@ayende You ought to try Mercurial. in reply to ayende 1 week ago

November 2006

26
Nov

Pastors: get blogging!

Kingdom Faith has a new website design, and the long awaited RSS feeds on the video blogs have finally arrived. There’s some great teaching, and you can have Google Reader or Internet Explorer 7 automatically alert you whenever there’s more for you to watch, listen to or read, without having to go back to the site every so often to check. Nice one.

Even better, I am told the video blogs will have a comment system in the near future.

That’ll be pretty exciting if they do it right. Comments are a crucial element of blogging: your readers can post their own feedback which will then appear below your article. In this way you can interact with them — they can ask you questions or initiate a discussion, and if you do it right, it gives them a feeling that they are actually interacting with real human beings rather than someone who is standing six feet above contradiction. It gives pastors a great way of interacting with, and even maybe widening, their audience beyond the four walls of the church.

There’s a new book coming out in the New Year called The Blogging Church, which looks like it could be a pretty good read. It is written by Brian Bailey, the technology director at Fellowship Church in Dallas, Texas, the fifth largest church in the USA. Bailey is also a friend of blogging guru and former Microsoftie Robert Scoble. Scoble’s book, Naked Conversations, is itself a must-read for anyone who is serious about blogging. It doesn’t blind you with science or technobabble, but focuses much more on the social and business aspects of blogging.

So pastors everywhere — you know what to do: get blogging. If you don’t know how to get started, the WordPress hosted service is as good as any.

22
Nov

WordPress not notable?!!?

What does this guy think he’s playing at? He thinks WordPress — the world’s most popular open source blogging engine — is not notable enough for Wikipedia.

Okay, let’s come up with a few other articles that, by the same standard, are not notable enough for Wikipedia. How about, er, this one, this one, this one, or this one?

16
Nov

Iain has a blog

Hehe, I’m no longer the only blogger in the family.

I set one up for Aaron a while ago too, but that doesn’t seem to have come to much yet.

15
Nov

Food fads or healthy eating?

We went out this evening to Smith & Western, our local American restaurant, to celebrate Mum’s birthday. A truly blessed occasion, with much more food than I could eat.

I’ve been there several times in the past, and usually I can manage everything that’s set before me. On Iain’s stag night in 1997, I had a 20 ounce steak, followed by a massive chocolate belly buster pudding. I managed it all, but the following day I felt rather unpleasant. It’s not often that I pig out like that.

When we moved house, I decided to get my diet under control, and instituted a spending cap for myself of three pounds a day on food. This meant an end to Dr Pepper, Pringles, Coca-Cola, doughnuts, McDonald’s and all sorts of other junk food that I was wasting an absolute fortune on. This was prompted mainly by the fact that I was tipping the scales at twelve and a half stone, and at my height and build, that means overweight. The first few days were pretty difficult: I kept feeling shaky, but by the end of the first week I was beginning to feel a good bit better.

I have always been a pretty fussy eater, and although I’m not as bad as I used to be, I still have a considerable catalogue of food dislikes. I won’t touch mince, margarine, butter, custard, eggs, milk or fried bread, and for many years the list included at various times things such as sausages, beefburgers, cheese and battered fish. I think some people were a bit bemused at my food faddishness, but now that I think about it, it was actually quite a healthy diet, because my main dislikes were for fatty, greasy or processed food. I think I must have been a bit on the sensitive side to some things too: the smell of boiling milk made me want to vomit, for instance. For that reason, if you ask me to make you up a milky drink, I will probably try to offer you a non-milky alternative. Or at least, something that doesn’t involve boiling the stuff. In the absence of a chemistry lab fume cupboard, at any rate.

In recent years, though, my eating patterns have been becoming much more indisciplined, and as they did so, I seemed to build up quite a tolerance for some of these foods that formerly made me feel woozy. Cheese and sausages were no longer a problem, for instance, nor was greasy chip shop batter.

However, now that I’ve cut back on my spending on junk food and started to build up some discipline, and some of the toxins have been cleared out of my system, I’ve begun to find some of my childhood dislikes coming back with a vengeance. A couple of months ago I’d have thought nothing of munching my way through a whole packet of dark chocolate Kit-Kats and a tub of Pringles in an afternoon, washed down with a bottle of Dr Pepper, and then eating a ten ounce steak and chips for supper.

I don’t seem to be able to do that any more.

I wasn’t feeling particularly full when the steak and chips arrived this evening, but the taste of the grease in the chips made me want to throw up. This was pretty surprising: Smith & Western chips aren’t particularly greasy. I think that at the moment, sausages, beefburgers and deep fried battered stuff are likely to be a pretty firm no-no.

Drinks are another big issue. I have a strong dislike for milk, coffee and pretty much all alcoholic drinks, and I find tea too bitter to taste without an exorbitant amount of sugar. Over the years there have been occasions when I’ve gone for months or even years at a time without taking any caffeinated drinks of any nature. When I drink tea for several days in a row, it makes me feel rather strange, and when I come off it, I get a pretty nasty headache after about a day or so. Fortunately, I’m in a bit of a non-tea phase at the moment. I’ve tried hot Ribena in the past, but that too seems to have a saturation point, beyond which I can’t take any more. It’s a bit annoying really, because I like to have a nice hot relaxing drink from time to time when I’m working.

Herbal infusions seem to work well. My current favourite drink is a Twinings lemon and ginger one, which is pretty refreshing. The best thing of all about it is that it tastes great with only a small amount of sugar, much less than any other tea or infusion that I’ve tried.

Hopefully all this will settle down to a nice healthy diet.