Cookies

An edible cookie Photo: Vyshnavi Bisani, 2020-08-18 (Unsplash).

“What is a cookie?” was a surprising question, because the person asking it makes most of the cookies I eat. Because of that I realized almost immediately, that the question referred to cookies commonly found on computers. I also realized that this could be an interesting topic for a weblog post. Why? because in my opinion, people do not take enough time to understand the implications of what they are doing when they are engaging the Internet with their computers.

When a web browser, such as Apple’s Safari, Google’s Chrome, Microsoft’s Edge or Mozilla’s Firefox connects with a website, that site typically transfers a data packet to the web browser. That packet is referred to as a cookie, sometimes with HTTP = Hypertext Transfer Protocol, as an adjective. This protocol is the foundation for data communication on the World Wide Web, an information system that enables content sharing over the Internet by users who are not computer specialists. Hypertext documents typically include hyperlinks to other resources that the user can easily access, for example by a mouse click or by tapping a screen. Cookies provide a unique identifier, and information about the visitor to the website. The information may include: website visits; activities performed, including pages viewed, links clicked, items added to a shopping cart; preferences such as language and currency as well as login information, including username and password.

Cookies allows websites to recognize specific computers and retrieve stored information about that computer’s user.

Here’s a simplified breakdown of the process:

  1. When visiting a website, a browser sends a request to the website’s server for the page you want to view.
  2. The website’s server includes a Set-Cookie header in its response, which instructs the browser to store the cookie.
  3. The HTTP cookie is saved in a dedicated cookie file on the browser’s computer.
  4. When a site is revisited, the browser sends the cookie back to the server in its Cookie header.
  5. The server retrieves the information stored in the HTTP cookie and uses it to personalize the browsing experience.

People like me, don’t want random websites to store information about them. They especially don’t want hackers and criminals (potential or real) to have that information. There are websites where I have an account, where I am willing for information to be stored when I undertake a transaction. The last time I did this was when I logged onto Entur, a site that allows the purchase of Norwegian train tickets.

Cookies can be irritating. EU regulations require every website to obtain user permission before installing tracking cookies. I have the I don’t care about cookies app installed on my Firefox browser. This extension automatically repeatedly gives permission, removes cookie warnings from almost all websites and saves thousands of unnecessary clicks! Normally, it blocks/ hides cookie related pop-ups, automatically accept the cookie policy. It does not delete cookies.

Corporations typically and perpetually emphasize the benefits of cookies for users. These are minimal, but can in limited ways can personalize browsing experience to emphasize individual preferences and interests, remember login information, shopping cart contents and other preferences. Most of the benefits accrue to website owners and can be regarded as user hinders. Information about user behavior most often results in an attempt to oversell, disguised as improving website design and content. They also use cookies to reduce their costs. By storing information locally on users’ computers, cookies reduce the load on web servers. Thus, users are paying for increases in speed and efficiency.

Some of the worst characteristics of cookies has to do with users intrusion. They track online behavior across multiple websites, potentially creating a detailed profile of browsing habits. They store personal information, raising concerns about data security misuse.

There are different types of cookies: 1) Persistent cookies are stored on your computer for a predetermined period, and are unaffected by the closing of a browser. However, they do have an expiration date, which determines how long they remain on a computer. This ranges from days to years. They are typically used for authentication and tracking; 2) session cookies are temporary. They are deleted when the browser is closed. These ensure that the website remembers actions when a person navigates from page to page. They are also used to remembering the items added to a shopping cart. 3) First-party cookies are set by the website being visited. ing directly. These cookies are generally considered safe, they offer a) an enhanced browsing experience, enabling shopping cart, user account, and personalized content features. They can also set user preferences for language, location or a specific theme. These cookies remember choices. 4) Third-party cookies are set by domains other than the website you’re visiting. They should be avoided. Some browsers, including Safari and Firefox, block them by default. This is one reason I use Firefox as my standard web browser. 5) Supercookies = Zombie cookies, are persistent tracking cookies stored outside of a browser’s usual cookie storage location. They can be difficult to remove and often reappear even after they have been deleted. This is because they’re often stored in multiple locations. Supercookies raise significant privacy concerns.

Web browser’s settings can be used to control cookies. Most browsers offer these options: 1) Block all cookies: This setting prevents all websites from storing cookies on a computer. This is often a too severe option. 2) Block third-party cookies: This is usually a better choice, preventing tracking cookies from being stored, while still allowing first-party cookies. 3) Delete cookies: This option can a) Deletes all cookies, b) Delete cookies from specific websites or c) Delete specific types of cookies. It can also be used to delete cookies automatically when a browser is closed.

Most browsers provide a cookie manager, allowing a person to view and manage the cookies stored on a computer. Details about each cookie are provided, including its name, domain, expiration date and the data it contains. Cookies typically encrypt login credentials, which only the originating website can decode.

Here’s how to find the cookie settings in some popular browsers: Chrome: Settings > Privacy and security > Cookies and other site data; Firefox: Settings > Privacy & Security > Cookies and Site Data; Edge: Settings > Cookies and site permissions > Manage and delete cookies and site data; Safari: Safari > Preferences > Privacy.

In countries where privacy is at risk, it can be useful to install an alternative browser, such as Brave, Librewolf or Tor. These are free and open-source web browsers. Brave is based on the Chromium web browser. Librewolf and Tor are both based on Firefox. All three browsers offer the most privacy protection compared to other browsers.

Chromium is not the same as Chrome. It is a free and open-source web browser project, primarily developed and maintained by Google. It is a widely-used codebase, providing the vast majority of code for Google Chrome and many other browsers, including Microsoft Edge, Samsung Internet, and Opera. The code is also used by several app frameworks.

Reviews of Brave praised the browser’s speed, privacy aspects and built-in ad blocking, as well as potential reduced battery usage. A 2021 research study analyzing the data reported by browsers to their back-end servers by Douglas J. Leith of the University of Dublin reported that Brave had the highest level of privacy. Brave is the only mainstream browser to pass the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Cover Your Tracks test.

Tor is a free overlay network = a logical network built on on top of a physical) network, that enables anonymous communication. Built on free and open-source software with seven thousand + volunteer-operated relays worldwide. Users typically have their Internet traffic randomly routed through the network. This makes it difficult to trace a user’s Internet activity, by preventing any point on the Internet, (except a user’s device) from being able to view both where traffic originated from and where it is ultimately going. This effectively exacerbates network surveillance. These are available for Windows, Linux, Apple and Android devices.

