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Sunday, July 31st, 2011
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11:23 am - Re-Install of Mythbox
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| Monday, January 4th, 2010
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10:37 am - Fail
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| Friday, December 11th, 2009
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4:00 pm - The Record
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| Monday, September 28th, 2009
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4:45 pm - A Fix for the HDMI Audio Bug??? Really?
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| Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009
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9:35 am - Video Fails on Ubuntu Upgrade
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This happens every time you upgrade Ubuntu. Just reinstall the ATI Catalyst Drivers, they're sitting on the desktop.
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(comment on this)
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| Monday, December 15th, 2008
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4:28 pm - Installing FC10 on my MythTV
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This is a process I've had to go through an inordinate number of times, so I'm just going to post on here the steps I go through to accomplish it.
1. Installation Because the DVD-ROM is busted and only seems to read CDs, burn the first installation CD while storing the DVD media on an NFS share. When the screen pops up asking if you'd like to install, edit the options (using the TAB key) and add "askmethod asknetwork" to enable installation from network media.
2. Upgrading Just get this done and don't try to get fancy.
3. Video card drivers for ATI HD 3200 Without going through the correct procedures for this, you end up with some pretty funky video output with the desktop stretched beyond the edge of the screen, mouse pointers not rendering correctly, etc.
The secret for this comes from a post on FedoraForum and walks through how to install for FC10 down through maybe FC6. Worked like a charm the first time.
However, when I did it the first time, I did it before upgrading and that worked ok. The second time I did it after an upgrade which left me with a buggy version of dbus and didn't allow me to use system-config-display. This wasn't a total disaster or anything, but certainly ticks me off.
4. Soundcard Still haven't cracked the code on this one just yet. A clue? Check it out....
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| Wednesday, February 20th, 2008
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10:56 pm - I Figured It Out!
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How dumb have I been. You know what I've been asking myself this whole time? The last two years? "Why I can't I get serious about someone?" But I know, and it was right there the whole time.
When I enter into a relationship, I do so with the knowledge that it will not work out, and it's just for fun. I tell myself I'm afraid of getting hurt, or I think I love someone else, or I've forgotten how to love, or whatever. But the secret is in the knowledge-- the KNOWLEDGE! It's a purely rational process! That's the secret! If I tell myself there's hope, then there's hope!
When it came to me, I called her to see if we could go for a walk. We bundled up, coat + gloves + hat and braved the winter wind to walk and talk and be together. When we got back home, I asked her if we could start over, but with hope, with a chance, with less DOOM...
And she said "yes."
So we're starting over, and I'm allowing my mind and my heart to do what it wants to do anyway. There are no guarantees in this life, there just aren't. But to go through life without risk is pointless...
I wish I could be more eloquent about all of this, but I'm just feeling so good about.
Hope... The last terror to jump out of Pandora's box... I knew it was there, I just had to find it. Wish us luck. :)
current mood: Elated
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| Sunday, February 17th, 2008
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12:06 am - Not Working Like I Thought
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I thought I was so clever. I thought I could insulate my heart from everyone I met, I thought I could keep them at emotional arm's length and protect myself. Jesus, I must be doing it wrong.
I really haven't felt this bad since that horrible debacle of moving up here.
God, I've got musings enough for pages and pages in here but I just can't bring myself to write them down.
I've got to figure my problems out here, I've either got to swear off human interaction (fat chance) or let my heart go where it wants to go. Well, step 1 there is figuring out where it wants to go which is easier said than done.
I second guess my feelings a lot too...
Wouldn't I have to have been in love to hurt this much? Is it the pain of loss and humiliation, or is it the more general realization that this has become a pattern and I'm just slowly killing myself?
Worthy questions... For another time. I've got more sad music to listen to...
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| Wednesday, December 26th, 2007
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6:00 pm - Eulogy
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I'm standing in the remains of Wildwood Cinemas, the place where I saw Jurassic Park, among other things. I had my first ever movie date here in 7th grade with a girl I liked from my volunteer job at the Red Mountain Museum. I remember vivid fantasies involving this girl that couldn't quite be called sexual fantasies, as I didn't know enough then about sex to really flesh them out... Maybe they were makeout fantasies. Anyway, one movie date, and I didn't even try to kiss her.
