I’m importing some lost data tonight thanks to Facebook Notes. My FB Notes are subscribed to this blog’s RSS feed, it pulls down all my posts and re-posts them. It’s kinda of a waste to duplicate data, however, my friends are on FB and I get some hits from that. It has also saved my ass when my host crashes and loses all my posts! My posts exists on FB, however, due to the closed wall environment that FB has, you have to work hard to pull it out.
The trick is that FB has an RSS feed of your last 10 Notes, whether you wrote them on FB or imported them from elsewhere. WordPress allows you to import RSS feeds. Find the RSS feed on FB that your 10 last Notes and save it locally to your computer, then import it into WP! To access your FB Notes past the first 10, delete the Notes you just imported off FB and your RSS feed will update to 10 new notes. Repeat until all your data is off FB and onto WP!
I attended Google IO over the past 2 days, chronicling the event on my Twitter and Flickr pages. I’m incredibly tired currently, barely running off coffee and my thoughts are a mess so I will wait until this weekend to post my thoughts, but quickly: it was an excellent event, well run with great food and great ideas all around. Here’s a shot of my swag below.

This morning, I walked down from my room and remarked that it was a horrible day outside, one of the worst days I’ve experience so far in California.

It’s about 66 degrees outside and mildy cloudly and I call this terrible. It’s amazing how jaded I have become thanks to California weather, it really is perfect here 99% of the time. In the 2 months that I have been here, it has rained about 3 hours total. It’s amazing and I never want to leave!
I attended Bay to Breakers this Sunday, a 12KM race across San Francisco, aptly named because you from the bay (the Embarcado) to the breakers (the waves breaking). It was a great race for me, not just for being the first time I have run in a legitimate timed event, but for the fun I had running it. Bay to Breakers is half-party half-race. People dress up in costume and run the race, along with many, many people drinking and walking the race. Literally 20K to 30K people flooding the streets. It was a great time that and I will definitely plan on attending it again.
Despite the party going on, I tried to run the race my best and not partake in the drinking. For 12KM, 7.45 miles, I ran it in 1 hour 16 minutes exact. Average of 10 minutes a mile, which isn’t too bad, but I was aiming for 8 minute miles. I started late in the morning and got caught in the crowd at the beginning, so there wasn’t much I could do. Overall, I’m glad that I ran it without stopping.
Here are some pictures from the race, another amenity of an official race:
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Me in the SF Park
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Me and Josh at the end of the race
Today was Bike to Work Day in the Bay Area and I did my part! It was a bit of a let down to me, since I bike everyday, but the sentiment wasn’t lost. Some bikers had a booth setup at CalTrain and I grabbed some free water and stickers.
I was most disappointed by the lack of other riders out on the street, although I regularly head into work around 10AM and I imagine most normal people are already at work by then. Two amusing sentiments of the day were 1) seeing a rather large man biking down one of the main streets in San Mateo wearing just shorts, no shoes, no shirt. 2) Having a guy on a Harvey come up next to me at a streetlight and give me flak for not riding a “real” bike. I was totally not expecting it, but it brought a smile to my face.
After moving out here to CA, I immediately started my job and slept in a hotel for 2 weeks while looking for an apartment. My friend Mike, also staying in the hotel, drove me to work for those weeks. After we had found a location, I settled upon the bike as means of getting to work. I didn’t have a car out here and public transport was far too inconvenient for my location. Biking was always a big activity of mine as a child, so why would it be different now?
My first few weeks were interesting. I rode to work the first few days in street clothes and regular shoes, but that was a terrible idea. My commute is around 10 miles total a day, 5 miles there and up a hill, 5 miles back and down a hill! It was workout and I did get very sweaty. I quickly bought some workout clothes and a windbreaker to help out. The hill was the toughest part, about 8-12 blocks of 45 degree incline. I just rode slowly and kept working at it, improving day after day. The first day that it was windy almost made me cry. Biking against the wind, exerting all your energy, and moving no where is one of the most frustrating things ever! Especially, when the cars around you are going 25-35 mph like the wind doesn’t even exist.
Speaking of the cars, riding my bike on the streets was another interesting challenge. I ride a major 2-3 lane road for a few miles, I ride through a 101 overpass, and face several bridges. I read the rules about riding with traffic, to just act like a car, but let me tell you, it takes balls to actually do it in tough traffic situations like those. The 101 highway is a major corridor in CA and just being anywhere near that means people are always driving fast and recklessly, even though traffic is probably at a standstill. Most but not all, drivers hate your guts and barely miss running you down while going twice as fast as you in their BMW. You need to know the traffic patterns and stoplights, so that you can plan ahead and merge properly. It’s something that has taken time to be less afraid of, but it’s still crazy sometimes.
After about 2 months of biking to work, I really enjoy it. I’m already in great shape from the exercise and eating properly and I usually have time to listen to podcasts during my commute. Also, I’m not paying $4.50/gallon for gas! Total win.