Pub quizzes in Newcastle upon Tyne
I’ve put together/am putting together a list of pub quizzes in Newcastle; let me know if I’ve missed any!
A quick review of what 2011 was like for me.
tl;dr: conference, book, Twedding, Drupal North East, new logo, conference, birthday, new company, conference, birthday, Christmas.
January
It’s nice to have been able to start the year off with a trip down to Nottingham for the New Adventures Conference. There was probably an intercourse-load of snow around, too.
February

Definitive Guide to Drupal 7 book
All my calendar reminds me about in February is work, a lot of it seemingly involving technically reviewing Apress’ Definitive Guide to Drupal 7.
March
I witnessed my first (and, to this day, last) Twitter wedding between @philsherry and @li_sherry.
April
We held the first Drupal North East event at The Bridge Hotel in Newcastle (coincidentally, after talking to Adam Hill at DIBI), which has been running monthly ever since.

Drupal North East user group
It’s become a great, informal chance to discuss not only Drupal, but other open source software, web design, clients and the North East tech scene.
May

Peacock Carter logo
Time for a new look for Peacock Carter. Meet Eric, the peacock.
June
Another month, another conference: this time, on my doorstep. The increasingly awesome (and I mean that in the literal sense of the word: the event has become awe-inspiring in the short time it’s been around) Design It Build It conference in Newcastle (well, Gateshead) with the chance to see Zeldman and a host of other talent speak, 20 minutes walk from my flat. Oh, and lots of beer, and pizza.
And Peacock Carter moved offices in to central Newcastle. The week the lift in our new building decided to die.
July
Between the usual British summer rain showers, I spoke at SuperMondays on the topic of ‘Design/CMS integration’.
August
Another year, another birthday. Can’t remember what I did this year, so must have been good!
September
I finally got around to registering Richard Carter Consultancy Ltd as a company, to enable me to start separating the open source consultancy services Peacock Carter offers in to a new entity for simplicity’s sake. Simplicity for my clients’ sake, rather than my bookkeeper’s or the taxman’s sake, that is.
October
October was immensely enjoyable for me, what with the excellent Front Row Conference in Krakow (and an opportunity for me to excite bore a room of people on the topic of open source software theming), as well as meeting the likes of recent Glaswegian convert Rich Quick, Rudy Rigot, and a lot of Polish guys and girls who insisted on buying the beer all night, every night.
November
Another birthday: this time, Peacock Carter’s 5th birthday. Cake, champagne and beer may have been enjoyed in various quantities in an order I have yet to remember (there were definitely balloons).
December
All I seem to remember is a month of Christmas parties, for the Young Entrepreneurs Trust, Peacock Carter, Durham Business Club and various other things I attend. I never want to see a mince pie again (give me 11 months)./h2
Living in a fairly student-y area of Newcastle, we get a lot of takeaway leaflets through the door. Largely, these are a fairly predictable split between pizzas, curry and Chinese, so when I saw the menu for Gourmet 2 Go come through the door, I was impresshttp://richard.peacockcarter.co.uk/websters/ed. Well, impressed by the menu, not impressed by the text-speak in a supposedly ‘upmarket’ company name!
The offer pizzas, with a selection of ‘gourmet’ toppings – you can get parma ham, goats cheese and other unusual, middle-class toppings – as well as gourmet burgers, onion rings and ‘proper’ chips. Their menu is online.
Posh takeaway; unposh prices
And yet, their pizzas are still about half the price of equivalents at Domino’s or Papa John’s, and made with more care than I expect the chain pizza takeaways to make!
And yes, I know ‘unposh’ isn’t a real word, but if Shakespeare can make up words, so can I.
Beware, though – they advertise their opening hours as 6pm – 4am everyday, and yet they almost certainly don’t stick to them during the week – they actually seem to close around 12am or 1am during the week. Not that I blame them; a bit on the ambitious side to keep up 7 days a week!
They’ve got a website at gourmet2go.co.uk, though it’s fairly poor (text as images, anyone?), but not poor enough to put me off their pizzas.
Google+ has grown up, and introduced pages for businesses recently. Google Plus’ pages come after Google’s insistence after launch that profiles must remain for individuals and not businesses and organisation, creating (quite rightly) speculation that Google was enforcing a strict line on this to ensure the success of the launch of its pages.
I’ve been playing this afternoon, and have created Peacock Carter Ltd’s Google+ page as a playground. You can create your own Google+ page at plus.google.com/pages/create.
It looks like pages in Google+ are treated very much like they are in Facebook, in terms of their ability to interact with individual profiles in Google+; i.e., it’s fairly limited (you’re only able to interact with an account as a page once that account has you in one or more circles).
The only snagging point I’ve found so far is that switching between my individual Google+ account and the page isn’t quite as smooth as it appears in Facebook at the moment – I can easily change back from the page to my own profile, but haven’t found an easy way to switch from my own Google+ profile back to the page at this point.
Next stop: seeing how Google+ copes with multiple pages.
Edit: page management in Google Plus
Aha, I’ve discovered the trick to switching between pages in Google Plus: it hides the drop-down list until you click your profile’s name in the top-left of the screen. From there, you’ll text along the lines of ’2 pages’, and you can click this and select the relevant page from a drop-down.
A little back story to start this review off: I met Peter Gasston, the author of The Book of CSS3, at Front Row Conference in Krakow (highly recommended for 2012, by the way).

