Tuesday, April 21, 2026

More Nonsense

After spending hours last month untangling the mess Microsoft made by quietly inserting OneDrive into an active role on my Windows 11 machines, I thought I had finally sorted things out. OneDrive had been redirecting my Documents, Pictures and Videos folders into its own subdirectories and syncing them to the cloud, all under the guise of "backing up" my files. In reality, it was removing them from my control.

After some research, I restored everything to its proper location, removed OneDrive and the equally annoying Copilot, and delayed Windows updates as long as possible (note: Windows 11 Home users can only delay updates, not stop them entirely).

Then last week, updates from both Microsoft and Google undid much of my work. Copilot reappeared, desktop icons went missing, my machine started launching straight into Edge on startup, and OneDrive was back, once again redirecting my Documents, Photos and Videos folders to its own directories. Fortunately it was not uploading to the cloud this time, but the intrusion was unwelcome regardless. 



I am clearly not alone in finding Windows updates frustrating and error-prone. A NotebookLM "podcast"on the topic covers the issue well. I’m very conscious that AI generated content is frequently incorrect, just AI slop, however this is worth a watch.

 


Whilst on YouTube I found a video that explains specifically how OneDrive sneaks back through a backdoor Microsoft leaves open during updates, its longish and detailed with steps to keep it Microsoft at bay at least for now.

If you are running Windows on a computer or laptop, good luck! Make sure you keep a current backup of all your files at all times.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Plein Air sketching follow up

What Actually Worked (and What Didn't)

Over the past month, I’ve had a trips down to the Mornington Peninsula, Venu Bay, and I'm partway through the Plein AirPril challenge, whereby I’m supposed to do an outdoor painting every day in April. It has been a great chance to properly road-test my three DIY portable setups I'd been tinkering with.

The clear winner: the sketchbook holder

I haven’t used my tripod easel at all, but I’ve used the sketchbook holder constantly. It securely holds both my A5 sketchbooks, one with a hardcover sewn-spine, the other a wire-coil visual diary style. You slide the book covers behind the holder, fold the pages forward, through the slot and spread the pages to where you want and clip them with large bulldog paper clips on either side, and you're done. Even in the wind, it stays put. It's light enough to hold one-handed while standing, or it just rests across my knees when I'm sitting.

The whole setup takes almost no time: a pencil, a pen, a water brush, and my homemade CD dot card palettes. Done. It pays to be agile when the fickle Melbourne weather decides to throw storms, rain, wind gusts, but is mostly grey and overcast with occasional surprise sunshine at me all in the same afternoon.

The watercolour sketchboard: promising but

I only pulled this one out a couple of times. It works, but it's heavier, slower to set up, and critically, the prototype was made of matte board. Getting drenched a few times took a real toll on it. The bulldog clip slots are a clever idea, and worth keeping in any future version

Lessons learned the hard way

Bag organisation matters more than you think. Rummaging around for that specific brush or pen mid-session is genuinely annoying. I've since started bundling brushes and pens in cord concealer spiral tubing and keeping them in small ziplock bags. Bonus is less disruption searching,

Using Velcro was trickier than it looks. Its holding capacity between its hock and loop surfaces is powerful. So powerful when I taped it to plastic palettes, the sticky backing kept pulling off surfaces as I removed the palettes. It was also lifting the paper surface off the matte board, strong double-sided tape and hot glue didn't work well either; PVC glue was slightly better. Still experimenting, looking for a heavy-duty version of this tape.

Keep your water brushes topped up. I nearly ran out of water mid-sketch one day. Lesson learned: empty, clean, and refill water brushes before heading out.

The spray bottle is actually pretty mandatory as well because it lets you keep whatever form of watercolour palette you’re using moist and the paint easier to pick up, especially with a water brush.

What's next

I'm planning to rebuild the sketchbook holder in plywood, with slots at the side to hold the sketchbook pages and a slightly bigger top flap for my larger palettes. For larger work or when using larger watercolour pads or blocks, I'll stick with my existing drawing board (the one with the tripod mount) with a camera tripod for a proper travel easel setup.

