2020 in pictures

Date: 2021-02-04

2020 has gone by very fast, and I've somehow just remembered I had a blog! I haven't done anything particularly remarkable in 2020, but here's a summary of what I've been up to.

The year started well, like every year ever, with my birthday. I didn't know it at the time, but this would be the last party with friends in a very long time!

Javi's birthday 1 Javi's birthday 2 Javi's birthday 3 Javi's birthday 4

February came, and a couple of cool things happened:

  • We discovered an amazing bagel bakery with delicious salt beef.
  • We spent over a week in Mauritius, around the same time that COVID-19 started hitting a few countries in Europe.

Bagel bakery Mauritius 1 Mauritius 2

With March, the first lockdown came. Prior to this time, I would have worked from home once a week. Changing to doing it every day had its challenges at the beginning, but I think that we all got used to it fairly quickly.

Lockdown 1 Lockdown 2 Lockdown 3

Lockdown didn't only bring continuous WFH, it also brought a bunch of other great things:

  • I started running a lot.
  • I started having my daily beer (between April and September!).
  • We baked a few bread loaves.
  • We did a bit of outdoor DIY – we restored our garden table and chairs, and an old bicycle that we inherited with the flat.
  • I grew the longest beard I've ever had – I miss it :(

Lockdown 4 Lockdown 5 Lockdown 6 Lockdown 7 Lockdown 8 Lockdown 9

By August lockdown was over, and we were able to meet with some people again, so we organised a couple of small barbeques, and we got to use our recently refurbished garden furniture.

BBQ 1 BBQ 2 BBQ 3

Before Summer was over, we managed to escape London for a few days to visit our family in Poland.

Poland 1 Poland 2

In October, it was time to visit Spain, which was the highlight of Autumn. Luckily we managed to spend 10 days over there, which were very needed. We ate as much as we could, and I remember it took me weeks until I was back at my pre-Spain trip running speed.

Spain 1 Spain 2 Spain 3 Spain 4 Spain 5

When we arrived in London, our 15-day quarantine overlapped with the beginning of a new lockdown, that lasted until the beginning of December. I honestly don't remember anything from November, but December was the month when we received a couple of amazing Christmas packages from our families in Poland and Spain :)

Polish package Spanish package

On the last day of 2020, we went to Hampstead Heath for a long walk.

Hampstead Heath

Bonus picture of our Christmas tree, which at the time of writing this, is still up (we like it too much).

Christmas tree

That was 2020. All things considered, we had a pretty good 2020. We both got to keep our jobs and keep busy for the entire year. We and our friends and families have been healthy, so there's nothing we can complain about. Let's hope 2021 will be better though.

Moebius exhibition, at Max Ernst Museum (Brühl)

Date: 2019-11-18

Last weekend I've been visiting Cologne and there happened to be an art exhibition about Moebius in a town nearby (just joking, this was no accident).

Moebius was Jean Giraud's artist name, who was born in France in 1938 and passed away on 2012. If you like European comic, you have probably heard of him, but if you haven't, he's mainly known for: - Blueberry, in my opinion the best western ever made. - Metal Hurlant / Heavy Metal magazine, where he started most of his sci-fi work. - The Incal, a sci-fi series written by A. Jodorowsky. - A lot of collaborations and design work for the movie industry, to mention a few names: The Fifth Element, Tron, Alien, Jodorowsky's Dune (which unfortunately never happened, but his designs inspired other movies).

Here are some of the best pictures I took at the exhibition.

Max Ernst Museum

leaflet

Arzach

Mr Blueberry

Hendrix

Hendrix

I've built a thing

Date: 2018-03-08

I like reading comics and for the last couple of years I've been reading and collecting a bunch of them – can't wait for the next time I change flats, yay. Because the idea of moving flats terrorises me, I've often thought about moving to digital and stop buying paper comics. But I can't, I really like to feel the physical books on my hands. I suspect that in a few years, when big sized tablets such as the iPad Pro 12" become affordable, I might make a full move to digital. But until then, it's all about paper.

Something I've realised though is that once I own the physical comic book and I've read it, I don't really mind too much re-reading or looking at it digitally. So a few months ago I came with the idea of digitalising my entire comic book collection. I'm doing this for the following reasons:

  • I want to be able to access all my comics in any way I like, at the best possible quality (I'm looking at you, Comixology), from any device I like. Because they are mine!
  • I want to unrust my Android and iOS skills.
  • I want to give some use to my Raspberry Pi 3.
  • I'm curious about the technical challenge all of this represents.

Stage 1 - Collect all the comics

The first thing I need in order to create a digital comic book library is its content: digital copies of my comic books. Finding most of them online isn't hard, but getting some of them is plainly impossible: I have some Spanish comic books that have never been digitalized, so I've had to find their English versions instead. And no, I won't scan them myself.

Apart from my physical library, I also have a big number of comics on Comixology: mainly the ones that I don't really mind not having on paper because I don't care too much about them or perhaps because Comixology has had an amazing sale, which unfortunately for my wallet, happens often.

It has taken me weeks to get to a point where I have almost the same content in both bookshelves, digital and physical.

