Surviving the 2008 Death Ride

Posted in cycling on July 14th, 2008 by Georges – 3 Comments

It’s only been 48 hours since I finished the Tour of the California Alps, also known as the Death Ride and I’ve been feeling the pressure to share all the gory details. So here ya go.

Joe, Jay and I setup for an early start. We figured we wanted to leave plenty of time to make the check points and finish the ride. We had a great carbo load dinner at Passaratti’s the night before and set the alarm for 4 am. We arrived at the Turtle Rock park shortly after 5 am. There was already a lot of people there as everyone was trying to get a headstart. The temperature was warmer than expected and after much debate about what to wear, we were ready to roll at 5:30, heading south towards Monitor Pass.

The day was off to a good start. The sky cleared up from smoke the day before and we were all happy to finally see some blue sky and clouds. Lake Tahoe had seen some pretty bad air quality recently, so bad that several events got cancelled, including the Donner Lake Triathlon the day before.
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Songbird path to Agility – Part I

Posted in agile on June 25th, 2008 by Georges – Comments Off

This is a repost of a series of article I originally published on Songbird’s blog.

This is the first post of a 3 part series presenting our experience moving Songbird development to an Agile process.

Drowning in the waterfall

Up until version 0.3, Songbird development had been following a fairly traditional waterfall model. Realizing the ambitious vision of building both a platform and a desktop media player has presented many challenges. A lot of plumbing infrastructure is needed before any features can be created. Faced with that challenge, the engineering team did what engineers do best, they designed a very comprehensive system, planned for it very carefully and started cranking code.

During the planning phase, the team estimated the work to the best of their abilities and a Gantt chart was created to reflect identified dependencies and track progress. Unfortunately, this approach led to lengthy release cycles (10-12 months) with lots of room for scope creep. When the release finally got completed, lots of good work was accomplished (over 1200 issues where addressed in 0.3 alone) but the lack of visibility was problematic and the slow pace of releases was too demoralizing.

We recognized that the schedule was build on assumption that we knew everything upfront. There was a sentiment that the whole Gantt thing was a little removed from the actual work and that overall “things were going ok, because we were kind of tracking it” was not an acceptable way to run our project. We had to accept that our planning and scheduling practices were broken.

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2007 Best Buddies Challenge Recap

Posted in cycling on September 11th, 2007 by Georges – Comments Off

Best Buddies Logo

The Best Buddies Challenge 2007 concluded with great success last week-end. The weather was perfect and the organization flawless, thanks in part to Audi and other sponsors who covered all the cost of the events so that 100% of donations would go directly to helping people with mental disabilities.

The 100-mile ride started at 7 am in the Chateau Julien Winery in Carmel and we were sent off by no other than California’s first lady Maria Shriver. Form there, the peloton was escorted to Highway One by a full CHP motorcade. Leading the pack was actor Rob Lowe (Brothers and Sisters, The West Wing) in an Audi RS4 Friendship pace car, hand painted by Brazilian artist Romero Britto.

As we reached the coastal road, my teammate and I started to form a paceline and ride south towards Hearst Castle in San Simeon Hills. Amongst the riders were many members of the T-mobile pro cycling team. Olympic medalist and 9 time tour de France rider Axel Merckx (yes the son of legendary Eddy Merckx), Olympic medalist Mari Holden, two-time National Champion Kimberly Baldwin and few others. I got to ride along (ok, draft along) for about 15 miles with some of these team members. What a great experience.

The ride along the coast is stunning. Imagine going up and down windy cornices, looking at 200 feet cliffs down to beautiful ocean water. My weeks of hard training paid off and I completed the ride with relative ease (to be clear, the double climbs between mile 70 and 80 still hurt).

The ride concluded with a wonderful celebration held at the Hearst Castle Ranch. We go treated to a lavish barbecue and private concert by classic rock icons Cheap Trick. We got to rub shoulder on the dance floor with Maria Shriver and her husband, Arnold Schwarzenegger the governator, Olympic Gold medalist Carl Lewis and other celebrities.

Thanks to the generosity of many donors, we raised a whooping total of $3,427,371 for this worthy cause. Many thanks again to those of you would contributed to this great cause and made this ride possible.

Now that BB 2007 is over, training season for Best Buddies 2008 is officially starting. The local century event, Tour for Woodside will be a nice way to keep the momentum going.

You can check the ride profile and overview below or fly the course in Google Earth.

BB2007-route

BB2007 profile