Year in review 2021

Every January I do a review of where I spent my time, money, and attention in the year just ended. This lets me add or remove subscriptions, memberships, recurring payments, and social media follows. It also lets me see if I have any biases or blind spots, or if I’m unknowingly stuck in any kind of echo chamber.

This year I’ve decided to document and share some of my 2021 review.

Podcasts

I subscribed to 41 podcasts in 2021:

  • I listened to every single episode of 83% of them

  • 46% of them I supported financially in one way or another (eg memberships, recurring Patreon support, digital subscriptions, one-off donations)

  • Women and non-binary people hosted 54% of the podcasts I listened to

  • I mostly listened to technology podcasts (eg This Week in Tech, Security Now, Rocket, Command Line Heroes, Darknet Diaries)

People

I directly supported 12 people through recurring payments in 2021:

  • Most of these people are YouTubers (or at least started on that platform)

  • 67% of them identified as female or non-binary

News and information

I paid for eight news and information sources (through recurring subscriptions):

  1. The Guardian

  2. The Conversation

  3. Wired

  4. Quartz

  5. The Sizzle newsletter

  6. CHOICE magazine

  7. Offscreen magazine

  8. Hodinkee magazine

Given that list, it makes sense that Blindspotter thinks my media diet:

  • leans left + centre (with the Conversation, the Guardian, and ABC Australia as my top 3 news sources) and

  • is somewhat narrow (since its sourced mostly from independently owned sources).

(This analysis was based off 53 of my most recent tweets that contained a link to a news article, by the way, so take it with a grain of salt.)

Do I want to engage more with media sources that lean to the right or are owned by large media conglomerates? Not really. Which means I’m quite happy with my current media balance.

My current media diet matches the latest ABC Vote Compass analysis of my political leanings (from the 2019 Australian Federal election) which puts me somewhere between the Greens and the Australian Labor Party. So that checks out.

Subscriptions and donations

I like getting and using things for free, but I pay for what’s important to me and what I can afford at the time.

So over 2021:

Twitter

The social network I participate in the most is Twitter.

Over 2021:

  • I posted 1,010 tweets, 33% of which were replies

  • I tweeted the most in June and August (131 and 139 tweets in those months, respectively)

  • On average my tweets get 198 impressions, and 5.8% of people who see my tweets engage with them (like, reply, retweet, etc)

  • My most popular tweet in 2021 got 45,237 impressions

  • My most engaging tweets in 2021 (of which there were a few) got 33.3% engagement

Overall, I’m happy with how much energy I put into Twitter and how much engagement I have with the people on this social network.

Over the year I also used tools like (the free versions of) Followerwonk and followerAudit to analyse my Twitter graph, which told me interesting things like:

  • I follow more female users (29%) than male users (22%) – though this tool only estimates within the gender binary

  • That said, gender isn’t relevant to most (49%) of the Twitter users I follow (eg they’re not personal accounts)

  • 5.6% of my followers are estimated to be fake, which is lower than the 7% world average

  • 92% of the people I follow have been on Twitter for more than 5 years (I myself have been on Twitter for more than 13 years)

Finally, to get the most out of Twitter, I did these things:

  • I followed really good users and several interesting topics

  • I maintained a bunch of lists to keep my main feed from being overrun by stuff I didn’t want to see all the time (and then I used TweetDeck to track what’s been said by users in those lists)

  • I audited the users I follow, and then did at least two bulk unfollows last year

You have to put in the work if you want to have a good experience on your social network of choice. That’s what I did with Twitter, and that’s why it continues to be one of my favourite places to hang out.

(FYI. Most of the rest of my online energy goes into YouTube, Reddit, tumblr, and the broader decentralised, RSS-based web via NewsBlur.)

Where to from here?

I did do more analysis than this, but I’m not going talk about it all here.

Though maybe I should mention that the ‘Wedding song lyrics’ page on this website continues to be the most popular page year after year. I’m glad I refreshed it a few months ago, correcting some lyrics and adding audio references for all the songs I’ve catalogued there.

