Archive: July 2014
Tour de France 2011 This post is a compendium of all my Tour de France 2014 posts...
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Le Route of Le Tour, 2014 |
The organizers of Le Tour have once again setup an amazing website chock full of information; among other things, nice maps of the route and all the stages, along with detailed elevations of each stage. Check it out and keep it handy for your second screen as you watch the racing!
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Le Tour 2014, stage 1: Jens breaks away, Fabian attacks, Kittel wins, Cavendish crashes |
Le Tour 2014 is officially under way, after a most Grand Depart in Leeds; stage 1 was a meandering tour of Yorkshire, in the North of the UK, with just enough little climbs and big rollers to keep things interesting. The weather was perfect and the crowds were huge and enthusiastic, a great start to what should be a great tour. Jens Voight was part of the initial break and finally attacked out of it to lead most of the way and gather enough points to be initial leader of the King of the Mountains, yay, Jens! And just as the peleton regrouped for a final sprint, Fabian Cancellara attacked and nearly won. But he didn't, and Marcel Kittel did (just like last year), after Mark Cavendish crashed in the runup to the finish (just like last year). Peter Sagan took second and staked his claim to the green jersey. Along with welcoming back a great spectacle and competition, it was so nice to hear Phil (Liggett) and Paul (Sherwin) back in action. Todd Harris is fine as MC, Bob Roll is pleasant and insightful, and this year we have Christian Vandenberg, who isn't quite as polished but makes interesting observations. And I love having Steve Porino out there in the middle of the peleton on a bike; he seems to know all the Directors Sportif intimitely, and brings great in-race insights. Tomorrow brings another lumpy stage with narrow roads and nine categorized climbs, could be a day for a break! |
Fifth wheel |
And so the Ole filter makes a pass... Yay, the Tour started today! Yesterday I was with a friend, and I said "tomorrow the Tour starts", and he said "what Tour?" If you're in that category, so be it.) I will be making separate posts as per usual*, so those of you who would say "what Tour" can safely ignore them...
Evolution in Action: "Convicted criminal offenders had more children than individuals never convicted of a criminal offense... We conclude that criminality appears to be adaptive in a contemporary industrialized country, and that this association can be explained by antisocial behavior being part of an adaptive alternative reproductive strategy." Yikes. Sounds like Unnatural Selection in action. Philosopher referee hand signals. I love it. Dear fellow zillionaires: they're coming for us with pitchforks. A hereditary millionaire makes the liberal case for raising the minimum wage. Sorry, I'm unconvinced, it still feels like socialism, and socialism never works. Bill Whittle: Firewall: Throwing away victory in Iraq. I must say I agree with quite a lot of this, although not with the implication that Obama and his team don't want to win. I think they honestly don't know how. Pretty interesting: If I were Ted Cruz. I was fairly anti-Cruz after the government shutdown, and I still don't think that was a reasonable political tactic even though I don't think Obamacare was a good idea or well implemented. But I recently read The Rise of Ted Cruz in the New Yorker - I'm pretty sure it was not supposed to be flattering - which put him in a different light. Just wish he didn't have that Christian-religious-sanctimony. This is just beautiful ... visualizing algorithms. Amazing how much animation brings understanding of an algorithm. There was a lot of work in creating these examples, but they're worth it :) Super cool optical illusion. The principle behind this is most interesting. I wonder if it could be used for movies? (e.g., use a 3D screen?) Seth Godin: Is better possible? "The answer to this is so obvious to me that it took me a while to realize that many people are far more comfortable with 'no'." My answer is 'yes', even if it *isn't* obvious.
Whew! Antarctica sets new record for sea ice. I was worried about these Emperor Penguins...
