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        <title>ACCU  :: From the Coal Face</title>
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<div class="xar-mod-head"><span class="xar-mod-title">CVu Journal Vol 26, #6 - January 2015</span></div>

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   <h1><strong>Title:</strong>&nbsp;From the Coal Face</h1>
<p><strong>Author:</strong>&nbsp;Martin Moene</p>
<p>
<strong>Date:</strong> 03 January 2015 21:23:57 +00:00 or Sat, 03 January 2015 21:23:57 +00:00</p>
<p><strong>Summary:</strong>&nbsp;Ian Bruntlett shares his experiences: not salaried because of mental ill-health, but still working and learning.

</p>
<p><strong>Body:</strong>&nbsp;<p>In 2001 I was diagnosed with schizophrenia. I spent a fair amount of time between 2001 and 2004 in St Georgeâ€™s (Psychiatric) Hospital. Whilst on East Loan (the hospitalâ€™s rehab unit) I started a blog [<a href="#[1]">1</a>]. To cut a long story short, I found it hard to keep a job down because of both the effects of schizophrenia and the side-effects of my medication. In particular, I experienced Cognitive Impairment. So I set about fixing my brain using my brain and the help of NHS staff. I got to grips with Cognitive Impairment and went on to run a 45 minute talk about it at ACCU 2014 (I also wrote up my experiences [<a href="#[2]">2</a>]).</p>

<p>Working is a goldilocks problem for people with schizophrenia. Salaried work is nice but in my case the stress involved triggered ill-health â€“ psychotic episodes. Sitting around in a hospital lounge drinking tea and chatting was nice but not productive. So I discovered that voluntary work at Contact <a href="#[3]">3</a> was the best compromise.</p>

<h2>Volunteering</h2>

<p>I am a Polymorphic Volunteer for Contact â€“ I do I.T. support and pretty much anything else (running a Hearing Voices Group, answering phones, fielding queries, taking messages, making cups of tea). Because that does not take up too much of my time in Contact, I teach myself things whilst there. Thanks to Chrissie Oâ€™Dell, I have a laptop which I keep in Contact. I read Linux books and try things out on the laptop. I am currently working my way through <em>Learning PHP, MySQL, JavaScript and HTML5 (3e)</em> <a href="#[4]">4</a>. When Iâ€™ve done that I will submit a book review to Astrid Byro.</p>

<p>We had a wiki with a Software Toolkit page, full of links to useful pieces of free software. Because wikispaces.com has gone commercial, we have lost access to those pages. So Iâ€™m waiting for Contactâ€™s website to be handed over to Contact and Iâ€™ll rebuild my Software Toolkit page.</p>

<p>I.T. is a bit like a Traveller (tabletop) RPG. You are faced with problem(s) and a less than perfect skill-set to fix the problems.</p>

<p>A recent problem happened with Contactâ€™s networked laser printer/ photocopier. It stopped talking to the officeâ€™s PCs. So I did some research. We had hundreds of pages of documentation on the printer and router as PDFs. Some of the printerâ€™s manuals had been printed. So I started reading and googling and taking notes for two days. Last time I was a netorking expert was for the Sinclair QL and things have changed since then. I discovered that the printerâ€™s I.P. address was now 0.0.0.0 which even I knew was a problem. There were two things that had to be done to fix the problem.</p>

<ol>
	<li>Configure the router to allocate a static I.P. address to a particular MAC/physical address.</li>
	<li>Configure the printer to have the static I.P. address mentioned in step 1.</li>
</ol>

<p>And, once things were working, I wrote up the notes. The printer has a drawer for manuals so I put it there.</p>

<p>I am also a volunteer for Ubuntu and lubuntu Quality Assurance. I have access to some old Dell computers and I install Ubuntu/lubuntu onto them and report successes and failures to particular e-mail mailing lists <a href="#[5]">5</a>. I also help out friends with Ubuntu/lubuntu PCs. Because I use Ubuntu/lubuntu Linux so much, every so often I buy stuff from the Ubuntu shop <a href="#[6]">6</a>.This time round I bought a variety of things including a 14.10 t-shirt â€“ Utopic Unicorn and an Ubuntu badge.</p>

<h2>Platforms</h2>

<p>Iâ€™ve changed software platforms a number of times â€“ HP calculator, ZX Spectrum, Sinclair QL, PC with DOS, PC with Windows. And now Iâ€™m using Linux exclusively for personal use and for learning new things. I decided that, taking my experience into account, when I read the <em>Linux Pocket Guide</em> <a href="#[7]">7</a> from cover to cover, understanding and knowing all of it, I would be a Linux person. That stage has been passed.So I am a Linux person these days.</p>

<h2>Direction</h2>

<p>Iâ€™ve discovered that as long as I pace myself, I can stay well and stay focussed. I donâ€™t know what kind of voluntary stuff I will do in the future. I do have a few ideas, though :)</p>

<h2>References</h2>
<p class="bibliomixed"><a id="[1]"></a>[1]	<a href="http://schizopanic.blogspot.co.uk/">http://schizopanic.blogspot.co.uk/</a></p>
<p class="bibliomixed"><a id="[2]"></a>[2]	<a href="https://sites.google.com/site/ianbruntlett/home/health">https://sites.google.com/site/ianbruntlett/home/health</a></p>
<p class="bibliomixed"><a id="[3]"></a>[3]	<a href="http://contactmorpeth.org.uk/">http://contactmorpeth.org.uk/</a></p>
<p class="bibliomixed"><a id="[4]"></a>[4]	Nixon, Robin (2014) <em>Learning PHP, MySQL, Javascript, CSS &amp; HTML5</em> (3rd Edition), Oâ€™Reilly Media, ISBN 978-1-49194-946-7</p>
<p class="bibliomixed"><a id="[5]"></a>[5]	<a href="http://community.ubuntu.com/">http://community.ubuntu.com/</a></p>
<p class="bibliomixed"><a id="[6]"></a>[6]	<a href="http://shop.ubuntu.com/">http://shop.ubuntu.com/</a></p>
<p class="bibliomixed"><a id="[7]"></a>[7]	Barrett, Daniel J. (2012) <em>Linux Pocket Guide</em>, Oâ€™Reilley Media, ISBN 978-1449316693</p>

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<p><strong>Notes:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>More fields may be available via dynamicdata ..</em></p>
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