Out on the tiles

Today we had friends round for the first time in ages. We had lunch, walked by the sea and then came back and played Mahjong. Or at least they showed us the basics.

Mah Jong game with Jan and Paul It seems to be a very deep game – like a cross between chess and dominoes but with lots of nuances. All the tiles in their set were bamboo and plastic – historically they were bamboo and ivory – and there are a mix of types.

There are the special tiles: winds, blessing and dragons. Then there are normal numbered tiles (1-9): bamboo, wheels and Chinese characters.

The experience was a bit like like playing poker for the first time, but having to learn how to count and what the cards mean.

A proper Mahjong game takes sixteen rounds. We managed three. One practice game and we were told how it worked. Two extra games and J won one and I won one too.

I think if we had been playing proper rules J would have won easily the second time too, but they were both very gracious and explained the game to us. They seem pretty good at it, but informed us that other friends at church have been playing for many years and are very, very good. I think we’ll stay out of their way!

For those of you who are interested, we warmed up with a game of Star Wars Top Trumps and the proceedings were helped along with music from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, chocolate Lebkuchen and an enormous pot of tea.

Keep taking the supplements

Confession time: I’m not very good at reading newspapers. I’m sure I should. But I’m always more interested in the supplement sections, especially on a Saturday.

Buying the Saturday Times has been a bit of a ritual for some time, and I won’t write at length about it here. But I guess one of the reasons we keep buying it is to see what the various columnists have been up to that week.

So, in the spirit of sharing our favourites, here are some of the columnists who write (and have written) well:

Kate Muir: the original. Kate has kept our attention for nearly 10 years now, writing from Paris, then Washington DC (lots on politics there), and now back to London. Kate is a Scot from Glasgow, so there are occasional comments from a Scottish perspective on some feature of England.

Kate’s topics: wide-ranging. There is quite a lot on bringing up a family in London, and dealing with yummy mummies there; the attempts to get an allotment; occasional pieces on feminism.

And from time to time, she goes on holiday to Argyll, and we can read about descriptions of places that are near our holiday haunt, the Isle of Jura. Her main achievement in this respect was tipping us off to the burger bar at the top of the hill the Rest and Be Thankful. It’s a glorious drive, and can be made even more so by a high-quality bacon roll.

Robert Crampton: otherwise known as Beta Male. While Kate is situated near the front of the Saturday Times magazine, Robert is on the back page, making a career out of not quite getting it right.

Robert’s subjects tend to be reasonably domestic, sometimes sport-driven, often with the option for him to record statistics along the way. We learn about the satisfaction of ‘getting a [washing] load on’, of local cycle paths, of the savage tendencies of his children’s hamsters.

Robert also shares some of the games he comes up with along with fellow columnist Alan Franks: try for yourself, although you may need to improve your knowledge of football and sub-Saharan African leaders.

Peter Paphides: now no longer writing his own column, Peter used to have the front page of the Knowledge, the entertainment section of the paper. Peter also tended to write about family but also music, his main area of knowledge.

Some of the best pieces involved him trying to encourage his daughter Dora to say what she thought of bands like the Clash. Dora was generally more interested in Dora the Explorer – if you have a television show apparently named after you, there’s no real substitute.

That’s enough for now. Just remember that most of these are available online now. No excuses!

Poems in public places

Discovered yesterday that someone has put a poem on each door of the women’s loos at church.  A different poem for each door – and for reading from the inside.

I’m not here to comment on the rights or wrongs of reading on the loo, or even any differences between men and women in this regard. (I’ll have to ask Dan to check if there’s an equivalent in the men’s loos.) But I happened to see the one with Ted Hughes‘ poem The Thought-Fox, which I know and like.

It was great to take an extra minute or so to think about something other than the session I’d come from, and I went back feeling a bit more in touch with the wider world. It reminded me of seeing poems in other public places.

The Poems on the [London] Underground are one well-known option, but there was also a set of poems on the buses in Edinburgh for a while, with one in Scots about the noises different things make, like fireworks, or snow under a sledge.

It seems like newspapers are equally publishing poems more regularly, sometimes with comments, sometimes without. So here’s to poems in public places – start your own series somewhere and see who notices!

Mac to Reality

I’ve finally taken the plunge back to my roots and bought a Mac. Okay, the company will be paying for it, but I ordered it and use it and get most of the benefit. It’s very sweet, cool and dare I say it, sexy. It’s quiet, quick, light it gets things to work so much easier.

It’s not all plain sailing as I’m having to learn all the little Mac bits and pieces that I’ve missed in the ten years since I stopped using Macs. I used to use them at university, but moved entirely to PCs in 1995 when my flatmate bought a PC.

It was a Pentium 133 with a 1.2Gb hard drive and 256Mb Ram. Can you believe it that I remember that kind of thing?! My camera has more storage capacity than that now . . .

I’m determined not to turn into a Mac geek (like my Inigo colleague Colin), as I know that the reset of the world is PC-based and will continue to be for a long time to come.

I’ve been telling our team that we have to design for the real world – those people still limited to Microsoft, Windows and Internet Explorer – but I have seen the light with MacBook, OSX and of course the massively popular and wonderful Firefox.

Mac after all these years

The new Mac (not given it a name yet) is Intel based, which allows me to run PC applications in a window run by software called Parallels. This allows me to run software (albeit fairly slowly) that I used to use and doesn’t put me just in the Mac camp.

So here’s looking forward to being efficient, flexible and funky in 2007.