This past week I spent with Sean, Rhonda, Ben, and the rest of the Safdi crew hanging out in Telluride. Among other things, we did a bunch of great hikes. A few photos…
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Kayaking on the San Miguel River
Sean and I took our Sea Eagle inflatable kayak, hiked through town, rode the rapids through town down the San Miguel River. Since it’s so early in the season and all the snow is melting high up in the mountains, the river is super high and fast. The ride took about two hours, and we ended up at the Society Turnoff, where we had parked my car, for the ride back.
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Biking in Telluride..
A day after arriving home in Telluride, Colorado, great bike rides have started..
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Exploring Alta Ghost Town
This week, Nate, Chris and I spent some time exploring the abandoned ghost town of Alta, outside Telluride, Colorado. A few pics..
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I’m A NOLS-WMI Certified Wilderness First Responder!
After a few weeks of training in the mountains around Leadville, Colorado, I passed my day long written and practical exam to become a certified Wilderness First Responder.
Wikipedia: Wilderness First Responders are individuals who are trained to respond to emergency situations in remote settings. They are part of a wide variety of wilderness medical professionals who deal with medical emergencies that occur in wilderness settings.
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NOLS-WMI Wilderness First Responder Training in Leadville, Colorado
For the past 2 weeks I’ve been living at the High Mountain Institute campus in Leadville, Colorado undergoing Wilderness First Responder training, through the National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS) Wilderness Medicine Institute (WMI).
Photo Set on Flickr (Slideshow)
The last two weeks, including people, class, adventures, and campus have been amazing. Our group is about 30 people, all taking this course for different reasons. A bunch of us, including myself, are going on to work in the outdoor education/wilderness guiding industries, a few people are going on to work in teaching roles, and a few are taking it because it’s fun!
Our days here at the HMI campus have been packed. We start class in the morning around 8am, and have a combination of classroom learning and practical scenarios. Practical scenarios beak up the classroom learning. In these, we go outside and into the mountain landscape, to practice dealing with mock patients – everything from massive bone fractures, broken spines, overdoses, cardiac emergencies, hypothermia, and mental illness – we’ve dealt with it all. In addition to classroom learning and short scenarios, we’ve also had a number of major scenarios. We worked as a team to pull hypothermia patients out of freezing cold snowmelt water – I was actually the patient in this scenario, and actually started to develop mild hypothermia after laying in the freezing cold stream for a few minutes waiting for my rescue team to get to me. We also completed an extended night scenario, in which we went out searching for victims in the evening. The night scenario developed into a multiple patient remote emergency with no chance of immediate evac, mountain temperatures and low supplies.
Our instructors, Milenka Heran and Iris Saxer were experienced, animated and effective educators, and were a pleasure to work with on this course.
During the course, I managed to take a few photos, with three different cameras, depending on what I had access to and what was most appropriate for the situation. I used the iPhone4, Canon G10, and Canon 5DmkII w/ Canon EF24-70 f/2.8L lens.
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Infographic: The Geosocial Universe
Although we here in America typically use Facebook to network, there are lots of other social networks out there, some of which are extremely popular in other countries. These include QZone, Mixi, and Google’s Orkut. In this interesting infographic, Jess3 lays it all out. Also, in a nod to sharing their infographics, Jess3 released the graphic in multiple versions, to satisfy the visual preferances of every blogger out there – nifty!
Notable Facts:
- Mobile: 5.3 billion mobile devices are used worldwide — that’s 77 percent of the world’s population
- Smartphones: 21.8 percent of all mobile devices are smartphones. Despite what one might think, Apple does not top the list in sales—Nokia does
- Skype: Mobile usage continues to increase thanks to Skype’s wise investment in apps and its mobile platform
- Facebook: Now tops 629 million registered users with almost 250 million people accessing the site via mobile
- Qzone: China’s version of Facebook, Qzone, is experiencing supernova-like growth with 480 million registered users
Found via TechCrunch
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Track me with the SPOT Satellite Messenger
While living in NYC, checking in on Foursquare and sharing my physical location as I traveled around the city became a regular occurance. Friends could see where I was, and I would see where they were. However, as I venture out of the city for the summer, and possibly longer, I’ll still be able to share my location anywhere on the planet (well, anywhere with both GPS and Iridium satellite coverage), thanks to my SPOT Satellite Messenger.
The SPOT is a small cell phone sized device that allows me to “check in” using satellites – no cell phone network necessary. The device uses a GPS chip to figure out my physical location, and then uses a Iridium satellite communications chip to sent a message up to the Iridium satellite network. The network then relays the message to the SPOT service. Currently I have it setup to automatically email my friends and family a message saying that I’m ok and my location, as well as automatically post on my Twitter and Facebook streams. Additionally, I’ve enabled a feature which lets me post to this blog automatically from my spot. No computer necessary!