Onward! |
World Cup: and then there were four |
So the World Cup quarterfinals are in the books, and we had four completely different games. Germany outlasted France, 1-0, not an exciting game but a study in precision football. Hard not to pick the Germans to go all the way. This game proved my theory about soccer only becoming interesting after one team scores; it was 1-0 after fifteen minutes, and it was pretty entertaining the rest of the way. Next Brazil outflopped Columbia, 2-1, scoring a first goal seven minutes in, and then the teams traded goals in the second half. This was a bit disappointing because neither team played their best; it felt like the referee let things get out of control, and the play suffered. We're still waiting to see a brilliant Brazilian side show up, and they'll have to against Germany. And then Argentina outplayed Belgium 1-0, again the only goal being scored early, but this time it led to a bunch of marching up and down the field with no real spark. So so glad my Tivo has a fast forward button. Not even Messi could liven up a dull game, and while the Belgians can play elegant soccer when they want, they didn't. In the final quarter Netherlands defeated Costa Rica 0-0, 4-3, in a game that could serve as a counterexample against my "give one team a goal" dictum. The football was fun and the Dutch certainly controlled the ball and squandered many chances, but in the end it came down to penalty kicks and that was that. If you weren't rooting for anyone you'd have to pick the winner of this team, based on sheer fun, so Go Oranje! I think the Netherlands - Argentina game is going to be quite entertaining. All my picks made it through and I'm stick with my picks for the next round: Germany vs Netherlands in the final. |
Le Tour 2014, stage 2: tough day in the hills of Yorkshire; Nibali wins late against GC rivals |
Excellent stage today in Le Tour; six solid hours of racing up and down, with nine categorized climbs and several others too, narrow roads, massive crowds, and great riding. It was capped by the GC contenders battling on a 25% hill three miles from the finish, with Chris Froome, Alberto Contador, Alejandro Valverde, and Rui Costa all in the mix, together with the all-around amazing Peter Sagan, but they all watched Vincenzo Nibali attack with 1 mile to go and couldn't bring him back. He only took two seconds in the end but it was a great victory for him and puts him in yellow. In addition to the beautiful Yorkshire countryside, the star of today's stage were the people; I've been watching bike racing for many years but have never seen such crowds. Even the small hills in the middle of nowhere had thousands of cheering fans crowding the road. Excellent. Stage 3 is a flat and crispy parade into London, which should culminate in a bunch sprint; too bad Mark Cavendish' crash yesterday forced him to abandon. I guess it will be Kittel vs Greipel and everyone else can rest up. Onward! |
my new $500 laptop |
A week ago I swapped my four-year-old laptop for a brand new one. It only cost $500 and I now have the fastest, coolest laptop on the planet, basically it’s a rocket ship. How was this possible? I replaced the hard drive in my four-year-old laptop with a solid state drive. 1TB for $500. And now it flies. This was amazing but actually not surprising, since Windows Paging is so crummy. Now that physical memory once again exceeds logical memory, you can run lots of stuff but you can't do it without paging. The best solution is a really fast disk. And eliminating seek time and rotational latency altogether means faster is blazingly faster. So if you have an old laptop which could use a little speed boost, consider an SSD. Try it, you'll like it :) PS for you Mac people, OS X is better at paging than Windows but the speedup will still be dramatic |
Le Tour 2014, stage 3: sprint into downtown London, Kittel triumphs again |
Ho hum; today's Tour de France stage was parade from Cambridge into download London, where Marcel Kittel finished off the field easily in a bunch sprint. The GC was unchanged, and on we go into France. There were huge crowds in England lining the road nearly the entire way - again! - but they didn't have much of a race to watch today. Tomorrow the field crosses the channel into France for another flat stage, a warmup before the Paris-Roubaix-like cobbles of stage 5. Stay tuned... |
the three hour rule |
Today I rediscovered for the Nth time the value of the three-hour rule*: it takes three hours to get anything "done", especially if that thing is something which requires concentration, like programming. And during that three hours it's best disable all interruptions; don't check email, take phone calls, send texts, etc. Three hours. A good day includes at least one three hour window, and a great day includes two :) Today ... was a good day. Tomorrow? We'll see :) |
Le Tour 2014, stage 4: yet another sprint to Kittel |
After a smashing start the 2014 Tour has settled into a (yawn) pattern; the field ride for several hours, millions of people cheer them on, and then Marcel Kittel outsprints everyone else for a win. It's happened three times now in four stages, and it's getting just a bit old. Today was a bit closer than yesterday but the result was the same. It does not make for gripping spectation. Tomorrow will be different however (!), we have a flat stage featuring nine cobbled sections of pave, duplicating a substantial section of the famous Paris-Roubaix race. The GC contenders will all be trying to finish intact while the classics' specialists like Fabian Cancellara try to pull off a win. In fact, with most of the field just two seconds behind current yellow jersey wearer Vincenzo Nibbali, there's a great chance for someone to take the overall lead, at least for a day. That should make for a great race. Onward! |
World Cup: semi-sad |
Rats! Both of the teams I was rooting for in the World Cup lost their semifinal matches ... Brazil were blown out by Germany, 7-1 (and it wasn't that close), and Netherlands were outlasted by Argentina, 0-0, 4-2 (and it was exactly that close). So be it. I am semi-sad. The games have been fun to watch and at least Brazil and Netherlands will meet, this Saturday in the 3rd place game (Go Oranje!) And then Germany and Argentina in the final! The best team (Germany) vs the team with the best player (Messi, for Argentina). Will it be a good match? Hard to say ... I predict Germany will not score five goals in the first 30 minutes, like they did against Argentina, and I predict Messi will probably get loose at least a few times; the Dutch held him in check pretty well. I actually think Argentina have a chance, and that's how I'll be rooting. |
Le Tour 2014, stage 5: wet cobbles! = first selection, Froome out, Nibali extends lead |
Yesterday I complained about how the Tour was settling into a pattern, and today's stage everything changed. A wild, wet, and tumultuous stage over nine sections of cobblestones created this year's first real selection, with Chris Froome crashing out, Vincenzo Nibali extending his lead in yellow, and most of the GC contenders happy they made it to the finish in one piece. Lars Boom won the stage - which was like a mini Paris-Roubaix - in convincing fashion, and Jacob Fulsong finished just ahead of his teammate Nibali in second, putting him in second overall as well. Peter Sagan was a close fourth, extending his lead in the green jersey points competition and landing him third overall in GC. Besides Froome, who sadly crashed twice before he even reached the cobbles and couldn't continue, the day's big loser was Alberto Contador, who rode well but ended up conceding nearly three minutes to Nibali, and over 30 seconds to Andrew Talansky, who is looking more and more like a genuine podium contender every day. We now have to ask ourselves, can Niabli win? We'll have to wait for the mountain stages in the alps to find out.
