Archive for the ‘My Story’ Category

Garden Plantings

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

Today we planted several things in the two raised bed. Yesterday, I added about 6.6 and 13.2 Cu Ft of cottonburs and 3 and 6 Cu Ft of composted cow manure to two raised beds and hoed up all the lamb’s quarters. The list of plantings is below.

Larger Raised Bed
~4 Petunias
2 Celosia

Small Raised Bed
1 clump of chives
~3 Petunias
2 Celosia
1 set of yellow granex onion
1 set of southern belle purple onion

We plan to put tomatoes and herbs in the smaller bed and beans in the larger bed. That still leaves various flowers, tomatillosm potatoes, shallots, scallions, etc. The raised hill will grow the squash; scallops(small bush) and zucchini type (yellow and green).

The drip lines to all three beds under the bedroom window have been laid out and adjusted. The two ground beds need to be setup.

One peach tree (larger) made it through the frost and is heavily loaded.

3 Black Simpson Seeded lettuce volunteered on their own around the yard and we are watering them a little to acclimatize and hopefully have more lettuce with no effort.

The parsley is taking over the ground beds and needs to be cut back heavily. Also rosemary, marjoram, and sage seem to survive the winters for a couple of years in a row and are continuing to grow around the yard.

Links to DVD Covers

Friday, October 9th, 2009

It can be challenging to find cover art for DVDs. Three sites seem to get just about everything for me.

Cdcovers.cc – Contains fan scanned DVD covers. Many are non-english and non-US and in a wide variety of resolutions.
Amazon.com – has small images and some have this zoom feature that makes them unobtainable and Flash-y.
Netflix – seems to have everything, but only in tiny 5 kb files. Last resort.

Just right click the image and save it. Don’t forget to crop it. Backsides from CDCovers and white edging from Amazon.com are annoying and unnecessary. Macs make this exceedingly easy with Preview.

My Home Network Goes Traveling

Monday, September 28th, 2009

So, Apple dropped the 40 gig AppleTV and dropped the price of the 160 gig version to that price a few weeks ago. It seems they waited till all the new 40’s had sold and there was nothing to put on clearance. I couldn’t resist picking up a refurb’ed 40 gig for $150. Of course, the plan is to put it in Dalton’s room or the living room. For now, I’ll take it to Jennifer’s house. You need an iTunes server to hold all the video for an AppleTV, which works great with fact that the old G4 Cube has been replaced by the nVidia Mini. Thanks to SuperSync for copying the iTunes library + meta data into the Mini.

The Cube by itself doesn’t have enough storage for the songs plus videos. That’s were the Drobo upgrades come in. Two new 1.5Ts in the big box put two 640gigs in the small box and two 500gigs came out without a home. These two can go in an external box and hold more than enough iTunes library to the Cube for the little AppleTV.

That means that videos aren’t limited to being played at my house. We can watch anything at Jennifer’s too. And it provides an offsite backup. Yay

It seems like my computers have sought to colonize every room in the house and to temporarily “go abroad”.

Why is Business Objects Code So Slow?

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

It is damn frustrating to use the code below to get to the label name of a specific Universe object. It just loops over and over again looking for a specific object id in a specific class. The object id is unique across all classes. So, the class part is redundant. There is inexplicably no function to obtain the object by giving the unique id. So, we loop and hope the desired object id is near the top.

Set oDesignerClass = m_oUniverse.Classes.FindClass(sClassName)
For nIndex = 1 To oDesignerClass.Objects.Count
Set oDesignerObject = oDesignerClass.Objects(nIndex)
If oDesignerObject.id = nBIObjectID Then
sLabel = m_oUniverse.Classes.FindClass(sClassName).Objects.Item(nIndex).Name
Exit For
End If
Next

When we know everything about the object that we want and could just get it with one line of code that doesn’t need to execute uselessly and repeatedly.

m_oUniverse.Classes.FindClass(sClassName).Objects.(Name).Name = sLabel

Or better yet, by ObjectID (SHOCK!!! I know)

m_oUniverse.(nBIObjectID).Name = sLabel

If someone knows who the idiots are that thought this was a good idea let me know their address. I would have no problems sending the team a book from Amazon on the binary search algorithm were learned in Computer Science 101.

Computer Changes

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

I’m very excited about the changes to the computers in the house recently. The wires are moving off the floor and computers are going in and out of the computer room.

