Today was the Great Trek race at UBC. It’s a 5 km race and since I resumed running regularly back in September, I figured it would be a good idea to enter. I was a bit focused on not dying when I crossed the finish line, so I didn’t see my time on the giant clock when I crossed. After a few minutes, I saw that it was at 29 minutes, so I know my time is less than 29 minutes, which isn’t so fast, but it’s a pace of higher than 10 km / h.
With respect to how the race went, I wasn’t first, but I wasn’t last. Official times will be posted on Saturday, so I can see then how I faired against everyone else, but I feel I was in the upper quartile. I had this great strategy before I started the race which was to just set my pace to what I normally do and keep it for the duration of the run. Psh, that went out the window almost immediately. In the first kilometer, people were passing me by the bucketload, so I kicked it up a notch to keep up. Of course, into the second kilometer, I started passing a lot of these people because they’d just sort of sprinted out of the starting line and didn’t quite realize that you can’t sprint for 5 km. Of course, since I was dumb and sprinted a little also to keep up with them, I was starting to get that fuzzy and warm burning leg feeling by the third kilometer or so. Hills didn’t help.
Anyways, considering it was my first race in a long time, I think I did not do so badly (though Saturday will be judgement day). At the very least, it was a learning experience.
On a completely unrelated subject, I’m thinking of canning my catch-all e-mail address for kenrose.org. Right now, there’s a catch-all which allows me to be cool and snazzy and tell people things like:
“Just e-mail anything you want @kenrose.org and I’ll get it.”
Another benefit is being able to never have to give a real e-mail address to various businesses. Rogers wants to know my e-mail address? Sure, just e-mail rogers@kenrose.org. Amazon wants my e-mail address? Try amazon@kenrose.org. If I start getting spam to any one of those addresses, I know exactly who it’s coming from (well, except for rogers and amazon since I just posted those two, but whatever).
Unfortunately, spammers can also send me stuff to the catch-all. This poses two problems. Problem one is that I get lots of spam to addresses like xzqadsf@kenrose.org. Problem two is that spammers use addresses like the previous in the From field, so I also get a bajillion bounce messages from mail servers around the world when the spam is unsuccesfully delivered.
So what should I do? Nuke the catch-all and manually create new addresses when I reference them in the real world (e.g., fido@kenrose.org will probably be created soon if I get a Fido phone)? Or should I keep the catch-all and just try to deal with the incredible amount of spam that’s coming in (I get about 50 pieces per day).
Finally, on the topic of work, it’s 02h43 and I got home not that long ago. Right after the race, I went back to the lab and got back to coding. The current project that I’m working on is awesome, but in true research fashion, is really hard (though it’s unknown if it’s NP-hard, which is a huge bother because then I can’t even prove it’s hard!). In 6 hours, I have to be up again and get back and keep on coding. Deadlines are looming.