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  • Tom Bihn Road Buddy Duffels

    These are the best duffels I tested this year, and the best I have ever used.

    Note: Tom Bihn provided these bags as review samples.

    Perhaps it is time to call 2018 the year for great duffel bags, as there has been no shortage of them this year. Adding to that established mix is Tom Bihn’s new Road Buddy Duffel Bags which come in both 36L and 60L sizes. I was told that these are decades in the making, and a partial revival of something Tom Bihn has been working on since day one, as well as a modern take on that idea. They are part duffle bag, part gym/gear bag, and part Aeronaut style travel bag.

    And I love them.

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  • A Packable Bag For One Bag Travel

    Why are packable briefcases not a thing companies make?

    For years now I have struggled with the same problem, which is admittedly a problem for very few people. The problem is that I travel with just one bag, a small 20-26 liter bag, typically a GORUCK GR1 and I only store it at my feet on the plane. But when I get to where I am going, especially for business travel, I want a smaller bag which I can use to carry my iPad and a few essentials. All of which makes the GR1 overkill for most of those types of tasks.

    I’ve never solved this issue, and I have tried numerous bags and setups. Some are hard to pack in my larger bag, taking up too much room, others are too large on their own while packing down nice. And a great many simply look terrible, such that I wouldn’t want to taken them anywhere but a hiking trail.

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  • Snack Pick of the Week — 12/10/18

    MmmmmmmyuummmmmmMMM

    We are at the cusp of the great holiday shit show as I like to call it. Right now is not the time for the great unknown or experimentation. It’s now the time for comfort food — for food that makes you feel good right now and terrible later down the road. That means, of course, the snack pick for this week is Doritos.

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  • JIRA is an Antipattern

    Jon Evans: Let me reiterate: to write elegant software, you must keep both the macro and the micro vision in your mind simultaneously while working. JIRA is good at managing micro pieces. But you need something else for the macro. (And no, a clickable prototype isn’t enough; those are important, but they too require descriptive…

    Jon Evans:

    Let me reiterate: to write elegant software, you must keep both the macro and the micro vision in your mind simultaneously while working. JIRA is good at managing micro pieces. But you need something else for the macro. (And no, a clickable prototype isn’t enough; those are important, but they too require descriptive context.)

    He goes on to talk about writing a ten pager about what you are trying to create. I like the idea of writing out some prose, but hate the idea of a ten page document. That’s absurd.

    If you can’t describe what your software needs to do in one sentence, you don’t yet understand what you are building. Once you get that once sentence figured out, then write a page or two about how you are going to accomplish that.

    Either way, JIRA has by in large has become JIRA for JIRA’s sake. And more worryingly, I’ve often seen it become a place to point fingers to blame for errors or delays, or features not coming out right. And the frustrating part is that this finger pointing is done completely unintentionally and ends up frustrating and confusing everyone, so the end result is usually doubling down on JIRA for the next week or so.

  • I’ve tried logging my exercise and diet – but are health apps really a good idea?

    Solid read. It is pretty clear that most ‘health’ apps are far more concerned with engagement than with help. Though I suspect most genuinely start off by wanting to help. There’s long been a trend with Nicholas Felton at the top of that, about logging your life to analyze the data. I call bullshit. Most…

    Solid read. It is pretty clear that most ‘health’ apps are far more concerned with engagement than with help. Though I suspect most genuinely start off by wanting to help. There’s long been a trend with Nicholas Felton at the top of that, about logging your life to analyze the data. I call bullshit.

    Most people log for trivial and idiotic rewards and rarely do they bother with any type of analysis. It’s logging to log for the sake of a log that you can hold up at some point.

    If the health app you use, doesn’t actually provide actionable data, then you are logging to log. Acting on data to make a change is great. Logging data so that you have it is pointless.

  • Fun with Shortcuts

    Randomly selecting things from a text file.

    For a while now I have been using a handy little shortcut which randomly selects an item from a text file. This allows me to create a really simple text file, with each ‘item’ on a new line, and have Shortcuts randomly select one and tell me which one. I’ve been using this on days when I want to do a workout at home, and have it select the order in which I do things. Or when I am raffling off something and need to select a random name. Building a text file on iOS is dead simple, and from there I just need to select which text file Shortcuts pulls and I get a nice little random item picker.

