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Sparsholt Countryside Day

Saturday, June 2nd, 2012

1031I’m hoping to use the double Bank Holiday weekend to post a few belated blog entries starting with two weekends back. On a run, someone had mentioned that there was an open day at Sparsholt College on the Saturday and, as the proceeding week’s rain had finally come to an end, we decided to head along and take a look. As we turned in to a huge parking field packed with cars I realised I had understimated the scale of the event. I had also underestimated the size of the campus and, even with tractor trailer rides a plenty, there was still a lot of ground to cover in the couple of hours that we had left before closing.

We managed to take in the farm, equine centre, plant sale, Gardeners’ Question Time garden (Duncan provided them with some water!), inflatables, birds of prey, assorted farm machines and tropical fish but there was still lots more to see and if we go again we’d definitely make a day of it. Needless to say, when asked for her favourite bit, Emma replied with “the ice cream”!

WebSphere Appliance Management Center

Tuesday, April 24th, 2012

I haven’t posted anything product related since the release of WebSphere ESB 7.5 in June last year where I hinted at pastures new. Those of you that I’m connected to on LinkedIn will know that I subsequently became Technical Lead for a product called WebSphere Appliance Management Center. WebSphere Appliance Management Center provides off-box management and monitoring of multiple WebSphere DataPower SOA appliances. The development for the management component of the product moved to Hursley shortly after the initial release (named 4.0 after the coincident firmware release). The new team put together a fix pack later in the year which delivered support for the new Service Gateway XG45 appliance.

Today saw the announcement of the next chapter in the WebSphere Appliance Management Center story. Significantly, you will find this in the WebSphere DataPower Appliances firmware V5.0 announcement letter as the next version will no longer be a chargeable product in its own right. Instead, it will be freely downloadable and supported free of charge for all customers with a current support entitlement for a WebSphere DataPower SOA appliance.

Not only will it cost you less – but we’ll also be giving you less! The team has been working flat out to create a much lighterweight offering which is faster to install and less resource intensive. The management user interface has also been extensively reworked to be more responsive and better support user interaction patterns. In particular, the current restrictions around managed set membership will be lifted allowing much great flexibility for firmware and configuration deployment. In addition to the existing domain management capabilities, you will also be able to manage configuration at the service level. All of this will be available for download on June 26.

For those attending IBM Impact next week who’d like to find out more about this exciting new release, I’ll be co-presenting on WebSphere Appliance Management Center (Monday, 5:15-6:30pm, Lando 4305). We will also be hosting a series of round table sessions in Toscana 3701 (Monday, 10:45-12:00; Tuesday, 1:20-2:45pm; Thursday 3:15-4:30pm) which will be your chance to shape the future direction of the product. Alternatively, please feel free to contact me directly or post questions in the DataPower developerWorks forum.

Tooth fairy short changed

Sunday, April 22nd, 2012

1025I had a phone call at work earlier this week to tell me that Emma had lost a tooth. She’s been saying it was wobbly for a while so it was no great surprise. Unfortunately, there is no sign of the tooth and the suspicion is that it was swallowed along with the apple she was eating at the time. Thankfully, she didn’t seem to want to retrieve it and the tooth fairly settled for a note explaining the situation! I can’t begrudge her £1: she’s spent some of it on stickers for my birthday.

In other news, Duncan is potty training again this weekend with about a 50% hit rate. Further evidence of the children ageing: I’ve finally got round to removing the remaining stair gate (children swinging on it being more of a danger than falling down the stairs) and most of the cupboard locks in the kitchen (so hopefully they’ll stay on their hinges a bit better).

Casio AWG100 review

Monday, April 16th, 2012

1022Yes – I can be bought! For the price of a watch, WatchCo.com have bought themselves a scattering of links in this review. I was given a budget of $200 which still left me with a huge selection of watches to choose from on their website. My main criteria for a watch is that it tells the time, and the right time at that. Consequently, I found myself looking at what the site calls automatic watches (solar or kinetic powered) and atomic watches (radio controlled – not nuclear powered!). The overlap between those two categories is unfortunately rather small (particularly once you’ve taken out the watches that are incorrectly labelled as atomic). I eventually settled on the G-Shock AWG100 from the range of Casio watches. Sadly well under my budget at $130!

Of course, you may need to factor in customs fees when buying from overseas sites like US based WatchCo.com. It cost £25.23 to retrieve the small package from the sorting office: £17.23 in VAT and £8 in Royal Mail international handling fee. Thankfully, in my case that was refunded as part of writing this review. Having unboxed the watch, I was generally pleased with the look of the watch. I have pretty slim wrists and some watches just look far too big and bulky. This one doesn’t although, as you can see from the second photo, the end of the strap does stick out a bit as I’m nearly on the smallest setting. The strap is consequently something I might look at replacing.

1019The watch very nearly met my main criteria: it was showing the correct time… for NYC. Seemingly you have to manually tell the watch your location, at which point the hands chugged their way round to the right time. By default the watch only adjusts the time from the radio signal once a day at one of six preset times throughout the night but you can force it to perform an update which I duly did. One of the small digital ‘dials’ on the front of the watch tells you which transmitter it is receiving a signal from which seems rather a waste of screen real-estate. Bizarrely, it seems the signal from Germany is stronger here than that from the UK! The manual gives detailed instructions on how to position your watch on the window sill to receive a signal which seemed a bit of a faff. The watch does tell you when it performed the last update and I was therefore glad to see that it seems to manage to do so from the comfort of my bedside table.

