Thursday, May 24, 2007

Check out mini Britney in action...

This mini version of Britney Spears is going great guns in the US, with celebs jetting in from far and wide to see her perform.
And there was me thinking vertically challenged people who wanted to be famous had to get into stage productions of The Wizard of Oz...

Monday, May 21, 2007

Walking in a winter wonderland...


Just back from a fantastic weekend up in the Blue Mountains thanks to the generous hospitality of Sammy and Lynnea.
We'd taken them to our South Coast getaway Red Rock earlier in the year, and this weekend they reciprocatred with their own personal favourite, Wentworth Falls in the Blue Mountains.
For those not familiar, the Blue Mountains are just over an hour to the north west of Sydney. Named after the blue haze that emits from the eucalyptus trees in the area, the Blue Mountains is a weekend favourite with Sydneysiders, especially at this time of year, when the weather is cooler.


Although we're still nine days short of official winter, it was a chilly nine degrees in the mountains this weekend, but the house we were staying at had electric blankets. I had mine on 24/7.
We took a trip out to Leura, famed for it's fantastic old-fashioned sweet shop, and did an amazing bush walk through the national park.


It was the perfect weekend... great company, wonderful food, and a chance to be cold... and a chance to come back into the thawed reality of city life!

Thursday, May 17, 2007

The only gays in Springfield...



I've seem to have come late to The Simpsons party, so I'm still catching up...
... but someone at work flicked me this classic clip.
Gold!

Monday, May 07, 2007

End of a era as I hit a century...



I know I tend to bang on about digital music, mixtapes etc, but this article in The Sun is really interesting.
And this is my 100th post.
Read on...


THE eject button has been pressed on the audio cassette for the very last time.

Currys, the UK’s biggest electronics retailer, yesterday announced it is to stop selling the tapes.

Woolworths and HMV have already removed them from their shelves.

Currys also predicts this Christmas will be the last time it sells hi-fi systems with tape decks included.

Compact cassettes could be frustrating at times — hissing, stretching or getting chewed up in tape decks — but while MP3s and downloads are all the rage now, tapes played an important role in musical culture for more than 40 years.

The recordable tape was introduced to Europe in 1963 by Philips.

Originally designed for dictation, tapes soon became used for home recording and even data storage for computers.

For younger readers, the compact cassette consisted of two miniature spools between which a magnetic tape was passed and wound. This mechanism was housed in a protective plastic shell.

Cassettes took off in the Seventies, offering a recordable alternative to LPs. Pre-recorded cassettes went on sale in Europe in 1965, and from the Seventies to the Nineties became one of the most common formats on which to buy music.

The appeal of the cassette was boosted by the launch of portable music players such as the Sony Walkman in 1979.

A massive 83million tapes were sold in the UK in 1989. Yet by last year the figure had fallen to a mere 100,000.

In the Nineties sales of pre-recorded tapes were overtaken by CDs and record companies started phasing them out.

And in recent years the digital music revolution has pressed pause on the old-fashioned practice of “home dubbing”.

Even Currys managing director Peter Keenan said he will look back with “fondness” at cassettes.

Indeed, the tapes and the players had their good points.

They were more resistent to dust, heat and shocks than most digital media and fixing cassettes didn’t need hi-tech equipment — any tape which spooled out could be wound back in using a Biro.

Their durability saw them act as catalysts for social change, taking rock and punk music behind the Iron Curtain and creating a foothold for Western culture.

But cassettes were not popular with everyone — especially record companies.

In the Eighties the British Phonographic Institute launched an anti-copyright infringement campaign under the slogan “Home Taping Is Killing Music”.

In 1988 the House of Lords ruled in favour of Sir Alan Sugar’s Amstrad that producing a high-speed twin cassette deck did not infringe copyright laws.

Despite the digital music revolution, it is thought around 500million tapes are still in circulation.

And beware, here are other devices we reckon could be on the way out next:

Answering machines

Fax machines

Portable CD players

Watches

You have been warned . . .

Sunday, May 06, 2007

She's back... and she's pretty great live!


Missy Higgins was huge in Australia three years ago. Her debut album, The Sound of White was in the charts for over a year and her debut single Scar was the biggest selling single of 2004.
Rumours around her sexuality abound, only adding to her mystique.
Anyway, she's back with her second album On A Clear Night, and has kicked off a small Aussie tour.
I got to see her this weekend and she was fantastic! Give her new album a listen (on the link I've provided - my work website is streaming it) - you might just love it!

Latest on the house...

Just a quick one to update you on the progress of the house purchase.
The building report came back at the start of the week, and to a novice like me it read like it was about to collapse like a pile of dominos.
Thankfully, I have no common sense where building terminology is concerned, and on closer inspection (the report and the house), we've got a thumbs up!
have to part with a painful $25,000 later this week as a deposit, but all being well I could have a new address by mid-july.
Anyway, here are some more pics:




The entertaining deck and rear view of the house, taken from the end of the garden




Mexican Chimenea/Tandoori oven/Pizza oven at the far end of the back garden




I love the detailing on the front porch. Very Waltons Mountain!