Violent storms
(Readers from Florida, skip this entry as it's probably insulting that I
talk about big storms when that hurricane is approaching your houses :)
On Thursday, there was a big rain storm in València, one of the biggest
I've seen in my life. By pure bad luck, I was inside a bar in Benimaclet at
00:15, saying good bye to my friends when it started to rain. As I had to cycle
back home and it was raining a lot, I decided to wait until it stopped. 3 hours
later, I was still inside the bar, watching how the rain got heavier and the
square where it's located was flooding, as the sewers couldn't deal with all
the water that was coming in. A few minutes later, the water was so high that
it started getting in the bar, but luckily it stopped raining so intensely and
the water level started to go down again.
When I got home, I found the living room was full of water, as well as the
kitchen. Cleaning that made me go to bed at 4 or so, making me a zombie next
morning at work...
Last night I went to Bétera to have dinner with some team mates, and I was
able to see the most impressive electric storm of my whole life. The lightnings
were continuous, and the storm seemed to move towards our direction. At one
point it started raining very heavily, and water started pouring into the house
even with the windows closed. The extremely strong winds did the rest: we could
see how huge, 20m tall trees around us just broke as if they were matches, with
quite bad results for the cars that were at one side of it, which were
basically crushed.
It's incredible how small and irrelevant we can feel when nature shows its
real power...
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They say it was about time...
On Friday at 13:00 I gave up and bought a mobile phone. For years, everyone
was urging me to do this, because "they couldn't contact me when they needed
to". Well, I guess there were other ways before mobile telephony was
introduced, because people managed to date and do stuff normally without
them.
So, why the need? Well, I don't really know, but people just started
buying phones and at some point, about 2 or 3 years ago (in Spain), everyone
seemed to have one, and if you didn't you were annoying, because people would
have to call to your fixed line, which is more expensive.
At some other point, the percentage of people with point was so big, that
the few of us without a mobile phone would actually expend quite a lot of
money when calling people. I find 70% or 80% of my calls were to mobile phones,
which is quite expensive. And if I was out, it was really annoying: all the
public phones in València are either a) vandalised and broken, b) just not
working for some reason, c) charging 1€ just for establishing a link. That,
and everyone telling me "dude, get a mobile phone!" provoked my defeat, and
now I'm one more.
At least I can say I resisted 6 years before it got too expensive not to
have one. The only other friend without a mobile phone is also getting one
in the next few weeks.
The little thing
doesn't take pics, is not a video camera, doesn't play FM radio or anything
real nifty, but I can receive calls. My father got it from free from the
telephone company, so I didn't use a single euro to get it. One nice surprise
was to find that Alcatel
(unlike, AFAIK, Nokia) supports Catalan in
the phone's UI. :)
I'll mail people around to distribute the number to my close friends and
relatives. If you're reading this and think you want my number, mail me, in
case I forgot you in my list.
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Fahrenheit 9/11
Last night I finally went to see
Michael Moore's new documentary.
I really wanted to see this film, after enjoying
Bowling for Columbine
and Stupid White Men a lot. And it didn't deceive me.
Fahrenheit 9/11 is probably a
better film than Bowling overall, and the first part, where he connects the
Bushes with the Saudi elite, is very well conducted. The scene with Bush
sitting in Florida during the 7 most terrible minutes in the US history, doing
nothing and with an empty expression in his face was both very funny and scary.
One could imagine this guy is a fool. But that was just too much.
What I didn't enjoy so much was the part where he shows the US troops
in Iraq having a bad time. Moore focuses a lot in the American casualties, and
sometimes gave me the impression that the thousands of Iraqi civilians killed
were second class deaths. There was also a bit too much of patriotism, but as
I guess the ultimate goal of this film is (besides making Michael Moore very
rich) enlightening a few millions of Americans before the November election,
I guess I can ignore it a bit.
In short, there aren't many facts in the film that I didn't know or assumed,
but they are presented in a very intelligent way (call it populism or whatever,
yesterday I was open to swallowing some of that). I haven't talked to
American people on IRC about what they think, but I'd really like that F9/11
helps to kick Bush out of office. As
murrayc
said,
these elections will have a massive impact in the lives of most of us around
the world, so here's hoping they come out as most of the rest of the world
(I suspect) wants.
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Teeth of Wisdom trouble
I went to the dentist on Tuesday and the doctor insisted on what I've been
trying to ignore during the last two years: I need to have my four Teeth of
Wisdom extracted.
