29 November 2009

1Password, Syncing between multiple Macs, and DropBox

I use the Mac program 1Password to keep track of my passwords, software licenses, and other accounts. 1Password has hooks in all Mac browsers to autofill and save passwords and other stuff you might enter into a web page. It's also got an iPhone counterpart that it'll sync with, although syncing this info between my iPhone and Mac is a little clumsy. 1Password keeps this information in an encrypted data file, which can be shared to all your computers through a cloud-based file sharing service.

Versions of 1Password prior to the new v3 used Mobile Me to share the 1Password data file with all your computers. That support ended with v3, claiming that Mobile Me didn't work well enough. On the vendor's recommendation, I am trying the well-reviewed service DropBox, which provides 2GB of free cloud-based storage space and a Mac app.

Migrating from Mobile Me to DropBox


Follow these steps to migrate your 1Password data file from Mobile Me to DropBox.

  • Go to the DropBox website and click Download Dropbox.

    download dropbox.jpg
  • Launch DropBox and set up a new account. When you're done, it will have created a DropBox folder in your home directory. Anything copied there will also be copied to the cloud, and copied to your computers also running DropBox.

  • Quit 1Password if it's running.

  • Drag the 1Password data file from Mobile Me to your desktop.

  • Rename the 1Password data file to 1Password.agilekeychain. The previous version of 1Password kept its data in a folder on Mobile Me named 1Password.agilekeychain\_folder. 1Password no longer supports that filename extension.

    When you see this warning about changing the file extension, click 'Use .agilekeychain'.
    dropbox.jpg

  • Launch 1Password and when prompted, open the 1Password.agilekeychain file on your desktop.

  • Move the data file to DropBox from 1Password's Preferences. In 1Password, go to Preferences>General and click Move...

    Move 1Password data file

  • In the Move panel, select your DropBox folder (mine is on my desktop, yours should be under your home folder) and click Move to Selected Folder.

    Move your file

  • The Preferences panel will now show DropBox as the location for your 1Password data file.

  • On your other computer, install DropBox as above.
  • Launch 1Password and, when prompted, open the 1Password data file in its DropBox folder. Now, all 1Password changes will be kept in sync between computers automatically.

  • Complete these last 2 steps on all your remaining computers.

    You're done! Enjoy having 1Password data quietly kept in sync between your computers.


30 August 2009

Snow Leopard Upgrade Notes

Got a few notes after upgrading to Snow Leopard:

My Apple mini-Bluetooth keyboard was not recognized during the reboot. I hit the sync button on the keyboard a few times with no luck. Mouse was wired, and OK of course, so I clicked through the OK buttons with my mouse until the desktop was visible. I then hit the button again on the keyboard and everything was OK.

I received the following error sometime after the OS had been up and running for a while:
The system extension "/System/Library/Extensions/CNQL4801_ClassicNotSeize.kext" was installed improperly and cannot be used. Please try reinstalling it, or contact the product's vendor for an update.

The extension is an old PowerPC format extension from Canon. Safe to delete.

I had a system message that I had old copies of my iDisk on my computer. I clicked OK to delete them, which caused the document I had docked from my remote iDisk folder to disappear (replaced by a '?'). The document is still on my iDisk so I'm not worried.

Had an alert from Mail that ODMailBundle.mailbundle is incompatible and should be deleted. I don't know what it is either, but I did delete it as instructed without incident.

Not really noticing that my iMac is faster - quite the contrary, window opening and app startup seems much slower than before. Looking forward to a reboot to see if things improve.

I hope everyone's upgrade is going well.

23 August 2009

Extracting Audio from a DVD on a Mac for Free

BEFB99F4-BA58-44EB-A1D8-1DE034F7B3C7.jpg


Simplehelp.com offers an excellent walk-through describing how to rip the audio track from a DVD. In a nutshell, rip the audio with Mac the Ripper and convert its output to MP3 with ffmpegX. Easy to follow instructions - now you need not be in front of your TV to listen to something from a DVD.

