Did you know our Wedding DVD information is available online? Bluehost sure did and didn’t like that it wasn’t directly linked from the website. So here it is: https://flessnerfam.com/familyDVD . Oh, wait? You need a password to view them? Oh… well, I guess you had better ask me for it then. Hannah’s 1st year DVD is available too. They’re big downloads, but I’ll explain more if you really want access to them, as long as my e-mail hasn’t been shut off…
All posts by Benjamin Flessner
Inexperienced Biker
I appear to be a very inexperienced biker. Back in high school, my parents and I would bike all over; we’d load up the carrier and try out trails, riding entire afternoons. In college, I went through no less than 3 cheap Wal-Mart bikes. The first rusted when I left it outside all winter. The second, I abandoned at a rack somewhere on campus, and it was never seen from again. The third… and this is when I really was trying to get back into exercising, when I really enjoyed biking around town… ended its life when I tried to go down a gully across from CyRide. There was a rut at the bottom. My front tire stopped cold… the rest of us: bike, mp3 player, me… went flying. It bent the front fork (including suspension) and ruined that bike.
So, I’ve finally saved up and bought a ‘real’ bike. Well, no $1500 professional-biker type a ride, but certainly not a Wal-Mart bike. It’s nice and comfortable, and it’s crossover/hybrid tires move a lot faster than the mountain-bike tires I’ve always had before. After I lamented that the front brake was a little off after I brought it home from Madison, my neighbor (thanks, Travis!) said, “well the back one will slow you down, but the front one is what really stops the bike well.” Then he helped me get it working again. Actually, that had nothing to do with the later incident, but Travis deserves a mention, since I got the same identical bike as he.
Anyway, last Saturday, I was invited to ride on Military Ridge trail with Ryan and Niha. Since I haven’t regularly ridden for several years, I was a bit apprehensive, but I made it across town to their house without any problem, so I figured I was ready for at least a short ride on the trail. We rode over to Pizza Hut where I got my trail pass (yes, you have to pay up here in Wisconsin). The trail started just across the street. I sped up crossing the street (it was a highway after all), but then didn’t realize the trail was so close until I saw Ryan slowing down right in front of me.
I could say I’m used to the cheap junk bikes without really good brakes; I could say Travis’s suggestion put off my fears of using the front brake on my extra-fast bike; I could call it dumb luck. But overall, it was just pure ignorance and inexperience that caused me to mash both brakes as hard as I could. The front tire stopped immediately, and I took a face-plant on the gravel road just inches from starting my first journey on the cross-Southern-Wisconsin trail. Ow.
I cut up my knees pretty well. I had been wearing biking gloves (Ryan and Niha were calling me such a serious biker) which probably protected my hands. Later that day I found some cuts on my shoulder and stomach (so that’s why it hurt when I itched there!). The bike’s none the worse for it; just a few scratches on the shifters. All in all, it wasn’t that big of a deal; more of an embarrassment than a serious injury. I’m looking forward to our next ride, where I’ll hopefully get to experience the trail itself.
But to add insult to injury, back home when I was in a bit of a daze (trying not to bleed on the carpet or anything), I slipped going down stairs and lost control of a thermos of coffee from that morning. Thank goodness we have brown carpet. 🙂
New pictures and geo-tagging in the gallery
Hey, you can actually write posts on this website! It seems like we’ve forgotten how to do that. Might have to get around to updating some things. In the mean time, I’ve finally updated the rest of our 2007 pictures and some 2008 pictures from Jan-Feb. Also, I’ve been playing a bit with geo-tagging. One some of our albums (try the Honeymoon or Living Spaces), you can click on ‘View Album on a Map’ (or something similar). I haven’t tagged too many things, but it might be crazy to tag everything. Still, a fun feature to play around with.