A pitty, because I never had any kind of pain as they grew in 8 years ago
or so and I thought I'd have no problems with them. Unfortunately, they never
got to get out entirely, and now they are basically useless for my bite, and
a potential risk area for teeth decay. They have pushed the rest of the teeth
out of alignment, so I may have to get dental braces to correct this. I'm
defering all of this until October, though. I don't want to be bothered during
Summer with this...
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No surprises in Le Tour
There were no surprises in the Alps or the time trial, and Armstrong managed
to win his 6th consecutive Tour de France. That I
initially wanted Ullrich to win
doesn't mean I acknoweledge there was no rival for him this year, and he's,
without doubt, the best rider the History of Le Tour has know. US Postal is
also with difference the best team around right now. Congrats!
Related to Lance, jfleck has
been blogging about the
Lance Armstrong Foundation and his
LiveStrong initiative to help
survivors of cancer. It's very nice to see people like Lance spending some of
his time in helping others while they go through what he managed to defeat
years ago. It's interesting, too, as he's a fierce competitor while riding
(this year he has won in time-trials, sprinting, in mountain stages, just
conceeding a victory to Basso one day), but is obviously another kind of person
outside the cycling world.
During some of the mountain stages, and specially in Alpe d'Huez, you could
see people booing at him as he flied past them. That wasn't good either. You
might not like his fierceness or the fact that he is now the best rider, but
if you don't like it just don't hail or clap. One Spanish diary translated his
comments about the Basque spectators in La Mongie as if "they wanted to kill
him". This probably wasn't what Armstrong said, but made many people here
think he was quite idiot.
Congrats to jfleck, greg and others, too!
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Armstrong's 6th Tour
It's not a secret that in Spain, most of the people following the Tour, and
cycling in general, prefer that Armstrong doesn't win his 6th Tour de France
in a row.
Unluckily for us, during the stages across the Pyrenees, he has proven to
be the strongest rider once again. We had hopes that after last year's very
difficult victory, this year Mayo, Ullrich, Heras and others would be able to
beat him in the mountain. All the contrary... Mayo seems to be about to quit,
Heras hasn't been seen anywhere near the first groups in the important summits
and Ullrich just doesn't seem to keep up with Armstrong. If nothing
extraordinary happens in the Alps, Armstrong will set a new record in the Tour,
which will be probably unbeaten for decades. Too bad for Miguel's mark...
I know a few gnomies at the other side of the Atlantic will be happy about
this, though. ;)
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Heart or potato?
This morning I got an ecocardiogram done at the hospital. The good news is
that the potato in my chest isn't exploding anytime soon.
Why I got my heart checked is a longish story. I started triathlon training
last year, and these two years are by far the period when I have put most
strain on my heart (and rest of my body). Last summer, I was arriving late to
a training, and I was cycling fast to get there ASAP. There are about 6
kilometres from my father's house to the sports campus. As soon as I entered
the city, I came across a closed traffic light, so I suddenly stopped after
15 minutes of extreme effort. A few seconds later, I started to feel dizzy,
my sight started to blank a bit and most alarmingly, I felt my heart skip a
few beats: pump-pump, pump-pump, pump-pump, ... pump, ... pump, ... pump,
pump-pump, pump-pump.... Of course, I freaked out a bit, but mostly forgot
about it when the lights went green and I had a completely normal training
session. Since then, I've got the same symptoms 3 more times, so I told my
mother and her husband, who casually are cardiologists. Even if they thought
that could be quite normal in people doing lots of sports, we decided to do
some tests just to make sure. I just don't want to collapse one day in the
street. :)
On Monday I was auscultated by Adolfo, and he says he found something
strange in the heartbeat sound. I had an electrocardiogram done, which didn't
reveal anything bad, but hey, now I know I have 45 beats per minute when
resting. Finally I got the ecocardiogram done at the hospital. The equipment
they use for this is fun. It's nothing new, it's the same technique as the
one used to look "inside" a pregnant woman to check the baby. I could see my
heart in the monitor from many different angles, distinguishing the ventricles
and valves. The two doctors started commenting something at one of the valves,
but I couldn't get anything out of their medical speak. In the end, it turns
out my aortic valve has a small fault and doesn't close completely, and some
blood escapes when it shouldn't. They say it's nothing I should care about
(yet?) and I can continue doing sport normally, but I need to keep an eye, and
have it checked every two years, as the valve tends to open more as one
ages. Someone else in the team had the same diagnosed for his heart, so I guess
this is not too uncommon. This evening, to celebrate, I went to the river to
run during 50 minutes.