Update: There has been a lot of discussion about whether cobblestones belong in the Tour. Without commenting on that, I just want to point out that Chris Froome crashed out *before* ever riding on cobbles. It was a wet stage on narrow roads, but I don't think anyone is suggesting that the Tour stop riding in rain, or on back lanes in France. Net net it is too bad that Froome is no longer in the race, but that's cycling... Tomorrow is another flat stage, and most likely another sprint finish. We'll see most of the peleton recovering and taking it easy, but will anyone be able to beat Kittel? Andre Greipel, call your office. |
Le Tour 2014, stage 6: Greipel outsprints the field in the rain |
After yesterday's wet and wild stage over the Paris-Roubaix cobbles, today shaped up to be a rather boring parade ending in a field sprint, and so it was. Most of the field licked their wounds all day, but there were a few more crashes adding injury to injury. The expected field sprint did materialize, but this time Andre Greipel triumphed, as Marcel Kittel sat this one out. Tomorrow is another flat stage, but there are a couple of climbs at the end, so it may be a day for a breakaway to succeed, or more likely a chance for Peter Sagan or Alejandro Valverde. |
Le Tour 2014, stage 7: Trentin nips Sagan in the final bumps; more crashes cost more time |
Looking at today's Tour 2014 stage 7 profile, you couldn't be sure whether the field would survive to the end for a bunch sprint, a breakaway would stay clear, or it would be a sprint among the survivors. And the latter came to pass, as Matteo Trentin barely nipped Peter Sagan in a sprint finish after the pure sprinters were dropped on the late climbs. There was more rain and more crashes, too; Tejay Van Garderen lost over a minute due to an unfortunte crash, exacerbated by his teammate Greg Van Avermaet's late attack. Andrew Talansky also crashed right in the sprint, losing skin but no time. Stage 8 tomorrow will be interesting; the first "real" climbs of the tour, right at the end of an otherwise flat stage, and more rain in the forecast. On paper it looks to be a perfect opportunity for a breakaway to survive as a tired and sore peleton take the day off. There will likely be a GC battle for time on the final climb which is short but steep. Stay tuned! |
Le Tour 2014, stage 8: Kadri survives from break, Contador and Nibali assert themselves |
Today's stage 8 of Le Tour was predictably boring for the first three hours (ho hum, a five man break pulls 10 minutes on a disinterested and resting peleton in quiet sunshine), and then predictably exciting for the last one (a breakaway survivor wins and a GC battle errupts on the final climb in pouring rain). And so it goes. Congratulations to Blel Kadri (call him "Joe" :) who attacked his breakaway companions as the climbs started near the end and won convincingly, taking the lead in the climbers' polka dot jersey competition as well. Meanwhile back in the peleton Alberto Contador's Saxo teammates cranked up the pressure and decanted the field on the first climb, leaving a select group of about 20 riders to content the final short (1 miles) but steep (10%+) climb to the finish. At that point Contador attacked, but he couldn't shake yellow-jersey-wearer Vincenzo Nibali, who was content to follow and not lose any time. Richie Porte was right there too, good for him as he assumes leadershop of the Sky team from defending champion Chris Froome who crashed out in stage 5. Meanwhile the other contenders all fell back a bit, as the Tour saw a main selection that establishes the leaderboard going into the second week. Nibali's teammate Jakob Fulsang lost time but is still in second (1:44), Porte moved up to to third (1:58), Michal Kwiatkowski lost time but is now fourth (2:26), Alejandro Valverde also lost time but also moved up, to fifth (2:27), and Contador sits sixth (2:34). Other would-be contenders include Rui Costa (8th, 2:52), Bauke Mollema (9th, 3:02), Tejay Van Garderen (12th, 3:34), and Andrew Talansky (16th, 4:42), who was the victim of a poorly timed crash just before the final climb. Tomorrow will be more of the same: not high mountains, exactly, but six categorized climbs. They don't come at the end, so perhaps we will see another breakaway and another victorious survivor. Of note, Peter Sagan finally lost time today (18:17), after being up among the leaders in every stage so far, so he might be allowed to escape for a win. [ Le Tour 2014: all posts | index ]
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time passing |
I'm in a reflective mood today, thinking about this year (already halfway!) and last summer (already a year ago!). So much has happened in that time that I can't say "wow, how time flies", and yet it seems weird that so much time has passed. Lots of memories. You just do the best you can with each day, and see what happens... I guess creating memories is the best use of time :) Onward! And so the world cup winds down; today we have the third place match, between Brazil, looking for some redemption after getting blown out by Germany, and the Netherlands, looking for a goal (pun intended, they've now gone two straight games without scoring one). I've been rooting for this matchup - of course, wish it was the final - and am hoping for a wide open game; each time has some amazing scorers if they're free to fly. Most pundits are picking Brazil, but I say Go Oranje! I've temporarily (?) switched back to Firefox as my everyday browser. What happened was; I logged into a server, launched its browser, which happened to be Firefox, and was surprised at how snappy and cool it looked. This is just an experiment, but so far, so good. I've been using Chrome for so long now... the main advantage of Firefox is that it doesn't bring the previously opened window forward before launching a new window, like Chrome does. Pretty nitty. Stay tuned!
