Terence Eden. He has a beard and is smiling.

Terence Eden’s Blog

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Get all the reactions to your GitHub content using GraphQL

· 3 comments · 850 words


GitHub logo.

I am both vain and prurient. A combination which makes me fun at parties and a delight to know. Sometimes when I raise an issue on GitHub, or write a comment, other users leave me Emoji reactions. Perhaps a 👍 or 🎉 if they like my contribution, but occasionally a 👎 or 😕 if they're foolish enough to think I'm wrong. The problem is, GitHub doesn't tell me that someone has 🚀'd my wisdom. If GitHub w…

Book Review: The Examiner - Janice Hallett

· 2 comments · 350 words


Book cover featuring a scorpion.

I've thoroughly enjoyed all of Janice Hallett's previous crime books. The Examiner is, frankly, more of the same - and I'm happy with that! You, the reader, are given a series of transcripts and have to work out what crime (if any) has been committed. You don't find out who the victim(s) is/are until reasonably far through the story. The characters are well realised (although a little similar…

The cost of running OpenBenches.org

· 7 comments · 800 words · Viewed ~550 times


The Open Benches logo.

After my recent presentation at FOSDEM, someone asked a pretty reasonable question. What does it cost to run OpenBenches? It is, thankfully, surprisingly cheap! In part, that's because it is a relatively simple tech stack - PHP, MySQL, a couple of API calls to external services. It was designed to be as low cost while also being useful. Here's the breakdown: Hosting - £171 per year Our biggest …

Book Review: The Voyage of the Space Beagle by Alfred Elton Van Vogt

· 3 comments · 400 words


Book cover featuring a large alien on a scary planet.

This is Star Trek before Star Trek. It is Alien long before Alien. It is the template for so much modern science fiction. What it is not is particularly good. I don't intend to dump on the classics (and this is undoubtedly a classic) but 1950s sci-fi takes place in an almost alien media environment. Even if you ignore the anachronisms (like having to develop film in order to see photographs)…

Vanguard - The Government Project to get British Businesses to use the Internet

· 3 comments · 1,200 words · Viewed ~402 times


Vague graph showing how adopting technologies is beneficial.

Email isn't an obvious business benefit. Imagine it is the early 1980s and you need to communicate with people across the country. A first-class letter will cost you 17p - about 60p in today's money. The letter will be delivered the next day and you'll have your answer back the day after. By contrast, a single computer terminal was likely to set you back around £3,000 - and that's before you …

Book Review: With the End in Mind - Dying, Death and Wisdom in an Age of Denial by Kathryn Mannix

· 3 comments · 300 words


Book cover.

Is it possible to "die well"? We have midwives for births, should we have "deathwives" for the other end of our lives? I think this book was recommended to me in the depths of the pandemic. I was too much of a chicken to read it while those around me were dying. The book aims to normalise the process of death and mostly succeeds. Unlike a lot of books, it doesn't just identify a problem - it…

Theatre Review: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to The Galaxy - Immersive Experience

· 2 comments · 500 words · Viewed ~201 times


Promo image. People standing on a planet with a depressed robot.

You've read the books, listened to the original radio performances, re-read the books, worn the t-shirt - and now it is time to be part of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to The Galaxy. *Cue the music from Flight of the Sorcerer* This is a 90-ish minute immersive experience. As well as a full cast of actors and a puppet android, there are ✨celebrity✨ voice cameos. And songs! So many songs! Pre Show …

Book Review: The Players Act 1 by Amy Sparkes

· 200 words


Book cover featuring illustrated actors.

So! Much! Melodrama! This is a gently funny (and slightly tragic) romp with a band of travelling vagrants actors as they attempt to ply their renditions of Shakespeare to an indifferent 1700ish audience. There's a lot of charm to the characters and the plot is relatively straightforward. The characters are a bit one-note. The baddie never actually twirls his moustache - but you'll instantly…

Are there any open APIs left?

· 21 comments · 600 words · Viewed ~1,041 times


A screen of JSON code showing my details.

One of the dreams of Web 2.0 was that website would speak unto website. An "Application Programming Interface" (API) would give programmatic access to structured data, allowing services to seamlessly integrate content from each other. Users would be able to quickly grab data from multiple sources and use them for their own purposes. No registration or API keys, no tedious EULAs or meetings. Just …

Book Review: Doppelganger - A Trip Into the Mirror World by Naomi Klein

· 2 comments · 450 words


Book cover with the world Doppelganger getting progressively more distressed and distorted.

This book is excellent at describing the symptoms of madness which have beset the world. It expertly diagnoses the causes which have led so many people into a mirror-realm of fantasy. Sadly it falls short of prescribing a cure. I doubt anyone who has fallen into the conspiracy mindset will read this book - but I hope if you read it you will become inoculated against the brain-worms. Let's…

Do savings accounts really lose money to inflation?

· 1 comment · 650 words · Viewed ~732 times


Graph plotting inflation vs interest. Interest beats inflation until about 2008.

I'm absolutely addicted to the Reddit's UK Personal Finance forum - where people mutually support each other through the difficult world of managing one's personal finances. It's a great community and full of people eager to help others. In amongst the confusion around pensions, tips for budgeting, and complaining about debt-collectors is a persistent drumbeat encouraging people to save money.…

Book Review: Human Rites by Juno Dawson

· 1 comment · 200 words


Book cover featuring a woman with a horned goat's head.

After the pretty good Her Majesty's Royal Coven, the excellent Shadow Cabinet, the law of reverting to the mean hits the conclusion of Juno Dawson's Witches of Hebden Bridge trilogy. By now you know the tropes - Bitchy-Witches, 90s pop-culture references, and wry chapter titles. It's all done well enough, the plot is a little twisty, the story entertaining, and the repeated mentions of Buffy…