← Home About Articles Photos Cycling auf Deutsch Archive Also on Micro.blog
  • Importing my photos from Instagram to @pixelfed@mastodon.social worked reasonably well. Pixelfed threw a couple of errors during import but everything went smoothly. Disappointingly and predictably Instagram doesn’t capture alt text in the data export.

    → 17:05, 20 Jan 2025
  • Attempting to import all my post from Instagram to my account at pixelfed.de. Wish me luck.

    → 09:40, 20 Jan 2025
  • Two shots from today’s walk with Mika.

    Close-up shot of a tree trunk with some blurred background visible. The tree trunk looks almost split in half vertically because on the left side the bark is covered with a lot of vivid green moss while on the right side of the trunk the bark is clean and moss-free.Scene on a narrow forest path. The subject of the photo is a tree trunk with a relatively thick foundation curving from the right, directly next to the narrow path and away from the path up to the left until it appears to grow stright up again. The bark has an almost scale-like quality to it and the foundation of the trunk has some specs of moss on it.

    → 21:37, 11 Jan 2025
  • Please let this be needle steadily moving towards the AI bubble. 🤞
    Petapixel: Have AI Companies Run Out of Training Data? E*** M*** Thinks So

    → 13:37, 10 Jan 2025
  • Two snaps from a visit to Bern, Switzerland last week.

    Scene overlooking the river, past worker housing, and rising garden terraces and „Kirchenfeldbrücke“ in Bern from the platform of the Bern munster. The contrast in the image is stark due to harsh light conditions as well as hate and smoke in their air. Looking up at the souther frontage of the Swiss parliament building in Bern. The photographer stood almost directly in front of the building creating a look of a towering building.

    → 13:19, 8 Jan 2025
  • Went for the first proper bike ride this year and I simply don’t remember signing up for this to be a mud fight.

    Titanium allroad bike laying on the non-drive side in a muddy field. The perspective has the photographer looking at the bike from below, tires facing the photographer. The tires and rims of the bike are caked in thick, viscous mud. The frame, fork, and full-length frame bag are showing a lot of specks of dirt. Also visible in the image are the feet of the photographer. They‘re wearing blue-green cycling shoes that are dirty and the sides are caked in mud.
    → 19:42, 6 Jan 2025
  • Ganz toller Artikel über die FDP in der aktuellen Phase des Bundestagswahlkampfs. Auch noch in der WiWo. Per @uedio@mastodon.social

    → 13:22, 6 Jan 2025
  • I completely forgot how deranged Eminem’s song “Kim” from “The Marshall Mathers LP” was. Fucking hell.

    → 18:41, 5 Jan 2025
  • Getting a Kydex frame sheet into a Goruck GR0 frame sheet pocket

    Yesterday I began the process of upgrading my trusty Goruck GR0 with a 3.2 mm (0.126 in) Kydex frame sheet to stiffen it up. I used the immensely helpful instructions written up by Ryan Burns on ruck.beer.

    The easy part was cutting and sanding it to size. The hard part—as the instructions suggested—would be getting it into the frame sheet pocket.

    Black and white image of an all-black Goruck backpack laying face down on a carpeted floor. Most of the backside of the pack is obscured by a white, thin frame sheet (a piece of plastic meant to stiffen the backpack and make it more stable and rigid) and a dark grey frame sheet made out of a different material on top of it. The frame sheets are mostly rectangular but have trapezoidal tapers at the bottom.

    I tried keeping bending the frame sheet and putting it in but the material is too tough (or I’m too weak). Then I had the idea to use tension straps to bend the (cold!) sheet into a u-shape to slide it in.
    I placed two robust but slick tension strap at two positions along the frame sheet and standing my foot in the middle of the sheet then slowly and carefully tensioning the straps. The result looked like this:

    Dark grey Kydex frame shee laying on a carpet bent into a light u-shape using two tension straps placed and tightened along the length of the frame sheet. The strap buckles are roughly in the middle (width-wise) of the sheet, placed almost directly over the lowers part of the u. Dark grey Kydex frame sheet shot top down standing on the bottom corner on a carpet to illustrate how two tension straps were used to bend the plastic material into a slight u-shape.

    With the plastic sheet in this shape, I started lowering it into the frame sheet pocket and slowly and steadily moving the lower strap up the length of the frame sheet as I was pushing the frame sheet down into the slit.
    Closing the velcro flap of the frame sheet pocket ended up being very easy work once the frame sheet was in.

    A couple of notes:

    1. I cut the Kydex to the exact size of the original frame sheet.
    2. Make sure that the edges of the frame sheet are filed down/sanded properly smooth to remove the risk of damaging (to the point of cutting and tearing) the straps or the material of the backpack.
    3. When lowering the frame sheet into the pocket, I’d suggest doing this little by little and moving up the straps correspondingly to prevent undue stress to the fabric of the frame sheet pocket.
    → 12:23, 5 Jan 2025
  • It is amazing working with genuinely nice people. I love my team, so much.

    → 18:31, 3 Jan 2025
← Newer Posts Page 2 of 3 Older Posts →
  • RSS
  • JSON Feed
  • Micro.blog