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The main IP address: 213.138.109.152,Your server United Kingdom,York ISP:Bytemark Computer Consulting Ltd TLD:com CountryCode:GB
The description :postbureaucrat steph gray skip to content about steph contact get updates disclaimer traindomiser 2: this time, it’s multimodal my family enjoys trains, apps and adventure. in episode 1, this led us t...
This report updates in 28-Aug-2018
Created Date: | 2010-05-12 |
Changed Date: | 2013-12-09 |
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Latitude: | 53.957630157471 |
Longitude: | -1.0827100276947 |
Country: | United Kingdom (GB) |
City: | York |
Region: | England |
ISP: | Bytemark Computer Consulting Ltd |
HTTP Header information is a part of HTTP protocol that a user's browser sends to called Apache containing the details of what the browser wants and will accept back from the web server.
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postbureaucrat steph gray skip to content about steph contact get updates disclaimer traindomiser 2: this time, it’s multimodal my family enjoys trains, apps and adventure. in episode 1, this led us to a half term adventure with the traindomiser , an app we made to help us pick a random uk destination and tell us how to get there by train. we had a good time, via wellingborough, ingatestone, aldershot and southend . our first traindomiser trip had a few limitations: starting from london, we ended up spending a fair bit of time going in and out of the capital, which was fine, but less exciting than a proper cross country journey lots of places aren’t really close to stations, so we ended up ruling them out after them coming up as results setting a distance threshold is useful but what we really wanted to was to travel for a feasible length of time, regardless of how far we actually went we’re hoping version 2 of our app, now called triprandomiser , will help. and this ain’t no stinking bug-fixes-and-performance-improvements release either, yo. alongside setting a maximum distance to travel, you can now set a maximum time duration, powered by the google maps directions api the same api also offers more than just train routes: buses, ferries, trams and tubes are now in the mix for added multimodal frisson – and it can give you a summary of your journey within the app and we’ve rebuilt the place finding algorithm to be directional: so if you’re down south and yearning for a bit of northern cheer, you can tell the app to take you anywhere but south we’re going to do some pretty hardcore user testing imminently. two hours every six weeks? screw dat. we’re off almost as far north as the triprandomiser can take us, starting from the island capital of orkney, kirkwall, and (hopefully) finding our way home. beyond the first night and a vague plan to play britain’s most northerly mini golf course, we’re in the lap of the gods. if you’re curious, you’ll be able to follow our adventures here . in blog | march 27, 2018 | 342 words how to be a very stable genius i’ve not pitched a session at ukgovcamp for a few years, but i’m hoping to pitch one this year on something that’s been troubling me for a while. how does social media and digital culture affect our state of mind, and what can we practically do about it? a note of clarification on the title: i’m not claiming trump-like smartness here. but in some ways, he’s emblematic of the shift i’ve seen in social media globally from the friendly club it was in the era when govcamping was born to… well, something a bit darker and more complicated, about tribes and tweetstorms, the sharing of #blessed lives and the retreat into private accounts and spaces where h8ters, future employers and our families won’t find us. more embarrassing to admit, i’m regularly frustrated with myself at losing useful time, sleep and positive focus winding myself up about the fun others seem to be having. and as my kids (and parents) get more addicted to their screens, i still don’t feel i have the strategies to help them get the etiquette right and protect their own state of mind. as 2018 kicks off, i’ve seen a few frustrated friends decide to take a break from social media altogether. that’s a shame. i’m still a militant optimist, and i’ve seen the tools do good for me and the world around me. so i’d like to have a session to share challenges and solutions around: how do we make social media and digital tools more generally a constructive part of a life well lived, and maintain our perspective, our generosity and our good temper? how do we stay productive in a world of notifications, interruptions and feeds? how have people helped their colleagues and loved ones (not that they are mutually exclusive – i won’t judge…) to build social media into their personal or professional lives in ways which help them be more cheerful, curious and kind? if you’d like to join in, please do! and if you’re not at ukgovcamp but have a story or idea to share, please let me know . photo by kayla velasquez on unsplash in blog | january 18, 2018 | 355 words the traindomiser: a train adventure we were having a family chat over breakfast one sunday morning about the kind of holidays we enjoy: “somewhere interesting & exciting” “somewhere not too bleak” “go interrailing” “go somewhere on a beach” as it’s a truth commonly acknowledged that a chap in possession of a weekend must be in need of a coding project, my son arthur