i.t.a

A great thing about the web, and search engines in particular, is that you can use tiny fragments of information from the dark recesses of your memory to recover substantial quantities of information. I’ve done this quite a lot, for example, with songs that I heard in my early childhood. For thirty-odd years I would hum fragments to myself in the shower but had no knowledge of whence they came, until one day it would occur to me to type the words into Google and discover that I had been sharing my shower with the Osmonds all these years, or some such embarassing revelation.

Anyway, the thing I typed this morning was ‘ITA’. In the sixties, the British government sponsored an experiment in the use of the ‘Initial Teaching Alphabet’, a 40-character phonetic alphabet designed by Sir James Pitman. The idea was that it’s tough enough for young children to learn the concepts of reading and writing without having to cope with the irregularities of English spelling and pronunciation. Italian and Spanish children, who have a much more phonetically -consistent language, progress much faster in the early years. The irregularities of normal English are best left until the ages of six or seven when the children are more confident about their abilities with the mechanics of reading and writing.

Well, that’s the way I learned, and it worked very well for me. Others, I gather, had different experiences, but my mother says that on one Very Important Day I went to school using ITA and came back using grown-up spelling, and never read an ITA book again. In fact, I had almost no memory of the alphabet I used for the first year or two of my education. Until this morning, that is, when I realised I could read all about it again.

Come along, boys!

It’s amazing what you can find on the web. I was looking for something completely different when I came across this rather wonderful description of Boy’s Vaulting Poles from an 1896 book by Daniel Carter Beard.

Lots more in this vein at Daniel Carter Beard’s Online Books

Where Apple leads…

picture of AOPen's Mac mini clone
AOpen’s imitation of the Mac Mini is the highest form of flattery.

This is not a bookshop…

Do you remember when computers and software used to come with manuals?

Not any more

A change in the Status-Q

I’ve been updating Statuq-Q to use WordPress 1.5 and making a few changes along the way.. a few more yet to come.

One is that I’m going to start using ‘categories’ on my posts so that people interested in
gadgets & toys or
Apple & Macs or
photos can see them in more concentrated form. (There are links on the right of the page, too). Other categories may follow.

With over 600 posts now, I may take some time to apply these retrospectively. But if I don’t start now, the job will only get harder in future.

SUV Segways

Mmm. The Segway XT looks fun.

Segway XT

See also the comments on my last segway post for another use for Segways.

France votes ‘non’!

Well, even if I weren’t heavily jetlagged, I can’t say I would lose any sleep at all over the likely demise of the EU constitution.

There’s a rather nice Q&A section in the Times:

…the French are very traditional, conservative, very prone to striking and revolution (the revolution is for when their conservatism runs out).

Like father, like son

I like ’em both. Nice photos from both John and Pete Naughton.

Actually, John has provided me with a good reason to start using categories in WordPress. You can view the recent postings in his Photography category for a visually-pleasing little browse. I haven’t felt the need to categorise my blog posts until now, but I might follow his example. It’s also time to upgrade my copy of WordPress…

My first time

Yesterday I rode on a Segway for the first time. I had high expectations and it lived up to all of them. A beautiful bit of engineering.

The main reason I don’t have one (despite it being an expensive toy at present) is that I would feel guilty about not exercising. It’s faster than walking and more convenient than but not as fast as cycling, but since it wouldn’t give me any exercise it’s not a compelling replacement for either of those. I couldn’t really justify it simply on the basis of being more fun.

For me to buy one I’d need to find a convincing reason to use it instead of a car. I don’t have that yet. But I’ll keep looking!

How Linux Could Overthrow Microsoft

How Linux Could Overthrow Microsoft – a well-written article in MIT’s Technology Review.

© Copyright Quentin Stafford-Fraser