Wednesday, 4 September 2013
in praise of Travelpro
The bits arrived yesterday, in a small padded bag from Boca Raton. Zipper parts. Not exciting? They were to me.
They were the parts needed to repair my black wheely luggage bag. It's a bag that has travelled many miles with me. Certainly over a quarter of a million miles. Maybe half a million. Definitely further than from earth to the moon.
Naturally, it has survived many luggage belts and climates in the process. Except the last time.
I can't be sure, but I'd guess that someone threw it by holding the zippers. Not a good move. The two biggest zippers both sighed and one popped out, now lost in some airport handling depot.
Frequent flyer tip: Don't close the zips aligned on the long (throwable) side of the case - always zip them to the top.
It's only a zipper, but it's then that you notice the industrial strength of the fittings on Travelpro. I checked another make of case and by comparison Travelpro is at least one or maybe two sizes more robust. Designed to last. And don't get me started on wheel designs for luggage.
I decided to check the Travelpro website and, sure enough, they had an exploded view of their luggage with all of the parts labelled.
I contacted them by email, explaining the mishap and the part's reference number.
The lovely support person emailed me back. "Don't worry, I'm sending you the parts."
It's all fixed again.
I see more Travelpro luggage in my future.
Monday, 2 September 2013
internet of wearable things: are we ready for the thingiverse?
The little fitbit gizmo has got me thinking about wearable computing again. It's another vanguard of the increasingly wide 'thingiverse' a.k.a. 'Internet of things'.
My bike already talks to the internet and logs what I've been up to. My phone is sending out all manner of data as well although I still don't know what the USB socket on the dishwasher is for. "Continuous Location Data" (CLD) is a buzz phrase around the IT social networking world because of the possibilities it provides around demographics, monitoring, augmented reality and so called lifestreaming.
The challenge for the designers of the new stuff is to figure out how 'personal' they can make it as well as how small. A phone is 'quite personal' but mostly doesn't handle the really personal stuff like healthcare related monitoring.
The challenge for all of us is to decide when it's a Good Thing and when we don't want it. I suspect that this next twist is almost upon us.
It also raises the question of how to persuade people to wear the technology needed to make it all work. Fitbit kind of does this, with its range of monitoring and so do the Nike Fuel and similar bracelet systems.
Let's face it, not everyone wants to wear a plastic bracelet that looks a bit like one of those french curve things from technical drawing. Some of the early ideas like foot pods have mainly dropped by the wayside and the chest strap style Heart Rate Monitors are really for workouts and sport.
So what to do?
Along with the demise of the landline for phone calls (except to parents and freephone numbers), the wrist watch has faded from much day to day use. I still use one, but many people don't, instead referring to their phones. I still think that in business world, the art of reading someone else's watch to know the time can be almost as useful as being able to quickly read upside down.
So the space vacated by the wrist watch is being targeted for the next generation of wearable technology. Not just a calculator like the old Casio type multi function watches, and not something geeked-out with buttons, but some kind of quiet technology to provide monitoring and interaction with useful information.
But there are obvious problems with this. Style, glare, complexity, battery life, compatibility spring to mind.
For style, the challenge with is whether to go visible or not?
Some of these devices pack some bulk. Something really good about the fitbit is that it can be invisible.
Two of their three models can just slip into a pocket or hook unseen onto clothing. Proper 'quiet technology'.
As soon as the object is visibly wearable, it's enduring appearance starts to become significant again. Remember the old iPod Nano watches as an example?
They need to deal with having a full iPod Nano width as well as a holder case. An attempt, but possibly technology over style such that many wouldn't adopt it. And what about the complicated LCD watches? Fine if you needed the function, but mainly used by people running or for other specific purposes. Remember those cellphone 'gun holsters'? They didn't last long.
And those posh supplements that market expensive watches may create a reaction to both complexity and bulk. Even the newer experiments like Pebble may suffer the same 'bulk' issues.
So I'm still wondering how they are going to solve the wearable conundrum. Something so compelling that people will forgo any style issues? But then, what if they all look the same, like mini iPhones?
Or something hidden, but then the function needs to be suitably addictive? And hopefully something reliable, so we don't have another device that requires a specialist to reset. And don't get me started on ANT+, Polar, Bluetooth 4, WiFi and all the various linkups.
It's an interesting period, akin to the recent past before mobile phones became pervasive and potentially with an even faster cycle time.
Pass me the charger.
Thursday, 29 August 2013
Thursday 13-ish binge series list
Some of use have been batting around lists of television series to watch. Mainly the type that can be binge watched, through box-sets or streaming.
