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Odds are good that Typica 2.0 will have a significant change to its main serialization. Most won't have to care about the difference, but it's both a significant reduction in file size and nicer for anybody doing by hand edits (though now that CRUCS exists, nobody should be doing that). Main downside I can think of is it'll break any XSLT workflows, but as far as I know, nobody is doing that. Might be worth asking the mailing list if it'll affect anybody anyway.

@dansup It's because the forks are all created by cats and of course cats are going to fork the thing that has a "user is a cat" setting.

The cat wants to help me write software tonight.

Finally landed a new personal best for damage with Qiqi's elemental skill. Was hoping to push it a bit higher than I did, but it's still a significant improvement over my previous best. Still need to review the recording to pull out an exact number, but it's substantially over 200K vs my old personal best of 174K.

The voices on the Deep Space Nine pinball table all sound wrong.

Would be nice if whoever keeps trying to leave fax spam on my voicemail would realize that this isn't a thing that's going to work.

Today's grocery store find: trash bags were on sale. Got a year supply for only $1 more than a box with a third fewer bags.

Breaking into the Puer samples. I'm starting with one that's about 6 years old that has the nicer looking tasting notes. Brewing instructions say to use a knife to break off the amount of tea needed, but I couldn't get that to work so I just ripped off a piece that looked about right with my hands.

The credit card terminals have recently developed a problem where sometimes overnight they go mad and apparently the solution is to go into Setup on both machines, change one of the settings to the wrong thing, save that, and then set it back to the right thing and save again. I'm not going to say I don't understand how that could happen because I've introduced suspiciously similar bugs in my own code over the years, but it would be nice if someone would take a look at that and fix it.

Latest tea shipment arrived with a bunch of Puer that I didn't order. I don't have a business use for that, but I don't mind drinking it.

Working on web site updates. Lots of coffees to put on the list. Once that's up there'll also be a mailing list update. That had been going out on Tinyletter so I'll have to sort out what I'm going to switch that over to before Tinyletter goes away, but I don't have time for that today.

The darkest thing on my tasting list today is a new lot from Sulawesi. A roaster friend who enjoys dark roasts and has been looking forward to this thinks, just based on the Agtron numbers, that I may have pushed this one a bit too far, but tasting it, it's come out quite nice. There's a lot of body, some nice dark spice notes. I might push the end a little faster for the next batch to maybe get a little more sweetness back, but I do like how this turned out as is.

Next up is a Fair Trade Certified decaf Sumatran coffee. This doesn't taste as dark as it measures, but is coming in sort of right on the edge between what I'd consider a medium and a dark roast. Will probably label it a dark roast since anybody sticking it in a degree of roast analyzer and looking at the number would put it there regardless of how it tastes. This is going to have to be my most expensive decaf.

Continuing darker the next batch is a coffee from Papua New Guinea taken just a bit into 2nd crack. No surprises here, nicely balanced. Should work well in the blends I wanted this to go in.

I feel like this is one of the more accessible Kenyan coffees I've had recently because there's still a lot of flavor to it, but it's not punching you in the face with it.

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Moving a little darker but still in the range that I'd consider a light roast is the new Kenya AA. Here I made a couple plan tweaks against the initial exploratory work (CRUCS makes that sort of tweaking so much easier, definitely worth the time I invested into porting that to the web). Here I wanted to bring the sweetness up a little more and moderate the acidity. It's not a total acid bomb but still vibrant with floral aromatics, super juicy.

Tasting production test batches of the new coffees today. Starting with the Ethiopian. This is the lightest of my test batches and I was a little worried as the initial exploratory work lacked intensity. I pulled the data from the lab roaster into CRUCS and edited a plan that pushed the roast faster, just a tiny bit out past a standard cupping roast. Bright, sweet, much better intensity, quite aromatic.

Production test batches of new arrivals cover a nice spread of roast levels. Assuming they taste right tomorrow I'll have a 61, 53, 44, 34, and 27 hitting the shelves. (Agtron gourmet scale, ground)

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