Cookie management summary: Install I Don’t Care about Cookies; block third-party cookies; Deleting cookies periodically to protect privacy by removing tracking data. Use private browsing mode to prevent a browser from storing cookies, history, and other browsing data. Avoid virtual private networks (VPNs). encrypts your internet traffic and routes it through a server in a different location, making it harder for websites to track your activity and identify your location.

While readers have to be free to make their own decisions. Mozilla Firefox is my standard web browser. In addition, I have Google Chromium, should Firefox fail. I also have Brave, if increased scrutiny is required. These browsers are all available for Android, iOS, Linux, Mac and Windows operating systems. So that I have them on my hand-held device, laptop computer and floortop computer (This new 37 litre machine, replaced my 0.5 litre desktop computer in late 2025). Most of the time, I only use Firefox, on my laptop as well as my floortop machine. I very seldom use a web browser with my hand-held device. That is because, use of a web browser encourages use of a keyboard, which functions best when a person can touch type. Touch typing is the one skill that I learned in my early teenage years, that has been most useful, and well worth the investment in time to learn. Yes, for almost forty years I have heard that touch typing will soon be out of date. I doubt it will be obsolete before the end of my life.

Challenger Deep

Challenger Deep (CD) is the deepest known point in the Earth’s seabed hydrosphere. It is located in the Marianna Trench, in the Federated States of Micronesia. The depression is named after the British Royal Navy survey ships HMS Challenger (1858 – 1980), the fifth of eight ships with that name, whose expedition of 1872–1876 first located the Deep, and HMS Challenger II (1932 – 1954), whose expedition of 1950–1952 established its record-setting depth, 10 935 m below the surface. Its coordinates are at 11°22′ N 142°35′ E.

CD is a slot-shaped valley in the floor of Mariana Trench, with depths exceeding 10 850 meters. It consists of three basins, each 6 to 10 km long and 2 km wide. They are separated by mounds between the basins 200 to 300 m higher. The three basins extend about 48 km west to east if measured at the 10 650 m isobath.

The first descent by any vehicle was conducted by the United States Navy using the bathyscaphe Trieste in 1960-01-23 crewed by Swiss oceanographer Jacques Piccard (1922 – 2008) and U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh (1931 – 2023). The Trieste is currently preserved as an exhibit in the National Museum of the United States Navy in Washington, D.C. It was decommissioned in 1966 after its deep-sea explorations.

The only bathyscaphe I have seen in person is the Trieste II, a vessel designed modified by the Naval Electronics Laboratory in San Diego, California and built at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard, located on Mare Island, a peninsula part of the city of Vallejo, on San Pablo Bay in San Francisco Bay, California. It incorporated the original Terni, Italian-built sphere used in Trieste. This sphere was suspended from a new, more seaworthy and streamlined float, operating on the same principles. It was completed in 1964, then placed on board USNS Francis X. McGraw (T-AK241) and shipped, via the Panama Canal, to Boston.

Trieste II conducted dives in the vicinity of the loss site of USS Thresher (SSN-593), lost on 1963-04-10, during deep-diving tests about 350 km east of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, killing everyone on board. This lead to the implementation of a rigorous submarine safety program = SUBSAFE. Wreckage from the Thresher was found.

Between 1965-09 and 1966-05, Trieste II underwent extensive modification and conversion at Mare Island Naval Shipyard. A third reconfiguration followed resulting in the installation of a new pressure sphere, designed for operation to 6,100 m depth. She was then used as a test vehicle for the deep submergence. This resulted in the design and construction of other deep-diving submersibles which could be used in rescuing crews and recovering objects from submarines in distress below levels reachable by conventional methods.

The Trieste II was listed as equipment in the Navy inventory until 1969-09-01, when it was placed in service, with the hull number X-1. She was reclassified as a deep submergence vehicle (DSV) on 1971-06-01. The Trieste class DSV were replaced by the Alvin class DSV: more capable, more maneuverable and less fragile. After that the Trieste II was preserved as a museum ship at the Naval Undersea Museum, Keyport, Washington.

Pressure Drop

The most extensive sonar mapping of CD was undertaken by the DSSV (deep submersible support vessel) Pressure Drop, a 68.3-metre former US Navy ship. Refitted to accommodate 47 people – including 19 crew and 12 technical specialists. In previous lives it was USNS Indomitable (T-AGOS-7), a United States Navy Stalwart-class ocean surveillance ship in service from 1985 to 2002. From 2003 until 2014, she was in commission in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) as the oceanographic research ship NOAAS McArthur II (R 330). It was then sold to Victor Vescovo’s (1966 – ) company Caladan Oceanic.

Vescovo graduated with a B.A. in Economics and Political Science from Stanford University, followed by a M.S. in Defense and Arms Control Studies from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a M.B.A. from Harvard Business School.

Inkfish purchased the DSSV Pressure Drop in 2022 and the crewed Deep Submersible Vehicle (DSV) Limiting Factor and was part of a package for marine research purposes. Inkfish was founded by Gabe Newell (1962 – ), a video-game developer who co-founded Valve and the digital distribution service Steam. Inkfish is a global philanthropic organization focused on marine research and innovation, known for its advanced research vessels and commitment to developing new technologies for scientific exploration. Limiting Factor has been renamed Bakunawa. The name refers to the Philippine moon dragon or moon-eating dragon, a serpent that looks like a Dragon, in Philippine mythology. It was given the designation Triton 36000/2 by its manufacturer Triton Submarines, located in Sebastian, Florida, USA.

A Norwegian Kongsberg SIMRAD EM124 multibeam echosounder system, was used to show the bottom of Challenger Deep comprised three ‘pools’ – Western, Central and Eastern.

In 2012, James Cameron became the first person to solo dive that point. Piccard, Walsh and Cameron remained the only people to reach the Challenger Deep until 2019, when regular dives in DSV Limiting Factor began. To date, 19 of the 22 successful descents have been made in the DSV Limiting Factor. No other craft has made a repeat descent. To date, there have been 27 people who have descended to the CD, the last on 2022-07-12.

