tcpip: (Default)
Diary of a B+ Grade Polymath ([personal profile] tcpip) wrote2012-10-05 12:00 pm

LUV, US Elections, Gaming, Socialising

Last Tuesday night convened the monthly LUV meeting. A good turnout, and two excellent speakers which have spurred my hitherto laziness on the need to learn and use HTML5 more extensively. Have also made initial preparations for LinuxConf AU 2013 and, across The Ditch, Multicore World 2013.

This Sunday Dean Edwards, Vice-Chair of Democrats Abroad (Au) will be speaking at the Kooying ALP FEA on the US Presidential elections. Expected a good turnout and interest. Have followed the polling closely at RealClear Politics and FiveThirtyEight, both of which suggest an Obama victory.

Pendragon game last night introduced the mythic story of The Fisher King. Earlier this week my review of [livejournal.com profile] jiawen's Blade and Crown was published on rpg.net. Last Sunday Redmond finished a session of Dark Hesresy. Still working away way to complete the next issue of RPG Review with last minute articles coming in; hopefully will complete by early next week.

Last Saturday evening [livejournal.com profile] caseopaya and I enjoyed the company of Brendan E., where we enjoyed dinner, drinks, and several episodes of Archer. Also very much enjoying the Friday evening gatherings organised by Keith P., a multicultural mix primarily of local students with themed discussions which help both cultural communication and understanding (not to mention English skills). Tomorrow afternoon will have other visitors (work and ex-work) colleagues and their partners to tour the Willsmere estate.
ideological_cuddle: (Default)

[personal profile] ideological_cuddle 2012-10-05 04:11 am (UTC)(link)
Willsmere as in the place in Kew, or some other Willsmere?

I ask because my boss just moved there this week!
ideological_cuddle: (Default)

[personal profile] ideological_cuddle 2012-10-05 04:35 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, you live there?

I'll probably be there on Sunday to help the boss with her A/V setup, as it happens. I was looking at the rental listing for the place she got and thinking it looked awesome, particularly for the price, and was all set to go looking for more listings until I saw how unsuitable it is for public transport...
ideological_cuddle: (Default)

[personal profile] ideological_cuddle 2012-10-05 05:19 am (UTC)(link)
Hm. It looks to be about a km to Princess St, though from there I guess you've got the bus down to Kew Junction. By suburban standards that's pretty reasonable, but I live in Carlton... ;->

What're the local facilities (shops, that kind of thing) like? Much within walking distance, or is it mostly houses?
ideological_cuddle: (Default)

[personal profile] ideological_cuddle 2012-10-05 05:42 am (UTC)(link)
It does look really nice, and if I were more "normal" it'd absolutely go toward the top of the list of places to look at.

The catch for me is that I am utterly dependent on public transport and close-by facilities -- too blind to drive, and mobility more broadly is an issue thanks to the MS. Thus winding up renting a house somewhere as insanely expensive as Carlton.
ideological_cuddle: (Default)

[personal profile] ideological_cuddle 2012-10-05 06:03 am (UTC)(link)
There may be some affordable bits of Richmond, but from what I've seen looking at listings there's not much of it -- unless you want a tiny falling-apart dogbox, anyway.

Mind you my house here isn't that much more expensive than the two-bedroom place the boss has leased at Willsmere, and what I have is a two-bedroom (really one plus a study which is unusable in the summer!) townhouse tucked away in a little square thingy across the road from Melbourne Uni.

Have to go a bit further out to get much cheaper, there's some stuff in Moreland. But mostly, if it's close to PT, particularly trams or rail, then it's going to be pricey. The market has spoken.
ideological_cuddle: (Default)

[personal profile] ideological_cuddle 2012-10-05 07:49 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, this house is remarkably good. It's relatively modern -- looks to be maybe a 1970s or 1980s build -- but reasonably good with insulation and so on. There are two others in this row, we have a little shared open area, and my neighbour on one side is a coffee shop who needs the parking space I have, so I get free coffee in return for that. :)

(And yes, the cost of coffee is a factor I take in to account when comparing rents.)

There are all sorts of issues with this stuff, absolutely. The one I find most annoying is that although politicians typically don't take PT very seriously, and many people are quite dismissive about it and are quite happily living their car-centred lives, there's enough demand for PT that all the property close to it is much more expensive.

Which is a real bugger if you don't get the choice to have that car-centric life. Because I'm making university/community-sector style money but competing with bankers and lawyers for housing...