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  • Google is Still Shady, Even If You Try to Dodge It

    The DuckDuckGo blog: Private browsing mode and being logged out of Google offered very little filter bubble protection. These tactics simply do not provide the anonymity most people expect. In fact, it’s simply not possible to use Google search and avoid its filter bubble. Ultimately: We often hear of confusion that private browsing mode enables…

    The DuckDuckGo blog:

    Private browsing mode and being logged out of Google offered very little filter bubble protection. These tactics simply do not provide the anonymity most people expect. In fact, it’s simply not possible to use Google search and avoid its filter bubble.

    Ultimately:

    We often hear of confusion that private browsing mode enables anonymity on the web, but this finding demonstrates that Google tailors search results regardless of browsing mode. People should not be lulled into a false sense of security that so-called “incognito” mode makes them anonymous.

    If the average person knew this, and accepted it, they’d shit a brick. The. Switch to DuckDuckGo which is far superior.

  • Notes and LiquidText

    Gabe Weatherhead: I’ve spent my entire career working with PDFs as reference material. I have thousands of documents and many, many notes. I feel like I spent my life doing it all wrong. LiquidText is an indispensable tool for any researcher or student. Such a killer app. If I still worked in real estate it…

    Gabe Weatherhead:

    I’ve spent my entire career working with PDFs as reference material. I have thousands of documents and many, many notes. I feel like I spent my life doing it all wrong. LiquidText is an indispensable tool for any researcher or student.

    Such a killer app. If I still worked in real estate it would have been a game changer.

  • GORUCK MACV-1s First Impressions

    A purpose built rucking boot, you knew it was coming.

    Last spring and summer GORUCK started teasing that they were about to release a boot. Some people found images of those boots online, and I quickly formed the opinion of: yikes. While I find GORUCK’s bags to be aesthetically pleasing, the preview images of the boot, I found to be comical. Surely it could not be real.

    Then GORUCK announced the boot as part of a pre-sale, I didn’t order one, because as it turns out the boot looked exactly as I had seen. And at $195, I was not willing to pay that for a boot I found to be hideous. A couple months ago people started receiving their boots and checking them out. For the most part the impressions I read were along the lines of these being the most comfortable boots out there.

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  • Getting in Shape

    Wherein I manage to talk about backpacks and how they got me in shape.

    In February of 2017 I made the decision that I needed to get in shape. I was larger, and more out of shape than I had ever been in my life. And while it wasn’t a dire situation, I could tell that I was more physically winded by things which had previously never troubled me. And this fact was now troubling me, so I made a simple decision: get in shape.

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  • Casio G-Shock GD350-1B

    My new alarm clock.

    If my recent G-SHOCK purchase taught me anything, it is that I really like G-SHOCKs. They are versatile, durable, and more than anything else: functional and extremely comfortable. The issue was that I had not found the one that I loved — the one that was right for me.

    So I kept searching.

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  • TOLL, an action-thriller novel by Matt Gemmell

    Out today, I had it in pre-order myself on Apple Books. Really enjoyed the first novel in the series and have been looking forward to reading this one too.

    Out today, I had it in pre-order myself on Apple Books. Really enjoyed the first novel in the series and have been looking forward to reading this one too.

  • Apple News is Secretly Really Great

    It’s my new RSS.

    I am a news junkie, and a completionist. That combination means the day I discovered RSS and, specifically at the time Google Reader, was the peak of my news obsession. It’s been downhill since then.

    While I still use RSS, most sites now abuse RSS in egregious ways. They randomly republish their entire feeds every month, or they don’t offer feeds for the ‘latest’ content instead forcing you to go find categories to subscribe to. Some flat out ignore RSS, instead telling you how great their miserable newsletter is.

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  • Snack Pick of the Week — 12/3/18

    MmmmmmMMMMMMmmmmMMMmm

    Note: This was a tradition I started at my last employer where I picked a snack for the week every Monday. I’ve been asked by several people to carry this on, and so I shall.

    The weather is colder, and the coffee naturally tastes better. But mornings can drag, so it’s good to have a goto snack in the morning that will give you a boost of energy, make you smile, go well with coffee, and of course later on the day make you slightly regret having ate it. For this very specific task we are going with: Little Debbie’s Glazed Donut Sticks.

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  • Filtering Out Stress

    Some key lessons I learned to manage my stress and get a good nights sleep.