Why it's a good thing that J.R.R.Tolkein didn't write in the era of political correctness. Hilarous but quite true. You could actually substitute anyone's name for Tolkein's. I've decided that "political correctness" is uniformly bad. It merely means the majority imposing their views on everyone else. An interesting corrective tactic: Following Netflix, YouTube shames ISPs delivering slow video. This could be a great way to achieve net neutrality without regulation. It's a new world: Plug your phone into this solar-powered donkey. Excellent. I'm eagerly awaiting my Amazon Fire phone (of course!), both to see what Firefly is all about (visual search!), as well as to finally have an Android phone. Don't know yet whether it will be my daily driver, stay tuned. But I agree with this: Amazon's Fire phone is an experiment to mitigate mobile's threat. You've got to love that they're trying it! Meanwhile: Google sets aside $500M to expand Shopping Express nationwide. Wow. Your phone is about to be a battleground for the retail giants. (And eyesFinder wants to be an arms vendor in the war :) Let's wrap up with Canada's most beautiful spots. Wow. |
Le Tour 2014, stage 9: Tony Martin powers to win, as Tony Gallopin moves into yellow |
Stage 9 of the 2014 Tour was one of those interesting transition stages; plenty of climbs, but nothing too brutal, and the last coming some considerable way from the finish. With a harder mountain stage tomorrow and a finish on a climb, and a rest day the day after, the GC contenders were content to take a rest, and Vincenzo Nibali and his Astana teammates were happy to see a break of 28 riders take off. Tony Gallopin was the highest placed in that group, and ended up in yellow, relieving Astana of any burden tomorrow without conceding any time to the true contenders. Meanwhile Tony Martin basted out early, a man on a mission, and powered to victory; even that huge break could not nail him back. I just watched him nearly win the Tour de Suisse; boy can he burn the watts. Just doesn't quite have the power to weight ratio you need to triumph in the mountains. As noted tomorrow's stage is going to be tough; nine catagorized climbs included four Cat 1s and a finish at the top of the last one. I predict serious fireworks as Alberto Contador tries to get some time back from Nibali, and Richi Porte, Andrew Talanski, etc will battle it out in a major selection for the overall. Stay tuned! |
World Cup: Germany triumphs over Argentina, 1-0... (yawn) |
And so the German machine ground out a 1-0 victory in the World Cup final, depriving Argentina (and Lionel Messi) of glory, and depriving us viewers of any interest. (yawn) I must tell you a game in which the score is 0-0 after two hours cannot be considered all that interesting, and especially this one. The final goal by Mario Goetze was artistic, but the rest of the game was not, especially. And so the World Cup 2014 ends. Most soccer experts will tell you it was a great world cup, with more goals and more action than previous years; for me, it was fun watching a sport I don't follow, and rooting for the Netherlands (go Oranje!), but the experience has not transformed me into a soccer fan. I doubt many others were converted either. Back to the Tour! Then Baseball. And then ... Football :) |
awesome Cassini |
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Le Tour 2014, stage 10: Contador crashes out as Nibali takes the queen stage and regains yellow |
Aw, man! First Chris Froome and now Alberto Contador have crashed out of the 2014 Tour, leaving Vincenzo Nibali as the last favorite standing. Stage 10 was always going to be one of the toughest in the whole tour, with seven categorized climbs and two Cat 1s near the end, but add serious rainstorms and a lot of competition going into the rest day tomorrow, and it was wild. Joaquim Rodriguez animated the early break, taking all the climbs in successful pursuit of the climbers polka dot jersey, but sadly Alberto Contador hit a pothole while descending in the rain and broke his leg, ending his tour. Nibali saved his firepower for the last climb and powered up the final stretch of 20% to take the stage and reclaim the jersey. At this point he's the overwhelming favorite to keep it all the way to Paris. That same climb reordered the general classification; Richie Porte now sits second (2:23), and Alejandro Valverde third (2:47). Other would-be contenders include Tejay Van Garderen, moving up to seventh (3:56) after a good day, and world champion Rui Costa now in ninth (3:58). Tomorrow is the tour's first rest day and boy is the peleton ready for it. I'll try to to a little photo essay. And Wednesday's stage 11 is one of those bumpy stages which are tough to predict; four smaller catagorized climbs in the last 40K might let a breakaway escape, or a strongman like Peter Sagan triumph. We'll see... |
Le Tour 2014, rest day 1: pics and thoughts |
