241122 22Nov24 Gritting routes, Gullies, Bins
Last updated
Last updated
Video Timeline (min:sec):
00:00 - 04:34 Gritting Routes
04:34 -10:35 Gullies - colour coding according to status
10:35 - 12:05 Scrolling in Parish Online on phone or tablet
12:05 - 19:00 Banter
19:00 - 23:12 Gullies revisited
23:12 - 41:00 Placing distance rings around bins
41:00 - 48:32 (end) Gritting routes and more banter
WEBVTT
1 00:00:38.570 --> 00:00:42.510 Malcolm Daniels: Looks as though you got your monk tablet on Stuart.
2 00:00:44.440 --> 00:00:45.880 Stuart Bacon: Looks as though what sorry.
3 00:00:46.070 --> 00:00:48.839 Malcolm Daniels: So you've got your monk's habit on.
4 00:00:52.010 --> 00:00:57.760 Stuart Bacon: No, just just a a hoodie bit cold today.
5 00:01:03.690 --> 00:01:08.189 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. Don't know whether anybody else been having difficulty getting in this more this afternoon.
6 00:01:08.390 --> 00:01:10.479 Malcolm Daniels: I've been kicked out 3 times.
7 00:01:11.280 --> 00:01:14.810 Stuart Bacon: Oh, yes, that's not good.
8 00:01:15.910 --> 00:01:17.659 Malcolm Daniels: I don't give up easily.
9 00:01:17.660 --> 00:01:21.829 Stuart Bacon: I joined a minute ago and saw John said Hello, and disappeared.
10 00:01:22.050 --> 00:01:23.640 Stuart Bacon: That was yeah.
11 00:01:26.940 --> 00:01:29.580 Scott Mason: Monday. Talk to you all later. See? You guys.
12 00:01:42.220 --> 00:01:44.450 Stuart Bacon: Well, I know Graham is having
13 00:01:45.288 --> 00:01:48.750 Stuart Bacon: a bit of a busy day preparation
14 00:01:54.570 --> 00:01:57.210 Stuart Bacon: to join us.
15 00:02:09.669 --> 00:02:12.147 Malcolm Daniels: Your audio went very quiet, Stuart.
16 00:02:24.420 --> 00:02:25.210 Scott Mason: Right.
17 00:02:45.130 --> 00:02:46.690 Scott Mason: Let's see.
18 00:02:50.770 --> 00:02:51.195 Scott Mason: Alright!
19 00:03:13.490 --> 00:03:16.194 John Roberts: I'm frightened to say anything in case I get kicked off again.
20 00:03:17.290 --> 00:03:19.810 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah, I got checked off 3 times.
21 00:03:19.990 --> 00:03:20.710 John Roberts: Yeah.
22 00:03:22.966 --> 00:03:24.020 Stuart Bacon: Let's say.
23 00:03:24.020 --> 00:03:27.349 John Roberts: Is that Richard, hiding behind retired clerk.
24 00:03:28.600 --> 00:03:29.470 Stuart Bacon: Yes.
25 00:03:29.620 --> 00:03:34.800 Retired Clerk: Well, bye, Hello, I don't.
26 00:03:43.970 --> 00:03:46.230 Retired Clerk: Where's our leader today? Then.
27 00:03:47.370 --> 00:03:50.970 Stuart Bacon: This area schoolboy who amazing double.
28 00:03:52.710 --> 00:03:54.250 Stuart Bacon: I like.
29 00:03:55.280 --> 00:03:56.310 John Roberts: No idea.
30 00:03:57.400 --> 00:04:00.140 Retired Clerk: The toyed toyed a bit high on the oil of white.
31 00:04:01.940 --> 00:04:02.490 Malcolm Daniels: That's it.
32 00:04:03.850 --> 00:04:09.730 John Roberts: Probably getting ready to with storm, Burt, although
33 00:04:10.160 --> 00:04:14.879 John Roberts: you have a job taking it seriously when they call it a storm. But
34 00:04:20.769 --> 00:04:27.319 John Roberts: right? Is anybody else having problems. When you add something to a map and then go to save it.
35 00:04:27.510 --> 00:04:29.689 John Roberts: and it doesn't show it as being saved.
36 00:04:32.470 --> 00:04:33.230 Malcolm Daniels: No.
37 00:04:34.010 --> 00:04:34.930 John Roberts: Right? Okay.
38 00:04:35.360 --> 00:04:36.519 Malcolm Daniels: I haven't done it.
39 00:04:37.570 --> 00:04:38.740 John Roberts: We mentioned.
40 00:04:39.010 --> 00:04:42.179 John Roberts: Right? I'm gonna do a Chris. Now, can I share my screen.
41 00:04:43.030 --> 00:04:43.720 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah.
42 00:04:48.010 --> 00:04:50.260 Stuart Bacon: Okay, think I've got some clarity
43 00:04:50.930 --> 00:04:52.720 Stuart Bacon: that was Graham on the phone.
44 00:04:53.210 --> 00:04:53.940 John Roberts: Right.
45 00:04:54.870 --> 00:04:55.780 Stuart Bacon: He's
46 00:04:56.540 --> 00:05:06.370 Stuart Bacon: been trying to join in, because he says the meeting it said, the meeting hasn't yet started, which is then sort of
47 00:05:06.520 --> 00:05:09.965 Stuart Bacon: ended it for everybody, causing the difficulty for people to
48 00:05:10.310 --> 00:05:10.740 Malcolm Daniels: So shit.
49 00:05:10.740 --> 00:05:13.250 Stuart Bacon: Join in. So yeah.
50 00:05:13.710 --> 00:05:19.670 Stuart Bacon: he's he's struggling to to get in today. So I was asked if we can carry on without him.
51 00:05:19.990 --> 00:05:22.429 Stuart Bacon: So yeah.
52 00:05:24.760 --> 00:05:28.139 Stuart Bacon: Scott. Anything from yourself.
53 00:05:29.260 --> 00:05:32.387 Scott Mason: I do? Please.
54 00:05:33.929 --> 00:05:36.881 Scott Mason: Shall I share my screen? Just 2 seconds?
55 00:05:47.750 --> 00:05:49.960 Scott Mason: Just let me know when that comes through.
56 00:05:58.420 --> 00:06:00.123 Scott Mason: Yeah. All good. Okay.
57 00:06:01.180 --> 00:06:13.050 Scott Mason: something I'd like to be able to do, if possible. Is Somerset Council currently share their greeting routes. Under the data agreement with us. Let me just try and find it.
58 00:06:15.480 --> 00:06:20.759 Scott Mason: and that is for wider than the Bridgewater Town boundary. I just wondered if there was a way that we could
59 00:06:20.840 --> 00:06:34.060 Scott Mason: extract that data and put it into our own Paris layers just showing the Bridgewater network routes. I've done something similar with the gullies where I was able to extract the data and divide it down just into the Bridgewater gullies. But I didn't know if that's possible for
60 00:06:34.700 --> 00:06:36.850 Scott Mason: the quitting roots at all.
61 00:06:38.890 --> 00:06:39.720 Stuart Bacon: And
62 00:06:43.960 --> 00:06:47.070 Stuart Bacon: I'm not going quiet. I'm trying something. Yeah.
63 00:06:47.070 --> 00:06:50.290 Stuart Bacon: I was just thinking, John, you might be the best one to answer this one.
64 00:06:50.780 --> 00:06:52.690 John Roberts: You know what right?
65 00:06:57.450 --> 00:07:00.430 John Roberts: They're very good. It's very clever, because the
66 00:07:00.930 --> 00:07:03.649 John Roberts: gritten route doesn't include where I live. But
67 00:07:12.830 --> 00:07:16.111 John Roberts: problem is, it's a county wide thing.
68 00:07:16.670 --> 00:07:19.200 John Roberts: yeah. When you did the gullies.
69 00:07:19.670 --> 00:07:20.520 Scott Mason: Yeah.
70 00:07:20.520 --> 00:07:24.929 John Roberts: Did you extract each gully time, or did you export it to a spreadsheet?
71 00:07:25.170 --> 00:07:34.410 Scott Mason: I exported a spreadsheet and then put filters on just for the Bridgewater parish boundary, which I can't see, you know, as an option for the highways, for the networks.
72 00:07:35.173 --> 00:07:38.380 John Roberts: Well, you can get it in you can. You can do it in Table View.
73 00:07:40.590 --> 00:07:42.040 Scott Mason: Yeah, so I could. I could
74 00:07:42.690 --> 00:07:51.469 Scott Mason: bear with me. So if I go to cog and then table View, there's no division to break that down into just a Bridgewater area. From what I can see.
75 00:07:53.340 --> 00:07:57.439 John Roberts: No, but you can. If you export, you'll then get it as a Csv file.
76 00:07:58.180 --> 00:08:00.360 John Roberts: and then you should be able to then filter it.
77 00:08:01.140 --> 00:08:04.759 Scott Mason: But I'm not sure there's the column to be able to filter it to Bridgewater, and.
78 00:08:04.760 --> 00:08:06.770 John Roberts: No, I did tell you I was guessing.
79 00:08:06.770 --> 00:08:07.460 Scott Mason: Yeah.
80 00:08:10.060 --> 00:08:10.880 Retired Clerk: Explain.
81 00:08:15.920 --> 00:08:17.050 Scott Mason: Bear with me.
82 00:08:17.640 --> 00:08:21.089 Scott Mason: It's because I've already got on the other side.
83 00:08:23.420 --> 00:08:25.310 Scott Mason: Let's try again.