Awesome Online Backup Service
Mozy seems to be a pretty awesome online backup service. I can’t say it’s the best because I haven’t tried any others, but it seems very easy and secure (and free!). You only get 2GB of space (2.25 if you use my referral code: ‘CMNX55’!), but for the data that really requires backing up, that should be decent. Plus the program is a dummy-proof auto-backup software that continually monitors your files and updates changes. It’s all secure too, with 448-bit Blowfish encryption (that’s good) that happens on your computer even before you transfer it over the 128-bit secure SSL layer. (Yes, nerds, that’s redundant, but it’s for people who don’t know what SSL means!)
I especailly loved their descriptions of alternatives to their service (my comments in [brackets]):
- Burn a new CD or DVD every Sunday night and store them at your brother-in-law’s office. [Or, in my case, it was my mother-in-law’s home safe]
- Pay $200/year for an online backup service that uses old, mediocre software.
- Buy a $200 external hard drive and hope your office doesn’t burn down. [I have several of these, but really want fire insurance. Sorry.. fire-proof safes aren’t always all that fireproof…]
- Do nothing and don’t worry about backup. (We suggest closing your eyes, plugging your ears and repeating “I’m in my happy place, I’m in my happy place.”) [< -- Awesome!]
- Run a cron job of rsync, gzip and mcrypt piped over ssh to your friend’s server over his DSL line. [I consider myself a nerd and would STILL not really like this option]
A couple other alternatives I thought up were:
- Use your huge gmail/yahoo/hotmail account storage limits as online backups – this is fine, but then you have to manage everything yourself or get some kind of patched-together program that might do it automatically for you
- Use your web-hosting’s ginormous disk space – This was actually going to be my first option, and I’ll still use it for the really big stuff (though Mozy has a $5/month option with unlimited storage that is pretty cool)
All in all, it seems like a great service. And the user-interface of the program you install is so easy that a computer-inept person can figure it out, and a computer ept person can configure and tweak it to do just what you want.
Give it a try, it’s pretty awesome.
New phone numbers
Amanda and I have new cell phone numbers now. I’m kind of bummed out because the guys said there were a lot more 341 numbers available (which through a couple of translations I thought meant most of the 341 numbers were available), so we had a bunch of DIAL numbers picked out (DIAL-BEN, DIAL-ALF, etc). Unfortunately, ‘most’ in this case meant only about 30%… none of which started with 5.
So we both have pretty random numbers (mine still ends in ‘BEN’ so that’s nice). But another feature they didn’t tell us up front was that we couldn’t keep our calling plan (not a huge deal since we’ve learned can’t save anything since our plan is now the cheapest… ouch). Plus within two hours of having my new number I received a wrong-number phone call. *sigh*
Anyway, if you want the number, head over to the page page and ask for it (or be geeky and view the source for the page and figure it out yourself!)
Password-protected family posts
So, after some concerns about privacy etc. (that’s the popular thing nowadays, isn’t it?), we’ve decided to password-protect family posts. We’ve tried a couple of ways of hiding information (including making you all log in, which is tough enough for the gallery… it’d be insane for the blog too!), and this one seems to be the best.
All you have to do is know the password, enter it into one field, hit enter, and you’re done. All password-protected posts will be view-able for the next 10 days.
One catch: if you use firefox (or some others besides Internet Exploder), make sure you’re using http://digimuzik.com as your homepage instead of http://www.digimuzik.com (i.e. take off the www). For some reason the passwords don’t work as well with the www. version. Maybe we can fix that someday.
In the meantime, just get ahold of one of us for the password. From time to time we may change it, so if you want to be on some sort of “mailing list,” we could probably set that up too. Happy surfing!
End of the world
Well, that’s it. It’s the end of the world as we know it!
Protected: Our first injury!
Protected: Baby is home!
Baby names
Speaking of baby names (no, you’re not getting a hint yet…and actually, who was speaking about baby names? anyway…), I ran across an interesting definition the other day. “Quaking aspen tree meadow.” I was going to post this mysterious phrase and then ask people to figure it out, but I’ve already given away that it was a name meaning. And anyway, if you put that into google, you hit a few dozen baby-name sites. Waverly means “from the quaking aspen tree meadow.” Tres bizarre…