We've [finally!] reached Le Tour 2014's first rest day, and what's left of the Peloton must be quite grateful. In sheer numbers this tour hasn't necessarily been more brutal than others, but seeing so many top riders like Mark Cavendish, Andy Schleck, Chris Froome, and Alberto Contador crash out has been amazing. It leaves the field clear for Vincenzo Nibali to win - doesn't look like anyone is going to challenge him (assuming he makes it!) - but it also clears the field for a bunch of contenders to finish on the podium. And most of the big climbs still lie ahead. Should be great. Other interesting subplots include Peter Sagan - he's got the green points jersey pretty well locked up, but will he win a stage? And Roman Bardet and Thibaut Pinot compete for the white best young rider jersey, as well as top Frenchman and possibly first Frenchman to be on the podium for many years. And Joaquim Rodriquez' pursuit of the polka dot climbers jersey. Mark Cavendish crashes out in stage 1 ... did not win any stages this year, leaving the sprints for Marcel Kittel and Andre Greipel. Chris Froome crashes out in stage 5 ... didn't even make it to the cobbles. Lars Boom wins stage 5, an iconic Paris-Roubaix stage in the rain over cobbles. Alberto Contador crashes out in stage 10 ... didn't even make it to the high mountains. Thibaut Pinot and Roman Bardet battle for the white best young rider jersey, and best Frenchman, and the podium! Joaquim Rodriquez looking good for the polka dot climbers' jersey. Cheers ... the Tour resumes tomorrow, with two lumpy stages which might see breakaways get clear, and then later in the week two serious mountain stages in the Alps. |
Visualizing |
We people are pretty visual creatures, even when talking about abstract concepts we "visualize them" to gain insights. I was thinking back to the idea of visualizing algorithms, and reflecting on how much it helps with insight and communication. All the more reason to have great visual search :)
After giving IOS 8 betas the old college try, I've fallen back to IOS 7.1.2. IOS 8 is simply too buggy, there are too many things that don't work. And sadly it isn't any better; I was hoping Apple would retrench on some of their UI stupidity and go back to buttons that look pushable, sliders that look slidable, etc. I totally wish there was a supported way to fall back to IOS 6. I fear this "flat look" is going to be with us for some time to come, despite being both uglier and harder to use. I've mentioned before, I have an original iPad running IOS 5 which I use from time to time, and every time I pick it up I wish we could have that look and feel back. Apropos: the best way to get ideas is to suffer with something that doesn't really work. Amen. IOS 8 has given me a lot of good ideas :) Wow, the first trailer for Star Wars, in 1976. I remember exactly where I was when I first saw it - my room at college - and I remember exactly my reaction - I must see this! Never mind the crappy non-CGI spaceships... they had me at hello. Excellent. Microsoft's CEO needs a new editor. "Tortured statements from CEOs mean one thing: I have something to hide." Um, yeah. This is one of the things we liked about Steve Jobs, when he had something to say he just said it. Oh, here is a translation. Awesome: 3D-printable version of Marcel Duchamp's art deco chess set. I love that we can do this sort of thing now, and so easily.
Dave Winer: comparing APIs. "I just spend 3 months wrangling with the current Twitter API, and got more or less the same functionality from Facebook in four days." I feel like Twitter never really wanted third-party adoption, while Facebook early-on realized it was a huge key to growth.
Elon Musk donates $1M for new Tesla museum. Excellent. The Oatmeal strikes again!
Scientists claim creation of blackest black yet. Hmmm... this is tough to visualize :) Does anyone outside of silicon valley want a smartwatch? Good question. I've been wearing my Pebble Steel off-and-on for the past week, and I kind of like it. I wish it looked cooler, but the functionality is pretty nice and occasionally even rises to "useful". One of my favorite ZooBorns ever: a Scops Owl chick. He looks like trouble :)
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complexity: Men vs Women |
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Le Tour 2014, stage 11: Gallopin nips Sagan on a lumpy day; Talansky survives |
Stage 11 of Le Tour 2014 was a lumpy ride along the Franco-Swiss border, with four minor climbs near the end. Everyone figured it would be a stage for Peter Sagan, and it was, but Tony Gallopin powered out from a late break to win by a whisker, leaving Sagan frustrated again. The GC was largely unchanged, but a big story of the day was Andrew Talansky's desperate battle to finish inside the time limit, still suffering badly from a series of crashes. He barely made it - yay! - and was cheered across the line by a crowd which waited over 30 minutes after the leaders had finished to cheer him on - yay! - but whether he'll be able to continue is doubtful. And his GC hopes have been dashed entirely. Tomorrow's stage 12 will be a bit more of the same: more lumps, four more climbs, and another chance for Sagan. Stay tuned! |
Le Tour 2014, stage 12: Kristoff nips Sagan on another lumpy day; GC unchanged |
Another lumpy day, another chance for Peter Sagan to win a stage, and another disappointment for him as Alexander Kristoff barely beat him to the line in the final sprint. Behind them a tired peleton continued to recover with the GC unchanged. It might have been the least eventful day so far in what has been a most eventful tour, marking the overall halfway point. And it gets more interesting from here, as we have the first real mountain stage in the Alps tomorrow, ending with an HC climb to the finish. Yippee. [ Le Tour 2014: all posts | index ]
