@ Adrian Tritschler · Wednesday, Feb 16, 2000 · 1 minute read · Update at Feb 16, 2000 ·
The valuer from Kay & Burton and only took about three minutes to go over the place. He is completely amazed at the huge gaping cracks in the brick wall and shakes his head when I explain the endless phone calls to Kay & Burton and no-show of their maintenance people. He says he will get them to contact me to fix it. He comments that there must be something basically wrong with the building for a crack that bad to be there – I suspect that ever since the Richmond Plaza’s three storey concrete car park was built right up to the property boundary, its weight has been pushing the ground down and twisting our old block of flats.
Adrian Tritschler's stuff
My website, an agglomerative mess, probably half-eaten by a grue
Vanity site? Technology experiment? Learning tool? Blog? Journal? Diary? Photo album? I could tell you, but then I’d have to kill you…
I experiment. I play. I write and I take pictures. Some of the site is organised around topics, other parts are organized by date, then there’s always the cross-references between them.
Its all been here a fairly long time. Like the papers on my desk, or the books on the bedside table, the pile just grew… and it all grew without much plan or structure. I try not to break URLs, so historical oddities abound.
Long ago it started as a learning experiment with a few static HTML pages, then I added a bit of server-side includes and some very ugly PHP. A hand-built journal/blog on top of that PHP, then a few experiments in moving to various static publishing systems. I’ve never wanted a database-based blogging engine, so over the years I’ve tried PHP, nanoblogger, emacs-muse, silkpage and docbook before settling on Emacs Org mode for writing and jekyll for publishing. But the itch remained… I never really liked jekyll and the ruby underneath always seemed so much black magic. So now the latest incarnation is Org mode and hugo.