weekend bits

Jan 11, 2004 21:20

Seen while walking home Saturday: a car with blinkers ( Read more... )

my synagogue, misc, sca: events, travel, tech

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Comments 18

geekosaur January 11 2004, 18:32:50 UTC
Re Cincy: Add 2 - 2 1/2 hours from Columbus.

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cellio January 11 2004, 19:58:19 UTC
Thanks.

If I'm not mistaken, the canonical route to Columbus is via the turnpike (I-76). For Cincinnati, Mapquest recommends I-70 (so south to WV and then west). Thus, you go nowhere near Columbus if you follow their route. I don't know if that's actually an appropriate route, of course. Having been burned in the past, I now use Mapquest as opening advice only. :-)

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geekosaur January 11 2004, 20:01:53 UTC
Er? 70 is a straight shot from a little south of Pgh. into Columbus (which is at the confluence of 70 and 71); you then follow 70 further to either 75 south or 675 to get to Cincinnati.

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geekosaur January 11 2004, 20:06:32 UTC
And 76 takes you north to Cleveland, you end up pretty far out of your way and it's more complicated. (76->[80->]480->271->71, figure 7 hours (!))

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ralphmelton January 11 2004, 19:46:52 UTC
The robotic vacuum cleaner that I've heard of is the Roomba, which is much cheaper than the price you quoted--about $200, if I recall correctly. You may be describing a different model, though.

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cellio January 11 2004, 19:52:06 UTC
I failed to retain the name of the one I read about. The reviewer did say that the product he reviewed will be for sale in the US later this year; he reviewed a European product (and translated the price into dollars). So who knows what that'll translate to when they market it here?

Off the top of my head, I'd guess that the cheaper model requires more human intervention, such as, perhaps, not being smart enough to recharge itself. The real appeal to me is not that, when I decide it's time to vacuum a room, I can set up a machine to save me the 10 minutes; rather, I'd like to be able to just set it in motion, say, on my way out in the morning, and come home to a vacuumed first floor. (The review mentioned that it's smart enough to not fall down steps, though of course you have to carry it upstairs yourself.)

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sethcohen January 11 2004, 20:34:37 UTC
From what I've read, the Roomba works every day. You tell it when you want it to work (e.g. it knows you're not home from 9am-5pm) and it just covers the area. It also can recharge itself by going to its docking station.

The downside is that it memorizes one room (and one room only) at a time. In a house your size, it might make sense for the bedroom, but not the downstairs.

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eub January 11 2004, 21:29:02 UTC
I wonder if this might have been the Trilobite.

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a bit from the event cellio January 11 2004, 19:55:56 UTC
There was a boffer tourney. Boffers are padded weapons, used without armor and without requiring fighter authorization. This particular implementation used pillows, which I find much harder than tubes of foam that are vaguely club-like.

Anyway, they asked people who have actual fighting experience to handicap themselves in some way, though this was left to entrants to work out. My first-round opponent was a fencer, so he put one hand behind his back. I had been prepared to call it even; while I'm not currently a fighter or fencer, I have been in the past. But instead, I took off my glasses. I figured that was fair. :-)

(The pillows were large enough that I would have had non-trivial control problems if I could only use one hand. My opponent's hands were bigger, so he could actually control a pillow one-handed.)

I lost, but it wasn't because of the glasses. It was because he's better than I am, and has longer arms. :-)

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geekosaur January 11 2004, 20:35:35 UTC
About the vacuum: The Roomba is indeed the most readily available robot; it's not very smart and apparently has serious problems with things like throw rugs. More recently another, smarter (and more expensive) robotic vacuum became available which is apparently much nicer; I'd have to go digging into archives to get details though. (I think the person commenting on it lives in England so it might even be the same one you heard about.)

lessee...
http://trilobite.electrolux.co.uk
(review here) It sounds like it's in the price range of the one you were looking at.... Then there's this one from Samsung, about the same price as the Roomba but reportedly smarter.

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cellio January 12 2004, 07:08:14 UTC
Sounds like it was probably Trilobite. Thanks.

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murmur311 January 12 2004, 09:48:39 UTC
once you get through columbus it will actually only take 1.5-2 hours to get down to cincinnati (depending on how fast you drive and also at what time of day you are going through; i suggest using the 270 loop around columbus, going south/west to avoid actually driving through columbus, which is a pain; 270 hooks up with I-71 south which will take you right down into cincinnati). depending on where you are staying or if you are headed straight to HUC, i can probably give you better directions than mapquest.

(i typed I-75 before and actually meant I-71)

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cellio January 12 2004, 10:03:10 UTC
If, as it appears, I'm looking at a roughly 5.5- or 6-hour drive, I'm going to at least try to find out if buses or trains go there before deciding to just drive. I dislike driving, especially when I don't know the area ("foreign" cities are bad; I can't assume I'll be able to read the street signs), and especially road trips without company.

It's not a phobia; it's a rational aversion. That's my story and I'm sticking to it. :-)

And this is all assuming I get accepted to the program at HUC, of course. Otherwise, I have very limited reasons to visit your fair city. (If I do end up driving, though, I'll be sure to get in touch with you for advice.)

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goljerp January 12 2004, 15:32:03 UTC
There are busses from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati; Greyhound seems to have around 5/6 a day on Sundays, and the estimated travel time is between 5.5 and 9 hours.

Amtrak doesn't seem to have trains which go between Cincinnati and Pittsburgh. You'd have to go to Philadelphia, down to DC, and then over to Cincinnati.

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