My interest in deep dives began by reading about William Beebe (1877-1962). Beebe was an American naturalist, ornithologist, marine biologist, entomologist, explorer and writer. He conducted numerous expeditions for the New York Zoological Society, such as the Arcturus mission (a six-month-long research expedition in 1925 from New York to the Sargasso Sea, Cocos Island and the Galápagos Islands). He undertook deep dives in the Bathysphere, a spherical deep-sea submersible lowered into the ocean on a cable. It was used to conduct a series of dives off Nonsuch, Bermuda from 1930 to 1934. The Bathysphere was designed in 1928 and 1929 by the American engineer Otis Barton (1899 – 1992), to be used by Beebe to study undersea wildlife. Beebe and Barton conducted dives in the Bathysphere together, marking the first time that a marine biologist observed deep-sea animals in their native environment. Many of the descents made by Beebe and Barton in the Bathysphere were described by Beebe in his book, Half-Mile Down (1934). I frequently borrowed this book from New Westminster Public Library. Currently, I have an e-book edition of this book.

The bathysphere had a number of limitations. Thus, the next step was to produce a vehicle that offered independent movement. The first undertaking were made by Jacques Piccard’s, father Auguste (1884 – 1962).

Context: The father was a physicist and professor of meteorology, who first experimented with balloons. In 1931 he and Paul Kipfer (1885 – 1975) used a balloon launched in Augsburg, Germany to reach a height of 15 781 m to measure cosmic radiation. In 1932 Piccard and Belgian Max Cosyns (1906 – 1998) reached 16 940 m, starting off from Dübendorf, Switzerland. The older Piccard completed 27 balloon expeditions, ultimately reaching a height of 23 000 m. The balloon used was the FNRS 1, named after Belgian Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique, the funding organization for the venture.

After World War II Auguste Piccard, used his experience to explore the ocean depths. In 1937 he designed the FNRS 2, built in Belgium between 1946 and 1948. It was damaged during 1948 trials in the Cape Verde Islands. It was then substantially rebuilt and greatly improved. The vessel was renamed FNRS 3 and carried out a series of descents including one to 4 000 m into the Atlantic off Dakar, Senegal, in 1954.

An improved bathyscaphe, the Trieste, was designed by Auguste Piccard and built by the Italian shipyards Acciaierie Terni and Cantieri Riuniti dell’Adriatico. It was launched in 1953, and dived to 3 150 metres that year. In 1958, the Trieste was acquired by the United States Navy, taken to California, and equipped with a new cabin designed to enable it to reach the seabed of the great oceanic trenches.

Rush

A German postcard of Yale, British Columbia from 1910, with a dredger in the foreground.

In the course of this post’s first five minutes of existence, it had been given four titles, not all of which were written down immediately. The first, Finding Australia, was based on an opinion post by Julianne Schultz, While Trump is moving fast and breaking things, Americans wanting to escape should come to Australia.

I realized that this was analogous to the situation my maternal grandparents found themselves in, living in Gateshead, in northern England, at a time when there wasn’t even northern soul to comfort them. Their then youngest daughter, Margaret, had died of tuberculosis in 1908, and my grandmother, born Jane Briggs (1880 – 1972) was determined to leave England. They escaped to the wild west of British Columbia, first Steveston then Kelowna. Both my aunt Mollie (1906 – 2010) and my mother, Jennie (1916 – 2021) had tuberculosis, and both were sterilized, which is the main reason why I was adopted and became a McLellan.

This situation encouraged me to reflect on other forms of escape more generally and the attraction of gold rushes, specifically. So the second title was, Finding your gold rush. It was then modified to Finding your personal gold rush, before it ended up as Rush.

Long after I had started writing this post I discovered that Jane’s husband, my maternal grandfather, Harry Andison (1878 – 1947), had lived in Yale, British Columbia. It was at the southern boundary of the Fraser Canyon gold rush (1858 – 1927). Before I knew this fact, I had regularly stopped at Yale when opportunity presented itself. It was the one location on the upper Fraser River = north of Hope, population 6 686 in 2021, a district municipality at the confluence of the Fraser and Coquihalla rivers, that had appealed as a place to live. It was serene, and seemed to have a more moderate temperature than Lytton, Lillooet or even Quesnel.

Lynne Brown (ca. 1952 – ), in Whoever Gives Us Bread: The Story of Italians in British Columbia (2013), notes: The title of “the largest town west of Chicago and north of San Francisco” moved in rapid succession from Yale to Lillooet, and then to Barkerville. Yes, these former boom-towns became bust-towns. Less polite comments include epithets such as: the wickedest little settlement in British Columbia and a veritable Sodom and Gomorrah of vice, violence and lawlessness.

The disadvantage of a lake, and other varieties of stagnant water, is that they attract mosquitos, while swiftly flowing rivers do not. Mosquito bites always caused a severe reaction in me, so I have always chosen places to live that are relatively free of mosquitos. This is why I live close to salt water, and definitely not near a lake! For those interested, Iceland is the only European country without mosquitos.

I remember driving my mother, Jennie (1916 – 2021), from New Westminster to Kamloops, on some unremembered date. We stopped for coffee at Ashcroft on the Thompson River. She confided in me, that this was where she had always wanted to live. The population of Kelowna in 1920, a couple of years after her family moved there, was about 1 500. The population of Ashcroft in 2011 was 1 628. This helped me understand its appeal. I think the reason she never moved either to Ashcroft or to Kelowna, as a widow, was that she felt the need to live close to a near relative = my sister, Mychael, her choice of name, but adopted and named Morva Alison, born Maureen MacCormack. They lived less than 800 meters from each other, for almost 30 years, excluding the 19 years she lived with my parents as a child.

Rush has a lot of different meanings, so it gives a lot of scope for individual attention. A dictionary can help people examine how the word is used. Yes, it can be a noun or an adjective. Of course it can also be a verb, with and without an object. Many of the definitions refer to a sudden escape to something, or a release of emotion.

The wild west of the Pacific Northwest, of which British Columbia is a part, is exemplified in two complementory works. The first, chronologically is Edmund Naughton’s (1926 – 2013) western novel, McCabe (1959). After more than 50 years, I found an e-book version of the book on 2025-12-17, hidden behind an inaccurate title, Strike from the Sky, but with Naughton listed as the author rather than Alexander McKee (1918 – 1992). I had originally learned that Odhams Press had published Naughton’s McCabe with McKee’s Strike from the Sky and James Mitchell’s (1926 – 2002) Steady Boys Steady (1960). There was even a used copy available from Yare Books in Great Yarmouth, England for £21.77 plus £33.13 in postage = £54.84 equivalent to NOK 746.88 = USD 75.

