260313 - 13Mar26 - session 26-11
Updating layers, deleting duplicate features
Meeting Summary:
Mar 13, 2026 01:55 PM London ID: 897 5877 7706
Quick recap
The meeting focused on technical support and training for Parish Online, with Sheila seeking assistance on various features including how to delete duplicate records and modify point colors. Andrew discussed his work with environmental sampling data layers and received guidance on managing multiple data layers in Parish Online. The group also addressed issues with address change records and recent modifications, noting that while the data is available, it may not be fully trustworthy. The session concluded with Stuart seeking clarification on address change documentation, which John helped resolve by directing him to the knowledge base articles.
Next steps
Summary
Parish Online Engagement Challenges
Sheila attended the conversation to explore available offerings and discuss her current challenges with Parish Online and community engagement work. She mentioned being overwhelmed with parish responsibilities, including work on a Neighbourhood Development Plan and the recruitment of a Community and Operations Coordinator, for which they are currently sifting through applications. Sheila expressed hope that the new coordinator would be able to effectively manage Parish Online and other responsibilities.
Housing Development Infrastructure Planning
Sheila discussed plans for housing development in her parish, noting that it will increase from 2,000 to 4,200 homes over the next five years, with 2,000 additional homes and 500 more planned for the future. She mentioned that a neighborhood plan is being refreshed to align with changes in the local plan, and the parish has £10 million to spend within five years on infrastructure projects, which must be committed or spent by October or revert to Somerset Council. John and Sheila shared challenges in spending the funds, including coordinating with multiple developers and ensuring projects align with requirements, with plans to use some of the money for land purchase, school facilities, and community hall improvements.
Parish Online Water Monitoring System
Andrew demonstrated his work on Parish Online, showing how he's tracking both phosphate levels and dissolved oxygen in local water bodies. He explained his reasoning for measuring dissolved oxygen, suggesting that oxygenation issues may be more problematic than nutrient levels in the Somerset levels. The group discussed the best approach for displaying both measurements in the system, with Graham suggesting that copying the phosphate layer and modifying it for dissolved oxygen would be simpler than creating separate layers, though maintaining synchronization between them would be challenging.
Water Quality Measurement System Design
The team discussed how to handle different water quality measurements, specifically dissolved oxygen and phosphate levels, in their mapping system. Andrew and Graham debated between using a single layer with filtering versus maintaining separate layers for different measurements. They determined that while filtering could work, maintaining two separate layers would be more practical since it would allow for different readings without having to constantly change the style class. The discussion also covered how to share specific layers with stakeholders, with Andrew noting the usefulness of guest access for different layers in their XMAP system.
Screen Sharing Technical Support Meeting
The meeting focused on helping Sheila resolve technical issues with screen sharing Parish Online while participating in a Zoom meeting. Graham and others guided Sheila through the process of sharing her screen, including selecting the correct window and using Alt-Tab to switch between applications. Sheila discovered she had duplicate entries in Parish Online, one set up by her assistant Tanya and her own version, and discussed whether she could delete the duplicate entry.
Duplicate Record Resolution Meeting
The team helped Sheila resolve an issue with duplicate records in Parish Online, where she had created two identical records due to case differences (uppercase vs lowercase). After discussing the potential consequences of deleting one record, they determined that deleting the lowercase version would not affect the uppercase record. Sheila successfully deleted the duplicate record and confirmed she could now proceed with her work.
Mapping Application Style Modifications
Sheila sought guidance on changing the color of points in a mapping application and received step-by-step instructions from Graham and John on how to modify the style and save the changes. They discussed a specific point of contention regarding a cycle and footway where additional safety measures, such as a bollard, were needed to address traffic issues. Sheila learned that she could adjust the wobbly line by clicking on it to create moveable points and delete unwanted points using the feature editing options.
Employment Processes and System Issues
The group discussed employment processes and Parish Online system issues. Sheila reported completing paperwork and scoring for potential candidates, with plans to conduct interviews in a few weeks, including a 3-month and 6-month trial period aligned with a contractor's October contract end. The main discussion centered on challenges with the Parish Online address system, where Stuart sought clarification on how to interpret "recent changes" data. Graham and John explained that the system shows reduced detail compared to older records, with new fields like street reference numbers being added, though the explanations in the knowledge base were found to be unclear and not entirely trustworthy.
Chat:
No chat in this session
Audiotranscript:
47 00:04:38.950 --> 00:04:43.379 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Anyway, we're holding you up, Sheila. You must have arrived with a specific purpose?
48 00:04:44.040 --> 00:04:46.940 Sheila Churchward: I've come to listen to what was on offer today.
49 00:04:46.940 --> 00:04:47.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, dear.
50 00:04:48.700 --> 00:04:50.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I mean, hoist!
51 00:04:50.060 --> 00:04:55.559 Sheila Churchward: I saw the list, I saw the list, and I thought, you know, I'm really gonna have to retrain myself.
52 00:04:57.110 --> 00:04:58.900 Sheila Churchward: I've been so… Is there any…
53 00:04:59.870 --> 00:05:13.110 Sheila Churchward: I was gonna say, I've been so involved with stuff in the parish that I haven't actually done a lot with parish online, except for my… except I only really use it for planning applications at the moment.
54 00:05:13.110 --> 00:05:13.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
55 00:05:14.200 --> 00:05:20.870 Sheila Churchward: And it… I was going to do a lot of work for our Neighbourhood Development Plan.
56 00:05:21.220 --> 00:05:22.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right?
57 00:05:22.930 --> 00:05:25.769 Sheila Churchward: It's… work's been overwhelming.
58 00:05:26.030 --> 00:05:26.380 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I know.
59 00:05:26.380 --> 00:05:28.989 Sheila Churchward: Personal life has been overwhelming.
60 00:05:29.220 --> 00:05:33.299 Sheila Churchward: And You know, I'm just doing what I need to do.
61 00:05:33.990 --> 00:05:34.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The, the…
62 00:05:34.520 --> 00:05:39.220 Sheila Churchward: Today, after this, I've got a meeting at 3 o'clock to discuss,
63 00:05:39.360 --> 00:05:44.009 Sheila Churchward: We're recruiting a community engagement coordinator.
64 00:05:44.260 --> 00:05:45.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
65 00:05:45.650 --> 00:05:50.090 Sheila Churchward: And today, we're doing the sifting for the… for interviewing.
66 00:05:51.290 --> 00:06:05.099 Sheila Churchward: It is… I find it absolutely exhausting going through application forms and filling out, you know, filling out the spreadsheet that we've got to make sure we ask the right… they're…
67 00:06:05.100 --> 00:06:05.709 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They're there.
68 00:06:05.710 --> 00:06:13.619 Sheila Churchward: Given the answers that we need, and then to develop the questions that we're going to ask them on the 23rd.
69 00:06:13.790 --> 00:06:24.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The trouble is, you have to comply with so many regulations, and they change every other week anyway, and then somebody says, well, that's infringing our civil rights, you can't do that.
70 00:06:24.020 --> 00:06:28.850 Sheila Churchward: That's right. I know, we… we can't ask their ages.
71 00:06:29.240 --> 00:06:33.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, and you can't even ask their gender nowadays.
72 00:06:33.590 --> 00:06:37.859 Sheila Churchward: It'd have been a pleasure if we'd had a man apply.
73 00:06:38.150 --> 00:06:40.140 Sheila Churchward: I'll tell you, it would…
74 00:06:40.250 --> 00:06:44.110 Sheila Churchward: I think it would have made a big difference if we'd had a man apply.
75 00:06:44.660 --> 00:06:46.449 Sheila Churchward: But nobody has.
76 00:06:46.560 --> 00:06:50.849 Sheila Churchward: Only as… we've only had ladies applying for this job.
77 00:06:52.020 --> 00:06:53.420 Sheila Churchward: And…
78 00:06:54.440 --> 00:06:55.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We're a community.
79 00:06:55.410 --> 00:06:55.860 Sheila Churchward: the biggest…
80 00:06:55.860 --> 00:06:57.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Officer, is that what you called her?
81 00:06:58.570 --> 00:07:03.240 Sheila Churchward: Well, she's going to be called, Community and Operations Coordinator.
82 00:07:03.240 --> 00:07:03.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
83 00:07:04.890 --> 00:07:08.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, actually, that's a very delightfully vague…
84 00:07:08.520 --> 00:07:09.910 Sheila Churchward: It is, isn't it?
85 00:07:09.910 --> 00:07:11.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do everything under that one, yes.
86 00:07:13.170 --> 00:07:18.220 Sheila Churchward: However, I hope that whoever is appointed
87 00:07:18.580 --> 00:07:23.930 Sheila Churchward: If we decide on the day, the interviewing day, that we will appoint somebody.
88 00:07:24.760 --> 00:07:26.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And they can take out a passion lies.
89 00:07:26.700 --> 00:07:34.499 Sheila Churchward: But she actually understands… What a mare's nest she's got into.
90 00:07:34.890 --> 00:07:35.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
91 00:07:35.830 --> 00:07:36.310 Sheila Churchward: Oh, my.
92 00:07:36.870 --> 00:07:38.610 John Roberts: Where are you based, Cheetah?
93 00:07:38.870 --> 00:07:43.620 Sheila Churchward: We live in Exminster. We're at Exminster Parish, which is just south of Exeter.
94 00:07:43.910 --> 00:07:44.440 John Roberts: Yep.
95 00:07:44.710 --> 00:07:55.750 Sheila Churchward: There is… we are doubling in size at the moment in actual… in the residence… in residence, in homes.
96 00:07:56.010 --> 00:08:07.759 Sheila Churchward: We've gone from just 2,000 homes, and we'll be going up to 4,200 within the next 5 years. We've already got 1,000 of those extra houses up.
97 00:08:07.860 --> 00:08:10.530 Sheila Churchward: But there'd be… there'd be 4,000…
98 00:08:11.250 --> 00:08:17.239 Sheila Churchward: there'd be 2,000 extra homes in our parish. And then.
99 00:08:17.350 --> 00:08:31.680 Sheila Churchward: There is another part of our parish where we're expecting to have another 500 homes, but they… they are long-term planning. They are going to be starting probably in about 5 years' time.
100 00:08:31.820 --> 00:08:48.250 Sheila Churchward: We've got all the outline planning for them, so we know what's going to be, where, and we nego… we've actually set up a cluster of parishes, because the parishes around us are small, and we used to be small.
101 00:08:48.440 --> 00:08:52.630 Sheila Churchward: But we're learning a steep learning curve on how to cope.
102 00:08:53.070 --> 00:08:53.620 Sheila Churchward: And…
103 00:08:54.510 --> 00:09:02.769 Sheila Churchward: So the five… the four parishes are all getting together to… between us, how to cope with all this extra housing that's coming in.
104 00:09:02.770 --> 00:09:10.479 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, if you've got… I was going to say, if you've got all that growth coming, you'd better slam in a neighborhood plaid quickly to start… Oh, we've already got one. Good.
105 00:09:10.480 --> 00:09:15.239 Sheila Churchward: Yeah, we're just refreshing it. We started refreshing it, 3 years ago.
106 00:09:15.410 --> 00:09:18.610 Sheila Churchward: But with all the changes, and…
107 00:09:18.810 --> 00:09:21.489 Sheila Churchward: We just thought we were getting through.
108 00:09:21.610 --> 00:09:25.099 Sheila Churchward: And then the NPPF changed.
109 00:09:25.100 --> 00:09:25.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
110 00:09:25.960 --> 00:09:34.240 Sheila Churchward: So, our local plan is changing, and so they will not sign off our neighbourhood plan.
111 00:09:34.240 --> 00:09:35.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So the electric plant is fixed, yeah.
112 00:09:35.840 --> 00:09:43.760 Sheila Churchward: Until they are satisfied that it abides with what their new local plan will be.