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Huge pile of mail
One of the expected surprises I found when I
came back
from Pont the Suert was a tremendous amount of unfiltered mail (ie, spam +
non-list mail I probably have to reply to). Just one year ago, the alarm bells
would have gone off if my inbox reached 40 mails or so. Today, it's probably
at 400 mails, some of them that I really should reply but I have no time to.
If you're waiting for a reply from me and you don't get it, I suggest you
remail me and insist. IRC and jabber probably works better these days,
though.
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Lovely heatwaves
It's not even July and TV news programs are only talking about the high
temperatures in Spain. Some southern cities have already hit 50ºC, and I melt
just thinking about it. Even worse, it seems Seville had massive blackouts
which lasted all day, due to a very high demand caused by air conditioning.
I definitely don't want to be in Seville in such situation.
I generally don't mind high temperatures. I will start ranting about the
cold weather when Valencia is at 10 or 12ºC in winter, but heat I can handle
pretty well. My Athlon, on the other hand, doesn't like heat at all, and just
a few months after buying this box, I suffered a few sudden reboots. After
removing the metal case, it got a lot better, but when summer comes it's not
rare to experience a few reboots...
The other day, Barrapunto had a story
about cooling your Athlon,
with links to the
Athlon Powersaving HOWTO
and the athcool
utility. I had no idea these things existed. As one may expect, athcool is
packaged in Debian,
so it was quite trivial to try it out. I'm still quite impressed by the result.
With the powersaving mode on, the system temperature got reduced by 12 degrees
or so, and now it's quite far from the dangerous "reboot" limit. I'm not
experiencing any of the problems the docs talk about (distorted sound,
lockups or performance hits). If you've got an Athlon box, I suggest you try
this stuff, even if it's just to help your power bill next month.
Bedtime, at 27ºC :)
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On Valencian exams, and why I say Valencian
I got a pair of comments on my
last entry
which I guessed I could answer in a new post, specially the second one, as
Amaya and I had an
argument
about Valencian vs. Catalan not that long ago.
Anyway, Tommy wanted to know what these exams are about. Basically, it's a
test on your knowledge on the Catalan language. The "Mitjà" level was more or
less easy to pass for me. The "Superior" level is the same, but with added
difficulty to the questions.
The exam, which lasts for 2:30h, consists on reading comprehension, a
dictation, writing, grammar, vocabulary and oral expression. Reading
comprehension is easy. They give you a text and you have to summarize in 5
lines. The dictation was kind of hard, because my sister and I were sit in the
last row, making it quite difficult to hear, besides the text was weird and
contained quite a few words I had never heard before. In the writing exercise,
they give you two options to write about (200 words). One was "Space tourism",
which I picked, I don't remember what the other was. There are a lot of
different exercises to test grammar, including filling in the blanks with
missing glyphs and rewriting sentences to use
pronoms febles.
This last exercise is quite tricky in Valencia because our variant of Catalan
in the area doesn't use promons febles extensively. Another difficult
exercise is correcting sentences. They give you 5 sentences which contain
errors gramatical or morphological errors, which you need to identify and
correct. In many cases you are convinced there's nothing wrong with it. Others,
you identify a barbarism in one of the words used, but it's of no use, as you
don't know or remember what the correct word is. How the fuck do you say
"corsé" in Catalan? The vocabulary section is quite hard too, because again
some words you haven't heard in your entire life. The oral exam is just reading
a text with some random subject (mine was about contamination in the food
chain) and then speaking a bit about it.
Next, Jaume asked why I called it a "Valencian" exam in the blog entry, when
I really mean Catalan. Jaume, the exam is quite localized. The text said
"servici" (ugh) instead of "servei", "este" instead of "aquest", and the verbs
were written in the Valencian fashion, "traduïx" instead of "tradueix", etc.
Even if I know it's Catalan, it was full of the minor differences between the
oriental branch of the language and our variant of the occidental branch, which
is commonly known as Valencian. I agree I should have put some emphasis on
the fact that it's the same language, in the end. I hope this answers your
question, I definitely have no doubts on the boring Catalan unity debate. ;)
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