One Mac Mini was moved into the bedroom to make video files from TiVo and VCR tapes. It’s a new one and unfortunately they only work with digital TVs (none of mine) and I had to resort to dragging in a computer monitor to put on the floor. This really bugs me. Now though, I have run coax cable from the bedroom to the kitchen and computer room and move the computer. The new Mac OS 10.6 should arrive on Friday and this little gem is the only box to get the upgrade. It’s been working great at transcode DVDs to AppleTV and iPhone formats. The VCRs can move with the Mac Mini too. Clears up a lot of clutter.

The cable used to run along the floor and stop in the guest bathroom. Now it goes through the walls and runs down the hallway (still visible) to the kitchen TV. We’ve been using the AppleTV a lot and it only spits out digital, which is very expensive to move around the house. VCR, DVD, and TV all work fine over the coax. The new wire cleans up the signal a lot and we want AppleTV in the kitchen without spending $200 to do it.

So, I checked an older Mac Mini that I wasn’t sure of, one that can output analog composite video, and discovered that it works fine. Better than fine since it can play on any of my TVs. With the proper cable that is. Which will come in on Friday too. This Mini was 10.4 and is upgraded to 10.5. It’s flakiness came from a possible botched upgrade from 512 meg to 2 gig. Seems like the upgrade was successful. This little gem will go in the kitchen TV. I need to run an Ethernet wire to this spot, but the wireless is ok.

Running the wires along the wall is annoying, but the attic is just too hot, cramped, and awful it’s worth it. The drop in the kitchen works for both the kitchen and living room. That’s very handy. This wires most of the house; kitchen, living room, master bedroom, and one bedroom (computer room). Though I still need coax and Ethernet to the bathrooms and a bedroom. And the “server closet” in one bedroom might need to move to the garage or hall closet.

I’m really hoping for new Macs in September or October. Not so much to get a new one, but to get a current one on clearance for $200-400 less. Maybe, a 24″ with 4 gig and a dedicated video card. The Minis are fine and I love my overheating upgraded Cube, but I would really would like to have transcoding take 1/3 of the time and to have at least one powerful machine. For a long time I wanted a Mac tower, but I just don’t have enough work to make up the $2200+ price tag. This box would replace the Cube as the desktop machine and I could use it as a spare web browser. It will output S Video to a TV, a very handy ability.

A little separate note on cutting off the cable..
The antenna works well and money spent on cable has gone to buying cheap movies and TV series at Walmart. The AppleTV has been a gem, but only because we rip the DVDs we buy and transcode them for it. All the shows are in one enormous list. Purchasing though Apple is ok, but they have not obtained new episodes and shows for everything and rental fees and terms are outrageous compared to Hastings, and downloads take hours or days through standard DSL. There are cheaper boxes that do the same thing, but without iTunes, and I would have chosen one of those if I were doing this again. The Mini going in the kitchen is saving transcoding time and space and $200+ worth of hardware. It’s outrageous how expensive it is to push a component video signal 50′ vs coax.

Mexico Vacation Photos

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

These are the links to the tiny versions of the vacation photos with movie files.

Thursday
Friday
Swim with the Dolphins
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Canopy Tour
Tuesday

Puerto Vallarta Vacation 1

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

We set out Thursday morning with passports in hand and bags full of 6 days worth of clothes headed to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Jennifer found a really great deal for an a package that included flight, hotel, and food for 6 days and 5 nights. It was in the off season or rather the rainy season. When the weather is nearly 100F and the humidity seems somehow to reach beyond 100%.

This was to be the first airplane flight for her son, Dalton, a very large nearly 13 year old boy. The plan was to fly down and then book 3-4 tour items like dolphins, a show, snorkeling, etc. Neither of us had been to PV before and all that we knew was from Jennifer’s two previous Mexican trips and the internet. The hotel looked workable, though a bit far from the airport on the south side of the bay, where PV is in the center. It was in a little town, Mismaloya on the Mismaloya river right on the beach. Two months ago we had applied for passports when booked the tickets and the whole thing seemed a lot more academic. Now passports in hand, we got ready to leave the country.

The flight was routine down to Houston Intercontinental and to Mexico. As soon as we landed in PV the plane was warm and going through the entrance proceeds was muggy. The air pressure is sea level combined with heat and humidity it was like a persistent pressure on everything; skin, lungs, chest, face,.. Within minutes we were sweating or rather dripping. Everything drips in PV often for no apparent reason. Maybe you can point to condensation as the cause sometimes.

