Thursday, July 2, 2026

Altered Towers

Do you remember that unfortunate instance at Alton Towers, when they lost power and we lost the plot, again back in May when it seemed it was never our day?

Well they stepped up and went the extra mile, providing both refund and tickets for a return visit, and it's ever credit where credit's due here on the 'blog.

I've discussed this with myself at the breakfast bar, pointing out you were all quite disappointed at our not being able to afford our 'big day out' at Sheffield, where I was to be celebrated as perhaps the university's most philanthropic benefactor.

Well I listened, and shall take you all to Alton Towers instead at a forthcoming date yet to be decided... but clear your diaries for the whole of September whilst I dwell on it.

Meantime as one of the UK's foremost influencers can I recommend a day out at the Towers followed by a pint of pale ale at the Cat and Fiddle on the way home?

I'll do the house, my son the rides. As a retired pilot at Blackpool Pleasure Beach all I could do was to wonder, 'And if it comes off the rails... now?'

Park It


Do you remember that time back in May when we went to the Cat and Fiddle? Among England's highest pubs and legend for bikers throughout the North, but how upset we were at receiving a parking ticket subsequent?

Well the nice people at Smart Parking have waived all charges, and so as I learned from night-stops in Bangkok, everything really does have a happy ending.

Ed. His address here in Palm Springs has been redacted to protect the stupid.

Spider Cam, Spider Cam...


... does whatever a spider can. Many of you like me will have been thrilled with the performance of the overhead 'spider-cam' during coverage of FIFA's World Cup.

Like me you will have wondered what that shadow was darting about the pitch... was it another Unexplained Aerial Phenomenon?

We saw recently how aerial drones transformed coverage of the Winter Olympics, so like me you will have paused the action to check if drones were in action again here.

Apparently not. The spider-cam, which for years in the US has been pulled this way and that by tethers at four corners of the stadia, is still with us... like Lionel Messi.

The reason drones are not used principally relate to health and safety, the chance of a stray ball bringing one down and, say, taking out a Lionel Messi, is considered too great a risk.

I would add physics plays a part. Larger multi-rotored drones used to follow sports like rowing or horse-racing have a good deal of inertia; something that does not trouble our spider-cam with its super-powers.

The alternative is a sub-250g type like that used for downhill ski and snowboarding events.

These though make a horrible noise, beside triggering PTSD breakdowns in veterans watching the match and wondering if friends were about to spill their intestines into a popcorn bucket.

Ed. Spiders have eight legs and not four but members of the Brush-Footed Butterfly family do fit the prescription and we've asked the MLS to refer instead to the 'brush-footed butterfly-cam'.

Sell Out and Sell Off


If you listen to DJ Fatboy Slim on the recent long-running BBC radio programme Desert Island Discs you'll hear how he went to Reigate Grammar School, where he was in the same class as Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Keir established a reputation for not being able to stick to any single initiative he announced with the exception of adding sales tax to private education.

When I was at school, state education was selective so that for instance Keir and I would pass an exam that meant we went to a grammar school of this kind instead of what were variously called secondary modern or comprehensive schools. Around the time I was there, however, the Labour government ~ most of whom attended private or grammar schools themselves ~ abolished the system. It was something my lifelong Labour supporter at college described as having been rescued, and then pulling up the ladder.

Wind on a generation and they have done the same for what remains of free choice in education by effectively upping the fees that private schools have to charge by some 25%. It did appear this would barely alter the status quo, and this was correct in so far as it effectively eliminated any chance of working-class parents continuing to benefit in that way.

I'd like to believe the revenue gained would be steered exclusively toward the state education system, but then I'd like to believe that the Earth is flat. The upshot however was that aside from the richest schools catering to the wealthiest, like for example socialist politicians, the remainder have been decimated.

A side-effect is that any number have been bought up by Chinese concerns for who-knows-what reason: the best guess of mainstream media is straightforward asset stripping. Accordingly, Galaxy Global Education whose website is down at 9:10 on a weekday morning (see me after class) is in the process of closing down Malvern St James established in 1893, Ruthin School founded in 1284, and Robotics stars Durham High School for Girls... clockwise from top left.

It is I guess a part of Labour's ongoing efforts to eliminate any trace of either labour or initiative in the UK, though there are great hopes for Keir's replacement, local lad Andy Burnham... yeah, right. Important thing is, meantimes it helps sell off the last of our silverware before the proper Soviets arrive.

I've no particular axe to grind though regards politicians, and like most of us living through the arse-end of a civilisation, loathe all of them equally.

* Ed. Well that's going to get us a grant, isn't it?

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Flat-Cat #2: Pat Pending


The value of a patent these days is debatable: one of my flying studes in London did act on behalf of the builder who invented the ratcheted silicone gun back in the day and would travel to China ~ where practically all were manufactured ~ in an effort to enforce the patent. Told me they'd go to court and the factory would close down and be up and running farther down the street a day or two later. US did the same to the UK circa 250 years ago, but the good news is we'll be able to do the same to China in due time, if indeed there are any factory buildings left either here or there.

But there was a time I'd be up all night feverishly drafting patents, and beside this I have to admit that Professor Pat Pending was my favourite Wacky Racer as a child.

