Sunday, February 14, 2010

Changes to the Blogger FTP services

I received this in an email from Blogger; it's genuine, I have checked.

"You are receiving this e-mail because one or more of your blogs at Blogger.com are set up to publish via FTP. We recently announced a planned shut-down of FTP support on Blogger Buzz (the official Blogger blog), and wanted to make sure you saw the announcement. We will be following up with more information via e-mail in the weeks ahead, and regularly updating a blog dedicated to this service shut-down here: http://blogger-ftp.blogspot.com/."
I use FTP for my this blogpage at http://earlshilton.org.uk/blogger.html (my own domain). This comes as a bit of a surprise because I am currently re-designing thisblog. That idea is now gone out of the window!

The full text of the announcement at Blogger Buzz follows:

"Last May, we discussed a number of challenges facing[1] Blogger users who relied on FTP to publish their blogs. FTP remains a significant drain on our ability to improve Blogger: only .5% of active blogs are published via FTP — yet the percentage of our engineering resources devoted to supporting FTP vastly exceeds that. On top of this, critical infrastructure that our FTP support relies on at Google will soon become unavailable, which would require that we completely rewrite the code that handles our FTP processing.

Three years ago we launched Custom Domains[2] to give users the simplicity of Blogger, the scalability of Google hosting, and the flexibility of hosting your blog at your own URL. Last year's post discussed the advantages of custom domains over FTP[3] and addressed a number of reasons users have continued to use FTP publishing. (If you're interested in reading more about Custom Domains, our Help Center has a good overview[4] of how to use them on your blog.) In evaluating the investment needed to continue supporting FTP, we have decided that we could not justify diverting further engineering resources away from building new features for all users.

For that reason, we are announcing today that we will no longer support FTP publishing in Blogger after March 26, 2010. We realize that this will not necessarily be welcome news for some users, and we are committed to making the transition as seamless as possible. To that end:

o We are building a migration tool that will walk users through a migration from their current URL to a Blogger-managed URL (either a Custom Domain or a Blogspot URL) that will be available to all users the week of February 22. This tool will handle redirecting traffic from the old URL to the new URL, and will handle the vast majority of situations.
o We will be providing a dedicated blog[5] and help documentation
o Blogger team members will also be available to answer questions on the forum, comments on the blog, and in a few scheduled conference calls once the tool is released.

We have a number of big releases planned in 2010. While we recognize that this decision will frustrate some users, we look forward to showing you the many great things on the way. Thanks for using Blogger."
I won't bore you with all the details suffice to say that they have given all FTP users just two months to initiate the change which for me with my currently level of work is not practical.

I'm abandoning this blog as of now and I shall be actively searching for a new host. At the moment Wordpress is favourite, but how long will that last is the question? I originally blogged with Geocities.com (now gone!), then Yahoo (blog service shutdown}, then I went to MeOnLine (that disappeared without warning) and finally to Blogger FTP.
posted by Keith at 3:00 AM   5 comments

Monday, January 11, 2010

More old pictures

After seeing the Sepia Saturday posts of my mother and the Twycross school pictures a cousin, Brenda, on my fathers side emailed me two old pictures of our great-grandfather that I didn't know existed.

Rather than wait another two weeks to show you I thought I would put them up now. The quality is good considering their age. I don't think I could improve them in Photoshop so I'll post them as I received them. Click the pictures to see a larger version.


The first on shows my grandfather sitting between the steps and the wheel of the vardo (gypsy caravan). My great-grandfather is sitting at the entrance to the 'bender' (a makeshift tent that the Romani used to cook and eat in). My grandfathers brother, Dick, is on the right of the picture, next to great-grandad.

We cannot trace our family back any earlier that this photo because the Romani didn't register births, deaths or marriages in the old days.

The second picture shows great-grandad years later when he obvious went on a trip to the seaside! We do know that he lived to be 94 which was a great age in those days. Apparently then gypsies lived longer than their 'townie' counterparts because of their diet of mainly fruit, veg, nuts and berries. Surprisingly they ate very little meat, well except for the odd hedgehog now and then. Perhaps we should learn from that and cut out burgers and fatty meats! (Do McDonalds do hedgehog-burgers?)


My great-grandfather was a bare fist prize fighter known on the circuit as 'Brandy Joe Smith' because of his love of French Brandy. In his younger days he took the caravan and the family around all the country fairs in the south of England, and after setting up his tent he would challenge all-comers to a boxing match at 2/6d a time and the winner took the 5 shilling bet. Apparently he was quite good, so he must have made quite a bit of money!

Brandy Joe's son, my grandfather, met the love of his life when he was 21, but she was a 'gadjo' (a non-Romany) and her name was Maud Elsie Worthy. They met at one of the country fairs in the New Forest where he was trading horses and ponies. She was rather keen on buying a New Forest pony that he and trained. After a long courtship he asked her to marry him. She said she would if he gave up the travelling life and settled down in a house and got a proper job. He agreed and they married and had twelve children, ten boys and two girls. My father, also named Joe, was the second eldest. Like all good love stories, they lived happily ever after; I think.


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posted by Keith at 7:55 AM   5 comments

Friday, January 8, 2010

Sepia Saturday


Twycross School 1922
Clic the pic to enlarge

This weeks picture is of all the children who attended Twycross Village School in Leicestershire in 1922. I can't name all the pupils, just my mother, and her three sisters and one of her brothers.