Edmund Naughton

Until now, my familiarity with McCabe is related to the second work, Robert Altman’s (1925 – 2006) film McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971), my favourite western film. Altman is generally appreciated for his western revisionism. Yes, one is entitled to ask just how much of this approach is derived from Naughton’s work? Brad Bigelow (1967 – ), a self described champion of neglected books, contends that McCabe follows the classic western formula, at least superficially: stranger comes to town, settles in, the town adjusts to him. Then circumstances change and the former stranger is forced to decide whether to run or stand his ground. It is reminiscent of Fred Zinnemann’s (1907 – 1997) High Noon (1952).

With the publication of McCabe seven years after the film High Noon (1952), it is appropriate to ask if Naughton is looking back or forward? Is he anticipating western and other film trends that came in the next 10-15 years, or looking back at older films and, to a lesser extent, novels. Naughton’s protagonist, John McCabe, is an anti-hero like John Yossarian in Joseph Heller’s (1923 – 1999 ) Catch 22 (1961).

In Darkness at High Noon: The Carl Foreman Documents, a 2002 documentary based in part on a lengthy 1952 letter from screenwriter Carl Foreman (1914 – 1984) to film critic Bosley Crowther (1905–1981). It appears that Foreman’s role in the creation and production of High Noon has been unfairly downplayed. The film originated from a four-page plot outline Foreman wrote that turned out to be very similar to The Tin Star (1947) a short story written by John W. Cunningham (1915 – 2002). Foreman purchased the film rights to Cunningham’s story and wrote the screenplay. Unfortunately, the documentary vilifies High Noon‘s director, Stanley Kramer (1913 – 2001), rather than providing insights into the creative process used in producing High Noon.

Westerns, novels or films, demand a deeper understanding of violence. I lack this, but gained some basic understandings in order to appreciate McCabe’s dead-eye shot, the adaptation of his Colt revolver to fire without a trigger. Unfortunately, my mind refuses to live in the past. It goes forward to the Rust (2021) film project at Bonanza Creek, New Mexico, which resulted in the death of Halyna Anatoliivna Hutchins, née Androsovych (1979 – 2021), a Ukrainian cinematographer. I see parallels. McCabe has killed one man, and in his mind this can be attributed to an accident. McCabe lived his earlier life mostly as a traveling gambler. He reminds himself that he was chased off a riverboat as a greenhorn amateur. At times he lacks the ethical values of the time. Unlike the other Euro-Americans, he tries to be fair to everyone, including Chinese and Indians (yes, the First Nation people rather than people from the Asian subcontinent) in the little mining town of Presbyterian Church where he decides to set up a saloon and, later, a whorehouse. I am uncertain if McCabe’s vocabulary allowed him to use other, potentially more polite, terms for such an establishment: House of assignation, brothel, bordello and bawdy house, may not have been available to him.

In English, there is an expression: calling a spade a spade. The idiom originates in the classical Greek of Plutarch’s (46 – 119) Apophthegmata Laconica (c 100), and was introduced into the English language in 1542 in Nicolas Udall’s (1504 – 1556) translation, incorporating some of the work of Erasmus (1466 – 1536) including the replacement of Plutarch’s images of “trough” and “fig” with the more familiar garden tool.

I had wondered if spade originated with a card suite. Their symbolic representations, colours, French names and English names are: ♣ often black, sometimes green, blue or pink = trèfles = clubs; ♦ often red, but sometimes orange, yellow or blue = carreaux = diamonds; ♥ most often red, but sometimes yellow = cœurs = hearts; ♠ most often black, sometimes green or blue = piques = spades. I was wrong.

McCabe is set in the Puget Sound area of Washington State in 1908. My grandfather arrived in British Columbia in 1910. As a cattle buyer, he was armed. Was he part of the wild west? I have no definitive answer, but tend towards a yes. When I think of westerns, I only have vague ideas of place and time. How far west is the west? Where does the west stop? What is further west than the west? Sometimes I think of the time period 1870 – 1900. However, one of my first exposures to Westerns involved the Roy Rogers show, which is set in the 1950s. I know this because Pat Brady drives what looks like a military jeep. I have written about Roy Rogers before. My other reference point for westerns is Have Gun – Will Travel, a radio and television series from 1957 through 1963, with Richard Boone (1917 – 1981) as Paladin, a gentleman gunfighter for hire. The name originates from the name of a group of twelve knights in Charlemagne’s (748 – 814) court. However, paladin has come to refer to any chivalrous hero.

I would like to update some information about Dale Evans (1912–2001). An 8 minute YouTube video discusses 5 men she allegedly disliked/hated, for various reasons, although the common thread seems to be masculine intoxication. It is claimed that she carried wounds that never healed. The allegation is that the men she disliked most were: Roy Rogers (1911 – 1998), John Wayne = Marion Robert Morrison (1907 – 1979), Clark Gable (1901–1960), Gene Autrey (1907–1998) and Bob Hope (1903–2003). That said, the truthiness of YouTube videos can always be discussed.

McCabe is far ahead of his time in his attitude towards women — or at least towards Mrs. Miller, who arrives and takes over the job of running McCabe’s second business. Though the two are partners in business and, fairly regularly, in bed, McCabe understands that he cannot take their relationship for granted.

McCabe was sensitive about being noticed in her room. He took care, though, to be discreet, and to attend to business. There were nights when he didn’t want to visit. Those were the nights when he knew she would be smoking, naked on the bed, with the wicks down in the kerosene lamps. If he came, she would look at him with eyes like violet stones in cold water — as if he were to blame for the man she had sold herself to that evening.

McCabe also exhibits a degree of emotional intelligence that’s still pretty rare in most male characters. He struggles with Mrs. Miller’s dispassionate approach to their nights together. Though frustrated that she quickly sees that he is close to illiterate and far less trustworthy with figures, he wishes they could share more than just a physical intimacy: “All my life I been walking around with a block of ice inside me, Constance, and I don’t hardly get the sawdust brushed off before you got me back in the icehouse.”

Naughton’s view of good and evil is a far cry from High Noon, too. McCabe is a gambler, a schemer, a coward and, when pressed, a killer. Rev. Elliott, who has erected the church that gives Presbyterian Church its name, is bitter, bigoted and anti-social: he would prefer that the rest of the town disappeared. When gunmen arrive to face off with McCabe, they are like Trump, transactional. They are present as representatives (some would say stooges) of a distant corporation, carrying out a simple business transaction: Snake River Mining Company can’t afford you: can’t afford a man it can’t buy out. Know that? Never tolerate that. Can afford Sheehan, damned fop they sent to you last week: margin of corruption it allows for in its budget. Company calculated the cost of Presbyterian Church; who collects doesn’t matter. More corrupt people are, easier they can be controlled; company can always send them to jail when they get to be a nuisance.