Dallas worked here in high school, the coolest job of all my friends. He was a projectionist through high school and lest us see the occasional free movie. He also introduced me to Mamoun, the friendly middle eastern manager who would occasionally hook me up with popcorn. He drove an old State Trooper car with the spotlight still attached--I'm sure he only got it because it was cheap, but it sure seemed like a cool car to me.
There used to be an aquarium in the front with a shot glass at the bottom--if you could get a quarter into the glass, it meant a free ticket. I discovered (or Dallas told me, I don't remember) that if you put two quarters together, and drop them from underneath the surface of the water, they will glide straight down into the glass. This netted me a host of free tickets, until they witnessed my technique and posted some new rules on the glass.
Next door to the empty husk of the theater is the former Subway sandwiches, home of the Subway-Tran, the first honest-to-god transsexual I had ever met. This former gentleman had long hair and makeup to distract you from her muscular arms, and the tanned and manly hands plying apart your sandwich roll with painted nails. I never really got used to the sight.
So here I am, in this monumnet to my adolescence, standing in a gravel pit where once stood the DTS sound system which scared the hell out of me in 1994. In a last solute to its past as a part of my coming of age, my mom is on her way to pick me up here. Goodbye Wildwood.
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| Sunday, September 30th, 2007
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1:04 am - Hunger Strikes Like a Viper
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If you ever find yourself in Buda (pronounced B-yoo-duh), Texas hankerin' for a slice of pizza, be forewarned: everybody closes at 11. Thank goodness Emily and Eric had already made the most delicious lasagna I'd ever reheated. Just amazing.
Time for sleep.
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| Friday, September 28th, 2007
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3:51 pm - The Briefcase
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I just ran across this Snopes article on the contents of the briefcase in Pulp Fiction. Now they cover the most popular answer I'd heard, which was Marsellus Wallace's soul. It's certainly a pretty cool idea, but it's strange that everyone recognizes it. I like what Roger Avery said, though, about the viewer filling the briefcase with his own ultimate swag.
My ultimate swag was pretty lame. After watching the movie for the first time, at the dollar theater in the summer of 1994 with Matt and Robin, I was convinced of what it was. From the looks on everyone's faces, the Jules and Vincent exchange, "we cool?" "yeah, we're cool," to Pumpkin saying "is that what I think it is?" I was totally convinced that it was the US Constitution.
I'm not kidding, that's really what I thought it was. It just came to me, like a flash of truth. "Why was it glowing?" you might ask. I have no idea. The holy light of democracy, maybe? I have no idea, but it's a weird idea.
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| Sunday, July 8th, 2007
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12:33 am - Roommate Search - Day 742
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Well maybe it hasn't been that long...
So yeah, I've been remiss in my blogging, haven't I?
I was just talking with Big Whiskey and he mentioned this site, and I realized I hadn't posted to it in months.
So, remember the roommate search? It's over at last. I got discouraged there for a while after getting nothing but strange girls, old guys and anti-social post docs. The worst was the disappointment of finding a really cool roommate that I clicked with and having the rug pulled out from under me when she didn't move to the ROC.
After that, I decided to lay off for awhile, and wait.
Eventually I convinced myself that it was time to post something about it at work, so I put together a poster listing all of its wonderful ammenities and conveniences of modern life. Such as, free WiFi, onsite laundry, heat! All the modern conveniences we take for granted. Not to mention close proximity to the bumping nightlife of downtown Rochester!
I figured that would be a huge splash with the new hire and co-op crowd!
What did I get? A middle-aged married guy named Ted who needed a place to crash during the week as his home and family was still back in Utica and he went there on the weekends. I was on the verge of taking him up on it, too, despite his old-guy status, and possible allergies, but he just stopped responding to my emails. It was like getting broken up with by a girl you only went out with for pity's sake in the first place--humiliating.
Again, more weeks of questioning myself, my performance as a roommate, my worth as a home owner. Finally I summoned the strength to post to Craigslist again, this time thinking more carefully about my audience. Who do I want to move in with me? Grad students, young professionals whose college days are still fresh in their minds, movie watchers! So I made sure to mention the house's proximity to the U of R and (sort of, not really) RIT. I through in stuff about the bike trails by the river, and some charming pictures of the outside and my dining room (I bought furniture, that makes me a grownup, right?).
