Kiko has shut its doors, and that makes me sad. And not just because the Kiko team was headquartered in Medford, MA, my town (at least for another week). Kiko was an online “web 2.0” calendar, an interactive personal calendaring app that you can use from your web browser. The first version was pretty awful, but version 2.0, released a little before Google Calendar appeared on the scene, was really powerful and fairly awesome. Sadly it was competing with the inexplicably popular 30boxes as well as Google Calendar, which integrates nicely with Gmail and Gtalk and all the other Google properties, which really kills you if your market is the kind of person who would be using Gmail in the first place. The Kiko folks were a scrappy bunch of college kids, and I was really rooting for them to succeed, especially after my calendar project failed to get off the ground.

They got burned out, they knew that they had lost, and they are shutting their doors gracefully, which I think is a very respectable thing to do.

Now with the sick, more to come

A few things I’m meaning to write about: Public media’s future, Marketplace, Wicked.

Meanwhile, my symptoms:
* Sore throat
* Muscle pain
* Stiff neck (possibly swollen lymph nodes, not sure)
* Clogged synuses
* Constant fatigue
* Dizziness when moving head or standing
* Upset stomach after eating any quantity of food

So lazyweb, what’ve I got? I’d say mono, but I’ve already had that, and it sounds like recurrence is very rare. Possibly something I picked up through travel. Whatever it is, it sorta sucks to have it while on vacation and after traveling all this way.

*Addendum:* In a feat of good timing, Ze Frank explains the Illness Communication Exaggeration Curve. Now someone get me a burrito!

Only Turkey ranks lower than the United States when it comes to public acceptance of evolution, according to a 20 year study of 34 countries. “[I]t makes about as much sense for politicians to oppose evolution in their campaigns as it is for them to advocate that the Earth is flat and promise to pass legislation saying so if elected to office.”

William Saletan’s response to the foiled British terrorist plot, “The liquid world,” is the best expression I’ve found so far of just the things I’ve been thinking (and, occasionally, saying) pretty much since 9/11. The world is different, and there are a few ways to respond. Sometimes, you have to make the tough choice and embrace the chaos, because that is the only solution. This essay is important, please read it.

Guess what? The TSA bans on liquids and gels is probably completely ineffective at stopping terrorists from getting bomb-making materials aboard plains. Admittedly, the new rules do make it harder by forcing the terrorist to bring along a child, but the practice of dumping all of the potentially explosive liquids into big trash bins in the middle of crowded airport checkpoints isn’t exactly the brightest idea either…

To watch: Eureka

It isn’t often that the SciFi channel impresses me with their selection of shows, but their decision to order and air up to 11 episodes of the new show Eureka is encouraging. The show debuted to very strong ratings and with any luck will keep it up and avoid cancellation, because I’m finding it very enjoyable. The pilot and second episode were a bit awkward at times and in some places lacking, but the third episode set just the right tone. It even saw the annoying teenage daughter character get a bit less annoying, always a good thing.

In brief, the premise of the show is that after World War II Albert Einstein convinced Truman and others to establish a secret town in which the most brilliant Americans and their families could live in safety and secrety and create great new scientific works. The town, Eureka, is controlled by the Department of Defense and is also home to a huge secret government research facility the purpose of which is to take the scientific genius of the town and turn it into useful machines, weapons, and the like. The high concentration of brain power brings a high concentration of other things, including quirkiness, dangerous experiments, paranormal activity, and nefarious double agents.

The show is told through the eyes of the more “normal” people who keep the town running, focusing mostly on the new town Sheriff, a divorced US marshall whose teenage daughter decided to come along for the ride.

If you get a chance, check out Eureka, the fourth episode airs on Tuesday at 9pm, and I have the first three if anyone wants ’em. For my UK friends, it is airing on Sky One under the name _A Town Called Eureka_ on Wedsnedays at 9pm.

Adventures update

Yesterday Jeremy and I drove to Concord, NH to kayak on the Contoocook River. It was a fun little adventure on a nice calm river, and, while we arrived fairly late in the day, we were able to kayak a couple miles upstream to a beach and then back again before closing time. Next time we’ll have to plan more than a few hours in advance and make reservations for one of the 5 or 10 mile journeys.

Warning signTwo weeks ago I set out with Igor and Yoni to hike Mt. Washington. While I’ve been on things I would call hikes, I’ve never gone on something this serious or difficult. I was woefully underequipped, with the wrong clothing, wrong equipment, and not enough water or food. The one thing I did have is an excellent pair of hiking boots and, thanks to Yoni, the right kind of (wool) socks, and my feet came out of the adventure feeling great, even if the rest of me didn’t do so well.

Mt. Washington is the highest peak in New England at 6288 ft, and while that might not mean much compared to other areas of the country, it is a very legitimate and potentially dangerous hike. It is also the location of the highest recorded wind gust in the world for a surface weather station, measuring 231 mph in 1934. On the day we arrived the weather was cool and clear for summer, and our chosen hike took us from Pinkham Notch up 4238 ft to the summit by way of the steep 4.1 mile long Tuckerman Ravine trail, which travels up the “headwall” of the ravine. I did not bring nearly enough water, but luckily the hiking companions we met up with were overprepared, and I was able to score some extra water, food, and a walking stick.

Us by the ravineMy choice of shorts and a light shirt paid off for the beginning of the hike, which was fairly easy going up nicely sloping trails. After a mile or so, we hit the fork that would take us up Tuckerman Ravine, and things got far more steep. The climb was still a pleasant one for another mile and a half or so, at which time we stopped to rest and eat. As we ate the sky opened and the rain started, another thing I was not well prepared for, with my jacket that was not especially good at keeping water out and my short pants.

We continued on, although I was slowed down for a bit by the food, which made me feel bad and gave me a headache (and there are no bathrooms along the trail). We kept going, and as we got higher fog started to roll in, the rain began to intensify, and the wind picked up. The last half mile was awful, and at times I had to stop to rest, out of energy to go on. Our group seperated into three pairs as we climbed the last section at different speeds and slowly, oh so slowly approached the top. When we finally got there, I was dismayed to see that we were only at a parking lot, and there was still a bunch of stairs to climb before we finally reached shelter. I was exhausted.

At the top we entered the visitors center, which was not well heated, and changed clothes for those of us who had things to change into, while attempting to dry off from the rain. Unwilling to made the descent in the crappy weather and the condition of some of our party, we bought a ticket to send one member of the group down on a van to pick up a car and come back up for the rest of us. While we waited for her to go and come back, and weather intensified, and the park service closed the road, saying it was unsafe to pass.

Worst weather in the worldWe were now trapped at the top of the mountain with the visitor center nearing closing time and the only way down to hike in the awful weather — or hitch a ride. Luckily the more female and cute members of our party were able to score us seats in the pickups and vans of the few remaining people at the top who had yet to leave. A very slow descent via road and we were finally, finally at the bottom, where the weather was a bit better.

This wasn’t the end of course, as next we had to drive for three hours to get back to Igor’s house, at the end of which I felt absolutely terrible and had the most awful painful hiccups, and then, after that, another half hour home.

Oh man, it was awful, aggrevated of course by me being out of shape and underequipped. Now that I know what I know, would I do it again? Damn right I would. But first I need to head out to REI or EMS and stock up on the right equipment.