2015 Posts

May 31st - Hills.

Cleaning chains in front of the church
Cleaning chains in front if the church. Click to rotate.

We biked another 50-ish miles today. The hills have been getting worse, but the group I was with was great. As usual, clock through the pictures and hover your cursor for captions. 

May 30th - The End of the Firsts

Predawn playground
I awoke before dawn to pack laundry the playground looked really neat in the predawn light.

For a while, at least. The rode was around 50 miles, and nothing really striking stuck out. Still a nice day. 

May 29th: 70 miles and clean clothes.

Helen pulling back onto the freeway
Stopping for a while at a river under the road. A semi buzzes by our bikes.

May 28th - My First New City

Bikes on a tarp
I realized I haven't uploaded many day-in-the-life photos. Here are the bikes on their tarps (to keep hosts floors clean)

Today we biked 70 miles (mostly flat) from Charleston to Pinopolis. The latter is a small town full of wealthy folks' houses. 

May 27th - My First Build

Setting up roof guards.
First, we installed roof "guardrails". Each of the J-shaped things support three 2x4's, forming a railing.

Today we participated in our first build day. The whole group laid an asphalt roof in a morning. 

It was very Mike Mulligan-flavored. 

(I'll try to post daily entries, but internet access may vary. In that case, I'll try to catch up when Internet returns.)

May 26th - Orientation

Trailer packed full
In the morning, we practiced what will become our routine by packing all our things into the trailer.

As with yesterday's post, hover over the images for a caption. I may see about more verbosity when I have more than a phone to work with. 

In the meantime, enjoy the pictures!

May 25th - The First Day

The plane we took from white plains to Philly
We walked across the Tarmac in White Plains to a tiny little plane.

Hover over the images to see a description. This site isn't really made for slide shows. 

I'll see if I can come up with anything more clever. Let me know how this works. 

.in

When I was setting this website up, I ran across a Wikipedia article on domain hacks. That's the official-sounding version of when a top-level domain (TLD) is part of a website's name. Things like who.is or blo.gs. It struck me that I could use India's TLD, .in, to shorten my own website's URL. I ran a whois search and it was availiable. Then it wasn't anymore. Someone had noticed my search and bought it to try and ransom the site.

That's how it works, I think. Some predatory whois sites automatically purchase domains searched, then offer to sell them back for some increased cost.

I checked again today, two years later, and it was available again! I'm not sure if I like nitk.in more than nitkin.net, but for now I have them both.

And, really, ben@nitk.in is a pretty darn cool email.

Flashlights!

Front of the flashlight
One flat flashlight.

Last year, Helen, Haley & I (we call ourselves the Technology LLC when we're trying to sound official) volunteered at the local elementary school with SWE. They worked with the entire 4th grade class. After dividing children into groups of 4-6, each one recieved some flavor of an Agilent educational kit. For simplicity, we only used three kinds: a solar-powered car, an electronic matching game, and ... something else. It's not important.

Day 2: Planking

The completed box, in its pretty polyurethane polish.
Figure 1.

The creature is taking shape!The first day of construction left me with a set of planks. Two sides, a back, and a queer-looking front. The front has a few pivoting drawers: pressing on the bottom of the drawer will swing the top forward and out. Since the drawers push to open, no handles are needed, so the front can be perfectly flat. It looks slick (see illustration 1).

Drawer view, from what will be the inside of the boxWith the panels made up, I went back to gluing things together. The drawers were first. I cut sides for the drawers out of short lengths of scrap. I drilled holes near the bottom front of the sides to ensure that the drawer center of gravity would fall behind the holes (that way they close automatically). Then the bandsaw rounded over the top of the sides (they'll look really slick when they open and close). Then I glued the sides of the drawers onto the front faces and let it set. 

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