All of palcu's Comments + Replies

Any advice for a rowing schedule? I picked up the sport three months ago and I've been doing 30 minute sessions at the upper limit of my Zone 2. Basically I slow down if I go above 150 bpm and ramp up when I go below 145 bpm.

I've been reading about doing some higher intensity intervals, but I've mostly focused on having good form for now.

5yagudin
Consider https://thepeteplan.wordpress.com/beginner-training/. 
3romeostevensit
Yeah ~1k intervals are probably the next step. You can start working them in gradually with just a single interval at somewhat greater than your easy pace then start increasing the number and intensity as feels good and you spot milestones that feel personally meaningful in the distance.

One way of generating camaraderie that seems very obvious to me and I don't see it explicit in the article is... war. It has happened times and times again during history. And also, I've been able to see it in my Ukrainian friends, though less so with my Russian friends (but that is expected based on the bubble in which I live).

If you are in the Apple ecosystem, I can recommend Day One. My oldest entry is nine years ago and I've been very happy with them.

2Yoav Ravid
I'm an android user. Not a fan of apple/IOS. But thanks :)

If you are on a Mac, a good alternative that I recommend for this use case is Flotato. I run a calorie tracker web app and as you said, it is so much better to isolate a specific app from the browser. The added advantage is that Flotato runs the Safari engine, so you don't get the battery drain from a Chrome instance.

I'm sorry Zvi, but I've now realized that you are running on a wordpress.com subdomain. You won't be able to use Cloudflare, unless you upgrade to the Wordpress business plan (£20 a month) so that you can install plugins.

I don't have any simple and effective ideas for what you could do, other than putting a call to action for somebody who has more Wordpress experience to help you migrate to a more sustainable setup.

I checked and all the images are hosted on googleusercontent.com which is a subdomain that Google uses to hold third party content. The images are probably getting rate limited, as the system serving them was designed to prioritize Google content and not user generated. The practice is usually called hotlinking and that's why the server started to rate limit. I recommend that you try and host the images on your own Wordpress. Otherwise, maybe throwing Cloudflare in front of your site as a caching layer might be an easier solution.

(Disclaimer: I work for Go... (read more)

5Zvi
So I'd put the images on Wordpress except that would require using their editor to do so, and their editor is a walking dumpster fire.  I could try to reclaim the old editor by using a plug-in but they want $300/year for that, which seems pretty extreme (I'd do it if I couldn't find any other solution I suppose, it's not THAT much money, it just stings quite a lot). Cloudflare at $5/month seems better and potentially gives better performance. Can anyone confirm whether this would be a good idea?