You’ve reached the home of Manek Dubash, journalist in a variety of fields but mainly technology, automotive, politics and beekeeping.
About
I’m lucky enough to live in a town that sits in the Sussex Downs – see the image above – from where a multitude of things become possible.
If you’re really interested, there’s quite of lot of mind-numbing detail about my previous professional life here, but my focus right now is more on fun things like beekeeping and messing around with rusty old cars – or rather, as this YouTube video explains, one ROC in particular. And of course, I’m writing a book – a sort-of sci-fi noir – but that’s all I’m saying about that right now.
Interests
I spent the first portion of my working life as a trades union organiser, and the second part – the bulk – as a technology and business journalist. Those career chunks were separated by five years at college, enhancing my knowledge about and how to think about both those areas. So my interests cover a range of topics, mostly science, technology and nature-related, plus politics – always a fundamental driving passion.
Right now, though, what consumes my time is beekeeping, old cars (new ones leave me cold, mostly), and railways, both modern and new.
I edit my local beekeeping association newsletter, which is fun. There’s more about us here. We’re organised and here to help, so if you think beekeeping might be your thing, please get in touch. Also, if you see a swarm of bees, please get in touch: there are always beekeepers looking for swarms.
Transport: MGB
This beautiful, 1968 British Racing Green MGB Roadster moved in with me in 2012, and since then I’ve enjoyed working on it, from basic maintenance to a major restoration (you can find details of how it was rescued from the ravages of rust here. This section of the site includes graphic images of iron oxide: so if you’re of a nervous disposition, beware!).
But just as importantly, I’ve loved driving it, whether locally or down to the south of France, it’s never missed a beat (well, it did once). It turns heads, sounds suitably fruity, and it connects the driver to what’s going on – unlike modern cars which attempt to do the opposite, not always with great outcomes.
Here is [er – will be] a series of pictures to give you a flavour of what this little green machine is all about [coming soon].
Transport: 2CV van
I fairly recently acquired a Citroën 2CV van or fourgonette. One of the last ones made, it rolled off a Spanish production line in 1977 and was imported into the UK in 2020. Despite being Spanish in origin, as far as I’m concerned it’s a 2CV, so it’s my own square of French territory. And it’s perfect for storing and carting my beekeeping equipment around.
Transport: Railways
As well as being a fan of the railways in general, I run the website of the Lambourn Valley Railway, a long-disused Great Western Railway branch line – with lots of lovely pictures of steam engines!
Blog
I’m in love with my laptop
Yes, sad, isn’t it? About a year ago, I bought an LG Gram 17 laptop. As you’ll see elsewhere in this blog, I was very pleased with it at the time, describing it after three months’ use as “the first laptop I’ve bought and used in at least 10 years that I’m entirely happy with.” …
The price of HS2: is it still worth £100 billion?
The price of HS2 is more than you think – but we’re not talking just about money. Blame the sunk costs fallacy. According to the UK government, the cost of the high-speed rail link from somewhere in London – more on this issue later – has rocketed to over £100 billion. To be clear, that’s …
Continue reading “The price of HS2: is it still worth £100 billion?”
Is this the perfect laptop?
It’s not often that I encounter a piece of technology that invokes a need to write about it. Especially in the consumer space, as most technology is a bit more of this or a bit less of that, but otherwise, you find the same technologies perhaps cobbled together in a slightly different way. Too often …
Work
If you’re keen to see what I’ve been up to for most of my life,
there’s a bunch of stuff on this and succeeding pages.
Warning: the pages you will encounter if you follow the link above are a bit logo city – and more than a bit 1990s…