Stuff, geeky stuff
Computing, archiving, digital media, and a bit of historical speculation
Sunday, 29 June 2025
Indelible pencils
Friday, 13 June 2025
Data recovery at home
J was looking through some documents to do with her mother's death that she had got some years ago from her sister, deciding what needed to be kept and what didn't. In among the papers was a CD labelled Graham family photos.
We had been living in England when J's mother died, (this had been round about the turn of the millennium) and it had been left to her sister to get rid of her mother's effects, and it looked like an album of family photos had disappeared.
So, did the CD have the missing photos?
Well, J's sister's husband been a photographer with The Age in Melbourne, and later on a TAFE photography lecturer, as well as being someone who was both interested in the history of photography - he built himself a copy of a nineteenth century glass plate camera at one point - and had dabbled a bit in family history, so it was just possible he had copied them, perhaps for a project of his own.
Unfortunately we couldn't ask him exactly what had happened as he died a few years ago.
And of course computers don't have CD drives these days.
So, nothing ventured, nothing gained, I bought a $20 external usb cd drive from ebay and connected it up to an old Windows 10 laptop.
Tuesday, 3 June 2025
Really really finished!
Back in April I blogged that I had completed the documentation of the contents of Lake View House in Chiltern for the National Trust.
Yesterday we had the close off meeting and I'm done. I've basically worked myself out of a job having catalogued the contents of both Dow's Pharmacy and Lake View.
They did ask me if I wanted to stay on as a front of house person, but that's not really me, so after the close off meeting I formally resigned as a volunteer - I felt it was important to do that, rather than simply fade away, as I had a 'Working with Children' registration that comes with being a registered volunteer, plus there's some other bureaucracy about being an official volunteer.
So, after eight years, I'm done.
Of course I feel a little bit sad, especially after all the nice emails thanking me for my work, but like with any project, I'd reached the point where it was time to let go and move on.
Let's see what the future brings ...
Friday, 30 May 2025
Digitising heritage libraries
Earlier today I tooted the following
Essentially, La Trobe university has digitised and catalogued the Sandhurst Mechanics Institute historical book collection.
Momentarily galling.
Especially, as up at the Athenaeum we are working on trying to make sense of the heritage book catalogue, actually an excel spreadsheet, we inherited from a now disbanded local library corporation.
When done, we should have a portrait of reading tastes in a small goldfields community and how it changed over the years.
Currently I'm working through the catalogue trying to rationalise and standardise the publisher's names, and even that's quite interesting.
We can see that most books in the nineteenth century were imported from England, and there seems to have been a love of sensation literature and the gothic, as well as more serious works such as an 1861 edition of Darwin's 'On the origin of the species' and a more prosaic 1862 book on chicken husbandry.
Post world war 1, there are a few more Australian books and a developing interest in crime fiction and escapist western novels. although some may been a little more serious drawn from life such as the books written by Dane Coolidge, who in his time was not only a well known author, but also had a reputation as a photographer and anthropologist, as well as a collector of mammals.
What there does not seem to have been, is any serious interest in devotional works.
When I was documenting the contents of Lake View house, it was noticeable that the nineteenth century devotional works used in part to 'dress' the house, did not show the same signs of use as more popular works - Mary Braddon and Charles Dickens certainly came before God as far as people's reading was concerned, and I can make the same sort of anecdotal observation about the Stanley Heritage book collection.
Once our collection's properly re-catalogued it might be interesting to see how much overlap there is with the Sandhurst collection from Bendigo ...
Sunday, 25 May 2025
Pocket is shutting down
As I guess we all know by now, Pocket is going to the data centre in the sky on July 8.
It's an annoyance, I principally used pocket to save articles that were potentially interesting, but I didn't have time to read at the moment.
I'd usually set aside some time at the end of the week to go through my pocket saves, and if the article actually was useful, such as this North Yorkshire Archives Service article on parish registers, save it somewhere useful in OneNote and then archive the pocket save.
I did do the pocket 'export your data' thing just in case there was anything useful I'd missed. I never found the pocket recommendations or suggestions that interesting or useful - they tended to be too USA centric, and given that my interests are a bit niche, sometimes a bit odd - articles on reading old handwriting produced a slew of revelation centred right wing Christian stuff.
