Archive for the ‘fun’ Category

Day 3: Passing the Martens brewery

Tuesday, August 21st, 2012

I’m on a biking holiday — first time I’ve done such a thing. Here’s a short summary of what’s happened so far:

Day 3: Maastricht – Eindhoven

Bike counter settings:

begin: 198km
end: 292km
cumulative avg: 17.6km/hr
route: Lanaken, Zutendaal, As, Opgladbeek, Bree, Bocholt, Achel, Valkenswaard, Aalst

Today was going to be fairly easy: mostly flat, about 80km (if I didn’t get too much lost :), and another nice day with nice weather. I crossed back into Belgium by going west out of Maastricht, and was very pleasantly surprised to find I had arrived in Flanders. People spoke Dutch!! Roads had bike lanes! Often even separated! After 2 days in Luxembourg and Walloon, it was a godsend. I left Maastricht in the morning at about 10:30, had a few breaks, and even a beer (I passed the Martens brewery at one point, and figured to celebrate it with a Martens pils. Conclusion: so not worth it — and thas was before I got back on the bike).

I arrived at about 17:00 in Eindhoven, and brought my bike immediately to the bike mechanic for its first revision. I had a nice evening at my parent’s place (yey, my new toner arrived!).

Day 2: arriving to Dutch-speaking territory

Tuesday, August 21st, 2012

I’m on a biking holiday — first time I’ve done such a thing. Here’s a short summary of what’s happened so far:

Day 2: Bovigny – Maastricht

Bike counter settings:

begin: 90km
end: 198km
cumulative avg: 17.6km/hr
route: Vielsalm, Trois-Ponts, Stoumont, Sougne, Louveigne, Olne, Soumange, Barchon, Dalhem, Vise, Mariadorp

The long day. This day, I was going to bike from (basically) the northern border of Luxembourg to the southern border of the Netherlands. Over the Ardennes. About 100km — which is quite a bit for me on flat terrain. I had been worried, especially after the headache of the previous evening. Luckily, it had vanished in the morning, and a healthy breakfast (and an early checkout time) put me on my way around 10am. It actually went quite well. The uphills were a struggle, of course, but the roads I had picked were not too heavy with traffic, and it was a pleasant day to be biking. Crossing the border under my own power was kind of magical: I had actually biked (at that point: close to) a hundred kms to enter NL! Again, in Maastricht, I missed the hotel in the beginning, and it took me a bit to find it.

The hotel was a sauna. Again, it had been a hot day. The hotel did not have any air conditioning, and the windows in the rooms could hardly be opened. Where outside, a gently breeze brought some relief and made it warm, yet bearably, inside, absent the breeze, oof…

Not a good night’s sleep, but the breakfast was good, and then I was ready to be on my way again!

Bike holiday day 1: down by the river (alzette, that is)

Tuesday, August 21st, 2012

I’m on a biking holiday — first time I’ve done such a thing. Here’s a short summary of what’s happened so far:

Day 1: Howald (Lux)- Courtil (B)

Bike counter settings:

begin: 0km
end: 90km
cumulative avg: 16.1km/hr
route: Dommeldange, PC15 to Ettelbruck, PC16 to Kautenbach, train to Troisvierges, Basbellain, Hautbellain, Gouvy, Halconreux, Courtil, Bovigny, Courtil

The piece Howald-Ettelbruck was very nice (mind you, near Mersch, there’s a car sign “Mersch 3km” pointing left, and a bike sign directing you right. Go left, follow the road to its end, then go right, again right at the end, and then to the station and follow the “piste cyclable” signs again).

In Ettelbruck, you canNOT go on the N7 (or whatever the main road is) to Clervaux. Which sucks. I opted for the Piste Cyclable: PC16 and PC21 (or somesuch). It was A Big Mistake.
I got to Göbelsmühle, and then the PC did not continue. I was lost, but a mountainbiker appeared from the forest, so I asked him how to go on to the next place (Kautenbach). He indicated that you could go through the forest, though it was a bit narrow at points.

Turns out, “a bit narrow” doesn’t quite cover it. It was a small hiking trail on a slope. After 5 gruelling kilometers, I got my bike and my weary self to Kautenbach. Called Aga, and learned that it was another 60km of very hilly terrain to go on. I did not have the strength for so much more (having already done about 70km), so I took the train in Kautenbach to Troisvierges (about 30km). While it had been pushing 30 degrees all the way, and sunny, when I got to Troisvierges, it had rained there and was about 19 degrees. I biked another 20km (4 of which due to looking for the hotel), and had a runny nose and a headache by the time I got to my hotel. But: I made it! I biked out of Luxembourg, mostly under my own power! Hooray!

