Category Archives: Blog

DC – Across the Tidal Basin

I went into DC today to see the Solar Decathlon, which had been moved off the capital mall to a park area down by the Potomac. It was far enough from the nearest metro that bus rides were provided to take visitors to the solar village.

Looking north across the tidal basin towards the Washington Monument and the Jefferson Memorial.

Going back I decided that I could walk across the Potomac and past the Pentagon to where I’d parked just as easily as making the bus to metro shuffle work…so I did. This view caught my eye crossing over a bridge.

It turned out to be about 3 miles back to my car, though 3 miles seems to be getting longer as time goes by.

First Bike Outing of the Year, Somewhat Belated

Riding down a covered sidewalk in DC

I just got back from the latest first ride of the year I’ve ever had. Spring was wet, the summer has been brutally hot and muggy, and this is the first Saturday it was cool enough for a morning ride.

That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

It makes me a bit crazy that I live two miles from work and drive to it every day, but I’m pretending to be a grownup, wearing suits and ties and all. Not that anyone (except EJ) cares. Granted, I’ve abandoned ties for the summer, except for special occasions.

The part of the future I’ve always been sad that never arrived is future clothes. Granted that my Permanent press dress shirts and microfiber stain resistant slacks have perfectly good tech in them, but my favorite gear clothes are my zip-off nylon cargo pants. They’ve been to the Mojave to watch Spaceship One launch, along on my Route 66 expedition, are a regular feature when I go to do event network setups with Alex and the TechKnowledge crew, and the only thing I’d wear to do bushwhacking at Paul and Gayle’s in the summer heat.

Even on casual friday though, they don’t make it to work much. They’re just too geeky.

Which is to say that they’re functional and practical, something clothing evidentally isn’t really supposed to be. Jeans are a statement of solidarity with the working class, as well as a of the refusal to leave our childhood playclothes behind, but they’re not all that nuch more functional than dress slacks.

I do love mine though.

Back to biking.

EJ wanted to get her bike out to go rowing on the Potmac, riding up to the Thompson Boat Center where she rents a scull. I gamely accompanied her the first year because I’ve always liked rowing, but getting in and out of the little things wasn’t nearly as much fun for me as for her.

Since her bike has been laid up for the better part of the summer heat as well, I knew it would need air in the tires, which is my job, and as long as I had to go down and pump her bike up at 6:30 am…I might as well drag mine down the three flights of stairs as well.

THere’s no exercise to be had in pumping up our tires, since I’ve got a $10 air pump that runs off my car’s 12v system. It’s pretty sweet, if not especially quiet.

EJ followed me north up the Washinton Bike trail, which actually runs through our parking lot, until she couldn’t take it anymore, then zoomed on ahead with all the other speedy bikers with their drop handlebars and zoomy ways. I’ve never been so much a zoomer, as a noodler, cranking along in my own space, poking into places to see what was there, dropping my gears low on hills.

I’ve thrilled to speed on a bike, but have now fallen off enough, broke enough things, and lost enough vison, that noodling works just fine for me.

I noodled my way up to the fourteenth street bridge, across to the Capital, west past the tidal basin and the Jefferson monument, up almost to the Lincoln, and then down the mall to Air and Space. Somehow there seem to have been a number of monuments added to the mall when I wasn’t looking, and I’ll have to go back with my camera to get some of them. Back from Air and Space and across the 14th the other way my legs weren’t aching at all…but despite my shock absorbing saddle…

Back at the parking lot I pulled the front wheel off and slid the bike into the back of the wagon under the delusion that I’m going to take it places and do biking.

All in all I biked for about an hour and a half, which I could fit in before work in the mornings, but there’s no way to hang a suit on the back of a bike. Well, we’ll see.

FenceGate or: How I Spent My Summer Weekend

A small section of the tall wooden fence in our back yard fell down, and rather than just put back into place and add a few more deck screws to it, EJ wanted me to turn it onto a gate.And by the way, could I replace one of the treads on the front porch.

