Adventures in Coffeeland

I have never really been much of a coffee drinker. Cafeteria coffee got me through exam week all-nighters and thesis writing during undergrad and grad school, but aside from that, drinking coffee was just a very rare thing I did when other primary caffeine sources were unavailable (or too much work to obtain).

Lately, driven mainly by late nights staying up trying to write papers, the easy availability of freshly roasted coffee beans (as in still-warm-from-roasting fresh), a recent introduction to the Aeropress and my usual curiosity, I’ve taken to experimenting with coffee the same way I experiment with new food recipes.

Having a couple of coffee shops within walking distance of the house hasn’t helped either.

I’m still pretty much a coffee noob. For the most part, there really aren’t a whole lot of differences between different beans or roasts at this point. Depending on how long this current coffee fixation lasts, that will probably change.

The latest thing I’ve been playing with is iced coffee, and the Aeropress makes it super easy to do. Following the coffee:water proportions used in the CoffeeGeek guide produced a pretty decent cup. Add chocolate milk and it’s a cup full of yum. Perfect for those hot days.

I also experimented with a small batch of cold brewed coffee yesterday. It was about 60 g of a fairly dark roast coffee to 250 mL water that I used for my first batch. Put it into a jar, stirred it a few times and let it sit for about 12 hours. Ended up with a pretty potent brew that had me buzzing for most of the morning, but wasn’t too bad. A little bit of bitterness from the dark roast, but not horrible.

Now I’m out of coffee beans and need to restock before I can experiment some more.

Failed platelet donation

I suppose it had to happen at least once. For the first time in my long history of donating blood and platelets, a donation failed. The return needle just wasn’t getting into the vein for whatever reason. Not a good thing, because you want the blood going back into the vein and not into the arm, which is painful.

After a few attempts to reposition the needle and to find another vein to use (apparently all my other veins are pretty deep and the other easily accessible ones are too small), they decided more messing around would cause more damage than it was worth.

Not sure what the problem was, but I suspect I just didn’t hydrate enough after the run I went on just before going to donate.

Will give it another go next month.

The bruise on my left arm is going to attract some attention I think.

Lightroom 3 book up for grabs

I found a copy of The Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3 Book for Digital Photographers by Scott Kelby sitting on my shelf that I’m pretty sure I got for being a Worldwide Photowalk leader a couple years ago.

Since my primary OS is Linux and Adobe is unlikely to release a copy of Lightroom that runs on Linux (yeah, I know, WINE, blah blah blah), this book is just sitting on my shelf taking up valuable space.

If anybody is interested in taking it off my hands, you’re welcome to it. If you’re local to Charleston, all the better since it will save me the trouble of mailing it.

Update: The book has been claimed.

Ham radioing

A new hobby is probably the last thing i need to get into right now, with all the PhD work I’ve been procrastinating on.

That’s never stopped me before though.

Decided to make a trip out to the Atlanta Hamfest where I’ll meet up with a road-tripping ham radio friend and most likely take the ham licensing tests.

I’ve had a passing interest in amateur radio for a while now and ever since I pushed it as a Barcamp topic a few years ago, I’ve had a few people “encouraging” me to get my license.

So now I’m finally going to do it and enter the world of amateur radio. This should be interesting and fun.

Collaboration phishing

I’ve received a couple of emails claiming to be from people who are interested in working with me on a project based on a blog post.

The first one I received a couple of days ago almost seemed genuine enough to make me think about it a little bit longer than usual before deciding it was just another form of phishing. The second one I received today pretty much confirmed that.

If the random URLs the spammers picked for their email were even remotely related to the claimed project, I almost might have been fooled. Big fat fail, spammers.

Both emails had the same form

I am curious if you are the person responsible for adding content to the following page: <Insert random URL>

If not, feel free to forward me on to the correct person! I came across your page during my research for a project for which I am contributor. It is a resource primarily aimed at health care professionals in a <Insert random health care profession> capacity. Our mission is to be an objective, informative source of information for those in the specialized fast-paced field of <Insert random health care profession>.

I would love to send over more details about this project and partner with you, let me know!

Thanks for your time. I look forward to working with you!