New parts or new bike?

I’ve been having trouble with my knees ever since I started commuting by bicycle. I tried adjusting my bike fit on my own, but some of the measurements really require a trained eye. (Said eye being in the skull of somebody other than the cyclist sitting on the bike.) So I took a ride to City Bikes after work a few weeks ago to see if they could help me adjust my touring bike for less painful riding.

The guys at the shop did their best not to laugh when I wheeled in my 20-year-old bike. They decried the overly large frame, fixed-length stem, and old-school drop bars. But keep in mind–The conventional wisdom back in the mid-80’s was to buy the biggest frame you could just barely stand over. The only adjustment one could make to the stem was to raise or lower it. If you wanted more “reach” you had to buy a longer stem, which is precisely what I did when I first bought the bike. And drop bars only came in one style back in the day. They went ahead and fitted me, but I guess I had already done a pretty good job myself–they weren’t able to find anything that could be adjusted that needed it. Thus, no charge for the fitting, but they did strongly suggest that I buy a new, modern bike with a smaller frame. They showed me a bunch of bikes, but the only one that caught my eye was a Specialized Sequoia Elite for about $1100.

So now I’m in a quandary–do I put money in my old bike or buy a new one? $1100 sounds like a fair bit of money for a bicycle, but it’s a heck of a lot cheaper than a car! Instead I decided to see what I could do with my existing bike first. I spent about $300 at Peak Adventures and replaced nearly the entire drive train with pretty nice components: Xpedo RF-L3 clipless pedals, FSA Gossamer triple chainring (53/39/30T) with 172.5 mm cranks and megaexo bottom bracket, Shimano Tiagra rear derailleur, and a new chain. The only original drive train components now are my 6-speed casette (28, 24, 21, 18, 16, 14T) and the wheels. I wouldn’t mind replacing the casette sometime, especially since I now have a 9-speed derailleur, but if I have to replace the wheels I’m going to be thinking very hard about just buying a new bike. (Decent wheels can be pretty expensive!)

If I do spring for a new bike, I’m not fixated on the Specialized Sequoia. I’d be looking for a touring bike–something with a rugged frame, drop bars, fittings for panniers (preferably front and rear), triple chainring or possibly a compact double, clipless pedals, and those very cool integrated shifters/brake levers (my favorite feature of the Sequoia)!

But before I drop that much cash I’m going to see how I do on some long-distance rides with my old Tribute. I’ve got a nice flat 100-mile ride this Saturday: Bike Around the Buttes. I haven’t done a ride this long for many years, so it’ll be interesting to see how it goes.

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OSX and Windows simultaneously!

The possibilities for an Intel-equipped Mac just keep improving! The headline from an article in today’s New York Times tells it best:

Run Windows and Mac OS Both at Once

Boot Camp by Apple was great news last week, and it will still have its uses, but the news out of Parallels about running OSX and Windows simultaneously just clinched my family’s next hardware purchase–an Intel Mac Mini will be the next system to grace our desk!

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ConQuest Sacramento

ConQuest Sac logo

The first Sacramento ConQuest game convention was held this weekend, April 7-9. There were quite a few things going on–CCG tournaments, miniature gaming (e.g. Warhammer), an anime film festival, miniature painting contest, costume contest, RPG’s, a bunch of science fiction movies (to go along with the convention theme, “Questing through time”), and…

Boardgaming! In spite of the fact that I only attended the con “part time”, (I was at home with my family at least a few hours every day), I managed to get in 14 games. At about two hours per game, that’s a lot of gaming! Half of the games were ones I’ve already played and/or own. Of the half that I had never played before, three stood out as likely purchases — Caylus, Reef Encounter, and Winds of Plunder. Caylus and Reef Encounter are both a bit complex and may not appeal to my family, but Winds of Plunder would probably get a lot of play at our house.

