21.21.21.21.21

So, on the twenty first minute of the twenty first hour of the twenty first day of the twenty first year of the twenty first century I have relaunched my personal blog.

(OK, I’ll admit that with the last two ‘twenty ones’ I cheated using the publish tool on WordPress, as I was only reminded of the significance of the date and time after the event. I do have the receipt to prove I bought the new domain – beyond 2020visions.blog – and a new WordPress subscription on the 21st of January 2021 though 🙂 )

Looking back over my last 10 years of posts is also a reminder of the ‘significant date number’ ones I’ve done in the past on dates we will never experience again in our lifetimes like 11.11.11 , 10.11.12 and 12.12.12

The title of my original blog, that I started in 2009, was ‘2020 VisionsImagining the World my children will inherit‘ and it was a platform for personal musings on family, work and personal interests.

I started writing it with good intentions but ran out of steam half way through the decade. In more recent years I have experimented with other writing platforms like Medium but found them far too distracting as they employ all the addictive tricks of the main ‘social media’ platforms to keep you unhealthily hooked.

On balance though I do like the discipline of putting thoughts in writing from time to time. It encourages you to really ‘think’ about things and also to both ‘review’ and ‘plan’.

In terms of reviewing the last decade there was one particular post I wrote in 2009 that has provided a benchmark for my thinking back then and also one mechanism by which to measure the passing of time.

#SpringFair16 – droning on and on …

So, 20,000 steps, 13.5 kilometres and two sore feet later, the Spring Fair 2016 at the NEC is done for another season. I was there mainly as a driver and bag carrier for my wife and associates and, beyond the inevitable kitsch and distressed homewares fatigue, there were a few things that caught my eye amongst the many thousands of willow wicker weaved hearts of all proportions …

madeinbrumLit with LEDs

A couple of years on from observing how embedding LEDs in all manner of objects was clearly an emerging trend the fashion has matured a bit with some objects actually looking quite tasteful with a little LED enhancement and trendy lit lettering adorning the cover shot of the show catalogue as well as illuminating logos and messages of stands themselves.

Retro record playing

Hot on the heels of vinyl returning to popularity – a digital to analogue revolution that literally sounds great – the retail industry has been quick to reinvent the styles of record players that were first seen in the baby boomers’ bedrooms and the living rooms of their parents too – and why not. With recognition that with audio in particular, lossy digital formats and loudness wars have diminished the quality of recordings considerably the same observation vinylcould be applied to the playback devices themselves which are virtually invisible these days. I’m not sure the same could be applied to the other obvious retro trend of the moment – ‘analogue’ telephones. As I am old enough to remember having to ‘dial’ a telephone number that is not something I want to return to doing any time soon – even for a sense of nostalgic fun.

Scent delivery evolves

mandmAll corners of this show appeared to have stands with a product or two devoted to scent delivery – from traditional candles to LED enhanced, bluetooth connected devices. Less than a month on from the potential dangers of scented products in the home hitting the headlines again http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-35281338 the sense of nausea and faint headache these stands induced at times with their overwhelming aroma had a more sinister undertone with the latest research highlighting carcinogenic dangers of some scent substances when released in poorly ventilated homes. Anyway, the latest thing being driven by Italian company Mr & Mrs is ‘sonic-fragrance diffusion’ with George – an electronic scent diffuser that’s also a bluetooth speaker.

Drones get bigger and smaller

dronesA good five years on from the Parrot AR drone’s first appearance at CES, quadcopters have grown to sizes that would give you serious concussion and probable hospitalisation if they hit you but also shrunk to sizes resembling insects that could be feasibly swallowed if you were unfortunate to have your mouth open at the wrong moment.

Hand-crafted thermoplastic

I was anticipating seeing a MakerBot or two dotted around the stands and indeed there were a few printing the obligatory chains (an impressive output that demonstrates the amazing flexibility of 3D printing to create interconnected objects) and pen pots as well as displays of some of the more impressive outputs from the ‘thingiverse’ – including this T-Rex skull that apparently took the stand owner 17 hours to print http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:308335. Right now though, the analogue use of thermoplastics looks far more commercially viable with brands like Formesta starting to establish its use in DIY and hand-crafted modelling.

