Prickly

I am feeling completely shitty. My head hurts and my back hurts and I just want to roll up into a little ball. Very hedgehoggy.

It’s that time of the month. That time when I seriously question God’s abilities as a designer. Wasn’t it a theory, at some point, that “the curse” was God’s punishment to women for Eve’s fall? Right now it makes sense to me. Bloody (literally) unfair, but if this isn’t a punishment it really is a serious design flaw.

Oh, and I just checked in on The Yankee Blogger, which didn’t help. Thank heavens it’s Friday.

Sound of the moment: laughing (at a story from customer support: when asked what sort of network they were running the answer was “well, the normal 220 volts”)
Age of the moment: at least 100

A bit of a lag

Finally got to give blood today. They figured I’d be allright now with the iron reserves up for this long. Also remembered to register for the bone marrow register. Feeling nice and useful.

As mentioned before, in addition to making me feel useful, giving blood in Norway is good because you get to pick a goodie of some sort when you’re done. So I now have yet another mug, this one from Arabia (Finland) with Little My:

Yay me.

Sound of the moment: VH-1 muted (so, in fact, silence)
Age of the moment: 10

Yawn

Got to bed WAY too late last night. I got a bit hooked on the new Bokprat forum and then realised that since cable is working again I could watch Parkinson – which I proceeded to do despite the fact that it was one I’ve already seen (Martine McCutcheon, Terry Wogan and Jennifer Lopez – hilarious show). And then I read a few chapters in my book, and suddenly it was the sort of time when the chariot turns back into a pumpkin, and I should have been fast asleep.

Had a guestmap entry from Theresa, so obviously I had to have a look at her blog – she’s done a 100 things list, too. It’s funny how fascinating reading other people’s list is. In any case, finding another blogger in Norway (even if she’s not Norwegian) is quite good fun. She also likes Pooh, apparently. At least I assume she does, seeing as her URL is “spellingtuesday”.

Back again

Had a lovely weekend in Arvika (well, had some icky moments Sunday morning after the night before, but otherwise it was good fun). L and L have just moved in, so naturally everything was basically still in boxes. They had also had a pile of furniture from IKEA delivered. So I got to spend some happy hours putting up flat-packed furniture (something I actually really enjoy doing), which was great.

I love having L an hour and a half away by train. Makes a big difference from 7. Or 3 hours by plane.

Sound of the moment: VH-1 (cable working again! Touch wood!)
Age of the moment: just about 28 and a half

Silence

Having a home-computer-internet-link hiccup situation at the moment, hence the lack of postings the last couple of days. Tomorrow evening I’m leaving for Arvika, to visit L over the weekend, so the pickings may continue slim until some time Monday. On the other hand I’m working on a ‘picture a day’ blog (as oppsed to the picture of the day, which isn’t, much of the time), so your patience will be rewarded.

Guestmap

For some years from when I was about 17 I used to have a world map up on the wall with pins in the places I had pen-pals and other places of interest, and pictures surrounding it with a string connecting them to the appropriate pin. I’ve been considering doing something similar again – it’s useful for getting a sense of geography in a world where my father calls me on my mobile and it sounds like he’s standing next tome at Obs! (big Norwegian supermarket) and it turns out he’s calling from Panama. Technology makes the world seems smaller, but at the same time it seems even more confusing. Anyway, until I figure out how to fit a large enough map on my already over-crowded walls (the few bits not covered by bookshelves are generally covered with pictures), I’ve aquired a Guestmap. It rocks, but it will rock even more once you’ve “signed” it. Please?


We’ll be right back after the break…

Book cataloguing software… Combining computer gadgetry and books, what more could one ask?

The one I use is called BookCat. Very happy with it. The database is easy to set up, easily customisable and you can store things like author profiles and publishers’ details in separate entities and tie them to the books and there’s room for cover pictures (up to three for each book). There’s decent importing and exporting functions, and lots of reporting functionality that I’ve yet to look into much.

You can download the program to try it out, but it will only let you register 40 books. If you like it you’ll have to fork out the shareware price ($39, I think) to get a licence file which will “unlock” the program for you. There’s a user forum at ezboards and the author (who, incidentally, is Norwegian) is pretty good at answering questions promptly.

Sound of the moment: You Came (Kim Wilde)
Age of the moment: just about correct