10 August 2009

MacBook Battery Management and Calibration

images.jpeg

Over time, notebook batteries lose their ability to keep a charge and the battery included with a MacBook is no different. Apple recommends calibrating your battery every couple of months and free software is available to monitor the condition of your battery and determine if it's time to replace it.


Calibrating your battery


Follow these steps to calibrate your battery every couple of months.

  • Plug your notebook in and charge your battery to 100%.
  • Leave your computer plugged in for 2 hours.
  • Disconnect from power and run the computer on battery power. Allow the computer to sleep when it runs out of juice.
  • Turn the computer off and leave it off for 5 hours. Do not plug it in during this time.
  • Reconnect your computer to power and recharge the battery to 100% again.


Monitoring your battery


Senora Graphics makes a great free utility that reports your battery's original and current capacity, current charge and remaining charge cycles. You can download it here. It reports that my relatively newish laptop battery has 85% of its original capacity remaining; my girlfriend's older laptop only has 45% left. She gets a new battery while I get to live with mine.
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02 August 2009

Tales Designed to Thrizzle by Michael Kupperman

Cartoonist Michael Kupperman trade 'Tales Designed to Thrizzle' collects the first 4 issues of his comic in hardcover. It seems like you've seen these characters in old engravings and reminiscent of work by others, but of course not exactly. Stories are great and weird. I've been getting into the stories of Albert Einstein and Mark Twain's woman-chasing, crime-busting superhero stories in issue 5. Retro-future robots are also a recurring theme.

Anyway, check this page out from the latest issue. It's not in the book - look for Volume 2 next year - but it's in the same ballpark.

You might also enjoy this battle between classic and pop:

Kupperman-1.jpg


06 July 2009

Harvard Business History Review article

Here's a random quote from a book my father Peter Mellish Reed's article 'Standard Oil in Indonesia, 1898-1928' from his article published in Harvard's Business History Review, coincidentally, my mother's great-great-grand-relatives worked for in the 1800-1920's.

Peter Mellish Reed
Standard Oil in Indonesia, 1898-1928
For many years Americans engaged in business abroad at their own risk, unaided in any important way by the backing of their government. When confronted with the forces of national self-interest, they faced frustration. Then the policy of the United States, aware of its economic responsibilities and opportunities and dangers, swung to their support. The new diplomacy was not always adept, but it produced remarkable changes. These are exemplified in the thirty-year history of American efforts to gain an entry to the oilfields of the Netherlands East Indies. The files of the Department of State provide an intimate and unique view both of motivations and the mechanisms of change. (Pages 311-337)

06 June 2009

Public Image Ltd. truly limited edition

The fashion designer Jun Takahashi and his label Undercover collaborated with one of my favorite bands from my youth, Public Image Ltd, to assemble a very limited edition line of clothing. The collection features mostly t-shirts with band photos and their ubiquitous PIL logo, and some snazzy blazers with the PIL logo on the breast pocket. The collection is available for just 2 days - June 5 - 7 - right now at Isetan in Shinjuku.

PIL were known for releasing limited edition versions of their recordings. Their first single was wrapped in a newspaper. The original vinyl and CD versions of Metal Box came in a round tin container stamped with the band logo. The original had 3 12" 45rpm LPs.
53AF760B-AFF8-4C7A-9C09-5E014973FCB5.jpg
230A5B70-DF5B-432E-BE35-DA01704EFD94.jpg
B35ACBEF-983B-4E0A-BEA2-C186217A4E92.jpg
6BACC9BC-363F-4B4D-9201-4A90C009BE3F.jpg

Reposted from http://blog.honeyee.com/jtakahashi/

27 April 2009

Folding Bikes Redux - What I Purchased and Why

I recently wrote about my search for a folding bike, what I looked at and liked, and why. I finally made the decision and purchased one but not the ones that I expected.

bigbike.jpg

I recently started a job that I plan to start biking to. I have a ten-year-old Trek hybrid bike that is generally fine to ride on (can handle city streets, is fairly comfortable and relatively cheap @ ~$350-400 1995 dollars) but needs new tubes and tires and is heavy, clunky and too large to easily get in and out of the house, let alone sneak into the PATH train during my reverse-commute. So I knew that my new bicycle had to be a folder.