The timing was just right, spring was in the air, their was a spirit of renewal in the earth and the populace, and new students were exploring their options at U of R. I ended up with two MDs coming to Rochester for residince, and a couple of undergrads. So, I didn't get to hear from that coveted graduate student, but these folks were all right.
MD number 1 was Indian, originally from the area and coming back fresh from NYC where he went to med school. I didn't actually meet the guy, but he sent a friend over to have a look at the place and make sure I wasn't a dullard or an asshole or something. What I gathered: he's very responsible, he's very neat, he owns a BMW.
It was that last bit that really put the X by his name. I mean, look at me, am I the type of guy who understands someone that buys a BMW he can barely afford right out of med school? No, no I'm not. You know how I know that? 'Cause I can't understand what makes a guy do that and then go share a room in some stranger's house. Priorities are all wrong.
The next MD actually had a wife and kids in Buffalo and would not be spending much time in the house. That's cool for a lot of reasons, it means I get a lot of time with the place to myself, it means-- okay, maybe that's only cool for that one reason. But after talking to him, surely his kids are gonna come by from time to time, and I'm damnably nervous about kids. Plus, all of these doctors are gonna keep residency schedules which means 12 hour shifts sometimes days and sometimes nights; what I really want is someone on my same, vanilla, 9-5 schedule.
So on to the undergrads. The first was an Indian fellow (from India, this time), who was actually pretty damn cool. To be precise, he was neither undergrad nor student, he had a BS in something sciency and was about to start a job as a lab assistant at U of R. He walked over from international student housing where he was crashing (notice no car) to check the place out. So he was funny, laid back, liked to cook Indian food--something I've been wanting to learn--the only thing was he was looking for something furnished. Seeing as he didn't have a car, buying furniture was going to be a big pain in the ass, so he found another spot.
Dejected, I continued to answer inquiries, getting one from a lady physics student/distance bicycle racer, and another from--get this--a high school girl coming to Rochester to go to the charter school in town. I tell you, there's enough weird about a single guy living with 3 cats, through in an unrelated 17 year-old and I might have to turn into a serial killer, or at least get a false sex-crime allegation.
The last one is a 21 year-old psych/art-history co-ed at U of R about to start her senior year. She came to take a look at the place and seemed down to earth, funny and responsible. Plus after looking at 6 other places, she decided mine was the most promising. I should mention here that she's 5 feet tall and adorable. Was I responding to what I thought was approval when I offered her the place? Was I starstruck by an attractive girl who only met me twice when I was covered with sweat from riding my bike home from work and still thought I'd make a good roommate? Probably.
Sad, right?
Well yeah. But-- she's not going to be here until late August, though she's already paid through then because she went ahead and moved her stuff in. I should say, her dad paid. So no worries about bouncing checks or anything, in fact I think I can convince her to pay me through Paypal so it'll just drop right into my savings account without me having to do anything.
So until she gets here, I've got her rent which I'm already pouring back into the house. It's actually just pathetic when you think about the amount of money I've "lost" not having a roommate. It's really 400 a month for something that's really no skin off my back. Maybe a little wait-time for the bathroom, but she's splitting utilities and will probably cook from time to time! It's just incredible.
OK, 'nuff for now. Next I'll be talking about fixing my soffitts with B. Are you ready for that 'Merica?
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| Friday, May 25th, 2007
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9:39 am - My Cats Are Trying to Kill Me
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My suspicions were first aroused on the stairs. Whenever I move upstairs or downstairs, at least one of them (usually Chewie) gets tangled up in my feet. At first I mistook this for affection, but as it happens more and more often, I sense a more malevolent nature to it. The point, however, was really driven home yesterday morning.
I awoke from a particularly hot night (I hate waking up sweaty, which is why I finally installed a window A/C unit in my bedroom) to hear a popping sound coming from somewhere. I thought it might have been construction noise from outside, or somehow related to the garbage trucks which were already loading up on my street. But time passed and the sound didn't stop or even change at all, just a very rhythmic pop-pop-pop.
