The new BMW K1200S Motorcycle

Work is covered in my other post, on the life front I have been keeping things low key, but had a nice time today popping in to our ‘local’ BMW Motorcycle dealership Motorrad Central to check out the new BMW K1200S that they launched at their dealership today.

Motorrad Central have been going for 18 months now, and I had always meant to take a look but this was my first visit. I have wanted an R1100RS for some time now, I tried one for size a few years back and it seemed to have the shape that suited me. I have not had a bike since I passed my bike test so I have set my heart on a BMW, being right for the size albeit a bit staid as bikes go. The R1100RS will have to wait a bit longer, but we went to Bishopbriggs to take a look at the bike that marks the new direction for BMW Motorcycles.

To begin with I got lost. I ran the route through a couple of options, Multimap and The AA to get directions and stumped for the AA as being the simplest route of the two from my house to the dealers. It was all well and good until I got to the bit to turn off at Junction 15 on the M8. Junction 15 is quite familiar to me, it is the turn off that takes you through the Cathedral district of Glasgow and is the route I follow when I visit a customer based in the centre of Glasgow. What caught me out today was the little turnoff for Kirkintilloch that is just after the main turnoff for junction 15. Unfortunately the AA directions label both as Junction 15 and I turned off just too early.

I got a bit harrassed but got back on track to join the A803, but then did not follow it far enough and turned off a total of three times far too early. So here goes – things to watch out for when going to BMW Motorrad Central which is on the Kirkintilloch road in Bishopbriggs. To start with get on the A803 heading north (ish) and keep going through Bishopbriggs, past the station (on your right going north) and through the centre past Somerfield. Keep going for a couple of miles until you see Asda on your right. You actually have to turn into what looks like the entrance to the car park for Asda, but there is a small road immediately on your left that goes behind some small trees / large bushes. Go for that one and you will come to Motorrad Central.

The new bike is quite nice, and reminds me a lot of the Honda Blackbird. I had a short sit on the K1200S and the room is excellent, with my big legs fitting into the shape of the tank no problem. A big difference for me was the riding position with it being quite upright and relaxed compared to the big Japanese bikes. It was good to have a wee chat before we left to see how they were going, they have one order on their books but seem hampered by their demo bike missing the trick suspension. Aparently quite a few folk are going to wait until that comes through on a demo bike. Good to see the level of interest – lots of 50 ish couples popping in on their respective BMWs to have a look. I had a wee sit on the R1100RS that they had in the showroom. It felt different and I was a bit unsure why until the sales person pointed out the bar backs fitted that bring the bars back a couple of inches. Personally I prefer the default position (long arms that I have) but I guess putting a few miles on the bike would sort out that opinion.

All the best to the guys there, and it would be nice to see a few more of those new BMWs out on the roads of Scotland. In the meantime I think I will be saving up and exploring a different route to my R1100RS than the official dealer channel – I just do not have the disposable income that would mean I could afford proper BMW service.

They had some good deals on BMW helmets too, but did not go up to my size – I have a big head too (mmm, I might have set myself up for some feedback there!).

September and SQL Server 2000

It has been a while since my last post, these things are very much of the moment for me and frankly I have to be in the right mood to spout forth – I reckon MartinS must have the personality to blog away all that he does – I take my hat off to him.

On the work front I have been out for a couple of weeks doing some onsite consultancy on Microsoft SQL Server 2000. It has been a real confirmation to me of the real value of proper indexing in giving SQL Server the best opportunity to do its stuff with query plans. Indexes, especially covering indexes used in joins, really boost the response and I saw some massive improvements in performance. Even as a basic rule, make sure the primary keys are there and all the foreign keys carry appropriate indexes too.

I am quite excited at a new objective placed on me at work, amongst other things I have been given a .NET development exam to do before the end of November. I would like to clear SQL Server admin away and will do so, but then on to .NET!

MCP Exams and the Microsoft way of doing things

MartinS has just passed 70-316 to get his MCSD.NET “premier” certification and congratulations to him!