Here’s how to track me around the globe with my SPOT Satellite Messenger:
- On this blog post, using the embedded map
- On my FindMeSpot tracking page
- In my Twitter Steam
- On my Facebook Feed
- On my Travelogue Page
- In your email by subscribing
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This site is now.. secure.
Not that it was completely necessary, but I’ve added a secure SSL certificate to my website’s hosting. Now, if you wish, you can also access this site at https://www.jeffreydonenfeld.com, and know that the entire connection is secure and encrypted. Although there’s not a real immediate need for this level of security, I thought it was a good excercise to learn the basics of setting up a dedicated IP, and installing and SSL certificate. Also, I’ll be using a secure connection for logging into the site for administration – which I believe actually is a valid use of the security.
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Key Lime Pie in Red Hook
This weekend, after a long long bikeride all through town, we stopped off at Steve’s Authentic Key Lime Pies in Red Hook, Brooklyn… Tasty. Also, I think Steve’s website wins the award for worst wordpress themed website ever.
Key Lime Pie, Five Simple Ingredients video, direct from Steves
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JeffreyDonenfeld.com – New Structure
In the past few weeks, I’ve completely overhauled the structure of my site. Before the change, the homepage of this domain was coded by hand in HTML, with a little bit of CSS and PHP thrown in there. The blog was managed by WordPress, but the rest of the site was all done by hand. It was a great opportunity to learn some basics, but in the end, maintaining all of the code, and content by hand was cumbersome and difficult. Adding any new section or feature was a chore, and as a result, I really didn’t add much content to it.
Now, in the new structure, the entire site, from the root, is managed by WordPress. Although WordPress is mainly a blog engine, it does have the ability to fully manage static content pages, and gives me full control over site content, urls, SEO, and extensibility. Now, both the blog, and the rest of the pages are all easily editable and maintainable. Plus all SEO and technical aspects of the site are able to be managed from the common WordPress admin interface, rather than hand coding files like robots.txt, .htaccess and sitemap.xml.
One of the first new things you’ll notice about the site is the addition of a “Projects” content category. These are all static page, dedicated to keeping a running space for ongoing projects, aside from the daily blog posts. The new theme is based on Ian Stewart’s “Duster” theme. I’ve also added a “Colophon” page, as a space to put production notes.
Still on the to-do list:
- Update look and feel of homepage – needs to be stripped down, simplified.
- Fix width of blog index and single post layout – needs to be a little wider, sidebar needs to be more narrow
- Update copy and layout on Connect page, include contact form
- Update copy and layout of About section
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Infographic: How Are Mac & PC People Different?
Another great infographic, this time courtesy of friends over at Hunch.
Source: Hunch Blog
Found via: Mashable
Listening To: Metronomy – Everything Goes My Way -
Optimizing WordPress
Cleanup cleanup.. in the 9+ years that I’ve been a “blogger”, I’ve written over 800 posts. Of couse all of those posts haven’t always been on the same platform, and over the years my blog has undergone many database updates, platform changes, plugin switches, theme options, and of course, technical difficulties. The blog survives today, but not without a few scars – my WordPress database is a mess, plugins run rampant, and the entire system could use an overhaul. So, I was interested to check out this article from Make Tech Easier, going over basics of cleaning up Worpress. I’ll be taking on this list asap, hopefully in conjunction with a cool new blog theme update. Stay tuned!
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Design of the Day: “Sliced” by Rob Price
I love this deconstructionist take on a grandfather clock – cut down to the only sliver of the object that matters, the time telling face. And then cut down some more. Sliced clock, designed by Rob Price for Kikkerland Design.
Listening to: Two Door Cinema Club – Something Good Can Work (The Twelves Remix)
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My First Blog: ILikeLasagna.com
After my first experience creating a website on Geocities, I decided to buy my own domain name and start a blog.
Back then, in the year 2001, the most prominent blog platform was the freshly released Blogger. It was in competition with a few other platforms such as LiveJournal, but seemed to me like the one with the most promise. Additionally, Blogger allowed users to not only publish to Google’s servers, but also to publish blog posts to your own web server. Back then the technology was pretty basic – blogger would make a simple FTP connection with a remote server, and then publish the entire blog as flat HTML pages. Every time a new blog post was published, Blogger would go back and re-make every page of the site that changed as a result. This method made publishing to a remote server take forever, and also made the system prone to random FTP issues. Additionally, if you tinkered with the file structure Blogger created, it was necessary to republish the entire blog from scratch – luckily a process Blogger made fairly simple. The system was rudimentary, but it worked, and the flat HTML publishing method made web host page serving overhead minimal. Back then I had hosting through Netfirms, which at the time was fairly prominent.
