Archive for October, 2006

Is your car a Classic?

When I first started driving the best car I could afford was a 20 year old hatchback, it wasn’t a prestige marque, it didn’t have a big engine, it wasn’t impressive looking, but importantly it was mine. However once the novelty of ownership becamse a memory I began to search for some other positive aspect of the car.


Was it perhaps unique in some way? was it a limited edition? Unfortunately not? and indeed as Seinfeld says that label merely indicates a model is “limited to hte number they can sell”!


After much musing I concluded my car must at least be a “classic”.

Well I did some research, and found out that there was no agreed definition. In Ireland for Motor Tax it was 30 years, but for insurance 25 years.


So I looked to the car clubs to provide te answer, the anoraks had compiled a table
ANTIQUE Pre 1905
VETERAN 1905-1918
VINTAGE 1918-1930
POST VINTAGE 1931-1945
CLASSIC 1946-1981 (a moving wall of 25 years, I’ve updated the figure at the time of writing)


So my car was not a classic by any standard, but if I kept it long enought it would be, and there is a moral of story, age (or to use the broader term rarity) equals value.

Continue reading ‘Is your car a Classic?’

The most overused stock photograph ever

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Is this the most overused stock photograph ever? Yes. It appears on so many websites, its usually on the contact page, to create the illusion that a mom and pop/bedroom operation has a call centre.


Here are the sighings so far (please add more using the comment box)

Paxilback



A parody of Justin Timberlake - Sexy Back
Continue reading ‘Paxilback’

Cronners

I wish I could sing (and play the piano) like Nat. what a smooth voice, what an air of effortless coolness, yet a more different coolness to that of Dean Martin, amazing.



Dean Martin - That’s Amore - 1953.
Continue reading ‘Cronners’

Using DECT on a PBX

DECT (Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications) is an ETSI (European Telecommunications Standards Institute) standard for digital portable phones.


A DECT handset looks like a mobile phone (a cell phone to my american readers) but instead of being connected (via the magic of radiowaves) to a remote base station and remote network it is instead connected to a local base station and network (your home phone line or PBX)


In a simple domestic context the DECT handset act as a replacement for a standard telephone, allowing the householder to make and receive call throughout the house, and possibly (depending on range) garden.


But in a business context the DECT handset can be put to a much more interesting use. Almost every business has a PBX with internal phones. If a DECT is allocated an internal socket and number and socket an employee can leave his desk.



I recently installed a DECT base system in my friends hardware store. The system comprises 1 no. station, 3 no. repeaters, 2 no. handsets.


Unfortunately while the hadsets are digital they seem to be modelled on GSM castoffs from 1998. They are huge! The common Siemens Gigaset (cobranded Eircom or BT depending on your territory) had every feature I needed, the key one being non-proprietry batteries and GAP compatibility for the repeaters. However it was just too big, and lets be frank when it comes to a portable device a key factor is size!


After much research I settled on the BT Glide, which is bluetooth compatible. It is still quite large but the form-factor is a glide so it can be left close and makes quite a small monoblock.

Unfortunately it was quite expensive so I didn’t get as many as I wanted, but it will be interesting to hear how they perform.

Continue reading ‘Using DECT on a PBX’

From Cork to Kershaw to Colbert

I recently stumbled upon the blog of Nik Kershaw (the 80s singer of Wouldn’t it be good who made fingerless gloves into vital sartorial requirements in 1984). I only found the page while searching for “cork” AND “property”. I gave up the search as the prices are still too high for me, but it seems Mr Kershaw does enjoy his own piece of Ireland. It is nice to know that Cork is favoured by the rich and famous, but alas I am not among them yet, so I had to console myself by heading over to YouTube for some comic relief.




Stepen Colbert - Charlene (I’m right behind you). A parody of the 80s music video.

Continue reading ‘From Cork to Kershaw to Colbert’


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