Archive for January, 2008

That was the week that was - Lotusphere 2008

Well, that was Lotusphere 2008 - a very different Lotusphere to last year in that I had absolutely no chance to do any real posting during the week.  It’s been a really busy week of meeting after meeting, along with attending the sessions, and we’ve done quite a lot of business along the way.

The biggest pushes from Lotus this year are along the collaboration tools front (no real surprises there), but the reaction from folks seemed a little mixed.

Much reflecting to do, and that starts today now that the we’ve reached the end.  Time to kick back and unwind before the long and winding road/flight path home.

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Off to Lotusphere

As popular dance beat combo KLF once said: 

Three-ay-ee-ay-em,Three-ee-ay-ee-ay-em.Three-ay-ee-ay-em,E-ter-nuh-uh-uh-ay-ul. 

 And how succinct and correct they were. I’ve forgotten quite how early, or late (depending upon your viewpoint)  3AM actually is… 

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Garmin Edge 205 (and using it on the Mac)

Father Christmas brought me a Garmin Edge 205 for the bike(s) this year.

The unit is roughly the size of a mobile phone. It’s waterproof, Welsh hail proof (as determined during today’s ride), and can be charged from USB, so it doesn’t really matter if you pick one up from abroad.

Garmin Training Center

Garmin Training Center is the software that’s available for both PC and Mac. It’s on v3.smmat on PC, but only back at v2.x for Mac. Looking at the About information for the softwarem it looks like it’s been put together by none other than the folks at Omni Group, purveyors of such fine software as OmniPlan, OmniGraffle and OmniOutliner Pro. Given that this is a particularly fine stable of software, I can only imagine that Garmin wrote their brief on the back of a fag packet for how they wanted Garmin Training Center to work on the Mac, and then OmniGroup sneezed the code out on to an iPod Touch.

It took Garmin quite a while to release a version of their software for OS X, and they’ve managed to upgrade the software in the meantime for PC users without keeping the OS X version in step. Nothing new there for most Mac users, but it’s a bit depressing that figuring out that there are an increasing number of Mac users out there is taxing Garmin - perhaps they should open up the source to the community :

Oh, the base map is absolutely rubbish for any purpose other than a very rough estimate of where you’ve just cycled in this version of the software. But no matter - there are other maps available out there, including Garmin’s own online services at Motionbased.com which rather handily supports Macs and has done since day one afaik.

Getting Route and Performance Data out of the Edge 205

More on this to follow, but in brief: you can use the Training Center to export a full .tcx file and/or use GPSBabel to read direct from the GPS unit and transform your routes, tracks and waypoints out to GPX for Google Maps or Google Earth.
Getting Route Data in to the Edge 205

So having managed a few runs just tracking my somewhat below-par performance, I decided I’d like to have a crack at predetermining a route and having it available on the Edge for me to follow. You can forget using the Training Center software for this, as all it will allow you to do is create a new route based on historical routes you’ve taken. Total cobblers.

No, for this bit of functionality, you’ll need to grab yourself a copy of GPSBabel and have that installed on your Mac. I’ll post a full howto as a follow up to this - probably to be written on the hop over the pond to Lotusphere. You basically need todo some Google Maps direction finding and then use GMapToGPX to convert the output to waypoints that your unit can use. Pretty simple really, and I haven’t got lost yet. In fact - the only time I disagreed with the directions the unit was telling me, I ended up being wrong and cycling further than I needed to.

Future Usage

Now I’d really like to try and use the Garmin Edge 305 with both the Cadence and Heartrate Monitor, but just can’t stretch to afford it given that I’ve only just splurged cash on the Kona, and then there’s the small matter of feeding/clothing the family and paying the mortgage. Trifling issues, I agree, but duties there to be fulfilled and complied with nonetheless. [Hey Garmin, I'm making eyes at you!]
Right about now Garmin will also be releasing the Edge 605 and 705 models which look set to be all swanky and colourful with their brighter displays and candy-coloured maps.  Again, I’d love to field test these on 2 counts: 1) they’re really great gadgets for cyclists, and, more importantly; 2) it gets me out of the house and away from the keyboard.

If you’re riding reasonably, you should really REALLY go and get one of these to replace your standard cycling computer. Check out EBay for bargain prices rather than breaking the bank on full retail.

