Recommendations, or not

Advice: So, you want a bike eh?

Perhaps because I blog about it a lot, recently more and more people are asking me for my advice on buying a bike. What kind to get is really the most frequent thing I’m asked, it’s also the most difficult to answer. Because I found myself telling multiple people the same thing, I figured it was time to make a blog post about it that I could just point people to in the future.

The answer to this isn’t as simple as “here’s the bike you should get” because this is a very personal choice and has every bit as much to do with how you’ll end up using the bike as what you want it look like. It’s like asking what is the best color of car to get, or which is better a 2 or 4 door. Well, depending on your usage and goals that answer is totally different. I know people who ride mountain bikes as their main bike and all swear by them. Same goes for folks who ride road bikes, ride track bikes, and every weird hybrid in between. That said, I can provide my personal thought process, which may or may not apply to you.

I used to ride a bad ass mountain bike with 27 gears and all kinds of shocks and shit. Actually that was the main thing I rode since about college. Recently I realized that I almost never shifted gears even though I spent a lot of time worrying about what gear I should be in. So I went to the other end of the extreme with a single speed road bike and I couldn’t be happier. I can go faster, I can go further, I’m not carrying around lots of extra weight, and the only thing I think about is where I’m riding, not if I’m doing it right. I feel like I’m more efficient and there’s less that can break on the bike.

Advice: Social Media Apps & Services

A bunch of people recently have asked me about doing one thing or another online and I find myself recommending the same services again and again so I though I’d just make a post covering a few of the services I use a lot and suggest other people use. I’ll also briefly mention a few of ones I’m still looking at or avoiding all together. Also, let me preface this by saying I’m not stupid enough to think any of these applications themselves are “social” because, well, they are software, but that they enable people to be more social online. Which is good. Also, these are in addition to your own personal or business blog or website, obviously. Also not including communication things like instant messaging, video conferencing or e-mail.

The MUST USE list:
Flickr (my profile)
LinkedIn (my profile)
Twitter (my profile)
Dopplr (my profile)
pbwiki (my wiki)
Google Apps (docs, calendar, etc)

Details and info about these and others after the jump.

Dear Lazy Web, T-Shirt Manufacturing/Selling Help

A friend was asking me about this earlier and while at one point I was able to answer it off the top of my head I’m now sorely lacking in the info for the best answer. Rather than do the right thing and respond with “I don’t know” I’m turning to you all for help. The basic question is in 2008 if you wanted to print and sell a couple of T-shirt designs on the web, how would you do it?

Things I think I know:

  • Proper screen printing is a requirement, no “print on demand” using iron on or heat transfers.
  • Printing a gross of shirts at a time is way cheaper than small runs.
  • Men’s S, M, L, XL are required.
  • Local printing with in person pick up is always cheaper than printing elsewhere and shipping.
  • Storage of and fulfillment is a nightmare.

Things I know I don’t know, but would like to:

  • Of men’s sizes, which are the most commonly ordered?
  • Which women’s sizes are most common and worth producing?
  • Does the shirt printed on still matter (American Apparel vs Hanes Beefy T, etc)?
  • Is it better to have a simpler shirt with no branding of who made it, or some credit somewhere so people know where it came from?
  • Are there any companies doing storage & fulfillment that are worthwhile? (I know at one point there was a guy in Chicago who ran a business where he did nothing but stock products for other people’s companies and handle their mail order in exchange for a % of the sales, but he’s long since stopped.)
  • If selling the shirts online, is it worth taking orders from outside the US or is shipping still prohibitively expensive? (Or is the exchange rate so good that it doesn’t matter?)

Any info (e-mailed to me or posted in the comments) would be super appreciated. I know for a fact that this person is looking to add merchandise to their existing non-merchandise related company so options like Threadless are out of the question from a business standpoint. Suggestions? Ideas? KTHXBAI

Top 5 Comic Book Inspired Movies

  1. Iron Man. As Wil notes, io9 says, “Iron Man is the first comic-book movie that’s actually better than its source material. That’s partly because Iron Man is one of the most boring characters in the history of comics, but it’s also because the movie manages to transcend its source.”
  2. Batman Begins – Batman was always supposed to be scary and this movie finally makes that clear. The follow up to this, Dark Night, already looks like it’s going to be unstoppable.
  3. Sin City – The pair up of Rodriguez and Miller to co-direct this pretty much insured it was going to be the comic book on the big screen and it delivered from the very first second.
  4. Spiderman – It’s amazing how good this was in comparison to how shitty the follow ups were.
  5. Hellboy – You know it.

I almost squeezed X-Men into that but I’m still not sure if I liked that movie so much because I was such a big fan of the comic initially and was just amped to see Wolverine so bad ass on the screen. I also came close to throwing Mallrats in there because comics are such a central point in that flick, and it’s amazing.

