June 2006 Archives

Having a baby has changed my mind on one thing which was unexpected. Having a 24 week limit on abortion is quite a long time, I know babies who have survived earlier than this. Below 23 weeks gives a less than 50 percent chance, so setting the cut off at below this means that there is no possibility to be aborting something that if induced would survive. So a twenty week limit seems to make sense. I believe that abortion should be allowed and am certainly no a pro-lifer. By three months, people should be aware that they are pregnant, they'll have missed two periods, that gives them two months to make their decision and emotionally come to terms with it.

There are I think medical reasons why 22 weeks is suggested, from memory certain conditions can only be determined at this stage, so maybe 22 is better. I didn't think I'd be writing about this, but the 20/22 week scan is a powerful image in my mind. It will be interesting to see if this Government makes any moves toward changing the limits, certainly the Health Secretary is not keen. Some stats, cribbed from the BBC, 87 percent happen before 12 weeks, and only 1.6 percent happen after 20 weeks, which in 2004 was about 3000, but of those about 100 were at 24 weeks.

I've spent the past six months being pretty busy, in pubic, what with sorting out our house and then Oscar arriving. However, I've been pretty quiet about my work at Nature, pretty quiet in general, actually. One of the reasons has just become public. Nature Network Boston, a social network or community site aimed at scientists, in the Boston area.

I'm quite excited about the project. I think that more specialist community sites have real strengths, because you can workout the real things that your community wants to do. I've had a lot of fun developing this site, from the wireframes in Omnigraffle to working with LouiseC, LouiseM, Tom, Mat, Matt, Corie, Margaret, Joy and Stephania. Developing in Rails was really productive, too.

A more considered launch announcement is on my team's weblog. We have a range of other products for scientists on Launchpad if you are interested.

Over the past year or so, the lack of wearing of watches amongst my London geek contemporaries has been frequently commented on. I'm sorry to break ranks, but I'm back to wearing a watch again. It is partly needing to be prompt for things, but the main desire was to be able to track time when Lucy was close to her due date. Also a phone in your pocket is just not enough as my main time piece, the awkwardness of getting a phone out of a jeans pocket made me check the time less often.

Relying on my powerbook to tell me the time is great when I'm in my office or sat using it at home, but I've spent a lot of the last few months away from my computer. Firstly doing lots of DIY, where the task was actually more important than the time. Then looking after Oscar when time sort of is irrelevant, but also a way of remaining sane.

So now I'm back with a watch on my wrist and it feels good, you should try it.

I built a shed yesterday, whilst Lucy looked after Oscar. I made a building in fact, the first I remember creating. It is an oddly powerful feeling. A space to store our things that is dry and safe for them. I can understand part of why people feel attached to them. I know the other half is escape and peace and quiet, but this one is 80cm by 210 cm and too low to stand up in.


See Lucy's picture of me making the shed

Today when I went down to the kitchen, there was something where yesterday there was nothing. One seldom gets to make a building, buy them, let them or stay in them, but not build them.

It made me think more about this house we bought and the irritation with the plumbing we are having. There is something appealing about starting afresh, what I like about Victoriana is not necessarily the age, more the style. With the age comes everyone else's compromises and shoddy workmanship. I'm tempted in my next house to start with a clean slate as much as possible. Here in Walthamstow, we rewired, part replastered and put in a new bathroom, given more time and money and hindsight, I'd have replaced all the plumbing and the kitchen too. Plumbing is the worst, every plumber dislikes the style or shortcuts of the previous incumbents.

That however is an immense amount of work, so to return to the shed, there is something appealing about a new building, hence the public appeal of Grand Designs I guess, making a big statement with the place you live in is tempting. A green oak framed barn would be nice, maybe someday, I'd need somewhere to build it though, which is a whole other blog post.

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