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My Garmin 965 lasts about a month, I can't believe it compared to my pixel watch which is flat in a day. Haven't touched it since.


I got it last week and it's great. My main concerns were the older (pixel 7 generation) camera and the battery life. Both have exceeded my expectations, the massive screen is great for browsing and someone even got debian on there (https://old.reddit.com/r/PixelFold/comments/1fcn4du/fullblow...), and it's fairly thin and light even with a case on.


I run my Christmas light show software (https://github.com/FalconChristmas/fpp) with a Pi: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlxaA-ca6S0 :)


> This content is not available in your area.

Really making good use of that global network we got goin' here, history.com.

https://i.imgur.com/3bPAFQA.png


Where should I book a plane ticket to, so I can view this article?

edit: https://archive.is/aAf3K


Mirror: https://i.imgur.com/Nvc70k1.png

gmail2.png still wont load but he's circled it at least in the 2nd image.


I thought of Amazon Polly.. converts text to lifelike speech.


> playing music

where does the music come from when you ok google it? I don't have a sonos or whatever set up in my house, so I use my Echo for this (the speaker is excellent) and playing spotify, playing tunein radio, playing pandora, setting kitchen timers when cooking and getting weather reports.

yeah you can get these in a million other ways, but it's just convenient to have in the kitchen.


Yep, there is no one killer thing, just a ton of small useful things. Like, when you are cooking and run out of oregano. "Alexa, add oregano", and now its in your shopping list.


I have a week to explore areas near San Francisco in the first week of December (driving there from Vegas via LA) can you suggest anything for an Australian? all I've heard is "Big Sur"


"Near San Francisco" coming from Vegas / LA gives you many options. Big Sur is definitely worthwhile, Yosemite is amazing but a bit out of the way.

Big mountains are between Vegas and LA - perhaps go through Mammoth Lakes and Bishop on highway 395, you go skiing at Mammoth and see Mt Whitney, the highest point in the lower 48 states, while driving through Lone Pine.

Note all the roads crossing the Sierra Nevada mountains are closed south of the Lake Tahoe area after they get enough snow, usually in November.

From LA to San Francisco, take the 101 freeway through Santa Barbara, which has great beaches and hiking (writing this from there). Recommend the courthouse (Spanish Colonial architecture), the botanic garden and Butterfly Beach. The southern Los Padres National Forest stretches for 40 miles behind there in the hills, with some of the beautiful hiking and camping far off the tourist trail the parent comment refers to: http://santabarbarahikes.com/hikes/sanrafael/

Wine country for the next 200 miles north through Santa Ynez and SLO, then leave the freeway for highway 1 to go through Hearst Castle and Big Sur.

Note vast parts of all the above have recently been or currently are on fire, so consider calling the ranger station to check conditions before you go.

More specific recommendations depend on what you're into, but usually the weather is nice in early December, though getting down near freezing at night away from the immediate coast.

If there's rain in the forecast at the coast spend the week skiing powder at Mammoth.


Big Sur is, coarsely speaking, the stretch of coastline between Morro Bay and Monterey. Route 1 hugs the coast, and there's cliffs down to the ocean on one side, and mountains and an occasional canyon to the other side. Hearst Castle, the Bixby (Creek) Bridge are here, as well as a few state parks, ocean-bound waterfalls (rare), a lighthouse on a rock (Point Sur); it's quite fascinating. Plus you arrive at Carmel, Pebble Beach, Pacific Grove, and Monterey, which are scenic in their own right.

After that, go to Santa Cruz. The Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park is the southernmost redwoods park on the coast. It's not quite as impressive as the Redwoods National Park much, much, much further north, but it's got the trees and the atmosphere. You're still south of San Francisco at this point. You can take Route 9 (a winding road) or Route 17 (a less-winding road) up to Silicon Valley from Santa Cruz.


Yosemite is still worth-while, at the top of the list, but it's a four hour drive. Mount Diablo is nice, and you can drive to the peak. Fremont peak is nice, and is a hike. Point Reyes is great hiking (I've seen a white deer there!). Pinnacles is great. Henry Cowell redwoods park is great, you've never seen redwoods like that.

Going south across the golden gate bridge, sometimes I just drive along the coast all the way south to half-moon bay, it's a great drive, and in December the Mavericks waves might be big. There is a black-sand beach along that drive, too.


I'm a little worried Yosemite might be closed in the first week of winter or something? does it get snowed in?


