Having not posted any ride videos on my Yamaha Vstar 950 yet, I made some recordings on Saturday. This one shows construction on route 15 near Williamsport and concludes with a ride over the grate metal arch street bridge.
I used to be terrified to ride on these, but now I rather enjoy them. The sensation of the motorcycle wavering underneath is interesting. Unfortunately this bridge is about to be replaced, the almost finished replacement visible on the right.
My 2012 Inferno Orange Chevy Sonic 1.4 Turbo LTZ Manual From Miscellaneous
Back in January I ordered this 2012 Chevy Sonic with the 1.4 Turbo engine and a manual transmission. I liked the motorcycle inspired design, the color, the opportunity to try a manual transmission, and the fuel economy. I usually ride a motorcycle to work, but some days it is more practical to take an automobile due to weather and/or hauling requirements.
One of the interesting aspects of this car is the made in Europe turbocharged engine. They have a different market over there, being primarily manual transmission cars whereas most drivers here want to chat on their cell phone and shave while driving instead of actually enjoying the drive, so manuals here are stereotypically sold on the cheap. As such, Chevy decided to list this car as running 87 octane gasoline, using a control chip to detect the type of fuel added and retard the engine as appropriate. A fascinating side effect of this unusual measure is a car that actually does perform better with premium gasoline.
But here's a nice trick; as enum members are actually classes, you can override the member functions they contain. I find this most useful overriding toString:
My first RC helicopter; a Syma 108g From RC Flight
At the Greensburg Train show in York last weekend a vendor was flying these RC Helicopters around his booth. Impressed by his precision and the low price, I purchased this one. About the length of my hand, it's designed for indoor use only.
I have been interested in RC aircraft for a while and was considering getting into the hobby this year. Although I was thinking airplanes, flying these around the house is surprisingly fun and not tied to good weather conditions. Helicopters I have looked at in the past were either ridiculously expensive, hard to fly, or both, but modern gyro technology now common in cell phones has made these quite reasonable in price and very stable to fly.
On Thanksgiving Day this year I rode over 300 miles to Cleveland on my VStar motorcycle to visit my sister. The picture at the left was taken upon my arrival at Crocker Park in the evening.
Heading out at 10:30 in the morning it was about 50 degrees Fahrenheit and sunny, a beautiful day for a ride. I decided not to put the windshield on the bike as it reduces my ability to control airflow with layers of clothing and is too hot with my winter gear on at those temperatures.
Today was my last day of full time employment at the PA Capitol Preservation Committee. Thanks to everyone who made me feel welcome over the years. To commemorate my many commutes, enjoy this motorcycle video including part of a favorite route to work on my 2008 Honda Rebel.
Headed to work today, it was 32.7 degrees F with fog. I was convinced, seeing the sun starting to poke out, all would be fine once I got to the top of the mountain and out of our valley of perpetual fog.
I started up the Rebel and after warming up a while, I lurched out the lane (still wasn't warm yet, had to increase choke and putter along; pretty common below 50F). Even though visibility was less than ideal, the roads were clean and dry. After puttering along across the valley, half opening my visor as needed to clear it and at times so I could see at all, I made it to the top of the mountain, but alas, the fog continued in the next valley.
In Liferay 6.0 GA4 Community Edition there is an error in the CKEditor configuration; different configuration files are used to define the editing toolbar for the web content and other areas depending on the browsing path. This results in an issue where the toolbar changes seemingly at random. This is fixed in the Enterprise Edition and for future versions, but for those of us using the current Community Edition, the following workaround is useful.
The most problematic disappearing item for my use case is the spell checker; the same method can be used to restore other buttons as necessary. Back up, then apply this ckconfig.jsp patch to the Liferay root web app. For the tomcat download this is located in the liferay-portal-6.0.6/tomcat-6.0.29/webapps/ROOT/html/js/editor/ckeditor/ directory. Shut down Liferay, remove the tomcat work directory to clear the cache, then restart Liferay.
For a few weeks now Google Maps has a bug where 22/322 at Clark's Ferry is impassible via through route directions. This is not the first time I have found bugs in Google Maps, but it is the first one I have seen involving a major highway.
Although rain from the previous day resulted in the cancellation of the tractor parade and poor attendance, there were still many tractors on display at the 2011 Loyalsock Valley Antique Machinery Association Show. One advantage to going on Sunday is hearing and seeing them pull out, which was a reasonable substitute for the parade.
Attended Carlisle Bike Fest 2011 this year. Enjoyed looking at the rides people came in on; much of the show is the bikes people bring which they park in the middle of the show in wide enough aisles to easily wander up and down.
Other enjoyable attractions included the demo rides (which I didn't qualify for this year due to only having a permit, but watching and listening to new bikes was still cool), Biker Billy's cooking show (watch out if you're in the audience at one of these, he actively seeks victims to roast), and the Disc Connected K9's.
I drove in via a cage this year, scared off by the threat of rain which never materialized. By next year I hope to be more adventuresome.
Although Apple uses standard protocols for Airprint, the service is very picky about the exact broadcast settings before the printer will show up on iOS devices. The easiest way I've found to Airprint to an office workgroup printer:
Configure the printer to be printable via a Linux / CUPS server. On Debian install the cups and cups-pdf packages then log in via port 631 and configure the workgroup printer, making sure a test page prints.
Add ServerAlias * in /etc/cups.conf; this prevents "Request from x using invalid Host: field" errors.
Install avahi, on Debian use the avahi-daemon package.
Run this handy airprint-generate script. Copy the resulting file to /etc/avahi/services/ and restart avahi and cups.
Airprint should now be working for your iOS devices on the local network.