Bay to Breakers Album 2016 available on Flickr. Download your photo for free (or ask me to remove it if you don’t like it).
03
2013
Gordon Dickson – March 2, 1935 – Oct. 28, 2013
My father, Gordon J. Dickson
Port Ludlow, WA
Gordon Dickson died at home after a brave battle with bladder cancer at the age of 78. He was born in Oceanside, CA and graduated from University High School in West Los Angeles in 1953. While in the U.S. Army, he trained as a paratrooper with the 101st Airborne Division in Alaska. His career began at Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica, CA, and he went on to become an electronics engineer with McDonnell Douglas. After 35 years, Gordon took an early retirement and moved to Newcastle, WA, where he was hired as a systems analyst at Boeing. In 2002 Gordon and his wife, Marilyn, built their home in Port Ludlow, where he developed Olympic Ridge Wireless, an internet service provider business.
In his California days Gordon was a motorcyle enthusiast, enjoying motocross and desert enduro racing. He was a long time holder of a Ham Radio license with the call sign W6CNL. After moving to the Pacific Northwest, Gordon found a new love of boating, and became a member of Meydenbauer Bay and Poulsbo Yacht Clubs. He was an avid predicted log racer winning many trophies to display on SeaBear II. Gordon also served as Commodore of the International Power Boating Association.
Always proud of his Scottish heritage, Gordon enjoyed a number of trips to his father’s native land. His travels included many other countries, and he especially liked taking cruises and winter motorhome trips to the Southwest. He adored his Portuguese Water Dogs, and his favorite activities included golfing and helping friends solve computer problems.
Gordon was a gentle, kind, generous, and loving man, who will be greatly missed by his family and many friends. Gordon is survived by his wife of 33 years, Marilyn, children Tracy and Grant Dickson, stepchildren Karen and Kevin Edwards, and grandchildren Alex, Aaron, Matthew, Carolyn, Nolan, and Grace.
The family wishes to express their appreciation to the doctors and nurses at the University of Washington Medical Center and to the nurses and caregivers at Jefferson Healthcare and Hospice for the kindness and excellent care Gordon received.
A memorial service and reception to celebrate Gordon’s life will be held 1-4pm Sunday, November 10 at:
Poulsbo Yacht Club
18129 Fjord Dr
NE, Poulsbo, WA.
29
2012
Flashpacking through Oceania with a Rented SIM from iPhoneTrip.com
I just returned from another major trip with my iPhone (and iPad in hand). This is my 3rd trip with a rented SIM from iPhoneTrip.com and 4th major Flashpacking trip.
See my reviews from previous iPhoneTrip reviews:
Flashpacking into Africa with a Rented SIM from iPhoneTrip.com
Flashpacking through Europe with iPhoneTrip.com
Flashpacking through North America without iPhoneTrip.com
On this trip, we traveled to Auckland, Christchurch, and Queenstown in New Zealand, and in Australia we traveled to Sydney, Ayers Rock, Cairns, Port Douglas, Daintree, The Great Barrier Reef and Brisbane.
Once again, the rented SIM from iPhoneTrip.com worked flawlessly. My girlfriend though she’d go without renting a SIM, but gave up along the way and had a SIM delivered to us at our first hotel. It’s nice to know that they can ship fast anywhere in case there’s a problem, but still I’d highly recommend ordering your SIM to arrive before you leave.
See my previous reviews to see how thoroughly pleased I was iPhoneTrip.com, for cost savings, connectivity and ease of use. Really, I can’t recommend renting their SIMs highly enough. And more importantly, traveling with the full connectivity it gives you will drastically change the way you travel.
That being said, I have to say that connectivity in general in Oceania is pretty bad. Bad, as in “worse than in the United States”. Data rates are low, and charges are high. Far fewer free WiFi locations exists and those that do have data caps on them. Even 5 star hotels and resorts that we stayed at not only charged for WiFi, but had very slow data rates, and often connections timed out or they capped your connections.
As a result, renting a SIM becomes much more beneficial. I found myself giving up on WiFi in every place I traveled to and went back to 3G for speed and connectivity improvements that the iPhoneTrip.com SIM gave me.
Australia is HUGE, and being so big, it’s not reasonable to expect great connectivity throughout the country, but ironically some remote locations we traveled to had pretty decent coverage. For example, bus and helicopter trips around Ayers Rock were just fine with connectivity, but suburbs of Sydney could have weak or dead spots.