One of the best things about con’s is the people they attract. I already know quite a few local gamers through the Sacramento Boardgames Meetup, but I met dozens of interesting new gamers at the con. Many of them are locals that are involved in other game groups, and I look forward to getting together with them in the future. I also talked to some well-informed folks and got some news about a few games I’m interested in: Zendo, which is currently out of print, is supposed to be re-published in the near future; Winds of Plunder has received almost enough pre-orders to enter GMT‘s production queue; and Take Stock, a game designed by my friend Simon Hunt, probably will be published in May or June. Take Stock was already a great game when I playtested it several months ago, but Simon and the publisher have tightened it up considerably since then and bumped it up to “excellent”. I’m really looking forward to this game’s publication!

I spoke with several of the convention organizers before I left on Sunday evening, and they were very happy with the attendance numbers. They were hoping for 400 attendees, and they managed to pull in over 500, which is quite a good turnout for a first-run con. We can look forward to an annual gaming convention in Sacramento every year in early April. Easter was very late this year and caused a bit of scheduling hassle, on top of the fact that this was organized on relatively short notice. But I understand that ConQuest Sac 2007 is already being planned, so next year should be even better!

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Gönül’s “Wine Maker’s Dinner”

My wife and I attended our first “wine maker’s dinner” at Gönül’s J Street Café last week, and it was incredible!

We got there a few minutes early and met Mitch, Gönül’s husband and co-owner of the restaurant. After introductions were made, we asked what I suppose is everybody’s first question: How to pronounce “Gönül”? He told us it’s something between GUHnuhl and GURnuhl, with the accent on the first syllable. (All along I’ve been saying guhNULE. Oops!) Mitch showed us to one of the only 2-person tables and went back to greeting the other diners.

The featured wine maker this evening was Lapis Luna. They had some excellent wines, which were conveniently available for purchase at the restaurant that night. We ended up buying 2.5 cases by the end of the evening, including some chardonnay–a variety which we normally wouldn’t even taste, let alone buy!

The food and wines were excellent on their own, but some of the food/wine pairings were just incredible! Here’s the menu for the evening:

  • First course, Seared diver scallops with red miso cream & wasabe citrus butter
    Served with 2004 chardonnay
  • Second course, Serrano ham, Nauvoo blue cheese & rosotto croquettes
    Served with 2003 zinfandel
  • Third course, Roasted pork tenderloin with blackberry chipotle glaze & sweet potato shoestrings
    Served with 2003 merlot
  • Fourth course, Grilled lamb chop over olive mashed potatoes with porcini jus
    Served with 2003 petite sirah
  • And for dessert, Turkish bread pudding

Everything was outstanding except the scallops, which were merely good. The wines complemented their respective dishes perfectly, especially the zinfandel/croquettes and the petite sirah/lamb chop. The best dish of the evening was the pork tenderloin–even a week later, it still makes my mouth water! I really hope they add this to the regular menu. And of course the Turkish bread pudding was a delectable finish to this amazing dinner.

Like I said earlier, this was our first wine maker’s dinner, and it certainly won’t be our last! I’m not sure we can afford to do this every month, but I think we could save up for a fabulous dinner such as this every few months.

NB: I’ve previously written about “Gonul’s” (sic), and I’ll probably write about it again in the future, so I’ve added gonuls to my tag list to facilitate finding all related posts.

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Mac OSX Subversion with an SMB repository (again)

I just applied the Mac OSX 10.4.6 update, hoping that it would solve my problems viz a viz committing changes to an SMB-based subversion repository. Alas, I still have the same trouble with svn commit. In addition, the new update undid scplugin’s changes to Finder which indicate a file’s svn status (e.g. current, newer working copy, etc). I guess that’s not such a big deal, since the svn status is useless without the ability to commit my changes. 🙁

Version 1.3.1 of svn came out a day or two ago, so let’s see if that does the trick.
Downloading Mac binary svn client v1.3.1
Installing…
Testing…


515$ svn --version
svn, version 1.3.1 (r19032)
compiled Apr 4 2006, 00:30:54

Copyright (C) 2000-2006 CollabNet.
Subversion is open source software, see http://subversion.tigris.org/
This product includes software developed by CollabNet (http://www.Collab.Net/).