As I was going downstairs to investigate, once again a cat got between my legs on the turn down the stairs, but I kicked him away and kept creeping down. The sound was coming from the kitchen. I had it in my head that it might be some giant beetle, so I went through the dining room in an effort to outflank whatever it was. As I turned the corner to the kitchen, the source was finally revealed to me:
The front burner on my stove.
The cats had managed to turn the knob on the front of the stove and just by luck it got stuck at Light. I mean, if it hadn't lit, the house could've just filled up with gas all night long! I could've either not woken up, or been blowed up by the gas that had filled up the several thousand cubic feet of my house.
So. It's obvious now... They're trying to kill me.
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| Thursday, April 19th, 2007
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10:59 am - Nevermind
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| Wednesday, April 18th, 2007
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11:12 pm - The Breakup
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Broke up with Katrina tonight.
It wasn't easy, and I really hope it was the right thing to do. It's a shame I never got to show her Birmingham, it's a shame we never went to the beach. That would've been fun.
I guess it just got too complicated (read emotionally involved). I think I'm trying to save myself from pain that I'm sure is lurking around the corner. Well, save the both of us.
I think I left her with the distinct impression that I just don't care about her at all, which is by no means true. But maybe it's better that she think that.
Ugh.
There's a bottle of Captain Morgan's with my name on it downstairs.
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| Thursday, April 12th, 2007
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12:06 pm - I used to write in this every day...
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Sam has joined the Army and ships out next week. This means 9 weeks of boot camp, a year of nursing school, and then another 3 years in her contract and God knows how much more if she enjoys it. So our few times a year rendezvous will basically be on hold for years--we had to have one last hurrah.
We planned it first as just her visiting me in Rochester, meeting my friends, seeing my new house and relaxing. She got a flight up on Friday night, and one out on Tuesday morning. But, she's not one to relax on a vacation, and she'd never been to New York City before (just a scant 400 miles from my house). Despite JetBlue's recent bad press, they still have an unbelievable rate for flying from ROC to JFK, just $110 round trip. So I snagged us a couple of tickets to The Big Apple Saturday night and Monday night.
Originally on Friday I had some plans worked out with all my friends to meet up at Lux Lounge on 666 South Avenue, just a half mile from my house. It's a nice place, fun and pretentious people, wraithish, tattooed, belly-dancing bartenders, and a fire pit outside. However, we met with some unexpected delays: my furnace broke. We got back from the Buffalo airport to find that my furnace was not working. Of course it's 20 degrees in April, which means my pipes are at risk if I chose to ignore it.
Luckily, the company that serviced the previous owner had a nice big sticker on the side of the furnace, and I was able to get a guy over that night to fix it (for the low-low price of $425). This took a few hours and put us way behind. By the time the furnace was functioning and we were fed and ready to go out, it was 11:00. I called up the Shoots' to see if they would be meeting us at Lux, but by this time they were already playing flipcup over at Ryan's, which basically meant they were too drunk to go anywhere. And we weren't really in the mood to spend the evening playing drinking games in a smoky apartment.
So instead we went out and drank all by our lonesome at Lux and then Caverly's. We were finally making our way home at about 1 am with the declared intention of watching American Graffiti. Have you seen it? I hadn't, the George Lucas classic with Richard Dreyfus, Ron Howard and a completely unknown Harrison Ford. Somehow I managed to stay awake through it, but Sammy was not so lucky. We eventually got to sleep some time after 4.
The next day was a nearly full day in Rochester. What to do?! Breakfast was a first. We got down to Charlie's Frog Pond on Park by 11:30 and had a delicious breakfast. Then we hit up Stever's Candy across the street for some locally made chocolates (not a good idea the day before Easter). I made it out with an orange-chocolate bunny in a race car and a chocolate cigar for Katrina, and Sam got her usual disgusting candy fare: licorice. Little licorice scotty dogs, to be precise.
We also swung by my office, which is a pretty boring stop and (according to her) smells like boys and dorritos--I'd never noticed before!
The real adventure was to begin Saturday night when we flew to NYC! Keeping with their unblemished tradition, our JetBlue flight was delayed by a half hour or so. And once we got on the ground, it took 45 minutes for our luggage to arrive. However, surely our troubles and inefficiencies were over there as we were about to enter the NYC MTA! Yeah right. Like babes lost in the woods, we got on the wrong train at the airport (the one going to Jamaica station instead of Howard Beach) and I thought we might have just gone another hour out of our way, but Sam noticed another shared stop on the line where we could get off and wait for the right one.