113 00:09:45.560 --> 00:09:46.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, just…
114 00:09:46.360 --> 00:09:57.190 Sheila Churchward: In the meantime, we've got £10 million to spend within the next 5 years. If we don't, it all goes back to whatever council is in charge of us.
115 00:09:58.440 --> 00:09:59.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Which you won't be able to…
116 00:10:00.720 --> 00:10:06.260 John Roberts: We're in a similar position with the sale. If we don't spend it, it goes to Somerset Council in October.
117 00:10:07.080 --> 00:10:07.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: true, and.
118 00:10:07.680 --> 00:10:11.829 Sheila Churchward: You have a period of time in which to either commit it or spend it.
119 00:10:12.060 --> 00:10:12.700 John Roberts: Yep.
120 00:10:13.420 --> 00:10:15.110 Sheila Churchward: And of course, it all depends on…
121 00:10:15.110 --> 00:10:15.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Bring it on?
122 00:10:16.260 --> 00:10:27.549 Sheila Churchward: Now, did you find that, you know, you get one development through, so that is… you start a cut-off date from then, and then another development goes… because our development's been split into about 5 different
123 00:10:28.500 --> 00:10:29.960 Sheila Churchward: builders?
124 00:10:30.600 --> 00:10:38.069 Sheila Churchward: So, the first lot is sorted, the second lot is sorted, and so is the third. We've got another two lots to come through.
125 00:10:39.250 --> 00:10:49.139 Sheila Churchward: And it all… it all has its own timescales. So our poor finance officer has to keep these timescales in mind.
126 00:10:49.280 --> 00:10:56.610 Sheila Churchward: When we're doing budgeting, and what we're gonna do, Oh, well, that's our problem.
127 00:10:56.610 --> 00:10:59.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good afternoon, Andrew. How lovely to see you. Your grandchildren have freed you up.
128 00:10:59.970 --> 00:11:10.540 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, no, they've not arrived yet. I might have to get up and rush off suddenly, so if I suddenly disappear, it means that everybody's…
129 00:11:10.830 --> 00:11:14.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, John, is it a problem finding things on which to spend the money?
130 00:11:15.470 --> 00:11:19.870 John Roberts: It is… hang on… it is to the… to the extent
131 00:11:20.100 --> 00:11:23.560 John Roberts: It's basically, you spend it on infrastructure.
132 00:11:24.780 --> 00:11:33.090 John Roberts: So, you go… you say to Somerset Council, well, we've got this project, we want to… Yeah, but that doesn't come under sale, so you can't spend the money.
133 00:11:33.620 --> 00:11:34.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No.
134 00:11:35.910 --> 00:11:36.290 Sheila Churchward: Yep.
135 00:11:36.290 --> 00:11:38.689 John Roberts: We're… we're looking at enhancing the…
136 00:11:38.930 --> 00:11:43.279 John Roberts: Looking at enhancing the cross, in the middle of the village.
137 00:11:43.840 --> 00:11:48.290 John Roberts: So we've decided what we're gonna do is… do it.
138 00:11:48.910 --> 00:11:52.360 John Roberts: Use the sale to pay for it, and then tell them afterwards.
139 00:11:56.270 --> 00:11:56.930 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
140 00:11:57.150 --> 00:11:58.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good move, good move.
141 00:12:00.360 --> 00:12:02.210 Sheila Churchward: We're going to buy some land.
142 00:12:03.300 --> 00:12:08.799 Sheila Churchward: And we're also going to do some wraparound care for the primary school.
143 00:12:09.400 --> 00:12:09.910 Andrew Clegg: Hmm.
144 00:12:09.910 --> 00:12:19.070 Sheila Churchward: And, we're going to extend and improve the facilities in our, our deep… what we call the Deepway Hall.
145 00:12:19.420 --> 00:12:26.699 Sheila Churchward: Then we've got a big area of Greenland, and we put a hole on it. Well, the villagers put… we all bought a…
146 00:12:26.970 --> 00:12:42.910 Sheila Churchward: bought bricks, you know, when we… every villager bought some bricks, and we… the bricks went towards the cost, you know, it was… and now… now that… that… that bricked version needs a serious upgrade, so…
147 00:12:42.910 --> 00:12:47.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We do a lot of, stuff with green energy and so forth as infrastructure.
148 00:12:49.080 --> 00:12:52.529 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You need a community heating system, or a community energy system.
149 00:12:55.080 --> 00:12:55.810 Sheila Churchward: or the ubiquit.
150 00:12:55.810 --> 00:13:01.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You need lots of energy in Nether Stowe, don't you? It's not as if you've got any source of energy nearby.
151 00:13:01.840 --> 00:13:05.429 John Roberts: No. We… well, you say that.
152 00:13:05.430 --> 00:13:11.500 Andrew Clegg: We've got a very, very large nuclear power station being built about 3 mile away.
153 00:13:12.200 --> 00:13:12.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I was being a little.
154 00:13:12.890 --> 00:13:14.880 Sheila Churchward: We don't need solar panels.
155 00:13:16.870 --> 00:13:17.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
156 00:13:17.960 --> 00:13:24.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Andrew, do you have any particular question you wanted to ask? Sheila joined because she was enticed by my email.
157 00:13:25.180 --> 00:13:26.080 Andrew Clegg: Okay.
158 00:13:26.080 --> 00:13:30.699 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But I didn't. You know, I actually have, Grimm. God.
159 00:13:31.300 --> 00:13:33.840 Andrew Clegg: Would you like it now?
160 00:13:33.840 --> 00:13:35.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, Sheila, would you mind if Andrew goes.
161 00:13:36.000 --> 00:13:37.530 Andrew Clegg: No, no, no, you carry on.
162 00:13:37.530 --> 00:13:38.579 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to run away, no, you might.
163 00:13:38.580 --> 00:13:39.030 Sheila Churchward: Carry on.
164 00:13:39.030 --> 00:13:40.030 Andrew Clegg: way, Andrew.
165 00:13:40.030 --> 00:13:42.020 Sheila Churchward: It's all a learning curve to me.
166 00:13:42.020 --> 00:13:47.390 Andrew Clegg: Yeah. Now, it's an interesting, it's a general issue.
167 00:13:47.710 --> 00:13:53.230 Andrew Clegg: If you've got a map… if you've got a map layer.
168 00:13:53.360 --> 00:13:59.630 Andrew Clegg: And all, formatted and everything. Let me just… I'm just wondering whether I can quickly…
169 00:13:59.890 --> 00:14:03.330 Andrew Clegg: I'm not really prepared for today properly.
170 00:14:09.820 --> 00:14:12.419 Andrew Clegg: Sorry, I'm logging into Posh Online now.
171 00:14:12.420 --> 00:14:19.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I just… did I mention the other week that we haven't quite been… got in touch with Chris Andrews, and he's okay?
172 00:14:20.130 --> 00:14:30.539 Andrew Clegg: Oh, yeah, yeah, Just thinking about… Find an example.
173 00:14:36.600 --> 00:14:37.830 Andrew Clegg: Okay.
174 00:14:38.090 --> 00:14:40.439 Andrew Clegg: Can I share a screen?
175 00:14:40.810 --> 00:14:41.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: B.
176 00:14:41.360 --> 00:14:44.299 Andrew Clegg: I've forgotten how to do it. Share.
177 00:14:45.760 --> 00:14:48.450 Andrew Clegg: It looks like that one.
178 00:14:51.530 --> 00:14:53.240 Andrew Clegg: Can you see…
179 00:14:53.350 --> 00:14:54.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's looking good.
180 00:14:54.180 --> 00:14:56.190 Andrew Clegg: Ledus, yeah.
181 00:14:56.300 --> 00:15:02.000 Andrew Clegg: Now, if you look at this right in the middle, this actually isn't Parish Online, it's XMAP.
182 00:15:02.300 --> 00:15:04.860 Andrew Clegg: And right in the middle here, I've got some…
183 00:15:05.120 --> 00:15:14.589 Andrew Clegg: These are samples where I've sampled the parrot this year, if I click on that…
184 00:15:15.040 --> 00:15:20.359 Andrew Clegg: That gives you the… this is phosphate sampling, it gives you what I've taken.
185 00:15:20.360 --> 00:15:20.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
186 00:15:20.680 --> 00:15:28.990 Andrew Clegg: But down at the bottom, I'm beginning now to take not only phosphate, which is… goes up there.
187 00:15:30.230 --> 00:15:33.829 Andrew Clegg: But also, dissolved oxygen.
188 00:15:33.980 --> 00:15:42.120 Andrew Clegg: Because, I've been given an old dissolved oxygen meter by Wessex Water.
189 00:15:42.690 --> 00:16:05.630 Andrew Clegg: It's a brilliant thing. The modern oxygen meters just are incredible. You just dip it in, and it records, and you just photograph the scale on it. So, I'm now doing… this is much more important, I think, than phosphate, that how much dissolved oxygen is there, and how well oxygenated is the river, or the stream, or the lake, or the pond.
190 00:16:05.850 --> 00:16:13.340 Andrew Clegg: And I'm doing it through the seasons, and the reason why I'm doing that is that I think the real problem with the Somerset levels
191 00:16:13.660 --> 00:16:21.850 Andrew Clegg: Is not necessarily nutrients, but the fact that it doesn't flow fast enough to get oxygenated enough.
192 00:16:22.020 --> 00:16:25.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, but what I want to be able to do.
193 00:16:25.320 --> 00:16:35.790 Andrew Clegg: At the moment, you see the… the… the… the size and the… of that. Let's go back, how do I… how do I get rid of this? There we go.
194 00:16:36.160 --> 00:16:38.159 Andrew Clegg: Let's go back to this.
195 00:16:39.150 --> 00:16:40.800 Andrew Clegg: And that's this scale.
196 00:16:41.360 --> 00:16:43.759 Andrew Clegg: And if I go along to the styling.
197 00:16:44.710 --> 00:16:51.220 Andrew Clegg: you can see that I've done… I've done the style options are class-based, and the class…
198 00:16:51.370 --> 00:16:53.319 Andrew Clegg: Is the phosphate level.
199 00:16:54.410 --> 00:17:00.430 Andrew Clegg: And so I've got, I've got the phosphate level here, which goes from poor.
200 00:17:00.840 --> 00:17:05.700 Andrew Clegg: Well, actually, it's not in proper order, but never mind. This is the poor
201 00:17:06.200 --> 00:17:13.629 Andrew Clegg: bad, good, moderate, and high. I might just get that in the right order. High is the best. Now, this
202 00:17:13.680 --> 00:17:28.780 Andrew Clegg: This scale is the scale which has been given to me by the Environment Agency, and it happens to be for phosphate in the rivers around us.
203 00:17:29.190 --> 00:17:44.050 Andrew Clegg: And so the good river around us has a phosphate level of between, of less than 0.15 parts per million. Really bad is greater than 3.3 parts per million.
204 00:17:44.170 --> 00:17:49.989 Andrew Clegg: Now… I would like to take this, this layer.
205 00:17:50.480 --> 00:17:59.919 Andrew Clegg: And also have, be able to display dissolved oxygen in this similar sort of way.
206 00:18:00.470 --> 00:18:02.710 Andrew Clegg: How…
207 00:18:02.820 --> 00:18:14.180 Andrew Clegg: I've been thinking about ways of doing it. I suppose I will have to have a second layer. I'd copy this one, and I'd redo the styling to show not…
208 00:18:14.450 --> 00:18:15.950 Andrew Clegg: phosphate here.
209 00:18:16.150 --> 00:18:24.139 Andrew Clegg: And here, with the colors, and the size of the thing, and also the shape, which is… the shape indicates the year that it was taken.
210 00:18:24.140 --> 00:18:25.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can just change it all to dissolved lock.