The design of my first blog – “ILikeLasagna.com”, was adapted off of a standard blogger template. This was really my first experience with coding HTML and CSS, and was an excellent learning experience. Since blogger didn’t use PHP, and the pages were structured with both tabular design and CSS, learning how it all worked was straightforward – and unlike today’s PHP-based WordPress, was almost impossible to completely break. With Blogger you just had to insert a few tags telling it where the blog post and other dynamic elements should show up, and the system would take it from there. Today, WordPress operates on the same principles, but with so many different elements, modifying a single character can bring the whole thing to its knees.
In the early days, my blog was an experiment. Actually, it still is today. But back then, I used it as an announcement board for my friends, a place to talk about various things in my life, and a place to write about what I was working on. It’s come a long way since then, but I’m essentially still using it for the same purpose – although now, hopefully, it’s been refined just a bit.
Migrating all of my old blog content has been an involved task, and it’s still not complete. But most of the posts are moved over, and I’m slowly going through them, editing a little bit, and putting the most relevant ones online publicly. For every one original blog post I share publicly, there’s about 15 other ones that I’m keeping private, but still integrated into the overal content mass.
Listed below are a couple of blog posts from my original blog that I feel represent significant events, or are somehow still relevant today.
- All posts re-posted from my first blog. Some were left out, but remain in my archives.
- First post:Hello, this is my new weblog.
- First full field post: Cadiz, Spain
- Road tripping Cincinnati to Boulder. Talking about Campus Hook, a precursor to Facebook.
- Early show review – Garage a Trois
- What should have been my first Tweet – Tonight
- Throwing parties in Denver
- Traveling in Israel and Egypt
- Supporting Blu-Ray
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Wikipedia traffic tool
Quick post for today – This tool for looking at wikipedia traffic was just passed around my office. The tool, from Grok.se, lets users look at traffic trends on wikipedia articles over time. This screen shot below is for NFC, a wireless protocol that’s seen increasedinterest lately, as it starts to be integrated into mobile phones for contactless payments.
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Andrew Wonder Explores the NYC Underground with a Canon 5Dmk2
This past week, urban explorer Andrew Wonder released his Undercity video on Vimeo. In it, he and Steve Duncan explore NYC’s hidden subway system. They take major risks and climb into the active tunnels, and eventually make it to the abandoned city hall subway station. The entire video was shot on the Canon 5Dmk2, and looks great.
I’ve done a bit of “urban exploration” myself – here are a few recent ones:
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Finally Posted: Exploring Centralia, PA
A little over a year ago, I went with friends Chris, Nick and Polina to explore the abandoned, burning ghost town of Centralia, PA. The town lies in the coal mining area of Pennsilvania, and due to a mine fire burning underneath it for the last 50 years, is completely abandoned. The mines continue to burn, and will continue for the next 200+ years.
I’ve finally published photos and a writeup of the trip: Exploring the Ghost Town of Centralia, PA
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Bobcat Sighting in Telluride, Colorado
Today, my father and I saw two Bobcats while snowboarding down Galloping Goose in Telluride, Colorado. They were both just hanging out on the ski run, and didn’t really pay much attention to us as we stopped to take a pic or two. Looking back on it, those things could have easily taken us on. The quick video clip is of the 2nd one as it disappeared into the trees.
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Rounding Up Emerging Trends in the Mobile Industry
A bit bit of research on = emerging trends in the overall mobile industry, originally done for a client. Fairly broad scope.
From Open Kernel Labs- Deck on Emerging Trends In Mobile Virtualization
- $7 billion expected to be spent on mobile applications in 2010
- 1.2 billion mobile phones shipped globally in 2009 (North America is 180 million)
- 175 million smart phones (15%) worldwide (Symbian 47%, RIM 20% iPhone 14%, Windows Mobile 9%, Android 4%)
==- More than 3 billion people on the planet are now mobile subscribers, and until the recent economic downturn, double-digit revenue growth had become almost a way of life in the mobile industry.
- Over the past couple of years, the global mobile market has added more than one billion new subscriptions, sold two billion new devices, and generated more than $300 billion in mobile data revenues.
- In the next five years, according to a recent report, the global market will add another 1.7 billion subscriptions; India and China will add 27 percent of them.
- Eight Emerging Mobile Trends
- Devices targeted to the population and environment of emerging markets
- Mobile gaming
- Mobile reading
- Mobile social networking
- Mobile video
- Mobile finance
- Location-based services
- Mobile advertising
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Tweets the week of 2010-08-15:
- Placecast creates game-changing solutions for location-based mobile marketing, advertising and content management https://icio.us/2ho5uy #
- Great overview on Best Practices for Mobile Search Marketing Campaigns from @sengineland https://icio.us/scvzfl #