I am the ghost of groovymother.com. Woooooo!

This is an old page from Rod Begbie's blog.

It only exists in an attempt to prevent linkrot. No new content will be added to this site, and links and images are liable to be broken. Check out begbie.com to find where I'm posting stuff these days.

Entries for week beginning May 29, 2005

June 4, 2005

Siemens Domestic Appliances - Dressman shirt iron

Some kind of high-falutin’ automagical shirt iron. Nifty.

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June 3, 2005

Webolodeon

Greasemonkey script to try to force yourself to only surf the web with a purpose.

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June 2, 2005

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

My original paperback copy of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, bought for me when I was five.

June 1, 2005

Amazon.com: Trainspotting (Statistically Improbable Phrases)

Rude words and Scottish pronunciation a-go-go.

Dead Tree Cavalcade

Bah! Curse you, Keith.

I was going to state here that normally I avoid memes (what do you think this is? Bloody LiveJournal?), but I relented since a) as you follow all the links back, you discover that lots of people state “I normally don’t do this, but…”, so I’d be blindingly unoriginal, and b) I like books.

Total number of books I’ve owned: No idea. Over my lifetime, probably about 500 or so.

Last book I bought: Freakonomics, which I picked up on the strength of its brief review in Entertainment Weekly.

Last book I read: Currently next to the lavvy is Evan Dorkin’s compilation of his Bill & Ted’s Most Excellent Adventures comics. I picked up a few of these comics back when they first came out (circa 1991), and really enjoyed them. Sadly, I’m not enjoying the reprint as much. Who would have thought that my tastes would have changed in the intervening fourteen years? Totally non-non-heinous.

Last book I finished: I read in quick succession a fairly well-linked threesome of All Marketers Are Liars, which makes reference to Blink, whose author is quoted on the cover of Freakonomics. All three give plenty of food for thought on the fact that there’s no such thing as “rational” human behaviour, and are recommended.

Five books that mean a lot to me:

  • Trainspotting. This was the book that reminded me how much fun reading could be, after five years of enforced dreadful dreary books at high school had sapped my will to read. I picked it up largely because it had a character called Begbie in it, and was engrossed. It’s not an easy read (even if you do know the Edinburgh accent), but it is worth it—The “Bad Blood” chapter in particular sticks in my mind. I read it over the summer of 1995, on the bus between Heriot Watt University and the branch of Comet where I worked, and haven’t re-read it since for fear that it won’t live up to my memory.
  • The Bug. A fine, fine novel, and an incredibly deep investigation of the psyche of the software engineer.
  • Joel on Software. Brilliant, humourous and perfectly opinionated writing on a myriad of different topics, important to anyone who shuffles bits around buses for a living. It helps you understand what’s going on inside both your computer and your co-workers.

People upon whom I wish to inflict this brain-wrackery:

In your own time, chaps.

Google Maps - Tillicoultry

I didn’t know that Google had launched Google Maps in the UK.

Governor digs fixing potholes

Governor Arnie has a road crew dig up a pothole so he can fill it in during a press-call. Fucking unbelievable. Round here they’d have trouble finding a pothole-free road to dig-up!

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chicksnbreasts

They troll Flickr for cleavage shots so you don’t have to. (Not particularly Safe for Work)

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Improv Everywhere Mission: Even Better Than The Real Thing

Absolute bleedin’ genius. A fake U2 (including an Asian “The Edge”) perform a rooftop gig.

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May 31, 2005

Google Code: Summer of Code

Google offers $4,500 to students who work on Open Source projects over the summer.

May 30, 2005

jwz - kissing the CD goodbye.

I strongly suspect that I’ve purchased my last CD rack. I’m busy making plans involving FLAC encoding, a 400Gb hard drive, and a mass of python code to rip my CDs one final time.

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The 'Missing Words' Round

Script to automagically create “Have I Got News for You” style questions from BBC RSS feeds.

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Lost Season 2 Teaser

Go to Oceanic-Air.com, use Hurley’s “lucky” numbers a couple of times, and see a brief teaser for the next season of Lost.


About This Site

This is an archive of groovmother.com, the old blog run by Rod Begbie — A Scottish geek who lives in San Francisco, CA.

I'm the co-founder of Sōsh, your handy-dandy guide for things to do in San Francisco this weekend.