2nd March 2008, 02:48 pm
Monthly rainfall tallies for the past 6 years (in millimetres), as at 20 km east of Armidale, NSW.
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Total
2002 50.0 80.0 78.7 3.5 4.3 21.9 10.3 58.2 26.7 25.0 83.2 75.6 517.4
2003 51.6 144.5 52.7 108.7 39.1 31.8 18.9 23.0 5.7 91.3 55.9 71.1 694.3
2004 192.1 77.8 65.2 22.4 5.4 20.4 43.3 49.6 45.9 111.2 69.0 133.8 836.0
2005 92.9 66.3 16.2 13.2 18.8 82.6 20.9 13.4 87.1 60.2 154.3 98.7 724.6
2006 109.5 115.2 110.2 22.5 3.6 45.8 46.4 30.8 44.8 29.8 133.6 43.8 735.0
2007 98.1 137.1 95.4 43.6 21.7 39.9 8.7 105.4 13.8 95.7 102.8 127.7 889.9
2008 133.6 203.0 (YTD) 336.6
The 135 year average for Armidale (in millimetres) is:
Avg 104.5 87.1 65.0 45.9 44.4 56.9 49.2 48.4 51.6 67.8 80.4 89.2 790.1
It’s been quite wet of late with above average rainfall in the past 5 months. A moderate La Niña episode has been responsible for the turn-around from the past several years of drought. Forecasts suggest that we’ll see at least another 3 months of wetter than average weather.
19th January 2008, 08:20 am
What a strange story from the ABC Online news service:
“Man critically injured in train platform accident” (http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/01/19/2142088.htm)
“A man is in critical condition after colliding with a train on a platform of Carnegie Station in Melbourne on Friday afternoon.
Police say the 62-year-old approached the empty express train before he was hit.”
A man collided … (objects collide with objects; in common usage, people don’t collide with trains)
… on a platform … (the train must have risen up from the track)
… the 62-year-old approached the empty express train … (”approached”? - like he was going to ask it for the time?)
1st January 2008, 06:23 pm
The rainfall chart for 2007 is now closed - the tally has been added to this table.
Monthly rainfall tallies for the past 6 years (in millimetres), as at 20 km east of Armidale, NSW.
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Total
2002 50.0 80.0 78.7 3.5 4.3 21.9 10.3 58.2 26.7 25.0 83.2 75.6 517.4
2003 51.6 144.5 52.7 108.7 39.1 31.8 18.9 23.0 5.7 91.3 55.9 71.1 694.3
2004 192.1 77.8 65.2 22.4 5.4 20.4 43.3 49.6 45.9 111.2 69.0 133.8 836.0
2005 92.9 66.3 16.2 13.2 18.8 82.6 20.9 13.4 87.1 60.2 154.3 98.7 724.6
2006 109.5 115.2 110.2 22.5 3.6 45.8 46.4 30.8 44.8 29.8 133.6 43.8 735.0
2007 98.1 137.1 95.4 43.6 21.7 39.9 8.7 105.4 13.8 95.7 102.8 127.7 889.9
The 135 year average for Armidale (in millimetres) is:
Avg 104.5 87.1 65.0 45.9 44.4 56.9 49.2 48.4 51.6 67.8 80.4 89.2 790.1
So, 890 mm (35 inches) of rain for the year isn’t too bad considering that this area was officially drought declared for part of the year. One good year doesn’t break the multi-year span of a drought, though. We just have to learn to live with less water in some years.
31st December 2007, 12:16 pm
My blog reading tool of choice for a long time used to be NetNewsWire. It’s a great piece of software and a great tool - I had purchased it after trialing it for a short time. But, being on a 2-way satellite link with a finite download quota, I began to resent the amount of bandwidth being consumed by NetNewsWire as it went about its business of checking for new blog articles every 2 hours. To be factually correct, much of the problem was due to bloggers not being aware of, or not being able to utilise, their ability to turn on data compression when their RSS feed was being checked.
My solution to this issue was to turn to Google Reader (again). I had tried Google Reader some time previously but, at the time, I didn’t like its user interface. And some time before that I had used Bloglines as an online reader before likewise becoming frustrated by its user interface.
In the intervening time Google had released a new version of their Reader. And I liked it. Google looked after the periodic checking for new blog articles - my own bandwidth use was reduced. Google Reader used Ajax to feed me only a couple of handfuls of blog articles at a time, thus trickling the data to me rather than spiking my bandwidth use.
And them came feed overload. Each time I came across an interesting blog article from a person whose blog I wasn’t subscribed to, I would immediately subscribe in the hope of continuing to find similarly interesting articles.
After I had reached some 535 feed subscriptions I came to the realisation that the signal to noise ration wasn’t especially good. I was having to wade through far too many articles that I wasn’t interested in before coming across something that was of interest.
So began the Great Cull.
Over a period of weeks I unsubscribed from over 200 blog feeds - I’m currently subscribed to about 320. That’s manageable. It now takes me less time to reading a larger number of interesting articles. I win.
1st July 2007, 01:15 pm
There’s no doubt that a few hundred thousand Apple iPhones have been sold in the USA over the past few days. It’s been highly anticipated and talked about and written about for months now. The new owners must be having a great time.
Then there are those of us in the rest of the world. Will it / won’t it be sold in Australia? The iPhone, currently, is a GSM device. Telstra, the largest carrier here, has pooh-poohed the idea of their supporting it - they’re moving away from GSM and CDMA to their new 3G network. If their advertising is to be believed, their nationwide CDMA network will be switched off in January 2008.
In the meantime, instead of the real thing, we’ll just have to make do by operating an iPhone by proxy. Here’s the link to the iPhone’s User Guide, read it, then imagine yourself using the new techno-thing.
If it’s any consolation, just remember that’s it’s never a great idea to buy something that’s version 1.0. Let others work out the bugs first.
16th June 2007, 12:42 pm
I’ve finally upgraded the software that drives this blog. It’s now running WordPress v2.2. Let me know if you notice something broken.