Entry was a bit of a joke. The passport checking official looked bored and sleepy repeatedly writing, scanning, and tearing bits of paper. Once our luggage was restored to use it was X-Rayed again in Mexico for illegal substances. Then, unbeknownst to us we were through. There is a significant lack of signage at the small PV airport, which has a larger terminal than Amarillo, but a much smaller airstrip.

Going through the foreign airport in a throng of people from the 737 we came upon this big room with desk along each side featuring tropical floral pictures and men with standard airport security badges around their neck. A man in the middle of the floor called out hotel names and directed people to various counter, which oddly did not have any names as you might expect of say rental car companies sharing counter space; Avis, National, Hertz.

iPhone Review

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

So, back in June, just before the Seattle bike ride I got an iPhone. The expense is a bit much, but I would like to program it when summer is over. At least that’s my rationale. :)

For the bike ride, I looked to conserve weight were ever possible and the iPhone does a lot of things. The camera, internet, phone, and text messaging are the beginning. The apps are like the cherry on top. The inability to send or receive photos is annoying. So, I took the iPhone and left the Netbook and camera at home. There were reports of dead batteries and cracked screens (Jessica). So, I got a case that doubles as a spare battery, the Mophie.

Right before the trip I realized that I could put video on the iPhone and then, with a special cable, play it on the motel TV. This was an invaluable feature. I thought I had a cable to do it, but was mistaken. After a visit to a nearby Apple store in Seattle I was all set. The cable is pricey at $50, but probably a knockoff would be cheaper. Since then I convert all my DVDs to play on the iPhone so they can come along. When we went home to Canadian a couple of weeks after the Seattle ride we brought Gran Torino and played it for Grandma.

The phone worked great most of the trip. I got 150 photos in the first 3 days. The phone worked and the internet is just really handy to have. The motel’s internet was unnecessary and the lack of a tactile keyboard really just kept my typing short and my thoughts down to 1-2 sentences, because that’s all you can see at a time. The text messaging was very helpful. And I found an app for Facebook to update that status too. As I went along on the ride I would send a single word, the name of the town I was in.

Somewhere in the despair portion of the second day the iPhone died. Nothing I did would wake it up. It’s really too bad. I wish I had photos of the finish line and last rest stop. The best photos of me taken by Marathonfoto were of that last 10 mile or so stretch. I got 4 of them. They are really good. Because of the rain all the second day I thought little iPhone was dead, but I charged it up anyway to see and within 10 minutes it was apparent that the battery had totally drain somewhere along the ride and my backup hadn’t helped it.

It was great for the rest of the trip with my cousin and her family. Monday morning I got to listen to my TWiT (This Weak in Tech) podcast. Now, I did bring along my iPod Nano. That was and still is the music box. The battery life is just so much better than the iPhone. Which is one of the major reasons I got it. The Nano is 16 gig and it holds a lot more music without competing for photo, video, and app space.

The first App on my iPhone was Pandora. And it’s really helped me discover music like I used to. I can listen at work and tag songs. Normally streaming music is blocked. The iPhone’s Internet connection gives me a private “unfiltered” Internet. I’ve been playing with it to find and tag music to buy for the Mexico trip.

The second App was Facebook. My peeps are on Facebook instead of Twitter. And the third was a copy of the bible for when I forget mine for church. It’s come in very handy.

I really like the iPhone, much more than I expected. It’s very nice to have the Internet so close at hand. And I discover new apps or features. Some are quite amazing. For example the Amazon Mobile app lets you take a photo of something and then matches it to a product Amazon sells and displays a list of sellers. It’s not for everyone. The slick glass keyboard and 1 day long battery life are problems. And it would just confuse my grandmother. It’s a good device for me.

My iPhone Shipped

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

Looks like the direct fulfillment order is due to arrive the iPhone tomorrow. Yay!!!

Arizona Pictures

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

I took too many pics on the bike trip to upload to Flickr. And there’s not a good way to just dump them on the blog. I had to write a VB script to process the folders and generate the HTML to display them. Most of you probably just read, “blah script process and generate blah blah”. Anyway, that adds up to time.

The link to the list of photos is here. There are 295 totaling almost 600 meg. The timestamps are corrected for local Arizona time which was even more work. Note to self: Remember to change the clock in the camera when leaving the state.