My criteria for a folding bicycle ended up including the following: light, sturdy, easy to fold, easy to maintain and at least 8 gears. Nice-to-haves were good selection of standard accessories, folds small, more gears, less than 1,000USD. To minimize the carbon cost, I really wanted to buy a bike that was made as locally as possible.


I looked at the Reach, Dahon, Citizen Bike, Strida, Airnimal, Brompton, Swift Folder/Xootr and Bike Friday. All were good but each were either poorly made, felt cheap, uncomfortable, heavy, hard to fold, or were expensive. All except the Bike Friday were made overseas. I almost went with the Bike Friday as I greatly preferred its ride (never did test-ride a Dahon or Airnimal) and it met all my requirements and nice to haves except cost at 1300USD.


A friend recommended the Swift Folder and once I looked into it decided that this was the bike to get. It was well made, engineered simply, light and compact enough, rode well and cost $700 for an 8 gear model. Best of all was that one of the inventors built it down the street from me and it's sold through a network of bicycle refurbishers, so getting repairs and recommendations is easy. Only downside for me - besides the hard-as-granite seat - is that it is not as compact a folder as the Dahon, Bike Friday or Brompton.


You can actually buy the bike from multiple sources: mass produced from Xootr for ~650USD; at Recycle-a-Bicycle for the Peter Reich's Brooklyn-built Swift Folder for ~700USD; or one out of hand-built steel from Human Powered Machines for at least 950USD.


Riding it has been great. I've already been able to bike to a couple of places I would have skipped or taken the train to. I plan to post a little more about my experiences using the bike as the unit itself settles in and as I start dealing with a near-daily commute on it.

14 April 2009

Peter Funch in Composite

Peter Funch is a Dutch photographer living in New York who produces, amongst other works, stunning composite New York street scenes. Many of the scenes are quite tense. According to veryshortlist.com, he places his camera in one place over a period of weeks and composites the resulting images and portraits into a single landscape. One work has a pack of yawners; in another everyone's smoking.

He's also shot a series of car crashes, some of which are pretty brutal.

My favorite is probably the shots of the skies filled with airplanes. Which of course is my nightmare, since I dislike flying so much.

19 March 2009

Clem Snide

Just saw Eef Barzelay perform in a 3-piece labeled Clem Snide. Who cares - it's great to see him play in New York, and he plays here so seldom. Here's the set list from tonight's show.

20090318 Clem Snide Setlist.png

05 February 2009

Lux Interior RIP

For Immediate Release:
February 4, 2009

Lux Interior, lead singer of The Cramps, passed away this morning due to an existing heart condition at Glendale Memorial Hospital in Glendale, California at 4:30 AM PST today. Lux has been an inspiration and influence to millions of artists and fans around the world. He and wife Poison Ivy’s contributions with The Cramps have had an immeasurable impact on modern music.

The Cramps emerged from the original New York punk scene of CBGB and Max’s Kansas City, with a singular sound and iconography. Their distinct take on rockabilly and surf along with their midnight movie imagery reminded us all just how exciting, dangerous, vital and sexy rock and roll should be and has spawned entire subcultures. Lux was a fearless frontman who transformed every stage he stepped on into a place of passion, abandon, and true freedom. He is a rare icon who will be missed dearly.

The family requests that you respect their privacy during this difficult time.





---
What a shame.

28 December 2008

"Creep predominant" with a "loser rising"

My friend Gillian Webber forwarded this to me and I thought it was funny enough to forward on and geeky enough to include here.

