Monthly Archives: May 2007

24 Hours of Conyers Wrapup?

I’m waiting on a call from Eddie O to see how the Granny Gear 24 Hours of Conyers turned out. It looks like Josh Tostado from Breckinridge, CO (Giant Bicycles) held on for the men’s solo win.

I was hoping to make it out there but am still not ambulatory. Just like last year, GG  appears to have had a very small attendance. It doesn’t look like there were more than 27 total solos + teams for the race. One big reason is because GG scheduled on top of the 12 Hours of Tsali again this year. Tsali is a very popular course and a very popular race, not to mention being a fraction of the cost of GG.

The feud between GG and 24 Hours of Adrenalin (Twenty4Sports) has actually translated into a rift at the local level. Southeast riders are divided into the camps of those that love GG/hate 24HOA and those that don’t understand/don’t care about the feud and want to race as they please. I’m not suggesting that the GG camp doesn’t have legitimate gripes. The problem is that the rift has both diminished the number of racers available to attend either race and decimated both races.

It started when Laird of GG sued Stuart of 24HOA (then TriLife) for copyright infringement. Ironically, Laird then decided to hold a race in Atlanta, a market that Stuart built, on the same course that 24HOA has been running since 1999.  To me, the move looked predatory and monopolistic. I’d kept quiet for over a year, and then in a moment of post-race fatigue and crankiness, I chimed in on a SORBA forum thread.

The argument goes back and forth about MTB becoming too commercial, not grassroots enought, etc. I look at GG and 24HOA as coke and pepsi. You can’t tell me that one promoter is better for the sport or more grassroots than the other. They’re both big entities and they both put on big production races. I think they’re both good for the sport.

People want to go to those big events at least once a year. They’re absolute freakshows in the best ways. They’re huge productions and they draw out the big stars. The big events raise the profile of the sport and raise awareness for new participants. They also bring in the kind of sponsors and media coverage that will (hopefully) allow some riders to make their living as professional racers.

You wouldn’t want to do a big race like that all the time though. It’s just too expensive, and all the production value does cut into the pure riding experience a bit. The small local races are perfect for getting out and racing affordably. They’re especially great for doing your first race in front of an undiluted home crowd. I would even argue that a lot of time their product is better. They have 6, 12, and 24 options to suit all comers. And because they don’t draw a ton of pros, they give the locals a chance to get on the podium.  Still, they’ve had their problems with scoring, inconsistent rules, etc. But again, it’s mostly a collegial crowd, and winning/losing is never a life or death matter at a local race.

At any rate, GG has had disappointing turnouts both years at Conyers, and 24HOA hasn’t broken 800 riders since 2003. Between the boycott of 24HOA and riders having to choose between GG and Tsali, it’s looking less and less profitable to hold a 24 Hour race in Atlanta.

And that’s really too bad, because this market defined endurance racing in the southeast. I really hope that attendance picks up in the coming years.

Primaries underway…

Recent polls have stated that 60% or so of those watching the Democratic primaries are delighted with the candidates. The past few years have witnessed the Democrats putting the strongest contender (rather than the best person) on the ballot, and in this climate of change, ideas may actually be important. (i.e., we get to vote FOR someone rather than AGAINST someone else.)

I love the primaries (in both parties) because the candidate’s haven’t homogenized their platforms yet. Stump speeches haven’t had their rough edges polished. Policies are bold and innovative, and candidates are still figuring out how to water them down to appeal to mixed bedfellows, such as autoworkers and environmentalists. Because the campaign analysts haven’t had much time to oversurvey and focus group every little idea, it’s still unknown as to what cocktail of vision and suibstance are going to sell. As we travel closer to the spigot that is the Democractic primary, we’ll see more co-opting and borrowing. 

The Economist had a great article on Hillary’s candidacy. I once waited 4 hours in the rain to meet Hillary when she was touring with her book It Takes a Village to Raise a Child. I realize that many consider her a polarizing figure, and I have never understood why. It seems to be mostly personal dislike. Is it because of her husband? Is it because she’s opinionated? Or too curt and not smiley enough? I could understand opposing her based on policies, but I don’t understand how people HATE her.

Regardless, public opinion is split and the Economist correctly points out that Hillary may be more effective and mending rifts abroad than at home.