Normally you don't share the content of an application or 'spec' but we're a caring, sharing community here at the blog and besides, you don't know whether I have filed any 'divisionals' which describe supplementary secret squirrels... so do you feel lucky, punk?

But print it off and let's treat it as a young person's guide to the patent process. It does have its uses, as King James I said when his courtiers patented the idea. For instance the 'Dragons' on the BBC's programme ~ for which I auditioned years ago ~ put undue value on one, which is surprising in view of the fact none of them know jack-shit about design or engineering. In fact as often as not patents work to inhibit the spread of good ideas, which is kind of the opposite of what was intended.

Anyhow, quiet at the back please, and turn to your printouts:

First off we've to establish what it is we're trying to invent in simple terms, which is why I've described it as a flat-packed watercraft. Reasonable?

Then we've to say why everything else out there is fairly useless, and how ours is set to change the world of boating for ever and ever.

Then there is a big-picture paragraph describing what we intend to do with it, and as an agent once told me, you want to add as much as you can think of in reason, which is why I've thrown in that casual reference ~ as might Superman ~ to notions that it might fly too. Keen followers of my work will recall that was something we'd have loved for flat-cat version 1.0, which was much the same as this albeit without wiiings.

Now we turn to the diagram or diagrams with which we shall flesh out the invention.

I have to admit at this point that the 'drawing' as they call it is literally sketchy, but that does not matter unduly for three reasons. Firstly if they don't like it (and as it's an online process and staff will have been cut to the bone, they likely won't even be looking) then they will tell you, and secondly we can re-file a duplicate with a better drawing altogether and claiming 'priority' from this one. Thirdly a lot of nutters out there file patent applications, and theirs are even worse, believe me.

The way I have always done this is old school viz. I build a model, take a photo of it and send it to a nice man who used to be in Birmingham to get it suitably rendered. Actually he's married a Latvian and now lives there, where they insist on business being done against a registered VAT (sales tax) account... which involves me paying a mate of mine with a company and transferring the cash. This is the reason Gen Z are unlikely to bother when video-streaming's out there.

Now you can only patent one aspect or single invention at a time and a basic outline does not cut it, firstly because we've disclosed such methods to the world online and secondly because the examiner is likely to point out it's not that unique, if all things are taken into account.

This is where we have literally to be inventive and what I have done is to suggest the boat is not simply flat-packed, but also foldable or collapsible when not in use; and I've left absent whether the two halves might be separate too or whether the upper parts remain intact during the process. Technically each side is not 'handed' and could be used for either side, which is an argument for them being independent so that if one gets pranged, you could substitute a spare.

If you think of things subs, incidentally, you can post a 'technical disclosure' online that renders them public and would invalidate any competitive patent. It was too an idea originated in the UK, adopted vigorously by the likes of IBM subsequent. There is a long-established company that charges for it, but you can do it for free at the Digital Commons... who send you a monthly round-up of the number of downloads each submission has enjoyed.

Essentially the description as revealed in the text associated with the diagrams is a step-by-step account of how practically such a thing can be built, and this may have to be demonstrated in court as patents are technically legal documents. This would be a great day out for the blog and one giant leap for blog-kind, but quite unlikely.

What we're trying to do here essentially is to deconstruct the idea of boats at a time when it is in many ways overdue. As the author of On Walden Pond pointed out though it is fine building a castle in the air, but at some stage we've to get out there and get our hands dirty, or wet.

I hope though you've enjoyed this literary excursion and that it put you off for good, however?

The fact we've filed on Jul 1st though means it's an easy date to remember, seeing as it's the start of the second half of the year. We needn't do much until nearer the anniversary, or spend any money and even then we can file an international patent providing six months further grace.

By then tho' I'll have invited you all in, and been jailed for illegal share-trading.

Ed. No charge for illustrations: the digital honesty box on our merch page set to process $100.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Con Trail


Around 50% of YouTube is AI slop, a further 40% angry people shooting off and the remainder (for reasons I can't fathom and this one's garnered over 750 comments in less than a fortnight) footage of aircraft landing when it's windy.

For whatever reason too, their authors feel obliged to embellish the thumbnail, and in this case a contrail has been added to an airliner in the final stage of an approach to Birmingham Airport.

Naturally after a glass of Hock my own comment read:

Think you'll find they're SOMEWHAT BELOW THE 'MINTRA' LEVEL... ROT IN HELL, LOSER!!!

198 LW (Reprise)


In a Hands across the Irish Sea gesture we are indebted to Galway's Tommy Ruddy for the final fifteen minutes of BBC Radio 4's longwave output... and on what looks to be Pye's magnificent 1780 model unless I'm mistaken!

And how easy to operate in contrast to navigating a screen: ON/OFF, volume, tone and band selector besides an auto-tune toggle for wavering FM frequencies.

There again I can't see a means of tuning anywhere... crap these old radios.

Nonetheless let's ignore that for a moment to enjoy 'Sailing By' or the tune that has preceded the late shipping forecast for more than fifty years:


Ed. No aerial required for LW reception... stick that up your modulated frequencies.