To Echternach and Back!

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

The weather has been lovely here in Luxembourg for the past few days. And I was recuperating. Also known as being terribly lazy :)
Well, I promised myself I’d do something to enjoy the nice weather. So, I decided to bike to Echternach and back. That isn’t exactly next door, so it’d take me a while.
On the way to, it was easy going. Sure, there were plenty of uphills, but even more downhills. A suspiciously large number of them… at one point I wondered if I wouldn’t end up at sea level like this. At any rate, thanks to all this downhilling, my average speed lifted from the paltry 17 it was before, to about 20.3. One other thing was the detour — I don’t know if it’s this or my slightly more remote location, but it was 49.79 km to get there. I kind of figured that that’d induce some ouch on the way back. Oh, top speed on a downhill was 52.6km, but the coolest part was breaking the law by speeding 20km — ok, in a 30km zone, but still :) most I’ve ever gone over the limit on a bike (though not the fastest by far).

That would be of later consequence, first to enjoy the city! So, I’m here, let’s do the enjoying part!!
Options were:
– sit on a terrace and have food / drink (no thank you)
– go to a shop and buy something I don’t need (no thank you).

Given my famously short attention span, I left within an hour of arriving. Probably shoud’ve given my legs a bit more rest, but what the hey.

I kind of was right about the more rest thing. In the beginning, my average was below 15. Thankfully, a downhill part notched it up a bit, and I managed to motivate myself into peddling somewhere around 16, 17 an hour. Geez! Had a few breaks, and my tush was kind enough to inform me that it had had quite enough of the saddle, thankyouverymuch.

With an emergency piece of pie from a cafe on the way (they had just closed the kitchen half an hour before I came, can you believe that??), I made it back to the University, where I had a more extended rehydration break and then went back home.

107 km in 5h20. Yeah, Tour de France beware and such :) But: at least I moved a bit.
(and, better: consdorf and berdorf are near there, meaning I can bike there to go on a hike!)

Thunderbird’s “get mail” button broken?

Wednesday, April 25th, 2012

Thunderbird logoI’m quite happy about Thunderbird (mail reader). Yes, I’ve had my struggles with it (as those of you who follow this blog know), but in the end, it all works.
All?
Almost all.

There is one button, no matter how hard I try, I cannot get to work.
You see, Thunderbird has a “Get mail” button. And I press it and press it, but do I get mail? nooooo….. ;-)

Hiking ebook finished!

Sunday, January 29th, 2012

kindle logoI finished the ebook project! When I started with this, I just got all of the files together and pressed “convert” in Calibre (an ebook manager). That crashed my PRS-T1 though :s.

After the holidays, despite it being too late to be of use now, I still had an itch to scratch. Well, I scratched it :) Took me a while and it got me back into sed-scripting (this page was a wonderful resource). Why sed-scripting? Well, I wanted to basically do “batch”-vi – that is, use the power of search-and-replace with regular expressions over a group of files. Roughly, there are 3 straightforward options: Perl, sed, and awk. Of these, I picked sed — it allows you to just type your regexps just as you would in vi :) Of course, they got a little more complicated after a while:

# row for total distance
/Total distance:<.td>$/ {
	N
	N
	N
	s/\n/ /g
	s#\s*\(Tot.*tance:</td>\) \(.*\)#<tr><td>\1<td>\&nbsp;</td><td>\2</tr>#
}

Not much, just a little. Near the end, several times I figured to be done when the lay-out on the devices themselves would be rather bad. But: no more crashing — definitely an improvement. And then, finally, the last tweaks were made, the last sed-script was run, and it was over! Hooray! To celebrate, I made two versions: one for my Kindle DX version (mobi) and one for my Sony Reader version (epub). (No clue if there’s any specific tweaks Calibre adds based on the device, but you can select specific devices for the “output profile”, and I did.)

If you’re interested in a copy of the book, drop me a line.
And, as a bonus, here’s the cover of the book: a photo of La Palma from the International Space Station.

cover

Tuxguitar working :)

Saturday, January 28th, 2012

playing guitarFor my birthday (a while ago, I admit it :), Aga thought about getting me Guitar Pro – a piece of software that can help you with guitar playing. Somehow. The trial version on Aga’s laptop looked pretty cool, but I had two hesitations:

  1. Will it run under Ubuntu?
    That’s kind of paramount for me…
  2. Will I actually use it?
    If people are going to spend money on my behalf and I get a say in it, I’d like to make sure they get value for money.

