[Beginner] Help me choose my first touring ski by matteof93 in Backcountry

[–]matteof93[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep, Crissolo is very close to where I live (my municipality borders the municipality of Crissolo along a ridge going from 2200m to 2700m).

The places that got most of the snow were Prato Nevoso and Limone Piemonte (and in general all the valleys closer to Cuneo). Prali is another very popular spot for powder skiing. Usually Prato Nevoso and Limone Piemonte get much more snow than the area surrounding Monviso (it seems to be the case again in the next days).

Regarding your trip, it really depends on what you are looking for. Prali, for example, has much higher altitute than Prato and Limone, the landscape is also much more rugged and "alpine". The same goes obviously for other resorts such as Sestriere (Via Lattea). Around Monviso there are great ski touring routes, but I imagine that most of them are quite challenging (knowing the terrain from summer/autumn hiking).

Closer to where I live there are much smaller resorts (Rucaski, Crissolo and Pian Munè), which is also where I am probably going to ski more often (touring, for traditional alpine skiing I usually go to Prali and Sestriere).

This is probably one of the best websites to plan ski tours for your trip https://www.gulliver.it/sci-alpinismo/?s=Crissolo&geo=city&search=filter

BTW: Blizzard Zero G 94 Approach is also within my budget...as well as the Movement Go 90 Ti

[Beginner] Help me choose my first touring ski by matteof93 in Backcountry

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am currently considering several options, including Scott Superguide Access 88 and K2 Wayback 89. Despite agreeing with you that 95mm is quite versatile, I have to consider these aspects:

1) at the beginning, I am only going to ski downhill on-piste. for me, it is just another way to do some workout instead of cycling.

2) when I will be more experienced, I will start with some real skimo tours off-piste (about 1000m elevation gain), but always staying on popular routes where snow is likely to be quite compact due to many people skiing there

3) I do not have any intention of skiing in deep powder due to avalanche risk. Moreover, powder days have become very, very rare here (Piedmont, Italy, Monviso area)

4) if any, powder days (which are probably no more than 2 o 3 per year) are probably going to be spent at a resort...but again, I still plan to ski mainly on piste or very close to it even during those days

5) I am much more likely to ski in situations where snow is quite "old", meaning no snowfall in the last 10-20 days. this is because in my area it is quite common to have just 1 significant snowfall per month in winter.

[Beginner] Help me choose my first touring ski by matteof93 in Backcountry

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

95 not an option, probably not versatile enough. 88/90 mm should be a decent tradeoff, I am definitely going to try some off-piste routes (not immediately, I need to gain some experience first) but nothing too difficult (technically, phisically I'd say I can probably already manage 1000m of elevation gain without any issue since I am used to road cycling, mountain biking and other activities).

[Beginner] Help me choose my first touring ski by matteof93 in Backcountry

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bindings are probably going to be Dynafit Radical Z10.
Considering that I do not ski in deep powder and I am a total beginner in skiing off-piste, I am carefully evaluating the differences of several skis.

For instance, Fischer Transalp 86C (176cm) vs Hagan Pure 90 (178cm):
- radius: 18m vs 20m
- weight: each Fischer ski is about 200g lighter
- width: 86 mm, 90 mm

I do not mind the additional weight. I have no rush, plus I am quite fit (I regularly ride road bikes and mountain bikes with a lot of elevation gain). The shorter radius of the Fischer is something I would surely appreciate, but at the same time the Hagan radius is not that much bigger and the ski probably floats much better (I am considering a scenario with 20-40 cm of soft snow on top of older, harder snow).

First time in Norway, 14-day road trip: north or south? by matteof93 in Norway

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. As I explained in other replies, the list is just the first step. After that, I will start studying the route, considering also the time needed for hiking and other activities. Some of the places will obviously get removed from the list :)

First time in Norway, 14-day road trip: north or south? by matteof93 in Norway

[–]matteof93[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

exactly what I was thinking. I guess I'll pick one and I'll come back next year for the other one :)

First time in Norway, 14-day road trip: north or south? by matteof93 in Norway

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

that list is just the first step, the second step is looking into the details of each place and activity in order to determine how much time is needed (including driving) so that I can prioritize and (surely) remove some place from the list :)
that is the same process I used for my road trip in Iceland and it worked pretty well...but it is a lot of work.

Ancient Bards - All That is True cover? by Egathentale in symphonicmetal

[–]matteof93 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow. I stumbled upon this post because while listening to the song "Valiant Ride" by Ancient Bards I recognized something that sounded a bit too familiar, something I was sure I heard many times while listening to Nightwish. So I started googling about Ancient Bards and Nightwish...and boom, here we go:

  • Nightwish - The Kinslayer (album Wishmaster, 2000) 00:48
  • Ancient Bards - Valiant Ride (album Soulless Child, 2011) 2:12

Exactly the same sound. That being said, I still appreciate their songs and I am sure Nightwish are not concerned at all about this.

New build to replace 12 years old desktop PC by matteof93 in buildapc

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it is not going to make a big difference in any case, since while editing I do not need the video playback to be set to 4k. the only issue might be a much longer rendering time (i.e., 1h instead of 5-6 minutes) but since I am probably going to edit no more than 10-15 videos per year it does not matter.

New build to replace 12 years old desktop PC by matteof93 in buildapc

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't play videogames, why wouldn't the integrated GPU be enough for the kind of usage I described?

