

28” is the correct size for a 700x45.
That being said, I’ve used 27.5 (650) tubes in a 700 tire in a pinch.


28” is the correct size for a 700x45.
That being said, I’ve used 27.5 (650) tubes in a 700 tire in a pinch.
If it’s been ridden with bad pads for a while, I’d pay close attention to the braking surface. Pick up some rim brake cleaner and go to town on the rims. Also make sure that the toe-in of the pads is adjusted properly, so that you’re using the entire pad surface and not just a corner.
And definitely pack an extra set of pads for a long tour with big descents.


It should technically begin when extraction begins — so (depending on your machine) when you press the button, lift the lever, etc. Water time on grounds is what you’re tracking.
That said, don’t be afraid to play. Times are just guidelines. Pay attention to what’s happening at the group head. Some of my best pulls have been longer than 30s.
Why people still willingly play in billionaires’ playgrounds is beyond me


“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”
Not a Docker expert by any stretch, but I believe Portainer can only connect to the socket locally. If you were to bind that socket over a ssh tunnel, you’d be limiting your Portainer to managing a single machine. You’d also be dealing with broken pipe errors every time the connection went idle.
Given those limitations, it’s much easier (and, I’d argue, more secure) to just spin up a Portainer container on that machine.
If you absolutely must use SSH, see this thread for the only working solution AFAIK:


Really wish there was a way to stream this one in the US.

You will see zero change until the people (all of us) stop going to work, grind the global economy to a halt, and force our leaders and billionaires to clean up their fucking mess.
Like a parent stopping the car until the kids behave.


Thankfully there are many other roadblocks as well (board certification, state licensure, etc), but that doesn’t make this any less terrifying.


This isn’t a statement rooted in honesty or morality. This is saying the quiet part out loud.


Where should we point them?
Quite happy with my life, thank you. And the bees.
As a local beekeeper, I take offense to your sentiment.


From reading the NPR article, it doesn’t sound like the surgical team started the procedure. They aborted before making any incisions, which is what they should have done. The Guardian headline is a touch sensationalist.
What’s horrifying is how they got all the way to the operating room before recognizing that the patient wasn’t brain dead.


The SILCA strip chip does a great job of eliminating the need for chain prep. Worth the extra cost, if you don’t want to mess around with harsh chemicals.
Waxed chains are the bees knees. I’ll never go back to using lube.
HIPAA only applies to Covered Entities. 23andMe does not meet the HHS definition of a Covered Entity.
https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/covered-entities/index.html


Yep, totally agree. Just pointing out that the tech is not the enemy here, it’s the intent of the user(s). I’m a big fan of Signal, and they’ve done nothing wrong here, though to some the headline could imply that the tool is complicit here.


Depends on when you started using it, when you were served with a notice to retain, and whether you used Signal to discuss content that falls under said notice.
Either way, encryption and/or auto-delete isn’t the enemy here.
“Populist billionaire” is quite the oxymoron