My mother, Mary, is on the back row 2nd from the right. Standing on her left at the end is Harry who died seven years after the picture was taken. In the middle row are Dorothy, Irene and Jessie who are 6th, 7th, and 8th from the left. If you look at last weeks "Sepia Saturday" which was taken six years later (I have been informed by a cousin, Dorthy's daughter) you will see that Robert was obvious too young to have been in the school photo, probably he wasn't even born then.

I do have the original. As you can see it is badly creased and torn and is held together with Sellotape in places. One of these days I intend to process it with Photoshop and try to get the image looking a bit better.

Next week I will post a photo of my grandmothers wedding group taken on 19th April 1911 outside "Croft House", the Henton family mansion, now sadly demolished in the name of progress. The original photo is in a terrible condition and I've been working on it this week and it now looks like it was taken yesterday.

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posted by Keith at 3:50 PM   2 comments

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Snowed in?

What a load of wimps this present generation are! We had a light dusting of snow last night and this morning which reached the impressive depth of 1.4 inches, I know because I have just measured it. I know a lot of you have had it really bad, but south Leicestershire always seems to get away with a light fall of snow.

The news on the local radio station said that there had been numerous accidents in the area and several roads are blocked by snow. How? The picture shows my road, which is a little used side road, as completely clear with no problems, so the main roads around here must be clear of snow.

A further announcement on the radio gave a list of local schools that are "closed for the duration because of the bad weather". So the ever enthusiastic teachers and staff are having yet another day off with pay and the children, for whom the authorities decided it was too dangerous and cold for them to trudge 500 yards through the snow to school, are now out playing in it! My neighbour said she wasn't going to work because her car is "buried under the snow" (see top pic) "but it doesn't matter because I get paid whether I am there or not" she said.

Here is my "When I was a lad. . . " bit. Stand up the person who just groaned!

I remember the winter of 1947 when we had some real snow, several feet of it actually. If you want to see more pics then Google "Winter 1947".

I was 10 years old at the time and my school was just under 2 miles away, which is a long way for little legs to walk, even in good weather. School buses? They were a thing of the future. I do remember trudging through the snow with my friends because our school never closed. When we got there wet through and cold we had to dry out by the pot-bellied coke stove in the middle of the classroom. No central heating then. By late afternoon our clothes were dry enough to start the long trek homeward in the dark and cold. Amazingly we all survived. I think that winter hardened us for life.

If we got stuck in a snowdrift or had some sort of an accident there was no way we could alert anyone because; and this will amaze the younger generation, we did NOT have mobile phones!

Our parents never took us to school or picked us up after, we were left to work out our own salvation. Pædophiles and child molesters didn't seem to exist then, but if one did try anything we were all armed to the teeth, with pellet guns, catapults and our scout sheath knives.
posted by Keith at 1:22 PM   4 comments

Monday, January 4, 2010

Dealing withText Messagers

It seems to be common practice nowadays for people to reach into their pocket or handbag during a conversation and take out their mobile phone.

While half-listening to their companion, this miscreant will read any text messages recently arrived in their inbox, sometimes even composing a reply. This is distinctly rude, and I suggest the following reposte.

In mid-conversation reach into your pocket or bag and pull out a slim volume of poetry, and proceed to read a verse or two in complete silence. Then gently place your book back into your pocket, or bag, and turn to your companion with "Excuse me. You were saying?"

Further exasperate your companion by taking out a little notebook and composing a line or two of verse yourself, heightening the effect by gazing skywards and licking the tip of your pencil.

If this doesn't work then you have no recourse but to gently take their mobile phone, and with a swift movement of your arm, throw it under a passing bus.

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posted by Keith at 1:17 PM   2 comments

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Sepia Saturday


This week my contribution is an early picture of my mother and her brothers and sisters. I'm not sure when the photo was taken, but I do know it was before 1929.
The reason I know that is because the boy on the left at the back died from poliomyelitis in 1929.


From left to right at the back is Harry, Mary (my mother), and Jessica. At the front is Dorothy, Robert, and Irene. The picture is a copy of the original, and that's the reason it's cut at off at the side and bottom.

I don't know where the original is. The photo was taken on my grandparents farm at Twycross in Leicestershire.

The farm has now disappeared and in it's place is a new housing estate called "The Oaks", which is ironic really because all the oak trees and hedgerows were cut down to make way for the houses and roads!

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posted by Keith at 7:52 AM   0 comments

Friday, January 1, 2010

January Man

Happy New Year to you all.


My daughter just sent me the words of a folk song which I think so very true. So here is my New Year post:

January Man
Dave Goulder

Oh the January man he walks abroad in woollen coat and boots of leather
The February man still wipes the snow from off his hair and blows his hand
The man of March he sees the Spring and wonders what the year will bring
And hopes for better weather

Through April rain the man goes down to watch the birds come in to share the summer
The man of May stands very still watching the children dance away the day
In June the man inside the man is young and wants to lend a hand
And grins at each new comer

And in July the man in cotton shirts he sits and thinks on being idle
The August man in thousands take the road and watch the sea and find the sun
September man is standing near to saddle up and lead the year
And Autumn is his bridle

The man of new October takes the reins and early frost is on his shoulder
The poor November man sees fire and wind and mist and rain and winter air
December man looks through the snow to let eleven brothers know
They're all a little older

And the January man comes round again in woollen coat and boots of leather
To take another turn and walk along the icy road he knows so well
The January man is here for starting each and every year
Along the way for ever

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posted by Keith at 12:26 PM   1 comments