… At any rate, McCabe, they can’t afford you around. Bad example. Pile all these mountains on you, if they have to; so people thereabouts will believe it, if they deny you ever existed.

Naughton may have been the only writer of westerns to have learned more from George Orwell (1903 – 1950) than Zane Grey (1872 – 1939) — although Brad Bigwell tells us that one English reviewer cited a different influence, dismissing the book as the “Latest example of the neo-Freudian [from the work of Sigmund Freud (1856 – 1939)] intellectual death-wishful Westerns.” Suffice it to say that McCabe merits more than just footnote status in reference to a much better known movie. It’s original, innovative, and as gripping as any thriller. As that one reviewer put it, “You don’t have to like westerns to like this one.”

Notes

Northern soul is a music and dance movement that emerged in Northern England and the Midlands in the early 1970s. It developed from the British mod scene, based on a particular style of Black American soul music with a heavy beat and fast tempo (100 bpm and above).

Perhaps the best known northern soul track is Tainted Love, composed by Ed Cobb (1938 – 1999), originally recorded by Gloria Jones (1945 – ) in 1964. It attained worldwide fame after being reworked by British synth-pop duo Soft Cell with vocalist Marc Almond (1957 – ) and instrumentalist David Ball (1959 – ) for their album Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret (1981). The main synth used in Soft Cell’s Tainted Love was the Korg Maxi-Korg 800DV, along with a Synclavier for additional sounds. The bassline was played on a Korg SB-100 Synthe-Bass.

Then there is Mod = modernist = someone who listens to modern jazz. It started as a London based 1950s working class subculture with a focus on music and fashion. In terms of transport, mode rode motor scooters, usually Lambrettas or Vespas. To understand mods, I recommend the London trilogy novels by Colin MacInnis (1914 – 1976): City of Spades (1957), Absolute Beginners (1959) and Mr Love & Justice (1960). The first book uses spade in a different context than that previously mentioned, because it is about the adventures of Johnny Fortune, a recently arrived Nigerian immigrant, and the emergent black culture in London in the late 1950s. The middle book in particular, is about mods, specifically. In addition there is Richard Weight (1970 – ) Mod: From Bebop to Britpop, Britain’s Biggest Youth Movement (2013). MOD = Ministry of Defense, which may be the reason why the British roundel is used as a symbol for the subculture version of mod.

In my world, modern jazz is exemplified by Herbie Hancock (1940 – ), Chic Corea (1941 – 2021) and Norwegian Nils Petter Mohr (1960 – ). Then there are the old timers: Scott Joplan (1868 – 1917), Bix Beiderbecke (1903 – 1931), Billy Holiday (1915 – 1959), Ella Fitzgerald (1917 – 1996), Dizzy Gillespie (1917 – 1993), Art Blakey (1919 – 1990), Dave Brubeck (1920 – 2012), Sarah Vaughan (1924 – 1990), John Coltrane (1926 – 1967) and Miles Davis (1926 – 1991). Maybe Isaak Hayes (1942 – 2008) should also be included somewhere. I would also like to mention that for many years when my family stayed at a cabin at Blind Bay on Shuswap Lake, the only music I was willing to listen to was Rhapsody in Blue, by George Gershwin (1898 – 1957).

Rockers were the alternative subculture to the mods. To understand them, one must realize the position motorcycling held during the post-world war II period. Initially, it held a prestigious position and was positively associated with wealth and glamour. However, starting in the 1950s, the working class were able to buy inexpensive cars, so motorcycles became transport for the poor. These motorcycles were transformed into cafe racers, which were used to intimidate others (mods!) and project masculinity. In terms of clothing they wore leather motorcycle jackets, no or a classic open-face helmet, aviator goggles and white silk scarves. Also popular were T-shirts, leather caps, jeans and engineer or motorcycle boots. These boots were laceless so they would not interfere with motorcycle drive belts, with well insulated shafts and almost full lower leg protection in case of an accident. Yes, I went through a phase myself where I wore engineer boots. Today, almost all of my footwear are Allbirds.

Teenage Engineering OP-XY alternatives

This photo comes as click bait for an Apollo Hanzo video. No, the woman does not appear in the video.

At a visual aesthetic level, I am attracted to many Teenage Engineering products, including the OP-XY, described by one fanchild as: sleek, smart and sophisticated, the most complete, portable sequencer ever built. Yes, if my life depended on it, I probably could afford the NOK 25 000 = US$ 2 500 price tag, but I won’t. Why? Because my GAS = Gear Acquisition Syndrome for musical equipment, is running close to empty.

I allowed myself to watch/ listen to the same Apollo Hanzo video shown in the above photo. The video was published 2024-11-20. The woman does not appear in the video, she is simply click bait. I am surprised by the wide-eyed appearance of the woman, the upper-case adjective ONLY followed by an outrageous price, as well as the use of phenomenal and !, possibly referring to the synth. Lots of synths can do the same thing as an OP-XY, that cost only a fraction of the price, or are available without charge = free, if one is willing to use a software synth.

I had originally written about this Swedish company in a post five years ago. The OP-XY is an updated version of the OP-1. I have checked the Norwegian market, using Finn for used equipment and Evenstad for new products. On 2025-10-19, I found a used OP-XY for sale for NOK 19 000. On 2025-11-30, I was unable to find a used one, but the price of a new one was NOK 23 690. However, a substantially inferior OP-Z can be purchased used for NOK 3 500, and a slightly inferior OP-1 for NOK 15 000.

Another choice is to begin with a Tracktion Engine, an open-source audio engine, that offers standard capabilities like recording, editing and mixing. The hardware platform is based on the Raspberry PI, a popular single-board computer design. On top of this construction, one builds a LMN-3 DAW = Digital Audio Workstation. Together these become a DIY alternative to the Teenage Engineering OP-1, since it’s designed to be an all-in-one portable solution for music making. The price will be closer to 10% of the OP-1.