After this little flub, we waited another half hour for the A train to arrive which would take us to Manhattan, uptown to Times Square where we were staying. I was hoping our stop on the subway was in one of those impressive places, where you walk out and are immediately awed and floored by the immensity of this great metropolis... Not quite. I prepared Sam for the moment, hold tight to your bag, keep your feet on the ground and VOILA! A 5 story building! Of course we were just a few blocks from Times Square and our hostel, so she got to see the wonders of Gotham soon enough.
After checking in at our hostel, I got ahold of Andrew who would be our guide to the nightlife in the city. He was at a punk bar on the lower east side called Manitoba's (what's with that name?). I should say at this point that I have forgotten my Not For Tourists Guide to the city, along with its pocket subway map and index of every store you'll ever need to find. So we were working off a big folding tourist map we procured from the hostel. Despite Andrew's advice to take a cab, we braved the subway along with the mile-long walk from the station to the bar. It was only by sheer luck that we started walking the right way when we got off the train.
"This is north, absolutely," I said as I led us confidently down the street. "This is the way we should be going."
It turned out to be east. But, luckily, also a direction we needed to go in. This was a really hit to my confidence, so the rest of the weekend I said things like: "this is west, absolutely. We need to go this way... Maybe."
TO BE CONTINUED...
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| Sunday, March 4th, 2007
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11:47 pm - Updates, Updates, Updates!
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Boy, I'm a terrible diarist.
There's a lot to talk about here, and the battery on my laptop is dangerously close to dead.
The Roommate Search So I met with my second PhD concerning the room in my house, and this one is pretty cool. She likes strange movies I've never heard of, she listens to NPR, she has no need of cable and she's highly, highly educated. Her research had something to do with migartory river birds in California--field biology. This is pretty cool, though a nearly opposite branch of science to my own expertise.
What else... Oh, she can slaughter, clean and butcher animals! So in the event of the appocolypse, we could eat little cat steaks! Which reminds me about the dog. She has a 9 year-old dog named Queenie that would be moving in with her. When she asked me about it, I thought immediately of the cats bedviling this dog and said, "well, we could just see how that works out." But she's lived with other animals before, and would certainly have the patience to deal with some irritating felines (more than I have, anyway).
So that looks very promising, we've agreed to her moving in, but the whole thing is contingent on her getting a job in Rochester. Last week she had her second interview with Nature Conservancy, something about preserving the mot biodiverse region in the northeast--apparently, said region is just a few miles out of the city. She's supposed to hear back about it this week--my fingers are crossed.
You know, the odds were not in my favor that by posting an ad on Craigslist I would find anyone I'm compatible with, but we really had a good meeting. I met Jessie on Craigslist and that worked out great, so maybe it's not so rare.
Speaking of Jessie
Jessie is now well on her way to California. She started talking about it back around Thanksgiving, but she actually went out and made it a reality. She quit her job, she packed up her apartment, she divested herself of her worldly possessions (I ended up with two lamps, a potted plant, a toaster and some margharita mix), and she took off for the coast. The last I heard from her she was in Kentucky visiting a friend she knew in Australia.
Before she left we had a little party for her at my house. Bee went crazy with the camera and managed to take 116 pictures in under 3 hours--nice.
It's sad to see her go, she really was my best friend up here. I could always count on her to get a beer, to chat about nothing in particular, and to stare at the boob tube. I'm sure if we'd spent another spring together, I could've counted on her to ride bikes too. But, now I've got a reason to visit California and a place to stay, and she can count on seeing me later.
Home Repair!! I Don't Make Mistakes, I Have Learning Experiences I'm doing a little wiring on my house right now, and learning as I go. Here's what I want to do:
1. Upgrade the service from 100 amps to 200 amps.
a. Install 200 amp box next to old service entrance.
b. Install new meter box, wire and weatherhead outside
c. Marry a and b.
d. Run cable from 100 amp service to 100 amp breaker in the new box.
