Thursday, August 13, 2009
Eve of shipping
getting all the stuff together. Hoping nothing critical ends up on a boat for 6-8 weeks.
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at
5:32 AM
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Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Visa
got it today! Also tried on the Oakley Jawbones ... amazing optics, even if they make you look like a bit of a geek
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max
at
5:28 AM
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Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Monday, August 10, 2009
Guh?
decent wheels, ultegra components, carbon fork and ... platform pedals?
Posted by
max
at
5:27 AM
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Aston Martin
with a GT-R thrown in as a bonus. Will I miss seeing all the exotics? Maybe a little.
Posted by
max
at
5:26 AM
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prius turbo
We made a very quick trip up to Alta to get our sleeping bags for the big move. Tons of traffic on the way back, and we were behind this:
A prius with shiny aftermarket exhaust tips! hilarious!
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max
at
5:24 AM
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Sunday, August 09, 2009
Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Zoe's first ice cream cone
She has gotten bites of parental ice cream cones before (including a chocolate chip cone which sent her into a caffeine fueled rampage for hours), but this was her first "Zoe-only" cone.
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at
5:04 PM
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Sunday, August 02, 2009
Alta
We went up to Alta with Christine and Terry, with a stop at Awful Annies (slooooooooow service) and the American River. The American river felt like a hot tub in comparison to the liquid nitrogen cooled waters of the Bear River, so we all (zoe included) floated around the river. I was happy that I remembered our Five Ten river tennies, which kept my feet dent and gash free.
After taking a few minutes to rest, I extended the deck railing and added a small triangular deck section in anticipation of one day finishing the railing for real.
Meanwhile, the ladies went off in search of blackberries.
After grilling some chicken and corn, we fired up the rotenburo.
Zoe put up her usual fuss about the tent, but was much better than previous attempts. Here she is, full of energy the next morning
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max
at
5:38 AM
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Friday, July 31, 2009
head sweat
I just discovered that the TOP of my head sweats when I eat hot food. What the hell?
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max
at
8:49 PM
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Thursday, July 30, 2009
Monday, July 27, 2009
Softball
Today we played (and beat) the dreaded Invitrogen team in our IM softball league. We were doing some aggressive bas running, and during my dash for home, I hooked my thumb into my pocket tby accident and heard a soft ripping sound. It turned out that my thumb had split my shorts down the seam, and I spent the next inning looking for someone with duct tape.
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max
at
5:17 AM
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Kenji's 80th Birthday Party
Was at his studio:
with grandma:
and grandpa:
Grandpa is 45.7 times older than Zoe.
Kenji and Gail:
Kenji as always had brought a bizarre Japanese snack food, which looks like... well let's face it, it looks like cat poo
But Zoe didn't seem to mind the appearance:
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max
at
5:13 AM
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Sunday, July 19, 2009
Smart's crossing
Kenji and I built an anti-Zoe railing, followed by a trip down to the river. Christina spotted a rattlesnake on the path! Here's Zoe enjoying the water
Zoe and the corn
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5:07 AM
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Saturday, July 18, 2009
Monday, July 13, 2009
Zoe's first successful potty
Zoe's current favorite book is A potty for Me, which I have gotten tired of reading, but chloe can't get enough of. We didn't really think she understood very much of it, but then she started ripping off her diaper, like the child in the book, so Zoe and I went potty shopping last weekend.
I pulled them all off the chelves and had her sit in each one (no Jackass style shanigans -- she kept her diapers on!) and then choose one. I put the Chosen Potty in the cart, and she started frantically saying "THAT THAT THAT" and pointing to the potty, so I gave it to her
which also did not seem to satisfy her. It turned out that she wanted to have the potty in the cart with her sitting on it.
Anyway, from time to time since then she has had a seat on the potty, but since we just bought it, we hadn't given much thought to how we were going to train her. Tonight we were getting her ready for a bath, when she sat down daintily on the potty, smiled, then grimaced, and peed in her potty.
