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Rincon Peak

April 12th, 2008 by nikkelne

Well, we finally did the Rincon Peak hike. It’s a whopper of a hike for Arizona…just over 16 miles, and about 5000 feet elevation gain.

Photos are posted here. This one here is looking off towards Tucson…just over that next ridge. The valley below heads right over towards my house. So yeah…Arizona isn’t that dull barren desert you all pictured huh?

Top of Rincon

The last two miles of the hike are killer…you’re walking along this flat section towards this really steep section, just thinking the whole time “oh my this is going to suck”…and to your own disdain you are right…it is going to suck. After a mile of going up a hillside that is so steep you can barely walk up without using your hands, you finally pop out of the trees up top to one hell of a view. You can see FOREVER. You can probably see Mexico City or something if you squint hard enough.

Welp time to work on the ga-rage. Yes…thats right…ga-rage.

The World is a Giant Lego Box…

March 31st, 2008 by nikkelne

…and I’m the little kid digging through it. There are a precious few pieces in the lego box that are powerful keys…pieces that seem to fit with everything.
I watched a movie recently called “The Prestige”…very good flick about a couple of feuding illusionists…well worth the watch. I, of course, was drawn to the suggestions the movie made about the work of Nikola Tesla during his stay in Colorado Springs near the turn of the 20th century.

During his stay there, he ran some incredible experiments in which he remotely powered light bulbs by transferring electomagnetic energy via finely tuned resonant earth structures. Â The interesting bit is that this isn’t so far gone from the work done recently by Soljacic in using near-term strongly coupled evanescent magnetic waves to transfer energy.

Tesla Earth Structure

  • Side note: my Aunt Laurie’s ex-husband Ray once tried to explain to me 10 years ago an “invention” of his about a bunch of rods in the ground or something…needless to say I had no idea what he was talking about then. Â Well, congratulations Ray…I finally figured out what in the sam hell you were talking about, but guess what: jigs up!

The point: the concept of resonance is a powerful one…best keep it in the back of my mind and try to apply it whenever possible. Add it to that “special” box of legos…the box you put only the good stuff in, and hide from everyone else.
My university professors tried to drill it into us, but like all things in engineering, the viewpoint was too tightly constrained. I think my dad was right when he said that physicists kick everyones asses. Needless to say…they also have the egos that come with such power.

Ok…time to keep working on the ga-rage. Yes, thats right…the ga-rage (English accent).

25

January 28th, 2008 by nikkelne

So what does it mean, exactly, to be 25?

I’ll tell you:

  • I’m now 1/4 done with my life (optimistic)
  • I can now rent a car.  Oh wait.  I’ve been renting cars since I was 20.  I’m now a member of National Emerald Club Executive baby!!!  Who else can say that?  Eh?  Eh?  ::crickets::  Yeah…thats what I thought…
  • The age at which my mom got married (I think…)

And thats about it.  Happy birfday to me, world!

Oh, and seriously…whats with Chuck Norris, kung-fu master turned politician?  I’ll tell you: world domination.
Chuck Norris can face away from the toilet, pee over his shoulder, and not spill a drop on the floor.

Lifesaving in the Keys

January 2nd, 2008 by nikkelne

My Uncle Keith wrote this today. It speaks for itself. Just goes to show…you don’t need superpowers to be a hero. Humanity is the only prerequisite.

-J

Heroes
Late this afternoon Jeff, camping a few sites down from us on Long Key campground got a call from Cris that a man was in distress about 1/2 to 3/4 mile out in the ocean. The person had apparently capsized and was waving a paddle for help. We had had strong winds gusting to 50 miles per hr. and offshore waves were quite large. Jeff went for his zodiac and soon had it in the water headed out to sea. Jeff hadn’t sighted the person himself, but was going on the word of the person on shore who had alerted Cris. Jeff had lost the shifter from his Mariner motor and so was shifting it by hand and was also low on gas but didn’t hesitate to attempt the rescue. Meanwhile, the girls and I put our boat in and mounted the motor on it. I had had it out for cleaning and a little repair. I pumped it up and Josh and Allison put the motor on and Allison and I took off as well.

