Today’s Links 9/14/2011

  • What happens first in Vegas: bike lanes or bikes? | Grist
    "I can’t help but think of the Interbike show, which will soon descend on the Strip, as it does every year. It’s a jarring juxtaposition: the broken built environment on the outside and the manicured bike utopia on the inside."
  • Producing sweeteners locally – TCLocal
    "Some require industrial facilities and major energy inputs, and a few are dangerous, but many familiar sweeteners will likely remain available into even an uncertain future."
  • First look: renovated sheriff’s station ready for its close-up (altadenablog)
    Visited in elementary school, got fingerprinted even IIRC.
  • Usability in Icons | Stiern
    Do (inexperienced) people understand the "chain" or "globe" icons for creating links in a CMS? I’ve had to do this training myself. I’m torn: on the one hand it would be nice to have something more immediately understandable, on the other it’s not terribly difficult to train people to recognize. (On the third hand, a lot of people don’t get the concept of writing "what you want to be the link" and then highlighting it to create a link right off the bat either.)
  • The Language of Fantasy by David Salo | Fantasy Magazine
    "As fantasy, in books, television, and film, has become more and more mainstream, the idea that every proper fantasy world deserves its own language—or maybe several!—has taken hold."

Digest powered by RSS Digest

Twitter Digest for 2011-09-13

Powered by Twitter Tools

Today’s Links 9/12/2011

Digest powered by RSS Digest

Facebook’s saving grace

The one thing I like about Facebook: birthday reminders. I’m not super about remembering people’s birthdays (I used to be wizard, but that time is long gone), and the weekly reminder of who’s birthday is coming is really nice. Alternately, it’s nice to get little “happy birthday” notes from a weird cross-section of people in one’s life: friends from junior high, high school, and college, including my long-time boyfriend from back in the day; the DM from my weekly D&D game; neighborhood association people; other local friends & acquaintances; and people I know from the internet. Also, my 10th grade biology teacher.

I’ve heard the complaint that Facebook birthday messages are shallow/meaningless, but I don’t find that to be so. For me, it’s just a tiny loose connection that reminds me of a web of people who I may not talk to all the time, but who saw my name and thought well enough to say hi.

(FWIW, I like this feature on the genealogy site Geni, too. It’s how I know my cousins’ birthdays, and that one of them has a wedding anniversary on my birthday.)

What I did on my summer vacation

As it turns out, almost all of the 85+F days we’ve gotten this summer were last week, which was also my vacation and my birthday! I hardly touched the computer; for the most part we alternated between bicycling and watching Harry Potter movies – or Star Trek: Voyager.

On my actual birthday, we biked downtown for coffee and a trip to the Farmers Market. ERN called while I was there and we chatted for a bit while I watched the bees in the garden at the market. We biked home by way of the fancy beer shop, where I picked up some ciders…and EAN called, and we wished each other mutual happy birthdays. 🙂 Did some laundry, talked to Kat, had some BLTs — which were awesome!

The tomato was a gift from a down the street neighbor. A couple of years ago, when we had a ginormous pile of wood chips in the front yard, a couple of little girls came over and asked if they could take some. They took a few wheelbarrow-loads, and we thought nothing more of it. Then one day (Labor Day weekend?) they came over with their dad with a box of tomatoes, some chard, a cucumber, and a little squash, as a thank you gift. So sweet! I gave them a jar of pickles, after we had talked about canning for a bit. The last of the tomatoes went on my birthday BLT.

Then, of course: ride to the river! (I biked to the river on every even-numbered day of my vacation, which I totally didn’t plan.) Set out a bit later than we would’ve liked, so we ended up riding in the hot part of the day. Happily, a great deal of the trail is shaded and there was a pleasant breeze. And of course the hot ride made the cold river even more delightful. As I said to some random person: “It’s fucking freezing, and then it’s awesome!” Dunked in the river a couple of times, had some snacks, basked in the sun. And then our friend L and her boyfriend showed up totally out of the blue! So that was lovely. We stayed late, until the sun passed through the trees and came out on the other side. (In this photo of the river, the stand of trees on the left side.) We all rode most of the way back together as the sun fell low in the sky, arriving home at dusk. The ride was glorious, perfectly pleasant temperature, and I just flew down the trail.

I ended my day with a trip to the Fred Meyer (yes, really), steak and fries, root beer float, cake, movies, and a Lego set. 🙂

It might end up having been my last summer ride to the river this year; today the heat wave broke, and I don’t know that we’ll see another stretch of heat. I’m happy that on our other rides last week we managed to push a little further before doubling back to relax on the river. I had my longest ride ever at just shy of 32 miles. Next year I’m hoping to bike all the way to the Quarry Park in Tenino to swim and camp. It feels doable now, which is something to keep me fired up through the winter to come.

Twitter Digest for 2011-09-11

Powered by Twitter Tools

Bicycling with Android

One of the things I was hoping to use my G2 for was tracking my bike rides, and to that end I’ve tried a variety of apps. (Unfortunately for the purposes of this post, I don’t remember all of them, and have uninstalled most of them.) So far, the two best of the bunch have been Strava & My Tracks. Strava has the better start/stop interface, and My Tracks tracks more of the data that I’m interested in. Specifically, I want to know my max speed, and I like the graph comparing speed with incline.

But I’m still only likely to use them when for whatever reason my trusty old cyclometer isn’t available…even though my cyclometer doesn’t map my ride or export it or post it to the internet. Because it has a nice mount on my handlebars, doesn’t have to be woken up or wait for a gps signal to start, and I don’t have to remember to stop it manually when my ride is over. And most of the time, I know what my route looked like, since probably 90% of my rides are to work or to the grocery store.

I’ve even got my own online tracking setup, integrated in the same site where I (usually) track my weight & sleep and keep a daily journal, which I built myself in Drupal. So when I wanted to make myself a list of which rides were commutes so I could more easily report that for work, I could add a checkbox and write a view in what I’m pretty sure was less than an hour. I can sort my rides by distance, time, max speed…not yet average speed though; I’m waiting for a patch to a module. Plus I can make notes about the ride: interesting things I saw, the weather, etc. And it takes just a couple of minutes; usually I record the day’s cycling stats off of the cyclometer just before bed.

So I guess it’s a higher hurdle than I expected, for a cycling app to be better than the cyclometer I’ve been using for 5 (?) years!

(I’m still interested in recommendations, though, if anybody’s using something they really like.)

Update: one other feature that none of the apps have that I love on my cyclometer: a thermometer. I don’t use it for tracking, but it’s nice to know the temp as I’m riding.

Twitter Digest for 2011-09-10

Powered by Twitter Tools