite sweep me away into another reality as it was probably supposed to; but, overall, I’ll give Harrison 11/10 for trying to write something with a bit of profundity and orginality.
Forgot to say that the money from the Astrological Association finally arrived today. About a week late, but very welcome. So I can now pay for my site’s hosting with 34sp. Yay!! I shall soon have my very own website! Think I’ll start designing it tomorrow.
Then I can move this blog and get it properly accessible to everyone again.

More Changes…

Got a phone call from Wendy Stacey at the Astrological Association on Saturday. They are keeping the online Transit – and want me to produce a hard-copy version as well, starting with the May edition. The entire layout and design of the magazine, as well as the content, will be my responsibility. Whee! My inner designer is very, very happy.
We won’t be printing it but I’ll be producing the camera-ready copy for the printer. No money has been mentioned yet, but I’ll surely be getting extra payment for the job.
Now, if only I could be sure that the benefits tribunal will see things my way when I argue my case with them next month. Then I’d be doing a happy dance all day (knees permitting).
In the meantime, got to get on with work!

I’ve not heard from 34sp.com about my domain name being ready yet – they must be waiting for my cheque to clear. Once the name is properly registered, I can then send in another cheque to get my site hosted with them. So it looks like another couple of weeks at least before it’s up.
I just haven’t got any time this week (or next) for designing. And we’re broke anyway.

Stupid Things I Have Seen (Pt99)

On TV this morning, Germaine Greer complaining “There is absolutely nothing to buy in the shops that I can wear!”. Well dear, that was a very nice set of clothes you were wearing – congratulations on being such a superb needlewoman! Grrrr, why do women who complain that they have absolutely nothing to wear always possess a roomful of perfectly wearable clothing?
That illustrates one of my pet hates – the misuse of words. There is plenty of clothes in the shops that Germaine Greer can wear (especially with the sort of money that she can throw around on a shopping expedition) ; what she meant was that she couldn’t find an outfit that she really liked.
It recalls something I was reading a couple of weeks ago. That was a report of a haunting; the writer, recounting the experience of the witness, wrote “She was literally scared to death!”. Yet the account made it perfectly clear that the woman was not in the least bit dead.
Greer was on TV to promote a new BBC series called “Grumpy Old Women”, featuring middle-aged female celebs grumping about some pet peeve. I wonder if they have a spot about the abuse and misuse of language; if not, maybe I could have such a spot? OK, I’m no celeb. But I’m female, I’m middle-aged. And I’m certainly grumpy!

The Glory Of It All

Tonight, there’s a glorious sky. Inky velvety black studded with diamond stars. Orion spread across the east, the Pleiades overhead, Pegasus dipping behind the trees in the west. The Milky Way is visible – a fine cloudy spray across the arch of the firmament.
I stood outside for about 15 minutes. One car passed by, but otherwise the night was almost completely undisturbed – just the barking of a fox from the woods.
Tonight is bloody beautiful.

Mounting Pressure

On Thursday, I at last got my cardiology checkup. So it was off to Dumfries for the afternoon.
Finding a parking space in the hospital car park was the first bit of stress. Finally, after circleing it for a couple of times, B dropped me at the main entrance and went off to carry on circling. My letter said to go to Outpatients. Quite a long walk from the entrance, but I made it OK and was glad to sink into a seat. Waited 10 minutes, got my blood pressure and weight recorded. Then got handed a card and told to go to the ECG dept for my tests. “Second floor, outside Ward 12” I was briskly told. So, there being no lifts in sight in Outpatients, I made my way back to Reception, where the main lift banks are.
Get out at the second floor, look for the dept. No sign of it. So I ask my way to Ward 12. Make my weary way to that, still no sign of ECG. Walk up and down, can’t see it. I ask again. The entrance to the ECG dept. turns out to be inside what appears to be a tiny wall recess, with a small sign (dark green, on a blue wall) pointing to it. For a hospital, the signage is remarkably poor; even somebody with decent eyesight could miss it.
So I go in and present my card. “Wait out there, seating area on the right” I am told by another brisk hospital worker. So I shuffle down the corridor to a seating area and make myself comfortable. Five minutes later, the hospital worker finds me – turns out I’m in the wrong seating area, I should have turned right after turning right. So off I shuffle again, down yet another bloody corridor.
Thoroughly weary by now, I sit and wait. And wait.
After around twenty minutes, I am finally called in for my tests. The first one is fine – I just have to recline on a bed while a technician scans my heart. It’s so comfortable that I almost doze off – but then I’m jerked awake by the tech’s mobile going off. “I thought you were supposed to turn those things off in here?” “Er, yes,” she replies guiltily, “but I’m expecting an important call.” Must be extremely important.
Then it’s time for the exercise test. And here is where it gets a lot less relaxing. I’m supposed to walk on an exercise machine – but nobody has told them that I have walking problems. And they don’t seem to have any provisions for exercise tests that don’t involve walking.
But I tell them I’ll give it a go. After wiring me up, they start the thing off. I almost immediatly start to fall over and have to grab onto the bars.
“That’s the slowest speed it will go.” the young tech barks at me, “Stretch your legs! Stay upright! Keep your back straight!”. I am now struggling to do all of that while keeping my balance, trying to stretch my legs without doing a damage to my knees and, more importantly, getting plenty of air into my lungs. I am panting heavily.
She switches up the speed. The consultant joins in, pushing in my backside and barking more orders at me. My vision is blurring, my attention span is shrinking – I am concentrating totally on breathing and staying upright. Which are both rapidly getting more difficult.
Abruptly, somebody cuts the power and I stumble off, falling into a chair, stillighting for breath.
The consultant now starts asking me questions. I gasp out one-word answers without thinking about them – then my head starts aching. Within seconds, white pain is stabbing up the right side of the back of my head, and I start involuntarily yelping softly, crying. I’m still wired up and the two of them start checking the readouts.
“Bastardsbastardsbastards” I’m thinking, with the small part of my mind that isn’t blanked out from the pain and the effort of breathing. “Look at me, not the bloody machine!!!”. The tech prises open my mouth, squirts something under my tongue. “You should feel better in a minute.”
“Bastardsbastardsbastards” is all I can think, but after a minute or so, everything starts to ease. Meanwhile the tech and the consultant are busy with the machine and its readout. They talk quietly together, just keeping an eye on me. “I’ve been told your angio exam went well this morning” Says the consultant to the young female tech. I don’t catch her reply, but it sounds soft and pleased. So, she’s his student. And the bastardsbastardsbastards are too interested in each other to see if I’m all right….
Eventually, I get back to a state where I can get dressed and leave. My head is still hurting, but it’s bearable. The consultant tells me that my heart is fine “except for a small valve leak, but that’s no problem!” Eh? But he doesn’t stop to explain explain why it isn’t a problem. ” But you have a serious problem with your blood pressure.” Oh wow, thanks for the info, doc – I’d never have guessed. He writes out a prescription. “You must take something stronger than your present beta-blockers. Start this immediately, it is important. I’ll write to your doctor, and I’ll see you again soon.” He shakes my hand. How nice.
So, out I go to find B. He’s not in the main reception, he’s not in Outpatients. He must be sitting in the car somewhere. Outside, it’s cold, dark, raining. The wind is whipping across the concrete. I’m so tired, so weary, with walking. But B is there, flashing his lights at me.
He takes me home. My head continues to ache. Later, it turns into a full-blown migraine that lasts the whole night.
Blahhhhh.