Jeff ended up thinking the person was out a lot further than he actually was, and overshot the mark and kept going out into the deeper water alone. Allison and I could see the location of the small boat and headed off Jeff’s course and found an elderly man in a mostly sunken portable boat with a small outboard motor that was under water and the gas can was floating off. Allison and I each grabbed on to the man and pulled him on board. He was exhausted and close to giving up entirely. He was also hypoglycemic as we later found out and had run out of sugar. Jessica had thrown in a couple towels which we covered him with as he lay on the floor of the boat. We had tied on to the prow of his boat and began towing it in with us, but then we let the boat go and determined to go get it later and took the man to shore. Underway, the man seemed to slip in and out of consciousness a couple of times. We got the man in so that the people waiting on shore were able to tend to him. They had an ambulance he went into where they took his blood pressure, etc and determined he would be OK. He revived fully once he got warmed and d rank some hot chocolate.

Jessica and I and Allison went out and met Jeff and all 4 of us got his boat and motor towed in after some effort. Jeff had come back in but had ventured almost out of sight looking for the person.
Later, we all got together in our 5th wheel; the man, his brother and sister-in-law, Jeff and all of us and talked it all over. He told the story then from his point of view, how he had some hope when Jeff passed him, then gave up. Then he said the next thing he saw was Allison’s face and he realized he would be safe.

The whole experience has been quite sobering.

The ocean is always a force to be reckoned with but when you see a man about to be lost it really makes an impression. I plan to revamp my approach to boating, including a cell phone on every trip in a waterproof case for one thing. Also the safety of having two boats out on any long trip is almost a must.

I don’t want to scare any of you or have you worry too much. It is great to be on our end of an episode like this. Allison performed well taking care of the man while on board and has been very impressed with the aspect of lifesaving from a nursing point of view and it may prove influential in that regard. Jeff has impressed me with his selfless courage and tenacity in this situation as well. I wish, in a way, that you could have all seen this happen, to see the way the kids responded and the face of the rescued man after words just overflowing with thanks and almost unable to leave Allison’s side. It is all very revealing of our human nature and we are very thankfull for God’s goodness in all things.
Written By Keith Nikkel Based on True Events that occurred on January 2, 2008

My New Phone - Blackberry Pearl 8130

December 27th, 2007 by nikkelne

So remind me again…why would I want to spend $500 on an iPhone, when I can buy a Blackberry Pearl which is sleaker, and nearly as functional?

Blackberry Pearl

The only thing that is really missing from this thing is the snazzy touchscreen interface, although I’m still not convinced it would have been the best way to go anyways. The thumbball is very functional.

What I have working for me on this puppy:

  • Broadband internet on the go for my laptop, anywhere. I’ve yet to go anywhere that the service is unavailable (and I’ve been travelling for the last month straight). It is fast too….faster than DSL…I see downlinks of 50 - 100kB/s regularly.
  • A fully functional browser on my phone. Not the mobile internet crap. This is the real deal.
  • Any number of apps to install. My favorites so far: Flipside (a music player that works much better than the pre-installed one), and Google Maps Mobile, which can now triangulate you to within a couple km using cell tower info.
  • 2 GB microSD card…why do i need an iPOD? I don’t anymore.
  • Bluetooth as you need it (handsfree, file transfer, etc)
  • Great battery life so far. I keep bluetooth off by default, and keep the screen dimmed way down.
  • A 1.3 MPixel camera that can do stills and video, with an LED flash that is actually pretty bright.
  • Calendering, email, etc, from work is syncable via a Lotus Notes plugin.

iCrap on the iPhone.

TMI

December 27th, 2007 by nikkelne

I read an article on slashdot today about a prediction that 2008 is the year for too much information. I’ve always been of the mindset that everyone is just too weak and unable to adapt, but I’m starting to think they’re right. This damn blog is proof in and of itself. Who actually reads all the crap that is put out these days (this blog included)?!?

Now, to back up a step, I write on here more for my own benefit and enjoyment than for anyone else. If someone else stumbles across this and enjoys the random reading, more power to em.

I think my post earlier this year on my thoughts about humanity approaching some sort of asymptote in it’s existence is reminiscent of this whole issue. We are simply generating and keeping more information (useful and otherwise) than can even be imagined, and requiring ourselves to parse and take it all in, more than is humanly possible.