211 00:18:25.880 --> 00:18:26.750 Andrew Clegg: We're seeing.
212 00:18:26.750 --> 00:18:27.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
213 00:18:27.130 --> 00:18:33.490 Andrew Clegg: So this is all 2026, this one, and 2026 are diamond shapes, so if I put
214 00:18:33.710 --> 00:18:38.060 Andrew Clegg: 2025 layer on as well, it's a different shape, you see.
215 00:18:38.500 --> 00:18:51.040 Andrew Clegg: And the color indicates how good it is, so that bad is red, and then… I'm colorblind, so this one is the moderate one, and those… that I'm told is green, which is good.
216 00:18:51.580 --> 00:18:53.080 Andrew Clegg: And very good.
217 00:18:53.460 --> 00:19:02.009 Andrew Clegg: Up here is… The size is bigger than the diamond for good. So I want to do the same.
218 00:19:02.130 --> 00:19:04.029 Andrew Clegg: with dissolved oxygen.
219 00:19:04.330 --> 00:19:10.869 Andrew Clegg: But what's the best way of doing it? Just making a copy of the layer and changing the…
220 00:19:11.660 --> 00:19:15.190 Andrew Clegg: And changing the, .
221 00:19:15.540 --> 00:19:19.019 John Roberts: Would… would you want to display… at the same time.
222 00:19:19.130 --> 00:19:29.240 Andrew Clegg: No, no, I don't. I mean, I don't think I can do that, can I? I'd have to have a… I'd have to have a whole lot of complicated things here.
223 00:19:30.160 --> 00:19:34.740 Andrew Clegg: I think I'd have to have it on two layers. What do you think? What's the best way?
224 00:19:34.740 --> 00:19:40.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Got some questions for you, Andrew. Do you take the samples for both in exactly the same place?
225 00:19:40.770 --> 00:19:41.520 Andrew Clegg: Yes.
226 00:19:42.260 --> 00:19:50.939 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so a copy of one into a new layer would, in fact, you wouldn't have to change the position, all you have to do is change the record, the readings.
227 00:19:50.940 --> 00:19:53.969 Andrew Clegg: the records, I'd use the same records.
228 00:19:53.970 --> 00:19:54.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
229 00:19:54.340 --> 00:19:58.760 Andrew Clegg: But I just use, probably, copy them into a different layer.
230 00:19:58.760 --> 00:19:59.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
231 00:19:59.760 --> 00:20:10.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well… I think that for the ease of your work, you would…
232 00:20:11.620 --> 00:20:16.129 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you look at that first choice of yours, you've got, sort of, multiple
233 00:20:16.320 --> 00:20:19.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Reference points, or fields, or columns, or whatever you want to call them.
234 00:20:22.850 --> 00:20:23.380 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
235 00:20:23.380 --> 00:20:34.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But also, if you go into… if you create a new record, or go into one of your existing records, and look at all those columns you've got, you don't need to replicate those into the new layer, do you?
236 00:20:34.570 --> 00:20:38.139 Andrew Clegg: Well, I don't necessarily, but…
237 00:20:38.450 --> 00:20:45.940 Andrew Clegg: would it matter? I mean, it would be easier just to copy the layer, to keep… but how would I keep two layers
238 00:20:46.200 --> 00:20:48.170 Andrew Clegg: in sync.
239 00:20:48.970 --> 00:20:51.260 Andrew Clegg: Well, that's the issue, I don't think…
240 00:20:51.260 --> 00:20:53.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's the disadvantage of two layers.
241 00:20:53.450 --> 00:20:54.100 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
242 00:20:54.870 --> 00:21:00.980 John Roberts: Would you have to have the things like the diamond and everything else on the dissolved oxygen one?
243 00:21:02.210 --> 00:21:13.400 Andrew Clegg: Well, the diamond indicates… indicates… the shape indicates that it's 2026, the color indicates how good it is, and
244 00:21:13.860 --> 00:21:14.700 Andrew Clegg: But, but…
245 00:21:14.700 --> 00:21:17.650 John Roberts: Could… could you not add another category?
246 00:21:19.460 --> 00:21:21.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: For the dissolved oxygen and reading.
247 00:21:22.610 --> 00:21:24.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, he's got it already, it's already there.
248 00:21:24.790 --> 00:21:27.350 Andrew Clegg: It's already there, if I go through…
249 00:21:27.350 --> 00:21:28.550 John Roberts: Sorry, I missed that bit.
250 00:21:28.730 --> 00:21:31.039 Andrew Clegg: If I go through to one of these…
251 00:21:32.040 --> 00:21:47.640 Andrew Clegg: You see, I've got the phosphate level there. So far, I haven't actually taken dissolved oxygen for this particular one, because I've only just got the machine going, and this was done in January.
252 00:21:48.480 --> 00:21:53.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, I think there are two ways of doing it.
253 00:21:53.420 --> 00:21:58.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Andrew, and I suspect that you'll very soon negate one of them.
254 00:21:58.330 --> 00:22:02.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because it occurred to me that you could… just filter.
255 00:22:03.130 --> 00:22:10.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you're looking at dissolved solids, you'd put a filter in that sort of said, show me anything with dissolved solids, or sorry, dissolved.
256 00:22:10.680 --> 00:22:11.730 Andrew Clegg: Oh, yeah.
257 00:22:11.950 --> 00:22:14.529 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But the problem with that is, is that…
258 00:22:14.830 --> 00:22:20.519 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And the style doesn't change unless you adjust the style class.
259 00:22:20.520 --> 00:22:21.360 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
260 00:22:21.500 --> 00:22:24.809 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, but I suspect that that is quicker
261 00:22:25.460 --> 00:22:29.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Than maintaining two layers as separate records.
262 00:22:30.870 --> 00:22:37.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, for instance, if you want to show the, dissolved oxygen.
263 00:22:38.010 --> 00:22:45.949 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then you just go into the style and change the class from, solids to… from phosphates to…
264 00:22:47.620 --> 00:22:48.270 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
265 00:22:48.270 --> 00:22:50.719 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you just, yes, go into style now.
266 00:22:51.460 --> 00:22:53.279 Andrew Clegg: Oh, I missed it.
267 00:22:53.280 --> 00:22:54.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
268 00:22:56.170 --> 00:22:59.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And that is showing you the phosphates.
269 00:23:00.080 --> 00:23:01.019 Andrew Clegg: You can virtually.
270 00:23:01.020 --> 00:23:06.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Change, yes, change that to oxygen under the phosph… where's it got phosphate level on the left-hand side?
271 00:23:07.410 --> 00:23:09.850 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, but you can't… Just changes.
272 00:23:09.850 --> 00:23:12.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Change it to oxygen.
273 00:23:12.290 --> 00:23:15.049 Andrew Clegg: It could be, yeah.
274 00:23:15.050 --> 00:23:17.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You need… you needed to do it once.
275 00:23:17.780 --> 00:23:18.540 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
276 00:23:20.850 --> 00:23:23.150 Andrew Clegg: Dissolved oxygen, I'd use that one.
277 00:23:24.120 --> 00:23:27.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but then I suspect that,
278 00:23:27.920 --> 00:23:31.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You could use the same color coding, as you've got.
279 00:23:32.180 --> 00:23:37.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: on the first one, but I don't think you'd get the chance to… They change the icons.
280 00:23:38.890 --> 00:23:39.930 Andrew Clegg: No.
281 00:23:40.240 --> 00:23:44.739 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You know, you could have poor, good, high, and moderate, but if they're not the same levels.
282 00:23:44.740 --> 00:23:45.699 Andrew Clegg: It's really tricky.
283 00:23:46.700 --> 00:23:56.750 Andrew Clegg: My inclination at the moment is to have two layers, but, the… problem is…
284 00:23:57.310 --> 00:23:59.940 Andrew Clegg: I'd use the same table.
285 00:24:00.370 --> 00:24:16.320 Andrew Clegg: I'd have more columns, I'd have some… a dissolved oxygen called… I don't think I… see, I've got dissolved oxygen here. Oh, the rate… the most recent ones have it in. That's interesting, I didn't notice that. That's probably another part of… another part of Martin.
286 00:24:18.830 --> 00:24:28.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think that if you are using the same points all the time.
287 00:24:28.890 --> 00:24:34.029 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then, having two layers is not so much of a problem, because you're not changing the…
288 00:24:34.030 --> 00:24:35.980 Andrew Clegg: I'm not changing anything, really.
289 00:24:35.980 --> 00:24:38.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you're putting different readings in, presumably.
290 00:24:38.480 --> 00:24:39.230 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
291 00:24:41.660 --> 00:24:45.599 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, it would be lovely if I could just flip from one to another.
292 00:24:46.440 --> 00:24:55.780 Andrew Clegg: You know, while I'm doing it, using the same… using the same table, using the same table view.
293 00:24:56.050 --> 00:24:59.129 Andrew Clegg: To be able to flip from one layer to another, wouldn't it?
294 00:25:00.470 --> 00:25:02.020 Andrew Clegg: But I can't…
295 00:25:02.020 --> 00:25:06.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you could if you were happy to filter, but the trouble is you couldn't change the symbols.
296 00:25:06.520 --> 00:25:07.260 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
297 00:25:09.710 --> 00:25:12.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I think you're right, I think it is two layers.
298 00:25:12.900 --> 00:25:13.680 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
299 00:25:14.490 --> 00:25:17.059 Andrew Clegg: But we can't just take
300 00:25:17.580 --> 00:25:24.649 Andrew Clegg: We can't copy from something like this, and copy it straight onto another layer, can we?
301 00:25:24.650 --> 00:25:27.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you can just duplicate the layer, yes, certainly.
302 00:25:27.590 --> 00:25:34.419 Andrew Clegg: Well, you can only duplicate it, but I remember that I'd have to duplicate it every time I took a reading.
303 00:25:35.300 --> 00:25:40.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No… it's only because you're only duplicating the structure, aren't you?
304 00:25:40.680 --> 00:25:43.430 Andrew Clegg: So, it… yeah…
305 00:25:44.850 --> 00:25:50.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you'd have the existing number of records, so as you'd adjusted
306 00:25:50.590 --> 00:26:04.529 Graham Stoddart-Stones: a new oxygen level, that would be in one layer, and you'd have a different one in the phosphate layer, and I suspect that although they start off with the same number of records, you'd soon end up with one being much larger than the other.
307 00:26:05.570 --> 00:26:06.440 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
308 00:26:07.640 --> 00:26:16.600 Andrew Clegg: I'm… Yeah, I still have to think about what I want to do with them when I've… you see…
309 00:26:16.760 --> 00:26:21.230 Andrew Clegg: when I, when, when it… When I've taken the readings, what I…
310 00:26:22.860 --> 00:26:27.460 Andrew Clegg: It will be nice to have… the table will have both on.
311 00:26:28.060 --> 00:26:29.079 Andrew Clegg: But the maps…
312 00:26:29.350 --> 00:26:30.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well…
313 00:26:30.000 --> 00:26:31.699 Andrew Clegg: have one or the other.
314 00:26:32.120 --> 00:26:33.569 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I don't think that's true.
315 00:26:33.780 --> 00:26:34.689 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because the table…
316 00:26:34.690 --> 00:26:35.530 John Roberts: How are they…
317 00:26:35.530 --> 00:26:37.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The table only shows one layer at a time.
318 00:26:38.930 --> 00:26:42.590 John Roberts: when you're communicating this to other people, which I'm assuming you do.
319 00:26:42.600 --> 00:26:45.089 Andrew Clegg: Is it by a table or by a map?
320 00:26:46.550 --> 00:27:05.349 Andrew Clegg: It's usually by a map. What I've done is I've given people who are interested in this, or the person who is interested in it, I've… I've given them… this is X map, and I can give… I can give them guest access to particular layers. That's a great thing to have, actually.
