This photo was taken outside our house in Malahide on the 8th of August.
The sky was amazing that evening, as you can see below.
No filters. No Photoshop. No trickery of any kind. Just an Android phone.
Rob Brydon tweeted the following the other day: “Very proud of what Wales have done in this World Cup, in the face of such injury problems. What remarkable heart and courage!”
I couldn’t say it better myself but the surprising things is that I would be talking about the Irish team!
So perhaps there is a common experience for many countries who are knocked out of the competition.
The whole country was so proud of the way the Irish team won all four pool matches, especially the last game against France.
Not only was that the game we need to win to avoid having to play the All Blacks, but we also lost our two superheroes during the game: Paul O’Connell and Jonathan Sexton. It was such a fine performance.
All of which made it very difficult to take the defeat to Argentina yesterday.
The thing about sport is that there are always “what ifs”. We will always wonder how we would have performed against Argentina if O’Connell, Sexton, Peter O’Mahony, Jared Payne, and Sean O’Brien had been playing. But we will never know.
What we do know is:
Here is a photo of O’Connell and Sexton before our hearts were broken:
This amazing wall can be see in the “2 Grand Canal Square” building, in Dublin, home to William Fry and a number of other companies.
I believe the words are related to a James Joyce novel (Finnegan’s Wake, I am told) but I find it hard to see myself.
It you find yourself in the area then you should pop in.
This is completely amazing: Gravity Glue.
Inspired by these accomplishments, I made my own small, simple stack on Malahide beach last weekend:
This is clever. You can cut up an old CD case (who needs CDs any more) and you can use it to view 3D videos on your smartphone.
You can find suitable videos here.
Every now and then technology manages to surprise you.
A while ago someone showed me YouTube 360.
The idea is simple: you take a 360 degree video, and you tie it in with a viewer on a phone so that you can turn the phone to see different parts of the video.
Genius!
Just search for “360” in YouTube.
Here’s an example (which might not look great on your laptop/desktop but will look great on your mobile):
The “Dublin Area Rapid Transit” (DART) service started in 1984, over 30 years ago.
For the first 15 years it ran between Howth and Bray, and then a branch was added at Howth Junction and Donaghmede so that some darts could go to Malahide instead of Howth.
There is talk now of extending the Malahide Dart line all the way to Balbriggan by 2022.
I imagine the people living in Howth and Sutton were worried which the Malahide line was opened that half of the northbound Darts would be diverted to Malahide instead. But the strange thing is that, even after all of these years, this has never happened.
I regularly arrive in a Dart station to see that the next two Darts are going to Howth and the one after that will be going to Malahide.
All I can conclude is that there is a very powerful politician living in Howth.
Here is a picture from one of my favourite apps (“Next Train Ireland”) showing not 2 but 3 Howth Darts between 2 Malahide Darts:
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