Here's the link to the original MySpace post
Tim



Tool dork loser schmuck buffoon nerd geek martian retard creep

No matter what anyone says, everyone can be labeled.

Here's a place where you can find out (and help determine) just what those labels are.

* * * *

How it works:
This webpage invites you to rate people according to 10 carefully selected chracteristics. By submitting your rankings, you evaluate the degree to which a person is a combination of a select group of negative traits:

tool, dork, loser, schmuck, buffoon, nerd, geek, martian, retard, creep

For a description of the definitions see the blog on this site:

Traits definitions

Everyone is a major and minor in something too. Thus, Charlie Sheen would be said to be "creep predominant" with a "loser rising".

A person gets a score in each category according to the percent of voters who ascribe that trait to the person. And as a final coup-de-grace, the person is given a total score. So you can see not just where someone falls, but also: how hard. You'll be suprised to find out how accurately this system pins down who someone really is.

* * * *

How to play:
Start looking through the blogs to find a person you would like to characterize. Click on the blog and post a comment with your vote of what traits characterize this person, ranking them in order of importance. (And feel free to add whatever comments you like by way of debate and explanation). We will update the blogs semi-regularly to tally the votes and display the results.

If the person you are looking for has not yet been posted for ranking, post a comment on the main profile page and tell us the name(and provide an appropriate photo if you like) of the person you think is ripe for such judgment. If we agree, we'll post the person as a blog and let the voting begin!

* * * *

A few last thoughts:

This is intended as a good-natured, collaborative game of personality analysis--a sort of Myers-Briggs of your foibles. We arrived at these ten traits by means of a rigorous weeding-out process to arrive at a perfect balance. It only takes a brief exposure to gameplay to realize that there is something magical in the way the interplay of these 10 traits manages to capture the warts-and-all essence of a person.

* * * *

Typically, people with thick skins tend to enjoy rating themselves (or hearing themselves rated) in a self-deprecating and character-building way; provided they are not rated a creep or schmuck, which is pretty hard to swallow.

The game works really well with celebrities -- especially in the quest to find the elusive person who has all 10 traits.

So far, Geraldo Rivera is the only winner in that regard.

A75D4DBA-07AA-4577-9063-0BFB0EF1C8A3.jpg


For some more background on the game, click here

19 December 2008

18 December 2008

NYC MTA vs. Helvetica vs. Arial vs. ClearView

Read the New York Times article about Helvetica in the subway:

This is the movie about Helvetica called, strangely, Helvetica, why it's such a cool font and how it came about. It's available to view on demand on your computer. I love the bit where the designer tears apart advertising style of the 50's and 60's. "Any questions?"

Arial is the version of Helvetica that Microsoft includes with Windows slightly changed to make it "more readable on computer screens" supposedly. More likely it's an almost identical rip of Helvetica but is cheaper for them to include wrt license fees.

ClearView is the new font (intended for highways and the AT&T logo) that provides for fast recognition by designing each character that emphasized negative space and size differences between short and tall letters, in order to improve legibility. It's also intended to be used in upper and lower case, rather than all upper case that signs typically use, also to improve legibility.

Everyone should use ClearView - I have a free rip-off version of it called RoadGeek that I would gladly punt if the price of the commercial version came down from its current 800 bucks. I guess I'm in my small way encouraging free font-alike vendors, so, ah, sorry. I love ClearView!!

23 November 2008

Robyn Hitchcock 'I Often Dream of Trains' program

This is the text from the program handed out at Robyn Hitchcock's performance of I Often Dream of Trains at Symphony Space in NYC on 11/22/08.