84 00:08:32.530 --> 00:08:35.009 Scott Mason: Okay, I pull that across.
85 00:08:41.059 --> 00:08:46.209 Scott Mason: So how would I now break that down into just the Bridgewater routes.
86 00:08:52.190 --> 00:08:52.870 Scott Mason: Yep.
87 00:08:58.930 --> 00:09:00.140 John Roberts: Criteria
88 00:09:12.380 --> 00:09:17.240 John Roberts: right? If I go criteria contains Bridgewater, you get nothing.
89 00:09:17.240 --> 00:09:17.970 Retired Clerk: Hmm.
90 00:09:18.220 --> 00:09:18.830 John Roberts: So I'm good.
91 00:09:18.830 --> 00:09:22.610 John Roberts: I'm guessing that their roots are probably road names. Scott.
92 00:09:22.990 --> 00:09:23.980 Scott Mason: Okay.
93 00:09:40.090 --> 00:09:43.649 Scott Mason: okay, so it may not be possible. Then.
94 00:09:43.940 --> 00:09:47.089 John Roberts: It may not, but I'll I'll look into it for you.
95 00:09:48.180 --> 00:09:49.230 Scott Mason: Okay.
96 00:09:49.230 --> 00:09:51.219 John Roberts: I can have a word with Adam Reimer
97 00:09:52.000 --> 00:09:56.690 John Roberts: and Alice and Ned, and I'll see if I can find out the answer.
98 00:09:58.000 --> 00:09:59.219 Scott Mason: Great. Thank you.
99 00:09:59.540 --> 00:10:00.490 John Roberts: Not a problem.
100 00:10:02.105 --> 00:10:15.999 Scott Mason: So my next query. It seems to be a popular topic at the minute I've been watching the previous meetings is about gullies. So I was able to extract all of our gully locations onto our in Paris layer, as can be seen here.
101 00:10:16.700 --> 00:10:19.630 Scott Mason: 6,700 of them.
102 00:10:20.037 --> 00:10:26.239 Scott Mason: So we need to begin thinking about how we're gonna get around all of those. And
103 00:10:26.250 --> 00:10:38.660 Scott Mason: I guess ultimately, what I want to be able to do is divide Bridgewater up into areas, probably as polygons to show when each part Bridgewater is going to be serviced, but also
104 00:10:38.730 --> 00:10:52.119 Scott Mason: allow the operator to be able to click on an individual gully and update the status of it. And I quite like to be color coded, if possible. So if it's been cleared in service, they can change it to Green and put an inspection date on it.
105 00:10:52.530 --> 00:11:02.897 Scott Mason: If it's silted up and needs further work, it could go red, and I just wondered how that might work in practice. If anyone's got any suggestions. I've also created the gully issues layer in case we need the the 2.
106 00:11:04.970 --> 00:11:05.490 Scott Mason: Yeah.
107 00:11:05.490 --> 00:11:08.509 John Roberts: With with your areas? Could you not use the postcode areas.
108 00:11:11.710 --> 00:11:16.249 Scott Mason: We could. Yeah, I was probably good. Just gonna divide it up into sensible
109 00:11:16.826 --> 00:11:24.730 Scott Mason: you know, sensible patches for them to cover for instance, pick on a particular housing estate and color code that
110 00:11:24.740 --> 00:11:25.669 Scott Mason: with a polygon.
111 00:11:26.842 --> 00:11:28.170 Scott Mason: But yeah, good deal.
112 00:11:29.450 --> 00:11:35.150 John Roberts: So in. If you click on the cogwheel for that, because that's a layer you've created.
113 00:11:35.150 --> 00:11:36.004 Scott Mason: It is. Yeah.
114 00:11:36.470 --> 00:11:38.060 John Roberts: Can you show us the style?
115 00:11:40.580 --> 00:11:41.250 Scott Mason: Yeah.
116 00:11:46.090 --> 00:11:47.709 Scott Mason: that's all I've got at the minute.
117 00:11:48.120 --> 00:11:49.080 John Roberts: Right.
118 00:11:55.310 --> 00:11:57.530 John Roberts: So you I think you're gonna
119 00:11:57.940 --> 00:12:03.480 John Roberts: probably Richard or Stuart better than me at this. But you have to. You have to change, that
120 00:12:03.940 --> 00:12:06.610 John Roberts: the style options to cloud.
121 00:12:07.237 --> 00:12:09.120 Scott Mason: Folks. Yeah. Okay.
122 00:12:12.950 --> 00:12:17.920 John Roberts: And then you have to go back to where you created it into the columns you have to give your your
123 00:12:18.750 --> 00:12:20.010 John Roberts: 2 different.
124 00:12:21.530 --> 00:12:25.099 John Roberts: How can I put it? You're gonna have to go back to the beginning.
125 00:12:26.480 --> 00:12:33.079 John Roberts: So where you set up the hang on.
126 00:12:33.990 --> 00:12:35.050 Retired Clerk: Hello!
127 00:12:35.800 --> 00:12:36.490 John Roberts: Hey!
128 00:12:38.700 --> 00:12:44.080 Retired Clerk: I've got. I've I've got all the gullies for Bridgewater. Come out in a boil
129 00:12:45.260 --> 00:12:49.509 Retired Clerk: showing on my screen, downloaded 7,000 of them with the addresses.
130 00:12:51.110 --> 00:12:54.969 Scott Mason: Yeah, which is what I've got here. So I've got all of the gullies within the Bridgewater boundary.
131 00:12:55.320 --> 00:13:00.619 Scott Mason: It's more now how we, as we begin to work on them, how we can update the status of them.
132 00:13:01.130 --> 00:13:01.510 Retired Clerk: I know.
133 00:13:01.510 --> 00:13:06.689 Scott Mason: Ideally by color coding. Really. So, the greens are the serviced ones. Red are problematic.
134 00:13:08.110 --> 00:13:12.449 John Roberts: Can I? Can you stop sharing and let me share a minute, and I can explain what I mean.
135 00:13:12.780 --> 00:13:19.560 Scott Mason: Yeah, no worries. I sorry connection is really slow. I'm trying to stop sharing, but it's not doing much.
136 00:13:20.100 --> 00:13:20.530 John Roberts: Hang on!
137 00:13:22.510 --> 00:13:22.954 Scott Mason: Okay.
138 00:13:24.030 --> 00:13:27.520 John Roberts: No, it was me struggling to explain what I was trying to say.
139 00:13:27.990 --> 00:13:28.640 Scott Mason: Yeah. No worries.
140 00:13:28.640 --> 00:13:38.540 John Roberts: Right if I turn off the dreaded gullies. You're looking at our planning, Matt, and when we created that
141 00:13:41.160 --> 00:13:42.999 John Roberts: it is slow this afternoon, isn't it?
142 00:13:51.270 --> 00:13:51.940 Scott Mason: Yeah.
143 00:13:52.970 --> 00:13:56.940 John Roberts: I don't think it's you, because it's not working.
144 00:14:07.530 --> 00:14:12.310 John Roberts: No, something is not working.
145 00:14:16.540 --> 00:14:18.190 John Roberts: I should get there.
146 00:14:21.840 --> 00:14:22.540 John Roberts: Join it.
147 00:14:22.700 --> 00:14:24.300 John Roberts: This is this is an old one, but
148 00:14:26.960 --> 00:14:31.159 John Roberts: what I should get there is is all the options I've got for planning.
149 00:14:31.650 --> 00:14:32.470 Scott Mason: Okay.
150 00:14:32.750 --> 00:14:38.489 John Roberts: And one of those options in that list which we do in the columns
151 00:14:38.540 --> 00:14:45.600 John Roberts: is where we've got current, withdrawn, or whatever, and as I choose each option, that color of those dots will change.
152 00:14:45.960 --> 00:14:46.780 Scott Mason: Okay.
153 00:14:48.480 --> 00:14:53.070 Scott Mason: so that'll be dictated by the columns within that layer which I need to go back to their structure.
154 00:14:53.340 --> 00:14:54.300 John Roberts: Yeah, so.
155 00:14:54.300 --> 00:14:54.920 Scott Mason: Okay.
156 00:14:54.920 --> 00:14:58.280 John Roberts: When you, when you create that, you, you add columns.
157 00:14:58.660 --> 00:15:03.870 John Roberts: So you could call one. Okay, you could call one defunct or whatever.
158 00:15:04.010 --> 00:15:06.389 John Roberts: And then, when you go back into style.
159 00:15:06.560 --> 00:15:09.530 John Roberts: each of those columns, you can then color code.
160 00:15:10.590 --> 00:15:11.580 Scott Mason: Yeah, that makes.
161 00:15:11.580 --> 00:15:12.710 John Roberts: Does it make sense.
162 00:15:12.710 --> 00:15:14.240 Scott Mason: Yeah, it does. Yeah, yeah.
163 00:15:14.240 --> 00:15:15.800 John Roberts: I'm better at. I'm better at
164 00:15:16.020 --> 00:15:19.349 John Roberts: showing you things. And I'm trying to explain what I mean.
165 00:15:20.560 --> 00:15:23.719 John Roberts: You're gonna have to go back to the start of that layer
166 00:15:24.450 --> 00:15:29.109 John Roberts: so you can. You can add the columns into it. So 3 or 4 columns
167 00:15:29.290 --> 00:15:34.019 John Roberts: go back into style when you've done it, and then give each column a different color
168 00:15:35.230 --> 00:15:37.340 John Roberts: as to what it is. So then.
169 00:15:37.520 --> 00:15:40.199 John Roberts: when the operator clicks on the gully.