2. Run wire up to my attic for a 50 amp subpanel which will serve power to my upstairs bedrooms
(fish down through the walls) and power my future home theater system.
a. Run new cable from basement to second floor
b. Run new cable from second floor to attic
c. Install 50 amp box in attic
d. Hook up the cable in the attic
e. Hook up the cable in the basement to the new service entrance
I have a ways to go on that. Plus, I've managed to drill a hole from my upstairs bathroom through my downstairs hall. And, I also managed to sever a cable by drilling through it (though I replaced that whole circuit without incident.
NOTE Sitting on Airtran flight 142 to Tampa in the second to last row in the window seat. It's better than the last row (where I spent my last flight) in that it has a window. However, the only thing you can see is one of the engines. Ah well, it's only an hour and a half.
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| Monday, February 19th, 2007
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4:05 pm - Updates on the Renter Search
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Since my last entry, I've interviewed three more candidates, all of them different kinds of odd.
Chris Chris is a smart cookie. He's sort of a New York intellectual. Brought up in NYC, he's very well-educated, very well-read, fluent on a host of topics, a fan of public radio, good taste in movies, etc., etc... The list goes on and on. He moved to Rochester to join the Rochester Zen Center (yeah, I didn't know we had one of those either) TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS AGO!!! That's right, in the year of my birth. So Chris' first big drawback is that he's pushing 50. Also, because of the money he made as a technical writer, his inheritance and good money management, he doesn't have to work anymore. That means he'd be home all day, so would my house become his house since he spends more time in it? Also this begs the question: why is he looking to share housing at this point in his life?
Those little details aside, he seemed like a really cool guy. However, he called me later to say that because he's not 100% sure what he's going to in the near term, and would rather not make any drastic changes right now, and moving is certainly a drastic change. So, he took himself out of contention.
Joe (guy on the left, Thanks Google!) Joe is working on a postdoc in immunology. He got his PhD from University of Vermont, worked in industry for a while in San Diego and then in Ithaca, but was disappointed with these jobs (all about the money, not the research). So he's going back to academia and starting a job at U of R in the near future.
Joe talked about his last three jobs for an hour and a half straight. He didn't ask one question about me, the house, the chalk pentagrams surrounding the red-stained concrete in the basement. Nope, he just talked and talked about how his friend Rene from the Army got him involved in his last job, but all the grant money for his program was taken and used on a product that was supposed to sterilize tissue but wasn't working as well as they'd hoped... ... Zzzzzz .... Zzzzzz ....
So Joe is out.
Lynne Lynne came by just as Joe was leaving. She's a sweet southern girl from Texas who moved up to the Adirondacks when she was 19 after spending two years at a small Christian college down south. The next several years are a wild haze due to coming out of a sheltered past and rebelling against the norms of her former community. However, she has settled down and is now a medical professional of some sort (something to do with contact lenses) and has put her past behind her. Oh, and her last boyfriend cheated on her and in retribution she made off with his laptop (he probably deserved it). I found all of this out in our first phone conversation.
So we talked for a while, and got to know one another a little bit. She's sweet, she likes to cook good southern food, she looks like she'd be neat as a pin and she gets along fine with the cats. In fact as soon as she sat down, both cats jumped in her lap and went to sleep. However, there are a couple of little things that got me.
First, I have an application I make people fill out now. When asked about nearest living relative (emergency contact, that sort of thing) she didn't put anyone, and when I asked her how often she goes home she said she hadn't been back in 10 years... Like, since she moved here. Hmm...
Second, folks are certainly entailed to their wild years, especially after being repressed by a church background or some other community pressure: have fun. But folks that can make a wild swing like that once, can make it again. I got the impression that she was a ticking time bomb. Maybe I'd go to work one day and come home to find a smoldering pile of ashes, or maybe all the stuff would be gone, including my father's prized glass football trophy like in Risky Business.
So, as nice as she is, I just have this sinking suspicion that something else is at work there.
Next! Stacy is the newest person to respond to the ad, and I just got off the phone with her a few minutes ago. She has a PhD in Biology from the University of Missouri and is heavily involved in nature conservancy (which is pretty cool). Also, she programs the music on an Internet radio station, loves public radio, and is impressed with the cultural offerings of Rochester. Also, during grad school she renovated a house with a bunch of friends so she could be a great source of info for the kind of work I'm doing to the house.