About the Artist
1952 Conceived in Stockholm.
1953 Born in London.
1956 I see a dead chicken.
1957 John Lennon meets Paul McCartney in Liverpool.
1959 I get my first plastic dinosaur.
1962 Bay of Pigs and the Cuban Missile Crisis; Kennedy faces off Kruschev; I start collecting beetles.
1963 The Beatles have four number one hits; I try unsuccessfully to compose an instrumental in my head; Kennedy shot dead; First Dr. Who episode transmitted.
1965 I discover H.G. Wells.
1966 I discover Bob Dylan.
1967 The Year Zero. February; Get my first guitar; October; Learn to tune it.
1969 In July, Neil Armstrong is the first man in recorded history to stand on the moon.
1970 The Beatles dissolve; I write my first song, "Baby" with my school friend Martin, who Is now a lawyer in Buenos Aires.
1972 Martin and I play the City and Guilds Art School Dance with our beat group, The Beatles; Somehow the name doesn't catch on. and we play our last gig on December 31. 1973 at the British Council. Topping the bill are Chilli Willi and The Red Hot Peppers. whose drummer, Pete Thomas. goes on to play with Elvis Costello.
1974 Nixon impeached; I move up to Cambridge looking for musicians. and play the folk clubs.
1975 Margaret Thatcher becomes head of the Conservative party; I keep playing the folk clubs.
1976 The Sex Pistols release Anarchy in the UK; I write "It's Not Just the Size of a Walnut." It goes down okay in the folk clubs, but I'm still looking for the right musicians.
1977 I find the right musicians, AKA The Soft Boys. and we release Wading Through a Ventilator in November. Doesn't quite connect with the Year Zero of Punk.
1978 The Soft Boys support Elvis Costello and nearly get a major record deal; Kimberley Rew joins the Soft Boys; Second Soft Boys single "I Wanna Be an Anglepoise Lamp."
1979 A Can of Bees released on our own Two Crabs label. Not immediately popular, but Julian Cope later describes It as a "red-hot poker up the arse of pop music"; Thatcher elected as Prime Minister; I read a lot of lG. Ballard.
1980 Underwater Moonlight, the second Soft Boys LP, is released on the Armageddon label; We get as far as New York, but dissolve the following February; Ronald Reagan elected; John Lennon shot dead In New York.
1981 I release Black Diamond Snake Role and promote it by doing nothing; Inner city riots throughout Britain; Spandau Ballet are huge.
1982 My second solo album, Groovy Decay; I promote it by doing even less except tour of Norwegian fallout shelters, playing to AC/DC fans; Falklands War guarantees Thatcher a second term; Decide to hibernate.
1983 Write lyrics for "Captain Sensible;" Sleep a lot; Unbeknownst to me, U.S. college radio stations are now massively playing our old records.
1984 REM and other new U.S. bands cite The Soft Boys and myself as influences; Meet Peter Buck outside Highgate Cat Protection league; Record first totally solo album I Often Dream of Trains; Play first live show in two years at The Hope & Anchor, Islington.
1985 Start touring U.S. with backing group The Egyptians, featuring former Soft Boys Morris Windsor and Andy Metcalfe; Booked to support REM but mystery cyst in my abdomen requires surgery which aborts tour; FegMANIA!, the first Robyn Hitchcock & The Egyptians LP is released; 15-minute standing ovation after our New York show at Irving Plaza; "Walking on Sunshine" is a global smash hit for Kimberley Rew's band Katrina and the Waves.
1986-1992 We sign to A&M records in the U.S.; Element of Light. Globe of Frogs, Queen Elvis, and Perspex Island all top the Rolling Stone Alternative chart.
1989 Finally open for REM on their Green tour; I play my first solo U.S. tour in the autumn.
1990 Eye, my second completely solo record is released.
1991 The Year Punk Broke. again; Nirvana chases us off the Alternative chart and the musical climate changes.
1993 Respect is the last album with the Egyptians; In Britain, the Tories are elected for a fourth term despite the deposing of Margaret Thatcher; Great debut albums from Grant-Lee Buffalo and Belly.
