Saturday, January 31, 2009

11+ years in Nokia now over

Today was my last day in Nokia, also premises-wise. It's amazing to think that I've spent over a quarter of my lifetime working there. Everything has to end sometime and I guess now was as good as any for this one.

30.01.2009 11+ years in Nokia now over - Share on Ovi

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Winter bike commuter morning flat tyre blues

22 January, 2009 09:22:28

In Finland it's customary to spread copious amounts of gravel to icy pavements and roads to keep people from slipping and hurting themselves as well as to help cars up steep hills and get going in intersections. Trouble is, this eskar gravel is becoming more and more expensive as the supplies from hillsides this is excavated from are running. Apparently, no more permits are given to open up new sources to conserve the nature. Thus the keep-people-walking-upright-in-winter departments have turned to another material to increase friction, which is bigger rocks ground to small pebbles.

This is all fine, as the finely ground rocks do the same thing for cars and pedestrians as the gravel used to do. Thing is, the stuff is murder to bike wheels. Many of the small pieces of stone have extremely sharp edges, which easily punch a hole through bike tyres if you run over them.

Last winter I had three punctures. Today morning was #1 for this one.

More philosophically, this one instance where conserving natural resources translates spending more elsewhere. Grinding rocks to produce this stuff must some energy. De-motivating people who ride a bike to work means they use means of transport with an internal combustion engine and thus CO2 emissions. I am waiting to be picked up right now in out family hatchback. Finally many more rubber inner tubes have to be manufactured, packaged and shipped to Finland to be punctured. I've read stories from more frequent cyclists of going through half a dozen each winter. I know that in the balance my vote would be on making a new hole for the non-puncturing gravel, as I start fixing yet another tyre...


Monday, January 19, 2009

Golf ghost town

Imagine owning a big villa in a location where it almost never rains, where it's always warm (if not hot) and where your backyard leads to a PGA rated 18-hole golf course. All this beyond a couple hours flight away from anywhere in Europe by the Red Sea filled with coral reef wonders.

Now imagine further that there are 200 of those villas surrounding the entire course, they're all unfinished heaps of junk and that they've been that way for the past 10 years everyplace else has been inflating a huge real estate bubble.

This totally weird sight is from Sharm el Sheikh in Egypt.