What I’ll do now is spend the next few days unfollowing and unsubscribing on Twitter, Reddit, YouTube, NewsBlur, and email. That should be fun, and it’ll help get 2022 off to a good start.

I intend to have a fantastic 2022 and I trust you do too. I hope this year exceeds all your expectations and that you have a truly fantabulous time!

Fifth Maggie-versary!

It’s our fifth Maggie-versary! We adopted Maggie — a red heeler, kelpie, staffie mix found wandering around the bush near Dubbo, NSW — five years ago today.

Photo of a red dog sitting on the floor on a green mat, looking somewhat nervously at the photographer.

Sadly our little doggo spent this morning and early afternoon at the vet getting some non-urgent dental work done. She’s back now, but is still worn down from the general anaesthetic.

At least she’s been reunited with her pack so she can rest properly.

Photo of a weary looking red dog who is resting her head on her paw, eyes closed, while lying next to a human.

The folks at Hobsons Bay Veterinary Clinic are fantastic, by the way. 10/10 would recommend.

Also, I love the design of the crepe bandage they used to hold the drip needle in place :)

Photo of a dog’s foreleg that has a green crepe bandage wrapped around it. The bandage has large blue paw prints stamped along its length.

The nurse said to keep Maggie warm but she’s managing that just fine on her own – given it’s a bright and sunny 34 degrees in Melbourne this afternoon!

Photo of a dog sitting on the grass in a residential garden on a bright, sunny day. The dog has its eyes half closed.

When she’s indoors, though, we give her a bit of a hand.

Photo of a red dog asleep on a towel that’s been placed across a leather sofa. The back half of the dog is covered with a soft blanket.

Overall she’s a little tired and a little stressed, but she’s eating well and is recovering nicely.

Pixel 6 Pro + trains

The down side of working from home during the pandemic is that I haven’t had the opportunity to walk around the city taking photos with my (still relatively new) Pixel 6 Pro phone camera system. Which is why you mostly get snaps of Maggie either at home or in and around our neighbourhood. So here are a few train photos I’ve taken over the last few weeks.

Here’s a long exposure of a V/Line train arriving at Southern Cross station. That was taken the last time I went into the office before my year-end break.

Photo of a train pulling into a platform across from the photographer. The photo is a long exposure, so the moving train has motion blur and is slightly transparent.

Here’s one of a train zipping along the tracks from Newport to Laverton stations. I’m really enjoying playing with the various motion photo features available in the Pixel 6 Pro camera.

Photo of a Metro Melbourne train running down train tracks behind a line of trees.

And here’s one of a freight train running down that same bit of track at the southern end of Newport. This time I’m making use of the zoom lenses available on this smartphone.

Photo of a freight train running down train tracks behind the tree line at the end of a residential street. The phrase ‘MULTI-FRIEGHTER’ is written on the side of a the khaki coloured boxcar that’s visible through the trees.

I expect to be going into the office at least a couple of days a week from early next year, so I’m looking forward to taking and sharing more photos then.

Christmas barbecue FTW!

All clear for the Christmas barbecue!

Photo of two rapid antigen tests lying next to each other on a counter. Both tests are showing a negative result for COVID-19.

The barbecue itself was a great success. This here is just a photo of the meat tray taken halfway through the meal. Not shown are the snacks, salads, vegetarian options, pile of haloumi, and desserts! :)

Photo of a tray piled with barbecued meats, including sausages, burger patties, cutlets, and ribs.

Thank you James for the barbecuing and Bec for the hosting! #ChosenFamily

Holiday transition movie

As is tradition since I was a teenager, I started off my big annual holiday with a big movie :)

Speaking of which, I really enjoyed Denis Villeneuve’s Dune. The team that made this film captured the scale, texture, and music of this universe as I imagined it to be. I’m quite impressed.

Photo of a cinema screen in a darkened theatre. The screen shows the Warner Bros logo on a cloudy blue sky background.

Keeping an eye out

Keeping an eye on its owner while he’s stepped to Leroy’s Café to grab a coffee.