321 00:27:05.610 --> 00:27:06.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
322 00:27:06.920 --> 00:27:21.230 Andrew Clegg: It really is good. You can just give any person… any particular person you want access to one or half a dozen layers only, and all they can do is read them, and they can't interfere with any of the other layers.
323 00:27:21.230 --> 00:27:22.619 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep, it's been good.
324 00:27:22.780 --> 00:27:23.450 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
325 00:27:24.950 --> 00:27:30.169 Andrew Clegg: Anyway, that's my problem. How do I get back? I… I say stop share.
326 00:27:34.070 --> 00:27:35.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Alright, Sheila.
327 00:27:36.120 --> 00:27:39.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do you remember anything about Poresh Online?
328 00:27:40.660 --> 00:27:45.679 Sheila Churchward: Certain amount, but I was most interested in what you're saying about changing features.
329 00:27:45.950 --> 00:27:49.099 Sheila Churchward: I have a small problem.
330 00:27:49.930 --> 00:27:55.509 Sheila Churchward: Inasmuch as when we do planning, At the moment.
331 00:27:55.970 --> 00:28:00.740 Sheila Churchward: And I go into… I have an assist… I have assistants.
332 00:28:01.210 --> 00:28:05.380 Sheila Churchward: For preparing, planning applications.
333 00:28:05.510 --> 00:28:10.330 Sheila Churchward: And the lady, when she does them form, she'll set up
334 00:28:10.790 --> 00:28:14.309 Sheila Churchward: the basic that I want to look at.
335 00:28:15.270 --> 00:28:20.429 Sheila Churchward: And then… I'm just trying to find out how I should… I look…
336 00:28:20.640 --> 00:28:24.009 Sheila Churchward: I'm looking at you on one screen, and my…
337 00:28:24.420 --> 00:28:29.969 Sheila Churchward: my parish online is on another screen, and I can't find the share on my other screen.
338 00:28:31.130 --> 00:28:33.099 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you go to…
339 00:28:33.630 --> 00:28:35.949 John Roberts: If you go to the bottom of your screen, Sheila.
340 00:28:36.260 --> 00:28:37.949 Sheila Churchward: Yeah, which screen.
341 00:28:37.950 --> 00:28:38.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The zoos.
342 00:28:38.810 --> 00:28:41.400 John Roberts: Then you're work… the main one, the one you're working on.
343 00:28:41.400 --> 00:28:42.110 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
344 00:28:42.490 --> 00:28:44.620 John Roberts: Where you can see all of our ugly mugs.
345 00:28:45.570 --> 00:28:53.099 Sheila Churchward: No, no, I've got your… all our vision is on my small… on my laptop.
346 00:28:53.320 --> 00:28:55.370 John Roberts: Right, if you go to chair…
347 00:28:56.750 --> 00:28:57.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do you need…
348 00:28:57.180 --> 00:28:57.890 John Roberts: On my laptop.
349 00:28:58.460 --> 00:29:00.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, you need to be only…
350 00:29:00.210 --> 00:29:02.849 John Roberts: Then ask you which screen you want to share.
351 00:29:02.850 --> 00:29:03.940 Sheila Churchward: Oh, really?
352 00:29:03.940 --> 00:29:07.329 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, but if you're on… is it on a different computer?
353 00:29:07.330 --> 00:29:08.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's not… yeah, that's not the point.
354 00:29:08.670 --> 00:29:09.279 John Roberts: Oh, alright.
355 00:29:09.280 --> 00:29:18.209 Sheila Churchward: I've got two screens. I've got two screens. I've got a screen on my laptop, and I've got a linked screen, which is much bigger and much easier to work on.
356 00:29:18.210 --> 00:29:23.010 Andrew Clegg: You can do it then. Yeah, if they have just running from one computer.
357 00:29:23.840 --> 00:29:25.710 Sheila Churchward: Oh yeah, it's on… So…
358 00:29:25.710 --> 00:29:33.440 Andrew Clegg: Try going, try sharing, and it should show you both screens. And you just select the one that you want.
359 00:29:33.440 --> 00:29:36.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The sharing is in the screen that's got Zoom showing.
360 00:29:37.260 --> 00:29:41.749 Sheila Churchward: I might… Just wonderful. My, mouse has just packed up on me.
361 00:29:41.750 --> 00:29:43.610 John Roberts: Hey!
362 00:29:44.480 --> 00:29:45.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There we go.
363 00:29:45.120 --> 00:29:46.029 Sheila Churchward: My nose is back.
364 00:29:46.030 --> 00:29:47.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Technology, right?
365 00:29:47.500 --> 00:29:48.210 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
366 00:29:49.030 --> 00:29:53.300 Sheila Churchward: So, so I go look for screen share.
367 00:29:53.800 --> 00:29:58.229 Sheila Churchward: So if… No, my math isn't quite ready yet.
368 00:29:59.900 --> 00:30:02.829 Andrew Clegg: Does it hibernate? Hibernates, does it?
369 00:30:02.830 --> 00:30:05.209 Graham Stoddart-Stones: on the screen, it's got Zoom showing.
370 00:30:06.030 --> 00:30:09.669 Sheila Churchward: I'm on the screen. Me, I'm looking at you on the screen at Zoom.
371 00:30:09.670 --> 00:30:10.250 Andrew Clegg: So, okay.
372 00:30:10.250 --> 00:30:17.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so if you move your mouse down to the bottom of the screen, it will highlight a green arrow called Share.
373 00:30:18.050 --> 00:30:21.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: To move your mouse along the middle of the bottom line.
374 00:30:22.340 --> 00:30:24.280 Andrew Clegg: Is that… is that green, Graham? That's it.
375 00:30:24.560 --> 00:30:25.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
376 00:30:25.760 --> 00:30:26.250 Sheila Churchward: Pretty sick.
377 00:30:26.250 --> 00:30:28.010 John Roberts: as far as I know.
378 00:30:28.010 --> 00:30:28.360 Sheila Churchward: Nope.
379 00:30:28.360 --> 00:30:31.209 John Roberts: and it's black and white, but then I'm colorblind.
380 00:30:32.860 --> 00:30:36.389 Sheila Churchward: Nope, it doesn't. Anyway, what I'm gonna set… what I,
381 00:30:36.490 --> 00:30:53.240 Sheila Churchward: if you can envisage, I've got a dot. For every planning application, I've got a dot on the area. That's my point. I use points. So, if I look at it, I look at my dot, it brings up two application numbers.
382 00:30:53.810 --> 00:30:55.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Always? Oh, well…
383 00:30:55.370 --> 00:30:55.830 Sheila Churchward: what?
384 00:30:55.830 --> 00:30:57.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: together, always.
385 00:30:57.410 --> 00:31:05.820 Sheila Churchward: No, it's the one application, it's a single application, but because Tanya's set it up already for me.
386 00:31:06.010 --> 00:31:08.349 Sheila Churchward: Even though I go into it.
387 00:31:09.830 --> 00:31:13.269 Sheila Churchward: and click on it to do amendments that I want to do.
388 00:31:14.230 --> 00:31:20.919 Sheila Churchward: I still get two links. I get two up on my left-hand side, under my,
389 00:31:20.920 --> 00:31:22.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep, I know what you mean.
390 00:31:22.090 --> 00:31:29.650 Sheila Churchward: Planning 2026, I get two application numbers for the same. Now, I can always tell hers…
391 00:31:29.780 --> 00:31:44.640 Sheila Churchward: Because where I've got, I always use capital letters for house. It's in particular is a… is a house application. Householders, she always puts it in lowercase. Yeah. So I can tell which one's hers.
392 00:31:45.070 --> 00:31:47.450 Sheila Churchward: Is it gonna be alright if I delete that?
393 00:31:48.630 --> 00:31:52.979 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, I still think it'd be a very good idea if you can find a way of sharing.
394 00:31:54.800 --> 00:31:55.690 Sheila Churchward: I know.
395 00:31:55.690 --> 00:32:00.709 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you go to your Zoom… go to your Zoom screen, and go down…
396 00:32:00.710 --> 00:32:01.680 Sheila Churchward: Zoom screen.
397 00:32:01.680 --> 00:32:04.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Go down to the bottom. Can you see a bunch of icons? It says.
398 00:32:04.740 --> 00:32:14.290 Sheila Churchward: No, I don't get it. I don't get that when I'm using my laptop, and I'm using the screen as well. I don't get the Zoom information. I get view…
399 00:32:14.530 --> 00:32:17.650 Sheila Churchward: So I'm just… I can look down through…
400 00:32:17.780 --> 00:32:21.090 Sheila Churchward: It says, full screen, show timers.
401 00:32:22.740 --> 00:32:23.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, full screen.
402 00:32:23.460 --> 00:32:25.319 Sheila Churchward: I have got a very limited
403 00:32:25.750 --> 00:32:29.670 Sheila Churchward: Very limited. Here we go.
404 00:32:29.870 --> 00:32:33.919 Sheila Churchward: if… I've… I've done… I can get leave now.
405 00:32:33.920 --> 00:32:34.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.
406 00:32:35.050 --> 00:32:36.109 Andrew Clegg: There we go.
407 00:32:36.550 --> 00:32:37.350 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
408 00:32:37.480 --> 00:32:43.850 Sheila Churchward: What I've done is I've… I have actually… so I'm gonna do… Screen 2.
409 00:32:44.470 --> 00:32:45.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right?
410 00:32:47.510 --> 00:32:52.750 Sheila Churchward: my screen, too. So you'll see a nice picture of my horse, just a moment.
411 00:32:52.750 --> 00:32:53.989 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hasn't come up yet.
412 00:32:54.240 --> 00:32:54.980 Sheila Churchward: No?
413 00:32:55.100 --> 00:32:55.880 Sheila Churchward: Shad?
414 00:32:55.880 --> 00:32:56.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's the.
415 00:32:56.270 --> 00:32:57.600 John Roberts: Yeah, Summit's coming.
416 00:32:57.930 --> 00:32:59.550 Andrew Clegg: We're getting some…
417 00:32:59.550 --> 00:33:00.340 Sheila Churchward: Close?
418 00:33:00.790 --> 00:33:02.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Whoa.
419 00:33:02.040 --> 00:33:03.670 Andrew Clegg: Oh, yeah.
420 00:33:03.670 --> 00:33:06.969 Sheila Churchward: Oh, it's my pony, actually, and my horse is… that isn't my horse.
421 00:33:07.480 --> 00:33:09.770 Andrew Clegg: Is this the Cheltenham Gold Cup?
422 00:33:13.000 --> 00:33:18.250 Sheila Churchward: So… Zoom… Parish Online.
423 00:33:18.660 --> 00:33:20.910 Sheila Churchward: So where's my parish online, then?
424 00:33:21.950 --> 00:33:26.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Might be on… which screen are you now showing? Screen 2 or screen 1?
425 00:33:26.110 --> 00:33:27.559 Sheila Churchward: You're on screen 2.
426 00:33:27.920 --> 00:33:30.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I have your line open on screen, too.
427 00:33:31.540 --> 00:33:37.879 Sheila Churchward: So, I've got audio… It tells me everything on the top, but it's actually showing.
428 00:33:41.160 --> 00:33:44.539 Sheila Churchward: It's actually showing my pony, and not…
429 00:33:44.540 --> 00:33:45.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sweet, you need…
430 00:33:45.770 --> 00:33:46.500 Sheila Churchward: I am.
431 00:33:48.530 --> 00:33:49.620 Sheila Churchward: How old?
432 00:33:49.780 --> 00:33:52.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You need to select a specific window.
433 00:33:55.200 --> 00:33:55.750 Sheila Churchward: Excuse me?
434 00:33:55.750 --> 00:34:01.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: comes up with Screen 2. You should have the option of which window you want to open on screen 2.