170 00:15:40.960 --> 00:15:43.059 John Roberts: the left hand side will come up.
171 00:15:43.150 --> 00:15:47.090 John Roberts: He then has to go to the pencil so he can make a change.
172 00:15:47.260 --> 00:15:47.660 Scott Mason: Yeah.
173 00:15:47.660 --> 00:15:49.929 John Roberts: And then, if he from from your
174 00:15:49.960 --> 00:15:55.099 John Roberts: options, he can then choose which one he wants, and then, as he chooses that option.
175 00:15:55.470 --> 00:15:57.390 John Roberts: the color on the map will change.
176 00:15:57.770 --> 00:16:01.779 Scott Mason: Yeah, I fully understand. Yeah, that's great. Thank you.
177 00:16:02.080 --> 00:16:03.509 John Roberts: Sorry for the length be.
178 00:16:03.710 --> 00:16:06.280 Scott Mason: No, no.
179 00:16:07.200 --> 00:16:24.929 Scott Mason: that's good, thank you. And my final thing to say was that I watched last week's clip, and I saw that somebody was having issues with panning on maps. And I've had exactly the same issue with using it on my phone. But it does seem like the using the 2 fingers to move around on the screen does work. So that was useful. Thank you.
180 00:16:33.305 --> 00:16:33.930 Stuart Bacon: Sorry.
181 00:16:34.553 --> 00:16:36.886 Stuart Bacon: Sorry I had to dip out there.
182 00:16:37.550 --> 00:16:39.120 Stuart Bacon: My apologies!
183 00:16:39.150 --> 00:16:42.470 Stuart Bacon: Did. Did you get.
184 00:16:42.830 --> 00:16:44.170 Scott Mason: Yes, thank you. Yeah.
185 00:16:44.170 --> 00:16:54.560 Retired Clerk: Is there? Is there an option to have those gullies from your table? You that you've extracted Scott in into a a parish layer to get all that information put in.
186 00:16:55.020 --> 00:16:57.779 Retired Clerk: and then you can, which then you can play with.
187 00:16:58.660 --> 00:16:59.449 Scott Mason: So we've got it.
188 00:16:59.450 --> 00:17:02.949 Retired Clerk: I know we've got it from Somerset in that. In that one layer.
189 00:17:03.040 --> 00:17:04.130 Scott Mason: Yeah, I I do.
190 00:17:04.240 --> 00:17:05.460 Scott Mason: There's a parish there.
191 00:17:05.460 --> 00:17:09.202 Retired Clerk: Yeah, if you're trying to do so, of course you can't copy the layer.
192 00:17:09.490 --> 00:17:13.439 Retired Clerk: we don't have that feature within the Somerset Council info.
193 00:17:13.880 --> 00:17:16.009 Retired Clerk: but you may be able to get it.
194 00:17:16.109 --> 00:17:21.960 Retired Clerk: Get them to to put it in as one of your parish layers, which would then make it editable for you.
195 00:17:23.020 --> 00:17:34.910 Scott Mason: Yeah. So I I've got to that point. So I was able to extract the data from Somerset and and filter it down to just Bridgewater, and then I raised the ticket through X maps and got it uploaded as our own Paris layer, which means I can now play around with it.
196 00:17:34.910 --> 00:17:36.229 Retired Clerk: And then you can play with it.
197 00:17:36.230 --> 00:17:38.780 Scott Mason: Yeah, yeah, thank you.
198 00:17:39.980 --> 00:17:42.080 Scott Mason: Yeah. And that's it. I think for me.
199 00:17:42.080 --> 00:17:42.570 Stuart Bacon: Okay.
200 00:17:42.570 --> 00:17:43.330 Scott Mason: Thank you.
201 00:17:45.360 --> 00:17:57.230 Stuart Bacon: Roger. Anything from yourself you're on. You're silent, Roger. I can't hear you right.
202 00:18:07.150 --> 00:18:08.600 Stuart Bacon: Can't hear you, Roger.
203 00:18:08.900 --> 00:18:10.449 Stuart Bacon: I don't know if anybody else can.
204 00:18:11.060 --> 00:18:11.790 John Roberts: No.
205 00:18:11.790 --> 00:18:12.510 Malcolm Daniels: No.
206 00:18:15.270 --> 00:18:18.310 Stuart Bacon: Okay, sorry about that.
207 00:18:18.670 --> 00:18:20.259 John Roberts: Think we've got the Gremlins today, aren't.
208 00:18:22.120 --> 00:18:26.979 Stuart Bacon: The the system doesn't want to be working quite as as it should does it. Unfortunately.
209 00:18:26.980 --> 00:18:27.710 John Roberts: No.
210 00:18:27.950 --> 00:18:31.830 Stuart Bacon: And surely
211 00:18:32.650 --> 00:18:33.330 Sherlie Burridge: Yeah.
212 00:18:33.900 --> 00:18:35.219 Stuart Bacon: How? How can we help you, sir?
213 00:18:36.070 --> 00:18:41.180 Sherlie Burridge: Well, I'm I'm a very new clerk. I'm just sitting and listening. Really.
214 00:18:41.460 --> 00:18:51.220 Sherlie Burridge: I've I've got multitude of problems. But I'm just trying to pick up hints. I'm over here on the Isle of White. The tides are fine, but we have had snow.
215 00:18:53.226 --> 00:18:55.089 Stuart Bacon: Can't get in. Yeah.
216 00:18:56.700 --> 00:18:58.699 Roger Simonite: Can you? Can you hear me?
217 00:19:00.630 --> 00:19:02.540 Sherlie Burridge: Can you hear me now? Yes.
218 00:19:02.540 --> 00:19:04.000 Roger Simonite: That's Roger. Yes, Roger.
219 00:19:04.000 --> 00:19:06.190 Roger Simonite: Finally, I
220 00:19:06.190 --> 00:19:15.440 Roger Simonite: I was trying to talk earlier. One of my suggestions was in in the case of the different colors. If you go to the the bin
221 00:19:15.450 --> 00:19:23.630 Roger Simonite: grip bins, they've got it graded by percentage. And and if you change the percentage, you get a different color.
222 00:19:23.720 --> 00:19:27.710 Roger Simonite: So, so it certainly is possible to to do what you want. Scott.
223 00:19:29.160 --> 00:19:32.659 Scott Mason: When you say graded by percentage, what do you mean? Is that just.
224 00:19:32.660 --> 00:19:35.890 Roger Simonite: If you if you go to the collective grip bins.
225 00:19:36.020 --> 00:19:53.400 Roger Simonite: and then if you click on a grip, bit, the bins will show you different colors. So depending whether they're full, whether they're 50, 60,%, 20%. And each one, it's aligned to a different color.
226 00:19:54.440 --> 00:19:58.089 Scott Mason: Okay, is that a Somerset layer, or is that wider.
227 00:19:58.090 --> 00:20:00.350 Roger Simonite: Well, if I can get
228 00:20:00.410 --> 00:20:09.060 Roger Simonite: if I can get into mine, I mean, I always find when I try and do this and go into parish online. Everything seems to stop working. But we'll we're
229 00:20:09.720 --> 00:20:10.449 Roger Simonite: see if I can.
230 00:20:10.450 --> 00:20:12.270 John Roberts: Yeah, I'll second that Roger.
231 00:20:12.840 --> 00:20:16.689 Roger Simonite: Let me see if I can get it open a minute. I'm just gonna move you.
232 00:20:17.140 --> 00:20:20.599 Scott Mason: And just keen to see how it looks to see if that might be a better solution. That's all.
233 00:20:20.600 --> 00:20:24.549 Roger Simonite: Yeah, but it's it's it's all as I say. Well, set.
234 00:20:24.900 --> 00:20:32.129 Roger Simonite: See? Now, I can't open open parish online. It won't even come up because we're on on zoom.
235 00:20:32.230 --> 00:20:36.389 Roger Simonite: I have to open it beforehand, and then come back to it. God.
236 00:20:36.650 --> 00:20:40.640 Scott Mason: Okay? So if I search grip bins, it comes up under assets and maintenance.
237 00:20:40.640 --> 00:20:42.310 Scott Mason: Yeah. And if you go on cool.
238 00:20:42.910 --> 00:20:57.039 Roger Simonite: There's collaborative ones, and then, if you go in there, quite a few parishes have populated them, and once you populate it, you can effectively grade it in terms of how how full or empty the bin is.
239 00:20:58.930 --> 00:20:59.950 Scott Mason: Okay.
240 00:21:02.450 --> 00:21:04.319 Roger Simonite: I just can't.
241 00:21:04.320 --> 00:21:12.540 Scott Mason: So that would mean the user of the app or or website would need to click on the Icon and edit it and update the status. Is that right?
242 00:21:12.540 --> 00:21:33.490 Roger Simonite: Yeah. And I mean, the beauty of it is is that you could you could do it, or one of the people who's filling the bins up can effectively do the same, so they could do exactly the same process with a gully if effectively it needed cleaning, and then, when you put it as a red, and then it goes to green when it's been cleaned.
243 00:21:34.260 --> 00:21:41.969 Roger Simonite: I can't. I can't at the moment open open parish online for some. For some unknown reason.
244 00:21:42.355 --> 00:21:48.919 Roger Simonite: I I did have a question. So I think what I'm going to do is I'll come out again.
245 00:21:49.010 --> 00:21:53.150 Roger Simonite: I'll try and open parish online, and then I'll come back in. Okay.
246 00:21:53.150 --> 00:21:54.809 Stuart Bacon: We'll see you in a few minutes. Then Roger.