We’ve got all these damned gadgets now to help us manage the information (and are doing a very good job of it to be honest), but they are persistent in their nagging, and don’t let up unless you “accidentally” drop them off of a tall tower (which a friend of mine did recently).

What happens if we don’t parse it all and don’t keep up? Best case: the assanine schedules and commitments we hold ourselves too fall apart. Worst case: an extremely vital and important piece of information slips through the cracks of email passed over due to bad subject lines, or crappy spam filters, opening the way for worldwide disaster.
What is the limiting factor? Human mental bandwidth.

What is the (human) solution? In my opinion, there isn’t one. At least not of the sort that we hope. Large human societies, governments, social networks, and the like are best described as massive non-linear stability problems. Any attempt to model them, and hence, control them, is doomed to be ill conceived, and forever bereft of success, for the simple fact that no SINGLE person can understand the entire problem. We are bound to a future of unpredictable periods of instability, catalyzed by any one of a number of single or multiple dependent or independent events.
Why do we care so much? Damn good question. Simple answer: humans love control. We HAVE to be in control. We MUST be master of our own destinies. This ties into our beliefs on religion and spirituality. Do YOU have control of your fate? Do you even WANT to have control of your fate?
The only reason we in this country have the stability we do is because some smart dudes a few hundred years ago recognized the fact that societal control is impossible. The only constantly predictable (and hence, controllable) element we have is the very one we sometimes hate the most: our own selfish desires. Somewhat paradoxical. Societal (community) stability is derived from selfishness.

What is my point in all this? I think it’s this: turn up the damn spam filters, ignore the crappy emails, stop trying to parse and react to every bit of information, stop trying to save the world, and do what you want to do for a change, without getting in the way of others. Unfortunately, not everyone thinks this way, so our stability problem is not controllable.

So maybe that is my point. We’re screwed no matter what we do. We die eventually anyways. Probably worth caring more about what happens after we die. Doesn’t matter how smart you are, how politically deft you are, how influential you are, how many friends you have (or don’t), how many people you lead (or follow). It doesn’t matter because some jackass with a gun can very well come right up out of the noise floor and blow your head off, for no reason whatsoever, and there’s not a damned thing you can do about it. Some rare heavy element can embed itself in one of your cells and you can develop cancer as a result, and there’s not a damned thing you can do about it. A boulder could roll down a hill onto your house while you sleep and there’s not a thing you can do about it. The whole point is that YOU do not have control of anything on a large scale.

We have to know our limits. We’re nearing them. Recognize and live within them, or bad shit will happen.
Now that was a ramble. More crap added onto the pile of crap. Well, guess what: I’m proud of my crap =).

Planets, Lions, and Lambs

November 15th, 2007 by nikkelne

Not sure if you all have used Google Sky yet (part of Google Earth), but I saw this link today on the Google Earth Blog: Exoplanets. Being able to look and see where all of the known planets in the galaxy are at a moments notice is pretty darn cool in my book.

Movie recommendation for the week: Lions for Lambs. This film has been stirring up some controversy apparently, but trust me: it’s worth the $10. Proud to be an American.

-J

The Basics: Reading and Writing

November 9th, 2007 by nikkelne

There are two very fundamental skills which I see becoming more and more important, but which fewer and fewer people are actually able to do effectively:

  • Reading
  • Writing

They are the foundation of all human knowledge. How can one expect to function in a demanding environment without them? The information age requires them of us more and more, as electronic communications mediums become more and more efficient, widely used, and commonplace. The telephone is antiquated, and for good reason. It still serves it’s purpose, but how can a phone call to 30 people compete with the clarity, precision and speed of a well written email?
I work on a large program which consists of many hundreds of people at the moment. I see it daily. Hundreds of people supposedly working towards a common goal, primarily interacting with each other verbally, despite the company’s best attempts to take advantage of electronic doodads. Person A hears Person B and C say something he thinks is wrong, be it in a meeting or a hallway conversation, but really doesn’t even know what the conversation was about to begin with, or got mixed up, and goes and starts spreading a tiny rumor, which then propagates, compounding along the way, until it finally somehow makes it back to the true originators, B and C, who, if they are a) smart and b) lucky, realize the potential ramifications and impending disaster that could be caused by said rumor to a design, procedure, program, or process, and then spend the remainder of their day either talking or writing to try to mitigate the situation and correct all the falsities that crept in.
Everyone fights the new, efficient, parallel communication medium. Even some of the young people, who have grown up with it. Some can handle it, and some can’t. Stores of human information are compounding at insane rates. Look, I’m adding to it right now. How can one person possibly keep up with it all?