Stage 2 - Put it on the local network

For that, I've acquired a NAS that I've connected to my local network. A 2TB WD My Cloud does the job.

Imgur

After putting all the digital comics on the network hard drive, a quick test to make sure this will be accessible on my local network, it works!

Imgur

Stage 3 - The apps

This has taken longer than the other "stages". I've built 3 different apps to get everything working the way I like:

  1. A Django app which works as a server for delivering the directories with comics and the individual pages of each comic when reading them. The code can be found here. I've built the actual "comic reading app" using React, because I wanted a quick way of giving the API a test before writing the native apps and it has turned out to be a very simple solution to the problem of having to write a web comic reader. I'm also using Django Rest Framework for putting together a very simple API to serve individual comic pages.
  2. An Android app which works as a client and connects to the Django API and lets me read my digital comics. I've recently added "offline" reading, so I can download my comics when I'm at home and read them anywhere I like. It works fairly well, but I want to improve the "downloading" feature - I'm updating the UI too much showing the download progress on the main thread, looking into writing a service for dealing with that. The code can be found here.
  3. I've also started writing an iOS app, which is almost done now! I can already browse the folders and read a comic, but the reader definitely needs more love. Zooming and page browsing is not there yet. I also need to add the offline mode to this one. The code can be found here.

Stage 4 - Setting up the Raspberry Pi 3

Simple, cheap and way more powerful than the Raspberry Pi 2 (which I also have lying around).

A few details on what I'm running here:

The only thing I need to do for this to work is mount the network drive on a local directory and point the comic-reader-home app to that location.

Imgur

Now, some screenshots of how the apps look like

Web reader

Imgur

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Android app

Imgur

Final thoughts and moral concerns

Unfortunately, in order to get digital copies of some of my comic books I've had to obtain them from dark places on the internet – I'm sorry, but after spending £30 on a heavy and nice hardcover comic book, I'm not going to spend £20 on its digital version. Some others, especially a lot of the Image ones, I've been able to get through amazing sales on Humble Bundle (in this case I've actually bought some comics twice) and I've been able to get some others from the Comixology "backup" option they offer on some comics - not on many though.

Marvel and DC have been doing something pretty cool during the last year or so: when you buy a paper issue, some of them will come with a "code" that will unlock that same comic book on the digital comics platform Comixology. That's great and I hope others like Image, Dark Horse, Dynamite, etc. will start doing the same at some point. I really prefer reading them on paper, but I also enjoy re-reading some of them digitally because the colours look so great on a screen.

All that said, my conscience is clean because I know I've spent honest money on supporting the artists, editors, distributors and librarians by buying a lot of paper comics from many, many comic shops.

Finally, I didn't want to finish this blog post without actually showing how my actual collection look like:

Bookshelves 1

Bookshelves 2

Bookshelves 3

(Yes, I know it's all a bit chaotic)

PS: Buy comics. Support the artists, editors, distributors, librarians and everyone who takes part in the process of bringing this great art to you.

Yawning People

Date: 2017-10-10

I was doing a bucket cleanup in my Amazon S3 console and I've found a bucket with some funny pictures.

Maikel-2012-04-29+02.43.10.JPG

ima-2012-06-10+02.23.55.JPG

Javi-2012-04-29+02.43.28.JPG

Zeta-2012-03-10+02.42.33.jpeg

Cris-2012-03-18+01.18.59.JPG

Artyom-2012-04-29+02.42.39.JPG

Arty-2012-07-22+01.44.56.JPG

Oihana-Rachel-2012-06-10+02.21.05.JPG

Related:

This blog is still alive

Date: 2017-08-01

It's been ten months – minus two days – since the last time I wrote anything here. A lot of stuff has happened in these last 10 months and I'm going to summarise all of it in a list:

  • I went to Japan with Magda for my honeymoon. It was amazing, although it would have been even better if I could have understood some Japanese.
  • We tried going back to Spain for New Year's Eve, but our flight got cancelled. We made the best of the situation and at least we enjoyed a delicious dinner and a couple of very peaceful days at home.
  • I started taking film pictures and developing my own film.
  • I spent a few weeks improving my iOS and Android skills. And I had a lot of fun.
  • I stopped taking film pictures and developing my own film.
  • I went to San Francisco for Google IO 2017. I started playing with Kotlin, the new language announced for Android. I'd love to be able to use it at a professional level. Perhaps one of these days?
  • My niece was born! :) She's great, but I won't be posting pictures of her online.
  • Magda took me to Brugges for our anniversary. SO. MUCH. BEER. EVERYWHERE. We were incredibly lucky with the weather and I can't stress enough how much I liked Belgium.
  • Generally, I've increased the load of comics I read since Christmas. I've caught up with a lot of series I started a few years ago – Y: The Last Man, The Walking Dead, Saga – and I've started following many series. I might write about some of them in the future.

I'll try to force myself to write at least once or twice a month from now one, at least short posts.

PS: the reason I've decided to bring this back to life is this morning I got charged $6 by Digital Ocean and I felt bad I wasn't doing anything productive with my server! This is a start.