Brains, and the eating there of.

Zombies. If you are reading my blog you should be well aware of the fact that I love the hell out of some zombies. So given that obsession I thought I’d share a few thoughts on some of my recent zombie themed consumptions. Some good, some bad – and this is plenty full of spoilers so if you don’t want to know about them don’t keep reading. Of course if you do, then, um.. yeah.

First off I just finished all three hardbound editions of The Walking Dead graphic novels and they turned out to be as awesome as I’d heard they were. I’ve actually been wanting to pick these up for a while but it wasn’t until a gift certificate I got for xmas that I just threw down and grabbed them. These are quick reads as you might expect but the storyline doesn’t suffer from that at all. Like any good zombie story the interactions between the non-zombies is the real focus and theres some top notch storytelling going on here. The one complaint I’d heard was that the artwork made some of the characters hard to tell apart, but honestly I didn’t notice that as a problem. The individual characters are extremely well developed and you understand how and why they react in some situations the way they do and while some of the story lines have been seen before (friendly survivers vs not so friendly ones) the little twists make them still completely enjoyable.

fido Let me just say this right out of the gate, Fido fucking ruled. I had no idea what to expect walking into this movie and I haven’t been so plesently surprised in a long time. It’s a totally new twist on the genre set in the technicolor world of the 60’s seemingly following the storyline of Night of The Living Dead but taking place after the zombie war is over and done. It’s a comedy more than a horror movie and and the basic story line is that a company has come to the forefront and figured out a way to domesticate zombies so rather than just killing them, people can use them to do house work and other things that a slightly smarter family dog might be expected to do. Of course it’s never that simple and some of the relationships aren’t what they seem. This film is spot on with every detail and never takes itself too seriously. I could watch it again and again, and probably will. Definitely an awesome addition to the world of zombie movies. A+++ Will do business again!

day For every little bit of awesome in Fido there is a bit of suck in the new Day of the Dead. Seriously, it sucked so bad it was nearly unwatchable. I found myself saying outloud “you have to be fucking kidding me” again and again. It’s one of the worst zombie films ever made. OK, it’s not quite as bad as the Return of the Living Dead series but it’s damn close. You might be thinking this is obvious because it’s a remake and there for destined to suck but then again you might be one of the people who refused to see the new Dawn of the Dead which means you missed out bigtime. I’m sorry but it’s true, if you didn’t see the new Dawn you can’t call yourself a zombie fan. Pack it up and go watch Batman Forever or something. But I’m ranting here. In the same vein as Dawn this is a remake in name alone. With the exception of a few minor story points this is an entirely new movie, and entirely sucky. Look, we can all admit that the original Day was not the best thing Romero ever did but that’s no excuse for the massive piece of crap this turned out to be. Everything about it made me want to claw my own eyes out, and I can only hope that the people making the movie did the same thing because if they were blind that would slightly begin to justify how shitty everything about the movie was. The effect, if you can even call them that, were YouTube quality and calling the young soldier boy “Bud” at the beginning actually physically hurt me. But, point is I watched this so you don’t have to. Unless you hate yourself and want to endure needless suffering, then go ahead. Otherwise run in fear.

Jumping back to the print world, I finally picked up the final chapter in David Wellington’s triology, Monster Planet. I loved the first two books (Monster Island & Monster Nation) and while I’m only halfway through this one it’s a perfect continuation of the story. While the first two books take place almost simultaniously, this one is set 12 years after the fact and picks up right where you’d hope it would. If you haven’t been following the story it’s totally worth picking up the first book and seeing how Wellington takes a new angle to this by telling part of it through the eyes of some of the zombies that managed to maintain some bit of consciousness. With the first two books I could barely put them down and only my current hectic schedule is preventing me from doing the same with this one. I’m kinda sad this is the final piece of the story, but super glad to have this series in my library.

OK, that’s all the zombieness you get at the moment. Now I have to get back to real work. Enjoy!

Do Something

She voted for the war

Tomorrow is the primaries. I’m not a registered Democrat so I won’t be voting for anyone. And even if I was I’d probably be writing in ‘No.’ I have to say that as much as I enjoy people getting rallied up about this stuff and taking a stand and voicing their support and all that spam is still spam and the sheer amount of thread jacking and blatant advertising that has been going on with blogs and forums is making me sick. Friends of mine who are registered Democrats say that their phones are ringing off the hook and their mail boxes are full of flyers – one friend told me he wished their was a “I already know about the candidates and I’ve made my decision, leave me alone” option for him somewhere. I feel his pain, and that’s half the reason I won’t sign up for their crap, the less people selling my info the better, and the less people selling it to rabid fanatics, well yeah.

I’m ranting a bit but voting is important, being up on the issues and finding someone you agree with to represent you is important. If you are voting tomorrow, I wish you and the folks you are voting for good luck.