1994 I am now a solo act.
1995 Jonathan Demme appears in the dressing room between sets at my show near his home just outside New York. He identifies himself and offers to film me in concert; All my albums from 1981-1986, plus Eye, are re-released on Rhino records.
1996 Storefront Hitchcock, featuring myself with accompaniment from violinist Deni Bonet and guitarist Tim Keegan playing in a shop window on 14th Street in New York, is directed by Jonathan Demme; Moss Elixir is released on Warner Brothers.
1997 Labour returns to power after 18 years - or does it?
1998 Storefront Hitchcock opens at the Film Forum in NYC. Jonathan & Joanne Demme, Laurie Anderson, Lou Reed, Michael Stipe, and Peter Buck attend. Peter and I busk outside afterwards and collect over $13.
1999 Third album for Warners. Jewels for Sophia; Tour the U.S. as part of the "Revue Against Brain Degeneration" with The Flaming Lips, Sebadoh, Sonic Boom, and Cornelius; Western planes bomb Belgrade; I introduce Storefront Hitchcock at film festivals in Australia, Sweden, Britain and the US.
2000 Tour in the U.S. as a double act with Grant Lee Phillips, doing the Grant lee Hitchcock show; A Star for Bram (companion disc to Jewels for Sophia) is the first release on editionsPAF!
2001 George W. Bush takes office; World Trade Center in New York demolished by hijacked passenger planes; The Soft Boys reform to promote the 21st anniversary re-release of Underwater Moonlight by Matador, and tour the U.S.; George Harrison dies at 58.
2002 The Soft Boys reunion album, Nextdoorland, is released by Matador; I have a cameo appearance as a sleazy rock granddad in the TV play Man And Boy; NASA plans manned landing on Mars within the next 20 years. Subterranean beds of frozen water "may make it habitable long-term;" Robyn Sings, a 2-CD set of Bob Dylan covers, is released on editionsPAF!
2003 At my 50th birthday party show in March, guest musicians include Peter Blegvad, John Paul Jones, Morris, Kimberley, Deni Bonet, and Tim Keegan. Luxor is pressed up to give away to the audience, then released on edittonsPAF! in Britain and the U.S.; U.S. and Britain invade Iraq, on the pretext of nullifying the threat from Iraqi missiles. No missiles were found. Saddam Hussein deposed; Jonathan Demme's remake of The Manchurian Candidate, featuring Denzel Washington, Meryl Streep, and L1ev Schrieber is filmed over the winter in New York. I play the part of Laurent Tokar, a sinister operative.
2004 Record Spooked in Nashville with Gillian Welch and David Rawlings in downtime from filming The Manchurian Candidate. Released on YepRoc in October (and on Proper Records in the U.K.).
2005/2006 Record Ole! Tarantula in Seattle with Bill Rieflin, Peter Buck, and Scott McCaughey. Released October 2006 on YepRoc Ex Proper; Begin touring with BUl, Peter, and Scott as RH and the Venus 3; John Edginton films documentary Robyn Hitchcock: Sex, Death, Food and Insects for the Sundance Channel. Premieres March 27, 2007 on Sundance in the U.S.; Kimberley, Morris, Paul Noble, Terry Edwards, and (perform Pink Floyd's Piper At The Gates Of Dawn as a benefit for Medecins Sans Frontieres at the 3 Kings in Clerkenwell, London. With this and our one-off performances of Sgt. Pepper's and The White Album, plus money raised from after-gig auctions, our fans have raised over £28.000 for MSF. These shows are all arranged and promoted by my wife, Michele Noach; Democrats regain U.S. Congress.
2007/2008 Continue to tour and record; YepRoc re-release all the old catalogue (plus extras) from the 1980s on two boxed sets: I Wanna Go Backwards (solo records) and Luminous Groove (with the Egyptians); Along with Michele and other artists and scientists, I am on the Cape Farewell expedition to West Greenland, to see the retreating ice-scape; Appear singing in Jonathan Demme's Rachel Getting Married starring Anne Hathaway and Rosemary DeWitt; Stock market crashes.
Early 2009 New record with the V3, Goodnight Oslo, due out