247 00:21:54.810 --> 00:21:55.589 Roger Simonite: Yeah, okay.
248 00:22:00.110 --> 00:22:04.328 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no. Look looking at that. What? What? Roger's saying?
249 00:22:05.400 --> 00:22:10.480 Stuart Bacon: Just to give you a quick view.
250 00:22:10.985 --> 00:22:15.110 Stuart Bacon: I've only got a couple of bins I could find quickly
251 00:22:15.597 --> 00:22:22.270 Stuart Bacon: likely to mine. And yeah, you can see the the colors of the bins vary
252 00:22:22.340 --> 00:22:32.129 Stuart Bacon: ever so slightly to between green and orange. They're dependent on how they're categorized on the the status.
253 00:22:35.270 --> 00:22:43.509 Stuart Bacon: so that one's at 80%. So it's it's good. Whereas these ones at 40%
254 00:22:44.400 --> 00:22:47.970 Stuart Bacon: orange, because they're not quite so well filled.
255 00:22:49.770 --> 00:22:54.400 Stuart Bacon: But you can't see the styling indicator.
256 00:22:54.630 --> 00:22:58.449 Stuart Bacon: because that's a collaborative layer, not parish layer.
257 00:23:00.430 --> 00:23:03.919 Retired Clerk: That's the sort of style that you actually want for your gullies, isn't it?
258 00:23:04.030 --> 00:23:08.610 Retired Clerk: To have that sort of collaborative layer that would would work between the 2.
259 00:23:10.240 --> 00:23:14.210 Stuart Bacon: That would be dash the ideal scenario, I think. Yeah.
260 00:23:15.780 --> 00:23:19.270 Retired Clerk: Sorry what what's meant by collaborative layer.
261 00:23:19.270 --> 00:23:40.600 Retired Clerk: They're they're working towards it. I think they've been telling us for some time that you know some of the layers that that parishes use use within assets and maintenance are actually a collaborative, so it could be worked between. It can be seen by other users from other parishes, and could have information come from from your principal authority down.
262 00:23:40.890 --> 00:23:45.049 Scott Mason: So, where Somerset, where Somerset, sharing their their gullies.
263 00:23:45.110 --> 00:23:54.279 Retired Clerk: Then it can populate, and and the same with the salt bins or the salt bags as they winter winter bags. They're now calling them
264 00:23:54.574 --> 00:23:58.140 Retired Clerk: it. It gives you a clue that you can see. See both of them.
265 00:23:59.390 --> 00:24:04.458 Retired Clerk: but the bins this one works. The salt bin seems to work a little bit better than the
266 00:24:05.090 --> 00:24:08.059 Retired Clerk: others because of the color coding.
267 00:24:08.060 --> 00:24:13.590 Roger Simonite: Yeah, it works very well. You can. You see very clearly what the status is.
268 00:24:16.270 --> 00:24:21.650 Stuart Bacon: So you can see they're sort of different ones from outside of the parish, because they're
269 00:24:24.560 --> 00:24:25.230 John Roberts: Right.
270 00:24:25.970 --> 00:24:26.570 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
271 00:24:27.580 --> 00:24:29.819 John Roberts: I'm gonna have another go, if I may.
272 00:24:30.360 --> 00:24:33.824 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, it would pop out, John.
273 00:24:34.640 --> 00:24:36.320 John Roberts: Okay. Here I go again.
274 00:24:36.450 --> 00:24:37.619 John Roberts: Sorry about this.
275 00:24:39.590 --> 00:24:40.760 John Roberts: Right? Scott.
276 00:24:41.220 --> 00:24:41.900 Scott Mason: Yep.
277 00:24:43.647 --> 00:24:49.990 John Roberts: John. John's test point is just a layer I use for mucking about with. But if I go to admin.
278 00:24:54.100 --> 00:24:55.740 John Roberts: wait for the layers.
279 00:24:55.860 --> 00:24:57.800 John Roberts: Right? John's test point.
280 00:24:59.790 --> 00:25:01.950 John Roberts: Go up to the pencil edit.
281 00:25:01.950 --> 00:25:02.660 Scott Mason: Yeah.
282 00:25:03.070 --> 00:25:06.190 John Roberts: I then come to my columns, which is what I was looking for earlier.
283 00:25:07.210 --> 00:25:08.710 John Roberts: What I've done there.
284 00:25:09.660 --> 00:25:15.870 John Roberts: I've added 3 columns to it, good broken, and needs attention just for summit to say.
285 00:25:16.510 --> 00:25:21.489 John Roberts: and you can keep adding columns as much as you like. Just keep clicking the Add Button.
286 00:25:21.930 --> 00:25:22.410 Scott Mason: Okay.
287 00:25:22.410 --> 00:25:23.550 John Roberts: Is that all right? Yeah.
288 00:25:23.550 --> 00:25:26.030 Roger Simonite: Yeah, yeah. Like, status, don't they?
289 00:25:26.860 --> 00:25:27.420 John Roberts: Yep.
290 00:25:27.980 --> 00:25:29.480 John Roberts: So, save that
291 00:25:34.020 --> 00:25:37.120 John Roberts: eventually go back to the map.
292 00:25:42.590 --> 00:25:52.460 John Roberts: Be nice to get something right this afternoon, right? And then into style at the moment.
293 00:25:52.560 --> 00:25:59.690 John Roberts: because it's a single layer, nothing showing. But if I go class base John's test point
294 00:26:00.060 --> 00:26:03.249 John Roberts: you'll have to choose what you want as your label column.
295 00:26:03.450 --> 00:26:07.470 John Roberts: but basically brokered needs attention and know they're there.
296 00:26:08.320 --> 00:26:08.886 Scott Mason: For him.
297 00:26:09.410 --> 00:26:11.619 John Roberts: So you can give them the 3 different colors.
298 00:26:12.250 --> 00:26:20.110 John Roberts: And this is where you hit another snag, because I'm colorblind. So yep, save
299 00:26:25.050 --> 00:26:25.790 John Roberts: right.
300 00:26:26.610 --> 00:26:28.000 John Roberts: John's test point.
301 00:26:30.450 --> 00:26:34.060 John Roberts: Add feature there.
302 00:26:38.650 --> 00:26:42.219 John Roberts: and I will get that come up. So if I go broken.
303 00:26:43.270 --> 00:26:43.880 Scott Mason: Yeah.
304 00:26:45.390 --> 00:26:52.330 John Roberts: Save the styles. Check the colors, change to suit it.
305 00:26:53.860 --> 00:26:54.620 John Roberts: Yeah.
306 00:26:54.990 --> 00:26:57.380 Scott Mason: Yeah, that's excellent. That's just just what we need. Thank you.
307 00:26:57.380 --> 00:26:59.310 John Roberts: So that will just come up each time.
308 00:26:59.630 --> 00:27:00.140 Scott Mason: Yeah.
309 00:27:00.140 --> 00:27:02.530 John Roberts: And then you can add other
310 00:27:02.990 --> 00:27:06.710 John Roberts: information there. If you want in your column to put a text column.
311 00:27:07.190 --> 00:27:07.880 Scott Mason: Like, okay.
312 00:27:07.880 --> 00:27:09.349 John Roberts: Was wrong, or whatever.
313 00:27:09.350 --> 00:27:12.669 Scott Mason: Date last inspected, or something we can put in, yeah, okay.
314 00:27:12.670 --> 00:27:13.689 John Roberts: Yeah, all right.
315 00:27:13.890 --> 00:27:21.939 Scott Mason: Yeah, that's great. Presumably there's not a way of combining polygons with points on a single layer, is there, so that we can show the.
316 00:27:22.160 --> 00:27:22.700 Stuart Bacon: No.
317 00:27:22.700 --> 00:27:23.090 John Roberts: This.
318 00:27:23.090 --> 00:27:24.940 John Roberts: No, this is another
319 00:27:25.250 --> 00:27:32.409 John Roberts: thing that we've got with parish online that we would like to be able to do. And apparently it's being looked at.
320 00:27:34.240 --> 00:27:35.660 Scott Mason: So I don't know.
321 00:27:37.020 --> 00:27:42.789 Scott Mason: so it'd be a case of creating a separate layer for the Polygons, and just turning them both on. I suppose, having both layers visible at the same time.
322 00:27:43.280 --> 00:27:46.026 Scott Mason: Yeah, we've done the same with some things.
323 00:27:47.410 --> 00:27:49.509 John Roberts: So that you can just overlay them.
324 00:27:49.760 --> 00:27:52.330 Roger Simonite: You can do it for grass, cutting.
325 00:27:52.960 --> 00:27:53.570 John Roberts: Yeah.
326 00:27:57.332 --> 00:28:08.960 Stuart Bacon: What you've got to remember, I suppose, in in doing this is at the moment, I think. From what I'm recall of what you showed. Scott, you're you've currently got the the icon
327 00:28:09.020 --> 00:28:24.299 Stuart Bacon: there for gullies is a blue with the design. Unfortunately, you can't change the the background color of that icon. It will just be a case of having a a dot of a color to to signify where they are.
328 00:28:26.010 --> 00:28:31.199 Scott Mason: Yeah. Okay, true. Yeah. So I'd have to change that to just a point a circle rather than an icon.
329 00:28:31.200 --> 00:28:31.730 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
330 00:28:31.730 --> 00:28:33.117 Scott Mason: Yeah. Fine. Okay.
331 00:28:34.310 --> 00:28:35.889 Roger Simonite: I don't think you can hear me, can you?
332 00:28:36.850 --> 00:28:38.210 Stuart Bacon: Yes. Sorry. Camera.
