Chauncey makes US Climbing Team
07/17/08 19:12 Filed in: Family,
climbing
Chauncey placed 4th in sport and 3rd in speed climbing
at the USA Climbing nationals in Sunnyvale.
Read
More...
Read
More...
Change OS X screenshot location with OnyX
07/17/08 19:02 Filed in: macintosh
I still haven’t found a good screen capture tool which
can capture directly into iPhoto. Grab, SnapZ Pro, and
the built-in OS X screenshot tools will not snap
directly to iPhoto. What’s worse is if If I snap with
the built-in tools and use the command sequence for
saving a snap to a file, it will automatically save the
shot to the desktop (something I hate with a passion.)
Use OnyX to change the default location of the builtin screen shot save directory. Read More...
Use OnyX to change the default location of the builtin screen shot save directory. Read More...
Different generations
07/08/08 20:11 Filed in: macintosh
What a difference a couple generations of Mac makes.
Here’s a side by side comparison of my parent’s eMac
with the iMac they just got:
Ali's Big Ride
07/08/08 20:03 Filed in: motorcycle
Pics from ABS9 Bouldering Nationals
02/29/08 15:13 Filed in: Family,
climbing
My buddy, Steve Woods,
was kind enough to shoot some shots of Chauncey in
the ABS finals - her debut in the pro/open
category. I put a link to the gallery of these
shots on the left ABS9 2008 ABS Nationals.
There's also a very nice pictorial
video of the event up on the Climbing Magazine
web site.
American Bouldering Series USA Climbing Nationals
02/18/08 19:31 Filed in: Family,
climbing
We just got through with the American Bouldering Series
nationals in Boulder, CO at The Spot. This year
Chauncey and Taya both qualified. Chauncey's in the
16-17 year old category and Taya is in the 12-13 year
category. The climbers were culled through a regional
championship process and came from all over the country
and even some from Japan and Canada.
This is from The Spot's web site and gives a panoramic of a crowded night at the spot.
Read
More...
This is from The Spot's web site and gives a panoramic of a crowded night at the spot.
Read
More...
Citizens Weather Observer Program
02/04/08 21:08 Filed in: Personal
I started experimenting with reporting wind data
through the CWOP
(Citizens Weather Observer Program). Using
OSCirrus,
my open source wind speed and direction package,
I've been collecting wind data for a long time
(nearly a year) but have never contributed the
data.
CWOP is an organization which uses a ham radio data protocol called APRS which has provisions for reporting weather data either through a ham data channel or directly through the internet. Since I'm not a ham operator, the internet channel was obvious.
I created a Ruby program which reads the wind data feed my device pushes to my web server. It then tracks average wind speed and maximum gusts over the sample period, formats the CWOP data string and sends it to the CWOP servers. Those servers in turn track the historical data for a time and it's possible to see a web page of graphs divvied up by various time intervals.
Read More...
CWOP is an organization which uses a ham radio data protocol called APRS which has provisions for reporting weather data either through a ham data channel or directly through the internet. Since I'm not a ham operator, the internet channel was obvious.
I created a Ruby program which reads the wind data feed my device pushes to my web server. It then tracks average wind speed and maximum gusts over the sample period, formats the CWOP data string and sends it to the CWOP servers. Those servers in turn track the historical data for a time and it's possible to see a web page of graphs divvied up by various time intervals.
Read More...