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#1
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On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 5:26:05 AM UTC-7, Martin Gregorie wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 01:15:56 -0800, Bruce Hoult wrote: On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 5:16:20 AM UTC+3, Dan Marotta wrote: What happens when you "like" something and why should I do it? On 1/12/2017 1:20 PM, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Thursday, January 12, 2017 at 12:01:02 PM UTC-7, Dan Stroschine wrote: On Tuesday, January 10, 2017 at 3:28:41 AM UTC-7, Dave Springford wrote: There are 70 trackers deployed amongst 113 pilots. They were dispersed such that every country has at least one tracker per class so you can probably guess where the other pilot from each country is, in each class ![]() The tracking seems to be working great! The refresh is amazing. Now it's even more interesting to watch. Yes, but the missing 43 trackers and those not functioning make the race less interesting because you can see some of the real challenges live. It'll get better along with the new Iridium satellite constellation and other changes. WRT Facebook reluctance and luddites. I don't post much on Facebook, but really do enjoy the streams from various quarters including many of the people I shared a military career with. Social media is not a panacea, the Internet is simply a smorgasbord of shifting paradigms. So much so that it is difficult to keep up with more than 3-4 or maybe a half dozen. However, Facebook does allow for various soaring communities to share and for some sites to aggregate this actively. I expect more in the future. I'll share that someone with a video channel has recently and suddenly seen a huge increase in viewers and comments and questions that appear to be contact from a new demographic, millennials I'd reckon, based on the banter. Almost like a celeb tweeted a channel checkout to a fanbase. Flash in the pan or long term impact remains to be seen. So get a gmail or some other toss away account, sign up for Facebook and like some soaring related pages. Twitter is not as engaged in US Soaring as it is in Europe and Canada. I'm clueless about snapchat, but my attention span is longer than 30 seconds. The person who posted the thing you "like" can see a count of how many people "liked" it (and can bring up a list of just who) and may get a warm fuzzy feeling in their tummy. ... and the Zuck gets more information about you that he can flog to advertisers. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | Yeah, showing me ads for items I've already purchased via Amazon somehow seems like a waste of bandwidth. Scrolling past the other ads is trivial. We don't get any of that on our organizational pages. Remember MySpace? Still out there but no one talks about it much. Same could happen with Facebook in time but soaring organizations can't really ignore it for now. A lot of video and other content is there at the moment that may not appear elsewhere, which is unfortunate, because I'd really like to share it with Bob. BGA makes pretty good use of FB and Twitter. Your personal digital footprint is interesting BTW. Best, Frank Whiteley |
#2
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On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 8:03:16 AM UTC-7, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 5:26:05 AM UTC-7, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 01:15:56 -0800, Bruce Hoult wrote: On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 5:16:20 AM UTC+3, Dan Marotta wrote: What happens when you "like" something and why should I do it? On 1/12/2017 1:20 PM, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Thursday, January 12, 2017 at 12:01:02 PM UTC-7, Dan Stroschine wrote: On Tuesday, January 10, 2017 at 3:28:41 AM UTC-7, Dave Springford wrote: There are 70 trackers deployed amongst 113 pilots. They were dispersed such that every country has at least one tracker per class so you can probably guess where the other pilot from each country is, in each class ![]() The tracking seems to be working great! The refresh is amazing. Now it's even more interesting to watch. Yes, but the missing 43 trackers and those not functioning make the race less interesting because you can see some of the real challenges live. It'll get better along with the new Iridium satellite constellation and other changes. WRT Facebook reluctance and luddites. I don't post much on Facebook, but really do enjoy the streams from various quarters including many of the people I shared a military career with. Social media is not a panacea, the Internet is simply a smorgasbord of shifting paradigms. So much so that it is difficult to keep up with more than 3-4 or maybe a half dozen. However, Facebook does allow for various soaring communities to share and for some sites to aggregate this actively.. I expect more in the future. I'll share that someone with a video channel has recently and suddenly seen a huge increase in viewers and comments and questions that appear to be contact from a new demographic, millennials I'd reckon, based on the banter. Almost like a celeb tweeted a channel checkout to a fanbase. Flash in the pan or long term impact remains to be seen. So get a gmail or some other toss away account, sign up for Facebook and like some soaring related pages. Twitter is not as engaged in US Soaring as it is in Europe and Canada. I'm clueless about snapchat, but my attention span is longer than 30 seconds. The person who posted the thing you "like" can see a count of how many people "liked" it (and can bring up a list of just who) and may get a warm fuzzy feeling in their tummy. ... and the Zuck gets more information about you that he can flog to advertisers. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | Yeah, showing me ads for items I've already purchased via Amazon somehow seems like a waste of bandwidth. Scrolling past the other ads is trivial. We don't get any of that on our organizational pages. Remember MySpace? Still out there but no one talks about it much. Same could happen with Facebook in time but soaring organizations can't really ignore it for now. A lot of video and other content is there at the moment that may not appear elsewhere, which is unfortunate, because I'd really like to share it with Bob. BGA makes pretty good use of FB and Twitter. Your personal digital footprint is interesting BTW. Best, Frank Whiteley At least some is shareable. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4dMaYwImixc @5:46 gets some comments. |
#3
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Sean re-designed is panel and it still has crap hanging off the sides and top.
