Nothing is vital for Science: nothing can beCharles Sanders Pierce
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Relates to Surf and Travel
Most excellent news! My good buddy and bore riding compatriot, Serginho Laus (aka Sergio), has realised his dream of surfing the mighty Qiantang Dragon tidal bore. Last week he and fellow Brazilian Pacelli spent the new moon syzygy scouting and surfing the Qiantang bore over an area agreed with the Chinese government. While no records were broken, some good clean sections and peaks reaching 10 feet were found - in between the occasional ferocious Asian squalls.
Check out some of the photos of Sergio and Jorge surfing the Dragon.
The trip was principally a relationship building exercise with the Chinese government, to strengthen a bond Serginho has been forging for several years. With the intent of returning for the equinox festival in September to deliver a display of tidal bore surfing to the hundreds of thousands of people that flock to Hangzhou every year to revere the tumultous power of the Dragon at full force.
I have considerable respect and admiration for Serginho. He is a great ambassador for the sport of tidal bore surfing and no one has pioneered this unique sport more than he over the last 10 years. Having spent many years learning every aspect of the Pororoca and showing a true passion for the spirit of the tidal bore Sergio has taken gradual and delicate steps towards realising his achievement in China. It is for this very reason tidal bore pioneering should stay the realm of the tidal bore specialist and not be absorbed into and saturated by the all-consuming materialism of the surfing industry's Search.
I hope that Team Gerlach showed the same respect AND the Chinese government doesn't get greedy!
Keep up to date with Sergio's adventures at the brazilian website Waves.
Posted on Aug 11, 2008 at 12:01:45.
Relates to Hardware
Simple objective to integrate an Airport Express station into my home network to allow us to broadcast audio to speakers in different parts of the house and then control the playlists using the new Remote feature on the iPod Touch. At the same time I was hoping to extend the network range by upgrading to the 802.11n wireless draft recommendation. My current network had a BT Home Hub router hard wired to a HomePlug to allow the range to reach my office in the farthest reaches of our large brick barn conversion.
Conclusion to this convoluted process is that it would appear with the lack of option for Repeater configuration with the Home Hub 2 there is no physical possibility for installing the Airport Express in a network powered by the BT Home Hub 2. So why have BT removed this configuration option anyway? I suppose their argument would be that with twice the range (up to 70m indoors) the new routers with 802.11n wireless do not need a repeater facility any more. Well maybe I just got a bricked hub from the outset but there is no way the new Hub was displaying that kind of improvement in range. Anyway I got a result in the end and have a happier household.
Nothing impresses guests more than flashing out the iPod touch to change the music playing on several speakers around the house! But I certainly won't be jumping through hopes to use the BT Home Hub 2 again and wouldn't recommend the additional investment that BT insist on charging long-standing customers for the development that went into constructing this brick!
Posted on Aug 11, 2008 at 11:14:49.