There’s a joke pill for that

sweetmedsThe diabolical gift people are guaranteed to provide a laugh or two and amongst the old favourites of the ‘grow your own’ variety was this lovely take on pharmaceutical product display

 

Honourable mentions

Turbospoke – the 21st Century version of pegging playing cards to your bike spokes to make them sound like motorbikes.

Easylace – a simple, colourful and inventive alternative to shoe laces

Facematt

Gravecard

My kingdom for a horse …

CH8FrdVWoAA954h“There’s nothing so good for the inside of a man as the outside of a horse.”

Lord Palmerston

I haven’t been the registered owner of a car for several years now since part exchanging my faithful and beloved Mazda for my wife’s new car – but since the end of last year I am the registered owner of a horse called Phacelia.

As a kid I couldn’t come within a few feet of any horse without my eyes puffing up and my nose running as they were, without doubt, the animals I was most allergic to.

So, the idea that I might own a horse, let alone spend time in its company, has never seemed a likely prospect. Even more unlikely is the idea that I would actually love this creature – but I do.

In fact, I will go as far as saying that owning and caring for this animal is one of the best things I have ever done. It’s not easy, it’s certainly not cheap but it is, in many ways, very therapeutic – particularly during a tough six months.

Up until now, I haven’t broadcast the fact that I ended up suddenly and unexpectedly in hospital during the early part of this year.

It’s the first time I’ve been admitted to hospital and hopefully the last – at least for many years to come I hope – and the aftermath has been challenging. Continue reading

48 Hours in AMU, then put on 'E'Bay for 4 days – Why I 'still' love the NHS

ct_pulmonary2If you watch programmes like 24 Hours in A&E then no doubt you’ve found yourself thinking what you would do if placed into similar scenarios, particularly if it was a close family member in a life threatening situation.

So it came as somewhat of a shock to find my own life threatened just over a month into 2015 and a couple of years before I’ve managed to reach at least my fiftieth birthday.

Obviously it’s only with the benefit of  hindsight that you come to understand the level of threat involved and I am sitting here now a week on from the original incident feeling very grateful I live at this time and place and for a succession of lovely people who did their respective jobs efficiently and effectively.

Anyway, in retrospect there were some warning signs during the previous few days before the fateful morning – an abnormal shortness of breath, particularly when going up stairs but put down to a cold bug that’s been going around the family.

On this morning it was a lot worse prompting me to call the local surgery in hope of a quick appointment. As luck would have it there was a virtually immediate slot available but I needed to get there within 15 minutes. It was during those frantic few minutes of getting ready to go out that I was a few short breaths away from asking my wife to call for a paramedic and it was also very clear that what I was experiencing was far from normal and that I was very much in unknown territory.

Continue reading

Green Nation – Free Solar Panel offers in South West UK – Greater freedom for the rest of us

This is a big shout out for a fantastic renewable energy company in the South West UK who are doing wonderful things with solar energy.

Established in 2011, Green Nation is developing solar farms of increasing size and helping public, commercial and private residences to maximise the benefits of solar power.

This is the type of organisation that is quietly making a big difference to some of the challenges we are facing today and on a blog related to imagining the world my children will inherit I have no hesitation in advocating and promoting their offerings.

Aside from being founded and run by people who are passionate about the transformative capabilities of technology, they already have many happy commercial and residential customers who are seeing the tangible and realistic benefits of installing the latest generation of solar panels.

Regular followers of this blog will know my admiration for the call to action campaign One Hundred Months and its excellent monthly updates which are a healthy mix of eye-opening climate science, political skepticism and technological optimisim.

As the counter clicked down to 29 at the beginning of this month, now well under the half way point in this credible and insightful action timeline, the concise and useful 5 point communication contained an excellent article documenting progress that is being made to combat our dangerous addiction to fossil fuels. Titled  10 reasons to be hopeful that we will overcome climate change point number 3 contains this encouraging comment … Continue reading