435 00:34:02.090 --> 00:34:08.310 Sheila Churchward: As soon as I clicked on screen 2, it took you to my… my opening screen.
436 00:34:08.310 --> 00:34:11.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right, what happens if you now do Alt-Tab?
437 00:34:11.389 --> 00:34:13.460 Sheila Churchward: You're on Windows, aren't you?
438 00:34:13.670 --> 00:34:14.330 Sheila Churchward: Yep.
439 00:34:14.370 --> 00:34:19.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so if you do Alt-Tab, it should bring up a choice of all the windows that are available on that screen.
440 00:34:22.659 --> 00:34:23.429 Sheila Churchward: tab.
441 00:34:24.060 --> 00:34:29.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, in all turn tab at the same time, you need to press two keys.
442 00:34:29.889 --> 00:34:30.779 Sheila Churchward: Old T.
443 00:34:31.659 --> 00:34:33.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And nothing else.
444 00:34:35.360 --> 00:34:37.270 Sheila Churchward: Oh, this is awful.
445 00:34:37.270 --> 00:34:43.460 Stuart Bacon: Can you drag Zoom, or you, can you drag your browser onto the screen, too?
446 00:34:43.650 --> 00:34:44.360 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
447 00:34:44.670 --> 00:34:46.360 Sheila Churchward: I've got my mouse up there.
448 00:34:48.860 --> 00:34:50.689 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Which screen is the browser on?
449 00:34:50.690 --> 00:34:52.280 Sheila Churchward: meeting, I can see.
450 00:34:53.670 --> 00:34:55.449 John Roberts: I'll say your mouse isn't moving.
451 00:34:56.040 --> 00:34:57.330 Sheila Churchward: Isn't it?
452 00:34:57.330 --> 00:34:59.240 John Roberts: I'm watching the little one.
453 00:34:59.240 --> 00:34:59.920 Sheila Churchward: How about that?
454 00:34:59.920 --> 00:35:00.800 John Roberts: not moving.
455 00:35:00.800 --> 00:35:02.709 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, it's not moving at all, Sheila.
456 00:35:03.280 --> 00:35:03.980 Sheila Churchward: Whoa.
457 00:35:04.990 --> 00:35:08.530 Sheila Churchward: Well, I… as far as I'm concerned, it's moving lovely.
458 00:35:08.950 --> 00:35:12.440 John Roberts: Well, certainly, it's… your bottom line is changing.
459 00:35:13.390 --> 00:35:18.739 Sheila Churchward: Anyway, so… This is really weird.
460 00:35:21.690 --> 00:35:29.510 Sheila Churchward: I've got Zoom. I'll bring Zoom up onto my, but you'll have to… Meh.
461 00:35:30.160 --> 00:35:35.209 Sheila Churchward: I'll bring Zoom, my other one up here. There we are.
462 00:35:36.360 --> 00:35:38.050 Sheila Churchward: I'll bring Zoom up here.
463 00:35:38.240 --> 00:35:41.790 Sheila Churchward: Onto the second screen, which is my normal screen.
464 00:35:43.080 --> 00:35:45.749 Sheila Churchward: I'll do a stop share for a moment.
465 00:35:47.420 --> 00:35:50.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good afternoon, Stuart. Nice to see you.
466 00:35:50.060 --> 00:35:51.580 Stuart Bacon: Good afternoon, folks.
467 00:35:52.360 --> 00:35:57.690 Sheila Churchward: And then I'll go back in to my Firefox and start doing it again.
468 00:35:58.280 --> 00:36:03.940 Sheila Churchward: When I click on Firefox, It says parish online.
469 00:36:05.630 --> 00:36:15.629 Sheila Churchward: But you haven't shared the screen yet, so we can't see it. No, I've just deleted that, because I was trying to clear it up. I was wondering, the real question is, can I delete the other one?
470 00:36:16.050 --> 00:36:23.789 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, well, if you show… if you show the screen, if we have another go at just showing… rather than showing screen 2, if you select the… the browser tab…
471 00:36:23.960 --> 00:36:25.280 Stuart Bacon: And whatever in…
472 00:36:25.280 --> 00:36:27.549 Sheila Churchward: When you select him, what to…
473 00:36:27.550 --> 00:36:28.650 Stuart Bacon: Screen share.
474 00:36:31.650 --> 00:36:35.310 Sheila Churchward: Right, I'll come back to mirror the screen. View.
475 00:36:35.730 --> 00:36:36.840 Sheila Churchward: Share.
476 00:36:39.610 --> 00:36:42.409 Sheila Churchward: I'll find another screen to share, shall I?
477 00:36:43.890 --> 00:36:48.470 Stuart Bacon: It should… under, what is it, application windows, or whatever.
478 00:36:48.690 --> 00:36:49.230 Sheila Churchward: Yes.
479 00:36:49.230 --> 00:36:52.830 Stuart Bacon: Brings up that. It should show one of them as your browser.
480 00:36:55.260 --> 00:36:57.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There we go, that's different, yep.
481 00:36:57.400 --> 00:36:59.699 Andrew Clegg: I think we've got parish online now.
482 00:36:59.700 --> 00:37:05.469 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's… are they the same… why has he… she entered the same record that you already entered?
483 00:37:06.730 --> 00:37:17.050 Sheila Churchward: Well, she likes to… she does a… she… the idea is that she sets it up for me, and I just go in and check everything, and I put my own words in.
484 00:37:17.470 --> 00:37:18.340 Sheila Churchward: Right?
485 00:37:19.700 --> 00:37:25.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I mean, yes, you can go ahead and delete her one, provided it's got the same information in that yours has got.
486 00:37:25.650 --> 00:37:30.319 Sheila Churchward: Well, my info… mine has got more information in, actually. Alright.
487 00:37:30.320 --> 00:37:36.099 John Roberts: When you… when you click on each of those, on the left-hand side, you'll get the details come up, won't you?
488 00:37:36.970 --> 00:37:37.510 Sheila Churchward: me.
489 00:37:37.710 --> 00:37:41.599 Sheila Churchward: Yes, I do. I get all the details come up. Fine.
490 00:37:42.500 --> 00:37:44.110 John Roberts: And is it the same in both?
491 00:37:46.280 --> 00:37:52.389 Sheila Churchward: She doesn't… what's my doing? I'm trying to get my act to come up a bit bigger.
492 00:37:53.550 --> 00:37:57.659 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you click on the top of your screen, it's probably hidden by the…
493 00:37:59.470 --> 00:38:02.560 Sheila Churchward: I usually just pick there and pull it across. There we go.
494 00:38:02.560 --> 00:38:03.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
495 00:38:03.070 --> 00:38:06.359 Sheila Churchward: Do you want to click? No. I don't want to delete anything.
496 00:38:08.440 --> 00:38:12.779 Sheila Churchward: You see, this… you see that blue dot there? That's the actual item.
497 00:38:13.010 --> 00:38:13.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
498 00:38:16.020 --> 00:38:17.759 Sheila Churchward: Where's it going?
499 00:38:19.430 --> 00:38:21.640 Sheila Churchward: Can't go over the left-hand side now.
500 00:38:22.010 --> 00:38:28.390 Sheila Churchward: So I'll get everything there. All I want to do is delete it. I just wanted a bit of assurance that if I deleted hers.
501 00:38:28.810 --> 00:38:31.610 Sheila Churchward: I wouldn't be deleting mine as well.
502 00:38:31.790 --> 00:38:39.060 Sheila Churchward: And I thought, well, what if I'm… if it's… it doesn't really, really matter, because I can put the information back in again.
503 00:38:39.060 --> 00:38:40.000 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, I think we don't.
504 00:38:40.000 --> 00:38:43.829 Sheila Churchward: I think there's only one way of finding this out. Is to do it.
505 00:38:43.830 --> 00:38:47.519 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, they are two separate records, and if you delete hers.
506 00:38:47.520 --> 00:38:47.890 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
507 00:38:47.890 --> 00:38:48.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to be there.
508 00:38:49.080 --> 00:38:49.890 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
509 00:38:49.890 --> 00:38:54.379 John Roberts: Parish Online wouldn't have allowed you to do two identical records.
510 00:38:54.530 --> 00:39:04.930 John Roberts: The only reason it has… No, the only reason it has is because one is done in uppercase and one's lowercase. Yes. So it's actually seeing it as two records.
511 00:39:04.930 --> 00:39:05.700 Sheila Churchward: Yes.
512 00:39:06.670 --> 00:39:07.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm kidding.
513 00:39:07.060 --> 00:39:08.690 John Roberts: So, like Andrew said.
514 00:39:08.890 --> 00:39:13.370 John Roberts: The only way you're going to find out is to delete one and see what happens, but.
515 00:39:13.370 --> 00:39:14.080 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
516 00:39:14.340 --> 00:39:23.819 Sheila Churchward: Yeah, the thing is, when I look at it… when… if I look at it, after she's set everything up, and I look at the… I don't see…
517 00:39:24.170 --> 00:39:26.700 Sheila Churchward: her information.
518 00:39:28.060 --> 00:39:32.310 Sheila Churchward: So then, I… I'm just assuming That it's not there.
519 00:39:32.980 --> 00:39:34.510 Sheila Churchward: And I do it again.
520 00:39:35.010 --> 00:39:41.159 Sheila Churchward: Because I don't usually have time to mess with… I've contacted her a couple of times, but she only works part-time.
521 00:39:42.430 --> 00:39:47.030 Sheila Churchward: And I've contacted a couple of times and asked her, And we get so…
522 00:39:48.200 --> 00:39:56.150 Sheila Churchward: she doesn't really know a lot about it, and I don't either, so between the two of us, we get in the right pickle.
523 00:39:56.670 --> 00:39:56.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: 8.
524 00:39:56.990 --> 00:40:02.479 Sheila Churchward: I just make sure that I can print out the information I need to do the plan…
525 00:40:02.700 --> 00:40:13.869 Sheila Churchward: To do the planning application, and ensure that if some… if you click onto the, item, you can go through and follow the… the application details.
526 00:40:14.320 --> 00:40:16.720 Sheila Churchward: And I'll just wa-
527 00:40:16.860 --> 00:40:22.240 Sheila Churchward: And that's the reason why, because she has got it in lowercase, and I've got it in uppercase.
528 00:40:22.940 --> 00:40:26.589 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, which one are you in at the moment? We can't see the record number, but are you.
529 00:40:26.590 --> 00:40:28.869 Sheila Churchward: No, I can't get over to the left-hand side.
530 00:40:28.870 --> 00:40:30.869 Stuart Bacon: Click on the X at the top of that.
531 00:40:31.400 --> 00:40:32.080 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
532 00:40:33.030 --> 00:40:34.570 Sheila Churchward: The top of which?
533 00:40:34.570 --> 00:40:36.010 John Roberts: Next to where it says…
534 00:40:36.510 --> 00:40:40.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Not that much.
535 00:40:42.060 --> 00:40:43.540 Sheila Churchward: I've lost it now, am I?
536 00:40:43.540 --> 00:40:44.660 Stuart Bacon: Oh, yeah.
537 00:40:46.160 --> 00:40:47.600 Sheila Churchward: Dear I did.
538 00:40:48.340 --> 00:40:48.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: he…
539 00:40:48.940 --> 00:40:55.070 Sheila Churchward: The trouble is, what I'm seeing is tiny. I've usually got this lovely big screen up in front of me.
540 00:40:56.490 --> 00:40:58.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: In the top right corner of your…
541 00:40:58.410 --> 00:41:00.420 John Roberts: We're seeing what you're seeing, don't worry about it.
542 00:41:00.420 --> 00:41:01.450 Sheila Churchward: How are you?
543 00:41:01.540 --> 00:41:02.750 John Roberts: Yeah. Right.