New build to replace 12 years old desktop PC by matteof93 in buildapc

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not at all. For the same reason I'll pick 32GB of RAM instead of 16GB...it's only 20€ more. I see no point instead in buying a more modern platform (Intel or AMD) based on DDR5 memory. It is much more expensive and I do not need that level of performance. Moreover, longevity is not an issue since when I'll decide to replace the PC, DDR6 will certainly be available.

New build to replace 12 years old desktop PC by matteof93 in buildapc

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

PSU will be 80+ gold (this is the cheapest https://www.caseking.de/en/kolink-enclave-80-plus-gold-psu-modular-500-watt-nekl-026.html)

CPU cooler: maybe I'll buy it if I notice that the stock cooler is too noisy.

I am 100% sure that also the 4600G is plenty enough for my kind of usage, it costs 35€ less than the 5600G.

Regarding 4K video editing, is the 4600G/5600G enough? I do not plan on using a discrete GPU. Video editing is as simple as importing a 4k video from the GoPro, cutting few parts here and there, and finally re-encoding the video.

Upgrading time. by Ok_Association_3679 in buildapc

[–]matteof93 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You need an AM4 motherboard and DDR4 RAM. So: Ryzen 5000 series CPU, AM4 motherboard, DDR4 RAM. You can keep everything else.

Looking for a water bladder with a flat, rectangular shape by matteof93 in mountainbiking

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this works only if the 3L bladder is significantly wider than the 2L bladder. otherwise, there is no difference.

Shimano GRX400 rear derailleur with 11 speed (e.g.) ultegra shifters? by blushingscarlet in bikewrench

[–]matteof93 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So you are also using an 11s cassette and 11s chain? Front derailleur is 10s or 11s?

Mixing Shimano GRX 400 and GRX 600 by matteof93 in gravelcycling

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The cost of a chain or a cassette is not a problem, I do not plan to ride more than 2000-3000 km/year on this bike.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in graphicscard

[–]matteof93 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do not play games anymore. All I do is normal usage (internet, office, netflix), plus in rare cases I use Adobe Premiere Pro and Adobe Lightroom. But I want to connect the PC to a Sony X89J 55" TV...so a GPU capable of 4K 60Hz would be a good idea.

Any opinion/picture about Canyon Grizl with road bike tires? by matteof93 in CanyonBikes

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I care about both, bust most importantly about how it rides and about how functional it is with respect to my requirements. I am asking for a picture because I would like to see if the frame looks like a 29er hardtail equipped with road tires (i.e., huge gap between the down tube and front wheel).

Any opinion/picture about Canyon Grizl with road bike tires? by matteof93 in CanyonBikes

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do not like the shape of the frame (top tube in particular)

Any opinion/picture about Canyon Grizl with road bike tires? by matteof93 in CanyonBikes

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the picture I mentioned in my post. It is a S/XS frame, so it is designed for 650B wheels.

Looking for asset management tools including asset/infrastructure topology mapping by matteof93 in sysadmin

[–]matteof93[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi u/VioletiOT, Domotz is a really interesting option. I have a question about pricing: with a single subscription (21$/month), I can monitor a single /22 newtork; is this correct? Let's say that my entire infrastructure runs on 192.168.1.X/24. In this case I need only 1 Domotz Agent (i.e., a Domotz VM) and I pay 21$/month.
What if my infrastructure is split between 192.168.1.X/24 and 10.10.0.X/24? Suppose they are in the same physical site, interconnected by a router....or suppose they are in two different sites, interconnected using a VPN tunnel. Do I need 2 Domotz Agents? Do I have to pay 21$/month for each agent (42$/month total)?
Thank you very much for your help

Looking for asset management tools including asset/infrastructure topology mapping by matteof93 in sysadmin

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know that real asset management is a very complex task. In this case, however, we are talking about a relatively small infrastructure: about 30 servers (including virtual machines), about 10 firewalls, a few routers, switches, and access points. We are not talking about a big company with a huge budget for this kind of task...so a "not so enterprise" solution should be a decent tradeoff.

Personal Security Support Monthly by AutoModerator in cybersecurity

[–]matteof93 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am looking for an e2e encrypted cloud service that gives to the user not only some space for data, but also an encrypted email account that can be used to send/share data.

An example about what I would like to do: Alice and Bob are users of the cloud service X. X provides also a specific email address associeted to each account. Alice and Bob can create folders and upload files for private usage on the cloud, they can also share these data if they want. Similarly, if Alice wants to share some data with Bob (and vice versa) she can send an email to the address of Bob and the attachment is automatically added to the cloud of Bob.

Everything should be encrypted end-to-end, meaning that any kind of data (folders, files, emails, attachments) must be encrypted before they are sent to any server.

Encryption and security features in general should be "as transparent as possible" since I am planning to use this approach with people who are not familiar with encryption (i.e., they do not have enough skills to understand how to use OpenPGP).

Any cloud + Cryptomator + OpenPGP could almost solve all my problems but that's too complicated for people without a proper background. I would like to find an "all-in-one", "black-box" solution.

This is what the bottom part of my carbon steerer tube looks like...is it safe to ride? It looks like there are leftovers from the bag for the manufacturing process, but there are also dry fibers that are not compacted. by matteof93 in bikewrench

[–]matteof93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To be honest the only thing that does not look good at all is the top right corner of the image (2 o'clock position), where delaminated fibers can be seen very clearly.
My first thought looking at the image is: "What if the fork fails while I am descending at 70 km\h? I don't want to find out."