2012 WNR Series 1 Race 3

It was grey, high chance of rain, with likely thunderstorms. Light winds were promised for the evening, except “wind and waves higher in thunderstorms”.

With Tim on work travel, crew was TimP, Garrett, and Brian. We made it to the start with enough time but not a lot of time. (We don’t know how to act when we have a lot of time.) We got the new D1 course with four other Albergs: Argo, Asylum, Second-to-Nun, and Skybird.

We started comfortably on starboard at the boat end, which I fervently hoped was favored, with Asylum to leeward. Skybird got a good start, closer to the line, on port but tacked over close in front of us just after the gun. I think Argo started toward the pin. Winds were South at about 5kts.

The wind was light but steady for the beat to drop mark A. We got lifted slightly nearing the mark and did well on the fleet, including a close pass with Argo on port which forced them to duck right at the mark. I think they might have crossed cleanly but with light wind and short crew, TC opted for the safe option. We rounded in first and rolled into a bearaway set followed by a quick gybe. On the rhumbline to G5 we had clear air with Argo setting up shop slightly higher and 6-8 lengths back. After rounding G5 we found a boat slower than the Albergs. Unfortunately they were too far away, and the leg too short, to get above them but close enough to spoil our air and hold us back. Argo closed the gap a bit.

Rounding the red nun and dousing the spinnaker I did a poor job getting on course and we were slow. Argo rounded cleanly with good momentum and rolled over us while we trundled back up to speed. By this time the breeze had gone all shifty and I played catch-up trying to find a groove. Argo moved into a 3-4 length lead on our tack while Skybird split with us after rounding the nun. The breeze got shiftier and puffier and we gained some on Argo’s double-handed crew. Halfway to the Academy seawall Argo tacked and we ducked them to continue on port. Further out Skybird was looking good, having crossed Argo and I think leading the race at that point. Getting closer to the wall we started to see big puffs swirling around, mostly coming out of the harbor, and generally increasing breeze. (This worked in our favor. Though we didn’t know it then, the wind was busily changing its colors from S at 5kts to NW at 18kts.)

We tacked to starboard at the wall and soon converged with Skybird on port. They were slightly ahead before tacking back to starboard a length below us. We had just gotten back up to speed when the really big gusts came with gusto and the right shift showed itself in earnest. Within sixty seconds it shifted so far right that we were now reaching straight at the finish. With Garrett on the main and Brian, who happened to be on the jib at the moment, working hard to follow the 30 degree shifts and 15kt gusts we blasted through the harbor dodging a bit of moored traffic with Skybird close astern and Argo close to them.

We took the gun nine seconds ahead of Skybird, after only 50 minutes racing!

That’s the quickest WNR I can remember. And we all finished within minutes of each other; thirty seconds separated 1st and 3rd.
Full results here.

We quickly dropped the jib and motored out of the fray. A few minutes later we also dropped the main and motored home in light rain, increasing wind and 23kt gusts.

Fun times!

Sos – running in beautiful rural France

We were lucky enough to vacation in France this year. We spent a few days in Paris and a few days with friends. They are in a tiny town in the southwest called Sos. It’s a 4.5 hour ride from Paris on the 190mph TGV train, and then an hour drive from Agen. It really is in the middle of nowhere…and it’s wonderful.

I got in a couple runs and it was a great way to see the scenery. They were sightseeing runs more than training runs. One hilly and one flat; the narrow roads were all mine.

Highlights included:

  • The hilly one showed me a fabulous view of the town from the next ridge. With the early morning sun at my back lighting the town with warm light, I wished I had the camera.
  • Bored cows whose heads came up in unison, in what I’m sure is their version of giddiness at this new excitement in their morning, heads slowly pivoting to follow my progress like 30 white-faced mimes.
  • A just-barely-not-turned ankle at the turnaround of an out-and-back run. Read: as far from home as possible. I was sure I was screwed but after a minute with the weight off it and a few minutes walking it wasn’t painful and got me home with no problems. It was very slightly swollen that night but, with no pain and no lingering inflammation, I feel lucky.