When it comes to synths, the easiest choice for most musicians is just to use Apple equipment, such as a M4 Mac Mini, and equip it with a software synth. However, Apple lost me as a customer in the previous millennium, when their Performa 5200 failed to work adequately. Microsoft and Windows have also failed to capture me as a client. People may be surprised, but since the late 1980s to almost 2000, Apple wasn’t in contention. It was the Atari 520 ST, a competitor to the Amiga. The reason was simple. It came equipped with a Musical Instrument Digital Interface = MIDI port. As 2025 turns into 2026, digital audio workstations (DAWs) can deliver hundreds of audio tracks, versatile effect plug-ins, and incredibly flexible editing tools for free. Today, the main challenge is the price of random access memory (RAM). I am using an Asus AiO (All-in-One) machine as a DAW.

I already have a Native Instruments Komplete Audio 6, that provides 6 channels = 4 analog in/out, 2 digital in/out, 2 headphone out and MIDI in/out. In terms of a microphone, I have Rode NT1, which should be adequate for vocals. All of this equipment is being moved slowly down to the playshop.

Roland Corporation, founded in 1972 by Ikutaro Kakehashi (1930 – 2017) in Osaka, Japan, has been a pioneer in the electronic music industry. The company is renowned for its innovative synthesizers and electronic instruments that have shaped various music genres. Roland synthesizers are known for their innovative sound design capabilities and versatility. In 1972 it released the TR-77, TR-33, and TR-55 drum machines. This was followed in 1973 with the SH-1000, Japan’s first compact synthesizer.

Of course, I already have a synth, a Behringer MS-1 = Roland SH-101 clone, which I have written about in a previous post. The SH-101 was an analog synthesizer manufactured between 1982 and 1986. It was a commercial failure during the time of its manufacture, but later became a staple of electronic music in the 1990s, particularly for house music. Since I have not mastered it, I have no need for any other synth. However, to allow multiple people to work with synths, here is my short list of synth purchases, all Behringer products. Prices at Evenstad Music in Norway on 2026-01-09 are given. Divide by 10 for American dollar prices. In declining price order = but in intended purchase order, these are: a TD-3 bass line synthesizer Modded Out (NOK 1 940) = clone of the Roland TB‑303 Bassline from 1981; a Wasp = clone of Electronic Dream Plant (EDP) from 1978 (NOK 1 718); a RD-6 drum machine = clone of the Roland TR-606 Drumatix from 1981 (NOK 1 448). The RD-6 and TD-3 provide electronic drum and bass sidemen, allowing for a one-man band.

If one is addicted to Teenage Engineering there are nine Pocket Operators. In general these cost about NOK 1 000 each. Together, that is still a lot of money. These are: PO-12 Rhythm – a basic drum machine with 16 sounds and 16 effects; PO-14 Sub – a bass synthesizer with 15 sounds that also includes a micro drum machine with 16 parts; PO-16 Factory – a melodic lead synthesizer with 15 lead sounds and (like the PO-14) a micro drum machine with 16 sounds; PO-20 Arcade – a Chiptune groovebox, with 16 drum and melodic parts based on sounds from old arcade machines. It has a chord mode, with 16 different chords able to be chained together like patterns; PO-24 Office – a groovebox inspired by vintage office equipment. It combines both real samples of office hardware and original synthesizer engines. It has a solo function, which mutes all other parts for the duration of a 16 step pattern. It also includes a step multiplier which acts like a stutter effect, repeating the note; PO-28 Robot – a lead synthesizer based on 8-bit sounds. It features 15 different lead synthesizer engines and a 16-part micro drum machine. It can be played live by using the buttons as a keyboard but also features a sequencer. The Robot has a glide function that can add portamento between notes or function as vibrato; PO-32 Tonic – a drum machine based on the MicroTonic VST plugin made in collaboration with Magnus Lidström (? – ). It has control over each part’s pitch and morph (blend between two sounds); PO-33 K.O! – a sampler, where samples can be recorded through line in or microphone and sorted into one of eight melodic tracks or one of eight drum tracks. Melodic tracks are capable of playing chromatically while drum tracks are played as hits; PO-35 Speak – a speech synthesizer, with 16 tracks, of which #1 – #15 use the speech synthesis engine and #16 uses a monophonic 16 part version of the PO-32’s sound engine. Sounds are used in the PO-35 by recording through the microphone or line-in. The PO-35 has a total of 120 seconds of recording memory: Eight seconds per slot. There are eight voices to choose from for the speech engine: Natural, Autotune, Retro, Noise, Robot, Fifth, Vocoder and Synth.

An updated version of the PO-33 is the EP-133 K.O II sampler offers: 9 projects each with 80 000 notes; projects contain 4 groups each with 99 patterns; patterns have 12 tracks for samples and MIDI; song mode for chaining scenes into 99 positions; resampling for patterns and sounds; variable pattern length per group (1 to 99 bars); 16 mono / 12 stereo voice polyphony; use groups to mix and match patterns on the fly; record 12 fader assignments simultaneously; sequence in free time or quantized with swing•flexible and dynamic midi functionality. Any pad can be assigned to a MIDI channel; loop mode from OB-4 with length and slide; 12 pressure and velocity sensitive pads; hands-free sampling key combination; instantaneous time correction and erase; slice samples live or automatically; note-triggered sidechain for groove control•stereo / mono sampling at 46.875 kHz / 16-bit: punch-in fx 2.0 (pressure sensitive); instant commit to quickly construct beats; 32-bit float signal chain, 24-bit ADC / DAC, and more.

Another approach is to buy a ASM = Ashun Sound Machine Hydrasynth. This costs about NOK 17 000, for a version with a keyboard or a sequencer. I would prefer not to spend so much money. Thus, an alternative is to opt for a Behringer Deepmind 12, which would cost under NOK 10 000. Before the pandemic, these machines cost about half their current price.

A fourth approach, and one with increasing appeal, is to buy used Behringer equipment that fits into Euroracks. These racks can also be bought used, or made in the household playshop.

Late in November I discovered by accident that there was a black friday sale going on at the online bookstore I most frequently use. Among the items purchased was a book by Oli Freke, Synthesizer Evolution: From Analogue to Digital (and Back) (2020). This provides an overview of almost all commercially available synths mainly from about 1970 to 1995. It even mentions pre-modern equipment, such as the 1759 Clavecin électrique, which automatically rang church bells. Some later equipment up to 1998 is also mentioned.

Note: this post was written as a reaction to the woman appearing in a Apollo Hanzo video thumbnail. Yes, thumbnail is the official YouTube term!

