The Queensland Writers Centre is touring blogs again. This time the tour has a theme: Writers’ Desks. For some reason writers’ desks are fascinating and pictures of same are hugely popular. So QWC is probably onto a winner here. However, when they asked me to put up a picture of my own desk as part of the tour, I was painfully aware that I’ve only recently done that.
Fascinating as my desk is, I can’t keep posting pictures of it. It’s not as if it has seasonal changes or anything. So I’ve taken the opportunity to correct a glaring omission from my last picture and show you my computer ‘desktop’. This should be just as interesting as the wooden one since, for me at least, the computer is where 95% of the work gets done.
For those without broadband (or using Telstra NextG, which is almost as bad) I apologise for the size of this picture. Even so, it isn’t big enough for you to recognise all the icons. That’s why the animation provides labels for the following groups.
- Group A: Various mobile device managers (phone, camera, MP3 player and so on.)
- Group B: Internet stuff (browser, email, Skype, Twitter, and FTP client)
- Group C: Office software (mostly Open Office but also PowerPoint)
- Group D: Music score editing software. (Yes, I write music. It’s a little hobby of mine.)
- Group E: Image editing software (Paint Shop Pro, IrfanView and IconEasel)
- Group F: Media players (Windows Media Player and WinAmp)
- Group G: HTML editors (HTML Kit and Komodo Edit)
- Group H: Sundry utilities (antivirus, encryption, DVD writers, backup, 3G wireless client, and Celestia, which lets me view the universe from various perspectives)
- Group I: Various ebook readers and ebook creators.
- Group J: Stuff to do with my current writing project (the Open Office file itself, my multifunction tracking sheet, and a program called StoryBook that I’ve been trying out as a way of organising the background info – I’m not getting along well with it.)
- Group K: Games (basically, the only computer game I ever play is Freecell – a patience-style card game.)
I should also mention the background picture. I change my background quite often and it is usually an astronomical theme. This one is a long-exposure shot of the space shuttle taking off in Florida last year. I love pictures of astronauts on EVAs, Hubble deep field shots, and the ISS. Images like these help keep me inspired.
This post is part of the Queensland Writers Centre blog tour, happening February to April 2010. To follow the tour, visit Queensland Writers Centre’s blog.













Evidence of a painfully analytical mind
Oh yes. My brain hurts.
Nice picture!
I get most of my best pictures from a NASA website, Astronomy Picture Of the Day (APOD http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html) which has a wonderful archive as well as a new and amazing picture each day.