Archive for July, 2007

Vermont

Sunday, July 29th, 2007

This weekend I had my first visit to Vermont! My friend Ann and I drove up saturday at noon to go to the wonderful wedding of our friends Mike & Carrie. We all used to work together at Lighthouse and Carrie was my first real friend there, meaning that I could talk to her about issues going on in my life and really be myself :) It was a lovely, lovely, casual, outdoor wedding on the edge of a lake in Barnet, VT. There were maybe under 50 people there, drinks were all stored in a canoe filled will ice, and it was just so personable and nice. There were 5 other Lighthouse folks there and it was really nice to chat & get to know them outside of the school setting. Lovely time, great trip. Congrats Mike & Carrie!

ann and jill in vermont

Saturday

Saturday, July 28th, 2007

Today Jill was away at a wedding, so I had the entire day to myself.  I taught a lesson, played some cards with the student after that, then set up my mic and practiced some tunes for an upcoming wedding.  I also played Warcraft a lot, fixed some code on our site, and read a little.  Now, I’m reading quotations.  I came upon a quote that justifies this:

“It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations. Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations is an admirable work, and I studied it intently. The quotations when engraved upon the memory give you good thoughts. They also make you anxious to read the authors and look for more.” -Sir Winston Churchill (1874 – 1965)

I’ve been adding some of them to my quote file when they apply to me in a particular way. I add more when I come across them – it’s about two years’ worth of collecting. You can see the file here.

I Never Knew About Milne

Friday, July 27th, 2007

Ben and I have just finished reading “By the Shores of Silver Lake”. We still have several to go in the Prairie series, but are taking a hiatus and reading something new. The winner is….”Winnie the Pooh” by A.A. Milne. I had no idea how enjoyable it would be! I have not laughed so consistently while reading (well, listening) to a book! Seems that every word out of Pooh’s mouth, and in Ben’s very well done voice, is so funny! I liked these lines:

“just a moment,” said Pooh, holding up his paw.
“What do we do to this – what you were saying? You sneezed just as you were going to tell me.”
“I didn’t sneeze.”
“Yes, you did, owl.”
“Excuse me, Pooh, I didn’t. You can’t sneeze without knowing it.”
” Well, you can’t know it without something having been sneezed. ”

and on and on. So, I am really enjoying or new read!! :)

Planes & The Interstate Highway System

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

So apparently a plane landed on a stretch of highway around 5 miles from our house. It was all over the news today (article here).

I had heard somewhere that the original Interstate Highway System (established by Eisenhower) required that one mile in five be straight and level for emergency plane landings. So I did some research (well, I read this wikipedia article). Here’s some interesting facts about the highways that we take for granted every day:

1) Initial federal planning for a nationwide highway system began in 1921. The initial cost estimate for the system was $25 billion over twelve years; it ended up costing $114 billion and taking 35 years to complete.

2) Interstate Highways often have the highest speed limits in a given area. Speed limits are determined by individual states. Rural limits generally range from 65 to 80 mph, and urban interstate speed limits are generally 50 to 65 mph across the country.

3) Contrary to popular lore, Interstate highways are not designed to serve as airstrips (oh well… at least it worked yesterday!)

4) In addition to being designed to support automobile and heavy truck traffic, interstate highways are also designed for use in military and civil defense operations within the United States, particularly troop movements.

5) An option for maximizing traffic throughput on a highway is to reverse the flow of traffic on one side of a divider so that all lanes become outbound lanes. This procedure, known as contraflow, was first employed in the 1998 evacuation of New Orleans, Louisiana in preparation for Hurricane Georges.

6) Primary Interstates are given one- or two-digit route numbers. Most Interstates have two digits; there are only three one-digit Interstates in the system: I-4, I-5 and I-8. East-west highways are assigned even numbers, and north-south highways are assigned odd numbers. Odd route numbers increase from west to east, and even numbered routes increase from south to north, though there are exceptions to both principles in several locations. Numbers divisible by 5 are intended to be major among the primary routes, carrying traffic long distances.

7) About 56% of the construction and maintenance costs are funded through user fees, primarily gasoline taxes, collected by states and the federal government, and tolls collected on toll roads and bridges. The rest of the costs are borne by the federal budget.

8 ) By threatening to withhold highway funds, the federal government has been able to stimulate state legislatures to pass a variety of laws.

9) The longest Interstate highway is Interstate 90, which runs 3099 miles between Boston, Massachusetts and Seattle, Washington.

Jill’s Store

Thursday, July 19th, 2007

My new job has been going decently.  I’ve been cleaning, doing data entry, helping people with their computer problems, and learning stuff.  At home, I’ve been coding this cool online store for Jill’s stuff.  It may not be as full-featured as ebay or something, but it works for our purposes.  Just a few items, an SQL backend, a page for Jill to edit her item information, and a “checkout” page. So, be sure to check out her store!  Her stuff is great quality and very cheap for the amount of work she put in.   Currently she has two categories of items up:  Record bowls and plastic bag-bags.

MAINE

Sunday, July 15th, 2007

After much traveling this month I think I am finally ready to stay put! This week I had a last minute trip up to Maine. Mom and Murphys were going up and I joined them for a 3 day trip. Most of the trip was about fishing, catching clams, boating… It is a fun place! Jayne and Mark just bought the house they are in – they are complete converts to Maine :) It was nice to visit and catch up with my little sister :)

Ben’s Progress

Saturday, July 14th, 2007

Today was a productive day.  I worked at the school and finished grade exports to CSV files.  I moved about 20 computers that had arrived after unpacking them.  I cleaned up massive amounts of bubble wrap after getting a few staff members to jump on them.

When I got home I transferred the website that I’ve been working on (for pay) to the actual server it will live on.  It’s live now but needs additional testing before it’s advertised to the world.  You can take a sneak peak here and tell me what you think of the design. It’s a site for boys, by the way.

After THAT I sent my client an email saying it was posted, and I got back the following:

Ben, I am so excited I’ve been dancing around over here. Unfortunately I have to leave for the weekend for a family commitment. I will test the hell out of it begining Monday. Thsi is killing me, after all these months I want to jump in right now and start uploading stories and photos and get ourselves in business! AAAACCK!

I don’t think he’ll mind me posting that, it makes me feel great about the work I’ve done over the past few months!

Then I recorded some soloing to an old idea I had created back in January. I got it all done and arranged, then exported it and wrote code for the song page. I remembered that my Flash player on the songs page wasn’t cutting it in IE on silly PeeCees. So I researched some other options and came up with this player, which embeds sound files rather well. After configuring that, it’s now about 2 AM. Please head on over to the song page and test out my teeny button player and see if it works ok on Winbloze :)

Jill returns tomorrow from ME, yay. This was a shorter trip than last time though.

WordPress Update

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

If you are here, you’re probably wondering why this page doesn’t look like the rest of our site!  I had to update WordPress (our blogging software) and it undid all the embedding work I did a couple years ago.  I like the new features on the right there (like the search etc) but eventually I will find a way to make this look like the rest of our site! One of the most requested features from friends was an RSS feed that worked.  I think I must have broken it when I edited the theme awhile back, but now it’s the default installation and it should work great :)