Facebook Privacy

Social Networking    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

An interesting thing just happened. Today I ‘added as friend’ someone whom I worked with back at IBM/Lotus. In the message I asked if he still worked with PeopleSoft. Just a handfull of hours later I get an email from a recruiter stating:

Dear Applicant,

My name is Charles and I’m a recruiter at COMPANY NAME REMOVED. Our records show that you are an experienced professional with experience in Peoplesoft. This experience is relevant to one of my current openings.

For the record I’ve never worked with PeopleSoft and it doesn’t show up on my linkedin profile, old resumes, nothing public. So, am I just paranoid or is it that I neglected to read the Facebook Privacy Agreement?

But is your PHONE ready for Lotusphere?

Lotusphere    Posted by Yancy Lent 1 comment »

With only 2 weeks to go until Lotusphere I just realized I have to prepare for the shock of living out of my… phone, away from the comfort of my all powerful laptop. I’ll have the laptop, but my main mode of connectedness will be my smartphone.  So how to prepare? For that I turned to those available on the im.bleedyellow Sametime server…

Question: What are 3 must have phone apps you should have for Lotusphere and do you have any tips….In no particular order…

Chris Toohey:  The sessions database, gTalk and twitterberry. Tips… “I’m going to WAP-enable SOTU and get it out there that way, you can issue remote console commands via a wap browser to your server from your WAP browser-havin’ phone so, I’d def recommend THAT one, once it’s released :)”

John Head: Twitterberry, facebook, and personal calendar. Tips… “get a portable charging device, like the callpod fueltank. recharges most blackberries about 4 times before its dead. so the device stays charged all day smile“.  and “set the ringer to vibrate on the plane to Orlando .. don’t take it off vibrate to the plane home”.

Karl-Henry Martinsson: Twibble for twittering, Google Sync to synchronize calendar between Google and Blackberry, Google maps for the Blackberry (or any cell phone), and LS09 Session Database.

Paul Mooney: The Turtle Group Sessions DB, currency calculator and weather app. Tip… Learn the silent mode :)

So, its unanimous. Have an easy on-ramp to Twitter, the sessions database and put your phone on vibrate.

The best advice I can give requires a single document in the Journal database. Every trip I go on I prepare a trip ‘one sheet’. I usually name it “1111 Lotusphere 2007″ or “11111111 Lotusphere 2008″ to have it show up at the top of the list. Then, in order, I add…

Name of Event/Trip
Room number (just the number so if I loose the phone I don’t get any midnight callers).
Ped / both numbers (for Axceler.com) for the showcase floor
My Flight Numbers and times
Names and Phone numbers of everyone I’ll be there with.
Then a quick list for the hotel and where we plan to eat (and the menu :)….
Walt Disney World Dolphin Hotel
1500 Epcot Resorts Blvd, Lake Buena Vista, FL, 32830
407-934-4000
Palm Restaurant (Orlando)
5800 Universal Blvd, Orlando, FL 32819
407-503-7256

http://www.thepalm.com
http://www.thepalm.com/menu.cfm?menu_id=324

Notice the single line address, this makes it easy to copy and paste into the google map app if you need to. Always fun if you want to check the route of the taxi or the Mears shuttle.

I then live out of this document. And make random notes for when i get back home. As far as applications go, I just started adding them so I don’t really know what I’m missing. Up until this point I have gotten by on http://m.planetlotus.org and http://m.planetlotus.org/twitter.php, hence the investigation into this topic.

1 Notes Admin / 2 Developers in a 3 way tie for Blogger of the Year

Planet Lotus    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

No clear leader! If you haven’t yet voted get over to planetlotus.org/awards/ and check it out.

Remember, you can change your vote as often as you’d like, but the voting will end the Thursday, before Lotusphere. Not yet sure of the time.

Introducing: Planet Lotus Blogger of the Year Awards.

Planet Lotus    Posted by Yancy Lent 5 comments »

The polls are open! - http://planetlotus.org/my/awards/

The premis is simply, vote for your favorite blog/blogger of 2008. The winner will be announced at BALD in Orlando and tweeted to the world. Prize yet to be determined.

I would like to start this first year off simple, one winner. Maybe next year it will expand to different categories, more collaboration on this in 2009.

This year, thanks to Nathan, there might also be MTV like categories, from our bleedyellow IM chat…”Best Lotus Meme, Best Single Post, Best Technical Post, Best Skewering of a Competitor, Best Flame War”.  This will come in the following days/weeks, hopfully in time for last minute voting.

Good luck and Happy New Year!

Blogger of the Year

Planet Lotus    Posted by Yancy Lent 7 comments »

How about a Planet Lotus Blogger of the Year? I’m looking for ideas on how to structure the winner(s). Have you any ideas?

Planet Lotus - Year One, the stats.

Planet Lotus    Posted by Yancy Lent 4 comments »

I will try and make this a part one of two, part one being the stats and part two being reflections, lessons learned, etc. I’ll try and write this up over the holiday break. For now the numbers…

Dec 20, 2007 - Dec 20, 2008

Active Blogs 310
Blog Posts 27,834
Bookmarks 1,174
Jobs 915
PodCasts 325
Downloads 62
Events 35
Clicks 1,306,520
Keywords indexed from feeds 241,111
Searches 47,908
Tweets 77,321

Jan 1, 2008 - Dec 22, 2008 - google.com/analytics

1,328,201 Unique Views
1,828,665 Pageviews
97,323 Visitors
88.54% (front page)

And my favorite stat of all… $6,484.72 raised from the Lotus community for Cancer research!