Don’t get me wrong, most places you’d travel to in Australia and New Zealand have good enough coverage for email, navigation, and simple web surfing, but for someone like me who uploads and downloads HD video for work, the difference between the incredibly good connectivity in Europe and the poor general connectivity in Oceania was significant and worth pointing out.
Also to be clear, this is a general connectivity issue through the places I went through in Australia and New Zealand. I wouldn’t be surprised if other places were much better. The iPhoneTrip.com SIM can only be as good as the wireless carriers in the areas you travel to, and the SIM did a great job of switching carriers along the way making the iPhoneTrip.com rental SIM your best option, especially since WiFi simply isn’t an option in many places for demanding users.
If you’d like to see the photos from my Oceania trip check out my photo albums on Facebook.
06
2012
Craft and Science on Sala-ma-Sond
From Connected Social Media:Craft and Science on Sala-ma-Sond
Right click here to download video | Right click here to download HD version
04
2011
01
2011
Live Webcast from Research@Intel – Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Connected Social Media will be broadcasting live from Research@Intel on Tuesday, June 7, 2011. Here’s the player. It’s currently showing clips from last year, but will go live with new coverage on June 7.
05
2011
Kevin J Edwards Video: Sky Diving in Santa Rosa California
Kevin Edwards goes sky diving in Santa Rosa California… A beautiful day with a nice view of the wine country near Sonoma, Napa, Marin and San Francisco.
This video of Kevin Edwards can be download here or viewed on YouTube.
26
2011
Kevin Edwards: Official Profile Picture
This is the official profile photo of Kevin Edwards
This photo was taken after a nice brunch in Nice along the French Riviera between Cannes and Antibes by my girlfriend who could barely lift the large DSLR camera (a Canon 7D). The tilted angle works well, but was more due to the struggle of holding the camera as opposed to artistic style.
This picture of Kevin Edwards can be found on Flickr
You can also download this picture of Kevin Edwards in these alternate size images:
Kevin Edwards icon 60×60
Kevin Edwards logo small 100×100
Kevin Edwards logo medium 200×200
Kevin Edwards logo large 300×300
06
2010
Please vote for Red Union Hair Salon – Best Hair Salon in San Francisco
Please vote for Red Union Hair Salon – Best Hair Salon in San Francisco
05
2010
Flashpacking through Europe with iPhoneTrip.com
An in-depth review follows. Here’s the take-away:
iPhoneTrip allows you to rent a SIM and use it abroad very cheaply. It works extremely well, and is well worth the money. It’s a must-have if you plan on flashpacking.
Pros: Incredibly easy, relatively cheap compared to other options, allows you to travel in ways not possible before. If you also use Google Voice and Skype it makes iPhoneTrip even better/cheaper.
Cons:
You may find yourself over-dependent on your iPhone. You run the risk of being too connected to people/co-workers back home. You’ll use your iPhone so much that you’ll want extra external batteries.
Bottom line:
For me it came out to about $60 a week versus well over $100 on a slow day. I couldn’t afford that, nor could I have done this trip without my iPhone.
Read more below for how I used it with my MacBook Pro, Skype, and Google Voice for free voice calling and SMS messages:
As I prepared for my Europera 2010 trip, I looked into options for using my iPhone 3GS. Coming from America with AT&T the option was to take out a mortgage and pay AT&T outrageous sums of money for international data roaming and sell body parts for a few minutes of voice time.
Another option could have been to get a SIM card in Europe, or even buy an iPhone in Europe and sell it before I leave. Neither of these options would work because I’m traveling to so many countries that I need to be able to freely roam without limitation or concern.
I stumbled across a site called iPhoneTrip.com. Now we all know when something sounds too good to be true, it always is. Except for when it isn’t, and I’ve got to say that the iPhoneTrip SIM has totally exceeded my expectations.
What is it?
It’s a way to cheaply use your iPhone abroad.
You have two options, you can rent an iPhone from them, or you can rent a SIM from them. I chose the SIM rental as I already have an iPhone 3GS configured exactly how I wanted it.
Now before signing up, I scoured the Net looking for personal reviews. I couldn’t find any with real authority and credibility. I actually saw a few posts from others who were highly skeptical and thinking it may be a scam. So here I am. Someone with an online history and credibility…and someone who’s written/produced reviews for such media companies as CNET amongst others.
The SIM from iPhoneTrip arrived via FedEx as promised, the day before departure. I was able to pop it in and test it before leaving. Yes, it worked in San Francisco.
