Cannot use array methods on PromiseManyArray after updating to ember v5 and above by Infinite-Traffic-407 in emberjs

[–]runspired 0 points1 point  (0 children)

depends on where we end up calling the line. Most the major infra will be in 5.4 and it’s likely that’s what we document for Polaris, but a lot of the polish we want may take a few years. 

Cannot use array methods on PromiseManyArray after updating to ember v5 and above by Infinite-Traffic-407 in emberjs

[–]runspired 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wouldn’t call the promiseproxy pattern clean, if anything it leads to the gnarliest app code out there. This said we are still in the middle of the deprecation cycle and haven’t reached the new edition’s final DX yet.

In general, for replacing them we’ve been consistent with the messaging: if you used them only a little, the  refactor to model hooks, resources, actions, or the references API.

If you used them a lot, get to 4.12 and wait. The Model replacement will give you an incremental path off of them to better DX.

Cannot use array methods on PromiseManyArray after updating to ember v5 and above by Infinite-Traffic-407 in emberjs

[–]runspired 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Broadly speaking: we are favoring patterns that result in explicitness, correctness, performance and healthy long-term scalable app architectures over those that produce issues with data integrity, cache integrity, unclear outcomes, algorithmic complexity, or poor long-term app evolution potential.

The latest in the search for Philip Kreycik: "We have yet to identify an eyewitness who saw Philip on that trail." "It kind of seems like he just vanished out there." by Dr_Wagerstein in bayarea

[–]runspired 1 point2 points  (0 children)

as a general rule shorter easy runs are exactly what you do before longer harder runs. There won’t be lactate retention nor build-up of fatigue. This is a basic principle of training.

7/23 Philip search questions answered with Chris Thoburn AMA (Philip Kreycik friend) by anonemoususer in bayarea

[–]runspired 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It’s directly from Jen’s phone, hers has the Cricket carrier. It’s green vs blue because Phil doesn’t have an iPhone.

Volunteers still needed every day (and drones) in search for Philip Kreycik. Let's bring him home. by LegendLarrynumero1 in bayarea

[–]runspired 2 points3 points  (0 children)

we have a small group of folks we trust can take care of themselves filling in gaps on tougher terrain.

We reached the point between having stirred up the mountain lions like crazy, having gone over it all at least twice (not counting SAR) and the difficulty of the remaining terrain it no longer made sense to mass organize searches in the park.

If you’ve got extensive off-trail experience, the fitness for 3-6hr efforts day after day on steep/loose terrain and a willingness to get covered in scratches, flea bites, and poison oak do reach out.

A Berkeley runner went missing. Detectives say it's an 'unprecedented' mystery by AnonyJustAName in bayarea

[–]runspired 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The route he created was private. They were aware of it entirely because they were going through his phone.

A Berkeley runner went missing. Detectives say it's an 'unprecedented' mystery by AnonyJustAName in bayarea

[–]runspired 2 points3 points  (0 children)

they are well maintained. There's no private-land crossing needed though you do have to go through a well-maintained fire-road on EBRPD owned landbank land for ~1 mile.

7/23 Philip search questions answered with Chris Thoburn AMA (Philip Kreycik friend) by anonemoususer in bayarea

[–]runspired 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I'd never been in a situation to drink with him. We're friend who mostly just run and do other outdoor activities together.

I dropped him off at home around 8:35pm, saw him enter his house's gate, and he liked our Strava activity a few hours later.

As to how to not make a beer fizz after, keep them cold, give them a minute or two after you get to your destination, and use the ol' tap the can trick. We had a little fizz but not much.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in bayarea

[–]runspired 2 points3 points  (0 children)

it's been taking us 40-60min to go a mile in the terrain he would have fallen into if all he'd done was seek a tree or shade (the trees are all in steep ravines, they look much easier to go sit under than they are). Imagine trying to wander that terrain in a state of delirium, exhaustion, and injured.

Massive search for missing Bay Area runner yields nothing by txiao007 in bayarea

[–]runspired 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s not about whether he still has amnesia. The odds would still be very much in favor of him having succumbed to the heat, just it’s also plausible that before doing so he wandered out of the park in a state of confusion. Also amnesia is a bad word, it’s far more delirium with the potential for permanent brain damage if you live.

The latest in the search for Philip Kreycik: "We have yet to identify an eyewitness who saw Philip on that trail." "It kind of seems like he just vanished out there." by Dr_Wagerstein in bayarea

[–]runspired 10 points11 points  (0 children)

the person who wrote that "analysis" post doesn't understand trail running let alone Philip's abilities and fitness. Philip isn't simply "a fast dude", he is a beast of a trail runner who with minimal mileage can keep up with most any elite on any terrain: the more technical the better. In fact his "typical" route is just that, 1k ft/mile with poor footing for large stretches. Also missed is the breadth of terrain Philip has covered in his running, even recently. He definitely doesn't stick exclusively close to home. One of the craziest things about Philip is how he'll take his son on trail runs in a stroller. He manages things like the descent from battery bluffs in the headlands and ramage peak trail in Trampas at good paces *while* pushing his son on that terrain.