Gimp Reviewed: Impressive, but not quite Photoshop

When I ordered my new Dell laptop, I made a concerted effort to always try an open source option whenever available. After reading a lot of personal commentaries on Gimp vs. Photoshop, I decided to give the Gimp a try.

I’ve been a power user of Photoshop for about the last 10 years. Starting in advertising and moving into interactive media, I’ve had a license since v3. 

Gimp is a great piece of software. For the novice to intermediate user, or for minor editing tasks, it’s the only editor most people will ever need. I do most of the resizing/cropping/sharpening of images on my blog with Gimp.

I have had a few problems. The toolbars and palettes all seem to launch as separate application windows, so they’re never all onscreen at the the same time. As soon as you click to the image window, the toolbar or layers palette disappear.

Gimp Review

I also live and die by shortcut keys, especially in Photoshop. I know so many of them that I can turn myself into a human batch program. Unfortunately, many of them are slightly different in Gimp, or at least the tools behave differently.

All in all, Gimp is solid. It’s incredible robust, and as someone who understands graphic compression and filter algorithms, I can tell you it was no small task to get all of the tools and filters working as well as they do. It’s a great photo editor for novice, and even expert graphic designers would choose to use it for many tasks. It loads so much quicker than photoshop, so when you just want the basics, there’s a lot less wait.

That being said, it often ends up taking me far longer to do the basic tasks. Some of this is getting used to different tool behaviors, but a lot of it is also the palettes and toolbars disappearing on me. Editing text is difficult, and Gimp lacks kerning and tracking adjustment. Many fonts (TrueType and PostScript) do not appear correctly in Gimp. It also doesn’t remember the settings I use. Everytime I export a JPEG, I have to reset the JPEG formats as well as adjust the compression setting. It also doesn’t remember my filter settings.

It appears that the layer options and gridlines allow for some way to slice page images when putting together a website.  I haven’t figured it out, but I think that anyone who already knows how to do it in another tool (Photoshop, ImageReady, or Fireworks) won’t want to learn how to do it in Gimp.

All in all, it’s hard to believe that there is a free tool this powerful and easy. I’m old enough to remember the days when you had to design in one application, like Photoshop, and then compress in another, like DeBabelizer. We were compressing GIFs to a web palette, for 640×480 256 color monitors, for 28.8 modems, all the while worried that Unisys was going to make us pay royalties on each GIF… Ok, now I’m starting to sound like your grandpa.

Broken Leg Academy of Martial Arts Presents…

Don’t miss  Broken Leg Academy’s Upcoming Seminar!

We will reveal all secrets to mystifying techniques and attacks in all positions and situations, including:

  • “Sit on the couch position”: Sit motionless 10 hours a day without killing yourself!
  • One legged pee stance: learn how to go to the bathroom like Mr. Miyagi!
  • Vocal commands: ask your wife/parents to bring you things in an authoritative manner!
  • Knitting: Knit one, pearl two. Learn the ancient art of sweater fabrication, since you really can’t do anything else…

I got a call tonight from Brett at Tiger Academy. I do miss my jiu-jitsu buddies a ton. I can’t replace the training anywhere, and mostly I can’t replace those people.

Keep your hands up

Also found out that Jeremiah’s fight can be viewed here.

Running with scissors

I’m getting around really well, though technically I’m not supposed to be up for more than a few minutes each hour. I feel really good whenever I get up, though I can feel the blood pooling in my ankle, which means it’s time to sit back down. Still, the lack of activity is killing me.

I’ve already watched ROAM at least 3 times in two days.

I get up to go to the bathroom, go to the kitchen, and then back to the couch. When I need to carry something with me, the dilemma is whether to give up a crutch arm and hop, or carry the object in my mouth.

crutching with scissors

Post-Op: Surving Day 1

I had a bit of trouble sleeping last night, and finally took some Advil. The ankle felt fine, but when the epidural wore off, my back was felt very sore as if badly bruised. My quadriceps on both legs were really straining and sore. I initially put a rolled-up t-shirt under my back, and that made it feel a little better.

I felt fantastic upon waking and realized that staying sedentary is really going to be the hardest part of healing. My ankle isn’t that painful. I really think the shooting pains of sprains are so much worse than the dull pain of breaks. Plus, I’ve lived with a broken bone for 4 months, other than the sutures there’s not a whole lot of difference.