Notes… does some very intuitive stuff that Microsoft just didn’t consider.

Lotus Notes    Posted by Yancy Lent 1 comment »

This is priceless. I was in search of a complex url, one with many different characters, so I did a search at ebay.com. The first thing that came to mind was Notes, and boy did i find something amazing… Apparently for a bid of $60 you can get Lotus Notes 6.5.2! It sounds like an amazing piece of software. I must warn you, after reading the details, “… There’s a lot to it, so you may need a reference manual that unfortunately cannot be supplied.“, you’ve been warned.

And what about the box you might ask? Well, you’re screwed; “Additionally there isn’t a box, but it does come safely and securely packaged.” all this functionality and no box! This could be the deal breaker for me. ”

The best part? If you’re new to “Lotus Notes”… the seller is available for questions after the sale, so free tech support, potentially FOREVER, you know, for when ‘Notes’ is unable to find ‘Domino’!… “I am easily accessible to answer all and any questions post sale date!!

I’m guessing the motivation behind the winning bidder is this… “It is full and perfectly 100% functional and does some very intuitive stuff that Microsoft just didn’t consider.“.

….Notes 6.5.2 ebay post….

Happy Purchasing…!

Date around in the Cloud then Marry the On-Property solution.

Broadcastr    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

I’m not sure how unique this concept is but I’m leaning in this direction with Broadcastr. Every solo project I’ve worked on this past year in some way has to be different. Broadcastr my most recent endeavor is doing just this, taking things we know and presenting them just a bit, differently. They don’t always start off this way, Planet Lotus started as LotusReport.com, a knock off of the Drudge Report for the Lotus community but when it became too time consuming to maintain I automated it, I then took that data and presented it way we’re all use to, an inbox. Now Broadcastr is taking similar twists and turns.

It started simple, a enterprise ready micro-blogging platform delivered as a VM. You simply download open it on a VM server and you’re ready to go. The authentication would be made simple by Domino LDAP. I also wanted to offer a hosted solution or at minimum a web demo. This proved difficult. I was educated by Nathan Freeman while trying to integrate Bleed Yellow’s LDAP server with Broadcastr.net on the concept of man in the middle attack. You can’t simply host an application where you enter your username and password on my site and I authenticate that info against your companies public (or secure) LDAP…. you would have to be very trusting to let that happen given the impotence of the Notes username and httppassword.

Just weeks into development I had a prototype up and running. The problem was you had to register at planetlotus.org and then go back and tool around a very open public site. It is, and was, a very forgettable demo experience, since I’m shooting for the enterprise this isn’t a very authentic approach.

How to demo it better? That started about 2 weeks ago while out at dinner. During a conversation on the project my friend enlightened me on the concept of Garden Walls. The concept is beautiful in its simplicity. In a nutshell, Facebook is too open. My family, high school buddies and professional contacts are all learning too much about me. A Facebook with Garden Walls would fix this, put up walls between the fart jokes and the professional contacts. My prototype needed said walls.

Today, the garden walls went up, now how to demo it? In steps a google search on a site i didn’t even know existed, to be honest I didn’t do too much research before starting this project. The site; Yammer, just launched in September and the front page had the solution, a simple request for a company email address. That was it. Base the garden (or in Broadcastr terms the ‘Market”) on your company email address. Soon you’ll be able test Broadcastr with your coworkers, or other yahoo.com, or gmail.com users.

Here comes the different business model. Something from the start of the project mixed with something learned later on. Yammer’s business model is to give you a base level micro-blogging platform in the cloud, but you have to pay to get additional administrative control and other features. The broadcastr.net demo will also be free (with-in reason) but the purchase will be for the VM version of the offing to be downloaded and housed inside your company. Once started on your VM server the web version’s data will expunged and replaced with a forward link to its new, on property, inside your firewall, location.

I wrote most of this blog post on the ride home from work today. I find it very interesting that Andrew Pollack wrote on this very topic, even mentioning “marrying the cloud“. If you read his 4 very insightful posts you’ll see that this model of dabbling with the cloud version and purchasing it as a VM addresses some of the concepts he raises.

Keep an eye on broadcastr.net for the new and improved offering. Invite your coworkers, speed date the cloud offering for your company and if you like it, marry the VM, together you’ll raise beautiful megabytes.

planetlotus.org/Broadcastr Public Beta

Broadcastr, Planet Lotus    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

The list of features keeps growing. My favorite, a version of twitter that sits behind the firewall, in this case behind a successful Planet Lotus registration.  In short, search engines won’t pick up your posts and you can post freely from Loti to Loti, I don’t plan on making this module public.

