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site iconThomas RigbyModify

A Gen-X/Millennial cusp (Xennial), currently a creative technologist at Havas Lynx Group.
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Junited 2026

2026-06-03 04:30:17

Inspired, as so many are, by Robert, I'm going to attempt #Junited2026 — sharing one link to another blogger every day to celebrate some of the excellent writing out there.

I may not make it but we can but try.

2nd June

Then there's AI. Sigh. I'm currently on a job hunt and I considered this time to be perfect to get a better grip on vibe-coding, vibe-designing, vibe-everything—the things that my future job will expect me to be good at. But at the mere thought of the "new way of doing things", I recoil. I've been having my objections with big tech for years—that's just who I am: looking for software alternatives, swimming against the stream, thinking maybe a little too much about how we use software in general. I haven't found a way to fit AI into my way of being a user.

Drowning in the City by niqwithq

1st June

The idea that a great photograph is created in a single, perfectly-timed instant is both deeply appealing and fundamentally wrong. Stepping into the world and courting serendipity may yield a beautiful accident, but pressing the shutter is only the beginning. The real work begins later, when those frames return from the field to the sorting table, where photography becomes art.

The Myth of Intent in Photography by David M. M. Taffet


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Ancient Roots

2026-06-02 23:13:22

An ancient, gnarled tree trunk with dramatic twisted root buttresses, photographed in stark black and white against a backdrop of surrounding trees and overcast sky

There's something prehistoric about the trees round here. They mark out boundaries of farming land but it's impossible to tell whether the trees or the farms came first. In all honesty, probably a bit of both; land will likely have been originally earmarked by natural landmarks such as this ancient tree before, much later, hedges and fences were erected to make those boundaries inarguable.


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Camera Dump: May 2026

2026-06-02 06:04:27

Happy New "Love Island" Day!

Here are a few photos from my phone from the last month with neither rhyme nor reason to the theme.

my Minolta hangs from a steel farm gate

crude drawing of a tea cup with 6 tally marks next to it clearly drawn in a personal notebook

the gorgeous tiny white flowers of a hawthorn bush


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Weeknotes: 2026-W22

2026-06-01 02:24:28

25th May - 31st May

As much as I was enjoying "Left Hand Of Darkness", it's not a holiday read. I didn't DNF it as much as set it aside for when I got home. I started to read a scandi-noir thriller (classic poolside fare) only to discover, one chapter in, that I had already read it! Sara Taylor to the rescue; "Boring Girls" is written by the lead singer of a metal band I like and is about a teenage killing spree. Really well written and excellent holiday fodder — light and funny and interesting AF.


The heatwave in Britain while we were away caused an explosion of growth in the garden. Back to, yes 5' weeds, but also a flurry of flowers; columbine, buttercups, clematis, and a huge solitary poppy — even the strawberries are making a go of it! The huge climbing rose is covered in fragrant pink flowers and the smaller white rose is not far behind.


Perfect morning weather for long dog walks. Living up to her name, our retriever picked up a fledgling jackdaw from a hedgerow. She dropped it on command (Good girl!) and the little fella was fine; spread its wings to look menacing and "flew" away back under the hedge.


Ten days of beer fueled lethargy, while lovely, left me feeling a bit urgh so, striking that hot iron before it cools, I pulled on a pair of running shoes and jogged around my old running circuit. Stats were too embarrassing to share but I felt good afterwards and plan to keep it up. Famous last words.


Links of Interest™


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Book Review — Boring Girls by Sara Taylor

2026-05-30 03:58:20

sara taylor holding an advance copy of her own novel. she is a caucasian woman with dark hair with a blunt fringe and is wearing a blue and white stripy top. the book is real with black and white writing over a big cloud of red, possibly blood

This interesting debut novel gripped me from the off with its "Virgin Suicides plus Carrie vibes". Rachel is an outsider in high school; mildly bullied but mostly ignored. A chance overhear of a death metal band plunges her into a world custom built for outcasts.

The book spends its majority trucking through forming a band, nascent gigs, Rachel's mild obsession with a specific painting that becomes really important later, themes of joining a scene and finding kinship; found family when your parents don't "get" you. But also frustration that there are assholes everywhere with the self assurance of any smart 15 year old. I should know — I was one!

Spoiler/Trigger Warning

The main events of the book are kick started by a sexual assault. It's not extremely graphic but it's worth flagging.

Taylor is clearly drawing on her experiences of being in a band and this gives those scenes a depth and colour that is lacking elsewhere in the book. Some contextual inaccuracies pulled me out of the narrative a little; we don't have "school buses" in England, for example.

An interesting theme as it's something I'm into outside of reading. I could have done with a little more killing and a bit less band rehearsal though.

All said, a good debut novel from a musician I like. When it lands, it lands well.


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Weeknotes: 2026-W21

2026-05-24 13:38:17

18th May - 24th May

Hello to everyone but especially the teenage emo lesbian in this restaurant wearing Vans, stockings, and a "I ♥️ My Girlfriend" t-shirt who has clearly escaped from 2005. Nice work.


The washing machine packed in necessitating an emergency replacement; other parents, I'm sure, can attest to the particularly Sisyphean effort of laundering children's clothes. A quick trip to the Sue Ryder and I picked up the last one they had. The new machine is black; gothic and shiny in that way the Eighties thought was classy.


I thought, shivering, that there are things that outweigh comfort, unless ones is an old woman or a cat.
Ursula K LeGuin, "The Left Hand of Darkness"


Links of Interest™


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