22 November 2008

iPhone apps on my first home screen

I keep my most-used apps on the first home screen on my iPhone. Here are the third party ones I store there.

Mobile News.pngMobile News
Good functionality is that it downloads all recent AP articles. Bad functionality is that you have to download each subject (Business, Local News, etc.) manually, one at a time.

Twitterriffic.pngTwitterrific
Not as huge a fan of this app itself as the fact that I don't have another Twitter app on my phone. It does work and it's free, and I use Twitterrific on my desktop. But the iPhone version doesn't automatically scroll to the top when you launch it, and it has ads.

Facebook.pngFacebook
This app gets almost everything right - it's easy to use and exposes enough useful Facebook functionality. I like that I can take and post a photo fairly easily. I use this all the time.

Instapaper.pngInstapaper
Instapaper works in conjunction with Instapaper.com to download web pages to your iPhone for offline reading. Click a special bookmarklet - which works on MacOSX, Windows or the iPhone itself - to save the web page you're viewing to Instapaper. The app then downloads the text from all your saved URLs to your phone. It's pretty neat and really easy to use.

NYTimes.pngNew York Times
This app downloads most of the day's NY Times content to your phone for offline reading. The functionality is useful, convenient and saves trees; too bad the app crashes all the time and takes forever to download everything to the phone. Now that I have AP Mobile News, I hardly ever read the Times.

OmniFocus.pngOmniFocus
Companion application to the desktop version. This is where I manage my GTD list. It's a good app but doesn't sync automatically, which is a pain.

City Transit.pngCityTransit
Provides a New York City subway map, as well as online access to subway system alerts. Too bad the alert system would be much more useful if it downloaded content for offline viewing - like when you're actually in the subway system without net access.

The Weather Channel.gifThe Weather Channel
View today and upcoming weather. It's a little more functional than the standard weather app - you can e-mail the weather report to someone else, for instance.

21 September 2008

Commuter Bike Technology

The commute to my new job in Jersey City requires 3 trains: F to the A to the PATH at World Trade Center. The commute generally isn't bad - maybe 45 minutes all in - but I sorely miss the days when I biked to my job at UBS in midtown. I stopped after I joined Lehman because of their 24x7 business-formal dress code, and the hairy eyeballs I'd get whenever I entered the Lehman building in running or biking gear. Now that I've landed at a place where I can dress comfortably, I want to bike to work again.

I'm evaluating a couple of folding bikes: Brompton and Bike Friday. I went to bfold (in the basement of the same building I lived in when going to college), met Steve, and test-rode the bikes.

General comments:
* Folding bikes are like clown cars. Everything feels miniature, except the rider, who feels like a jackass.
* They both fold up really quickly.
* The ride is bumpier than a full-sized bike.
* You can bike pretty fast on both.
* They're very expensive.
* Folded, they feel a little bigger than I'd expected.

4485798A-ABDE-4492-A5F5-23DB8772721B.jpg
Brompton
Con: Made in the UK.
Con: 3 gears.
Con: All custom parts.
Con: Weak bell.
Con: Weird handle-bars with a deep dip in the middle.
Con: Heavier.
Con: Slow to assemble.
Pro: Not made in China.
Pro: Most compact fold-up.
Pro: Sturdier - metal pedals.
Pro: Additional little wheels to facilitate wheeling it around when it's folded.
Pro: Simple folding mechanism.
Pro: Securing mechanism feels more secure.
268445F6-A7C1-487F-A135-8257485B0F3C.jpg
Bike Friday Tikit
Con: Not so compact fold-up.
Con: Cheaper feel - plastic pedals.
Con: Harder to carry and wheel.
Pro: Made in the USA.
Pro: 8 gears.
Pro: Standard parts.
Pro: Great bell.
Pro: Flat T handlebars.
Pro: Can be wheeled around on it's front wheel when folded up.
Pro: Heavier.
Pro: Simple folding mechanism.
Pro: Fastest to fold up.

About Me

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Brooklyn, New York, United States