Saturday, August 25, 2012

Biking to Work

Last month, I started riding my bike to work one or two days per week.

I'll start this with an article in the New York Times that my sister sent me about a crazy solar guy who rides his bike to work. I'm pretty sure this is what people think of those that ride long distances to get to work every day.

From a certain perspective, I'm crazy.  I understand this. Like Danny Kennedy, most of my life revolves around solar energy and cycling. In college I built two solar cars in college that can cruise at 50mph on just the power of the sun. Every week I clock 100 miles on my bike. And just this year, I started work at a solar company with new technology in Fremont. And no, it's not called Solyndra.

I'm not different just for the sake of being different.  I'm different because I have gained some perspective about what we as humans do to this planet when we don't care for it.  Over the past century, we've developed weapons that can kill everything in a 50 mile radius, developed power sources that can poison the entire northern Pacific, and tapped oil wells that spill 210 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.  And we're just getting started.

So you might think I'm about to say that I bike to work to save the environment.  I'm good enough at math to figure out that me biking to work has no significant effect on the environment.

I bike to work for fun.  I really enjoy cycling, and have found a route to work that is only about 20 miles long and is mostly on the San Francisco Bay Trail, which is quite pleasant and far away from cars.

I also hate sitting in traffic.  I actually don't encounter much traffic on my commute if I drive, but I feel pretty horrible starting and stopped on the freeway, especially because most traffic is triggered by some idiot randomly hitting his brake.

Of course, there is an argument against riding to work.  It's more dangerous than driving, but only because certain drivers don't pay attention to their surroundings.  I had a near miss when a car tried to turn left in the same lane as me, then merge into me.  I have had several near misses and an accident when drivers allowed another car to turn in front of them, without considering the lane of bicycle traffic next to him.  I had a really bad crash because somebody honked their horn repeatedly at me for riding under the speed limit.

I'd like to point out that the speed limit is the maximum safe speed on a given road, and that there is no minimum speed on residential roads.  Some highways have minimum speeds, but those highways don't even allow bicycles.  In the law, a bicycle is treated the same as a car, meaning that it can take an entire lane if necessary, but also that bicycles must stop at traffic signals just as cars do.

I don't hate cars.  Cars are inanimate object.  I don't hate drivers.  I in fact am a driver.  I do pay taxes, and when I'm riding my bike, I have the same right to the road as any other vehicle operator.

One reason why I really love the San Francisco Bay Area is that it is a "bicycle friendly" community.  This really just means that a lot of people get around by bicycle and that there are bike lanes on some roads.  While living in Maryland, I was once lectured by a man for riding my bike on the sidewalk next to a busy road that was unsafe for bicycle traffic.  Instead of responding that I didn't feel safe riding my bike on the road, and that there was no law against riding one's bike on sidewalks in that town, I just rode away.

The funny thing is, bicycles were around before cars or airplanes.  Both Karl Benz and the Wright Brothers were avid bicyclist and bike mechanics, and the bicycle inspired their revolutionary inventions.

So what have I learned from riding my bike to work?  I've learned that our bicycle transportation infrastructure is pretty abysmal.  Even the awesome San Francisco Bay Trail has to cross the highway many times to go around landfills and wastewater treatment plants.  It also has lots of hazards, like untrimmed weeds, speed bumps (don't get me started), cracking pavement, and unprotected railroad crossings.  I imagine a world where riding a bike somewhere is as easy as driving.  The sad thing is that the federal government provides funds for exactly that, improving bike lanes and bike trails, but many states choose not to accept that funding!

If you've gotten through this whole post, you might be interested in my same vision of a world where it is safe to ride a bike.  You can get started by joining millions of people who agree with you at this website: http://www.peopleforbikes.org/

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Why I Use Android

I recently had a job interview with Apple and listened to the Steve Jobs biography by Walter Isaacson. This got me thinking, why don't I move into the Apple ecosystem and buy their entire product line, from Mac Pro to iPod Shuffle?

I also often enjoy playing with my wife's iPhone, and am amazed by the speed and fluidity with which the device functions. Steve Jobs' philosophy on product design was that you fully integrate the hardware and software to ensure a great user experience. Steve focused on creating beautiful hardware, and I have to admit that my Android phone have been less pretty than any of the iPhone generations. The hardware also has great features and functionality, like high pixel density and really good mobile and wifi radios.

In addition to the beautiful function of the product (I've only ever found one bug), the app ecosystem for the iPhone rocks. There were many more iPhone apps than Android apps back in 2009 when I got my first Android phone, the Google Dev Phone (T-mobile G1). Now, there are roughly the same number of apps on both stores, and Android actually has more free apps. Some apps that I really wanted (Flickr, Instagram) are now available on the Android market, but many apps still have more functionality on the iPhone. For example, the Gospel Library app is available on both platforms, but on the iPhone you can listen to the scriptures or conference talks.

That brings me back to the original question: if I like iPhone hardware and iPhone apps better, why don't I make the switch?

1. Google Talk - it's not facetime, but it has video chat and even google+ hangouts, and I am always logged into gchat, so I am more accessible.
2. Google Voice - it's now available on iPhone, but it wasn't for a while, and it allows me to make free calls over wifi and get voicemails transcribed in an email.
3. Google Maps - turn by turn directions on the Android version of Google Maps is amazing. It uses a lot of power, but it gets you exactly where you want to go.
4. Tethering - while moving cross-country, it took a while to setup internet at our new apartment. Thanks to AT&T, I was able to gobble lots of unlimited data on my Android phone tethered to my laptop. Tethering and WiFi hotspot is built into Android 2.3 and up.
5. Google Voice Search - This was around years before Siri, and it is actually just as good as Siri at actually answering questions because Siri has to google most information anyways.
6. Adobe Flash - I don't use it much, but it is nice to view videos and flash-based websites on my phone. iPhone doesn't have it because Steve Jobs had a grudge against Adobe for not producing video editing software for the Mac. Sure, HTML5 will make flash obsolete, but for now it's nice.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Mechanical Design Brainstorming

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Big Sur Marathon


I finally did it! I ran 26.3 miles without stopping! It was an amazing experience, and I would like to say that it was the hardest run I have ever done. However, I ran a 20 mile run two months ago when I was training for the marathon that blows the actual thing out of the water. At the time, I hadn't ever done anything more than 13 miles.