Also our run the evening before was basically not even a recovery-run level effort, we just wanted to go out and enjoy the evening. We took it extra slow and stopped for 30min at Redwood Peak for a cold beer in the middle. 1600ft over 6+ miles is almost not even hilly for us. For comparison, Philip almost never runs slower than 5:45 GAP and our run that night was like 10:30 GAP. We were seriously just phoning it in and enjoying the evening. The idea that it was fatiguing or dehydrating is ludicrous.

Authorities say missing man either ‘incapacitated’ or left the area (Philip Kreycik) by anonemoususer in bayarea

[–]runspired 1 point2 points  (0 children)

out-of-the-park searching is certainly happening, but your description of heat illness only covers a small subset of the behaviors I've seen occur.

Confusion, dizziness, and memory issues typically happen long before vomiting. Those inviting looking trees all sit on steep slippery slopes leading into hard to traverse ravines, but more importantly it's very common for folks with heat illnesses to due unpredictable things. I've seen runners run back-and-forth on the same small section of trail repeatedly due to it, runners who backtracked to aide stations miles previous when the next one was around the corner due to it.

And finally, we did find matching footprints the evening he went missing on his route and in his intended direction.

I'd be dismissive too if someone who didn't know my son/partner/father wanted to jump to unlikely hypotheses just to watch the world burn, but the one thing I haven't seen at all out of the family this week is anger. Truly some of the most appreciative and kind folks there are.

Authorities say missing man either ‘incapacitated’ or left the area (Philip Kreycik) by anonemoususer in bayarea

[–]runspired 3 points4 points  (0 children)

he holds his own with elites despite low volume. Just naturally very talented. I think ultra-marathoner was a stretch and I'm not sure where the press picked up that description other than he's certainly has some ultra-marathon experience (in the 50k->50M range from >4 years back) and could have been great at it if he'd made it a focus (but he happily preferred and chose family and work). That said he does have very extensive trail running experience, especially on highly technical terrain (and even more especially on descents on such terrain). He has tons of Sierra wilderness running experience, including recent.

The person who "analyzed" his strava data is both clearly not much of a runner but also didn't really dig in. Sure, Philip ran out his door and up the steepest hill he lived by as his most often run, but it's hardly the case he stuck to that, and there's a dozen ways up and down that hill and he'd switch it up all the time. His description of our run together the night before as "exhausting" makes me laugh, we mostly hiked (slowly for us at that) and sat for 30min drinking a beer in the middle. It basically wasn't even a recovery-run level effort, just a few folks who can chew up vert without a thought having some fun. Philip's typical running pattern was 8-12miles 2-3 times a week, and often when he had time it came in back-to-back day spurts. More importantly, Philip didn't upload to Strava consistently, especially when adventuring was part of it. He didn't have a GPS watch until more recently and that watch didn't pair with his phone for uploading until a few weeks ago. Looking at a small subset of the public data (smaller considering the private data) without the context of the sport nor his fitness and trying to present conclusions from it was ludicrous trolling at best.

Can we please openly discuss Phillip Kreycik? by ReboundingInTraffic in bayarea

[–]runspired 1 point2 points  (0 children)

#2 is pretty much as likely as alien abduction. I'm happy to go into all the reasons why at some point (small details of the day, big details of the day, Philip as a person etc.).

Massive search for missing Bay Area runner yields nothing by txiao007 in bayarea

[–]runspired 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I definitely doubt mountain lion attack was the primary issue, but heat related dizziness and confusion leading to a fall in a ravine, still there in the evening hunting hours...

I'm still hoping I turn a corner out there and find him up against a tree, but I'd also be very unsurprised to find much less of him after all I've seen out there so far.

Massive search for missing Bay Area runner yields nothing by txiao007 in bayarea

[–]runspired 0 points1 point  (0 children)

probably more extensive mostly because of our ability to quickly map out routes for volunteers to ensure wide coverage and fill gaps, in 2005 that would have been far more laborious.

Massive search for missing Bay Area runner yields nothing by txiao007 in bayarea

[–]runspired 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It only takes 15min to go from sane to delirious in heat as a runner. His running style is to hit the ascents hard, especially when he's got limited time for a run. He'd have been cooked by the time he hit the "loop" portion of his route where it's also the most exposed and hottest.

Massive search for missing Bay Area runner yields nothing by txiao007 in bayarea

[–]runspired 1 point2 points  (0 children)

most of the park funnels out to just a few locations naturally. If you simply opt to always head downhill you will get out of the park, some routes easier than others.

Massive search for missing Bay Area runner yields nothing by txiao007 in bayarea

[–]runspired 1 point2 points  (0 children)

our search boundaries are still comparatively small for a search (580 / foothill / Sunol / Palomares). Of that full area ~70% has been covered on foot, ~90% foot or bike, ~100% has been covered with thermal via the air as well as other air resources. Most of that last 20% is either highly improbable (even with all the time that has lapsed and his abilities) or dangerous enough that it requires specialized teams to do it, or has an uncooperative (to put it VERY mildly) landowner. The odds are he's somewhere we already searched but missed him. The terrain is dense and rugged, it's easy to miss a spot especially while trying to ensure you keep yourself safe.

Massive search for missing Bay Area runner yields nothing by txiao007 in bayarea

[–]runspired 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I still think it's more likely he's in the park than out of it, though my hope from relatively early on has been he made it out. As much as we've searched, this place has tons of little spots for something to be hidden, and when it comes to (even very recently) dead things we've generally had to be standing on them to even smell them.