It also means there's a few that get excluded because of their ubiquity on normal television. Friends, Frasier, Doctor Who, Torchwood, Startrek spring to mind because they are always on normal television, often being shown out of sequence.
Here's my quick list of a few series I've watched/re-watched largely in blocks of viewing. I won't rank them, instead add a few comments.
- Weeds : The one about the housewife who sells weed to support her family. It starts in a 'Little Boxes' housing estate in suburban USA and after various mishaps moves to the Mexican border and further beyond. A few years old, quite funny and handling a few taboo subjects. At various stages it gets new things thrown in to keep the mix running. I've not seen the last two series because of non-UK availability. Would definitely re-watch.
- Breaking Bad: Ostensibly similar plot to Weeds, stepped up to crystal meth lab but played more earnestly than Weeds. Shows the spiral of a regular teacher as he crosses further to the dark side. Some very sharp writing. On its last few episodes now. Quite intrigued by how the end may play out. Seeing the last few shows makes me think I'll need to watch it all the way through at some time.
- The Sopranos: One of the original binge sets. I remember sometime in the last century(?) getting the first set on DVD when it was the only set available. Then I missed 2-3 series because of work schedules but decided I'd need to watch it from the start. I only managed this after the last series had finished. Along the way it played around with most of the Goodfellas and similar movie ideas and then finished in a clever way. I'm not sure of I'd watch it all again though. There were some characters that I found too irritating (like Tony's mum).
- Orange is the new Black : A kind of 21st Century Tenko set in a womens' prison in upstate New York. Much acclaimed although I struggled through the first five or so episodes. Up to the one with the chicken, where it started to settle in and became quite good. The first few episodes were almost trying too hard but then it settled into a more thoughtful style whilst still taking a run at many subjects. It's only run one series through to an unfestive climax although I'm sure I'll watch the next.
- House of cards : The Kevin Spacey remake of the UK series, extended in an American context from 3 episodes to around 13. I was surprised how good this was, even with the similar storyline and some slightly cliched sections. I may well watch it again at some time, although I watched the UK version after I'd finished the US series.
- Green Wing : About a UK hospital. Somewhat bonkers and surreal. I keep this for emergency entertainment on my iphone.
- Black Books : How could so much fun be had with a bookshop and a few bottles of wine. Also on my emergency humour ipod playlist
- Spaced : A rather north London comedy which references US films and genres. Very funny but might not travel well. I hear they tried to make a US pilot, but it would be a very odd concept. Really moment in time
- 24 : Jack Bauer making 100s of decisions in every episode. Intense and one of those series that inevitably gets watched in multiple episode chunks. "just one more" but can be exhausting. Maybe I'll go back to the furniture showroom episodes at some point.
I know there's more, including some generally popular ones. I won't include Arrested Development (didn't like it) nor Portlandia (wanted to like it but couldn't get into it). I didn't really like The Office (UK nor US versions) either and wouldn't watch blocks of it.
I can think of others that should be included but I haven't ever watched in blocks. X-files, West Wing?
There's some UK shows like Faulty Towers or The Young Ones which are more a part of heritage. I wouldn't seek them out but still laugh when I see an episode of them.
And I could have mentioned The Killing (which I enjoyed, but watched close to the episodes being broadcast) and Top of the Lake (ditto). The French series 'The Returned' started well but lost my interest by the end when it started to turn into an alpine version of Shaun of the Dead.
So that's my starter list...Anything else I should have mentioned?
Wednesday, 28 August 2013
a question of balance
I've got too many air-miles to get properly jetlagged. I suppose it used to happen, but for as long as I can remember I just slam myself into the new time zone.
The soul takes a while to catch up, but the basic functionality is there from landing, through car collection and to whatever.
It's apparent when doing one of those red-eyes back to an office after a short night. London to Moscow. San Francisico to New York. Europe to Tel-Aviv. The night somehow just goes missing. Like after a good party, but less fun.
The dreams aren't fooled that there is still a need for adjustment.
Some people say they can't tell whether they dream in colour or monochrome. I know I dream in colour, with occasional lapses into bird-vision. Added spectrum and extra wide. I know, it's useful for finding berries.
The peculiar part of post flight catchup is being asleep and knowing it's a dream but not being able to break out of it. It can sound a bit Christopher Nolan, but it's odd to have that awareness of being asleep and in a dream.
Detached. Waiting for the soul to catch up.
The soul takes a while to catch up, but the basic functionality is there from landing, through car collection and to whatever.
