# Friday, May 15, 2009
posted by: Martin Criminale

And so it begins.

A few days ago under the affects of new bike euphoria I Tweeted, "Can I get a (Ellsworth) witness?!" Sheesh, talk about starting things off with a cliché. :(

But screw that, a few days ago Shelley and I received the bulk of the stuff needed to build our first full-suspension mountain bike tandem and it rocks. It ROCKS. You hear me?

First I gotta thank the 'sponsors'.

Ellsworth - this company is one of most outstanding mountain bike companies in the world. All their shiz is still made right here in America (not just assembled here or designed here) and lucky for me they launched their own recovery plan whereby new bikes were discounted $700 if you sent them any(!) old complete bike or frame. Ellsworth gets the tax write off, needy people get a working used bike and Shelley and I get a brand spanking new ride. Martin is no dummy, I jumped at the offer.

WebCyclery (and Henry Able) - this company is actually a brick and mortar retailer in OR but they happen to have a big web presence and phenomenal customer service. Oh yeah, the happen to be tandem experts. It helps that Henry is a tandem-crazy person himself (he has a road, full-suspension and single speed tandem at least…) and the guy is passionate about riding them. Way passionate. Henry answered all of my questions patiently and even though I did not get ALL of the parts through WebCyclery they were never anything but fantastic. I did a 15 year stint in the bicycle industry and this is why IBDs succeed.

This morning I finally broke down the boxes, put the frame in my repair stand and sorted through all the parts to see if anything was not going to work or was missing. Here are those pictures. Turns out the 350 mm Ritchey Pro seatpost I ordered for myself will not be long enough. Luckily though Ritchey makes a Comp in a 400 mm length so that's now on the way. Even though I triple and quadruple checked the advertised dimensions against my single and tandem bikes, there is nothing like dropping 5 large on a bike that you have never seen in person to make you sweat… I was not absolutely positive it would fit us until it showed and thank GOODNESS it will be fine. Shelley will actually need a 350 mm post and the stoker top tube is plenty roomy. And with the 400 mm post in front and one of my 15 cm stems it will be fine for me. One word: relief. One more: Anticipation. One more: I'm calling in sick as soon as it's ready! Oops, that's more than one but you get the idea.

I was able to recycle some parts from an old tandem (the captain's cranks) and from my single (headset, shifters, derailleurs, saddle and pedals) and had a some tires and tubes and a saddle and pedals lying around for Shelley but everything else is new.

Speaking of new, I love the fork I got for this bike. LOVE it. It's the 2009 Fox Talas. OMG, this is one sweet way to hang a wheel on a frame.

ASIDE - I had to sell two tandems to afford this one! I sold the beautiful, custom Ti Cycles steel bike with the daVinci Designs drivetrain that Cameron and I used to ride in the Courage Classic to a good friend and I will need to sell our Rodriguez mountain bike tandem as well. I'm okay with this. :)

What's next? I need to build the wheels and then assemble the bike. I'm still waiting for two parts to arrive, one of which is that longer seatpost, but my goal is to be in the dirt one week from Saturday. Yes!

Friday, May 15, 2009 6:29:43 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

Bookmark and Share
# Sunday, May 10, 2009
posted by: Martin Criminale

Most of us use iTunes and most of us experience the frustration with having to sync it with your music or video folders each time you add or subtract stuff from those folders.

Well say hello to iTunes Library Updater. This program will let you sync any combination of folders with iTunes and let's you specify lots of useful options in the process.

Using the GUI is neat but what if you want to run this program automatically? Simple, you create a script and run it as a Scheduled Task.

  • Grab a copy of of the iTLU batch script.
  • Edit the script per the included instructions to include all of your folders.
  • Save the script to your hard drive.
  • From Control Panel, add a new Scheduled Task that will run this script daily.

Now that's more like it.

Sunday, May 10, 2009 4:12:19 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Bookmark and Share
# Saturday, May 09, 2009
posted by: Martin Criminale

Oh. My. Freaking. God.

A friend posted this video on Facebook today:

and it is quite possibly the funniest IT movie I have ever seen in my entire life. That means it's damn funny. You have to watch it many times to catch all the jokes, like when:

  • the IT guy keeps shooting the character in Halo in the balls while talking to the sales guy
  • the IT guy opens the sales guy's mailbox in Outlook and deletes the sent mail
  • the email with the warning about not rebooting the web server is displayed in huge, red letters
  • the IT guy blames the sales guy for making him take down the web server incorrectly
  • the IT guy blames the guy in the server room for taking down the Exchange server
  • the sales guy admits to having the same icon arrangement for 8-9 years
  • "You can't arrange them by penis."

But I digress. In the video the IT guy mentions posting a picture of the sales guy's desktop on Boing Boing and so of course I had to go there right away. Here is what I just saw:

http://www.boingboing.net/2009/05/08/woman-kills-elephant.html

This woman trained for months so that she could use a bow big enough to bring down an elephant? Oh man, how many more things could you spend months doing something useful? Reading comments like, "I waited overnight to make sure it was dead." make me sick. Obviously death was NOT very quick.

Sport hunting is ridiculous. And when I say ridiculous I of course mean that the hunter is retarded. Hello, if you're going to kill it, how about you eat it too? And then how about you donate everything you can't eat to organizations or industries that can use the stuff. You know, parts like hooves and hide, etc.

If you're going to waste your time, at least do something that does not require anything else to die. How about that.

Tune in next week when Martin goes off about something else.

Saturday, May 09, 2009 12:04:50 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Bookmark and Share
# Tuesday, May 05, 2009
posted by: Martin Criminale

Today at work one of our faculty sent out a link to a video and on a whim I watched it:

It was fascinating.

The speaker - Hans Rosling - started an organization called Gapminder (as in the British slogan "Mind the gap!" that pertains to their subway system) that endeavors to take existing data and display/present/explain it in such a manner that allows the layman (read: me and maybe you too) to understand it. Nice.

His premise is that we don't need new databases or more, obscure repositories to store data; rather we need to get it out to the public and make it accessible because by and large we do not know the truth about our world as it exists today.

There are so many noble causes out there but this one really struck a chord with me.

Tuesday, May 05, 2009 8:38:59 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Bookmark and Share
# Friday, May 01, 2009
posted by: Martin Criminale

What a bust…!

To fill you in, some time ago I embarked on a diet to see if I could improve my climbing a bit (I'm talking about cycling here) and today is a little over six weeks from the time I began.

Did it work? Well… it might have helped a little but it also reduced the fun factor in my life quite a bit. Like I said in my original post, there is nothing like trying to eliminate something from your life to make you want it liken ever before. When it comes to food that is. In my case I cut out alcohol and 'extraneous' sugar meaning deserts and the like.

And of course as luck would have it (not), as soon as I decided to do this we were invited out for drinks several times and went to a free dinner with unlimited wine, etc., etc. Sigh.

The whole point was to try and lose a few pounds for this hilly race I did last Sunday. When I started I lost four or five pounds right away and then leveled off. After a few weeks I gained back a couple of pounds because I think I started eating larger portions to compensate for not having the stuff I was craving. Then I leveled off again so the net result was I only lost about three pounds.

That's not a big amount of gain for a comparatively large amount of anguish and conscious self-control. What did Martin learn? Totally cutting out something is not that hard but the benefit and reward is also not so great. Portion control on the other hand is obviously the key to more significant gains (or loses in this case) and MUCH harder to enforce.

Major revelation, eh? I know, I know… it just takes me longer than most to figure these things out. :(

Friday, May 01, 2009 5:12:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Bookmark and Share