544 00:41:05.290 --> 00:41:09.470 Sheila Churchward: I can't actually get over. I can't get over there.
545 00:41:09.810 --> 00:41:12.309 John Roberts: At the top of your… at the top of your screen.
546 00:41:12.760 --> 00:41:18.050 John Roberts: Where you've got the X, the square, and the minus. What happens if you click on the square?
547 00:41:19.030 --> 00:41:19.800 John Roberts: Oh!
548 00:41:19.930 --> 00:41:20.480 John Roberts: Go up.
549 00:41:20.480 --> 00:41:21.630 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
550 00:41:21.630 --> 00:41:23.569 John Roberts: Not that… right.
551 00:41:23.760 --> 00:41:26.330 Sheila Churchward: You're right there. What happens if you clip on that?
552 00:41:26.730 --> 00:41:28.959 Sheila Churchward: Well, that's what you can see what it's got there.
553 00:41:29.240 --> 00:41:29.840 John Roberts: Okay.
554 00:41:29.840 --> 00:41:31.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's full screen now.
555 00:41:31.950 --> 00:41:35.430 Sheila Churchward: I've got full screen now, which is lovely, but I can't…
556 00:41:36.250 --> 00:41:39.080 Sheila Churchward: I can't see how I log in.
557 00:41:39.190 --> 00:41:39.940 Sheila Churchward: I click on…
558 00:41:39.940 --> 00:41:40.710 Stuart Bacon: on the…
559 00:41:42.290 --> 00:41:45.589 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, where you were. Where you were. Yep.
560 00:41:47.050 --> 00:41:47.859 Stuart Bacon: Come on.
561 00:41:48.480 --> 00:41:49.549 Stuart Bacon: Kick on the tree.
562 00:41:49.550 --> 00:41:52.730 John Roberts: I want lines. Pick on the three… lines.
563 00:41:53.500 --> 00:41:55.609 Sheila Churchward: So, go to the three lines.
564 00:41:55.970 --> 00:41:56.440 John Roberts: Yeah.
565 00:41:56.440 --> 00:41:59.279 Stuart Bacon: And the fourth item down is login.
566 00:41:59.280 --> 00:41:59.940 Sheila Churchward: Oh, lucky.
567 00:41:59.940 --> 00:42:00.840 John Roberts: got login.
568 00:42:00.990 --> 00:42:01.590 Sheila Churchward: Yep.
569 00:42:02.790 --> 00:42:03.890 John Roberts: Click on login.
570 00:42:04.090 --> 00:42:04.920 Sheila Churchward: I did.
571 00:42:05.740 --> 00:42:06.400 John Roberts: Sorry.
572 00:42:11.530 --> 00:42:17.070 Sheila Churchward: The screen… because the screen isn't… Here we go.
573 00:42:17.070 --> 00:42:19.620 Stuart Bacon: Jalen, because you're struggling on that screen…
574 00:42:19.620 --> 00:42:20.280 Sheila Churchward: Yes.
575 00:42:20.730 --> 00:42:26.080 Stuart Bacon: Because we're seeing your browser, it doesn't mind if you drag that browser up onto your other screen.
576 00:42:26.590 --> 00:42:27.380 Sheila Churchward: Right.
577 00:42:29.230 --> 00:42:30.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: To a big screen, yeah.
578 00:42:32.530 --> 00:42:33.430 Sheila Churchward: Can you see that?
579 00:42:33.810 --> 00:42:36.250 Stuart Bacon: We can still see it, we've not lost it.
580 00:42:36.800 --> 00:42:38.759 Sheila Churchward: Alright, I'll do that.
581 00:42:38.760 --> 00:42:41.759 Stuart Bacon: Turn that to full screen, that might make it easier for you to…
582 00:42:41.970 --> 00:42:43.490 Sheila Churchward: Navigate and see.
583 00:42:46.260 --> 00:42:48.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now, you're on a fairly slow internet connection?
584 00:42:49.330 --> 00:42:53.459 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Me? Yeah, I live in the back of beyond.
585 00:42:56.760 --> 00:43:03.469 Sheila Churchward: No, I'm on… I'm at the wrong end of the village, we're on copper. Can you… can you see our village now?
586 00:43:03.840 --> 00:43:06.970 Andrew Clegg: We can see everything perfectly now, yeah.
587 00:43:07.820 --> 00:43:10.089 Sheila Churchward: Right, I'm going to parish layers.
588 00:43:10.760 --> 00:43:17.690 Sheila Churchward: 26. You see, when I copied 26 over, it brought over all 25 as well.
589 00:43:18.210 --> 00:43:25.469 Sheila Churchward: Which I thought… I was being… I was being clever, and I thought, oh, I'll just copy 25 and make a 26.
590 00:43:25.470 --> 00:43:39.109 Andrew Clegg: When you copy, you're given the opportunity of either copying it with the data, or without the data. And when you copy, and if you don't want the 25, you have to copy it without the data.
591 00:43:39.470 --> 00:43:40.240 Sheila Churchward: Right.
592 00:43:41.010 --> 00:43:51.519 Sheila Churchward: Well, that was my fault. I was just… I've started deleting this stuff off 26. When I realised what I'd done, I just thought, oh, well, never mind, I'll live with it.
593 00:43:52.160 --> 00:43:57.669 Sheila Churchward: But this is… This is the one.
594 00:43:59.450 --> 00:44:01.199 Sheila Churchward: No, I've got the two.
595 00:44:02.820 --> 00:44:05.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Enter the lowercase one and delete it.
596 00:44:06.010 --> 00:44:06.670 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
597 00:44:08.540 --> 00:44:09.729 Sheila Churchward: In the bin.
598 00:44:10.650 --> 00:44:11.340 Sheila Churchward: Perfect.
599 00:44:11.340 --> 00:44:12.000 Stuart Bacon: Update?
600 00:44:13.160 --> 00:44:15.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep, that's alright. Now, if you click on it.
601 00:44:15.740 --> 00:44:17.050 Sheila Churchward: I've got mine.
602 00:44:17.220 --> 00:44:17.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
603 00:44:19.120 --> 00:44:19.739 John Roberts: There you go.
604 00:44:19.740 --> 00:44:20.410 Sheila Churchward: wheel.
605 00:44:22.060 --> 00:44:22.640 Sheila Churchward: Fine.
606 00:44:22.640 --> 00:44:24.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Answered your question.
607 00:44:24.430 --> 00:44:28.289 Sheila Churchward: That's lovely, thank you very much. I can go and do… go and do the others now.
608 00:44:30.320 --> 00:44:33.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Splendid that we spent 30 minutes answering one question.
609 00:44:35.070 --> 00:44:37.090 Sheila Churchward: Oh, but you've helped me a great deal.
610 00:44:37.810 --> 00:44:40.289 John Roberts: No, but at least we've answered a question.
611 00:44:42.090 --> 00:44:44.130 John Roberts: Not just sat here and chatted.
612 00:44:44.930 --> 00:44:46.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Is there another question, Sheila?
613 00:44:47.110 --> 00:44:48.700 Sheila Churchward: You…
614 00:44:48.700 --> 00:44:51.530 John Roberts: Stuart must have one, or Sheila must have one.
615 00:44:51.530 --> 00:44:56.399 Sheila Churchward: On the email, you had a list of things about how to change the color of points. Yes.
616 00:44:56.400 --> 00:44:57.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Absolutely.
617 00:44:58.270 --> 00:45:00.129 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, would you like to do that?
618 00:45:00.310 --> 00:45:03.539 Sheila Churchward: Yes, I won… There was.
619 00:45:03.540 --> 00:45:07.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: In here, in neighborhood plans? Oh, sorry, in, planning applications?
620 00:45:07.990 --> 00:45:08.839 Sheila Churchward: What was it?
621 00:45:09.210 --> 00:45:12.520 Sheila Churchward: Our northern route out.
622 00:45:14.430 --> 00:45:19.719 Sheila Churchward: We've got a northern route, Yeah. Out of the village.
623 00:45:19.750 --> 00:45:20.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
624 00:45:20.540 --> 00:45:25.270 Sheila Churchward: And… The rest… It has been…
625 00:45:25.420 --> 00:45:29.219 Sheila Churchward: Decided that it is too strong a color.
626 00:45:29.400 --> 00:45:35.499 Sheila Churchward: So I just thought I'd go in and change it. But also, someone said it had a lot of… it was a bit wobbly.
627 00:45:35.890 --> 00:45:38.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, it is a little.
628 00:45:38.630 --> 00:45:40.109 Sheila Churchward: It was a bit wobbly.
629 00:45:40.340 --> 00:45:42.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, so if you don't…
630 00:45:42.270 --> 00:45:51.749 Sheila Churchward: It doesn't show the points of contention. We have a point of… we have two points of contention on this, and I was asked if I would sort it out.
631 00:45:51.970 --> 00:45:55.220 Sheila Churchward: Right. The color, I don't think, is difficult, but…
632 00:45:56.090 --> 00:45:58.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Were you in the wrong place for the color?
633 00:45:58.920 --> 00:46:01.699 Sheila Churchward: Yes, I know, it has to… we'll have to go into.
634 00:46:01.700 --> 00:46:03.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Close that column down, will you?
635 00:46:03.700 --> 00:46:04.380 Sheila Churchward: tools.
636 00:46:04.780 --> 00:46:08.980 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, whoa, stop. Go down to where it says Cycleways.
637 00:46:09.180 --> 00:46:11.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And… Go down to where…
638 00:46:11.310 --> 00:46:12.259 John Roberts: the check is.
639 00:46:12.260 --> 00:46:14.589 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hover over the… that cogwheel.
640 00:46:14.850 --> 00:46:17.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on the cogwheel at the right. 8, well…
641 00:46:17.180 --> 00:46:17.550 John Roberts: Nope.
642 00:46:17.550 --> 00:46:19.459 Stuart Bacon: No, not that one. No.
643 00:46:19.460 --> 00:46:20.300 John Roberts: No, that one…
644 00:46:20.530 --> 00:46:21.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Appropriate on the ladder.
645 00:46:21.850 --> 00:46:24.169 Stuart Bacon: Otherwise, it becomes a cog.
646 00:46:25.620 --> 00:46:28.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sheila, come down to your left, to the left-hand column.
647 00:46:28.230 --> 00:46:30.150 Sheila Churchward: My left-hand column here.
648 00:46:30.150 --> 00:46:31.440 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, that's it right.
649 00:46:31.440 --> 00:46:33.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: click on that cogwheel. Yeah.
650 00:46:33.810 --> 00:46:36.149 Sheila Churchward: And then I have to click on that one and change.
651 00:46:36.150 --> 00:46:38.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's style.
652 00:46:38.470 --> 00:46:39.290 Andrew Clegg: Kyle.
653 00:46:39.650 --> 00:46:40.900 Sheila Churchward: our style.
654 00:46:41.070 --> 00:46:41.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
655 00:46:42.010 --> 00:46:43.670 Sheila Churchward: And then I changed the color.
656 00:46:44.170 --> 00:46:45.659 John Roberts: If you click on color…
657 00:46:46.510 --> 00:46:48.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep, just click on it and change it.
658 00:46:48.090 --> 00:46:48.569 John Roberts: appreciate your peer.
659 00:46:49.840 --> 00:46:58.699 Sheila Churchward: Well, they wanted something nicer, but it has to stand out. And I… I thought the purple was really quite good. If I go for a bit lighter purple…
660 00:46:59.080 --> 00:47:00.250 Sheila Churchward: That's better, isn't it?
661 00:47:00.500 --> 00:47:01.779 Stuart Bacon: And don't forget to press…
662 00:47:02.940 --> 00:47:04.449 John Roberts: Sheila, press save.
663 00:47:04.730 --> 00:47:06.470 John Roberts: Down the bottom right-hand corner.