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Mike Barnsley

This is one of the saddest and hardest things I’ve ever had to write, so please bear with me. It’s been more than a month of effort so far, and this is as far as I’ve got…
Back in early December, we received word that Mike Barnsley, Research Professor and Pro-VC at Swansea University, was seriously ill in hospital. Mike passed away on December 6th 2007.

From the Swansea Press Release:

Professor Barnsley studied Human and Physical Geography at the University of Reading, obtaining First Class Honours, where he also obtained a PhD in Remote Sensing of Vegetation and Soils.His first academic appointment was a `New Blood’ Lectureship in Remote Sensing and Geographical Information Systems (GIS), which was held jointly between University College and Birkbeck College, University of London. In 1989, he moved to a full-time post in the Department of Geography at UCL.

Mike Barnsley was appointed as Research Professor of Remote Sensing and GIS at Swansea University in 1995, becoming Head of the Department of Geography in 2002 and Head of the School of the Environment in 2005. Between 2003 and 2005, he was also the first Director of the Climate and Land-Surface Systems Interaction Centre (CLASSIC), one of the Natural Environment Research Council’s (NERC) six Centres of Excellence in Earth Observation, with which he remains closely involved. Professor Barnsley is currently a member of the Geography sub-panel for the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise. In recent years, he has also been a member of NERC’s Peer Review Panel, the UK national committee of the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme, the Ordnance Survey’s Science and Technology Advisory Group and the British National Space Centre’s Earth Observation Programme Board.

He recently was involved as land science team leader on a European Space Agency small satellite mission, known as PROBA/CHRIS, and had also been an associate team member of NASA’s MODIS science team. Professor Barnsley held the post of Chairman of the University’s Technical Staffs Working Group and chaired the University’s Environmental Management Strategy

A memorial fund has been established in Mike’s memory. Cheques should be made payable to “Mike Barnsley Memorial,” and sent to: St James Funeral Home, 31 St James Gardens, Uplands, Swansea SA1 6DT. Alternatively, donations may be made online. Account name: Mike Barnsley Memorial. Account number: 58036695. Sort code: 602141 (NatWest). All funds will be donated to Cancer Research and Footsteps www.footstepsuk.org.

I’m proud to have known Mike as a friend and to have worked for him for the best part of 7 years. He was instrumental in molding my skills and provided opportunities to me that I would never have dreamed of as a Geography Undergraduate.

The first time I met Mike was for a job interview at Swansea Uni. He took me on a tour of the Gower Peninsula for a chat in his miraculously clean Renault 21. It was a supremely sunny day, and Swansea looked like the South of France in the heat haze late in the afternoon. I think he was so good at Environmental Science that he actually set the weather for the day. I swear blind that after my first day in the office, some 6 weeks later, it never stopped raining for those 7 years!

I was sold on moving to Swansea from that very first meeting, and it wasn’t the place or the Department that did it for me - it was Mike (ok, and a little of Giles Foody, who was severely jet-lagged at my interview). His passion for his chosen science shone through in the day or so I spent in Swansea, to the extent that he turned my head from Glaciology and turned me on to the Bidirectional Reflectance Distribution Function (aka BRDF).

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As the research group grew under Mike’s direction, we needed to find more resource to replace our Sparc 5 and Sparc Classic kit. Sun were still charging a fortune for slower-than-pc clockspeed boxes and coupled that with astonishingly overpriced storage costs. Fortuitously, this was around about the time that Slackware came on the scene - and true to the kind of weirdos we were, we spent a whole Sunday in the office performing our first Slackware install from 80+ 3.5″ floppies. Those were the days.We eventually managed to replace our 4 Sparc 5s with 10 dual-cpu Redhat workstations. Mike was all about openness and fairness and so Opensource and Linux ended up being a core part of what the Research Group were all about. The last conversation I had with Mike back in November ended up drifting on to issues to do with Ubuntu - I can hardly remember a conversation where we didn’t get on to tech, gadgets or Linux :) [ask Mrs Breadedcod - she got the brunt of it].

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paul and mike

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Actually - the Mrs Breadedcod angle is actually very important here. Mike was instrumental, albeit not through design, in the eventual hook up between myself and my better half. Our family life today stands as a testament to the supportive environment we met in and I’m pleased that Mike managed to share some time with our eldest child. It’s a real shame that he never got the opportunity to meet the youngest - everything was just stacked against us over the summer months and our oft-planned meeting up just never came off.