Other new features, Group and Project support. That’s right, create a group, say Priceless Quotes, and post messages. Anyone following it will have your quote/post show up on their page. Image support is also up and running. If you’ve already checked it out, feel free to go back and upload your (twitter?) profile image. @username is also live, as is RSS feeds, posting urls, etc.

planetlotus.org/broadcastr/  Since the end game is a product you can download and use in your organization, some for the features lean towards enterprise use.
Features:

  • Project Support, anyone can create a project, anyone can follow that project and post messages to its page.
  • Group Support, post messages to your existing Domino Directory groups or create your own.
  • Domino LDAP authentication
  • Customizable post length, default is 256 characters, system admin can change
  • Personal Groups, coming soon, create your own groups, manage the members and quickly post messages to @mygroup which in turn posts directs to @groupmember1, @ groupmember2, etc.
  • URL’s will automatically be converted to a clickable url with the url as a name or can be overridden to defined value like “Link”, the tool tip will expose the actual url.
  • @username. Post multiple direct messages in one post.
  • Email addresses convert to clickable mailto links.
  • Detailed views, most active groups, users, projects, most followed, etc.
  • Ability to toggle use of image/avatars or generic more general icons. (defined by system administrator).
  • Ability to view posts displayed like twitter with limited detail or more verbose information as seen on Facebook wall.
  • View newly activated users.
  • Full search of users, groups, project.
  • RSS feeds of user posts, more feeds to follow. (the current feeds work,  are readable, just don’t link anywhere; yet).
  • Installs as a lightweight ubuntu VM, not yet available.

Broadcastr prototype is Live.

Broadcastr    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

Feel free to kick the tires. It uses your myPL login information.

http://planetlotus.org/broadcastr/

There are some missing pieces, rss, pagination, etc. They’ll get there in over time. Feel free drop the project “Broadcastr  Comments” an idea or two or if you have to “Broadcastr Bugs”. Maybe the application will help in making the application better.

Before you enter remember one thing, its Twitter meets Facebook “Wall”, it has some of each. Essentially you can use @yancylent or you can just go to my wall and post me a message. There will be other micro-blogging fusion going in over time, for example, posting to a “project” or a Domino Directory group, so everyone in the group gets the post even if you or they arn’t following, or everyone in your “Location” as defined by the Location (or Department) field in the Domino Directory person document.

I plan to have a hosted version available in the coming months and a version as a VM appliance sometime after Lotusphere. Drop me a line (yancy at teratechie dot com) if you’re intrested in a demo site for your company.

How to win my vote in 2008

Random    Posted by Yancy Lent 3 comments »

My vote goes to the candidate who pledges to force auto makers to add a “I have my high beams on” blue light to the front of cars. So there is no uncertainty.

My current project: Broadcastr. It’s Twitter meets Facebook’s wall for the enterprise.

Broadcastr, Lotus Notes    Posted by Yancy Lent 5 comments »

Before I spend too much time building the prototype I wanted to throw the idea out to the community to see what you think.

Broadcastr is a light weight communications vehicle that takes the best of Twitter and Facebook wall and puts it inside your firewall. It will deliver as a Ubuntu JeOS, LAMP, VM Appliance that can be quicly started on any VM server. It will use Lotus Domino LDAP for authentication against the Domino Directory. I have posted a screen shot to give you and idea… Screen shot of Broadcastr.

The Overview

Your company is looking for a Twitter / Facebook wall type solution. (I will spare you from explaining why your company would want this). You simply start up this VM, answer a few questions and hit the url with a browser. The user base will be built over time as new users login. They will be challenged for their Lotus Notes http username and password and upon LDAP authentication a page will be created for them. The future of the users session will be handled by PHP and MySQL. The admin of the system will determine the life of the session. Since it’s inside the firewall, the default is set very far out so there is an illusion of SSO.

The page that is create will act as a wall of sorts. Anyone can write on anyone’s wall and since its a company only site anyone can follow anyone. This concept is broken out further, anyone can create a ‘project’. A project is identical to a persons page. Anyone can follow a public project, allowing them to read or pull feeds from broadcasts from that project page.

Similar to People and Projects there will be the concept of Lotus Domino directory groups.  Directory groups will also have their own page. Only the groups chosen to be pulled into the system will be managed over time. This will cut down on synchronization of the two directories in the background. Any person group from the Domino Directory can be selected and instantly anyone can post to that group and all members will receive that broadcast on their page.

I have a majority of this already completed. In posting this I’ve had to do a balancing act of how much to complete before making the idea public. I will error on the side that the feedback will trump all since its is that what i need to know right now. I hope to get a working prototype up on http://www.broadcastr.net in the coming weeks. The problem is the domino authnication piece (which is up and running). It’s asking a TON but I’ve put in a request to Bruce to cross pollinate ideajam.net or openntf.org for the LDAP calls. This way those registered at those sites can poke around on the prototype and be spared yet another registration.

What about DomCastr? Pure coincidence.  Every idea above including the name was in place before Dec’s announcement. I wish him luck! Bottom line, you can see from his post and this one, they are very different.

There is another fun part to this posting. The invitation to all of you to occasionally check in to watch the progress of the idea. My hope is to turn all the amazing knowledge I’ve gained from PlanetLotus.org into another successful idea/product.

299 ‘active’ Lotus blogs updated hourly, what it means.

Planet Lotus    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

There was a lot of talk about a month back about getting to the 300 blog mark on Planet Lotus. It is an exciting milestone but that number when it is reached only means that there is 300 ‘active’ blogs checked on an hourly basis. Over the past year there have been many sites dropped and activity, or lack there of, is the most common reason. One of the services I provide with the sites is the knowledge that the blogs listed are relevant, active and the information is what fellow Loti would enjoy reading.

