logo

A Mind @ Play

2021 in Review

Another year of the plague behind us, another 365 days of solitude. It’s hardly Marquez, but it certainly feels like life has been chugging along in neutral after so many heady years in first gear. The year was mostly dominated by work, with little in the way of holiday breaks, social activities or other diversions to break up the monotony.

So joining the yearly roundups from 2015 , 2016 , 2017 , 2018 , 2019 and 2020 , here’s looking back over the second year of the plague, 2021.

12 minutes to read
Windows 10 Home/Pro

Windows 10 Home/Pro

I recently gave my machine a long overdue brain transplant, but stupidly didn’t consider what would happen to my Windows 10 licence after making a major change to the hardware. Of course, upon booting back up I was greeted with the friendly warning that my OS installation had not yet been activated.

While it is possible to reactivate Windows after a hardware change , this relies on you having linked the licence to your Microsoft account, which I hadn’t done beforehand. Various attempts to troubleshoot the problem just had me going around in circles navigating the same help pages from different angles (“have you tried turning it off and on again?”) And as tempting as it sounded to spend another evening elbow-deep in transistors restoring the status quo ante, there’d be no guarantee that my copy would be activated again with the original hardware in place (anyone know if this is the case?)

3 minutes to read

2020 in Review

This year has been anything if not interesting. At the start, a lot of people around me seemed to answering the call for change, with numerous friends choosing to up sticks, start new careers, move houses, or meet new partners.

While little changed for me beyond shifting to working from home, one difference was saying goodbye to a forum I’d been running for nearly two decades. As no one had posted anything in nearly twelve months, and its use had been dwindling for some years already, it seemed the time had come to save some computing cycles and lay the bits to rest.

13 minutes to read
Brexit in Germany

Brexit in Germany

You almost have to feel sorry for Greg Hands, sitting as a guest on Anne Will’s show, trying to defend Tory policy. Invited to a five-to-one Brexit bashing, it’s a debate of the ilk where the quacks aren’t invited in the name of ‘balance’. From the off, and as if to distance himself from the madness he’s supporting, Hands immediately claims to have been anti-Brexit, to have been anti-Boris during the leadership change. But not one to let principles get in the way, he’s supporting both of them because ‘democracy’. What follows is a virtuoso display of logical acrobatics skills as he attempts to defend his position: the shittiness of Britain’s democracy (being old is apparently a compliment?); that the referendum somehow showed clarity of purpose; that Boris threatening to ignore the law to push through a no-deal Brexit is democracy in action; that proroguing parliament is standard procedure and clearly shouldn’t be reconsidered at such a crucial juncture; that an election could show what the people want, but a second referendum would be undemocratic. If he weren’t sitting there looking like a naughty schoolboy called to the headmaster’s office, his mind-bending mental tricks might have earned some applause.
3 minutes to read

2018 in Review

To keep up an ancient tradition, I figured I’ll keep up my review of the past twelve months in consumed media goods. So following on from 2015 , 2016 and 2017 , the first wrap-up on the new forums! (I normally draught these things and write them over a series of days, but since this software doesn’t seem to offer draughts, I’ve penned this in one sitting and it’s probably riddled with typos. :) )
22 minutes to read
Nichts verschieben

Nichts verschieben

„Nein!“ sagte sie, die leicht ironische Empörung in ihrer Stimme unverkennbar. „Verschieben Sie nichts!“

So wollte uns die Frau davon abbringen, unsere Urlaubspläne auf die lange Bank zu schieben. Denn sie hätte zusammen mit ihrem Mann allzu oft solche Worte von sich gegeben. „Das machen wir später, wenn die Kinder älter sind. Wenn wir mehr Zeit haben, mehr Geld. Wenn wir in Rente gehen.“

Doch später wurde immer später. Die Kinder wurden erwachsen und zogen aus. Ihr Mann arbeitete sehr gerne und weit nach dem üblichen Renteneintrittsalter. In ihrem Lebensabend hatten sie noch viel vor. Aber sie taten es. Alle paar Wochen, alle paar Monate, zogen sie durch die Landschaft auf ein neues Abenteuer. Ein Wochenende in dieser Stadt, ein kurzer Ausflug in jene. Nach all den Jahren hatten sie es sich verdient, und trotzdem sie nicht mehr die jüngsten waren, ließen sie sich nicht abschrecken.

2 minutes to read