Book of CSS3 by Peter Gasston
The book
The book is sold as ‘a developer’s guide to the future of web design‘; a (perhaps acceptable?) bit of marketing guff, since you can use everything in the book now – it just won’t work in certain browsers, yet. The obligatory chapter list is pasted below from the publisher’s website for The Book of CSS3:
- Chapter 1: An Overview of CSS3
- Chapter 2: Media Queries
- Chapter 3: DOM and Attribute selectors
- Chapter 4: Pseudo Classes and Pseudo Elements
- Chapter 5: Web Fonts
- Chapter 6: Text Effects and Typographic Styles
- Chapter 7: Multiple Columns
- Chapter 8: Background Images and Other Decorative Properties
- Chapter 9: Border and Box Effects
- Chapter 10: Color and Opacity
- Chapter 11: Gradients
- Chapter 12: 2D Transformations
- Chapter 13: Transitions and Animations
- Chapter 14: 3D Transformations
- Chapter 15: Flexible Box Layout
- Chapter 16: Template Layout
- Chapter 17: The Future of CSS
- Appendix A: Browser Support
- Appendix B: Online Resources
One of my initial concerns with the book was it’d cover techniques I already knew (most of the books I buy, read and review are more software-specific), but I managed to learn a couple of very useful and previously entirely alien techniques (matrix3d being one). The book also clarified my understanding of some existing CSS. Retrospectively, this is what I would have expected to have get out of reading the book.
The good
Peter’s also put a huge effort in to the companion website for the book, thebookofcss3.com, but that’s not too much of a surprise if you consider he’s a contributor to css3.info too.
The book is extremely thorough; from accessibility concerns to z-axis and ‘zebra striping for tables‘. The book’s index is equally thorough, reinforcing its usefulness as a reference book and just a one-off read.
The CSS and HTML snippets throughout the book are nice and clear, and well explained. I’m particularly keen on the way proprietary attributes (e.g., -o-border-radius) are (generally) omitted from code snippets, which allows you to see the general gist of the CSS without wading through lines of duplicate attributes.
Proprietary attributes are explained in subsequent sections of the chapter, which is especially useful given the discrepancies and inconsistencies between implementations (particularly, I must say, between Mozilla and Webkit implementations). For this in particular, the book is a good go-to resource. The screenshots are also clear throughout the book – a rare achievement for a black-and-white book which deserves some kudos itself.
One of my favourite ‘features’ of the book is the ‘browser support’ section at the end of each chapter, which contains an overview of (surprisingly), the browser support for the various attributes covered within the chapter; an invaluable resource for future reference, again.
A thanks to the publishers, No Starch, too, for their incredibly swift response to my request for an image of the book cover. It was a matter of hours, rather than days, when it can take some publishers a matter of weeks, or even months, to respond!
The bad
I did have one negative; the printed book is entirely black and white, (though you can get the ebook in full colour, obviously). As I said, this isn’t as much of a problem with example screenshots as you’d think, since the examples are very carefully put together to avoid most issues with colour contrast.
And, best of all – I certainly didn’t find any gripes I could classify as ‘ugly’.
The Book of CSS3; overall impression
I’m incredibly impressed with the The Book of CSS3, from the enviable, concise style of writing to the sheer thoroughness of the topics covered, and the clear, consistently presented examples. I’d say it’s a worthwhile buy even more for experienced front-end developers (and, dare I say it, a necessary buy for any back-end developer?).
Books by Richard Carter
Joomla! 1.5 Templates Cookbook
Joomla! 1.5 Templates Cookbook is a collection of 'recipes' designed to help you customise the look and functionality of your Joomla! website.
Magento 1.4 Theme Design
And update to my Magento 1.3 Themes Design book, Magento 1.3 Theme Design, is a guide to theming the open source Magento Commerce platform.
Magento 1.3 Theme Design
My second book, Magento 1.3 Theme Design, is a guide to theming the open source Magento Commerce platform.
MediaWiki Skins Design
My first book, MediaWiki Skins Design, is a guide to customising the design of the open source MediaWiki platform.