Notes on the March Southern AZ Tour

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

Well, I got in at 4:30 AM Friday night, or I guess that Saturday morning. That’s a tough drive. It got dark while I was in the mountains between Las Cruces and Albuquerque. Through the remainder of the trip I would perceive some steep drop off or bend even after I crossed into Texas and knew that any sort of incline over 50′ was hours behind me.

The trip was fantastic. I would recommend it to a number or people. Camping is the cheapest option, but many people cycle from motel to motel for twice the price. Our cook was fantastic. Two hot meals a day. Always eggs and oatmeal in the morning with a high carb food like hashbrowns, pancakes, mashed potatoes, rice, etc. on the side. You should forget about your normal calorie restrictions while reading. On the bike eat twice as much as normal and as fattening as you want. At night we has two entres, one meatless or lactose free and one meaty entre. It might contain tofu, curried rice, chicken, beef, steak, snap peas, asparagus, or green beans. Plus a roll with a big tub of slightly warm whipped butter. To drink was water or coke with beer or wine in RV parks.

The riding was nice, though I was disappointed. The scenario of southern Arizona is similar to New Mexico that I had to drive through and the climate is very similar to Amarillo. It’s very dry and sunny. They have far less wind. Arizona roads leave something to be desired, particularly the almost complete lack of a shoulder. Also, and this was just funny. They can’t paint a straight line. The while line on the side wobbles and even the center stripes aren’t straight or point off to the side. The climbs are tough, particularly into Bisbee. Hurt my knee on that one and it stayed hurt the rest of the ride. The last day was so bad I riding it all one legged and trying to limit the rotations in the left leg.

The staff was fantastic. Everything was well done. We had a route marker on bike from the UK whose normal job is flight attendant for Quantas. The leader is a long term substitute teacher out of Las Cruces, NM. The cook and companion will do this 12 or 13 more weeks this year. She also owns the company and teaches cooking. Then there was the mechanic and a few helpers I didn’t get to know much about.

The other participants were very interesting and extremely varied in many ways except age. I was the youngest by about 20 years. The oldest male was 72 and female 70. They tell me that this is very unusual. There are younger people and in fact we encountered about 7 hot chicks with PAC Tours also visiting the Elgin Winery when we were. To give you an idea I met an ex Dean of Engineering; Perdue event planner whose rather wacky husband flys a hot air balloon, wood works, and stone works; a couple very into sailing; a man and his wife into Japanese/American business deals; two astronomer or maybe one was an astronomer technician; a teacher, from a previously Outward Bound, charter school in denver; a political science professor; a dentist or two; a Presbertian(?) minister; and several retired persons and some I just don’t know. There was one other person from Texas. Houston is further away than Amarillo. Several people from pretty much all over; California, Florida, Oregon, Indiana, New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, and more. They had a lot to say about other rides. Some cross state rides that are really rolling parties of up to 20,000 riders and some smaller more challenging rides of 2,000 people in the mountains. Several had done Transamerican rides and with other tour companies.

Bisbee was an interesting town, then Patagonia, and Tombstone. I didn’t really go into Tucson. Bisbee was a massive mining town at the turn of the century for a long time. It’s not very artsy downtown and a bit hippyish. Patagonia is a tiny town that I can’t fathom what keeps it going. There’s a good downtown. So, maybe it’s tourism. Tombstone is a dramatically overblown tourist town. They have a section of town with mock old wood buildings and lots of businesses pretending to be from the old west version. Stage shows and tours run nearly everyday.

The cats seemed to have survived. Though they all ran outside in the middle of the night as soon as the door was opened and their bellies filled. Mitten’s responded by coming to the kitchen to check out the noise. Then walked over to the food bowls, which were empty. After carrying in the necessary bags and checking things around the house I went looking for her. Tiger and Dora were around me with Tiger attached to my calves. Mitten was sitting in the middle of the food bowls with head cocked to the side obviously questioning the location of dinner.

This is something I would definately like to do again. In several months I have the Seattle to Portland, then two weeks later the MS 150, which is more in the range of a training ride for STP. Those are both in July. I’m thinking a late August or September ride would be nice. Not in New Mexico or Oklahoma or Florida and preferabbly not in Texas (kind of seen most of this state). I’ve had enough treeless expanses to last the rest of the year. Fortunately, I live in Amarillo. There are enough trees on the training route to fill a quarter acre square.