One can’t. Not all of it We have limits. We are human. Our brains and bodies have physical capacities and bandwidths.
But one can under sample the information. We don’t have to read every word. There are patterns. High level constructs. Orders of knowledge. One can start at a higher order, absorb the important aspects of the configuration and format, and then head down the chain, absorbing only the levels of detail required at the moment.

It’s called skimming. Speed reading. It takes effort. Mental effort. You have to force yourself to do it. Learn how to do it, or prepare to get trounced by the coming oceans of expanding knowledge. We’re only at the tip of the iceberg.

Spins + AdSense Revenue = Sweet Weekend

November 4th, 2007 by nikkelne

I just logged into my bank account today and guess what: I had a deposit from Google for $0.65!!! Pretty cool. Thats $0.65 I didn’t have to do any work for, aside from keeping my site going!

I flew on Friday morning again. The focus was “spin entry and recovery”. Well, lets just say we did a little more than entry and recovery =). I was feeling good about it, so after Joe demo’d a couple entries, and then a couple full spins (or two?), he had me try a couple. Holy cow, what a rush! It’s about a million times better than a roller coster because, yes, you are in control! The basic procedure:

  1. Set up for an unpowered stall.
  2. While approaching the stall, cross-control the airplane (opposite rudder and aileron).
  3. When near the stall, accentuate the stall entry with heavy elevator motion.
  4. Hang on while the airplane starts to pitch down and yaw. Keep rudder into the spin to get er’ goin a bit.
  5. After having the earth spin wildly under you the desired amount, full rudder opposite the spin, and relax elevator.
  6. Pull out of the dive (some nice g’s there), and add power once some of the excess airspeed is traded for altitude.
  7. Squeal with delight.

My Blog/Website Has Been Googlified

October 25th, 2007 by nikkelne

Googlified
Yes, that is now officially a new word. Googlified. Which describes my blog. My blog, my wonderful blog, has been googlified. See it’s catching on.
All you on facebook reading this (because I have facebook automatically import from my blog) won’t see the changes unless you go to my website/blog: NikkelNet. Now clicky clicky…

Ok. You should now be reading this from my website. Look around a bit…note the

  • Top ad banner
  • Google driven site-search box in the sidebar
  • Skyscraper ad banner below the meta information

There is also an example video ad generator on this page here (or at least there will be soon once I figure out what the problem is…).

All are driven by Google AdSense, the incredible advertising platform developed by Google (see also, Google AdWords, which is how you advertise via Google), which allows normal people like me to monetize their crappy (but rapidly becoming less crappy) website content.

I use WordPress to drive my site now by the way (in case you didn’t notice), and I’m rapidly becoming proficient at hacking it’s code to bits to make it do what I want.

Google Lunar X-Prize
In case nobody saw as well, Google is sponsoring the next X-prize, dubbed the Google Lunar X-Prize. In short, there is a $20 million dollar prize for the first private entity that lands a robot on the moon, and drives it 500 meters across the surface while taking radioing back to earth at least 1 Gigabyte of high res digital still photography, high res near real-time video of the drive, and an unspecified amount of high definition video. I plan to participate in it…one way or another…
Google Earth Fire Feed
Also, for anyone interested in the raging fires in CA, there is a great Google Earth feed that shows the extent of the burn. It’s pretty amazing…you should check it out. My friends at JAI Camera Solutions, who donated hardware to Team Scorpion for the DARPA Urban Challenge, was supposed to head out to the Urban Challenge NQE this weekend at the Southern California Logistics Airport in
Victorville, CA, but their CEO is now not let them go because he fears for their lives (for good reason…he is from Denmark apparently and has no concept of the size of California…this fire would probably have swallowed Denmark alive!).

Global Warming

I haven’t had time yet to re-work my global warming post, but it’s coming soon people. Prepare to be un-Al-Gorified in a serious way. =)

ICE!