90% Chance of Success

I got around to calling technical support at Horizon Fitness yesterday morning to see if they could help me diagnose what is wrong with our treadmill.

I called and got right through to a man who walked me through the process of checking a few things. A few things I noticed right from the beginning:

  1. He brought up the details of my machine from the online registration. I didn’t have repeat information to 3 different people.
  2. It was the second time I have called technical support and the first person took notes which the person I spoke with yesterday actually read and referred to.
  3. He wanted to help me, not get me off the phone ASAP.
  4. While I was on the phone, he emailed me a diagram of the machine and instructions for replacing many parts on the treadmill.

After checking a few areas of the treadmill, he said that the problem was likely the computer board and offered to send out a new board for me to installed. I asked if he felt certain the board was the problem. He explain why he thought it’horizons was and then said, “I’m 90% certain it’s the board giving you problems”.

I got off the phone and started to wonder what made him say 90% and not 100% or 99% or even 95%. I like my odds when 9 of 10 times replacing the board works. I hope he’s right. I’ll find out in a few days when a new board arrives.

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Barry Bonds

From what I read, I will be one of the few who cheers when Bonds finally breaks Hank Aaron’s hallowed home run record. It’s sad to think about what might have been. This could have been a magical season for Bonds where even casual fans discussed the importance of the record because everyone was following the chase. Much the same way people talked about Mark McGuire and Sammy Sosa around the water cooler during the summer of 1998.

bonds My justification in cheering for Bonds goes something like this: During this era of steroids, we have no way of knowing who took what. It’s quite obvious that some of the games great sluggers were juiced. But so were some pitchers yet they haven’t come under the same type of scrutiny. What if the pitchers were inching towards records that were as recognizable as most home runs in a season or most career home runs? Is it possible that some some pitchers, especially hard throwing relievers, were juiced up yet didn’t garner the attention showered on the sluggers? It’s not nearly as exciting to hear about a pitcher who picked up an extra 5 mph on his fast ball through the use of steroids. Why do we demand answers from our sluggers but the pitchers and other players were also gaining an unfair advantage through the use of steroids? Cheating is cheating is cheating.

Maybe Bonds has cheated by taking steroids. Maybe they have helped him recover more quickly from injury. But I have a hard time believing they help him swing a bat or see a baseball more clearly. They don’t improve his swing or his hand-eye coordination. It still takes an enormous amount of talent to hit a baseball at the professional level. Ask Danny Ainge or Michael Jordan.

While I don’t admire Bonds the person, I do admire Bonds the baseball player. And I will cheer when he breaks Aaron’s record.

Mariner’s Game

I went to the Seattle Mariner’s game tonight with my dad. We had a salad at FX McRory’s before the game and then watched the M’s play the Detroit Tigers who won 6 to 3.

Just before the game started, they showed a short history of Ichiro’s time in Seattle that included some of his best highlights. When that was over they announced he signed a contract extension through the 2012 season which sent everyone into a frenzy. I read in the paper tonight that he signed a 5 year, $90 million extension.

My dad and I watched the game, chatted about sports and munched on roasted peanuts. We had great seats only 16 rows back down the third base line.

Even though the M’s lost it was fun to watch the game and spend time with my dad. Here’s a picture from our seats.

mariners 

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