Well that's all behind us. I have a subscription to Inoreader which has a 'read later' feature which may help, otherwise it will be bookmarking pages to deal with the happenstance discoveries...
Saturday, 24 May 2025
Family History and structured data
It was a chance remark that it was easy to use Excel to transcribe marriage certificate data by someone at the monthly meeting of our family history group that gave me the idea.
Family history is largely built on birth marriage and death data, and in the process of building family trees you inevitably end up with a large pile of scanned documents all of which tend to have similar incomprehensible machine generated names.
But, if you look at England and Wales marriage certificates they are all structured similarly - for example here's the one for George Wardle and Madeleine Smith
- When they got married
- Where they got married
- What they did for a living
- How old they were
- Where they were living prior to being married
- Who their father was
- What their father did for a living
- date
- where they were married
- party 1 name
- party 1 age
- party 1 condition - ie had they been previously married
- party 1 profession
- party 1 address
- party 1 father's name
- party 1 father's profession
- party 1 mother's maiden name
- party 2 name
- party 2 age
- party 2 condition - ie had they been previously married
- party 2 profession
- party 2 address
- party 2 father's name
- party 2 father's profession
- party 2 mother's maiden name
- witness 1 name
- witness 2 name
- source document
Tuesday, 20 May 2025
I bought an old Chromebook...
Chromebooks, well I have a soft spot for chromebooks, minimal but reliable devices.
But why buy an old one? Especially when I’ve already got a competent ChromeOS device in the form of my Lenovo Ideapad Duet.
Well there are a lot of reasons not to buy an old one. The principal one is, that while new Chromebooks get 10 years of automatic updates out of the box, older ones don’t.
Now this isn’t quite the problem it might seem, it’s quite possible to run one without regular security updates, and in fact I got about two and a half years more out of one before it finally succumbed to hardware failure.
But what it does mean is that it is possible to pick up an old Chromebook in decent condition for not a lot of money. And because a lot of them are targeted at the education market, the hardware tends to be a bit tougher than is the case with other cheap machines.
Most of them have quite nice screens and keyboards, meaning that providing you have internet access - a given for a Chromebook to do anything useful - you have a machine that you can type on, using the Google Docs App and that makes a pretty good device for writing drafts and taking notes, and remember that, given Chromebooks role in education, they have pretty good battery life.
And of course, you can be assured that any document you create is saved to cloud storage, rather than having to backup your data at the end of a session, as would be the case with a linux based laptop.
As we know support for Windows 10 is ending, and a number or groups are advocating sidegrading old Windows 10 machines to Linux - not a silly idea, but one thing that most Linux distros don't provide is automatic cloud backup.
Windows machines don’t have this problem - data is normally saved to OneDrive automatically, but decent refurbished machines running a recent version of windows are not as cheap as refurbished Chromebooks, and with the imminent end of Windows 10 support, there’s always the risk that a combination of feature creep and bitrot could break automatic backup to One Drive for Windows 10 machines.
So, tossing the ball back and forth, you can argue that if you want a machine simply to write on, an old Chromebook wins out over both an old windows machine and a refurbished device running Linux.
But back to my Duet. Excellent device that it is, it has a problem.
Form factor.
The Duet, like the Microsoft Surface, is difficult to use when you don’t have a flat surface to type on, simply because the kickstand to support the screen requires that you have to have a certain amount of real estate to set up on.
If you don’t believe me, look around you next time you’re on a long distance train or, worse, a plane.
V/line trains, unlike some European trains, don’t have shared tables, but instead have aircraft style seating with tiny fold out tables.
You can just about squeeze a standard clamshell laptop on one of the tables, but a surface - no. (Incidentally, the ipad mini that I added a keyboard to a few years ago, doesn’t have that problem, it mimics the clamshell design by using a triangular design to support the keyboard)
And the same goes for typing on your knee in a meeting. It’s perfectly possible to use a clamshell type device on your knee, even though the ergonomics people will have a fit, but the kickstand type device, no so much.
And that’s why I bought an old Chromebook - it gives me a device that has good battery life, a decent size keyboard, and decent screen, automated cloud backup, but is roughly half the weight of using an old laptop running linux, which if you have one on your knee for two or three hours at a time does make a difference…