That day, I decided to go running with the running club, which my friend Ishan suggested that I check out. Two other guys were training for marathons, and they wanted to do a long run. I agreed, and we set out. The first 12 miles were at a brisk 6:30 pace, which they seemed fine with, but killed me. While running on Mountain Home Road in Woodside, my foot started hurting me and I was sure that my quads and calves couldn't take me any further. The other two guys waited for me at the little grocery store in Woodside, and we started back towards campus. I quickly fell behind and it started to get dark.

It had been raining that day, and unbenownst to me, my nipples started chafing. They were bleeding by the time we started back to campus. Running down Whiskey Hill Road, I had to take off my shirt, and I was ready to curl up on the side of the road and die. The last uphill was along Sand Hill road, and I had to walk part of the way. I was already at 15 miles, which I had never run before. I hobbled back to campus on Sand Hill Road, walking most of the way. I was worried that the other guys might be looking for me, so I returned to the claw, but they were already gone. I had run 20 miles, 7 more than ever before! As I approached Mirrielees, I saw E. driver her car with a bunch of my friends, with whom I was supposed to grab dinner and froyo. I was embarassed by my blood-stained shirt, and barely made the drive out to Cupertino. Here is a link to my gps data from that run.

The marathon was much better. For starters, the elevation change was big (7,000 ft), but not as much as my first 20 miler (10,000 ft). The day was chill, but not cold, and the start was festive. I went out way too fast, but slowed my roll to 7:30 pace for the long downhill to the sea. I found a group of people who had goals similar to my 3:16 goal, and I stuck with them all the way to the top of Hurricane Point. Heidi and I broke the wind for each other, and I was feeling great. For some reason, the 2.5 uphill of Hurricane Point killed my legs and I was unable to run fast for the rest of the race. I barely noticed the picturesque Bixby Bridge which is the centerpiece of the beautiful course. The second half was quite a bit more difficult, with continuous "rolling" hills that sapped my energy.

I had promised myself that I would step up my pace for the last 10k if I was feeling good, which I wasn't. By this time, I was doing 8:00 pace on downhills and 11:00 pace on uphills. A postman from Santa Cruz passed me with about 2 miles left to go, and that encouraged me. I pushed the last mile, and sprinted after I crested the last hill. I was thinking that it finished in Monterey, but the finish was in Carmel Highlands! After the finish, I was completely wiped out, and I barely made it through the food line before sitting down and devouring muffins, bagels, and fruit. I climbed onto the bus with great effort, and had a tough time walking to my car. Despite it all, I never reached a point where I didn't think I could go any further, but I also didn't get a "second wind", unless you count my kick at the end. Here is the track of my first marathon.

I would definately recommend this marathon, as it is beautiful, hugging the cliffs of the Pacific Ocean. They say it is about 20 minutes slower than most marathons, which I hope is true, as I ran it in 3:34. I am now planning on running the Silicon Valley Marathon, and I want to do it in 3:10 or less to qualify for the Boston Marathon!

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Thursday, January 29, 2009

Deep Spiritual Thoughts


I have been thinking a lot of late about fate. In my literature class today we talked about two Russian words which I though about a lot back on my mission. The first is свобода (svaboda), which means freedom and independance. The other word is воля, which means will, or the ability to make choices.

Our class discussion just reminded me of how happy I am that the gospel allows us to understand free agency. Both of these words are used in 2 Nephi 2:26, which explains that we are free(воля) to choose freedom and life (свобода) or captivity and death.

On the same note, I learned from a talk by President Eyring that our fate is tied to others through the message of the gospel: "The Lord trusts His true disciples. He sends prepared people to His prepared servants. You have had the experience, as have I, of meeting people where you were sure the meeting could not have been by chance."

Marvelously, this all ties in to an article that I was reading this morning about how there was an entire school of Russian though which interpreted natural selection to be the survival of those who help others in their community, not those who fight and win. Kropotkin, the Russian thinker who expressed this idea, lived in England and noticed how the the Theory of Natural Selection was very similar to the "Island Mentality" of the British. On the other hand, the Russians were more prone to have to fight against nature itself in such a harsh environment, and those who could work together were most likely to survive. (http://www.marxists.org/subject/science/essays/kropotkin.htm)

That is my defense of karma.

Oh yeah, and a big shout out to my friends: Mike "No-mo Love" Orgill, and Jon "Scrubber Stealer" O'Bryan!

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Aspen Grove





This is my first post on this blog, which I will keep private. Today, Gordon Thomas suggested keeping a blog and using internet tools like wikipedia, scriptures.lds.org, and google to enhance scripture study. I am going to try that.

This past, week, I was at Aspen Grove Family Camp with my Wheatley cousins. It was a blast, but it did leave me badly sunburned and my rotator cuff was pretty messed up by the tennis action. On Wednesday, we climbed Mount Timpanogas with Josh, Aunt Shauna, Dad, and Audrey. Only Audrey and I made it to the summit and I lost my phone on the way down, but some people that we met found it.