Reasons for delisting range from:

  • Request of the author… stage fright
  • Sites that are not blogs; news sites that were just duplicating news provide by blogs
  • Sites that require a log in to view their content
  • Change in career and blog content.

Back to the term ‘active’. It can mean many things to many people. I go by the last blog post. If its been over a year since the last post there is no reason for my server to check it every hour. If the person wants to get back into it they can send me an email and I only need to change the publish field from 0 to 1 to start checking again, it’s that simple.

Now for the gray area, what about situations that fall outside activity and the reasons above, i.e., Alan Lepofsky :). It was easy to delist Gia Lyons, she blogged about social networking, she wasn’t on the site long and didn’t’ have the large core Lotus following… in comparison to Alan and Adam Gartenberg for that matter… What to do with those guys!?!?  I view then as part of the family and I don’t think anyone minds me keeping them listed for the near future. If Adam’s DB2 posts raise in volume, email me. I listen. You are my customer and if you think a blog no longer fits, I’ll look into it.

If you are interested in looking at the 18 delisted blogs, they can found here:  http://planetlotus.org/blogs/  select Sort, Blogs: Unpublished.

Mining Chrome on Planet Lotus

Planet Lotus    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

 Vowe and Ed have been tweeting their Chrome stats, here are mine from Planet Lotus.org

1     Firefox     65.27%
2     Internet Explorer     20.89%
3     Chrome     8.22%
4     Safari     3.27%
5     Opera     2.18%
6     Blazer     0.07%
7     Mozilla     0.07%
8     Konqueror     0.02%
9     Mozilla Compatible Agent     0.01%
10     SAMSUNG-SGH-i600     0.01%
Per Google Analytics.

From the statcounter blog: The Chrome browser was launched late in the day GMT time on Sept 2nd so the first full day of tracking for Chrome is Sept 3rd. The stats above are from Sept 3-6. If you choose this entire week it deludes the stats.

Pretty impressive start.

The 37 photos I currently have on my BlackBerry.

Family    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

To make a long story long. I upgraded my Notes client to 8.0.2 today (from 7.0.2) which meant I had to upgrade BB Desktop Manager from 4.2 SPx to 4.6, which meant I could finally get to my trapped media files…

BlackBerry2008

Enjoy and Happy Labor Day!

How to save 609 MB of disk space in a couple of seconds

Uncategorized    Posted by Yancy Lent 7 comments »

Check out:

mo07.gif

and remove the 609 MB Microsoft Office 2007 leaves behind. How many employees does IBM have? 300,000? 183 Terabytes of wasted storage. Then install Lotus Symphony.

Update: Apparently not everyone saw this post: http://vowe.net/archives/009840.html. I’ve had issues with Office all day so to me, at the time, it was funny.

Why Facebook is moving past Linkedin as my favorite Social Website.

Social Networking    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

For the last couple years Linkedin has been a great way to link up with people I’ve worked or work with. The treasure I find is both the syncing and the permanence of the sync. I’ll have their contact info no matter which country, job or cell phone number they move to down the road, of course with-in reason, they could remove their account.

The limitation or magic of Linkedin is in the lens I view it. I view it from the perspective of those who I’ve worked with or those I want to be professionally associated with. In steps Facebook.

I really only do one thing with Facebook, confirm friendships. I have written on a wall or two and sent a message here and there to ‘check it out’ but I’m not really into learning more of the features; not just yet. The draw for me is the random connections the behemoth site funnels, not the bells and whistles.

The confirming of friends over the past half year I’ve been a member has been not only fun but the most talked about subject with my best friend. We go back to 7th grade so every time an invite is received we’re talking about it. The complete diversity of invites boggles my mind; the classic George Costanza worlds colliding! Invites from HS (my favorite), college, family, fraternity, career, sports, activities, you name it.

My favorite came this morning on the way in to work. Who the heck is Tim so and so. Instantly all the conversations about the random people that you never spoke to in school coming out of the woodwork came to mind; and then I read the note.

“Tell Ethan that Charlie says “hi” :)”.

It was Charlie’s Dad, Tim. Charlie, a year ago, was 1 of 3 boys (including my son Ethan) on 6 North at Children’s Hospital with AML (The lesser occurring version of Leukemia). They were the family I looked for strength. When we meet Charlie’s family they were half way into the same 6 month stay that we had ahead of us in the early parts of May 2007. I don’t know what it’s like to fight alongside someone in the fox holes of a war but I do understand the bond that forms when you share a traumatic period of your life with a previous total stranger.

I will cherish the confirmation of this invite like few others.

My email address has been out on the web, easily searchable for the past 10 years but never have the random contacts been so frequent. Facebook has tapped into some illusive force of nature that nurtures connections to casual friendships of the past. For this I am hooked.

From here on out. Linked for professional networking, Facebook for anyone i’ve ever crossed paths with. That about sums it up.

tinyPL

Planet Lotus    Posted by Yancy Lent 2 comments »

URL compression has landed on Planet Lotus. I don’t plan on making the URL’s public and they will be around as long as the site is online. Bottom line its a fun way to promote Lotus blogs.

tinyPL will turn a long URL into a smaller one, most of the time; at worst it will be branded.