We are very proud of her
Posted by
max
at
4:56 AM
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Sunday, July 12, 2009
Sunday, July 05, 2009
parade
Dutch flat parade:
The highlight was a very generoud fireman from the Placer County FD, who threw a plush stuffed bunny out the window to Zoe
Thank you guys!!
From there it was back to the cabin for some chainsawin' while Terry and Ian took the ZZN off of our hands for a few hours (THANK YOU GUYS!). Since the last visit, the local deer had eaten the apples and almost every leaf off of my newly planted fuji tree. I think the tree is dead, but I made a makeshift fortress around it and gave it around 200 gallons of water.
Little bastards.
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max
at
4:49 AM
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Saturday, July 04, 2009
American River
We drove down to the American River with Terry and Ian for an easy access river dip. Most of the yokel population had the same idea, but it was still a good time. The water is warm, and Zoe seemed to really enjoy it.
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max
at
4:48 AM
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Friday, June 26, 2009
Alta
Alta and Smart's Crossing with Matthias, Monica, Christina and Terry. That water is sooooooo cold!
Posted by
max
at
11:29 PM
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friday after work ride
route here. Along the way, I passed the Canyon School: 4 teachers for 69 students -- pretty good! I also passed a guy on Pinehurst who had set up a full drum kit and was practicing. Thankfully, he was pretty good.
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max
at
11:26 PM
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diaper soundz
part of our evolution from normal people to parents has involved a modification of our aural awareness; sounds (or lack of sounds) that would have no significance at all without kids now take on profound significance. Suspicious lack of crying? the soft squeak of a forbidden pantry door opening? We're on it.
Occasionally, despite our better judgment, we might ignore one of these disturbances in the force, and we always end up paying for it. Tonight was just such an occasion. I was most of the way through a new hangboard workout, when I heard an almost imperceptibly soft ripping sound coming from the crib. "Bah", I thought. "I'll finish the last two 20 twenty second hangs and THEN check it out".
After the penultimate hang, I thought better of waiting and gingerly crept into Zoe's bedroom, where I found a fully awake and smiling Zoe standing in her crib. As I walked in, she held something out to me. In the low light, it could have been a bottle, but it wasn't. It was a diaper with a full poo payload, and by some miracle, the crib was not a nightmare of smeared excrement (although a lot of cleaning was still required). I guess it's time to buy her a potty.
Posted by
max
at
5:58 AM
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Saturday, June 20, 2009
drool
It's enough to turn you into a fixie riding hipster doofus!
you give me the frame, and I'll buy the skinny jeans and studded belt. and stop showering.
Posted by
max
at
5:10 AM
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lesson 1
Lesson 1:
the lens is the thing with "Lens" engraved on it.
Posted by
max
at
4:59 AM
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Friday, June 19, 2009
whee!
another slow but fun ride
http://veloroutes.org/bikemaps/?route=33683
Posted by
max
at
6:35 AM
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Thursday, June 18, 2009
Bike repaired!
Today I bought some parts to undo my ham-fisted "repair" yesterday and take care of a few other things. A new chain was at the top of the list, of course. I bought a SRAM chain from wheel girl and Performance was having a sale on the excellent Forté dual sided pedal (SPD on one side). I also had bought new brake pads to replace the ossified pads from Montano. After an hour of work, everything is working great! The brakes actually stop the bike now, and the pedals down creak and pop like they used to. It took an 18" pipe wrench to remove the old pedals. One thing that I discovered about converting a "normal" frame to a ss/fixie: those track frames with long horizontal dropouts are looking GOOD!
Posted by
max
at
6:36 AM
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Bike "repair"
I got a flat tire during my lunchtime ride today, and it was on the rear wheel. I guess it hadn't occurred to me, but changing the tire is a little more of a pain in the ass with a single speed. Not having done any bike work for a long time, I managed to completely screw everything up. I managed to pop one of the chain pins out (first time ever for that), and spent the next few hours trying to get it in. Predictably, the chain was too short -2 links :(.