333 00:28:38.210 --> 00:28:38.630 Roger Simonite: Okay.
334 00:28:38.630 --> 00:28:39.239 John Roberts: That's true.
335 00:28:39.240 --> 00:28:42.860 Roger Simonite: All right, I was thinking, I'm gonna have to go in and out again.
336 00:28:42.860 --> 00:28:43.205 Scott Mason: Okay.
337 00:28:45.450 --> 00:28:47.190 Stuart Bacon: No jump in.
338 00:28:47.540 --> 00:28:56.600 Roger Simonite: Can I? Just if I share my screen and hopefully, parish online will be, ask, ask.
339 00:29:00.320 --> 00:29:03.900 Roger Simonite: right? So, where are we now?
340 00:29:04.480 --> 00:29:06.860 Roger Simonite: Where's my parish online.
341 00:29:13.160 --> 00:29:14.460 Roger Simonite: Where's a gun?
342 00:29:15.030 --> 00:29:15.900 Roger Simonite: Correct?
343 00:29:17.610 --> 00:29:18.730 Roger Simonite: Oh, wait!
344 00:29:19.480 --> 00:29:23.439 Roger Simonite: It's disappeared, and it won't let me open it again.
345 00:29:27.310 --> 00:29:29.400 Malcolm Daniels: Bandwidth problem. I expect.
346 00:29:29.640 --> 00:29:32.055 Roger Simonite: Apparently it's not what I'm saying, but
347 00:29:33.980 --> 00:29:35.565 Stuart Bacon: You know the
348 00:29:36.440 --> 00:29:39.969 Stuart Bacon: It's because I've got to open a new window, isn't it? That's what it is.
349 00:29:40.600 --> 00:29:41.900 Roger Simonite: There we go.
350 00:29:42.170 --> 00:29:43.949 Roger Simonite: Now, let's see whether
351 00:29:47.200 --> 00:29:49.359 Roger Simonite: finally I think we're getting there.
352 00:29:52.610 --> 00:29:56.432 Roger Simonite: So my my question relates to
353 00:29:57.170 --> 00:29:59.139 Roger Simonite: I've got a bit of an obsession with
354 00:29:59.470 --> 00:30:06.660 Roger Simonite: with bins, etc. So we have dog waste bins and ordinary bins.
355 00:30:07.240 --> 00:30:16.680 Roger Simonite: What what I would like to be able to do is to create another layer that effectively
356 00:30:16.910 --> 00:30:25.020 Roger Simonite: I could pick something like. Let's let's say that bin there and
357 00:30:25.130 --> 00:30:30.160 Roger Simonite: superimpose via a layer, a ring which shows its
358 00:30:30.581 --> 00:30:40.880 Roger Simonite: coverage. So I'm trying to argue that we need bins in in populated areas between 3 and 500 metres apart. And if I could
359 00:30:40.990 --> 00:31:04.960 Roger Simonite: just superimpose a ring on it, one that was, say, dotted. That was the 300 meters, and then another one with a slightly different pattern or color that would say, be 500. So the idea would be that if if this was an example, that there was 300 meters and that was 500, therefore we've got the appropriate coverage.
360 00:31:04.990 --> 00:31:12.999 Roger Simonite: Now, does anybody know whether that is possible that you can create rings and and then use that as a
361 00:31:13.040 --> 00:31:15.870 Roger Simonite: a point to to superimpose.
362 00:31:20.090 --> 00:31:21.849 Roger Simonite: Everything's quiet. I can't hear you
363 00:31:24.860 --> 00:31:25.460 Roger Simonite: second.
364 00:31:25.460 --> 00:31:27.353 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. Sorry.
365 00:31:28.300 --> 00:31:31.170 Malcolm Daniels: You have to use 2 separate layers within.
366 00:31:31.170 --> 00:31:32.190 Roger Simonite: Yeah, I I mean.
367 00:31:32.640 --> 00:31:43.429 Roger Simonite: I can. I could see I could put a separate layout, because because effectively, we've got bins that have disappeared. So
368 00:31:44.290 --> 00:32:09.220 Roger Simonite: the the ones here that we've got like a new bin required there, and a missing bin. So so, as far as that layer is concerned, I'd like to be able to do that, switch it in and out so you wouldn't want that ring there all the time, as it would just be a complete mess. But if you were focused in in a specific area and you'd already put them on everything but just said, switch it on.
369 00:32:09.220 --> 00:32:20.369 Roger Simonite: and you could see that ring that would help justify in a discussion why we want an additional bin, or why there are sufficient number.
370 00:32:20.840 --> 00:32:26.940 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, 2 2 ways. And I guess 2 things I'm thinking of at the minute is if you create 2 new
371 00:32:27.000 --> 00:32:31.870 Stuart Bacon: parish layers. Yeah, you can do it within that right and.
372 00:32:31.870 --> 00:32:45.469 Roger Simonite: How do I draw the ring, and how do I get it in keeping with a scale? So if I said, I'm on 100 meter there.
373 00:32:45.590 --> 00:32:53.999 Roger Simonite: where? Where I could have I got to replicate? That? Is there a way of dragging it out, and knowing that that is a hundred meters.
374 00:32:59.900 --> 00:33:09.329 Stuart Bacon: definitively. I think it's a little bit touch and go. I can think of 2 ways of achieving it, but one is only short term.
375 00:33:13.670 --> 00:33:16.920 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, in in doing the the measure.
376 00:33:17.040 --> 00:33:22.650 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. To get you an initial length of
377 00:33:23.600 --> 00:33:28.310 Stuart Bacon: if if you go into tools and create a length of
378 00:33:28.628 --> 00:33:32.330 Stuart Bacon: what? What is it you want in so many 300 meters?
379 00:33:32.580 --> 00:33:40.420 Roger Simonite: Yes, I would like to create a ring that is 300 meters in radius.
380 00:33:41.750 --> 00:33:42.685 Stuart Bacon: Okay,
381 00:33:43.660 --> 00:33:44.840 Stuart Bacon: Let me.
382 00:33:51.250 --> 00:33:53.930 Roger Simonite: Because there you can measure. So you can.
383 00:33:54.040 --> 00:33:55.480 Roger Simonite: You can go.
384 00:33:56.915 --> 00:34:04.090 Roger Simonite: Let's centimeters, millimeters, metres, so so I can.
385 00:34:04.090 --> 00:34:13.229 Stuart Bacon: That, and then draw drag out from that down to towards the houses, or whatever in one particular direction.
386 00:34:13.659 --> 00:34:13.979 Roger Simonite: Yeah.
387 00:34:13.980 --> 00:34:16.250 Stuart Bacon: And and that just.
388 00:34:16.250 --> 00:34:19.060 Roger Simonite: So I could do it that way which would tell me.
389 00:34:19.060 --> 00:34:24.840 Stuart Bacon: But just double click there, and that should give you a measurement. Then that's a hundred 21 meters.
390 00:34:24.840 --> 00:34:29.039 Roger Simonite: Yes, so how do I? How do I clear that? So I go.
391 00:34:29.040 --> 00:34:33.499 Stuart Bacon: So if you just click on like click, cancel, click, cancel. Oh, okay.
392 00:34:33.500 --> 00:34:37.670 Roger Simonite: So if if I go there again and down to there.
393 00:34:38.090 --> 00:34:38.525 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
394 00:34:39.250 --> 00:34:41.669 Roger Simonite: That gives you 130 metres.
395 00:34:42.010 --> 00:34:42.400 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
396 00:34:42.400 --> 00:34:43.150 Roger Simonite: Yeah, okay.
397 00:34:43.159 --> 00:34:46.399 Stuart Bacon: If you want it, if you want it to get to 300 metres.
398 00:34:46.400 --> 00:34:46.820 Roger Simonite: Yeah.
399 00:34:46.820 --> 00:34:48.400 Stuart Bacon: Is that the figure you're you're going for?
400 00:34:48.409 --> 00:34:48.899 Roger Simonite: Yeah, that.
401 00:34:48.900 --> 00:34:54.430 Stuart Bacon: Might have to zoom out initially on where you are, just to give you enough room to do it.
402 00:34:54.719 --> 00:34:55.279 Roger Simonite: Yeah.
403 00:34:58.010 --> 00:34:59.059 Stuart Bacon: Right? Let's
404 00:34:59.420 --> 00:35:13.170 Stuart Bacon: just somewhere just a random point on the map. It's not particularly where anything is. But let's just choose a random point on the map and draw a straight line of what is effectively gonna be down to the bottom of the page.
405 00:35:14.240 --> 00:35:18.959 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, that's so. That's 500. Okay.
406 00:35:18.960 --> 00:35:27.579 Roger Simonite: And and that's okay, because that's the sort of limit I want. I want between 3 and 500. But I want to. Actually, as I say.
407 00:35:28.470 --> 00:35:32.200 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no sorry, I guess what what I'm thinking.
408 00:35:34.500 --> 00:35:37.209 Stuart Bacon: Double click that now.
409 00:35:37.920 --> 00:35:38.500 Roger Simonite: Yeah.
410 00:35:41.060 --> 00:35:45.569 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. So line 3 is roughly, your 300 meters.
411 00:35:45.730 --> 00:35:46.470 Roger Simonite: Yes.
412 00:35:47.211 --> 00:35:54.430 Stuart Bacon: So that that works out well right now so close that the may show.
413 00:35:54.740 --> 00:35:56.250 Roger Simonite: How do I do that.
414 00:35:56.250 --> 00:36:01.240 Stuart Bacon: On the X on the top of the the ball!