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Le Tour 2014, stage 13: Nibali wins on HC final climb, solidifies hold on yellow |
Stage 13 of Le Tour 2014 was the first "real" mountain stage, with a Cat 1 hors d'oeuvre 40K out and a 20K HC final climb to the finish. It promised some interesting GC dynamics, a decanting of the contenders to determine who was really in to finish on the podium, and it did not disappoint. When the dust settled Vincenzo Nibali won the stage and solidified his hold on the yellow jersey, overtaking attackers Leopold Konig and Rafal Majka on the final ramps to the finish. Alejandro Valverde ended up second (3:37) with best young rider Romain Bardet in third (4:24). Thibaut Pinot and Tejay Van Garderen now round out the top five. |
the real world |
I've been happily working away on my new company, watching Le Tour and the World Cup, but meanwhile in the real world, things are not good. In fact, they're very not good. Of course this morning's tragedy was not good; pro-Russian militants in Ukraine shot down a passenger jet (or possibly, the Russian military). Depending on your point of view, this was an isolated disaster, a mistake, or an unfortunate consequence of letting the situation in Ukraine escalate into badness. But there is a lot more which is not good. Our President is refusing to enforce our immigration laws, exacerbating an already difficult situation. I'll have more to say about the need for having borders and restricting immigration, but I'll just note that few of us would let strangers come and live in our homes, no matter how sympathetic we might be to their plight. Broken US foreign policy is also responsible for another slow motion train crash, the situation in Gaza, which has unfolded with brutal moral clarity. That anyone thinks the Palestinians can govern themselves after the ongoing disaster there is difficult to imagine, and that anyone blames Israel for defending themselves against senseless aggression is even harder. This has happened against a backdrop of incredible news about our government: spying on civilians, spying on foreign governments, IRS subversion and lying, and a general disregard for the law. And the economy? We pissed away $7B for a stimulus which expanded our government tremendously but did little to actually stimulate anything; unemployment remains high, our economy remains stagnant, and we have an incredible new debt load to service. The bill for Obamacare has yet to be paid, and the Medicare time bomb will soon explode. I'm generally optimistic and under-react to things, but it is hard to disagree with Victor Davis Hanson: in Obama's America "scandals now come so fast that each new mess makes us forget the previous one". Let's hope we all don't forget how this all unfolded the next time we visit the ballot box. |
Le Tour 2014, stage 14: Majka triumphs, GC solidifies |
Today's second Alpine stage of the 2014 Tour de France provided more climbing fireworks. Rafal Majka survived three tremendous climbs from a seventeen-man break to win, after finishing second yesterday. He is giving team Tinkoff-Saxo something to celebrate after losing leader Alberto Contador back in stage 10. Vincenzo Nibali added to his overall lead by finishing second, and the rest of the GC compacted and solidified... Alejandro Valverde is still second (now at 4:37), Romain Bardet is till third (4:50), also in yellow, and also the top French rider, Thibaut Pinot is still fourth (5:06), and Tejay Van Garderen is still fifth (5:49) after another strong ride in the mountains. Meanwhile Joaquim Rodriguez recaptured the climber's polka dot jersey by taking all the early climb points (including leading across the top of the Col d'Izouard, and claiming the prize for the first rider over the highest point of the tour). He is now tied with Majka, and that might be an interesting competition when the Tour reaches the Pyrenees. Another interesting competition is the best young rider, between Bardet and Pinot, who are also battling for a podium spot and ... best Frenchman! Tomorrow is a long transition stage (aka, watch out for Marcel Kittel and Andre Greipel), and Monday is the Tour's second rest day. After that ... the Pyrenees for three days! Stay tuned. |
Le Tour 2014, stage 15: Kristoff wins transition stage as break caught with 20m to go |
Argh! These transition stages can be nail-biters; today on Le Tour featured a long flat run through Provence, with a dead flat sprint into Nimes. A stage for Marcel Kittel or Andre Griepel for sure, right? But then a two-man break nearly ... nearly! ... got away, as the peloton's chase was slowed by rain and roundabouts. Jack Bauer and Martin Elminger rode hard all day and at first it seemed they would surely be caught, and then it seemed they would make it to the finish! But heartbreakingly they were caught, with 20m to go... and Alexender Kristoff led the field sprint across the line. Whew. Tomorrow is the tour's second rest day, and then Tuesday the race resumes with three stages in the Pyrenees! |
footprint |
45 years ago today, the footprint heard around the world ... leaving a lasting impression on the human race. Our first step off our own planet. Pretty hard to look at that picture without feeling chills.