664 00:47:09.280 --> 00:47:14.119 Sheila Churchward: So, as a better. Now, the point of contention is just here.
665 00:47:15.230 --> 00:47:17.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, click on the layer, bring up your record.
666 00:47:19.560 --> 00:47:29.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on the record in the left-hand side, yep, and go into the edit button, the pencil item, and now zoom in.
667 00:47:29.680 --> 00:47:36.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: On the map, just zoom in until you get to your point of… there you go, now you can find your point of contention. Which one is it?
668 00:47:36.010 --> 00:47:43.240 Sheila Churchward: It's just here. We… you see, just there, that black dot, is a… It's a warning.
669 00:47:43.410 --> 00:47:53.730 Sheila Churchward: To say that, you know, you're coming… people… this is cycle and pathway… cycle and footway, and it's a warning there to say to people, you are going to cross this road.
670 00:47:54.010 --> 00:47:54.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right?
671 00:47:55.580 --> 00:47:59.159 Sheila Churchward: We wanted… when we talked to highways.
672 00:47:59.370 --> 00:48:06.959 Sheila Churchward: The people in the area wanted another warning here, And we were refused it.
673 00:48:07.380 --> 00:48:14.259 Sheila Churchward: But what happens is that traffic comes up the road, turns left, and goes in here.
674 00:48:14.870 --> 00:48:17.580 Sheila Churchward: And it… this is a private road.
675 00:48:18.180 --> 00:48:18.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
676 00:48:19.500 --> 00:48:21.820 Sheila Churchward: And the… the problem is that
677 00:48:22.460 --> 00:48:25.900 Sheila Churchward: People come in here and turn left to go down there.
678 00:48:26.520 --> 00:48:27.929 Sheila Churchward: Because it's easier.
679 00:48:28.170 --> 00:48:35.239 Sheila Churchward: And I don't have to go all the way up here, lost my mouse, around the corner, back around.
680 00:48:35.490 --> 00:48:37.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, people alike.
681 00:48:37.710 --> 00:48:43.280 Sheila Churchward: And there's… Because… Vans aren't aware.
682 00:48:43.470 --> 00:48:49.889 Sheila Churchward: really, that this is a cycle and footway. Cyclists are coming down, or up.
683 00:48:51.000 --> 00:48:51.580 Andrew Clegg: Thank you.
684 00:48:51.580 --> 00:48:56.319 Sheila Churchward: You know, the… we want to have Another bollard there.
685 00:48:57.440 --> 00:49:03.089 Sheila Churchward: So I've been asked to progress having another bollard there with highways.
686 00:49:04.860 --> 00:49:09.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right, but you want to put a bollard in as a separate item, a separate layer.
687 00:49:10.630 --> 00:49:17.099 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because this is a line layer at the moment, and you've drawn the line, but now you want to put in a point on the line.
688 00:49:18.590 --> 00:49:23.999 Sheila Churchward: So, on the layer, I can't have more than one item. I can't have lines and points.
689 00:49:24.000 --> 00:49:37.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can't, exactly. You can only have one type of geometry on each layer, so you have either a line, or a point, or a polygon, but only one of each. But on the other hand, it's very simple to add another item to your…
690 00:49:39.040 --> 00:49:40.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: layers.
691 00:49:40.110 --> 00:49:40.850 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
692 00:49:41.100 --> 00:49:45.530 Sheila Churchward: The trouble is, you see, this is… that P belongs to highways.
693 00:49:46.530 --> 00:49:47.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
694 00:49:47.750 --> 00:49:48.619 John Roberts: I won't quit.
695 00:49:48.620 --> 00:49:52.040 Sheila Churchward: We want highways to put another P in there.
696 00:49:53.200 --> 00:49:58.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We can do it! That road, the crossroad is a private road.
697 00:49:58.430 --> 00:49:59.110 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
698 00:49:59.340 --> 00:50:02.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So shouldn't the sign be at the other, at the left-hand end?
699 00:50:04.810 --> 00:50:05.550 Sheila Churchward: Here.
700 00:50:05.550 --> 00:50:07.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Should be a no entry, shouldn't they?
701 00:50:07.140 --> 00:50:12.599 Sheila Churchward: Oh, no, no, the people that live there have put a notice on this bank saying.
702 00:50:13.040 --> 00:50:15.120 Sheila Churchward: Carry on for Millbury.
703 00:50:15.200 --> 00:50:16.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do not turn here.
704 00:50:16.620 --> 00:50:17.510 Andrew Clegg: Hmm…
705 00:50:17.900 --> 00:50:21.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And all the white van, man, men, sorry, white van men ignore that.
706 00:50:21.810 --> 00:50:25.110 Sheila Churchward: Well, you see, they've got,
707 00:50:25.410 --> 00:50:31.350 Sheila Churchward: They've got auto… automatic system that actually tells them to turn left there, because it's quicker.
708 00:50:31.990 --> 00:50:34.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, GPS getting in the way.
709 00:50:34.150 --> 00:50:35.350 Sheila Churchward: It does, rather.
710 00:50:35.350 --> 00:50:36.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hmm.
711 00:50:36.150 --> 00:50:42.750 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, this is probably not very helpful. Yeah, this is probably not very helpful, Sheila, but with us.
712 00:50:42.970 --> 00:50:53.939 Andrew Clegg: We live near a quarry, and we know the quarry man very quite well, and if we want to block something, we just ask him to bring down a bit of stone, a big lumber.
713 00:50:55.570 --> 00:51:00.560 Sheila Churchward: Well, we tried that. Well, we, we put, There's…
714 00:51:01.260 --> 00:51:18.169 Sheila Churchward: these pop… these things, you know, those road things you get, those, yeah, those orange things. We put those in the middle, and they keep… well, not us even, it's… it's the people who… these… the people who live in those two houses, they put the bar… they put them up.
715 00:51:18.300 --> 00:51:32.830 Andrew Clegg: And they… they're knocked down, or moved. They just squashed them, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I've got a whole lot of squash ball art, squash cones in my… Cones, that's it. Because I'm a flood warden, and they get squashed every time it floods.
716 00:51:32.830 --> 00:51:36.289 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What you're looking for, Sheila, is a dragon's tooth.
717 00:51:36.730 --> 00:51:37.640 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
718 00:51:38.290 --> 00:51:39.350 Andrew Clegg: Bye.
719 00:51:39.520 --> 00:51:44.250 Sheila Churchward: Well, thank you very much. I, I know, I realize what you… I'll.
720 00:51:45.120 --> 00:51:47.810 Sheila Churchward: I do have another… The other question…
721 00:51:47.810 --> 00:51:50.999 John Roberts: you mentioned, Sheila, is that your line is a bit wiggly?
722 00:51:51.150 --> 00:51:52.610 Sheila Churchward: Yes, I see.
723 00:51:53.210 --> 00:51:57.089 John Roberts: If you go there, if you click there, that's it.
724 00:51:59.530 --> 00:52:03.200 Sheila Churchward: It's, you know, pity I can't do…
725 00:52:03.350 --> 00:52:06.189 Andrew Clegg: sort of… oh, I can, sort of, can't I?
726 00:52:06.390 --> 00:52:07.160 Sheila Churchward: That's better.
727 00:52:07.160 --> 00:52:10.980 John Roberts: Wherever you click on that line, you will create a point where you can move.
728 00:52:12.240 --> 00:52:13.070 Stuart Bacon: If you go… if you.
729 00:52:13.070 --> 00:52:21.839 Sheila Churchward: Oh, where I can move. I always thought it was a point, I can't even move on that point.
730 00:52:21.840 --> 00:52:24.799 John Roberts: Wherever you click on the line you've drawn.
731 00:52:25.010 --> 00:52:25.770 Sheila Churchward: Hmm.
732 00:52:26.020 --> 00:52:28.650 John Roberts: You'll create a point where you can move it.
733 00:52:30.250 --> 00:52:38.839 Stuart Bacon: And if you want to then delete it, under where it says Cycleways, and you've got the three icons there on the left-hand side, under featured.
734 00:52:38.840 --> 00:52:39.500 Sheila Churchward: Correct.
735 00:52:40.100 --> 00:52:41.880 Stuart Bacon: If you click on the left one.
736 00:52:42.570 --> 00:52:46.730 Stuart Bacon: That allows you to delete a point when you then click on it on the line.
737 00:52:47.640 --> 00:52:48.680 Sheila Churchward: Oh, I see.
738 00:52:50.850 --> 00:52:51.630 Sheila Churchward: Oh.
739 00:52:52.200 --> 00:52:58.579 Sheila Churchward: Well, thank you very much. I'm… I'm… I'll have to leave you in a minute, because I'm going to a sifting
740 00:52:58.820 --> 00:53:07.849 Sheila Churchward: email out at home. We're going to have a Teams meeting to sift through some applicants for our new Engagement Coordinator.
741 00:53:07.880 --> 00:53:08.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
742 00:53:08.880 --> 00:53:09.370 Stuart Bacon: Mmm.
743 00:53:09.370 --> 00:53:10.470 John Roberts: Best of luck.
744 00:53:10.470 --> 00:53:21.889 Sheila Churchward: Well, I've got all my paperwork done, I did it all yesterday, and a bit this morning, and did what I thought my, my, my scoring, so hopefully the…
745 00:53:22.820 --> 00:53:35.259 Sheila Churchward: Hopefully, there'll be some sort of agreement between the four of us of who we're going to employ, or who we're going to interview in a couple of weeks' time.
746 00:53:36.440 --> 00:53:41.249 John Roberts: But I'm assuming that… If they're offered the job, there'll be a trial period anyway.
747 00:53:41.440 --> 00:53:51.429 Sheila Churchward: Yes, 3 months. It's a 3 months and a 6… it's 3 months and 6 months, basically, because we're being assisted in this process with a contractor.
748 00:53:51.540 --> 00:53:58.370 Sheila Churchward: And the contract finishes in October, so we thought if we had a 3-month period and a 6 months.
749 00:53:58.640 --> 00:54:01.820 Sheila Churchward: We could actually work it in.
750 00:54:01.980 --> 00:54:05.819 Sheila Churchward: So that we didn't wait the 6 months, and the contract was going.
751 00:54:07.280 --> 00:54:09.609 Sheila Churchward: You know, so… oh, yeah.
752 00:54:09.760 --> 00:54:13.209 Sheila Churchward: It's all very difficult when you've got to pay people to help you.
753 00:54:14.880 --> 00:54:19.359 Sheila Churchward: Because there's not enough… there's not enough parish councillors to do the work.
754 00:54:19.520 --> 00:54:22.870 Sheila Churchward: So we have to employ people to help us in certain things.
755 00:54:22.870 --> 00:54:23.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
756 00:54:26.850 --> 00:54:35.120 Sheila Churchward: Well, thank you very much. I think… I think I'd better leave you now. I look forward to talking to you again on another interesting subject.
757 00:54:35.510 --> 00:54:37.860 John Roberts: Bye-bye, Sheila.
758 00:54:37.870 --> 00:54:38.640 Andrew Clegg: Thank you.
759 00:54:38.640 --> 00:54:39.610 Sheila Churchward: Bye, then.
760 00:54:39.610 --> 00:54:40.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Take care.
761 00:54:44.700 --> 00:54:50.239 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Stuart, the burden falls to you to come up with something interesting.
762 00:54:54.240 --> 00:54:58.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You're looking very delightfully interesting.
763 00:55:01.200 --> 00:55:02.469 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You're very muted.
764 00:55:06.560 --> 00:55:10.150 Andrew Clegg: Yes, you're muted, stuart.
765 00:55:13.830 --> 00:55:15.680 Andrew Clegg: He probably realised that.
766 00:55:16.230 --> 00:55:17.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: David.
767 00:55:18.520 --> 00:55:21.520 Stuart Bacon: Telling me my username and password are incorrect.