An example would be: http://www.yancylent.com/2008/08/14/tinypl/ to http://planetlotus.org/t/3

My favorite is http://is.gd. It’s where a lot of the PL implementation ideas came from. I use it to ensure long URL’s don’t get cut in two in email messages.

To use it, simply go to the Planet Lotus front page and enter a url (http or https) into the search field.

Enjoy!

UPDATE:  Hit count is not tracked on links that are added to tinyURL.

My Twitter Experiment

Planet Lotus, Social Networking    Posted by Yancy Lent No comments »

I really enjoy reading posts from the Lotus community regarding thoughts on Twitter. The latest is from Andrew Pollack. I side with about half the post. I agree that its unfortunate that its become a chat room but i disagree that that’s a bad thing. It was architected for serve one purpose but grew into something else… so you adapt, you re-architect and improve on the model the masses have chosen. Back to what we agree on, the chat aspect. What if we could toggle it?

I’ve gone ahead and added ‘All’, ‘Status’ and ‘Conversation’ views to planetlotus.org/twitter

It was pretty easy to impliment if it had a ‘@’ in it, its part of a converation, if not its either a micro blog post or a status.

How can this be expanded? ‘Links’? or anything with a link in it? Chris Miller is always reading the coolest stuff. ‘Hashs’? In the end, I think this is more for those, like me, that almost exclusively read twitter.

Pan Mass. Challenge 2008 Official Finisher

PMC 2008    Posted by Yancy Lent 4 comments »

It was everything and more then I ever thought it would be. Here are my thoughts and reflections on this amazing event.

Friday Evening

I arrived at the Sturbridge Guest Hotel at around 5 and was quickly overwhelmed. There were people and bikes everywhere. I made my way to the registration area after getting a lay of the land. I turned into the large registration room and quickly did a u-turn. The one thing I was worried about, the one thing I couldn’t train away was happening 10 minutes into my journey. I wasn’t quite ready to hear the cow bell ring, indicating that I was a first year rider. I took a couple deep breaths as I stood there acting busy on my cell phone and turned around and waked to my assigned letter. The bell went off, smiles were had and surprisingly kept my composure.  Bell was going off a lot and I was elated. I got my stuff and made it out of the room with dry eyes.

Next was dinner and the all important carbo loading. I got the basics, pasta and steamed carrots. As a mental note, I will never do this again. It had to be my 4th pasta meal in the past 3 days and the night before is just too close to the effort. Next time around in the days leading up, pasta yes, but a hearty meal the night before. The eve of my PR marathon I had a huge steak with nothing on it. I made my way to a table and quickly made some friends. I ended up following them after dinner to the opening session. They were all on a team and many worked in the IT department at State Street bank so we had a lot to talk about.

The opening session was very nice. It was set to a live airing on New England Cable News so there was down time between commercials just like you see in a sporting event. For those reading from Planet Lotus this session was like a mini Lotusphere. When the live broadcast would break to prepared segments they projected them up on the big screen. Some of the extended interviews, really, really hit home bringing back some vivid memories of May 7th, 2007. One of those interviewed mentioned when he got ‘almost’ the worst news a parent could get or when they explained their reaction to the news. All of the stories made me melt.

The session ended at exactly 9 and I was picked up minutes later by my friend Mike. He lived just a mile down from the hotel/starting line so it was perfect. I told him in advance I was going right to bed but you know how that is. We had to print out a sign for my back that Johanna made up, get the tape, take a shower, prep all my stuff, decide what I was taking on my bike and what I would pack, the important little things that in now way do you stress over for the next three hours as you try to go to bed.. ok maybe 3.5 hours.

Saturday

I woke up at about 4:40 and would guess I got about 3 hours of total sleep. It was part stress part kid the night before Christmas excitement. We got to the starting area a little after 5 and it was an organized mad house. I spent the last of my nervous energy taking pictures, getting water and organizing things in my jersey pockets. I then started playing phone tag with Chandler. He was a fellow team member that I had to sync up with to get the team tattoos and paper cranes for my bike. I didn’t put much thought into where he told me to meet him. The huge wide open parking lot was divided into three wide lanes depending on your speed. He had had me meet him ‘near the NECN news truck’. This happened to be in the middle of the middle lane and just a couple feet from where MA. Senator John Kerry was being interviewed. As we exchanged the items I couldn’t help but notice a fast moving rider that rode just behind Chandler which instinctively caused me to quietly start punching Chandler in the arm, pointing in his general direction. It was Frankie Andreu, all alone waiting in the wings as they Star Spangle Banner was being introduced starting. Chandler and I went over and shook his hand. As I continued to put away the stuff I was given. Chandler took off and followed Frankie to the start of the fast rider lane, the moment I realized the Star Spangled Banner was starting. I was standing there with my helmet in my hands unable to follow him. There were thousands of rider behind me and I was right under the flag, no one was moving and I couldn’t bring myself to be that guy. The second the song started volunteers blocked anyone from jumping into the front of the fast lane and I was stuck. The gun went off and I had to stand there and watch as the entire fast lane headed out.