The first point is easily settled with a quick Google… except it isn’t. As in: the company says “yes”, plenty of users complain. Hmms. But, in the course of googling, I stumble upon TuxGuitar, a freeware project doing roughly similar things. (Note that development seems to have ceased 3 years ago…). Installed it, but: no sound. For a tablature editor (or any musical score editor, for that matter) lack of sound is of course the death knell. Tweaked around with the various settings, unplugged and replugged cables, but to no avail. Left it alone for a long while, and then realised I didn’t do the obvious: complain to google. I do, and indeed, the first hit solves my problems! Turns out Ubuntu doesn’t come with midi support by default. Makes sense, probably. Anyway, let’s add some!

In a nutshell: install TiMidity, a piece of software so finished it hasn’t been updated since before 2005 ;-). Then, run TuxGuitar, tweak the settings to use a TiMidity midi port as output, test, et voila! (In case of absence of Voila!, choose a different midi port and repeat).

Now to find out what this TuxGuitar thingy actually does

Current project: compile hiking e-book!

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

kindle logoAga likes hiking trips. My kindle DX, awesome though it is, is too heavy and bulky for light-weight travel. So, for our recent visit to the Canary islands (perhaps see a blogpost in the near future), I bought a new reader, the Sony PRS-T1. Extremely lightweight, as it happens (not the reason I bought it — it was the only model the store had that I found acceptable :)

But then, in preparing our trip, Aga found an online hiking guide to La Palma. It is fantastic! It has a lot of info you want when tracking… so how to take that?

I figured to try and convert it into an ebook and take it. Tried, but miserably failed. There was some flash going on on the pages, which crashed the ebook. So, we went without. But ever since then, the idea of having the hiking guide there caught me, and now I’m in the grips of it. While most of it is rather straightforward (basically, cleaning up the HTML and removing cruft), it is quite a bit of work. Or at least, it is the way I’m doing it :)

Still, the project is progressing slowly. Moreover, I’m taking the opportunity to add some notes — e.g. to underline the error found in some maps (they list a mountain hut where there is none, not even a place to get water). Fun!

Will keep you up to date.
PS: Since I’m not looking to infringe upon someone’s copy right, I’ll probably not distribute it publicly.

It would be funny if it weren’t so true…

Sunday, September 25th, 2011

Yeah, not subtle, not PC. But, if you’ve ever read an online discussion, you must recognise the below sentiment.
Arguing on the internet motivational poster

Going below the equator (SA update #1)

Monday, August 29th, 2011

Flag of South AfricaIt’s cold here! I arrived at Johannesburg airport yesterday morning, having hardly slept. My bad: we left at 11pm, more or less, and in the first hour and a half they were handing out food and such. So then, I figured to try the video on demand part ;-) It was cool! Gnomeo and Juliet, Rio, Thor, another movie I’m interested in (will watch on the way back). The plane was also a gigantic whale! 2 levels… geez! I found that a good place to sit is probably either near a door or in the center isle in the center — provided no one is sitting next to you. All because of legspace. Sitting next to the aisle isn’t great: people walking by, and you shouldn’t dump your legs in the aisle because of that…

Anyway, Around three I realised sleeping would be a good plan. Around 7, people were waking up and around 7.30, breakfast was being served. That ain’t much sleep. Ah well.

I got off the plane (as one of the later ones), took forever to get money (I’m apparently withdrawing from my savings account?!?!) and then lazily made my way to the pickup point: a hotel. There, I picked up internet and tried to work. No luck, too tired. Waited for hours till the pickup showed up (as scheduled) at 17:00. It took another 30-45 min before we were finally off, and then a 2 hr drive to the reserve. We were just in time to have dinner (though it was cold and leftovers). Made my way to bed, read a bit, and slept with earplugs (too much wind making noise). Earplugs caused me to sleep in till 6:44, which was nice, I guess. Breakfast was supposedly served at 7, though in reality everyone was slowly working up to there, so 7.15 was more like it. I will so sleep in till 7.15 tomorrow!

Anyway, no pictures yet. So far, SA didn’t look tantalising, but that’s probably because I was dead tired and almost asleep in a hotel for most of my stay here. The reserve (where the conference is taking place) does look cool! Tonight: game drive! ;-)