Monday, 6 July 2009

Bring back traditional Fish & Chip wrapping in Australia

Twice now I've had fish & chips in Sydney from what I'd regard as traditional fish & chip shops (not restaurants selling takeaways as well) and they've been served in a ridiculous box with more cardboard than food. Aside from the extra cost this must bring, its environmentally insane and to top it off the fish & chips go cold before you get out the shop door.

I asked the guy in the shop I went to most recently what the story is, he told me they would prefer to use good old fashioned paper but health and safety don't allow it - WTF is going on here! He also mentioned it costs them (and therefore us) a lot more to package in boxes, will someone give me a good reason why paper is less hygienic than cardboard, unlikely because THERE ISN'T ONE!!

I don't want to blame individual shops as it seems they may not have a choice but, I'd like to list my experiences of cardboard craziness here and have others add theirs as well, please help me stop this charade and use this blog post to start a petition to "Bring back traditional paper wrapped fish & chips".

My two offenders so far are:

Dockside Seafood - 4/314-322 Darling St, Balmain, NSW, 2041
Bay Seafood - 485a Darling St, Balmain, NSW, 2041

Add a comment with your experience and where it occurred.

Cheers
Tim

Saturday, 4 July 2009

Jägermeister & the Jägerbomb

How can a drink so nasty taste so good!

Take a shot of whisky or tequila - you practically have to close your eyes and groan just to remotely enjoy the event. Now take a Jägermeister, it's a completely different story for me. This is the first shot since the ole days of that very drinkable peppermint liqueur called Clarise or something (I can't remember how to spell it properly but it was good) or the more recently popular Goldschlager that I've come across something so smooth. It doesn't seem to hurt a bit!

I had the pleasure of enjoying a couple of Jägermeister (one of which turned into a Jägerbomb after some arm-twisting) at a work colleague Krysten's (aka America) 25th birthday party up at the Glenmore pub in The Rocks Sydney. They certainly set us up for a fun night of good old fashion 'talking crap', priceless!

The worrying thing for me is, the past few times I've had Jägermeister I've absolutely looooved it. The longer I can keep a bottle of that stuff out of the house the better I think - anyone going through duty free Sydney soon?!

Salud!
Tim

Friday, 19 June 2009

Diving at Shelly Beach near Manly in Sydney

It'd been over 5 months since my last dive so was great to get underwater again and take a look around at the Shelly Beach area, about 30 mins North East of Sydney.

I was diving with a mate Paul and through the guys at Pro Dive Manly. The team at Pro Dive are cool guys with a lot of experience and a good set-up, our Divemaster Rob was open to ideas of what we wanted out of the dives and as we only had a small group of four we didn't have to wait around for too long.

Given Shelly Beach is a marine reserve (no fishing allowed) the sealife seemed larger and more mature than usual. On dive one we saw a massive Cuttlefish that took a liking to my mask (the Divemaster seemed to think they like bright colours and mines purple and orange) and swam slowly toward me like playing chicken getting very close before I moved to avoid a collision - it's eyes we're amazing, we definitely had a moment! Apparently they have a strong jaw and can grab onto things quite quickly and aggressively, I was right to move away I guess.

On dive two we saw a massive Flathead, I didn't know they got that big, this one was about a metre long and would've tasted brilliant I'm sure.

The visibility was generally good and the bottom temperature a mild 18 degrees considering it's winter in Australia now. It did get cold about 15 mins into the second 45 min dive when we all wished we had dry suits on!

I'll definitely dive with Pro Dive again, hopefully Long Reef and soon!

Cheers
Tim

Wednesday, 3 June 2009

My Worthy Watch blog

Over the past few months I've been watching a lot of DVD's at home. I've always enjoyed films but more recently have almost become addicted. We have a local DVD rental store just a few minutes walk from home, who know us well enough now not to have to ask for a card or name - they don't even expect us to pay at the time and generally say 'just bring the money next time if you don't have it on you'!

Also, given Mel (my wife) is heavily pregnant we don't spend as much time socialising or 'going out' as we used to which is all part of the nesting process of having a child (so I'm told).