On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 7:19:45 AM UTC-8, Frank Whiteley wrote: At least some is shareable. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4dMaYwImixc @5:46 gets some comments. |
#4
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On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 07:03:13 -0800, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 5:26:05 AM UTC-7, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 01:15:56 -0800, Bruce Hoult wrote: On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 5:16:20 AM UTC+3, Dan Marotta wrote: What happens when you "like" something and why should I do it? On 1/12/2017 1:20 PM, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Thursday, January 12, 2017 at 12:01:02 PM UTC-7, Dan Stroschine wrote: On Tuesday, January 10, 2017 at 3:28:41 AM UTC-7, Dave Springford wrote: There are 70 trackers deployed amongst 113 pilots. They were dispersed such that every country has at least one tracker per class so you can probably guess where the other pilot from each country is, in each class ![]() The tracking seems to be working great! The refresh is amazing. Now it's even more interesting to watch. Yes, but the missing 43 trackers and those not functioning make the race less interesting because you can see some of the real challenges live. It'll get better along with the new Iridium satellite constellation and other changes. WRT Facebook reluctance and luddites. I don't post much on Facebook, but really do enjoy the streams from various quarters including many of the people I shared a military career with. Social media is not a panacea, the Internet is simply a smorgasbord of shifting paradigms. So much so that it is difficult to keep up with more than 3-4 or maybe a half dozen. However, Facebook does allow for various soaring communities to share and for some sites to aggregate this actively. I expect more in the future. I'll share that someone with a video channel has recently and suddenly seen a huge increase in viewers and comments and questions that appear to be contact from a new demographic, millennials I'd reckon, based on the banter. Almost like a celeb tweeted a channel checkout to a fanbase. Flash in the pan or long term impact remains to be seen. So get a gmail or some other toss away account, sign up for Facebook and like some soaring related pages. Twitter is not as engaged in US Soaring as it is in Europe and Canada. I'm clueless about snapchat, but my attention span is longer than 30 seconds. The person who posted the thing you "like" can see a count of how many people "liked" it (and can bring up a list of just who) and may get a warm fuzzy feeling in their tummy. ... and the Zuck gets more information about you that he can flog to advertisers. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | Yeah, showing me ads for items I've already purchased via Amazon somehow seems like a waste of bandwidth. Scrolling past the other ads is trivial. We don't get any of that on our organizational pages. Remember MySpace? Still out there but no one talks about it much. Same could happen with Facebook in time but soaring organizations can't really ignore it for now. A lot of video and other content is there at the moment that may not appear elsewhere, which is unfortunate, because I'd really like to share it with Bob. BGA makes pretty good use of FB and Twitter. Your personal digital footprint is interesting BTW. I minimise it somewhat, but I do run a couple of websites and have projects on SourceForge and have fairly wide interests. OTOH I don't use any social media, unless you count Newsgroups accessed over NNTP and SEN. My home site is locked up fairly tight and checked for leaks and visibility with Gibson Research's ShieldsUP tool. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#5
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Not the highest day, but the trough has moved north.
http://reg.bom.gov.au/australia/charts/4day_col.shtml Jim |
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