Photo of a black and tan French bulldog wearing a blue and white polka dot vest. The dog is tied to a pole with a blue leash outside a café. It is leaning to one side so it can peek through the door at its owner, who is inside the café.

Mango summer

Nothing quite like a bowl of cold, diced mango on a hot summer day.

Photo of a hand holding a pink and white bowl that’s full of diced chunks of mango.

When life gives you lemons, make lemonade. When your fridge freezes your diced mango (because you inadvertently knocked the temperature dial to a higher setting) make mango milkshake.

Photo of a blue glass full of mango milkshake.

Thunderstorm unhappiness

Guess whose large pointy ears have heard the slow moving thunderstorms rolling by several kilometres from our house and has therefore plonked herself right next to my office chair? *sigh*

At least the storms aren’t so close by that she’s started stress farting. So that’s a silver lining.

Photo of a red dog lying right next to the legs of an office chair.

It was good while it lasted. The thunderstorms finally came through our suburb so poor Maggie was a panting, trembling stress machine for three hours.

Photo of a dog sitting on a sofa. The dog’s ears are pulled back and its tongue is hanging out as it pants stressfully.

Making the most of a little bit of sun

Maggie made the most of what little sun we got today.

Photo of a red dog sitting on the grass on a mildly sunny day. The dog is looking at the photographer.

She’s definitely living the life!

(Meanwhile I spent the day in back-to-back meetings from 9am to 4pm, with only two short breaks in between. *sigh*)

Photo of a red dog asleep on its side in a residential garden.

Pixel 6 Pro photos in the city

It’s been ages since I’ve ridden a tram. At least I got to see one when I went into the office today.

Photo of a classic tram turning into a street in front of some office building. Everything but the tram is blurred in the photo.

Zippy cyclist is zippy.

Photo of a motion-blurred cyclist exiting a curved bridge onto a paved, inner city riverbank.

Maggie likes popcorn

Maggie would like Nadia to know that she too likes popcorn. Very, very much, in fact.

Photo of a red dog, ears pricked, standing at the foot of a low, outdoor lounge chair. The dog is looking attentively at the person sitting on the chair, whose is mostly off-camera but has their feet visible near the dog’s head.

A few seconds later…[Chariots of Fire soundtrack starts playing]

Them's the rules

When the weather is good, you take an extra long walk. And after you take an extra long walk, you nap. Them’s the rules.

Photo of a red dog fast asleep on a towel that’s been spread across the seat of a black leather sofa.

Pixel 6 Pro long exposure

So the Google Pixel 6 Pro smartphone camera’s long exposure functionality is cool.

Selective long-exposure photo of a train passing through a level crossing. The moving train is the only element of the photo that has a motion blur effect applied to it. Because one of the long-exposure photos taken was from before the train appeared within the frame, the train in the final image appears to be semi-transparent. A white car has stopped in front of the lowered boom gate of the level crossing.

The more I use it, the more I like it.

Selective long-exposure photo of a train passing through a level crossing. Only the moving train has had the long exposure effect applied to it, so it’s the only object in the photo with motion blur.

Post-lockdown hotpot

Yay for post-lockdown catch-ups!

Had a lovely, delicious dinner at Panda Hot Pot with a bunch of friends. The food was good and the company was fantastic. 10/10 would recommend.

There was a line outside the restaurant for our scheduled sitting too. Nature is healing!

Selfie of a man and a woman sitting next to each other inside a large Chinese restaurant. Both are smiling at the camera.

Forever hopeful

Maggie keeps an eye on us while we eat dinner on the off chance that she’ll score a human-food treat when we’re done. She is forever hopeful and always hungry!

Photo of a red dog, sitting alert and ready, a short distance away from a dining table that has a pattered green and white tablecloth.

Favourite garden tool

Today I used my favourite garden tool (which I didn’t know was my favourite garden tool till I used it today): a line trimmer (aka whipper snipper). Same with my new self-propelled lawn mower, which now my second favourite.

Photo of a grass-spattered line trimmer (whipper snipper) and battery powered lawn mower on an outdoor deck.