The Stratford-revered glockenspiel has stood proud in the main street, Broadway, since it officially opened in 1996, but it had stopped working over the weekend.

Stratford District deputy mayor Min McKay said it was a large tourist attraction.

She did not know the reason why it had stopped but hoped an engineer would check it on Tuesday.

Edit: If you’re reading from All, this is Stratford in New Zealand, it’s named after Stratford upon Avon but it’s not the same place 🙂

  • @DaveOPMA
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    20 days ago

    I’m not sure why but I found this article hilarious, or at least its existance. Council’s thing breaks. They will get someone to look at it ASAP. Thank you for reading.

    I remember this opening, which I don’t normally remember much but apparently I remember a clocktower in small town Taranaki opening. That it was almost 30 years ago is also a little scary.

  • @liv
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    320 days ago

    Noooo I hope they can fix it!

    I love glockenspiels and wanted to see it one day! (What can I say, in order to be realistic my travel aspirations have become very small).

    • @DaveOPMA
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      20 days ago

      I’m sure it will be fine. But it is nearly 30 years old so maybe don’t bet on it being around for too long.

      I tried to find info about others, but a glockenspiel is a musical instrument and I think the clock things are named after the Rathaus-Glockenspiel, so I’m not sure how to search for others and work out an average life span 😆

      • @liv
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        19 days ago

        Search engines have really gone to hell. It’s one of those words with two meanings.

        Here’s the one I most want to see, in Hamlyn

        Here’s the Graz one

        Here’s a random one in Texas

        I don’t think it would help us estimate, though, because it depends on quality of manufacture and some of them were made like a century ago. I’ll just have to hope for the best!

        • @DaveOPMA
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          219 days ago

          Wow you must have some awesome google-fu! I’m not sure if search engines can be blamed, since the Wikipedia disambiguation page doesn’t mention this kind of glockenspiel.

          I don’t think it would help us estimate, though, because it depends on quality of manufacture and some of them were made like a century ago. I’ll just have to hope for the best!

          Time to start planning!

          • @liv
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            218 days ago

            Planning to make our own glockenspiel?!😀

            It’s much easier to find something if you know it’s a thing. But I think google (and maybe wikipedia) failed us on this. If I win lotto I’ll give that paid search engine a go.

            • @DaveOPMA
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              218 days ago

              The secret is that paid search engine is a search aggregator. They take results from Google, Bing, Brave, etc and then order them with some tweaks.

              And for the record, I tried it and it didn’t help in this case.

              Planning to make our own glockenspiel?!😀

              I wasn’t, but even if I wanted to all I can find are instructions on making glockenspiel instruments 🙁

              • @liv
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                217 days ago

                I can’t find it either, though I bet I could find something rudimentary in a library. But it’s an old artisan skill, so the only real way to learn is to apprentice ourselves to a master clockmaker. I did however spot how to build one in Roblox!

                What has your general experience of Kagi been like? Disappointed it was no better at this.

                • @DaveOPMA
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                  17 days ago

                  Before Kagi I was running self hosted Searx (technically searxng as it keeps getting forked) which is a search aggregator. It runs the same search over multiple engines then lists the results based on which ones come up the most often. I like Searx but it’s slow (takes a few seconds to retrieve all results from search engines and build the page). Kagi does the same but is very fast.

                  I’m not sure the search results are generally better with Kagi but it does have some great features. E.g. you can block, lower, raise, or pin certain sites. So I block all the Pinterest domains so they don’t show up in results, and I pin Wikipedia so if it’s in the results it’s always at the top.

                  Raise and lower just bump up or down that site’s importance.

                  There are also some AI things like summarising pages and one I recently discovered is you can type in a question and get a chatGPT-like response (but it’s not using chatGPT).

                  I think the main reason I use it is not that it’s better but that I like to support projects that are trying to do things different, I want a world to exist where a search engine can sustain itself without ads (since I’m gonna block them anyway). I’m lucky that the cost isn’t an issue for me, so I see this as a way to support the goal.

                  If you want to test it out, you can sign up for 100 free searches (and can then also have a look around all the customisation options), but if you’re already a pretty skilled searcher I wouldn’t expect it to be significantly better.