Overall?  Happy with how it went. Sometimes the simplest, lightest setup really is the best one.

Monday, April 06, 2026

Dealing with Unexpected Expenses in Retirement

As you get deeper into retirement, you start to dread things breaking down and needing replacement. They're often big, expensive items, and we've had several recently unrelated plumbing and electrical issues, with multiple big-ticket items needing repair and/or replacement. Annoyingly, these are things that have to be replaced but don't get covered by standard insurance. You just have to grin and bear it. It is time to consider a careful division of limited retirement funds, what's most important to maintain and what could be tolerated or put off.

Unfortunately, the surprises just kept going on and on with different new problems.

Anyone know how to open the
well-designed Lacie housing?
My current computer problems have become a low priority behind everything else? One extra problem arose when our washing machine flooded laundary and tripped the power. One of my attached drives in the studio failed to restart. I had been gradually building up a family photo library on it from my larger photographic collection. Unfortunately, it wasn't yet backed up. The same hard drive also now housed all my Wednesday Wanderers photos and had become the working area for my website updates, also not backed up.

Is this yet another disaster? Some of the working files are still around on my two working computers. I'm hopeful I can take the unresponsive Lacie drive apart and maybe recover what's on the disk if I can just open the well-designed housing.

The moral of the story? If things get tough, make sure you backup everything and don't just have a single copy of important computer files. Older and wiser, isn't that what they say...

Thursday, April 02, 2026

Figuring Out What to Keep and What to Change

Laptop
The good news is that the basics are already sorted. Email, browsing, office work, wifi, bluetooth, and lots of small applications all have solid Linux equivalents, so day-to-day computing isn't a problem. The more interesting challenge is figuring out what to do with the more specialised creative software.

The office computer, the one that died its unfortunate death-by-upgrade, had been the focus for most of the heavy graphics work. It was well set up for it. Dual screens, a BenQ eye-care monitor (low contrast by design but genuinely helpful reducing glare for my eye problem), and enough USB ports to keep all my external photo backpack drives plugged in at once. Replacing that setup takes a bit of planning.

Here's where the graphics and photo software currently stands:

Program Temp Destination Linux Alternative Cost
ON1 Photo RAW Laptop Darktable Free
Luminar Neo Laptop Darktable Free
Corel Draw Studio Inkscape Free
Corel Painter Studio Krita Free
Corel VideoStudio Pro Studio Kdenlive Free
Corel AfterShot Pro Laptop RawTherapee Free?
Paint.NET Both Pinta or GIMP Free
XnView MP Both XnView MP Free (user supported)

The encouraging news is that ON1, Corel, and XnView all offer Linux versions of their software, which opens up some options. The outstanding question is how to transfer licences from the dead office machine without having to buy everything again, particularly if switching to Linux versions. That's a puzzle still to be worked through.

Studio
The way I work has always been a bit like following a thread wherever it leads. An idea turns up when it feels like it, on whichever computer is in reach, so sketches, notes, half-finished drafts, and collected images end up scattered naturally across all three machines (office, laptop, and studio). The office computer was nominally where it all came together, but that's never really been the point. The point is being free to pick up and run with something the moment it sparks, without being tied to one desk, one device, or worse, someone else's server.

That last bit matters quite a lot, actually. The whole appeal of building and managing things locally is that the work stays mine, on my machine, without a monthly subscription, quietly making itself essential to getting anything done. There's something genuinely satisfying about owning your tools outright.

Which brings up the trickiest part of the whole picture. My website has been built using Incomedia's Website X5, which fits that local, hands-on approach perfectly. I can build and preview everything on my machine, tweak the code directly where needed, then upload it live via an old-fashioned FTP (FileZilla) when it's ready. Simple, direct, and nobody else involved. The snag is that Website X5 is Windows-only, with no Linux equivalent on the horizon.

Program Destination Linux Alternative
Website X5 Studio No direct equivalent
FileZilla Both FileZilla (Linux version available)

Most things have been recovered and pieced back together, but a few Website X5 gaps makes this a natural moment to stop and ask whether it's time to find a different approach that keeps that same local, independent spirit intact.