Cyprical Actions

Sometimes titles do not accurately reflect a topic being discussed. Initially, I thought this post would just be about air-fryers. However, this post evolved, and has more to do with some aspects of the infrastructure of our house = Fjellheim (unique official name in Inderøy municipality, from a time before numbers and street names were used) = mountain home (translation) = Vangshylla 82 (current official street name and number, followed on the next line with our postal code 7670, then Inderøy. Outside of Norway, we add Norway on yet another line) = Cliff Cottage (our unofficial English language name for the house).

We are not the only creatures living at Cliff Cottage. We have squirrels (currently 3), titmice, magpies and several other species of birds. Below is a photo of an underground entrance belonging to another resident, most likely a badger, although we have not seen it for several years. New entrances are found periodically.

Many people, especially those who know me, will be surprised that I possess culinary skills. These are activated about once a week, often on a Wednesday, when I take responsibility for making dinner. On 2025-12-03, at 13:00, I took responsibility for making fish & chips, one of my standard meals. I was going to use an air-fryer for the first time.

What seems normal, even logical, in a kitchen does not always feel that way for me. I made notes for the future. Including, that next time I should have the two buckets stop cooking at the same time. Thus, I thought I should probably include more detailed instructions putting all of the steps in sequence. Thus, I told myself to insert the buckets before heating. I followed this up by writing, that I should outsert those buckets after the meal is cooked, but before the next step, serving the dinner. I thought outsert was a better word than remove.

For me, the use of re is problematic. In letters, it seems to preface the letter body, and seems to mean: in the matter of or concerning. I am told it originates from Latin. It seems redundant. Another usage of the term, appears to be again, as in reheat. It has been in the English language since 1727. Thus, if one is going to place something into position, I am content to use the term insert. If the opposite is being considered, then outsert seems the logical choice.

Redundant is not another use of re. It comes from the Latin redundāns, present participle of redundō (to overflow, redound), from red- (again, back) + undō (to surge, flood), from unda (a wave).

I appreciate words being balanced. For example, using the same verb but with different prefixes or suffixes. In the above example, other choices could have been to plug in/ in plug/ inplug the buckets before heating, and to plug out/ out plug/ outplug them after the meal is cooked.

After eating this meal, I decided that I should follow this internal pondering with a weblog post. The next challenge came almost immediately. Half of me wanted to write the post title as: Reciprocal Actions. Except, when I said that first word aloud, it turned out to be reciprical. Another percentage of me felt that there should be no re. Thus, I decided to write it ciprical, rather than ciprocal. Cyprocal refers to a syrup that contains cyproheptadine, which is an antihistamine used to block the action of histamine in the body. It is commonly used to control allergies and stimulate appetite.

Yes, I have spelling challenges, which is why I appreciate text processors making wavy red lines under words they regard as misspelled. Their built-in spelling checkers, even provide sugestions for spelling wurds corectly, if one follows them. However, I am also a person who believes that sugestion is the operative wurd in the above sentence. If I don’t feel like spelling wurds corectly, I won’t follow the sugestion. This may explain why I encounter more wavy red lines than most people.

There are great linguists among us, who can provide some enlightenment. Bugs Bunny is one of them. The Tasmanian Devil is fast on the trail of Marvin the Martian. Bugs pulls Marvin aside by the scruff of his neck. The dialogue is as follows: What’s up, Doc? You’s gotta unlax. … It’s only a cartoon. A furry bunny hand reaches outside of the TV and punches pause stopping the Tasmanian Devil in his tracks, allowing Bugs and Marvin to converse.

I try to follow the advice of Bugs. Should lax = engage in some activity, and unlax = rest. No, Bugs has it wrong. In Latin, laxus = lax means loose, wide, spacious or relaxed. It can also refer to something that is not tight or firm. So to engage in something should actually be to unlax, while to rest should be to lax. So even the experts can get things wrong. Rather than saying that I am going to demolish, unbuild or unmake something. I use the word pair construct and destruct. The first from Latin cōnstrūctus, from cōnstruō (“to heap together”), from com- (“together”) + struō (“I heap up, pile”). Destruction is from the Old French destrucion, from the Latin dēstructiō, dēstructiōnem.

Air-fryers

Yes, I took the above photo of symbols are on our Philips air-fryer, with my hands and pink phone case clearly visible. The symbols are as follows: On the left, there is an on-off switch, with increase and decrease controls for temperature. On the right, there is a temporary start-stop switch, with increase and decrease controls for time. At the top are ingredient symbols, allowing for an automatic temperature and time setting. The ingredients from left to right are: frozen fries, fresh fries, chops and steaks, chicken, fish, vegetables, cakes, reheat. In the middle row one sees the values for basket 1 (left): shake, temperature, time; On/ off status to have both baskets finish at the same time; values for basket 2 (right): temperature, time and shake; To the left, in the centre, and to the right, bucket symbols refers to the basket(s) being controlled: 1, 1 & 2 or 2. To the left of the 1 & 2 bucket control, there is a button to control having both buckets finish at the same time. To the right of the 1 & 2 bucket control, there is a button to pause the cooking process mid-way to allow the bucket contents to be turned or shaken.

Some Cyprical Actions involve Circuits

Introductory comment: Bureaucracy in Norway can be frustrating, but it differs from that in other countries. For example, while a building permit is needed to construct a house, there are no permits needed to make most modifications. For example, some years ago now, I decided to extend a walkway on the upper floor of our house, so that if people needed to escape the kitchen, say from a fire, they could climb through the windows ending up on the walkway about 70 cm (28″) below. Before the walkway was built the distance was about 3m (10 feet). I did not apply for any permit to do this work, but at some point someone from the municipality noticed the change, and updated the official house plans to incorporate this change.

Plumbers and electricians are allowed to undertake changes without any municipal paperwork. Every 20 years, we have our electrical circuits inspected. If there are code violations, then we have to use a licensed electrician to correct those. During the last inspection, it was noted that some rooms contained a mixture of grounded and ungrounded sockets. This was in clear violation of newer regulations. All of the sockets in a room have to be one or the other, but not both. I quickly changed most of the sockets myself, then contacted our electricity provider to change the one remaining ungrounded socket in each room to grounded, five in total. All of these contacts have worked without any problems for the past fifteen years.

