Started to read: Mayday by Jackie Kay. I don’t read a lot of poetry but the blurb on the back cover struck a few emotional chords. 📚


Read: Nobody’s Empire by Stuart Murdoch. Very enjoyable debut by the Belle and Sebastian singer/songwriter. Obviously very autobiographical. Recommended to any fans of the band. 📚


We and our 854 partners store and access personal data, like browsing data or unique identifiers, on your device.

Nope.


I don’t usually like the food outlets at big shopping malls but this one place does a great calzone. I’ve had this before and couldn’t finish it but today it was all gone.

A calzone topped with grated cheese is served on a plate with a fresh salad and a side of tomato sauce, accompanied by two glasses of cola.

Out shopping today, in Glasgow, for a new kettle. Decided on this rather smart one….

A stainless steel electric kettle with a red central band is placed on a countertop.

Like so many of the tech titans, Mark really does offer an end-to-end service: they make the world worse, then they claim to be leading the escape.

Marina Hyde - Hail Zuckus Maximus!


Big Big Train - Last Eleven. One of the highlight songs, amongst many, from Saturday’s show in Edinburgh. I love this band. The combination of music and lyrics here never fails to move me. 🎵


Reading: Neu Klang - The Definitive History Of Krautrock by Christoph Dallach. I really like the oral history style of books like this. You get a better picture of what happened with all of the different memories and viewpoints. 📚


The Time Bandits “remake” is a lot of fun. Boo! to the naysayers.


The iOS Journal app is starting to grow on me. I don’t use it every day but I like the way it suggests places, photos, and activities from the day as starting points. I think its strengths lie in recording memories rather than as a record of thoughts and feelings though. That’s how I’m using it.


Back to book shopping this week. It’s funny how Waterstones used to be the big bullies out to destroy all other bookshops back in the 90s. Now buying stuff there feels like rebellion. Anyway I’m looking forward to reading this.

A book titled Postcards from Scotland: Scottish Independent Music 1983-1995 by Grant McPhee is seen, placed atop some papers.

Paid a visit to Braehead Shopping Centre in Glasgow today. I went into the Apple Store and came out ten minutes later with an unplanned brand new iPad Pro. It was inevitable, wasn’t it?


I’ll be up late for Thursday’s UK election results and I’m looking forward to lots of “Portillo moments”.


Recently Read: Golden Hill by Francis Spufford. I loved this one even more than Cahokia Jazz. It’s another historical novel but set in mid 18th century New York this time. A young man arrives from London with a large money order and sets off all sorts of suspicion and intrigue. Loved the ending. 📚


Big fire to the west of Glasgow a couple of nights ago. It was well over ten miles from here and I could see the smoke from my window.

A plume of dark smoke rises from a distant area beneath a sunset sky, with silhouetted buildings and trees in the foreground.

Recently Read: Cahokia Jazz by Francis Spufford. Loved this one. The setting is an alternative 1920s USA where the state of Cahokia is run by a native American/Catholic monarchy. Mix in murder, jazz, politics, and hard boiled detectives and it makes a world I’d like to read more of. 📚


I Don't Really Like Social Media

Yet, off the back of Manton’s recent posts regarding OpenAI, I read a number of responses from people on Mastodon that were needlessly antagonistic and emotionally detached, with some cancelling their subscriptions. Pile on!! These were posted to Mastodon but could be seen in an otherwise tranquil Micro.blog app thanks to the platform’s support for ActivityPub.Source: Protocols, platforms and priorities · Paul Robert Lloyd

I like this response. It gets to why I’m disenchanted with social media in general. I think it’s obvious that @manton is a good person so some of the reactions to his comments were way over the top. Federated social media hasn’t fixed the self-righteous blowhard problem but micro.blog is going a long way to make things better.


My usual online notebook source had a sale and I couldn’t resist. I love the Hobonichi notebooks. They’re expensive but I actually use these and fill them up. It’s nice to have some different cover designs (the cat one is great).

A
collection of notebooks and journals, some with unique covers and 
others labeled by their types and sizes, are displayed on a wooden 
surface.


Started to read: Three Rocks by Bill Griffith 📚


I found a decent frame for my Jacques Tati film poster at last. It’s big but looks pretty good on this wall.

A framed poster for the film Mon Oncle (directed by Jacques Tati) hanging on a wall.