I would later learn that Chandler lined up right next to and befriended Frankie and Senator Kerry. They were part of a group of 5 that did the entire ride together. I have only a high level of what was talked about but Frankie as I’m sure anyone that’s heard him speak on TV is just as cool in person and can still hammer on the bike. Senator Kerry, WTF! They finished at 11:30 am. He is 64! Yes, he drafted Frankie almost the entire away but it still doesn’t diminish the amazing performance. Where does he get the time to train! It makes one wonder.

The first 10 miles were slow going. There were so many people that I didn’t feel all that comfortable darting up the left hand side. After about 10 miles of passing hundreds of people the hills came alive. They weren’t all that bad for many reasons, good training, excitement, energy of those around, etc. The course was hilly but you have to expect that over a distance of 110 miles.

At about the 15 mile point you could feel the pace of those around pick up, or I cough up to those going the pace I wanted… not sure which is correct. There weren’t that many pace lines forming but I did start following a guy that was going faster then the rest. I was staring to settle in when I heard a loud voice scream my name. I turned back to look through the crowd of people and it was Mrs. Donna. It hit me like a ton of bricks. It was one of those moments where it all came together. One of my Son’s most favorite people in the world was out there cheering everyone on. I lost it. It was the single best moment of the ride.

I skipped the first rest stop at mile 24ish. I was able to sync up with a couple pace lines but either they were unorganized, I dropped them or they dropped me. What ever the case I was amazed for a ride this size how much time I spent riding with no one in front of me. I made my first stop at the 42 mile rest stop. I got a new water and sports drink and a cliff double espresso shot. I also switched over to my sunglasses which I never cleaned and had nothing to clean them with. O’well. The double espresso wasn’t a good idea, you should never try anything new on race day. I can’t describe what I didn’t like about it I just didn’t like it. At about the 60 mile mark as almost on que, my shoulders started to hurt. I tried to will my way through it but the pain moved up my neck and started hurting my jaw, it was pretty bad. I pulled over an downed some Advil which turns out to be a boat load cheaper then getting my bike professionally fit ;).

I was on pace to meet the family at the family lunch stop at 9:40. I actually arrived at 9:36 with a pace of 20.5 at the 69 mile mark. While riding in to the back of the school I called out “Han” to a woman… who wasn’t my wife. My sunglasses were that bad.

I was so happy to see everyone. So happy. I gave myself 5 minutes to visit which turned into 16. I was back on my bike with somewhat cleaner sunglasses. The ‘lunch’ I consumed included ¾ of a large Dunkin Donuts coffee a piece of cantaloupe and a Stonyfield strawberry smoothie. This ride taught me how much you can eat when you ride. It is not running where the food, for lack of a better term sloshes around in your stomach.

That would be my last official water stop. I only refilled one more time at stand in someone’s driveway. I was thrilled to know I only had 40 something miles to go. With the coffee, a little food I was good to go.

As the miles increased so did the heat. My goal was in question. The math was even hard to do. At around the 90 mile mark I was in no mans land. Long stretches of road with no one in front or behind me 5,000 riders and not one in sight. I spent from mile 85 to about 100 both trying to figure out if id be able to finish before noon. It was a constant balancing of pushing myself and regulating my body temperature. Energy replacement was no simple task. It took over 15 minutes to eat my last Powerbar. I could only swallow small bits of the bar at any one time and was always on the verge of gagging. I have no clue why but this only happens at the 3 hour + mark. Cliff shots from here on out.

As my odometer reached 100 I pulled over and took off the thick black socks they gave us at reg. Another amateur mistake, it actually made a difference and I felt a little cooler all be it mostly psychological. I was also a little pissed that I would never know my (actual) ride time and pace for 100. The reason had to do with the family rest stop. Half the time we were there we were walking. I never disengaged my odometer. I went from a listed 20.5 average to 19.7 over the course of that 16 minutes water stop. A reading of 1mph will kill your ride average ;).

It was clear from about the 95 mile mark, based on the fuzzy figures I had to go on that I wasn’t going to make it in before noon. I just keep plugging away and kept crunching the numbers. The last 15 miles was a hypersensitive effort to not overexert or overheat. The heat was getting to me. I do well in the heat but that is in relation to everyone else, when there is no one around its hard to gauge.

I finished strong at 12:06 something. I had made sure to sync my watch to the atomic time days before. I was not disappointed. When I brought my bike into the bike rack area I was a little light headed. When I saw how few bikes were in (of 4,900+ on route) I was even more satisfied with my performance. I exited the bike racks and found the first piece of shade and laid down. I was only able to rest for a minute then another celebrity sighting, I got up to watch Uta Pippig walk by and sit down about 10 feet to my side. She is SO nice. After she was done with her phone call I asked someone sitting by to take our picture. Eat your heart out Dave ;)

Greg Lemond in the middle.From here I walked to get my stuff to take a shower. I ran into Chandler where he told me all about his amazing ride. He road with Frankie and Senator Kerry the whole way. I later learned that he also road with Greg Lemond for the first half but lost him somewhere along the way. I could not get enough details of the ride. I could have been in that group; I’ll let it go; one day.

I when in to the caged area with all the bags only to find my bags weren’t there. Then I found out my bag was in my room after some looking. I made my way into the middle of the Mass Maritime Academy (MMA) and ran into Ken. We signed up for massages both at 2 and went off to our rooms to shower up. When I got to my room there was only one bag, in that was only my pillow. So check every other room that ends in 18, in bike shoes. They weren’t there so off to lost and found. They gave me a shower kit so all was good. On the way back to my room I found my bag, two rooms down; score.