    It’s that nag that keeps you awake at night. The trigger which spins your morning from the enjoyment of a well rested night, to a deep sinking feeling. I don’t know how to make it go away, not for you, and not really even for myself. I do know when I am stressed, and I do have a few top tips for you to help delay the feeling of stress in the morning, and to keep it at bay through the night. To help focus during the day.

    My advice is to use two tried and true methods:

    1. Bury your head in the sand and;
    2. Always get some small wins.

    I’ve been working through most of these ideas since the beginning of this year, so allow me to share them with you now.

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  • Work-Life Balance

    Speaking of lifestyle changes, this post at Working Mother, has this tidbit that bothers me: Instead of work and life outside of the office being two totally separate parts of our lives, Bezos envisions a more harmonic relationship between the two. In his world, work and life outside of work are reciprocal rather than competing,…

    Speaking of lifestyle changes, this post at Working Mother, has this tidbit that bothers me:

    Instead of work and life outside of the office being two totally separate parts of our lives, Bezos envisions a more harmonic relationship between the two. In his world, work and life outside of work are reciprocal rather than competing, compartmentalized parts.

    First, this coming from Bezos is fucking rich. Secondly, I think this is still not the right way to think about it. Work and ‘life’ should not be things that happen at set points during the day. I often told people when bringing them on in my last job, that I didn’t care when they work or for how long, just get the job done and do it well.

    I told them that if that meant leaving for an hour mid-morning to grocery shop, and then working later, that’s great. Life shouldn’t be hard, as a “boss” I always felt it was asinine to make life harder by making someone be chained to set hours when they “have” to work.

  • Men’s Health on Standing versus Sitting

    Men’s Health has a follow up to that NYT post. From Michael Frederickson, M.D.: It really has to be a lifestyle. Not “okay, I’ll sit all day (even though it’s really bad) and then I’ll try and make up for at another time.” Think about your lifestyle and how you can work around inactive periods.…

    Men’s Health has a follow up to that NYT post. From Michael Frederickson, M.D.:

    It really has to be a lifestyle. Not “okay, I’ll sit all day (even though it’s really bad) and then I’ll try and make up for at another time.” Think about your lifestyle and how you can work around inactive periods.

    Indeed.

  • NYT: Standing Desks are Overrated

    Aaron E. Carroll: But standing is not exercise. Many health groups recommend that people at work take frequent walking breaks. Replacing sitting with standing does not fulfill that recommendation and may even mislead people into thinking they’re doing enough activity. Standing desks are “overrated” in the same way that any other health advice is: it’s…

    Aaron E. Carroll:

    But standing is not exercise. Many health groups recommend that people at work take frequent walking breaks. Replacing sitting with standing does not fulfill that recommendation and may even mislead people into thinking they’re doing enough activity.

    Standing desks are “overrated” in the same way that any other health advice is: it’s not a panacea so stop treating it like one. That said, reading this article, I can’t help but think the advice is: change positions often. As a long time standing desk user I think you are far more likely to change positions often when standing than when sitting. Say, 100% more likely, as that’s quotable.

  • Orient Bambino Small Seconds

    Among the watches available for people who want something very inexpensive, but mechanical and which also doesn’t suck for one reason or another — they always end up getting recommended an Orient Bambino. The Bambino is a bit of a wunderkind, with a huge array of options and colors available, while coming it at an…

    Among the watches available for people who want something very inexpensive, but mechanical and which also doesn’t suck for one reason or another — they always end up getting recommended an Orient Bambino. The Bambino is a bit of a wunderkind, with a huge array of options and colors available, while coming it at an absurdly low price typically under $200, but far more often able to be found discounted below $120. Right now there are options on Amazon with Prime shipping for $114. That’s a bargain for any well made watch, let alone one with an automatic movement.

    I’ve had my Small Seconds now for a while and I’ve become quite fond on it. Let’s dive in.

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  • Bond Travel Gear’s Travel Wallet

    I’ve been keeping a close eye on Bond Travel Gear since testing out their excellent Tool Roll a while back. This Travel Wallet caught my eye as a potentially great little organizer pouch. I picked one up to test, and have been quite pleased with it over the last several weeks.

    I’ve been keeping a close eye on Bond Travel Gear since testing out their excellent Tool Roll a while back. This Travel Wallet caught my eye as a potentially great little organizer pouch. I picked one up to test, and have been quite pleased with it over the last several weeks.

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