Posted by
max
at
6:25 AM
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Monday, June 15, 2009
more light stuff
A 1 hour ride showed no signs of heating on the lamp.
Run length should be 5 hours, unless I calculated something wrong.
Also worth noting, a similar output NiteRider lamp (110 lm) costs $130, compared to the $10 driver + $8 LED + 3$ optic + 2$ PVC + 10$ niMh batteries.
Posted by
max
at
9:58 PM
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cheap and easy bike light
I built a cheap and somewhat easy bike light for my new twenty year old KHS bike. The design principles were:
1)Relatively bright
2)Efficient
3)Small
4)Lightweight
5)Low power
6)Makes me a sammich
I came up with this: 350 mA micropuck driving a Cree XR-E R2 bin ( a bit brighter than q5 bin, so 114 or so lm). I decided to use the same plastic lens that I used for my previous headlamp, and bought the R2 pre mounted on a star from DealExtreme (it took AGES to show up, as usual, but their support is ok). I'm still working on what to do with the battery back, but this is what I have so far:
1)use hole saw to drill handlebar radius hole into a PVC angle
2)Drill holes at the front and rear for zip-tying
3)solder together micropuck and star
4)cut slot in side of angle,insert metal washer (I actually used a random piece of metal from one of our Ikea dressers that was left over)
5)Bond star to washer with thermal adhesive: thin layer only, as usual.
6)Figure out some kind of removable battery pack: I ripped a plug out of an old nonfunctional wifi router
7)Mount to handlebars with zip ties, and small piece of rubber. It's the same idea as mounting a bike computer, for example.
8)Here's a shot of the plug
The shoddiness of the plug is purely to dissuade someone from stealing such a fine piece of hardware, and NOT because I am a disaster with a soldering iron.
The light is plenty bright, and no word yet on battery life or heating issues. The heating is a typical problem with these high power LEDs, but I have going for me: low current (350 mA), relatively large piece of metal bonded to the star, small gap around the lens through which air can flow.
Posted by
max
at
12:22 AM
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zoe's new trick
Zoe has always loved baths, and is very unwilling to leave once she has started splashing and carrying on. Recently she figured out that when we started draining the tub, it meant it was bath exiting time... so she figured out how to stop the tub (a few seconds after we start it). I thought that was exceptionally clever, but I'm sure that's just daddy brain.
Posted by
max
at
12:10 AM
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The KHS
I bought a used KHS as an around-the-town bike last month. It's a vintage lugged steel frame built in Taiwan, and a biking guy tells me that KHS are probably as well built as the vintage Raleigh frames, but easier to find. I picked mine up for $150. I had also recently tried a few single and fixies and loved them, despite the hipster stigma. I guess it's kind of like buying a BMW: they are great machines that drive well, but you look like a douche in one. ANYWAY, I decided that the old components were not really worth having adjusted, since they would probably constanly need tweaking, so I had Montano Velo convert it to a single speed, swap out the hobbit sized handlebars and do a few other modifications. The biggest cost was the new hand built wheel. They finished it on Friday, and I picked it up yesterday, and it is so, so sweet. It's an amazingly plush ride, and the drivetrain feels supernaturally responsive and direct. The only problem for Montclair milk runs is the hill going back up to our house.
The shop also has an amazing selection of Pegoretti frames, which are lustworthy. I guess they know Dario personally, and have carried his frames for years. They even had a freakishly beautiful lugged pegoretti frame in a glass case. I thought he only did welded frames, and don't really want to know how much that one costs.
Posted by
max
at
12:08 AM
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life in Grenoble, France as an expat postdoc
life in Grenoble, France as an expat scientist
life in San Francisco, CA as a biotech nerd
life in Grenoble, France as an expat scientist
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