Uta PippingI entered my room and meet two of my three roommates. They were not the stereotypical feather weight cyclist so I mistakenly stereotyped them. We were talking about training and I had mentioned that my Wednesday ride, 3 days prior was 36 miles and the pack averaged 22.1 mph. You could hear crickets in the room, after a second or two of silence one of them said “that’s about what we averaged today.” They said they finished at 11:07 from Sturbridge. If they didn’t stop at all, they would have done 21.4 but they had to stop so they’re right on. They were hard core; which I define as anyone finishing faster them me :). They must have been one of the first groups to finish. Yes, the pattern is forming, I can’t get the whole, non race, charity ride thing straight. Everything is a race. Club rides, if your on a bike, on the road, in some way, if its not a Town Line, or Hill, its always a race… and is all the reason in so into this sport. I don’t watch ESPN. I’d rather come as close as I can to actually living it.

After the shower I meet Ken on the lawn for beer, food, beer and music. We had one of these it’s a small world moments. He worked security for the RPI field house in Troy, NY during college where he was a student. At the time I was in HS or even JH (sorry Ken) I forget, attending my first Heavy Metal concert with friends. It was to see RATT; he was working that night. Too funny.

The massage was well worth the wait. Everyone talks about the massage for good reason. Never in your life are you in so much need for one. Even a bad one would have been great. The set up is this. You sign up for a time, you get a slip with your time confirmed. Everyone with that time meets under a tent in the minutes before. They call everyone in to a big air conditioned room and ask that you quickly get a table. You lay down and all table has two masseuses. So the 15 minutes is really 30. They ring a bell a two minute bell at minute 13 and ring another one at the end. Where you have to quickly exit. This happens for 8 hours. The masseuses get 1/3 of their practicum work done towards their license one that one day. It’s a win win. Just like the free beer Harpoon gives out all day. We get free beer, and I in turn have a hard time buying or ordering anything other then Harpoon for some time to come. Let it also be know that Ravenswood Wine, Nantucket Nectar’s along with Snapple are also on this list.

Then the rain came. At about 5 ish the rain can in sideways. The Nantucket Nectar’s 12/12 tent and one other flew into the air and crashed to the ground. Everyone moved into the big tent which was eventually evacuated, it was that bad. Ken and I when in and found a long hallway with a door at the end to hang out and watch the storm. There where three other people there. We had some great conversation with those people. For the first, actually only time I got to tell a stranger Ethan’s story in bits and pieces. It was healing.

After this was more food and more drink then off to an early sleep; so I thought. When I got to bed it was hot as could be with no moving air. The roommate above me, the one I didn’t meet didn’t like the light or the sound from the hall so he closed the door. I got even hotter. For the first time ever I was sleeping with out a shirt on, to add to that sweet was dripping down my back. I got up to splash some water on my face but it didn’t do the trick. It took well over 2 hours of lying in my own pool of sweet to get to sleep. I went on to wake up 2 more times. I got scant sleep and finally got out of bed at 4:20ish.

Sunday

Sunday 6:00 AMI got dressed, packed and brought my stuff down to the truck. I was elated to find many breakfast options including the sure fire winner bacon, egg and cheese on English muffin. I had one of those a smoothie and get this, a coffee. I was worried I’d regret it on the ride but it was the correct thing to do. Then, after 8 hours of hanging out with Ken on Saturday, a dinner at my hours on Thursday with his family I realized I didn’t have his number in my phone. The vague “I’ll see you at breakfast” was just that, vague. It took him emailing me his number. I meet him at the bikes and we waited for a bit for Team Bright Happy Power. By the time we left there were about as many bikes left as when I came in the day before.

The ride started off very slow. I spent more time coasting then peddling. My legs and body was no different then any other ride I had done all year. I was amazed. The first test came about a mile in when we had to cross the Bourne bridge. This also turned out to be a cake walk and I believe the last time all day I used my small chain ring. After the bride we turned onto a path that followed along the water. The fog was heavy and it was magical. One of the guys on Bright Happy Power lead the pack to a consistent 20-21 mph pull for its entire length. I was in second position enjoying the sights. Not being a morning person it was pretty cool to see the morning fog, fishermen at work and people out walking their dog.

Team Bright Happy Power broke up in the coming miles the varying speeds split everyone apart and I was fixed on staying with Ken. At the base of the first big hill was the last time we all road together. This was a good thing. I would have loved to ride with all of them but the talent levels seemed all over the place and keeping everyone together on a crowed ride just isn’t fun.

There were a fair number of hills in the first 10 miles of the ride but they were so rolling that momentum from one lead to an easy effort up the next, or so I though. The rolling was nice but even if they didn’t the oxygen build up in the legs from the previous days effort made every hill easy, even with my 215 lbs. Ken and I joked that it had to be the massage and that the only difference between us and pro riders was that daily massage… and the 7 hours a day on the bike; might also help a little. In looking back, the beer, massage, previous days effort and the enormity of the event all lead to an amazing day 2.