Which all sounded like a a pretty good idea, and didn’t look too hard, so I took some measurements, made some scribbles on the iPad, and headed up to Lowes Friday after work to pick up everything we’d need for the job.

Almost everything anyway.

Final count: Two trips to Lowes, one to Home Depot, and one to the nearby hardware store where they didn’t have 2″ deck screws.

The tread was pretty easy, since all I had to do was rip up the old one and screw in a new piece of 2×12 pressure treated lumber with three inch deck screws. It’s not going anywhere soon. Granted the color’s a bit off, but a little weathering will help that, and the whole porch is getting rebuilt within a year.

The fence to gate transition was a lot more fun. First I reconstructed the original section lying flat on the ground, then added a diagonal brace on the back and built up the top and bottom sections so it would bear its own weight. The self closing hinge set I picked up at Lowes opened the wrong way, meaning I had to put the hinge on the outside of the gate where an enterprising character with a screwdriver could take it apart even though they couldn’t get to the latch. It would take a while though, and as it’s only a wood fence, really…a few firm boot-kicks would accomplish much the same.

Things were going pretty well on the project, despite the near 100 degree heat. I started at 8 am and knocked off at noon, and all told it took both Saturday and Sunday to do. Saturday I managed to push myself into heat exhaustion regardless, but Sunday I only had to add a few touches, like a slide bolt and upper brace, and though I started later I was still in pretty good shape when I knocked off.

I had a lucky bit of mishap on Saturday, when my faithful magnetic screwdriver bit holder fell off my Ryobi One cordless drill. Into the leaves and vines beyond the fence. Twice.

The first time I found it without too much trouble, but the second time no amount of searching would turn it up. Since it was about noon and I was about ready for fall over from the heat…I took the hint. Really, it had every right to fall off. It had been pretty well worn out for a while, and I just kept putting it back whenever it came off.

All of which more or less brings us to the point of today’s post.

EJ thought I had scrap lumber in storage, which would be handy as I wanted to put something across the top of the gate opening to stiffen the whole thing up. We stopped, we looked, we dropped off half the tools…and didn’t find anything. No worries. An early Sunday morning trip to Lowes, possibly with a stop at the Starbucks next door for a Grande Light Mocha Frap (no whip) was actually kind of fun.

And it was there I found the DeWALT 12 PC Magnetic Drive guide set (DW2089).

Amazon lists this handy little set for $9.99. Which isn’t unreasonable, but at Lowes it was only $3.89, which is a freakin steal. For the money you get two magentic bit holders and a collection of basic bits (two each of the most popular), and a pocketable case that has a handy compartment for the smaller (normal sized) bit holder. But that’s not what elevates this into cool tool territory.

[amazon_link id=”B004Q04Q6E” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]DEWALT 12-Piece Magnetic Drive Guide Set DW2089CS[/amazon_link]The magnetic bit holder has a sleeve that both rotates and extends, slipping over the body of a small screw (or bolt) and holding it straight until it catches. If that doesn’t sound like a terrific innovation, you probably haven’t ever driven screws with a drill/screwdriver.

Sometimes its a good thing when a tool wears out, especially if you get a better one in the bargain.

Readercon 22

Getting here wasn’t hard at all for once. Instead of driving up from DC I hopped on the metro to the airport, took the US Airways shuttle to Logan, and got a ride from the airport by Daniel Dern. Very civilized.

While waiting  in the airport I downloaded two books from Amazon to my iPad: Charles Stross’ new book,”Rule 34,” and James Gould’s “7th Sigma,” the latter of which I just finished kicking back in a comfy chair in the lobby with a fresh cup of Starbucks at my elbow. Excellent book, btw.

The first panel I caught was the SF as Tragedy Mash-up with Clute, Malzberg, Sleight, Delany and Dozois. Talk about your heavy hitters. Early American SF escaped the tragedy meme because editors were specifically looking for thrilling adventure stories with upbeat resolutions. The Brits have never been hobbled in that fashion, and we seem to have gotten over it. One gets teh feeling that if a story is to have literary merit it needs to have a tragic ending, or at least an ending where triumph comes at a tragic cost. Continue reading