We were amazed at the number of runners we saw in Paris! I was hoping for an early morning, pre-crowds, run around Notre Dame and along the Seine but it didn’t work out.




The scary reality of internet voting

I’m a web and network geek so I’d love to see it work. But I admit thinking about relying on it today for so elemental a thing as electing the representatives to lead a nation scares the proverbial electronic bejeezus out of me.

Maybe Halderman’s “significant fundamental advances in computer security” will be possible with quantum computing.

Beer-powered bending robot elected to DC school board by hackers


Bender-Nixon

60-minute NapTown run with Tim

It feels good to run long again! It’s been almost a year since I started having foot pain on long runs. I ended up bagging that marathon and a half Ironman later in the summer. I was bummin’.

Tim and I had a good hour this morning and I’m feeling good after it. My 10k PR, at the Camp Letts turkey trot, is only 2 minutes faster.

This is my first long run since losing 10 pounds and boy does it make a difference! Even at my fittest, long runs were usually over 10-min miles. I’m way less fit now but the mass reduction lets me keep up with Tim in the 9:15-9:40 range much easier! (He’s still waay faster. He PR’d in the 10k last year under 8 min/mile.)

Launching LogMeIn Rescue Desktop App with AutoHotKey

Happy Leap Day

At work I use LogMeIn Rescue a lot. It’s a great tool for for accessing remote computers and it works from any web browser…assuming the browser is IE or Firefox. I used Firefox mostly but I got tired of keeping up with what version of what browser was compatible with the Rescue plugin. Lately Firefox has gotten pushy about updating itself and LogMeIn wasn’t always as quick to update their plugin.

LogMeIn now offers a standalone desktop application and it’s very quick. Not only faster-loading than a browser, the Desktop App can get you there quicker by remembering your LogMeIn credentials. You’ll be be going from zero to tech support in no time flat.

The problem is we share LogMeIn accounts and need to use whichever is available at the time. Using the Desktop App and AutoHotKey to quickly enter the username is a good solution.

Log into your Rescue admin account and download the Desktop App from there. Install it and make sure it works when you log in manually.

Download AutoHotKey_L from here: AutoHotKey download. Install it and follow the instructions to make it run every time you login.

Once that’s solid, add this code and reload the script. (Of course, edit the run path to match your LogMeIn installation and enter your email addresses.)

I chose the Ctrl-Shift combination plus the numbers 1 thru 3 since I can hit these quickly with two fingers of one hand. Take a look at the AutoHotKey documentation for other key combinations. (AutoHotKey is amazingly flexible and I’ve already thought of a ton of other ways it can make my life more fun…well, at least easier. I can’t believe I haven’t found it before now!)

This will run the Desktop App and enter the login name, then tab to the password field and wait for your input. Very quick and easy!

Enjoy

; *****************************************************
; Launch #1 LogMeInRescue with Ctrl-Shift-1
^+1::
IfWinExist LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console
WinActivate
else
run "C:\Program Files (x86)\LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console\LogMeInRescueTechnicianConsole_x64\LMIRTechConsole.exe"
WinActivate LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console
WinWaitActive LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console
send user1EmailAddress`t
return

; *****************************************************
; Launch #2 LogMeInRescue with Ctrl-Shift-2
^+2::
IfWinExist LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console
WinActivate
else
run "C:\Program Files (x86)\LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console\LogMeInRescueTechnicianConsole_x64\LMIRTechConsole.exe"
WinActivate LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console
WinWaitActive LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console
send user2EmailAddress`t
return

; *****************************************************
; Launch #3 LogMeInRescue with Ctrl-Shift-3
^+3::
IfWinExist LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console
WinActivate
else
run "C:\Program Files (x86)\LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console\LogMeInRescueTechnicianConsole_x64\LMIRTechConsole.exe"
WinActivate LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console
WinWaitActive LogMeIn Rescue Technician Console
send user3EmailAddress`t
return