During a change in my job towards the end of October, Mike took the time to put together a reference for me and we shared a joke about jobs and him saying ‘you want the usual don’t touch with a bargepole number?’ He still managed to be the only one of three referees to get the paperwork back in on time.

Our very last conversation piece, somewhat ironically, was about bikes. Mike took to cycling over the past couple of years - I guess because so many people have been through the doors of Geography at Swansea and raved about being soaking wet through and caked up to the nines - but always with a ridiculously oversized grin on their faces. The irony stems from the fact that it was Mike who put me on to the possibilities presented by the Kona PhD. He bought a Kona PhD (also the white one) in 2006 and raved about it.

So there we go. I could go on and on. I won’t (but that’s not to say I won’t again). Suffice it to say that I wish I didn’t have to stop. Like many, I wish I could have more to tell, and remain completely devastated that this isn’t to be.

I’ll end with a seemingly random set of tags - they’re not random, they’re a sort of tag cloud of meaning for our good fortune to have known Mike.

Fimo Ducks, Curry, Pasta, Red Wine, Coffee, Single Malt, Jesus’ Blood, Man in a Room Gambling, Arsenal, Phillip Glass, Linux, BRDF, Graph Theory, ENVMOD, the book.

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Kona PhD 2008 Lands

OK, it’s a loooong time since I wrote that I was on the way to owning a Kona PhD 2008. A lot has happened since I put that order in, not least with the actual order and the bike itself. Originally, I was expecting that the bike would turn up towards the end of October, having ordered it at the end of September. As things turned out, that wasn’t to be.

I contacted Cyclestore towards the original ETA and they told me they were still waiting on the arrival of stock. I was OK with that in that new year bikes sometimes take a while to make it to market - particularly when you aren’t buying British. Cyclestore, to their absolute credit, worked really hard to get hold of a bike as soon as possible.

Time ticked by. My birthday came and went. October came and went. Eventually, I decided to check with Kona to see when they were expecting supply.

Now Kona in the UK are distributed by Paligap, who are based over the Channel from me in Avonmouth. After a little detective work, they managed to find a European-based PhD at Kona Europe in Monaco. Around a week later it was shipped to me, via Cyclestore for setup, and was to be delivered by UPS by 22/11 - a week shy of 2 months since I put the order in.

Or at least it should have been delivered by UPS on the 22/11 had managed to get out as far as us, which they singularly failed to do. Live tracking on the UPS website saw the carton out for delivery and then checked back in overnight. It finally arrived on 23/11.

So this is what it looked like after UPS finally got it to me. By all accounts, the FIRST PhD 2008 in the country.

Kona Packing Carton

I thought I’d checked the carton over and found it to be OK, but must have been a little over excited. On further inspection (on the other side of the carton) I came across this…

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Uh-oh.

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Thankfully, on taking the bike out of its packing crate, everything looked to OK. Here’s that quick release skewer that was poking out of the carton (below) - it’s picked up a slight scratch in transit, probably from sliding around in the back of a UPS van. Grrr.

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Once assembled, this is the Kona PhD 2008 in all its glory (below). Dig those crazy reflectors!

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Once of the main reasons (aside from the fact that they’re the number 1 Kona dealer in the UK) that I went for Cyclestore this time around was the fact that they were offering 10% of the value of the bike in free accessories. I really needed to get a new bag, as the amount of sweat and bacteria in the shoulder straps of my old one would likely cause the UN to come down heavy on me for harbouring a biochemical weapon, and fortunately Cyclestore sell a range of bags from Deuter. I went for a TransAlpine 30L backpack as shown below.

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The rest of my booty comprised of a new CatEye rear LED light, a Specialized water bottle to replace one of my aging old bottles on the O2 and a contour headband - the greatest ‘technical accessory’ I’ve ever owned. Remember, at the time of writing, the outside temperature is hovering just above freezing, and the windchill at 36mph on a downhill is significant.

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A final inspection revealed that one of the brake levers was slightly bent

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Bums.

A quick call to James at Cyclestore sorted things out, even though it meant that they would be out of pocket given that UPS had a signature for the parcel. THAT’s the kind of bike shop you should be doing business with - despite everything over the lack of supply and less than quality service from UPS, Cyclestore and Paligap did not disappoint me in the slightest.

If you’re thinking of going for a Kona, you could do a lot worse than give Cyclestore a call.

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