415 00:36:01.680 --> 00:36:02.300 Stuart Bacon: Well, that's.
416 00:36:02.300 --> 00:36:03.889 Roger Simonite: It's gone now.
417 00:36:03.890 --> 00:36:06.509 Stuart Bacon: Okay. But we know roughly where.
418 00:36:06.510 --> 00:36:10.730 Roger Simonite: Tools, measure lengths, meters.
419 00:36:11.030 --> 00:36:12.370 Roger Simonite: Yeah, so if we.
420 00:36:12.370 --> 00:36:17.560 Stuart Bacon: So let's choose from the end of Cops road just to the right emails.
421 00:36:18.940 --> 00:36:20.580 Roger Simonite: Where I can't see Copse Road.
422 00:36:20.580 --> 00:36:23.899 Stuart Bacon: Just just where where your mouse is just down a little bit.
423 00:36:24.200 --> 00:36:24.750 Roger Simonite: Yeah, that's.
424 00:36:24.750 --> 00:36:33.920 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, there. Yeah. And then, if you come down Western Avenue to Westminster.
425 00:36:34.790 --> 00:36:35.370 Roger Simonite: Yeah.
426 00:36:36.910 --> 00:36:39.499 Stuart Bacon: How far is that? Is that? Roughly, 300.
427 00:36:40.570 --> 00:36:42.719 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, 2, 2, 42, 40.
428 00:36:42.720 --> 00:36:49.730 Stuart Bacon: Okay, yeah. So that gives that gives me just give me a scale just to work on. Okay, so clear that close that.
429 00:36:49.730 --> 00:36:50.910 Malcolm Daniels: Converting.
430 00:36:50.910 --> 00:36:54.119 Roger Simonite: How do I? How do I close it?
431 00:36:54.720 --> 00:36:55.080 John Roberts: Hang on!
432 00:36:55.080 --> 00:36:55.630 Roger Simonite: And.
433 00:36:55.922 --> 00:36:59.719 John Roberts: Roger. Does it have to be a circle? Can it be a square.
434 00:37:00.400 --> 00:37:04.870 Roger Simonite: I was, I would prefer a circle, because it just shows a radius. Then.
435 00:37:05.240 --> 00:37:06.330 John Roberts: Right? Okay.
436 00:37:06.330 --> 00:37:08.940 Roger Simonite: That's that's what I'd like to do, and.
437 00:37:08.940 --> 00:37:15.550 John Roberts: There's a very there's a very easy way of getting rectangles or squares that will scale with your map.
438 00:37:16.491 --> 00:37:19.690 John Roberts: But I don't know how to turn it into a circle.
439 00:37:20.440 --> 00:37:21.910 Roger Simonite: Okay. Okay.
440 00:37:22.470 --> 00:37:25.280 Roger Simonite: Alright. Well, do you want? So I.
441 00:37:25.280 --> 00:37:25.710 John Roberts: Have you?
442 00:37:25.710 --> 00:37:26.620 Roger Simonite: Have you been.
443 00:37:26.620 --> 00:37:29.320 John Roberts: Got any of your layers that are polygon.
444 00:37:30.367 --> 00:37:36.930 Roger Simonite: Yes, and and I, if I do, if I show you grass cutting there so.
445 00:37:36.930 --> 00:37:37.560 John Roberts: Right.
446 00:37:37.820 --> 00:37:39.939 Roger Simonite: We've got that.
447 00:37:41.350 --> 00:37:41.920 John Roberts: That.
448 00:37:42.120 --> 00:37:44.439 John Roberts: Okay? So if you go, is that Polygon.
449 00:37:44.770 --> 00:37:56.129 Roger Simonite: Yeah. So so there, if I put grass cutting. No, that's not the parish layer. I I use the actual grass cutting on this one.
450 00:37:56.130 --> 00:37:56.630 Stuart Bacon: Awesome.
451 00:37:56.760 --> 00:38:01.510 Roger Simonite: Ground surfaces. Where is it in there grass-cutting?
452 00:38:01.600 --> 00:38:05.300 Roger Simonite: So there. So our non-cut areas.
453 00:38:05.350 --> 00:38:20.999 Roger Simonite: we we have identified doing that. So so that's that's quite straightforward. I know how to do that, what all I wanted to be able to do. And I thought I saw it on one of these videos where you could touch a point, drag it out, and it would be a perfect circle.
454 00:38:21.690 --> 00:38:26.519 John Roberts: Right I'm not sure about. Can you click on? Add style add feature on that layer.
455 00:38:30.590 --> 00:38:35.149 Roger Simonite: Yeah, right? So effectively, if I wanted to, I could.
456 00:38:35.500 --> 00:38:36.729 John Roberts: No, no, no, wait!
457 00:38:37.450 --> 00:38:42.329 John Roberts: If you you've got the 4 icons underneath grass cutting.
458 00:38:42.610 --> 00:38:45.119 Roger Simonite: Yeah, you know on that. Yes.
459 00:38:45.120 --> 00:38:46.590 John Roberts: You'll have to stop what you're doing.
460 00:38:47.160 --> 00:38:48.939 Roger Simonite: Okay, let's get rid of them.
461 00:38:49.350 --> 00:38:49.610 John Roberts: Right.
462 00:38:50.620 --> 00:38:52.550 John Roberts: Alright. If you go, add feature.
463 00:38:53.630 --> 00:39:00.440 Roger Simonite: Yeah. So where am I? Lara? There? So I am dogwise grass cutting, add.
464 00:39:00.440 --> 00:39:01.770 John Roberts: If you add feature.
465 00:39:01.770 --> 00:39:02.640 Roger Simonite: Feature. Yeah.
466 00:39:02.640 --> 00:39:09.720 John Roberts: Yeah. Right now, the 4 little icons underneath grass cutting. If you click on the square, which is at the far right.
467 00:39:09.720 --> 00:39:10.530 Roger Simonite: That one.
468 00:39:10.750 --> 00:39:11.430 John Roberts: Yeah.
469 00:39:13.580 --> 00:39:16.890 John Roberts: Now, put in there at 100 by 100.
470 00:39:17.330 --> 00:39:21.550 Roger Simonite: Okay, just times.
471 00:39:22.340 --> 00:39:24.920 John Roberts: Because it's set for meters, anyway. No.
472 00:39:24.920 --> 00:39:25.870 Roger Simonite: Oh no!
473 00:39:25.870 --> 00:39:28.200 John Roberts: 100, then 100, in the next one.
474 00:39:28.500 --> 00:39:29.800 Roger Simonite: 100.
475 00:39:30.630 --> 00:39:31.810 John Roberts: Go. Okay.
476 00:39:32.190 --> 00:39:32.820 Roger Simonite: Yeah.
477 00:39:32.820 --> 00:39:35.799 John Roberts: Right now. Click on the map somewhere.
478 00:39:37.995 --> 00:39:39.060 Roger Simonite: That would work.
479 00:39:39.080 --> 00:39:40.800 Roger Simonite: I could live with that.
480 00:39:41.080 --> 00:39:41.620 Roger Simonite: Okay.
481 00:39:41.620 --> 00:39:45.439 John Roberts: And that that will then stay at 100 by 100 meters.
482 00:39:45.620 --> 00:39:48.620 Roger Simonite: So if I now zoom in and out.
483 00:39:48.660 --> 00:39:52.379 Roger Simonite: yeah, it would be purport. Well, let's just save that a minute.
484 00:39:52.780 --> 00:39:54.770 Roger Simonite: It's it's now proportional.
485 00:39:55.500 --> 00:39:59.660 John Roberts: Yeah, because it's it is what it is, says it is.
486 00:40:00.050 --> 00:40:01.189 Roger Simonite: Yeah, okay.
487 00:40:01.190 --> 00:40:01.530 John Roberts: And then.
488 00:40:01.530 --> 00:40:01.890 Roger Simonite: Like.
489 00:40:01.890 --> 00:40:05.499 John Roberts: Obviously, if it's 1 of your own layers, if you go into style.
490 00:40:05.620 --> 00:40:09.710 John Roberts: you can make that as opaque or transparent as you wish.
491 00:40:09.860 --> 00:40:14.590 Roger Simonite: Yeah, yeah, okay, right? I'll I'll have a play. I'll have a play with that.
492 00:40:14.820 --> 00:40:17.717 Stuart Bacon: If you tried that again. Sorry.
493 00:40:18.320 --> 00:40:21.119 Stuart Bacon: try. Try and try and create a new one of those.
494 00:40:22.390 --> 00:40:23.419 Roger Simonite: Where's it going?
495 00:40:23.500 --> 00:40:33.040 Roger Simonite: I'm trying to. Okay. So so yes, go back to the grass cutting one there, add feature.
496 00:40:33.350 --> 00:40:36.589 Roger Simonite: And you're saying that there, yeah.
497 00:40:37.030 --> 00:40:40.320 Stuart Bacon: I'm pretty sad presets at the top.
498 00:40:41.570 --> 00:40:43.250 Roger Simonite: Oh, a football! Pitch!
499 00:40:45.130 --> 00:40:47.210 Stuart Bacon: Oh, they're they're all.
500 00:40:48.580 --> 00:40:49.989 Roger Simonite: They're all rectangled.
501 00:40:49.990 --> 00:40:52.400 Stuart Bacon: Are they all rectangles? Is the marquee.
502 00:40:52.760 --> 00:40:53.950 Roger Simonite: Basketball court.
503 00:40:53.950 --> 00:40:57.199 Stuart Bacon: I was just wondering if there were any circles or anything in there that.
