On a beautiful Saturday morning...and you wanna take a ride ...what should u do?
Malaysian Mountain Bikers
For the love of Pedaling.......
Wednesday, 10 August 2011
How to Choose and Size the right Bike for you
Here a short video showing the basic info on about finding the right bike & size for you...
Tuesday, 9 August 2011
GoPro HD Helmet HERO
HD Helmet HERO
GoPro’s HD Helmet HERO is the world’s highest performance wearable 1080p HD video and still photo camera. Professional quality 1080p / 960p / 720p HD resolutions record at 30 and 60 frames per second (60 fps in 720p). Record up to 2.5 hours on a single charge and up to 9 hours total on a 32GB SD card (not included).
Helmet camera mount options include a headlamp style head strap that you can quickly share with your friends, a lace-through strap-mount for vented helmets, two curved and two flat adhesive mounts for attaching to gear, vehicles or whatever else moves you.
The HD Helmet HERO is compatible with all other GoPro HERO camera mounts & accessories, so it’s very easy to expand the functionality of your camera to attach with a suction cup to vehicles, clamp to bike handlebars and seat posts, mount to surfboards, and even be worn on the wrist or chest.Local Price: Ranging from RM900 to RM1400 depending on Model. (http://www.funsportz.com.my/gopro/)
A Must Have BB
New Blackberry Bold 9900 and 9930 smartphones with BB7 OS
For the BlackBerry smartphone users out there, you may be pleased to know that Research in Motion has announced at the BlackBerry World Conference in Orlando, Florida that their Blackberry Bold 9900 and 9930 smartphones will come with an updated Blackberry 7 operating system.
However, for those that were hoping to see Android Apps and Flash Support with the BlackBerry 7 OS, unfortunately it comes with neither, as mentioned in my article yesterday. Nevertheless, despite the absence of the Android Apps and Flash Support the Blackberry 7 OS provides an easier and faster user experience through improved web browsing, voice activated searches and the ability to manage personal and business content separately.
In addition, Chris Martin of The Inquirer has mentioned that Docs To Go will be pre-loaded onto the handsets, with all premium features enabled, to handle Microsoft Word, PowerPoint and Excel files. These two smartphones come with the all too familiar Qwerty keyboard and trackpad that we are use to seeing on BlackBerry’s phones and have a 2.8in Liquid Graphics capacitive touchscreen that has 640×480 resolution.
The devices each run a 1.2GHz processor and are just 10.5mm thick, making them RIM‘s fastest and most thinnest smartphones to date. They have 768MB of RAM, 8GB of internal storage, a 5MP camera that can record HD 720p video, near field communications technology and a 1230mAh battery. Each handset weighs in at 130g and is made with brushed stainless steel frames, and has a high gloss fibreglass backplate.
The difference with the two handsets is the 9930 offers dual-band HSPA+ and dual-band CDMA, whilst the 9900 offers tri-band HSPA+. However, both come with quad-band GSM/EDGE. Will you be getting your hands on one of these BlackBerry smartphones when they release worldwide at the beginning of Summer?
For the BlackBerry smartphone users out there, you may be pleased to know that Research in Motion has announced at the BlackBerry World Conference in Orlando, Florida that their Blackberry Bold 9900 and 9930 smartphones will come with an updated Blackberry 7 operating system.
However, for those that were hoping to see Android Apps and Flash Support with the BlackBerry 7 OS, unfortunately it comes with neither, as mentioned in my article yesterday. Nevertheless, despite the absence of the Android Apps and Flash Support the Blackberry 7 OS provides an easier and faster user experience through improved web browsing, voice activated searches and the ability to manage personal and business content separately.
In addition, Chris Martin of The Inquirer has mentioned that Docs To Go will be pre-loaded onto the handsets, with all premium features enabled, to handle Microsoft Word, PowerPoint and Excel files. These two smartphones come with the all too familiar Qwerty keyboard and trackpad that we are use to seeing on BlackBerry’s phones and have a 2.8in Liquid Graphics capacitive touchscreen that has 640×480 resolution.
The devices each run a 1.2GHz processor and are just 10.5mm thick, making them RIM‘s fastest and most thinnest smartphones to date. They have 768MB of RAM, 8GB of internal storage, a 5MP camera that can record HD 720p video, near field communications technology and a 1230mAh battery. Each handset weighs in at 130g and is made with brushed stainless steel frames, and has a high gloss fibreglass backplate.
The difference with the two handsets is the 9930 offers dual-band HSPA+ and dual-band CDMA, whilst the 9900 offers tri-band HSPA+. However, both come with quad-band GSM/EDGE. Will you be getting your hands on one of these BlackBerry smartphones when they release worldwide at the beginning of Summer?
Monday, 8 August 2011
Ten Speed Revolution
By Chris Lesser
According to an online poll conducted by Bike198.com, some 60 percent of mountain bikers are resisting the switch to 10-speed drivetrain. While the poll is obviously unscientific and of unknown focus-group size, it doesn’t take a degree in statistical regression analysis to predict the direction mountain bike drivetrains are going. Most new bikes are coming with 10-speed set-ups and increasingly, riders looking for quality replacement components have only one option: 10-speed.
A poll by Bike198.com says 25 percent of riders have already made the switch, while 60-some percent are holding out.
SRAM was first out of the gate with its XX flagship component group in the spring of ’09, followed closely by a sweeping adoption of 10-speed technology all the way down to X7. SRAM still offers X7, X9 and some X0 components in 9-speed, but all the new development—and all the bling new finish options—is going into 10-speed specific product.
Mmmm, shiny. You can have it, but you have to say goodbye to 9-speed, first.
Bringing 10-speed all the way down to Deore will ease the pain (also see: expense) of making the jump to a 10-speed component group.
To be fair it’s understandable that someone who recently bought (or has been maintaining) a top-shelf X.0 or XTR 9-speed drivetrain might be hesitant to ditch it just to keep up with the Joneses. Unlike piecemeal drivetrain upgrades of the past, switching to 10-speed is a big commitment. Shifters, derailleurs, cassette, crank (or at least chainrings and some elbow grease) and chain all are interdependent, and the leap must be made at once, not one piece at a time.
One undeniable apples-to-apples benefit of 10-speed is the larger cassette range, with a 36-tooth cassette delaying the drop to granny gear longer, helping keep up momentum and flow. And 2X front chainring configurations wouldn’t be possible without wider-range cassettes to flush out the gear chart.
Pinkbike reported on this prototype 9-36t 10-speed cassette from SRAM, which offers an enticing option (though it's not yet nor may ever be available) for those looking for a functional 10-speed system without the hullabaloo of buying a 10-speed crank, front derailleur, front shifter, etc. Photo: Pinkbike.com
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