Dodging the lunch rush wasn't as bad as I figured it would be this morning. The usual SE winds made for some challenging sections, particularly the climb up to Antioch. I accidentally left one bottle up in my office, leaving only the smaller bottle of Gatorade to quench my thirst. It was gone before I got to Turkey Creek Trail, so I hit the Trek Store for a water refill, then took Nieman home.
I took the Sorrento out to the Trek Store ride. The ride there wasn't without some goofing off. The ultra-steep multi-use path from Switzer has some gravel and dirt a few dozen yards to the north of it, and I took that steep gravel slope instead of the steep, windy paved path. Loads of fun! I goofed off a bit in the Trek parking lot as well. Sharpening my track stand skills, hopping curbs, going up and down stairs, etc. I had to adjust the front derailleur as well, but just with the barrel adjuster while orbiting the parking lot. On my way home, I conquered the same gravel slope I descended, and it was pitch black outside. The rest of my ride home from the Trek Store ride was the same route I took home from the Trek Store this afternoon.
I also had to run out and pick up some stuff for my wife to eat at work. I took the bike out again, for a grand total of a little more than 50 miles ridden today. Not bad at all. It's supposed to storm tomorrow, so I am thinking of keeping the mountain bike geared up. I may end up riding to the express bus tomorrow.
Also, this is my first post from Linux. I'm usually a big OpenBSD fan, and OpenBSD acts a lot like Linux in many ways. Getting it set up just the way you want it takes quite a bit of work, but once you have stuff installed, the programs work the same. Firefox for Internet browsing, OpenOffice for word processing, spreadsheets and the like. I love OpenBSD and won't get rid of it any time soon, but I downloaded Ubuntu Linux and gave it a shot on one of my old Pentium 3 (or is it Pentium /// ?) computers and it seems to be working pretty well. I'm such a geek. Sitting around me here at my computer desk, I have:
- Sun Microsystems SparcStation 5 Running OpenBSD 3.9
- Sun Microsystems Ultra 5 running Sun Solaris 10
- Dell PowerEdge 650 (1U Rackmount) running OpenBSD 4.1
- Dell OptiPlex GX150 (Mini Tower) running Ubuntu Linux 7.04
- Apple MacBook 2.0GHz running OS X 10.4 Tiger
- IBM RS/6000 Model 250 running IBM AIX 5.1/L
So, I got off on this huge nerd tangent. Are you happy now? I guess I'll go back to playing with Ubuntu and coming up with things to complain about.
Random Tunage:
Grand National - Talk amongst yourselves
Jon Secada - Do you believe in us
3 comments:
I noticed how many miles your riding now. Sure beats driving a mini van eating donuts doesn't it?
The last few months I really packed them on, but this month I've been slacking a bit.
By the way, I just snarfed a donut, but it's okay because unlike some of my minivan-driving cow-orkers, I will actually burn it off.
It's getting pretty amazing how easy a modern Linux install is getting. Compared to the driver hell of Win98 on up, a modern Linux distro recognizes so much out of the box it's almost scary. When you can boot a Ubuntu LiveCD on an old P2 laptop with a WiFi PC Card and have just about everything work, and then stick that same LiveCD in a P4 tower and it works just about the same it's an odd feeling. Then you realize that the two are over 5 years apart in technology...
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