504 00:40:58.360 --> 00:41:05.130 Roger Simonite: No, it's amazing how much you suddenly suddenly don't even realize that, is there.
505 00:41:08.800 --> 00:41:12.719 Roger Simonite: But okay, I I can play with that. I'll I'll
506 00:41:12.750 --> 00:41:16.639 Roger Simonite: use that as as the opportunity really.
507 00:41:16.760 --> 00:41:21.530 Roger Simonite: and the other one just again, which we did create and Graham
508 00:41:21.580 --> 00:41:30.229 Roger Simonite: helped me create. It was the hedgehog signs. So there, there's the case where we wanted to just turn these off
509 00:41:33.840 --> 00:41:39.630 Roger Simonite: there. We wanted hedgehog signs, and we wanted a different status, and what
510 00:41:39.770 --> 00:41:42.490 Roger Simonite: with the question that Stuart was on.
511 00:41:42.620 --> 00:41:47.679 Roger Simonite: There was the case where you you had it from the point of view of of that item.
512 00:41:47.970 --> 00:41:50.230 Roger Simonite: and then, if you go into that
513 00:41:50.280 --> 00:41:53.930 Roger Simonite: in terms of the status we had an existing.
514 00:41:54.620 --> 00:41:56.719 Roger Simonite: or you could have a proposed
515 00:41:56.900 --> 00:42:00.349 Roger Simonite: and effectively, if you save that
516 00:42:02.040 --> 00:42:06.799 Roger Simonite: the proposed changed color effectively. I've got to go in and out.
517 00:42:06.940 --> 00:42:22.529 Roger Simonite: and there it is. So so now you've you've got exactly the same thing but 2 different statuses, and and he did that, as I say, by going in as you did with the Admin, and and then effectively creating this this status line here.
518 00:42:23.340 --> 00:42:23.850 John Roberts: Yeah.
519 00:42:26.840 --> 00:42:27.640 Roger Simonite: Okay.
520 00:42:27.980 --> 00:42:37.820 Roger Simonite: but that's that's sort of all I wanted to do at the moment. And I, you know, just welcome. How do I get rid of unsharing.
521 00:42:39.660 --> 00:42:43.050 Stuart Bacon: Should be a red at the top. Red boxes.
522 00:42:43.950 --> 00:42:44.919 Roger Simonite: There we are!
523 00:42:45.790 --> 00:42:49.050 Roger Simonite: Stop sharing right back to you.
524 00:43:00.550 --> 00:43:05.270 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. Sorry. I've not got any more.
525 00:43:05.490 --> 00:43:07.756 Roger Simonite: I've got nothing else today.
526 00:43:08.210 --> 00:43:08.969 Roger Simonite: He knew the.
527 00:43:10.100 --> 00:43:13.669 Malcolm Daniels: Where you were creating that square just now. John.
528 00:43:14.390 --> 00:43:15.040 John Roberts: Yeah.
529 00:43:15.620 --> 00:43:19.870 Malcolm Daniels: Would it be worth having a word with Adam? See whether it could be
530 00:43:19.970 --> 00:43:22.979 Malcolm Daniels: an extra option to create a circle.
531 00:43:24.520 --> 00:43:25.130 John Roberts: Yeah.
532 00:43:25.810 --> 00:43:28.289 Malcolm Daniels: I mean, the principle must be very similar.
533 00:43:28.470 --> 00:43:40.879 Roger Simonite: That would be good if we could. I mean it just then makes it a lot lot easier to then say that is the radius that we're talking about, and and just literally superimpose them on like that with a separate layer.
534 00:43:41.170 --> 00:43:41.790 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah.
535 00:43:43.570 --> 00:43:46.689 Stuart Bacon: Well, you can ruin Chris's weekend and and drop.
536 00:43:46.690 --> 00:43:48.970 John Roberts: I was. Gonna say, that'd be a question for Chris, wouldn't it?
537 00:43:49.310 --> 00:43:49.670 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
538 00:43:52.390 --> 00:43:54.160 Roger Simonite: This is Chris who.
539 00:43:54.160 --> 00:43:54.740 Retired Clerk: Thanks.
540 00:43:55.380 --> 00:44:00.880 Stuart Bacon: Paris online. Yeah, if you drop a support ticket to to parish online?
541 00:44:02.044 --> 00:44:13.759 Stuart Bacon: Then, yeah, and and ask, is there if it's possible to add a preset in, as we just said. That's a circle rather than a square to to determine you.
542 00:44:14.670 --> 00:44:20.640 Roger Simonite: Just have to give me an idea of. Hang on. I'll just get a pen. Who?
543 00:44:20.950 --> 00:44:26.179 Roger Simonite: How do I go about writing to him? Is it an email address, or what?
544 00:44:26.180 --> 00:44:31.149 Stuart Bacon: Well it, either. So if you're with me.
545 00:44:31.150 --> 00:44:34.179 John Roberts: Rod, Roger, if you look at your parish online
546 00:44:34.580 --> 00:44:39.264 John Roberts: and you've got the cog on the top right hand side, Stuart's gonna show you. I think.
547 00:44:39.540 --> 00:44:46.389 Stuart Bacon: Yes, I'm sorry. I was just gonna talking through click on help and support in the top right hand corner.
548 00:44:46.390 --> 00:44:47.303 Roger Simonite: Oh, okay.
549 00:44:48.555 --> 00:44:56.129 Stuart Bacon: And that takes you to the support center. And then you can complete a ticket.
550 00:44:56.290 --> 00:44:56.850 Roger Simonite: Yeah.
551 00:44:57.630 --> 00:45:06.959 Stuart Bacon: I'm there where you just sign up with your existing credentials, whatever there to to do that
552 00:45:07.318 --> 00:45:12.320 Stuart Bacon: log in, and you can. You can send a ticket, and that'll email it out back to you with any response.
553 00:45:12.320 --> 00:45:26.580 Roger Simonite: Oh, excellent! Okay, I will do that. I don't expect I'll spoil his weekend, because I'll probably do it on Monday, but I'll get that in and see whether we can. I'm sure it's the functions there. It's just finding it.
554 00:45:27.100 --> 00:45:45.479 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no. But I mean that that works exactly the same as if you were to send an email to support@gspheum.com, whatever it it. Yeah. The the ticket system that gives you an ability as well once you're logged in, gives you an ability to track your query, and any responses and
555 00:45:45.520 --> 00:45:50.950 Stuart Bacon: any questions you asked as well. So it's useful feature to sort of have
556 00:45:51.100 --> 00:45:53.620 Stuart Bacon: signed up for and whatever, so that to.
557 00:45:53.620 --> 00:45:54.720 Roger Simonite: And literally, where.
558 00:45:54.720 --> 00:45:55.180 Stuart Bacon: Was.
559 00:45:55.180 --> 00:46:00.689 Roger Simonite: There where you could just have it as a pull down. It would be ideal, wouldn't it?
560 00:46:01.450 --> 00:46:02.619 Stuart Bacon: Oh, yeah, certainly.
561 00:46:05.620 --> 00:46:06.729 Roger Simonite: Done. Thank you.
562 00:46:07.810 --> 00:46:14.827 Stuart Bacon: So we we're not. We're not spoiling Chris. Muses weekend they were gonna spoil Graham's because he's got a bit since he's not here.
563 00:46:18.740 --> 00:46:23.010 Roger Simonite: He's obviously he's eating mince pies and drinking cherry.
564 00:46:24.520 --> 00:46:25.630 Retired Clerk: Bit, early.
565 00:46:26.830 --> 00:46:27.500 Stuart Bacon: And.
566 00:46:27.630 --> 00:46:28.369 Malcolm Daniels: I'll just like.
567 00:46:28.370 --> 00:46:30.799 Roger Simonite: So I'm going to love you and leave you. Then thank you.
568 00:46:31.140 --> 00:46:31.600 John Roberts: All right.
569 00:46:31.600 --> 00:46:32.960 Stuart Bacon: Here's Roger! Say again.
570 00:46:32.960 --> 00:46:33.490 Roger Simonite: Is.
571 00:46:33.490 --> 00:46:34.450 Retired Clerk: Take care!
572 00:46:38.980 --> 00:46:45.589 John Roberts: Right. I'm gonna see if I can spoil Somerset and ask about these gritting roots. But other than that, I'm going to leave you for now.
573 00:46:46.350 --> 00:46:47.070 Stuart Bacon: Okay.
574 00:46:47.220 --> 00:46:51.229 Stuart Bacon: But yeah, you you guys are spoiled in Somerset.
575 00:46:51.850 --> 00:46:57.242 Stuart Bacon: your gritty roots and your your gullies. The amount of data you get out of your
576 00:46:57.630 --> 00:46:59.510 Stuart Bacon: County and District councils is.
577 00:46:59.510 --> 00:47:03.130 Malcolm Daniels: We've been working on it for about 5 years direct.
578 00:47:04.020 --> 00:47:11.189 Stuart Bacon: But yeah, well, I've I've been working on hours since we took parish online on some 10 years ago.
579 00:47:11.460 --> 00:47:18.260 Stuart Bacon: and they continue to refuse to provide anything into parish online at all.
580 00:47:18.390 --> 00:47:20.719 Malcolm Daniels: You're probably talking to the wrong person.
581 00:47:22.216 --> 00:47:25.483 Stuart Bacon: I I'm not getting
582 00:47:27.570 --> 00:47:33.910 Stuart Bacon: yeah, not not get, not getting the answers we need. So yeah, no, I need to do to change tax. But I yeah, I thought I'd gone to the
583 00:47:34.180 --> 00:47:37.709 Stuart Bacon: Gis people and whatever to get to get sorted and not.
