I am as pleased as punch to have attended the graduation ceremony for the BA learning technology research degree run by Anglia Ruskin University. Not least because it is now three years old, and I was one of the team that helped devise the pathway and create the opportunity. However, it is more significant than that for me… this particular cohort included my brother who graduated with a first class honours degree.
The degree pathway allows you to stay in regular employment throughout the course. You actually study your work in a research sense and engage in a number of practical and innovative projects designed to help you get better at what you already do.
Codenamed ‘Ultraversity’ from inception, the degree was one of the first work based learning solutions in the UK that is designed to keep you in your job. Others may encourage you to study and seek promotion elsewhere after graduating, or take an extraordinarily long time to complete, but Ultraversity is designed to be completed in just three years, operates entirely online and doesn’t require any face to face sessions at all.
It might just be worth your while contacting Anglia Ruskin University in Chelmsford to find out more – it is a full quality British degree and remains one of the most innovative approaches to degree studies I have yet seen.
But it was the pride with which I watched my brother graduate that I shall remember, more than anything else. More than the speech about how good ARU is as a university, more than the procession of academics, more than the dank and cold weather…
Today I went to the local supermarket and did the usual rounds of the aisles, loading the trolley with packets of food all wrapped in excessive amounts of cardboard and plastic. Today I picked up less than I usually do, but even so it was more than would fit into one or two bags.
On 1st October, Sainsbury’s took the decision to move the plastic bags off the end of the checkout, but to make them available if asked for. Not realising this, I stopped and asked. The conversation with the enthusiastic (over zealous?) 17yr old lad went along these lines:
“Could I please have some bags?”
“Yes, how many would you like?”
“I think six should do it, thanks.”
“Six? For that little lot? You don’t need six, you could get all of that into just four…”
“Do you think so? I don’t, which is why I have asked for six. If it turns out I can manage with less then I’ll leave some on the end of the checkout. Please pass me six bags.”
Now I wasn’t in a very good mood at that point in the day, and could possibly have been a little less ‘sharp’, but I really do object to being told I can do with less by someone who hasn’t done as much shopping as I have done, who chooses not to question the reason why he has been told to restrict the bags in the first place.
Apparently, it’s to save the planet, some environmental excuse like that. Which is fine – I’m the first to complain if I see something not being done, but I was told that it was the scourge of plastic bags which is most damaging to the environment, and made to feel as I was somehow to blame for the multiple thousands that are strewn along our highways and byways. I was the culprit, obviously.
I pointed out that plastic bags form less than 1% of all landfill, and that plastic packaging, such as that used for ready meals, forms a massive component. What really made me cross was that the supermarkets themselves promoted the use of plastic bags back in the late seventies to replace the humble cardboard box. Does anyone else remember hunting for a decent box under the checkouts and using those to pack the groceries in? When home, the box would be unpacked and crushed to go into the bin… or these days into the recycling. So what happened to boxes then? They were untidy components at the tills, polythene seemed far cheaper, more accessible, maybe. The humble cardboard box was cast out as inefficient and unwanted. Yet what is more environmentally suitable?
To my mind, the supermarkets drive the need for plastic packaging, by demanding foodstuffs that can be kept on the shelves longer, and are responsible for a huge proportion of the environmental damage we have got by importing foods from all over the planet (apparently we consumers demand that they do so) by using less than environmentally friendly processes. They introduce bags that do not degrade, and refuse to absorb far better alternatives, such as alternative plastics because they cost a bit more (and goodness knows, we can’t have a supermarket giant like Sainsbury reducing its profit margin by giving away better bags). They remove the cardboard boxes which were fine, actually, and then employ some spotty 17 year old child who is told to peddle the environmental angle to those of us who can remember what it was like to shop in small greengrocers that have long since been put out of business by supermarkets.
So the supermarket that employs the young man who doesn’t actually question any of what he has been told is the very same one that has been driving the need for the plastic packaging which forms the vast majority of household waste, and then turns on the guilt for the consumer by telling them how wasteful it is to use too many bags… the very bags which make up so very little of the content of land fill sites.
I just don’t get it.
Are we consumers now somehow responsible for the decisions that were taken at corporate level years ago? Decisions that were driven by efficiency demands, cost savings, commercial directions? Are we now going to just sit back and let Sainsbury and Tesco and every other large supermarket hoodwink us all into believing that we are all to blame for this? Maybe we should stop eating lychees and guavas, or tomatoes from Holland, and stick to the foods we can produce in our own country? Actually, I’m quite in favour of that.
Give me back the cardboard box and I’ll take it to a recycling plant. Give me a paper bag to pack the products into. Start putting milk back in to glass bottles, which are made from a pretty abundant raw material, after all and can be recycled. Start spending some of your enormous profits on envinronmentally friendly, alternative plastics for your bags (if you are going to provide any) and start putting meals for one into packaging that isn’t going to take three barrels of oil to make. But whatever else you do, never ever tell your staff to advise me that I don’t need six bags, particularly when they have no idea about what my needs really are, and when you have spent so much of this planet’s resources lining your pockets with cash for far too long.
Up until now I have been a big fan of tinyurl, which takes a really long URL from anywhere and converts it into a short and neat version that can be pasted into a text document or email. This is good because it means the link won’t split over lines and is less likely therefore to appear to be broken.
Where Spedr wins is that it is an extension to Firefox and gives you the exact same functionality in your URL bar by clicking a small ‘lightening bolt’ icon. This saves so much time it’s ridiculous! Tinyurl does provide a link to add to your toolbars in other browsers, which is alright, but takes you to the tinyurl.com page.
Have you ever wanted to just get the complete path to a file and use it in a text editor? I find I do more often these days, particularly when trying to explain to someone where they might find a preference file, for example. I’m sure there used to be the ability to copy the file path to the clipboard in earlier versions of Mac OS, but in OSX it isn’t there.
You can get utilities that add that functionality, of course, but I was playing with Automator again, and thought I’d give it a go. It turns out to be extraordinarily easy!
Run Automator, set it to work with FIles and Folders, and add the first of two commands: ‘Get Selected Finder Items’. Now add the second commans from the ‘Utilities’ section: ‘Copy to Clipboard’.
That’s it. Really.
Now go to the ~/Library/Workflows/Applications/Finder folder and put your workflow in there. It will now appear in the contextual menu, under ‘Automator’ for any file or folder you have got. When you click it, wait a moment for a slight ‘flash’ to appear on screen and you know you’ve got the path in your clipboard.
If you need to replace the Unix style separators with a forward slash, or replace the full path to show a ’tilde’ character (as in the example above) then simply add a third command in between the two you’ve just done – use the ‘Text’ tools and run a ‘Search and Replace’ command to find ‘:’ and replace with ‘/’. You might also want to replace ‘Users/accountname/’ with simply ‘~/’ or even ‘User Account/’ or whatever you want. Add another workflow item before the ‘Copy to Clipboard’ command.
Then, pick any file or folder anywhere on your system, control (right) click on it and select ‘More’ at the bottom of the menu, then ‘Automator’ then the name of your workflow. You’ll then be able to paste it into any text document you wish. You can download my workflow file HERE.