First stop on my trip was London. I got off the plane and inserted the SIM. Almost immediately it picked up the local carrier and gave me 3G coverage. Many European carriers don’t support aGPS, which means that, as I found in London, it can take a long time to find your position if you’ve moved far since the last time it had a satellite lock. It also means that it can’t find your position at all if you are deep indoors. The solution to this is to just be patient. Before arriving at a destination, pull up Google Maps and get walking directions from your train station to your hostel, then start using it as a map until the GPS kicks in and can track your position.
Google Maps is awesome when flashpacking. Take advantage of it with any number of Wikipedia apps that show you what’s around you so you can see cool stuff along the way.
The apps I’m using the most are:
Skype
iTranslate
iConvert
Fizz Weather
Facebook
Hostelworld
Google Voice (via Cydia on jailbroken iPhones or webapp)
iRail
WikiMe
Shazam
Motion Alarm
I’ve also been beta testing an augmented reality app that I can’t divulge too much about yet, but it allows you to use the camera and GPS to point at something and the iPhone returns information on what you’re looking. This technology is going to be very big.
The iPhoneTrip SIM doesn’t require that you jailbreak your iPhone. They don’t mention that you might find that it works better even if you do. I’m also traveling with a MacBook Pro and because my iPhone 3GS is jailbroken, I’m able to tether my MacBook Pro, which is just what I’m doing right now…on a train somewhere between Dresden and Prague.
Also, with a jailbroken iPhone, you can run Skype over 3G (or even Edge). This means that phone calls Skype to Skype are free. Phone calls Skype to landlines back home are free with a $12.95 subscription, and Skype to cell phones are incredibly cheap.
Since you’re replacing the SIM, the phone number on your iPhone changes. You could forward your original number to your iPhoneTrip number, but I didn’t want to do that, so I had my original phone number forwarded to Google Voice. This allows me to read a transcription of the voicemail, or hear the voicemail for free, and then Skype call them back if needed.
Google Voice also allows you to send and receive SMS messages for free. You’ll want to alert people back home to your Google Voice number, so they’ll recognize the SMS as coming from you.
It’s really amazing how well this works and how critical it is on my trip. James Bond never had anything like this. Think about this… I don’t speak a word of any language for most of the countries I’m going to (except a little bit of Spanish). No problem, I get in a taxi and hand my iPhone over to the driver who sees that I want to go to the opera house. Along the way he stops and I can here him talking on the radio. I pull up iTranslate and ask if he’s lost. He nods his head as he’s arguing with the person on the radio. I pull up Google Maps and him my iPhone again. He smiles and we’re back under way. I want to emphasize this point here: I was in Berlin for a matter of minutes and I’m able to ask a taxi driver if he’s lost, and then provide him with step by step directions.
Hey, what’s that building? Out comes the iPhone.
I wish my friends back home could see this now. Posts to Facebook.
I have no idea what you’re trying to tell me. Enters phrase in iTranslate.
How much is that in $US or US measurement. Enters amount in iConvert.
Etc…
I could go on and on with all the uses of the iPhone when traveling abroad, but the key point here is that iPhoneTrip allows you to actually use your iPhone for a very reasonable price. It’s also 100% seamless. You do nothing but replace the SIM and turn data roaming on (if it’s not already). Your iPhone will automagically connect to whatever available carrier there is in whatever country.
Keep in mind that you’re going to be using your iPhone constantly, especially if you’re doing a lot of walking around. You could charge your iPhone on most but not all trains and at most but not all hostels. I’d highly recommend getting some cheap external iPhone batteries. Look for the ones with high amperages. I bought 3 from Monoprice.com that are 2200mAh for about $14 and can completely charge by iPhone twice before needing recharging themselves. These also work well because they charge using the standard USB docking cable and can be connected to your iPhone while charging, thus charging both. That’s also where Motion Alarm comes in. I’m sleeping in hostels that are mostly dorm or ensuite style. With Motion Alarm, I can plug in my iPhone, external batteries, and MacBook Pro all with my iPhone on top. If someone moves any of it or my backpack, the alarm goes off on my iPhone. I still keep it all hidden on my bed between me and the wall.
iRail and HostelWorld apps are great for looking up specific travel information. To make things easier, I created a spreadsheet that lists all of my trains, cities, hostels, operas and other activities and then saved it in PDF form. At any time I can pull this up on my iPhone and see where/when I’m supposed to be someplace.
This is the coolest, most adventurous trip I’ve ever taken in my life. It’s amazing how much the iPhone adds to the experience and how iPhoneTrip enables the use through reasonable pricing.
If you’re interested in learning more about my Europera 2010 trip or having any questions, please follow me on Facebook at:
facebook.com/kevine