Terence Eden. He has a beard and is smiling.

Terence Eden’s Blog

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Book Review - Embroidered Worlds: Fantastic Fiction From Ukraine & The Diaspora

· 1 comment · 300 words


An old Ukrainian woman smokes a pipe. Is she a cyborg or a creature of legend?

I don't usually back Kickstarter campaigns - but I love sci-fi & fantasy, and I don't think I've previously read any from Ukraine. So this was an instant buy - and it is a delight. As with any translation, you have to accept that the phrasing may sound a little "foreign" and you won't immediately get all the idioms and references - but that's all part of the fun, right? A tiny drumming sound…

The Mobile Phones of Doctor Who - 60th Anniversary Specials

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Dual screen phone showing CGI of a rocket landing and lots of scientific read-outs.

Let's do the time warp again! If you're new to the blog series, this is where I attempt to identify all the mobile phones used by The Doctor and their companions. The 2023 shows were an absolute blast. Some classic stories and a whole lot of running around. But were there any phones? Oh yes! The Star Beast First up, we get a gaggle of extras filming and taking selfies with the spaceship…

You can print posters of your own artwork and no one can stop you!

· 2 comments · 200 words · Viewed ~399 times


Giant poster on the floor.

It sometimes takes my brain a little while to catch up with reality. Back in 2019, I used Wikidata to improve a popular piece of art. I had lots of fun writing the code, fiddling with the output, and blogging about the process. Four years later I realised I could pay a poster shop to print it out! So I uploaded it to my RedBubble shop and paid about a tenner for them to print me off a HUGE…

Book Review: "How Buildings Learn: What Happens After They're Built" by Stewart Brand

· 14 comments · 700 words · Viewed ~224 times


Book cover showing buildings.

People who fart about with computers like to give themselves highfalutin titles. We're not programmers; we're architects! Yeah, nah. I wish I knew who recommended this book to me so that I could properly thank them. It is an astonishing series of life lessons viewed through the lens of architecture. Even to a lay-person like me, it was an accessible work - helped by Brand's friendly and…

A list of incredible BlockChain innovations which I would like funding for please

· 8 comments · 900 words · Viewed ~258 times


A tiny lego Storm Trooper eats a chocolate coin.

Dear the venture capitalists. I am a very charming white man and am prepared to drop out of university if you'll invest in these ideas. In the future, all your clothes are an NFT. "Wow! I love your blouse." "Thanks, here's a smart contract showing where I purchased it from. If you buy one, I get 10% of the sale price back in WoolworthsCoin." Applause Tokens™. A smart monitor under your t…

Using date-based CSS to make old web pages *look* old

· 9 comments · 750 words · Viewed ~8,207 times


Screenshot of an early BBC news website from the 1990s. The page looks old fashioned.

How do you know you're looking at an old website? You may have found a page which has lots of interesting information, but how can you tell it's a modern and relevant result? Some websites don't contain dates in their URls. There may not be a © date or publication date shown on the page. And the <meta> tags might not contain anything useful. If you're lucky, the site will look old fashioned: …

30,000 Crowd-Sourced Memorial Benches!

· 1 comment · 600 words


Graph showing a steady progression from 0 to 30,000 over a few years.

Way back in July 2017, Liz and I started OpenBenches.org. It was designed to be a fun way to record all the lovely memorial benches we saw on our walks. A few weeks ago, Stuart Orford added the thirty-thousandth entry! Here's what all that collective human effort looks like when plotted on a very exciting graph. Using a proprietary mix of AI and BIG DATA, I can confidentially predict that…

Gig Review: Scary Pockets at the Troxy

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Photo from the balcony at the Troxy - the dancefloor is full.

You know it's a good gig when you're having too much fun to take photos! I'd decided to go see the Internet-famous Scary Pockets on tour in London. A few months after buying the tickets, they announced they were moving to a bigger venue due to overwhelming demand. The Troxy was heaving! It's an excellent venue with a large standing floor and plenty of booths and seats for those of us who don't…

Reflections on completing NaNoWriMo

· 1 comment · 750 words


A laptop keyboard with worn out letters.

The venerable NaNoWriMo is a self-directed challenge. To whit - can you write a 50,000 word novel in the month of November? It doesn't have to be a good novel. You just need to complete it. 50k words over 30 days is 1,667 words per day. If you can type at about 20 Words Per Minute, then you can bash out a novel in 90 minutes per day. I completed the challenge in 15 days and published a new…

2023 - A Retrospective

· 5 comments · 850 words · Viewed ~211 times


Edent Shouting into a microphone.

Well, that year happened! I quit my Civil Service job. Started my own consultancy. Then took on a new job working 4 days a week. Busy! I wrote a 50,000 word set of sci-fi short stories for NaNoWriMo. Contributed to lots of Open Source projects and did a few responsible disclosures - but got no bounties. Got sent some weird gadgets to review. Went to some splendid restaurants. Saw some decent…

TfL are blocking rooted devices from accessing maps - how to fix

· 6 comments · 300 words · Viewed ~751 times


Error. TfL Go is only supported on unmodified version of Android.

TfL Go is a handy app. It gives you real-time access to the timetables and delays of London's tube and bus network. That's all you can do with it. You can't buy tickets, store a photocard, or anything like that. Which was why I was annoyed when this popped up in-app one day: I emailed them asking why they were doing this. The reply I got back was underwhelming: Thank you for contacting us…

Book Review: Bournville - Jonathan Coe

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Book cover featuring a British street party.

I did not get on well with this story. I know every novel has to be about The Pandemic, but this feels like it really wants to hammer home that Boris Johnson wasn't an especially good PM. I mean, yeah, we lived it. We know. At its heart, a story about how a family survives from the Second World War until the end of Covid might be interesting. It pops back and forth in time. It flips between…