It was a lot of fun strolling along and taking everything in. There was one point where I couldn’t hold back. A pack of kitted out riders all from the same time when flying by, I joked with Ken that I was being sucked in where he responded, Go, I’ll see you at the next water stop. Off I went. We were averaging in the high 20’s in a long pace line. It was pretty hairy at times due to all the riders around going about 14ish mph slower. The narrow cape roads, the traffic all made it very edge of your seat. I was in heaven. There is few sporting highs like flying at top speed with a pack of riders. Primal is the only thing that comes to mind. I’ll guess we covered 8 miles in this pack up until the next water stop in Brewster. They were team ROAG out of Westford, MA (where I used to work).  I overheard one of the guys at the back saying it was his 16th PMC. Good for him!.

The Brewster water was organized chaos. It had a western theme and had everything you could ask for. Drinks, food, music… but no coffee. I got a couple laughs when I asked a volunteer. A rider next to me yelled yeah, and simulated guzzling down a hot cup of coffee then pouring it over his head. It had everyone around laughing. I had a ton to drink and a half a Peanut and Fluff. In the coming miles I would learn the difference between a long ride and a long run. A sandwich, for me is out of the question on a run, biking is totally different, if I were only to have put this together months ago. You live and learn.

Brewster lead to Orleans, where my in laws have a house and where I have been at least once for the past 10 years. We spent time on the bike trail and went through a part of Orleans that I rarely go. From here it was road then back on the bike path. As part of my training I did a 76 mile ride which covered two laps of this trail so I know it well. We took it to the end in Wellfleet I believe where we went out to the ocean side. This was the exact path I went on with a guy I meet on my training ride. I couldn’t help but go fast up every hill. I had so much more speed and energy then that training ride.

Due to the relaxed pace we had been on I had a lot of energy build up for the hills. I tried to go up each one as fast as I could, just trying to stir up a chase from others around me. One older guy actually yelled out “You sure love those hills”. My legs weren’t getting tired, id sprint up to the top then slow down to let Ken catch up. I began to start thinking about my goal for the weekend. I really put a lot of weight on this event in terms of using it go get out the daemons. Saturday’s effort didn’t really do it. I think it had to do with not digging two deep. I worked hard for that time but didn’t kill myself partly because I didn’t want to blowup, overheat or not have anything in the tank for day 2. In hinds site no matter what effort you put in on Saturday I feel you will always have more in the tank.

So the hills we’re it for today. I was going to go deep on every hill, sprint up everyone until I couldn’t’ any more. I kept asking Ken where the big hill was, the one everyone talked about. I told him that I was going to attack it like a starved dog attacking a steak. I could feel my legs tiring but I still had a fight in them. As the big hill came into sight I sprinted by a group of people and didn’t stop for about .3 of a mile. I put everything I had into it, the effort was full of yelling, swearing and a few tears. When I got to the top and started slowing I looked at my speedometer, 23. Success.

The ride into PTown was partly on a major road with fast moving traffic. I was waiting for Ken at one point when I saw a big sign that read, tell us why you are riding. I had to put in writing the one thing that I had been saying over and over again. This is very difficult part of the ride for me to express. I saw this ride as a journey to help me come to terms with all that has happened over the past year. When I found out on that journey is things changed. I believe I have come to terms with Ethan’s illness and have set my eyes on the now. We have all been blessed with Ethan health. This ride was all about Tim.

Tim is one of the 3 boys on 6 North that had AML. In our time there I only know of Ethan, Tim and Charlie. Tim and his family arrived on 6 North just a week or so after Ethan. I remember when I first laid eyes on Kevin and Joanne in the resource room possibly hours after coming in; they were drained confused and in the exact same state we were in just days earlier. They were the new family but instantly there was a bond. Tim is still fighting Leukemia. I drew all my strength this past weekend from him by repeating the chant. Tim Will Win.

I wrote this on that sign. You can faintly see it in the picture. What I said over and over in my mind became more pronounced as the efforts became more trying. I found it very therapeutic to vocalize it under my breath until that last hill where I was yelling it at the top of my lungs mixed with a few choice words that my kids aren’t allowed to say. I will continue to pray for Tim; if you’re still reading, please do the same.

Ken and IFrom the top of that last hill on it was smooth sailing. I got what I came for now it was time to see the family. Ken and I did the last few miles together. I got the best of both worlds, I got the competition of day 1 and the fun of day 2. Looking back I wouldn’t have done anything different and if I do it next year will do the same thing. I was great to share the day with Ken, it would have been a lonely ride without him.

The finish was overwhelming. Running through the gauntlet, giving hi-fives to the kids then seeing my family and my mother was a perfect end to a perfect event.

The return rate of riders for this event is amazing, something like 70%+, maybe even more. For the last couple days the thought of not doing it next year hasn’t crossed my mind until Johanna mentioned interest in doing it next year. I am asking anyone that is reading this that knows Johanna to please encourage her!

This is one event everyone must try. I have run many a race, nothing is more rewarding then thousands of people along the route saying two words, thank you. When you actually stop and think why they’re thanking you… when they don’t have any hair and they’re thanking you, when they’re dancing with a grass skirt on next to a sign that reads I’m 8 because of you… that is why you must do this ride.

As for next year, if I do ride again I have figured out the sign I will wear on my back; and I pray to god it will still hold true.

 

 

 

 

 1980-2006 PMC RIDERS
My Son is 7
Because of YOU!

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Thank-you for reading.