It's apparent when doing one of those red-eyes back to an office after a short night. London to Moscow. San Francisico to New York. Europe to Tel-Aviv. The night somehow just goes missing. Like after a good party, but less fun.
The dreams aren't fooled that there is still a need for adjustment.
Some people say they can't tell whether they dream in colour or monochrome. I know I dream in colour, with occasional lapses into bird-vision. Added spectrum and extra wide. I know, it's useful for finding berries.
The peculiar part of post flight catchup is being asleep and knowing it's a dream but not being able to break out of it. It can sound a bit Christopher Nolan, but it's odd to have that awareness of being asleep and in a dream.
Detached. Waiting for the soul to catch up.
Monday, 26 August 2013
fitbit one experiment
I was in the Broad Chare in Newcastle a few weeks ago when we started talking about the gadget telemetry we can all use. I didn't start the conversation, although we did talk about the Garmin bike stuff that I use for heartrate, cadence, speed and similar.
We started by talking about those little pedometer systems (Ages ago I tried the Nike footpad thing, for example) and we got onto the newer ones like Fitbit.
They work on the pedometer principle, and use bluetooth to send information to the internet. I know people who use them and who target the 10,000 steps a day target.
Fast forward to the Apple store in Santa Barbara and I found myself buying one as an experiment.
10,000 steps in a day. Can't be that hard?
I tried it the next day. 2,500 steps. Hmm, maybe a rethink required. Admittedly it was holiday time so a bit lazy on beaches and around pools.
Next morning I'd decided to take an early stroll along the beach. Before 7:00 I'd clocked 2,800 steps. Not even had a cup of coffee. Surprisingly, I'd also walked a couple of miles, but it hardly felt like it. This was interesting.
It's a pretty easy care kind of system. As long as the pen-cap sized device is somewhere on me, it seems to detect the steps and quietly resychronises without me even taking it from a pocket.
It also checks for flights of stairs, which I thought was pretty clever - more exertion climbing than walking flat. It says it uses an altimeter and initially I didn't believe the description, because my mental picture of an altimeter involved big mechanical parts.
Of course, nowadays with Micro Electro Mechanical Systems (MEMS) both a three plane counter and an altimeter are readily available. Presumably they'll get put into phones along with the GPS and other direction finding gear.
So the little tracker unit is counting changes of altitude of 20cm or more accompanied by exertion. Every 3 metres upwards = 1 flight of stairs. It can tell the difference between me walking up stairs, using an escalator and being on a plane (which it ignores).
Altogether, pretty good.
It just sent me an email to say I'm 1,800 steps short of 10,000 today. I reckon I'll make it.
Sunday, 25 August 2013
final approach to London
Sunrise above the clouds. Over the U.K. and heading back for London.
Passing the shard, as we turn around towards the airport.
Soon enough onto final approach over a few familiar landmarks, the City, the Thames.
Maybe the Houses of Parliament.
And then Battersea Power Station and Chelsea Bridge Wharf. Almost back.
Saturday, 24 August 2013
Leaving Los Angeles
A sort of combined post today, covering the return trip from L.A. to London. In the other direction we had those fancy seats with the beds and the fold down screens, more like a little room. On the way back we were by the window, so here's a few snaps as a sort of geography test.
Here's just after takeoff from L.A. That's probably Anaheim somewhere in the middle of the picture. I can't see Disneyland though.
The next one is of the edge of the San Bernadino mountains, before we head off into the desert.
I'm guessing that this is Diamond Valley Lake, just around the hills from Palm Springs. They flooded the valley to get extra water reserves for L.A and San Diego.
...and then some proper desert, around Barstow. Spot the train line too.
Or maybe this one will help. Quite a few freight cars. We're at 36,000 feet now so it's quite a long view.
This one is easy. Its the area created from the Hoover Dam. I've driven over the Hoover Dam at night; it arrives out of the desert and reminded me of an encounter with the X-Files. The dam itself is about where the slightly chunky bit is at the top of the 'larger' lake. It's surprisingly small from the air.
The next one is the edge of Arizona, looking towards the Grand Canyon area. We didn't fly over the canyon, but it's on the edge of the shot.
And then clouds below us.
And the moon from above the clouds.
Next post I'll add the London end of the flight. Dinner and breakfast in between.
Friday, 23 August 2013
Catching up with Breaking Bad's last few episodes
I've been watching Breaking Bad through all of the series and there's only a few to go now.