Anyway, I've started a new blog to document the films I'm watching and will give my own unprofessional and potentially useless view on them. I've added a ratings module (which kind of works) so anyone can rate the film if they've seen it too and a comments module to write personal comments on the film or my blog post.

http://worthywatch.blogspot.com/

Cheers
Tim

Monday, 18 May 2009

Losing my Mac virginity

Thanks to the clowns who broke into our house a few weeks back and stole our HP laptop, we're now the proud owners of a new MacBook Pro! A few years back when I was a programmer I wouldn't have contemplated using a Mac for fear of loss in efficiency and productivity. I was not alone in this thinking, there was only one Mac in the office used mainly for testing our websites actually worked on one - not that we really cared too much if they did or not back then! Fast forward to present times, I work at Yahoo! with many talented developers and engineers walking around with their MacBook's tucked under their arms. Gone are the days of only designers, gadget geeks and rich folks using Mac's, but why is that all of a sudden? It was well known back in the mid-late 90's that only around 10% of computers we're Apple manufactured and most of those we're used by design folks.

Personally, I switched for a few reasons but mainly because of build quality, software & hardware from the same manufacturer (always been the case I know but...) and my increased interest in photography. As I'm no longer programming that's not really a factor but with even developers now turning to Mac for their front-end experience if I did decide to chip the rust off the coding side of my brain again I'm confident I'd be in good hands.

I'm still learning the ropes (thanks Seb for the Mac Command = PC Ctrl tip last week) and must get a mouse to bring back the right-click but so far I'm impressed. Looking forward to when I get time for a decent session with the camera, that's when it's value will truly manifest I think!

Concluding point, stuff just seems to work on a Mac (and how many years have I ignored pesky people saying that to me).

Cheers
Tim

Friday, 8 May 2009

Holidays


Twelve Apostles
Originally uploaded by timbo262
Having spent the best part of the last month on holiday I've plenty to blog about, sadly I'm a bit short on the photo front given my camera was nicked from our house; but I won't dwell on that!

Mel's parents arrived end of March, we had a full itinerary set up on tripit.com and wasted no time getting into it. Long walks around Sydney, a trip down to Melbourne with drive on the Great Ocean Road and a night in the Blue Mountains we're highlights with plenty of nice dinners and a good few beers along the way too.

I have to admit to being surprised and astonished at the beauty of the Great Ocean Road and Blue Mountains, it's often hard to get excited about other countries natural beauty coming from NZ but it did not disappoint - there we're even some friendly Aussies to chat with here and there too! My fav accommodation on the trip has to be in Apollo Bay where our place was within spitting distance to the ocean boasting empty beaches and some near perfect waves.

My return to work was short lived (1.5 weeks) before setting off again to NZ on a trip based around two Super 14 Hurricanes matches in Wellington. Mel stayed at home in Sydney while I 'swanned off' (Mel's words not mine) to NZ for a week. I spent a lot of time with family and friends and two nights away fishing (unsuccessfully) with my mate Tavis. It was awesome to catch up with everyone again.

Now it's back to work until Bruce arrives in July when I'll take yet more time off to go surfing (I mean look after him)!

Cheers
Tim

Wednesday, 25 March 2009

Flickr Interestingness, Contacts and The Commons

Some of the most interesting things happening in my life over the past couple of weeks have been work related, presenting and evangelising Flickr to external partners (sadly nothing particularly interesting personally) so I thought I'd plug some pretty cool features on the photo sharing site (which those of you who know me well know I not only love Flickr but happen to work on it at Yahoo! as well).

Interestingness
Flickr takes a whole bunch of things into consideration when selecting photos for the interestingness photostream, for instance where the clickthroughs are coming from; who comments on it and when; who marks it as a favourite; its tags and many more things which are constantly changing (I copied that last bit straight from flickr.com, sorry). One feature within interestingness I particularly love is where you can browse using a calendar and see most interesting photos from a particular month like March 2009, wicked!

Contacts
Flickr has recently redesigned this page to make it easier to browse your contacts and to straight away see who your most active contacts are, you need to be logged in to see this feature, just head for 'Contacts List' in the nav bar. You can even sort so you see who out of your contacts has uploaded the most public photos to Flickr, one of my Flickr meet-up (another story) contacts has over 15,000 public photos!

The Commons
Another fantastic initiative from Flickr is The Commons where you can find the "hidden treasures in the world's public photography archives". You can add tags and leave comments on photos to make the collections even more descriptive and worthwhile to others. I could (and sometimes do) spend hours browsing these, we even have a few Commons partners from Australia & NZ including the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney, State Library of NSW, Australian War Memorial, State Library of Queensland and the National Library NZ!

With holidays on the way in April I hope in my next post I'll be able to show off some new pics from my own Flickr photostream and tell some stories, or perhaps I'll just end up plugging the cool (and very useful) tripit.com website we used to build the holiday itinerary!

Cheers
Tim