Of course the lunar landings were the epitome of a team accomplishment, but no doubt there were brilliant engineers making significant individual contributions. I always think the team sets up the individual, but can never take her place. Have we reached the end of 'genius'? Looking around me, I don't think so... Heh: selfies are awesome. "I take a lot of selfies. You know why? Because I’m fucking adorable." Those were the days: space disintegrator gun and helmet. I feel like I'd want one of those right now (and yeah, I'd take a selfie with it :) Scott "Dilbert" Adams: the user interface to reality. "Today when I hear people debate the existence of God, it feels exactly like debating whether the software they are using is hosted on Amazon's servers or Rackspace." Both subjects certainly prove strong feelings! The perfect use for a 3D-printer: making Barbie armor! Wow, this is genius. I wonder if we could print her a disintegrator gun? Meanwhile another great use: 3D-printing ice cream! I am not making this up. Where do I get one? (This happened at MIT, I hope my Caltech brethren are paying attention.) Oh, and this company lets you print selfies on toast! Seriously. Just when you think you've heard it all... Robot swarm descends on NYC's museum of math. Excellent.
An article in Salon (!) examines the recently announced Tesla Model 3. Less expensive, and with a range of 200+ miles, this could be the mainstream electric car everyone has been waiting for. We'll see... I haven't seen any pictures of this car yet, only rumors and mockups. Also electrifying: Airbus' shows off its largest (A308) and smallest planes at the Farnborough air show, including a new electric "jet". How cool is that?
I'm going to have to work on this: how to get ahead by speaking vaguely. Fortunately among our political leaders there are many good examples :) ZooBorn of the day: a little South African fur seal pup. Aww, he's so cute!
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Le Tour 2014, rest day 2: movie + thoughts |
The Tour de France 2014 rests again today. Left are three mountain stages in the Pyrenees, a transition stage, and a time trial left before Sunday's parade / sprint to Paris. It seems like Vincenzo Nibali is a lock to win. But the rest of the podium and top ten is up for grabs, should make for some exciting racing. Peter Sagan has the green jersey sewn up. But the polka dot jersey competition is tight (tied!) between Joaquim Rodriquez and Rafal Majka, and the white jersey is up for grabs between Romain Bardet and Thibaut Pinot, who are also battling for top French rider and ... perhaps most importantly ... fighting to be the first Frenchman on the podium since Ricard Virenque in 1997. Add to that Tejay Van Garderen sitting in fifth, and riding stronger every day, and Bauke Mollema lurking in seventh, and Rui Costa ... well there's a lot of racing left. (Update: Rui has dropped out due to pnemonia! Rats) It already seems a long time ago but remember stage 5, which retraced the Paris-Roubaoix route over the cobbles in the rain? Want to see it again, from the handlebars of a rider? Check this out: Wow. And Onward! |
Le Tour 2014, stage 16: Rodgers attacks downhill, GC shuffled |
Well you never know what's going to happen after a rest day in the Tour. Today seemed like there might be a breakaway which could get away; the longest stage of this year's Tour, with the HC Port de Bales climb 21km from the finish. And indeed a huge group of 21 riders broke off early before basting apart on that final climb. Michael Rodgers went over the top first with Thomas Voelker and a small group of others, and they battled on the long downhill with Rodgers emerging victorious. A great race. And meanwhile another battle played out among the GC contenders; Vincenzo Nibali made it safely up and over, along with Alejandro Valverde and the French trip of JC Peraud, Thibot Pinot, and white jersey wearer Romain Bardet, but Tejay Van Garderen struggled and lost serious time, as did Chris Horner. (I was hoping Horner would fly without having to protect Rui Costa any longer, but looks like he's still recovering from that horrible training crash a couple of months ago.) Tomorrow is the hardest stage of the tour, bar none; three serious Cat 1 climbs followed by an HC mountaintop finish at Pla d'Adet. I can't wait! |
Le Tour 2014, stage 17: Majka triumphs, confirms polkadots |
In the hardest stage of this year's tour, Rafael Majka triumphed on the final mountain climb up to Pla d'Adet, giving Team Tinkoff Saxo their third stage win and confirming his right to wear the polka dot jersey of the King of the Mountains. Any one of the climbs in this stage could have been decisive, but having four serious climbs in a row certainly created a selection. And it was fun to watch, too. Behind the leaders the GC contenders battled but ultimately the times were little changed, except that Romain Bardet faltered a little and ceded time and the white best young rider jersey to Thibout Pinot. Tomorrow's stage 18 is yet another tough Pyrenees stage, with two HC climbs: up the Col du Tourmalet and another serious mountaintop finish atop the Hautecam. Excellent! |
Le Tour 2014, stage 18: Nibali confirms dominance up Hautecam |
