Route from last Sunday's Lune RCC club run in Garmin Connect
The route from last Sunday's Lune RCC club run
http://connect.garmin.com/activity/19954813The route from last Sunday's Lune RCC club run
http://connect.garmin.com/activity/19954813Mobilers want one device. That's how it goes. Our phones have decent media players now, they have decent cameras now too and the same kind of integration is edging out the stand alone GPS devices.We're not feeling you anymore Garmin, we aren't Gel'n with you anymore Megellan, and Tom Tom, say, "Bye, Bye." You guys are nice for our vehicles but the same little devices that keep you affixed so nicely on our dashes, work great with or GPS enabled cell phones. Don't believe me? The the grey matter out over at www.physorg.com . What did I tell ya?
A knight in a station wagon, a triathlon-leprechaun, a camera-savvy yeti, a golf-club swinging Scotsman, a humanoid nutcracker a scary clown and a jamming squirrel are the heros in the new Garmin 2009 holiday ads. They're surprisingly entertaining, hypnotic and disturbing. In a good way.
Way to go, Garmin!
While the Google Android has become the darling of mobile manufactures
and operators not selling an iPhone around the world there is one
group of companies that are decidedly unhappy about Google's latest
version of the mobile operating system Android 2.0.
The dude in the blue shirt is really annoying. But what he says is simply amazing!
Google just released a beta version of Google Maps Navigation (for Android 2.0 phones like the new Motorola droid.) Watch what it can do!

And the best part: It's absolutely free.
(Btw. Look what this did to TomTom & Garmin.)
Update: It may also be available for the iPhone soon... =)
Today, as soon as Google showed off its beta GPS navigator, the stocks of Garmin, TomTom and other companies in that industry fell into the toilet. It's hard to compete with free Google apps, but that's not why they're screwed...
These companies were stuck on basic business models and failed to see the benefit of innovation and revisiting experience with their products. How have navigation and GPS systems changed in the last 10 years? Accuracy? little improvement, downloading your favorite narrator/highway dictator voice, points of interest? Road-side assistance? and then what? that's it...
This should be a beginning for more innovations to come into this marketplace.
Honestly? Its not anywhere near as bad as I expected. Could it have been better? Sure. Could it have been worse? Definitely. Waking up at 5:30 on a Saturday is FTL but after I dragged ass out of bed and into the shower (I thought it would give me a “pick me up”) I was starting to get excited and the wooziness was going away. Met up at Alex’s with him and Eddy at 6:40 and loaded up the car. Oh I forgot to mention it before, but I got the bike rack done:
That’s not the finished product though, I painted the 2x4 black so it matches the car much better. I also still need to figure out a way to anchor it down with damaging the car but in reality it doesn’t move at all, so I may just leave it. Anywho, we got the bikes loaded and the equipment in Alex’s truck and headed down to the busway by US1 and 152 st. We started further south than usual because riding the Busway for the most part sucks badly. The lights taunt you, they either turn red right before you can cross them, or turn green the second you unclip. With a light every mile for about 15 miles its not a good time at all. I’m not sure what time we got on the bikes but it was probably like 7:45 or 8am, we’re like a bunch of girls getting ready and take forever to get going. We took off down the busway and were enjoying the weather, it was in the mid 80’s and clear skies with no wind. A big difference from last week. Once we got off the busway we headed west and started leaving civilization far far behind. As Alex acknowledges how far out we are we suddenly hear a pop/bang and I thought he popped a spoke, luckily he had just some how kicked the tail light off his bike. That was our first stop. Another few miles in Eddy gets chased by some vicious dogs and lays down his fastest sprint of the day. Ok maybe they werent vicious, they probably weighed 20 pounds lol but that was the best laugh of the day. Luckily for me Eddy wore them down and when I rode by they just looked at me with a “the hell with it” face on. A few seconds later I look back and WhereTF is Alex? I look back and fuuuuuu he’s pulled over, turns out he got a flat.
First one with a flat had to buy lunch, teehee. Homestead is basically rural farm land, cars are few and far between and open space is abundant:
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Again, I keep impressing myself though, after the 40 mile mark my legs came alive and I started messing with the virtual partner feature on the garmin where you race a “virtual” bike. For a long stretch of rode I was up in the 19-20 mph range without any fatigue what so ever, just pedaling up front by myself. I didn’t think I could have that kind of energy so far into the ride. I was feeling good until basically mile 61 then I just wanted to finish. I did do a sprint at the end and made it up to 29mph which I was happy with considering I had already been on the bike for 62 miles at that point and the floor was really wet. Alex as usual is a beast on the bike. And Eddy shocked us, he hung with no problem even though he’s barely been on the bike in the past month or more. When he gets back into the grove we’re all screwed.
Notice the pruned up fingers and wet screen. Good Times!
I’m glad we did it, it proved we can, and we didn’t do bad considering we only drafted for maybe 10-15 miles of the ride, we each basically rode solo centuries.
Now I’m going to go clean the bike AGAIN, lube it up and short my cable housings. They’re annoying me since they’re so long.
and i almost forgot. The Garmin "Datalogs" : http://connect.garmin.com/player/12645043
And the mapmyride info: http://www.mapmyride.com/route/us/fl/miami/290125218006480939
And thanks to Eddy for the fritas!
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