768 00:55:21.710 --> 00:55:23.940 Stuart Bacon: Same one I've been using for years.
769 00:55:25.600 --> 00:55:29.170 Stuart Bacon: Same username, I've been using for years, so I know that's right.
770 00:55:30.710 --> 00:55:34.219 Andrew Clegg: Oh, I'm glad you have this kind of problem, as well.
771 00:55:38.390 --> 00:55:39.860 Stuart Bacon: Or a different username.
772 00:55:45.010 --> 00:55:45.949 Stuart Bacon: There we go.
773 00:55:49.130 --> 00:55:51.910 Stuart Bacon: Fair.
774 00:55:52.360 --> 00:55:56.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Raises the question of how many accounts do you have in Paris Online?
775 00:55:57.430 --> 00:56:05.600 Stuart Bacon: Admin and Clark, poems…
776 00:56:06.090 --> 00:56:08.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: In Clark, in Clark of 5 places.
777 00:56:10.650 --> 00:56:13.930 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no, not that many, fortunately.
778 00:56:19.860 --> 00:56:24.939 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And yet again, I am forced to say that your new camera He's splendiferous.
779 00:56:25.550 --> 00:56:29.370 Andrew Clegg: It's quite good, isn't it? It's not a… it's a Logitech.
780 00:56:29.690 --> 00:56:32.309 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I got it fairly cheaply, I think.
781 00:56:33.250 --> 00:56:37.790 Andrew Clegg: Logitechs always work well with Macs, I think. You know…
782 00:56:40.700 --> 00:56:46.200 Andrew Clegg: Oh, I'm looking outside the window, I think my daughter may have arrived, but she'll ring the bell.
783 00:56:49.870 --> 00:56:51.579 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Complete with her daughter.
784 00:56:52.360 --> 00:57:05.119 Andrew Clegg: No, no, no, it's just… it's just, it's just my daughter, it's not other… my… my grandson is in the Lake District, and he's… he's 24. It's not… they're not little.
785 00:57:06.250 --> 00:57:09.200 Andrew Clegg: He climbs up mountains at weekends.
786 00:57:09.970 --> 00:57:10.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, fun!
787 00:57:11.710 --> 00:57:12.390 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
788 00:57:16.190 --> 00:57:19.119 Stuart Bacon: It's a… it's a relatively straightforward question.
789 00:57:21.990 --> 00:57:24.519 John Roberts: What, how to log in to Parish Online?
790 00:57:24.870 --> 00:57:28.910 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, Mark, can somebody help me with that? No.
791 00:57:29.620 --> 00:57:32.969 Stuart Bacon: Now, looking at addresses and recent changes.
792 00:57:33.560 --> 00:57:36.999 Andrew Clegg: Sorry, folks, I'm… I'm… I'm going. Bye.
793 00:57:37.000 --> 00:57:37.940 Stuart Bacon: And bye-bye.
794 00:57:37.940 --> 00:57:38.320 John Roberts: Andrew.
795 00:57:38.320 --> 00:57:39.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nice to see you.
796 00:57:40.890 --> 00:57:44.100 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, so looking at addresses and… Recent changes.
797 00:57:44.650 --> 00:57:45.160 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
798 00:57:45.650 --> 00:57:50.899 Stuart Bacon: Is there a way to, sort of, work out what
799 00:57:52.200 --> 00:57:58.580 Stuart Bacon: that recent change is, where it just says modified attributes. What that actually means…
800 00:57:59.130 --> 00:58:12.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, I think you'll find, if you check the old address record for the same place, you'll see it is hugely more detailed. So I think that they've changed the attributes just by reducing the amount of information they're giving you.
801 00:58:13.520 --> 00:58:19.490 Stuart Bacon: Because all I can say… Yeah, I can't see the only person.
802 00:58:19.490 --> 00:58:23.129 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Find one of those that's got both a red and a yellow on the same place.
803 00:58:25.430 --> 00:58:28.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then you can click on… Yeah.
804 00:58:30.470 --> 00:58:37.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that one has got something like 15 or more, and look at that, it's got a huge number of data.
805 00:58:37.540 --> 00:58:42.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And if you go into the recent change, you'll find it shrunk hugely.
806 00:58:45.700 --> 00:58:52.109 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, I think… yeah, see, it's… they've got less than a quarter of the number of columns.
807 00:58:53.730 --> 00:58:54.530 Stuart Bacon: Okay.
808 00:58:54.680 --> 00:58:57.029 Stuart Bacon: So are these the only ones that have…
809 00:58:57.640 --> 00:59:02.049 Stuart Bacon: Is it that the items here are consistent?
810 00:59:03.370 --> 00:59:06.050 Stuart Bacon: Or are these just the elements that have changed?
811 00:59:06.740 --> 00:59:13.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think it depends on where you are, because in my village, every single house is both red and yellow.
812 00:59:13.580 --> 00:59:17.690 John Roberts: Yeah, I was just looking at it, and I'm the same. Everyone is red and yellow.
813 00:59:17.690 --> 00:59:23.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I don't believe that they have indeed changed the records for each of them. I think they've just, issued
814 00:59:24.320 --> 00:59:28.209 Graham Stoddart-Stones: A second layer with the same data, but they've reduced the columns in it.
815 00:59:30.750 --> 00:59:44.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, until that all gets itself sorted out, I'm not sure how useful this layer is, the recent changes. It's obviously helpful for people who've got new developments going up, because I suspect the data goes there much more quickly.
816 00:59:44.980 --> 00:59:49.469 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think I remember, didn't they say that this data now gets updated daily?
817 00:59:51.310 --> 00:59:54.729 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think they update it daily as opposed to once every 6 weeks.
818 00:59:54.730 --> 00:59:59.039 Stuart Bacon: May well be, yeah. Cause, I mean, yeah, the,
819 01:00:01.630 --> 01:00:09.259 Stuart Bacon: The houses there that it's clicked on, are… Some more old.
820 01:00:09.870 --> 01:00:10.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
821 01:00:10.770 --> 01:00:11.800 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
822 01:00:12.950 --> 01:00:14.930 Stuart Bacon: I'm 50 plus year old.
823 01:00:16.360 --> 01:00:23.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I suspect there's a transition period that, you know, we're working our way gradually through all the records, but you're going to have this…
824 01:00:24.010 --> 01:00:29.160 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Duplication whilst they're just making whatever change they make to an address.
825 01:00:29.810 --> 01:00:33.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And as you say, it may not be even noticeable what the change has been.
826 01:00:37.390 --> 01:00:43.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I suspect the change will be in the old record, and then the system says, well, you've changed this, so therefore it has to be a…
827 01:00:43.850 --> 01:00:45.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: A recent change.
828 01:00:45.940 --> 01:00:50.440 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no, and that was what I was getting at, whether that recent changes is a dynamic
829 01:00:50.760 --> 01:00:54.139 Stuart Bacon: Sort of list of what information has been changed.
830 01:00:54.400 --> 01:00:59.460 Stuart Bacon: Or whether it only shows… Always the same headings.
831 01:01:00.280 --> 01:01:06.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, I suspect the data change has been in one of the fields that is not in the recent change layer.
832 01:01:06.270 --> 01:01:06.920 Stuart Bacon: Okay.
833 01:01:09.670 --> 01:01:19.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because they've added new fields to the old addresses, so we never used to have the street reference number, I don't think. I don't remember having the street reference number in there.
834 01:01:19.630 --> 01:01:20.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But now you do.
835 01:01:21.410 --> 01:01:22.620 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, okay.
836 01:01:24.550 --> 01:01:28.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I don't think the street reference number is in the new record, is it? Is it in the recent change?
837 01:01:32.800 --> 01:01:36.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Seemed to remember looking at it earlier and thinking, oh, well, that's what the difference is.
838 01:01:36.890 --> 01:01:42.659 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no, it's not in the recent changes. You've got the UPRN, but not street reference number.
839 01:01:42.960 --> 01:01:44.929 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Exactly, so I think…
840 01:01:45.590 --> 01:01:56.879 Graham Stoddart-Stones: When they add the street reference to the old address, then that triggers a change in the new… in the recent change, because it is a recent change, but the data that has changed isn't in there.
841 01:01:57.630 --> 01:02:04.740 John Roberts: If you go in… if you go in… if you go into the knowledge base, And put addresses.
842 01:02:05.700 --> 01:02:08.800 John Roberts: There's actually an explanation there as to why they've done it.
843 01:02:11.680 --> 01:02:12.470 Stuart Bacon: Okay.
844 01:02:12.970 --> 01:02:15.230 Stuart Bacon: Never thought of having a look at that.
845 01:02:15.230 --> 01:02:16.960 John Roberts: I've only just found it.
846 01:02:26.020 --> 01:02:28.519 Stuart Bacon: Which art… what… what's the article called?
847 01:02:29.280 --> 01:02:30.210 Stuart Bacon: John?
848 01:02:30.210 --> 01:02:34.959 John Roberts: I… I went into the knowledge base, and in the search bar, I put addresses.
849 01:02:35.850 --> 01:02:36.470 Stuart Bacon: Yep.
850 01:02:37.890 --> 01:02:40.989 Stuart Bacon: And it's brought up a list of different articles for me, so…
851 01:02:40.990 --> 01:02:46.159 John Roberts: And then the second one down, how can I see which addresses have been added or changed?
852 01:02:46.160 --> 01:02:47.380 Stuart Bacon: Okay, yep.
853 01:02:49.700 --> 01:02:52.000 John Roberts: I think that's what we're looking for, I'm not sure.
854 01:03:45.600 --> 01:03:48.670 John Roberts: Having said that, it still doesn't make complete sense.
855 01:03:48.670 --> 01:03:52.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, it doesn't. It doesn't actually explain it very well at all, I don't think.
856 01:03:53.190 --> 01:03:58.450 John Roberts: if I look on… if I, say, take my house and go… The new addresses one.
857 01:03:58.840 --> 01:04:04.409 John Roberts: It tells me there's modifications, but I've lived here for 40-odd years, and there's been no changes.
858 01:04:05.760 --> 01:04:13.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And if you look at their explanations, they expect the postcode has changed, or they think that the position of the house has changed, or… Yes.
859 01:04:13.060 --> 01:04:13.550 John Roberts: So.
860 01:04:13.550 --> 01:04:18.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And none of those… I don't think we can trust the information.
861 01:04:18.220 --> 01:04:20.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Correct. Well, that's nothing new.
862 01:04:21.190 --> 01:04:22.120 John Roberts: No.
863 01:04:30.840 --> 01:04:34.639 John Roberts: Okay, well, I'm consistent in saying, sorry, we don't…
864 01:04:34.670 --> 01:04:39.059 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, the info is there, but it's not 100% trustworthy, we're fine.
865 01:04:39.350 --> 01:04:40.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, exactly.
866 01:04:41.410 --> 01:04:44.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Gentlemen, is it time to declare the weekend has started?
867 01:04:45.100 --> 01:04:46.100 John Roberts: I think so.
868 01:04:46.360 --> 01:04:47.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's true.
869 01:04:47.230 --> 01:04:48.199 John Roberts: Jeff's got anything out?
870 01:04:49.380 --> 01:04:52.869 Stuart Bacon: No, no, I was scraping the bottom of the barrel to find that question.
871 01:04:52.870 --> 01:04:57.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: In that case, good news.
872 01:04:57.180 --> 01:04:59.170 John Roberts: I wish you both have a good weekend.
873 01:04:59.170 --> 01:05:00.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you too, take care.
874 01:05:00.120 --> 01:05:01.140 Stuart Bacon: Have a good one, guys.
875 01:05:01.140 --> 01:05:01.500 John Roberts: Bye-bye.
876 01:05:01.500 --> 01:05:02.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: bio…
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