The following repository access (RA) modules are available:

* ra_dav : Module for accessing a repository via WebDAV (DeltaV) protocol.
- handles 'http' scheme
- handles 'https' scheme
* ra_svn : Module for accessing a repository using the svn network protocol.
- handles 'svn' scheme
* ra_local : Module for accessing a repository on local disk.
- handles 'file' scheme

516$ svn commit -m 'Changed script to be user-independent' my_script
subversion/libsvn_client/commit.c:873: (apr_err=5)
svn: Commit failed (details follow):
subversion/libsvn_subr/io.c:2199: (apr_err=5)
svn: Can't write to file '/Volumes/svn/grading_system/db/transactions/4-7.txn/rev': Input/output error

ARRRRRGH!

Oh well, I guess it’s time to try the (old) patch for SMB access, which means building Subversion from source. Darwin ports collection, here I come!

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New books at Modoc Hall OBCZ!

Today I stopped by Java City to give the staff a “heads up” about some books being sent by BookCrossing user KimKerry. Good thing I showed up when I did, since the box had just arrived! The following books are now on the OBCZ bookshelf:

Thanks, Kim, for helping us keep the bookshelf filled!

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My introduction to “Discworld”

I finished reading Monstrous Regiment last night, after starting it on Saturday evening. It took me about 10-20 pages to get hooked on this story, and quite a few more for me to figure out what was going on. (Is this a fantasy novel? Science Fiction? Some weird alternate fantastic history?)

This was my first experience with the Discworld setting, and I think it would have been helpful for me to have some background before reading this book. As it was, I enjoyed it enough to go hunting for more Discworld novels — it turns out there are plenty to choose from! Terry Pratchett has been working on this series since 1983, so I guess that’s no surprise.

Now I’ll have to peruse the list of Discworld novels and figure out what to read next. I’ll probably go back and read some of the early books, just to get a feel for this universe.

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Progress on scplugin?

Thanks to Stu (no URL) and Ant, I think I’ve made some progress on scplugin! For some background, see my post on Subversion on Mac OSX and my subsequent attempts to get SCPlugin to work with Finder.

After trying Stu’s and Ant’s suggestions, I now get a Subversion menu when I control-click or right-click on a file/directory in the Finder. Woo hoo! Everything looks good, too. If I open the Subversion menu on a file which isn’t part of a svn working copy, only the Checkout and About menu items are available (as expected). Subversion working copies show the full menu (or whatever is appropriate). However, there are two things that still seem to be broken: the svn status indicators (icon overlays?) aren’t showing up in Finder, and I seem to have hosed the connection to my repository. Doh!

We’re using smb file shares to host our repository. When I first set this up, I connected to the file share (⌘K in Finder) and checked out a working copy of the repository. I could only work via the command line, but everything worked. Fastforward to a few days ago (when Stu and Ant dropped comments). I’m now trying to use scplugin again (not the command line), and all of the sudden nothing is working. It finally dawned on me that perhaps I should try the command line again. It turns out that when I first created my working copy, I must have somehow given a connection-specific smb string instead of the server name followed by the share. Here are the errors I’m getting:

svn commit -m 'Changed script to be user-independent' my_script
subversion/libsvn_client/commit.c:873: (apr_err=180001)
svn: Commit failed (details follow):
subversion/libsvn_ra_local/ra_plugin.c:285: (apr_err=180001)
svn: Unable to open an ra_local session to URL
subversion/libsvn_ra_local/split_url.c:125: (apr_err=180001)
svn: Unable to open repository 'file:///Volumes/server-3/my_proj/trunk/my_script'

The /Volumes/server-3 bit is where the problem lies–It should be /Volumes/sharename, instead of the third connection to this server. I did some hunting around on the net and found out how to fix broken svn repository references: use svn switch --relocate, such as:

svn switch --relocate file:///Volumes/server-3 file:///Volumes/sharename working_copy_root

or so I thought. 🙁 Now I’m getting the following error:

svn commit -m 'Changed script to be user-independent' my_script
subversion/libsvn_client/commit.c:873: (apr_err=5)
svn: Commit failed (details follow):
subversion/libsvn_subr/io.c:2199: (apr_err=5)
svn: Can't write to file '/Volumes/sharename/my_proj/db/transactions/3-1.txn/rev': Input/output error

Bummer. It may be time for a bug report…

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Peaceful co-existence

I took this picture a while back, when it was really cold outside.