584 00:47:37.710 --> 00:47:38.090 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah, yeah.
585 00:47:38.090 --> 00:47:38.860 Stuart Bacon: Contacting us.
586 00:47:38.860 --> 00:47:39.360 Malcolm Daniels: From p.
587 00:47:39.673 --> 00:47:46.110 Stuart Bacon: Parish online to ask for support and whatever. But I don't think it's obviously
588 00:47:46.210 --> 00:47:50.709 Stuart Bacon: something that they're able to to help with either. Unfortunately, it's been a challenge.
589 00:47:51.140 --> 00:47:53.719 Malcolm Daniels: People just do what they're told.
590 00:47:53.910 --> 00:47:54.520 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
591 00:47:55.170 --> 00:47:56.920 Malcolm Daniels: They don't make decisions.
592 00:47:58.130 --> 00:48:06.570 Stuart Bacon: Well, I've been through the the head of yeah, the directors of highways and and whatever to try and get the support.
593 00:48:07.190 --> 00:48:07.460 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah.
594 00:48:07.460 --> 00:48:12.360 Malcolm Daniels: Customer services refund in service app.
595 00:48:14.230 --> 00:48:18.310 Malcolm Daniels: Once we got through to the right person, all the doors opened.
596 00:48:20.440 --> 00:48:26.669 Stuart Bacon: Well, we shall see how how things progress then. But no. Well done to you guys for your persistence.
597 00:48:28.130 --> 00:48:30.630 John Roberts: I've just got the answer to what Scott wanted.
598 00:48:32.920 --> 00:48:37.480 Retired Clerk: Oh, I see better than John. You gonna share it for for the purposes of the video.
599 00:48:37.970 --> 00:48:41.190 John Roberts: I think so. Right hang on.
600 00:48:47.740 --> 00:48:48.260 Malcolm Daniels: Okay.
601 00:48:51.190 --> 00:48:56.509 John Roberts: Right hopefully. You're hang on, are you now looking at Bridgewater?
602 00:48:57.210 --> 00:48:58.060 Stuart Bacon: Yes.
603 00:48:58.500 --> 00:49:00.980 John Roberts: I switched on the gritting roots.
604 00:49:01.900 --> 00:49:03.340 John Roberts: They've all got a label.
605 00:49:05.130 --> 00:49:13.519 John Roberts: So if I click on that one, that one copy the label to clipboard.
606 00:49:27.810 --> 00:49:28.899 John Roberts: you've got column.
607 00:49:31.420 --> 00:49:33.770 Stuart Bacon: Label at the top one. Is that the one you want.
608 00:49:33.770 --> 00:49:35.200 John Roberts: Yeah, that's the one sorry.
609 00:49:39.330 --> 00:49:40.190 John Roberts: There it is.
610 00:49:40.760 --> 00:49:43.480 John Roberts: That's the one that's that route within Bridgewater.
611 00:49:47.480 --> 00:49:48.160 Malcolm Daniels: Very good.
612 00:49:48.160 --> 00:49:51.029 John Roberts: If that's if that's what he's asking for, I'm not sure
613 00:49:54.830 --> 00:49:56.769 John Roberts: but I'll go back to it and find out.
614 00:49:57.040 --> 00:50:00.249 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no. But hopefully, that helps scope.
615 00:50:01.860 --> 00:50:05.540 John Roberts: But he should then be able to export that into to whatever he wants.
616 00:50:15.170 --> 00:50:15.940 John Roberts: I'll see if I.
617 00:50:15.940 --> 00:50:16.260 Retired Clerk: Thanks.
618 00:50:16.260 --> 00:50:18.320 John Roberts: Explain it in an email to him.
619 00:50:18.867 --> 00:50:25.609 Stuart Bacon: Sorry again. Say, it's unfortunate where I can't offer much on that one, because I haven't got access to the
620 00:50:26.110 --> 00:50:28.589 Stuart Bacon: the layers that you guys have got from.
621 00:50:28.590 --> 00:50:33.780 John Roberts: No interesting one for Richard.
622 00:50:33.870 --> 00:50:36.860 John Roberts: I'm sorry it's a Somerset one again, but
623 00:50:36.960 --> 00:50:41.560 John Roberts: with, in regards to the gritting routes, an operation. Harold.
624 00:50:42.000 --> 00:50:42.880 Retired Clerk: Yeah, we've.
625 00:50:42.880 --> 00:50:43.260 John Roberts: Yeah.
626 00:50:43.260 --> 00:50:50.580 Retired Clerk: They? They do do some of ours, John. They they actually do. Do they do the shirt and rig.
627 00:50:50.600 --> 00:50:56.629 John Roberts: And the transfer, the transport Forum, the last one I went to. They were on about the
628 00:50:56.900 --> 00:50:59.470 John Roberts: Somerset. We're talking about the gritting route.
629 00:51:00.090 --> 00:51:04.440 John Roberts: And I had pointed out that operation. Harold wasn't on it.
630 00:51:05.410 --> 00:51:07.249 John Roberts: An entry point looked at.
631 00:51:07.390 --> 00:51:09.799 John Roberts: Oh, what's his name, Andy Coupe?
632 00:51:10.710 --> 00:51:17.190 John Roberts: And they said, is it not on it? He he just shook his head and said, No, and they weren't very happy.
633 00:51:18.840 --> 00:51:19.360 Retired Clerk: Wait!
634 00:51:20.400 --> 00:51:23.080 John Roberts: The entirety of operation. Harold, isn't it?
635 00:51:23.080 --> 00:51:30.149 Retired Clerk: Yeah, yeah, they don't do the entirety, but I understood that they do. They do shirt and out to out to you.
636 00:51:30.260 --> 00:51:38.849 Retired Clerk: and then they do from Stowie back through to Staguzi village, back out.
637 00:51:38.850 --> 00:51:41.720 John Roberts: Yeah, they they don't do Stagersi Lane, or any of that.
638 00:51:41.720 --> 00:51:42.640 Retired Clerk: No.
639 00:51:42.640 --> 00:51:45.929 John Roberts: But anyway, we'll have to wait and see when they grit next.
640 00:51:46.340 --> 00:51:46.690 Retired Clerk: Yeah.
641 00:51:47.040 --> 00:51:50.919 John Roberts: But I'm gonna leave you people, and I'll try and explain that to Scott.
642 00:51:52.010 --> 00:51:54.630 Retired Clerk: Cheers, Joe.
643 00:51:54.906 --> 00:51:59.609 Retired Clerk: Sorry I I won't see you next week. I don't think so. We'll leave you like that.
644 00:51:59.910 --> 00:52:02.089 Stuart Bacon: We'll see you in a couple of weeks time. Then, John.
645 00:52:02.090 --> 00:52:03.020 John Roberts: Cheers, bye.
646 00:52:03.020 --> 00:52:03.810 Retired Clerk: Bye.
647 00:52:07.562 --> 00:52:14.420 Stuart Bacon: I'm gonna bow out as well. Guys, I think so unless Andrew's got anything.
648 00:52:20.490 --> 00:52:21.469 Stuart Bacon: Hi, Andrew, how are you.
649 00:52:21.470 --> 00:52:22.450 Andrew Clegg: I don't know.
650 00:52:24.550 --> 00:52:26.547 Stuart Bacon: It's been a bit of a
651 00:52:27.010 --> 00:52:29.549 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. Short session this afternoon.
652 00:52:29.550 --> 00:52:30.870 Andrew Clegg: Oh, has it cause? I.
653 00:52:30.870 --> 00:52:34.099 Stuart Bacon: Graham's had a few technical difficulties getting in.
654 00:52:34.100 --> 00:52:34.910 Andrew Clegg: Okay.
655 00:52:35.324 --> 00:52:39.470 Stuart Bacon: And yeah, so we've we've won the session without him.
656 00:52:40.149 --> 00:52:42.199 Stuart Bacon: But there weren't many questions.
657 00:52:42.550 --> 00:52:47.561 Andrew Clegg: Okay. Now I'm I'm sorry I should have come earlier, but as I, as I was about to
658 00:52:47.850 --> 00:52:48.870 Andrew Clegg: join
659 00:52:49.930 --> 00:52:59.100 Andrew Clegg: one of the Somerset counselors whom I I've been working with on phosphate issues, knocked on the door.
660 00:52:59.610 --> 00:53:02.180 Stuart Bacon: You've got to be polite and answer the door.
661 00:53:02.180 --> 00:53:07.730 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, well, it's important. It's important. It was important. Now, I was hoping to get there this week.
662 00:53:08.150 --> 00:53:10.040 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, so it's just 3 of us, is it?
663 00:53:10.766 --> 00:53:16.109 Stuart Bacon: No, there have been, I think at the peak there were 8 of us.
664 00:53:16.350 --> 00:53:17.170 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
665 00:53:17.640 --> 00:53:23.279 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. But yeah. John, John and Richard have literally just left.
666 00:53:23.280 --> 00:53:28.459 Andrew Clegg: Just look okay. Well, I won't keep you any. I won't keep you anymore. Then, Stuart, I'll see you next week.
667 00:53:28.460 --> 00:53:30.009 Stuart Bacon: Okay. See you next week have a.
668 00:53:30.010 --> 00:53:32.120 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, okay, yeah. Bye.
669 00:53:32.120 --> 00:53:32.990 Stuart Bacon: Hi. Malcolm.
670 00:53:33.440 --> 00:53:35.220 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah, I'll say bye as well.