Interesting finds around the web
#2551
Senior Member
#2553
#2556
Senior Member
#2557
Great at turning left
#2558
Aergo (Look) extensions have been out a while now. They are a fairly neat concept, but for most of us the fact that we would have to deal with LOOK is a dealbreaker when you need very specific replacement parts. The "next" thing in aero extensions is integration with the forearm, another few months and we'll have fairly readily available off the shelf solutions (Testing Drag2Zero's, they are pretty nice to not be custom) that will work with non-proprietary cockpits.
A lot of the new 3D printed parts / drops look good, some (like the madison bars) are pretty single purpose, but that's fine at high level. It's exciting as 3d printing tech starts trickling down. We're still a few years away from it being accessible to mortals, but big steps are being taken every year (I have actually seen some new metal filament that is supposed to work on home 3d printers fairly well, that's huge!)
A lot of the new 3D printed parts / drops look good, some (like the madison bars) are pretty single purpose, but that's fine at high level. It's exciting as 3d printing tech starts trickling down. We're still a few years away from it being accessible to mortals, but big steps are being taken every year (I have actually seen some new metal filament that is supposed to work on home 3d printers fairly well, that's huge!)
#2560
Full Member
Nitto now offers 31.8mm Carbon B123 in 37, 38, 39, and 40cm widths called "B123CB". Interesting.
NEW NITTO
NEW NITTO
(Crawling back under my desk now for safety.)
#2561
Elitist
Thread Starter
The Nitto website seems like the kind of site that some old school "webmaster" updates by manually typing HTML in Notepad. Updates are few and far between.
...I wouldn't be surprised if there was a hit counter at the bottom of each page
#2562
Full Member
Really? 3 years? Ha! I hadn't seen them and saw the "New" on the site and thought they were new.
The Nitto website seems like the kind of site that some old school "webmaster" updates by manually typing HTML in Notepad. Updates are few and far between.
...I wouldn't be surprised if there was a hit counter at the bottom of each page
The Nitto website seems like the kind of site that some old school "webmaster" updates by manually typing HTML in Notepad. Updates are few and far between.
...I wouldn't be surprised if there was a hit counter at the bottom of each page
After reading that, I'm imagining me and you at a bar, trying to pick up girls...
A couple of cuties start walking over, and as they get closer they overhear what you just said, look at each other, roll their eyes, do a one-eighty, and walk away.
#2563
Senior Member
I wish Nitto would model these on the 125 bar instead, then charge half the price. I would totally buy.
#2564
Elitist
Thread Starter
Come to find out, regression testing horror stories aren't the popular first date conversation as I thought it would be
Yeah, I think 125 is the sweet spot. They are nearly the exact same width, reach, and drop as the Scattos. While we are asking, they should do 32, 33, 34, 35, and 36cm. No need to go to 40. That bar would be stiff as hell.
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#2565
Full Member
I think you should have some pre-qualification questions prior to any first dates, to establish correct audience segmentation and conversion rate optimization. Next app, perhaps?
#2566
Elitist
Thread Starter
Big data analysis, data engineering, large scale ETL, Oracle, SQL Server, BigQuery, Google Analytics, SalesForce, Tableau, etc (all on a daily basis). To rephrase Baranoski's, "I don't touch any gears under 100 inches.", "I do't touch any datasets under 100 million records."
So. Tired.
#2567
Full Member
That's literally what I do these days, but for a sorta household name company.
Big data analysis, data engineering, large scale ETL, Oracle, SQL Server, BigQuery, Google Analytics, SalesForce, Tableau, etc (all on a daily basis). To rephrase Baranoski's, "I don't touch any gears under 100 inches.", "I do't touch any datasets under 100 million records."
So. Tired.
Big data analysis, data engineering, large scale ETL, Oracle, SQL Server, BigQuery, Google Analytics, SalesForce, Tableau, etc (all on a daily basis). To rephrase Baranoski's, "I don't touch any gears under 100 inches.", "I do't touch any datasets under 100 million records."
So. Tired.
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#2570
Bastion Cycles has created the world’s most expensive 3D-printed stem that costs a staggering $1,399.00.
According to Bastion, its new stem is made from Ti6AI4V/Grade 5 titanium, which is designed to work specifically with Argon 18’s Electron Pro track frame.
Bastion says the stem is available in a number of stack heights, and in lengths up to 160mm with an angle of +17/-17 degrees.
Created in collaboration with Cycling Australia, the stem was developed to be used by the Australian national track cycling team at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games.
BASTION CYCLES
#2572
Elitist
Thread Starter
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