Posted on January 15, 2008

Macbook Air

Macbook Air; not small enough, not enough ports, too much bling. I wanted a macbook swiss army knife, but we got a macbook porsche instead.

Well, that’s what I just posted on Twitter. Okay, it’s pretty, but I need a digital leatherman more than some pretty laptop. I want something I can use for a variety of purposes in a variety of places, and the damn thing looks far too bling. I also don’t think that there will be a version of it in my (very low) price range.

I would have thrown my budgetary caution to the wind for a cut-back Macbook. One with no optical drive (useless things anyway) and less power. Instead, I find myself casting more towards the Linux end of the pool to give me what I want. No, not one of those Asus EEE’s, but a Thinkpad. If only I had some money…

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Sunderland Uni: Hey, remember that time…

… when my university housing caught fire? At the fusebox? In the fireman’s strike?

… when you hired that technician to run the video editing suite, who’d never used FCP or macs?

… when all the lecturers took three days a week off, for what seemed like a month, right before the degree show?

… when everybody passed the Fine Art course, no matter how hard they worked?

… when you told people they couldn’t drill into the walls of the sculpture studios, because they were full of asbestos?

… when I found out that butter on toast was 16p extra in the canteen?

… when you swelled the students attending Fine Art by over a hundred, but didn’t give any extra space to the course?

… when you got that budget for extra computers,  but didn’t let students use them for two years?

Ahh, memories. I could reminisce for  hours minutes.

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RCA Interview

I’m going to take a break from my review-writing and talk about some history.  About three years ago (2005), around this time of year (January), I had an interview for the UK’s highest educational establishment, the Royal College of Arts.

Back then, I was really interested in making interactive art pieces. In some ways, I still am, but I wanted to go to the RCA’s Interaction Design department to fiddle with computers for two years and make cool stuff, because it was the only place in the UK that had anything like the level of techno-knowledge that I needed. If you are reading this from a bloggers point of view, you might think that last sentence sounded big-headed; however, I’d just finished studying at a university famous for it’s coverage of New Media art, where several important faculty members didn’t know how to email people.

And that’s not unusual either. The ivory towers of art academia are usually full of people who retired from using technology somepoint between betamax and steam boats. So I was really hoping to get into the RCA’s Interaction Design department, as I knew that they understood Processing, Max/MSP, and other, similar programs that were emerging around that time.

What I remember about the day is waiting outside the office for my interview, and hearing the sounds of the one workroom they had as it was full of students. And, to a man, those students seemed to be alpha-male types. The workroom of the course is very cramped, and the thought of spending two years in London, stuck in a room with braying alpha males did not appeal to me.

RCA Interaction Design Room

(Above: one of the four workbenches at the RCA’s Interaction Design room. Note the use of eMac’s, Apple’s loudest computer, which are pretty unpleasant to spend any time around.)

I didn’t do well in the interview. For one thing, I had an enormous ulcer on my tongue, which hurt when I talked. I’ve never had an ulcer like it since, but I still remember that bastard thing. Also, I wasn’t a designer. I was an artist, and they really wanted designers. Thirdly, I wasn’t somebody who wanted to do bio-art, which was where they have since re-focused the course.

I didn’t get on the course, and I was a whole lot busy with other things for that two years. It was only while doing some research last night that I remembered about that interview, as I saw a raft of familar names and what they were up to now. I guess if I’d passed that course, I could have been involved with some of the new interaction design programs coming up from London, like the people at tinker.it, or thishappened.org.

I wanted to do that course at a specific time in my life, and I think I would have been disappointed if I had got in. Instead of being thrown up against the crushing reality of living in London during an economic boom, I got to experience some really great stuff in Newcastle. And some other stuff that wasn’t so great, but was important to me.

Addendum: this blog post gets a lot of hits at the start of every year… I guess that RCA Design Interactions course is pretty popular! If you’re searching for help with the interview, or getting on the course, remember: I didn’t get on. But that doesn’t mean that I did nothing for two years – I did a whole bunch of stuff,  I just didn’t get a degree from the RCA.

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