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Sunday
Oct232011

Racing deaths teach us cruel lessons

It's been a tough week for race fans, with deaths of two major stars shaking our belief in sports that give us so much joy. 

Marco Simoncelli was known for his wild hair and wild abandon on the racetrack.Today brought the death of rising motorcycle-racing star Marco Simoncelli, just a week after Dan Wheldon lost his life in an IndyCar race. 

Simoncelli was killed in a horrific MotoGP crash at Sepang. He was in fourth place when he lost control of his bike and was run over by another racer who had nowhere to go. The race was red flagged (SpeedTV's Dave Despain has a nice tribute to Simoncelli).

Wheldon died early into a very fast IndyCar race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. I was at the track last Sunday, sitting high in the Turn 4 end of the front straightaway. The 15-car crash that took Wheldon's life was halfway across the track so it was hard to grasp the extent of Wheldon's injuries from so far away. 

Today's IndyCars are relatively safe despite racing at 200-230 mph. And seeing car bodies explode on impact is actually a good thing; by design a chassis that breaks apart dissipates energy from the cockpit. So, drivers walk away from most crashes, even those at 220 mph. 

But it didn't take too long to realize something was amiss last Sunday as track workers moved from a fast-paced cleanup to one more methodical, almost as if race officials had told them, "stretch it out."  I've seen more than a hundred races of all types and had never seen death in person. But in my gut  as I watched from the stands, I knew things were likely not going to end well. And so did the thousands of others around us, who were sharing rumors and checking their phones for any updates. 

I've always shared the traditional race mantra that when death strikes, "the race must go on." But as I caught the first news of Wheldon's death on my smartphone -- long before the news was officially announced at the track -- I told my wife, "Let's go. Even if they restart, we're not going to enjoy it."

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Sunday
Oct092011

Props to Verizon handling of privacy-policy changes

Regular readers know I get cranky when website operators do dumb things when it comes to their customers' privacy. 

I believe there should be a basic expectation of transparency and honesty when it comes to using your customers' personal information. Sadly, many companies big and small abuse those relationships. 

So, I was pleasantly surprised with a recent email from Verizon (my cell carrier) that not only alerted me to changes to its privacy policy but gave me concrete examples of how my information might be used and how I could easily opt out of participation should I have concerns. 

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Thursday
Oct062011

Testing the new Urtak poll widget

Updated on Monday, September 16, 2013 at 8:33 PM by Registered CommenterLogan Molen

I've stumbled across an interesting poll/quiz widget called Urtak that not only collects data but allows participates to add their own questions. 

That's an interesting twist on traditional online quizzes, and ensures that where you start may not be where you end up.

I've embedded the poll widget in the upper right of all my page templates, and currently am asking questions about personal technology. Give it a spin and let me know what you think. 

Urtak is a polling widget with a twistUrtak (an Icelandic word meaning "statistical sample") is free and simple to get started, although it took me three tries to make sure my questions were written in the required Yes/No phrasing. And while adding questions is a snap, I was unable to edit my mistakes or disable quizzes, which go live immediately for the world to see. Until you get the hang of writing in a Yes/No format, it's easy to mess up, so having an edit function would seem like a major need.

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