Yosemite doesn't usually close except for rare events like flooding. The valley will remain open through the winter. It's just the road over Tioga Pass that closes with the first snow since NPS doesn't plow it. Actually, winter is my favorite time of the year there. Snow (hopefully) blanketing the mountains and the valley floor and fewer people. Many fewer people.


Winter is a great time to visit. I recommend avoiding the weekend if you can, because it does get crowded.

This year, since the rainfall has been good, there will probably be some frozen waterfalls.


Thank you :) I'll try check it out. 4 hours is fine after flying there 14 hours.


Big Sur is awesome, but ~3 hours away by car. Yosemite is also reasonable weekend trip from SF, maybe ~4 hours away. Preferably plan to spend at least two days, and camp in the park, in either case; there's at lot to see/do and that's a lot of driving to only stay for a short time.

Muir Woods (which is under an hour away), Point Lobos...there's a lot of really beautiful stuff within a day trip of SF. I'd buy a tent, and plan to spend the night out for some of these, since most of the really good spots are at least a couple hours away.

That said, one could easily spend a week (month) on SF and Bay Area city exploration. There's a train that connects SF with the entirety of the rest of the bay area, so you don't even need a car to visit Mountain View (Computer History Museum is a must see!, though you'd want to catch a bus or Uber from the station to the museum, as it'd be a longish walk), Palo Alto (Stanford, Facebook, etc.), and several others along the CalTrain route.

Given how little time you have, I'd probably recommend you focus on minimizing travel time, and hit on stuff that's really close. That limits your "natural wonders" options, but there's a lot of really cool stuff made by people in recent history that's also worth seeing. SF is one of America's great cities.


Big Sur is terrific, with lots of beautiful rugged and ritzy places that a google search will quickly turn up. Might I suggest Cone Peak. It's 5000 feet above sea level and just 3 miles from the beach, with a road almost all the way to the top. (you can camp on the side of Nacimiento-Fergusson road overlooking the coast, too). Great entry point to the Ventana Wilderness if you find time for backpacking, even in December.

Inland from Big Sur and equally south of SF, Pinnacles was recently made a national park. It can be fully explored in a couple days and, aside from the stunning volcanic scenery, is the first place the Califirnia Condor was reintroduced after very nearly going extinct. These days you can spot quite a few of them if you're willing to wake up early and watch the sunrise from the summit. The park attracts a crowd, and it's worth reserving a camp site early, but it's far less hectic than some of the better known parks.

Going east from SF, the Sierras has a number of wilderness areas that attract a fraction of the people you'd find in Yosemite (the valley is an absolute must-see, but it's a zoo outside of winter. The outdoors will require more gear in December, but the snow capped valley rim is one of the most beautiful places I've seen). If the snow is late in falling, I'm partial to Emigrant Wilderness - the same granite as Yosemite, none of the crowds. South of Yosemite, look into King's Canyon. Both should have snow in December, which is a good reminder to check seasonal road closures if you intend a scenic route across the Sierras. North of Yosemite, highways 120, 4, 88, and others typically close.

North of SF, Mendocino National Forest has an abundance of dirt roads accessing enormously underutilised public spaces. There's a drive-in campground just south of Snow Mountain (in the Snow Mtn wilderness) that's stunning and empty. Despite the name, it doesn't get much snow. Closer to the city, Sugarloaf above the Sonoma valley makes for a great low-key 1 or 2 day trip that can be worked into visiting a winery or two.

The Sonoma coast north of SF also has a lot of beautiful places. Check out Salt Point. A bit out of the way for Vegas, though.

Death Valley is mostly on the way to LV and in December will be cool enough to stand.

These are a few of my favorites that are varying degrees off the beaten path but all incredible natural places.


Thanks for your detailed reply, i'll try to see as much as I can!


From Santa Monica to San Francisco take the coast highway as much as you're able (usually Pacific Coast Highway 1, sometimes 101), especially from Morro Bay north. The drive will take longer, maybe much longer if you stop at the scenic points. Driving north puts your car against the mountain. Driving south would put your car on the ocean side of the road, possibly offering better views.


Big Sur is great, and quite a fun drive. There is also the Marin Headlands and Muir woods north of San Francisco


Go further north up the 101 and visit the redwoods. I literally grew up on Endor. You will never see trees bigger. Head up to Humboldt county and check it out. The towns are meth filled hell holes but the camping and National/State parks are amazing.


Congrats to Ryan and the cloudguru team. I used http://acloud.guru for all my associate level AWS certifications and they were so great I ended up co-authoring the DevOps Engineer certification course with them.


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