In the final decisive road stage of the 2014 Tour, Vincenzo Nibali triumphed up the final HC climb of Hautecam and confirmed his dominance of this year's Tour. Barring a disaster in Saturday's time trial, he will wear the yellow jersey in Paris. And at this point who could deny him; the way he's ridden this tour, he might well have won even if Chris Froome and Alberto Contador were still riding. It was a great race all the way up the last climb; if you've ever wanted to watch a truly great race up a truly tough mountain, this would be a good one to go back and watch. I enjoyed every minute of it, especially 42-year-old Chris Horner's late attack on the GC leaders, which was glorious despite ultimately failing. Rafael Majka had a great ride too, as did Tejay Van Garderen and JC Peraud. Unfortunately Alejandro Valverde faltered in the final battle and now sits fourth, with some serious work to do in the time trial to get back on the podium. And it was a great race for France, as there were no fewer than three French riders battling and left with a chance at the podium. Tomorrow is a flat sprinters stage - the last chance for a breakaway, so could be interesting - and then Saturday is the long time trial before Sunday's parade into Paris. Onward. |
Le Tour 2014, stage 19: Navardauskas outruns charging peleton |
On paper the last road stage of the 2014 Tour looked like one for the sprinters; a flat "transition" stage. But as the last chance for glory you knew anything could happen, and something great did; Ramunas Navardauskas attacked the peloton on a dinky Cat 4 climb near the end and then powered away from a charging peloton to give Team Garmin Sharp their first victory of the tour. And it certainly made for great spectating, it seemed he would be reeled in just at the end like his teammate Jack Bauer on stage 15, yet he held on and made it. Yay. Stage 20 tomorrow is the time trial, and there's quite a lot at stake; 2nd, 3rd, and 4th place are up for grab between JC Peraud, Thibot Pinot, and Alejandro Valverde, and 5th and 6th are in play between Romain Bardet and Tejay Van Garderen. Stay tuned! |
Le Tour 2014, stage 20: Martin wins TT as Nibali cruises to final yellow |
The amazing 2014 Tour de France continued today as Tony Martin won the long 40km time trial, extending his dominance in the TT discipline. Vincenzo Nibali finished a strong fourth, wrapping up his overall GC victory. JC Peraud passed his French countryman Thibot Pinot to end up second, despite two punctures, and Alejandro Valverde failed to gain ground, leaving Pinot on the podium in third and finishing fourth overall (and taking the white jersey as best young rider). Tejay Van Garderen finished fifth for the second time, after barely passing Romain Bardet. So ends a great Tour; tomorrow is the traditional parade to Paris, punctuated at the end by what will likely be a ferocious bunch sprint. I'm sad! I don't want the Tour to end... |
Le Tour 2014, stage 21: Kittel wins final sprint (again); Nibali golden in yellow |
To nobody's surprise Marcel Kittel won the final bunch sprint down the Champs d'Elysee in Paris, after the usual flurries of attacks on the cobbles in front of millions of screaming Frenchman. It was an amazing pageant, as always, to see 200 brightly clad riders flying down the boulevard at 40mph. And so ends the remarkable 2014 tour; with Vincenzo Nibali in firm possession of the overall leader's yellow jersey, Peter Sagan equally secure in the sprinter's green jersey, Rafael Majka in the king of the mountain's polka dots, and Thibot Pinot as the best young rider in white. It was a great three weeks of great racing, with a little bit of everything, and after looking forward to each day's racing I'm sorry it's all over. I guess I'll have my little period of mourning and then we can look forward to the 2014 Vuelta a Espana. (Will Chris Horner be able to defend against Chris Froome and Alberto Contador?) |
resurfacing |
Whew, what a week! What a two weeks... work work work and a wonderful interlude sailing an E Scow with a friend in Charleston and a business trip to Boston. And so much going on at eyesFinder. But there's a lot going on elsewhere too ... let's take a look, shall we?
I am spending 50% of my time coding these days, and the other 100% of my time doing everything else. It has been great. There is so much pleasure in slowly patiently building something piece by piece, making all the pieces fit just so. Awesome!
Just finished The Martian, by Andy Weir. It was excellent, highly recommended, as plausible near-future science fiction. So much greatness and so much humor too. (Thanks, Brad Feld.) Couldn't wait to reach the end of each day so I could visit Mars :) Fun fact: this book was first self-published as an e-book on Amazon, and Random House picked it up for printing afterward. The 'Just in Time' theory of user behavior. Aka, "the path of least resistance is everyone's best friend". Taken from a cool new book: The Honest Truth about Dishonesty, by Dan Ariely. Bill Gates' and Warren Buffets' favorite business book is out of print. Written in 1971, in consists of 12 stories from The New Yorker. However, it is now available ... as an e-book. Cool. Nobody doubt's Google's cloud intentions anymore. Nope. But then, whoever did?
I read this with great interest: What's Google's biggest fear? Native search. That is, sites and apps which have their own search, instead of using Google.
Verizon FIOS gets speed boost; uploads now as fast as downloads. Yep. Thank you! Helpful: Why seven hours of sleep might be better than eight. Personally I suggest six, but that's just me... So did I tell you? I've got a Fire Phone. So far I like it, stay tuned for a full review. In the meantime, the critics have soundly panned it. Ah, they didn't like the first Kindle either, and now look.
Excellent: 3D-printing comes to Amazon. Of course. Although right now they're selling 3D-printed stuff, someday they will sell the models so you can print your own at home. Guess before clicking: The most important factor of startup success. I agree entirely. (It’s not having a funny Dutch founder who sails and cycles, although that was a good guess :) Why OKCupid's experiments aren't the same as Facebook's. Yeah I kind of agree. The difference is setting expectations. This little guy is too cute, ZooBorn of the week is Jasper, a Lynx Cub. |
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