He reiterates a point made many times by MCP exam takers that there is a definate Microsoft way of things. Many of these exams present answers in a multiple choice format and when given the option between the way you would do things, and the “proper microsoft” way of doing things, you have to defer to the latter.

I’m not surprised, computer based testing has to degrade to one answer in the end so in the absence of a written exam format I’m happy to forfeit the opportunity for debate to get a pass or fail immediately at the end of my exam. Apparently PRINCE2 practitioners have to wait over 2 weeks to get the results of their test – ouch.

This blog is moving to a new host

Hopefully that is. I have started a subscription to a paid hosting provider and will attempt to set up the blog in the new environment over the next few days. It will be under one of the alistairl domains, and should look exactly the same.

How quickly it happens will depend on my navigation around the .net side of things. Shouldn’t take too long at all.

More details as it happens!

New Hosting Arrangement in Place

Well, that migration went more smoothly than I thought it would. In the end I would put more of the time down to file transfer and familiarisation with the directory layout than actual configuration related issues.

We shall see over the next few days whether everything is working ok – looks fine at the moment.

Blog days are numbered

Its a fair cop. I, and the other europe.webmatrixhosting users have received notification that they are going to enforce the 30 day lifetime rule on sites hosted by them, so I am going to have to decide whether I want to pay some money and host this elsewhere, or go quiet for a while.

Decisions decisions. I’ve been posting stuff up here for a while, on and off, we shall see what I decide.

Long Way Round

Ewan Magregor has just completed a round the world trip on a BMW GS motorcycle, with some other chap who I’d never heard of. Well done to them (though they had a support crew). Looking forward to seeing the TV series about it, but I’ll need Satellite television in the UK to see it. Mmmm, decisions decisions.

Minor rant about newspaper coverage again – banner on the front of the print edition of The Scotsman describes it as “his easy rider round-the-world road trip”. Off road bikes, no roads in Mongolia, easy rider ? Groan.

And don’t start me on their so-called computer expert talking about Linux and saying that noone hacks it because it is wonderful and hackers hack Windows because they don’t like Microsoft. I see no need to redress the balance because that would waste all of our time, but needless to say that proper regimes for all parts of your operation are necessary for security, not just Windows.

Just goes to show how far you have to simplify things to reach the mainstream audience. And yes, I probably applied a bit of spin to support my rant – its more fun 🙂

Credit Card Fraud

After all the years I’ve been using and buying stuff off the Internet, I got hit by credit card fraud for the first time today.

Got a call from a company verifying part of my card details, fine I thought and left it at that. Then started thinking, hadn’t ordered anything that hadn’t been processed in the last few days.

So I called them back and asked a bit more about who the company was and a bit more about the order concerned. Unfortunately I couldn’t hear the name of the company – some underwear place according to the nice lady on the phone. As it transpired, someone had my card details, home address and mobile number and had ordered £180 of rollneck T-Shirts. All to be sent to an address in North East London.

Needless to say that has now been cancelled, as has my credit card (new one on the way). I’m now racking my brains to think where the details came from. I can only guess its from some website somewhere, but goodness knows.

Thudfactor 31% Geek

Via a people link on Sunpig (See – I’m on there too!). I ended up at the Geekquiz on Thudfactor. I’m not sure about going both ways though…

You are 31% geek
You are a geek liaison, which means you go both ways. You can hang out with normal people or you can hang out with geeks which means you often have geeks as friends and/or have a job where you have to mediate between geeks and normal people. This is an important role and one of which you should be proud. In fact, you can make a good deal of money as a translator.

Normal: Tell our geek we need him to work this weekend.

You [to Geek]: We need more than that, Scotty. You’ll have to stay until you can squeeze more outta them engines!

Geek [to You]: I’m givin’ her all she’s got, Captain, but we need more dilithium crystals!

You [to Normal]: He wants to know if he gets overtime.

Take the Polygeek Quiz at Thudfactor.com