and i set to work to come up with something that might tick these boxes. we were aiming for something that might help us go on a train adventure this half term through the uk, exploring (non-bleak, possibly seaside) places we’ve not been to before and staying wherever airbnb or booking.com might find for us that night. the result is: the traindomiser . we found a list of uk towns and cities, and explored the excellent transport api which provides free access to all kinds of things, from bus routes to train fares, and – most useful for our purposes – helps map a place to a nearby station. we coded up a randomising algorithm that will take a maximum distance you want to travel, and suggest a place to suit, along with the train route to get there from a nearby station. we learned how mobile devices can request your location and pass it to a form, fiddled around with the search results urls for airbnb and booking.com, and added a bit of suspense with some animation of the results. we learned to curse javascript until a stackoverflow answer emerged, an important skill for any coder. we’ve been preparing for our inaugural traindomiser trip this week. we’ve got our family & friends railcard and a vintage map of the rail network (sadly out of print now). we’re travelling light, and seeing how things go. the goal: get to where the traindomiser picks for us each evening of the trip, assuming we can find a place to stay while on our way. we’ll stop off at the interesting points on the journey, recognising that exciting adventures can come from unexpected places when you’re small. (hopefully nowhere too bleak.) we’ve built a little travel blog to track our first adventure with the app, and we’ll post updates there from our trip. and hope the traindomiser can get us back home before school starts on monday… update: we made it home. 4 random destinations in 4 days. lots of pics and a few reflections on the trip over here . in blog | october 26, 2017 | 413 words agent o september 2012: five years ago. the paralympic and olympic champions were parading down the strand. david cameron and nick clegg were crowdsourcing ways to cut red tape. gov.uk was still an alpha. luke oatham quit his newly permanent civil service job to come and work with me . like all good business decisions, neither of us had much of a plan for what we might do next, but we reckoned it would be interesting. as i explained at the time, i hired luke because he exemplified for me – and still does – what a digital hero is. he’s a creative user of cheap, simple technology to solve problems people actually have. he’s a natural tinkerer, explorer and geek. he’s no loudmouth but he’s chatty enough one to one, helping dig someone out of a hole or teaching them a new skill. he’s modest to a fault. his blog posts aren’t boastful case studies; they’re cathartic, useful sharing. his knowledge of the back catalogue of kate bush at karaoke outings is… impressive. in our first year in our tiny office off trafalgar square, luke and i built websites for the audit commission, wilton park and the committee on climate change amongst others – big, complex ones that i’d never done before in wordpress. we ran ux training and crisis simulations (though trolling on fake-twitter is more my cup of tea than his). but most importantly, we started building a brand as a small company, not just a freelancer with connections. from i to a proper we. in the years since he joined, luke’s had a key part in some epic creat
https://postbureaucrat.com/contact/
https://postbureaucrat.com/2016/12/31/in-2016-i/
https://postbureaucrat.com/2016/07/27/on-experts-and-amateurs/
https://postbureaucrat.com/trips/
https://postbureaucrat.com/2018/01/18/how-to-be-a-very-stable-genius/
https://postbureaucrat.com/category/helpful-blog/
https://postbureaucrat.com/2017/03/27/digital-hero-stephen-hale/
https://postbureaucrat.com/2017/09/01/agent-o/
https://postbureaucrat.com/disclaimer/
https://postbureaucrat.com/get-updates/
https://postbureaucrat.com/2017/10/26/the-traindomiser-a-train-adventure/
https://postbureaucrat.com/2010/12/11/how-should-you-measure-the-success-of-a-digital-team/
https://postbureaucrat.com/2017/07/14/20-things-i-learned-at-commscamp-2017/
https://postbureaucrat.com/2012/07/02/employee-1/
https://postbureaucrat.com/traindomiser/
blogs.fco.gov.uk
gds.blog.gov.uk
userresearch.blog.gov.uk
comms2point0.co.uk
manchestereveningnews.co.uk
digitalhealth.blog.gov.uk
gov.uk
ico.org.uk
bas.ac.uk
pigsonthewing.org.uk
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Domain Name: POSTBUREAUCRAT.COM
Registry Domain ID: 1596909775_DOMAIN_COM-VRSN
Registrar WHOIS Server: whois.ascio.com
Registrar URL: http://www.ascio.com
Updated Date: 2013-12-09T13:44:55Z
Creation Date: 2010-05-12T08:19:37Z
Registry Expiry Date: 2019-05-12T08:19:37Z
Registrar: Ascio Technologies, Inc. Danmark - Filial af Ascio technologies, Inc. USA
Registrar IANA ID: 106
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Registrar Abuse Contact Phone: +442070159370
Domain Status: ok https://icann.org/epp#ok
Name Server: DNS0.EASILY.CO.UK
Name Server: DNS1.EASILY.CO.UK
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REGISTRAR Ascio Technologies, Inc. Danmark - Filial af Ascio technologies, Inc. USA
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DNS0.EASILY.CO.UK 185.83.100.31
DNS1.EASILY.CO.UK 185.83.102.32
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