IdioC's Fifth Dimension

IdioC

22:35, 18 July 2010

IdioC

People in little white coats

Categories: Science

In the past few months, I’ve spent most of my time in some rather strange facility, and no, probably not the one you immediately think of. I doubt padded cells have good enough internet connections.

This is the quaint and unusual world of the chemical laboratory. Where people are beyond aware of the potentially harmful nature of strange powders and liquids, let still opt to stand in front of them in a glass cupboard in the hope that through stirring them or heating them it changes colour or forms lumps before 5pm. Where work involves changing one thing you can’t visually determine into another equally enigmatic species by the shape of a couple of a graphs, in the hope it might be medically or physically useful. Where you might handle something lethal, then consider it perfectly fine to eat your lunch in the room next door. Yet, allegedly, we’re just making some sort of living and are perfectly sane.

We are the people in little white coats.

Spending at least three years getting a degree – well, one-and-a-half if you discount the lie-ins while others got notes, summer breaks and moments of insobriety – clearly wasn’t enough to deter me from staying in lab work. Student life needs little introduction: absorbing the discoveries of the past hundred or so years as spoken by the great minds of the areas in question, after getting the notes of missed lectures a week before the exam; repeating the experiments of those who attempted new and innovative things, then making gargantuan mistakes through skipping off to lunch early; then striking our own paths through the wilderness of the scientifically unknown, usually turning out to be circular or old tracks in papers from 50 years ago that were just slightly overgrown. Somehow I avoided setting myself on fire, accidentally inhaling something to make me drop dead and cartoon-style explosions throughout my time and left University with a piece of parchment, wearing thick, black robes against all sense on one of the hottest days in summer and getting rained on in the British tradition. This was, however, a bitter-sweet moment, the friends from my department had PhD places lined up, the friends from my societies had their own paths to follow, whereas leaving with a BSc meant there was no space for me yet in the department I had worked in. The city that I had grown to know, love and get frustrated with the transport system of over the past few years was going to be left behind, with my career looking uncertain: a one-year MSc course would be difficult to find, a one-year MSc course in a research area relevant to where I’d worked before yet more so,  a one-year MSc course with the money to keep me alive a needle in a haystack.

However, the wonders of modern technology, such as computers, needles usually being made of metal and enough caffeine to search through the potential paths in a coffee-blurred haze meant that the haystack was easier than ever to burn down to leave the needle behind. I could live 75 miles away and leave what I’d known behind, but have a living doing what I wanted to do. Move down for a year, do the work, get the parchment and then I could look for the suitable next research step, possibly moving back to see all the friends and places I’d left behind. Money talks. Importantly it talks to shops so I can get food, to landlords so I can get a roof on my head and to bars to get me beer at the end of the week. It’s an effortless negotiator.

But it was never going to be that simple, was it?

IdioC and a Binary Spanner

19:04, 14 July 2010

Site Tweakings

Categories: Random

It’s been a while since anything happened on this site, partially due to re-establishing my working life after a hiatus, partially due to time restraints and partially because every time I came to update the site, the front page evidently needed work. It was a large (admittedly default) summary of all the pages which didn’t really look that inviting or particularly organised. Just a field of off-pink and greys. It needed hitting aesthetically with a hammer.

A few issues with it came from how it was designed to begin with. The site was designed on a 1024×600 netbook originally and made the transition nicely to my 1440×900 screen (both 16:10), but the menu system, being centred, generated large pastel-pink voids either side of it on larger screens. I’ve returned the system to a fixed-width centre despite the narrowing of the reading space on larger resolutions, to keep the header well-tied to the body.

Another glaring cringe-worthy issue was the background, affecting all pages on the site. The black border around the main content dividing the off-pink from… yet more off-pink.  Although not pure black, it was still too strong for a border and the colour needed changing. Something darker was needed in the background to help being out the brighter centre and I toyed with several ideas. Gradients are pretty unoriginal and awkward to “arrange” around the centre for all browsers, as well as looking different between resolutions. Two-toned diagonal stripes are ubiquitous and having a static photograph would cause issues with tiling. The only option was to alter an image I’d taken myself – so as not to pinch someone else’s picture – then stylise it to reduce the number of colours to prevent it being too “busy”. Hopefully it doesn’t look narcissistic having a picture of myself splattered everywhere!

Finally, the front page needed structure of its own, a focus and the site needed some long-overdue links to other things. The old front page showed the title, timestamp and an excerpt of the 10 newest posts (originally it showed the entire post for each). The current one hopefully retains this functionality whilst looking structured and not taking up too much space. The links and twitter integration are all in a similar style to the latest posts and hopefully this makes the site a lot better aesthetically.

…and perhaps most importantly, it’s Firefox 3.6.6 and IE 8.0.6 tested. It has a few W3C validation errors but those will be ironed out in time.

UPDATE (19:13): The site’s pages now validate to XHTML 1.1 and CSS3.

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