The boredom is a killer though. I happened on this site for other people with broken legs. www.mybrokenleg.com. Right now, I’m a lurker, but I may have to signup and hit the forums.

After reading a few stories, I really feel for some of these people. One guy had a near-fatal accident and is so depressed, he wishes he’d died in the wreck. Another guy has had multiple surgeries after nearly severing his leg in a backyard constuction accident. I couldn’t even continue reading that one.

I guess this is one of those web 2.0 microniches I keep reading about. Not that I’m not aware of what’s going on in the cyber world, but until I got injured, I could find my micro-niches in the offline world.

Hospitals and the strangers you meet.

I was first on deck at Northside, which everyone tells me is an absolute blessing. It sure didn’t feel like one when I got up at 4:30. Nonetheless, I’m not dependent on anyone else’s surgery schedule, so I was basically assured to be first in, first out, and on the road before rush hour traffic.

I was given a few options for anesthesiology, and I always opt for the least invasive method. I truly believe the recovery from the drugs is often worse than the procedure. In this case, I received an epidural injection, a popliteal block (a block on the nerve behind my knee), and some sedation so that I would shut up during the surgery. I did drift in and out during the procedure, and I distinctly remember hearing the doctor ask for a scalpel, then ask about his drill. I mostly remember not really caring.

recovering from talus surgery 

I spent an hour or so in a shared recovery room looking to my left, right, and across at the other patients. I’d had a relatively uninvasive procedure and hoped they were so lucky. I saw one woman wheeled in unconscious. She looked to be in terrible shape, but I realized she was still out. I heard faint muttering from the nurses of a masectomy. I couldn’t help but feel terrible for this woman and sincerely hoped she’d make a full recovery. I later learned that Jen had been in the waiting room conversing with two women. These were the same two we encountered at 5:30 am and had them witness my living will; I was so rushed to get all my paperwork signed, I’d barely had a chance to read any of it, nor to share more than the most basic smalltalk with these two who were signing a document that said the hospital must legally deprive me of food and water should I fall into a persistent vegetative state.

Jen had talked with these two at great length. She said their mother was back in the hospital for treatment of cancer that had spread into her lungs. I mentioned that I’d heard something about a masectomy, and Jen confirmed that the woman had fought breast cancer and was now seeing a relapse. How terrible I now felt. These two women had been so seemingly concerned when I told them I was in for ankle surgery. How foolish I now felt.

The hospital staff was excellent, and I was finally moved to a room. Our nurse was great, and it turned out her husband was a local cyclist for a rival team. We talked at length about healthcare, cycling, hobbies, and I received more than one lecture on how to and how not to rehab my ankle.  There was also a list of criteria I’d have to meet before going home, including having the epidural wear off so that I could bear weight on my other leg, as well as demonstrating the ability to eat and pee. 

beef stew 
I opted for the “surprise” plate and requested no red meat. They sent beef stew.

I talked quite a bit with the nurse while Jen ran out to get Percoset, aspirin, and some gas. Our nurse is a traveling nurse like my friend Erick, meaning she can pretty much get a job in any city. She’s on for three 12 hour days and then off for 4. She has a 2 year old and a husband who is recovering from being hit by an SUV. She went into nursing because she loves people, which was clear to me. I’d told her how I thought I received excellent care from all the physicians, who were no doubt experts in their field. But I realized that I really couldn’t have ever been one, because they don’t have the time to spend more than a few minutes with their patients.

T-minus 15 hours…

Had my pre-op with the doctor today. He corroborated my expert read of the CT and my talus is still broken. He did say that there was evidence that the bone and cartilage are still actively trying to heal — they won’t be able to — but that means my body is still trying. Good news for the impending operation.

I’m scheduled at 7:30 tomorrow. My doc did his undergrad and med school at Michigan. I also found out they call the main hospital the “big house”. Interesting.

I’m ecstatic with my choice of a surgeon. He’s definitely a scientist. He’s meticulous with the details, and extremely well-read. So I have the left brain covered. He’s also left-handed, so apparently I have the right brain covered as well. I’ve heard from 2 different medical professionals that he’s obsessive in the details. One of the top guys in Atlanta says that he’s seen the best results from my doc… Here we go.