The proposition is of a teacher with cancer who goes into the drugs business to make quick money for his family. He hooks up with a waster guy and they create a crystal meth lab, initially in a camper van.
It's one of those series in the debate about changing viewing habits as people consume whole series from streaming libraries now instead of watching advertising riddled real-time television.
It's not got the same level of buzz in the U.K. compared with America, where there's all manner of spin offs for the last few episodes.
An example is the idiots' guide for the first four series, which give a usable recap of the show.
To go with the last few episodes (Series 5, Part 2), there's been various television appearances including the main character, Bryan Cranston, who walked around Comic-con wearing a mask portraying his character, to avoid identification.
The series creator, Vince Gilligan, was interviewed in the UK a few days ago on Front Row about the show and admitted that the first series had low viewing figures when originally released, but it then picked up via the streaming offers.
Vince Gilligan is an interesting guy, having originally created some X-Files episodes, after he sent a script in on spec, and then later won the first series of Breaking Bad. He's also been interviewed extensively in the US, including this in-depth one. He explains the trail blazing of other series like Sopranos but also the need to make Breaking Bad's lead different. A regular guy who goes darker as the series runs.
As well as the serious trailers and interviews, theres a whole series of mini spin offs including the "Breaking Bad as a Sitcom" (try adding a laughter track and it does go a bit weird), "Breakbad Mountain", a variant of Downton Abbey called "Breaking Abbey" and various appearances of Breaking Bad characters in cartoon series.
Here's the sitcom, and a few outtakes.
And maybe a few outtakes from Series Five.
I'm up-to-date, but theres' still a few episodes to go. Anything could happen. Crooked lawyer Saul could even get a spin-off show...
I'm expecting it to feature in the Emmys.
Wednesday, 21 August 2013
in which I mislay my macbook air
Breathe...
I know the macbook air is small, but it shouldn't be forgettable.
A few years ago, in the days of those bulky Thinkpad docking stations, I managed to leave my laptop plugged in back at the office, when I was due on a business trip. I only noticed when I was already checked in at Heathrow and buying currency for the trip. Fortunately, I was able to survive on other technology for that 1-dayer.
This time, I managed to leave the macbook air in the airport lounge as we swept everything together for the flight.
I'm usually pretty good at that 'afterwards' look back at where we've just been (in restaurants, hotels etc.) to check for leftover items such as mobile phones, jackets etc. and am often the one who spots the missing item left by others.
Not this time and it was only as we were getting out the electronics for the security scanner at the airport that I noticed the laptop was missing from my backpack. I did that double take and rummaged around in the bag to make certain.
Oops.
I sought out an important looking official, who had been issuing instructions to us all about shoes and belts and he kindly escorted me back through the system to an exit so that I could leg it back to the lounge.
A different kindly person was standing outside the lounge, with my laptop in its little case. He immediately recognised me and handed it over as I exchanged grateful thanks.
...and relax.
Tuesday, 20 August 2013
a walk on the beach before heading for L.A.
The seals around Santa Barbara have a pretty cushy life. This little band hang out on one of the channel bouys every day, maybe popping into the water for an occasional forage for food.
The rest of the time its California sun bathing.
For me, it's time to head to Malibu, and then back to Los Angeles. I'll be on the wifi in the LAX lounge by the time I can post this one.
Even if my feet are still on the beach.
Monday, 19 August 2013
we reach Santa Barbara
So here we are in Santa Barbara, just a few moments from the Stearns Wharf pier.
Santa Barbara is one of those places with a great balance of sunshine, sea, mountains in the background and a continuous stream of interesting and cool things happening.
Perhaps time for boating or watersports?
It could be watching people fishing on the pier.
Maybe its joining in the cycling around the numerous cycleways. Come to think of it, perhaps its cycling to the pier to go fishing?
Maybe the casual practicing of tightrope walking in the park or watching the dogs that wear sunshades?
Perhaps watching a sunset?
One thing is for sure. The right car and surfboard can help this kind of road trip.
aebleskiver time in Solvang
Towards sunset and we found ourselves in that little part of the USA resembling a miniature Denmark. There's the little mermaid on one of the street corners, a windmill and many half timbered houses in a Danish design.
It was faintly disorientating with the cross between some Danish words, then finding shops selling native american goods.
For us, Solvang was an overnight stop on the last part of the journey towards Santa Barbara.
We stayed in a pretty motel, kind of Danish style, dined al fresco and in the morning sought out the aebleskiver which are a kind of cross between a round waffle and an apple cake.
I'm not sure if they are really designed for breakfast, but with a cup of coffee they sure tasted good.
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