All three cats, not fighting!

Her Majesty (red tabby in the back) normally wouldn’t tolerate either of the kittens lying near her; likewise, the kittens wouldn’t usually stay put if Her Majesty jumped onto the bed. (They like their fur on their bodies, not in bloody clumps in Her Majesty’s claws.) But they all three know that if they start fighting they’ll get put out in the cold.

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I finally admit our TV is useless

I don’t care much for television, which partially explains why the last time I bought a TV was over 20 years ago. I was a college student, i.e. poor, but I managed to scrounge up about $300 one summer and bought a 19″ Zenith that had been used as a display model. No remote–this is old school, you have to get up off your butt and walk over to the TV to change channels.

Our old 19-inch Zenith TV

This has served me (and later my family) for quite some time, but its age has been showing. About five years ago, it developed a need to “warm up” when first turned on. The picture would be fuzzy or completely garbled, then it would suddenly snap into a clear picture after a few minutes. Lately, this delay has been getting longer and longer. It never bothered me overmuch, but it did bother my wife. A few months ago she started working an extra half-day each week to save up for a new TV. Last weekend it took over half an hour to warm up, and I finally decided to throw in the towel with my old Zenith.

We don’t watch much (if any) broadcast television, and we don’t have cable, so we didn’t need an [HD]TV tuner or cable input. But we do like to watch movies, so we wanted a wide screen (9:16 aspect ratio) capable of displaying HD images. We also wanted a large wall-mountable display for about $3,000. We toyed around with a bleeding-edge “1080p” unit, but almost all of the currently-available units are projection systems (not wall-mountable), or LCD systems that are too expensive or smaller than we’d like.

We’re planning to mount this on the wall in the living/family/great room once we remodel the house. There will be a lot of windows on the south side of this room, so we need a fairly bright technology with a reasonable viewing angle. LCD’s and plasma displays were what we finally settled on. I did a lot of research on Consumer Reports online and came up with a few possible candidates.

After checking some prices online, I wasn’t sure that we were going to be able to get everything we wanted. CR suggested that warehouse membership stores often had the best prices (as well as very flexible return/refund policies), so we headed over to the nearest CostCo to do some first hand research. The LCD and plasma displays were in two adjacent aisles, but by standing in one particular spot we were able to get a good head-on view of all the displays. The best thing about checking these out at CostCo is the crappy lighting/viewing conditions, compared to a dimly-lit “home theater” store. The LCD panels might be fine given better (i.e. dimmer) lighting, but in the warehouse it was immediately obvious to me that plasma was the way to go. My wife didn’t notice much of a difference at first; however, as soon as I asked her to compare the backgrounds in the images she too voted for plasma. (We were watching Olympic figure skating, and there wasn’t much difference between the images of the spotlighted skaters. But on the plasma screens you could see the faces of people in the darkened stands, whereas on the LCD screens you could merely see the outlines of heads and shoulders.) Then a clip from a basketball game was played, and that clinched it–whenever a player moved across the screen very quickly, the LCD pictures got “chunky” while the plasma screens displayed the motion smoothly. I’m not much of a sports viewer, but it sure makes a good “stress test” for TV’s!

I jotted down all the model numbers and prices of suitable displays at CostCo and we came back home to do some more research on CR-online. Of course, none of the models that CostCo was selling were reviewed by CR, but we got some good comparisons of brands and features. We settled on a Panasonic 50″ plasma screen, model TH-50PM50U. After some online price shopping, it looked like CostCo did indeed have the best price. (Plus we would get the unit home that same day–instant gratification!) So my wife and I hopped in the truck and drove back to CostCo and picked up a monster-sized TV screen.

Our new 50-inch plasma display

(For comparison, the tape measure in this image is still set to 19″ as in the Zenith picture at the top of the article.)

Since it’ll be very difficult to get a good look at this later, here are pictures of the connection panel and the manufacturer’s information:

I/O panel for plasma display Manufacturer's data plate

Panasonic model TH-50PM50U, ser#YP6140357 (Not that anybody else cares about this–it’s just here for my future reference.)

I started this article last year when we bought the display, but for some reason I never published it. The article date is accurate, although it was “published” today.

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