Well, that’s most of the story without pictures. Those are uploading to the blog now. Flickr can’t handle them all without paying and then they are kind of tiny.

Stephen

Day 4

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

We are laid over in Bisbee today and I found an Internet hookup. Last night, St Patrick’s Day, about a dozen of us met in a bar and played pool and drank for a couple of hours. It was a lot of fun. Today, everyone’s kind of split off. Some riding to the bird conservatory, some riding for fun and others are about town.

Bisbee is an interesting town. A stair climber’s wet dream. Tiny, narrow building carved into any available space. The next block over is also at least a story up too. Lots of touristing, shops and antiques. You could explore here for a couple of days easy. It has a very hippyish feel. On the way in we passed a Gay/Lesbian RV/Camp site.

The weather is fantastic. Cool at night and warm during the day. Very dry. No wind or maybe a light cool breeze.

I thought I would catch up on a few things on the computer. Wonder around town some and kind of lay off. My knee is hurting a bit and could use the break. Tomorrow, we spin 50 miles back to Tombstone, through Hereford.

The group is like a bunch of sparrows in the winter bushes at meal times. Lots of talking and crosstalking. There are a couple of astronomers, architect, flight attendent, retired people, etc. From all over like Vermont, California, New Mexico, Denver, Houston, Florida, Minneapolis, and more. The average age is 61. If you remove me, the yougest at 33, it becomes 65. It’s an interesting mix. Very enjoyable.

Training Status

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

A week from today I will, hopefully, be writing about my first tour ride or 48 miles. This post is coming from the tiny Acer Aspire One Netbook that I got for that purpose. Of course, I’m using the 28″ monitor and not the 9″ built in.

Everything is coming together well. There are a couple of things on my list that I don’t have. Notably, rain gear. The tent is packed along with the sleeping bag, pillow, 1/4 the clothes and most of the electrical gear.

This weeks miles were lower than last week; 102 vs 125. It’s not for lack of time. I’m just uninterested some days. It’s not fresh any more. I’ve been on the same route for quite a while. My alternative training route is blocked off by recent detours between Amarillo and Canyon. The miles, wind, cold, and terrain aren’t a challenge. Time is the biggest concern. In the face of this, my body is still improving. The past two rides are over 13 mph. One with wind and one without. Though my miles are missing the target I’m not too concerned.

Also, I’m training heavy. Without support, I carry an extra water bottle, arm warmers, 2 tubes, 2 air pumps, tools, shirt, jacket, and food in a trunk bag on a rack. The trip will have specified stops and a mechanic. So, about 10-15 lbs of crap is unnecessary. I still need a larger trunk bag than I have. And Walmart, oddly, seems to have the best bag. This is also the strategy I used in the century ride last year and my speed was 2 mph higher than average.

The great weather holds till Tuesday. Then it turns below 50 the rest of the week. My cutoff is about 60F. Two long rides over the next two days and then yoga and indoor bike.

Friday, I’ll come home to having everything packed except the car and take a nap. Set off for Tucson, AZ about 11:00 pm. Check in is 1:00pm Saturday. I guess I get an hour crossing into NM.

The ride was originally targeted to about 40 people and has expanded to 50 and now says waiting list. The company’s magazine profiles a similar tour in Washington last week and raves about the food. I noticed another tour in this area that is happening this week. It seems like a popular spot at this time of year. At the bike shop, I ran into a guy who got back from mountain biking there about 2 wks ago and all agog about it.

Still have to true the back wheel. Don’t forget.

BTW, Tucson is predicting 75/50F all week.

Training Status

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

Two Weeks. One more weekend. The weather forecast for this week looks fantastic! 76F+ all week after a cool weekend. I took good advantage last week with 6 out of 7 riding days and yoga every(3) times. Weekending miles were 125 and February miles were 267. This is the most miles back to back that I’ve ridden in a long time. All of Feb about the number of miles on the weeklong ride, which concerns me a little. My legs are very firm.

Cat Pics

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

These are three cute cat pics. Tiger is the gray/black strip with the deafening purr. Goldie is the blond with that looks like someone pour caramel on him. Mitten is mom’s cat. Four white mitten paws with here white bib. The Terror of the Kittens, who much to Mittens chagrin ignore a lot of her posturing.

goldie

tiger asleep

mitten