Only time will tell how the solar charging works out. The manual cautions you against keeping your watch out of sight under your jacket. Not a problem for me as I’m almost always have my sleeves rolled up! The only real evidence of this aspect of the watch (beyond the patterning on the dial) is that, after a period in the dark, the digital part of the display is turned off to conserve power until it sees the light again or you press a button.

The other two digital parts to the display generally show the seconds (the watch has no second hand) and the time or day/date. The dials are also used for viewing the battery charge, world times, countdown timer (not less than a minute), stopwatch (one lap time), alarm (only beeps 10 times so not one I’d want to rely on after a heavy night) and, if necessary, manually setting the time. Unavoidably for this design of watch, the hands can sometimes make the display hard to read. It also isn’t possible to read them in the dark as the LED light just illuminates the hands.

All-in-all, a reasonable looking watch which does its main function of telling the time accurately competently. I’m not sure I’d fork out £80 for the watch (not counting the import costs) but I’m generally a cheapskate when it comes to watches. It will, therefore, probably be replacing my previous timepiece that came free with a running book! Thanks WatchCo.com!

Summer (?) series returns

Saturday, April 14th, 2012

We decided to sneak in a trip to the first event of the orienteering club’s summer series before Emma had to head off to a party. Unfortunately Southampton Common wasn’t at its summeriest with a steady drizzle eventually turning in to a downpour. Emma, Duncan and I went round the yellow whilst Christine had her run. We made it round the 2km course in just under 35 minutes which must be some kind of a record for Emma. We may even have to start her on some navigation soon! Duncan, meanwhile, stayed resolutely in the pushchair. The rest of the family then departed in the direction of Longdown Farm (with my lunch) and it was my turn to tackle the light green. Theoretically no real navigational challenge but I still wasted a minute at number 9 having failed to realise which clearing I had run up and another 30 seconds or so at 17 when I got ahead of myself on the map. That would have brought me under 4 min/k which would have been nice but I’ll settle for a first place in the results. It’s a shame I then got completely soaked cycling back home!

20120414 Southampton Common Light Green GPX

Child minding

Saturday, April 14th, 2012

1016Christine worked the last couple of days so I had time off to look after the children. Well, on Thursday, I actually only looked after one of them as Emma and I dropped off Duncan at nursery before spending most of the day at Manor Farm Country Park. Much to my surprise, Emma even enjoyed the 40 minute Victorian school lesson on offer although she only put her hand up once (to spell dog!). We stopped off at the library on the way home. Having spent most of the stay colouring, her contribution to the book selection was a cartoon book of Shakespeare’s plays: Midsummer Night’s Dream is the only one which doesn’t involve at least one murder! Yesterday, Duncan, Emma and I eventually made it out the house and went to Hilliers where the children ran themselves in the ground. We managed, for example, to spend half an hour playing manically on a wobbly bridge that is all of three metres long. They also spent ages jumping around a circle of log stumps. Duncan just leapt from one towards the next regardless of whether he was likely to make it! I’m looking forward to having a rest at work next week…

Easter hunt

Saturday, April 14th, 2012

1013Having had a trial run in Monmouth with friends, when we arrived home on Easter Sunday the children were in no doubt that they wanted a treasure hunt in order to find the Easter eggs provided by Grandma. Christine therefore whipped up a quick set of clues: written for Emma and pictorial for Duncan, and distributed them around the garden. It didn’t take long for them to follow the trail and even less time to start to demolish their prize!

Brecon break

Saturday, April 14th, 2012

1010For the first half of the Easter half-term holiday we booked a last minute break at a cottage on the north edge of the Brecon Beacons near Llanfrynach. We arrived on the Saturday and the next day enjoyed a fantastic cycle ride along the east edge of Talybont reservoir up to the waterfalls where we had lunch. Duncan got a bit cold during the shady ride there (he doesn’t put any effort in when sat in the child seat) but the falls were in the sunshine and he seemed to have warmed up enough by the end of the trip to enjoy an ice cream!

The next day, after much indecision we decided to take a crack at climbing a hill and if you’re going to climb a hill it might as well by the highest: Pen y Fan. We spurned the motorway footpath up from the Storey Arms, instead using the car parks on the north side near the cottage. This gave us a nice gentle climb up past Pen Milan, stopping near Llyn Cwm Llwch for lunch before the final steep climb up past the obelisk and to Corn Du. Emma was starting to flag a little bit on this final ascent but she and Duncan enjoyed playing with the stones on the flat summit. From there, it’s a short hop to the marginally higher Pen y Fan. We descended north from there and I abandoned Christine and the children and ran off to bring the car round. It may have only been about five miles in total but it was still a fun day out in the hills and we were pleased that Emma made it round without too much grumbling. Even Duncan walked more than we expected!

The weather began to turn at this point and we spent the next day at Dan-yr-Ogof caves. I was actually quite impressed by the caves but for the children I think the Dinosaur Park was the real winner. By the time we reached the Shire Horse Centre, the rain had set in and sadly the indoor play area didn’t appear to have much for young children (a tricycle race track which isn’t much fun on your own) so we set off back to the cottage. The Wednesday was pretty much a write off as we watched the thick snow cover first the hills and eventually the fields surrounding the cottage. We managed a twenty minute walk in the morning and then went to the swimming pool in Brecon after lunch.

The cottage was booked for the Easter weekend so we packed the car on Thursday and went for a short walk along the Brecon and Monmouthshire canal before heading off to stay at Christine’s parents’ for a couple of days to make a week of the holiday.