All of the boxes associated with electrical circuits in our house are marked with a device type – circuit number – device number. Device type codes are A = appliance; J = junction box; P = power outlet; S = switch. The circuit number is from 01 to 14. For each device type, on each circuit, the boxes are numbered starting at 1, for the one closest to the circuit breaker box. There are no regulations enforcing this coding. This is just an activity I like to do.

All of the power outlets inside and outside the house are now grounded. Unofficially, these are a type F socket, patented in Germany in 1929, gaining international use in 1951. Officially, they are referred to internationally as a CEE 7/3 socket, associated with a matching Schuko = Schutzkontakt, Protective contact CEE 7/4 plug. CEE is an abbreviation of Commission for Conformity Testing of Electrical Equipment. It is undertaken by the Commission de l’Électrotechnique Internationale = the International Electrotechnical Commission. These sockets can accept devices with up to 16 A of power. Ungrounded sockets are restricted to 2.5 A. These are referred to as type C (on the diagram below) but often have a more squished (a rounded rectangle rather than circular) appearance.

Most Norwegian houses have their electrical power cables dimensioned to use up to 63 A at a nominal 240 V. The actual voltage in Norway, like the rest of Europe, is 230 V with a frequency of 50 Hz. That involves three x 16mm2 cables into the house, coloured brown, black and grey to the circuit breaker box. After that, single phase wiring is brown (line) and blue (neutral). Grounding is yellow and green.

North Americans will see some similarity with their circuit breaker boxes, but European boxes are offset 90°. American colours are black, red, and blue are used for phases in 120/208V systems; brown, orange and yellow for 277/480V systems. They also use white or grey for neutral lines,

While we have 3-phase circuitry into the house, our circuits are not grounded with external wiring. This is referred to as an IT network layout, and is very common in Norway, but uncommon in the rest of Europe. I have asked our electrical provider when a fully grounded system will be installed, and was told, not before 2050. That means that we have to provide our own grounding, which I have done! It involves providing grounding circuitry from the circuit breaker box, with a cable that leads to a 2.5 meter long stake, located in wet soil. From inside the circuit breaker box everything is grounded.

Political digression: One has to remember that before oil was discovered in the North Sea, Norway was one of the poorest countries in Europe. Everything had to be done as cheaply as possible, and that meant installing three electrical cables instead of four. This cheapness also meant that our roads were narrower than in most other countries. This means that Norwegians have to drive more defensively than many others. The benefit is that Norway ranks 6th best in the world in terms of motor-vehicle related deaths at 2.14/ 100 000 people/ year. Countries that are better are: 1 Monaco (0), 2 Hong Kong (1.3), 3 Maldives (1.6), 4 Japan (2.1) tied with Singapore (2.1). Other values are: 32 Canada (5.3), 111 USA (14.2). The global average is 15.

In the circuit breaker box, the first device encountered is a 63 A power = amperage overload limiter, followed by a voltage overload limiter. The second one is most often used to prevent damage from lightning. Beyond these devices, we have 14 circuits, providing us with up to 15 kW of power. Three of these are 3-phase circuits, while the remainder are single-phase. The largest of these 3-phase circuits provides up to 32 A of charging for our electric vehicle. The other two provide 20 A of power for general heating in the attic ( for a currently uninstalled heat exchanger), and for use in the playshop = workshop (previous use) = garage (original use). The remainder of the circuits are 1-phase (pronounced single phase) with anywhere from 15 to 20 A, each. At one time we had a mix of 10 A and 16 A 1-phase circuits, but all of the 10 A ones were replaced.

In Norway, we are encouraged to disconnect the electrical power supply to devices with heating elements. No, not the induction stove top or oven, that are both fused with circuit breakers. These are on two separate circuits: A-01-01 provides single phase, 20 A of power to the stove top, while A-06-01 provides single phase 06 – 15 A, slow fuse = circuit breaker reaction, respectively.

The rest of the kitchen uses circuit 12 – single phase, 16 A, fast reaction. This includes the lighting. The main light is controlled by S-12-01, in addition to two counter top lighting units that are controlled with other switches S-12-02 and S-12-03. Then there are six sets of power outlets. Four of them have two plugs: S-12-01, S-12-02, S-12-03 and S-12-06. The remaining two have four plugs: S-12-04 and S-12-05. Other places in the house have outlets with six plugs.

Air (Vacuum) and Water

These are not the only items marked in this way. The central vacuum has two plugs, marked V-01 (downstairs, closest to the vacuum unit) and V-02 (upstairs, or the main floor).

Then there is the water supply. I believe Norway is unique in the world, mandating pipe in pipe connections. An inner pipe provides the water, while an outer pipe ensures that if there is a leak, that the water will flow to a place where it will not cause damage. Our cold water pipes are marked C followed by a circuit number, while the hot water pipes are marked H, again followed by a circuit number.

I have considered marking the waste water with a W, followed by a number, but this has not been implemented – yet.

Ethernet

We also have Ethernet wiring throughout the house. We have a 48 port switch with a Power-over-Ethernet (POE) system to pass electric power along with data on twisted-pair Ethernet cabling to ports. All of the Ethernet ports have PoE apart from the port to the play shop, which is connected with fibre-optic cable, because of the potential for lightning damage. Currently, 19 Ethernet ports are in use, of which six are access points (AP) for wireless communications. Four of these are in the house, two on each floor. There is also another AP in the play shop, and a final AP in the carport, which serves most of the outside area. Most of the other ports service a pair of connectors. However, the port that leads to the play shop is attached to a switch with 24 ports. The switch on my desk has five ports.

Our doorbell is aIso connected to the Ethernet, so we can see what is happening at the door, by connecting our devices (phones, computers) using the APs.

A Realink doorbell (black) and chime (white) using the POE Ethernet system for power and communication. The chime is activated through an AP.

In addition, there are three additional places in the house that need to have Ethernet cables installed. Once that work is finished each port will be numbered, starting with E.

From Workshop to Playshop

Slowly, my facade is cracking. At 77, I am no longer in my prime. Thus, I decided that it was time to stop working in my retirement construction job, and to take on lighter tasks. The workshop, that supported this construction work, has had most of its specialist woodworking tools removed. They have been given to a young (63) neighbour. Hopefully, he will let me use them in an emergency. Otherwise they are his to do what he wants with them. I had also purchased a CNC = computer numerical control machine. It was never used, so Alasdair had taken it over.

I now have a playshop, that will support my hobbies. These involve: airbrush painting, electronics and synthesizers. However, the playshop is a topic for a future weblog post.