To be honest, she sounds really cool, and I thought we clicked pretty well on the phone. My fingers are crossed that she doesn't want to grow 'shrooms in the basement, or have a condition where she stabs people in her sleep, or that she's a firestarter.
So I'll meet her on Thursday when she comes up for her second interview with the Nature Conservancy here in Rochester.
This has been a really interesting process so far. I don't know if any of you have ever just tried to find a roommate outside of your circle of friends, but I have to say: it ain't easy. You just never know who you're going to get, especially if your pool is Craigslist users...
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| Thursday, February 15th, 2007
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3:54 pm - Renting a Room
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Hey folks.
So I'm trying to rent a room in my house. After paying the mortgage and the heat on my own for two months running, I realize I need to get a housemate if I'm going to live here and maintain my level of (in)sobriety-- not to mention having money to fix the place up. To that end, I posted the following ad on Craigslist:
Hi! I'm 27, a software engineer and pretty new to the area (I moved up from Alabama at the end of 2005). Anyway, I bought this house in November and right now it's just me in there. I'd very much like to add a roommate to the mix.
So it's a 4 bedroom house: 1 - Mine 2 - Office 3 - Guest Bedroom 4 - VACANT!
Let's see, what else... It's 1.5 bathrooms, so that means sharing a bathroom. Laundry is in the basement and works just fine. The kitchen has a dishwasher and garbage disposal. Secure wireless Internet access is enabled that works everywhere from the basement to the attic and even in the yard.
Utilities: Water, trash, and high speed wireless Internet are included. I'll take care of 2/3 of the RG&E bill because I'm taking up so much space, and if you'd like to get cable or a telephone, that can be split 50/50.
Pictures: Here are some pictures from before I moved in.
Home Repair: The place is in really good shape as it is, but I'm doing little projects as they come up, and I'm learning about all kinds of things from carpentry, to electrical. So if you'd like a chance to learn that kind of stuff along with me, this is a good opportunity.
I'm really looking for a roommate, not a tenant here. I like movies a lot, so I've got a bunch of (I think) good DVDs.
To be honest I'd like for a girl to move in, 'cause I find that there really is a nice balance of energy in a mixed-gender house (promise I'm not a creep), but I'm open to anybody.
All of the shared spaces are already furnished, but there's basement storage space for extra stuff.
******ADDENDUM****** I have two cats... ******ADDENDUM******
I've gotten two responces so far, the first from Rachel, a D&D-type nerd who doesn't own a car and is in a less-than-perfect housing situation all the way out in Greece (a two hour bus commute from her work, apparently). She came over with a friend to look at the place a couple of days ago. Apparently, her best friend lives on the far end of my street, a little over a mile away, so that's good.
She's nice, employed, and goes through 5 NetFlix movies a week. One thing, she'd be in her room for at least four hours a night playing a text-based role-playing online game called GemStone. While that can be nice, leaving the house to me most of the time, it's certainly seems slightly strange--I think I'd prefer someone I could comfortably spend some more time with.
The second response is from a fellow named Chris who's going to come over and check it out tonight:
Hi,
I'm Chris (male), do technical writing, am looking into getting a masters in psychology, and am both responsible and easy going. The section of Linden you live on is nice. I live about two blocks from you at Oakland and Linden in a one bedroom apartment, have been here four years. The big advantage of my place is that I have an attic all to myself which is convenient because I have stored books and household items in boxes up there. (I have too many books!). I love cats (having grown up with them) and also have good DVD's. Zip me an e-mail if you're still looking for a room mate or call me at 256-xxxx. I guess the basic space question for me is if I can put what is in my living and bedroom area here into a bedroom area.
Thanks for listing your place !
Chris
So, student is good, having books is good, no problem with cats is good. So he'll come by tonight and look around and we'll just see. Maybe he'll stick around for spaghetti and Battlestar Galactica!
I guess that deserves an explanation, tonight is BSG night for Bee, John and myself. I got them hooked on the show a couple of months ago and we've been watching several episodes at a sitting to get them caught up to 'today.' In fact, after tonight we should be done with season 2 and ready for the current season! That's good, 'cause I've been denying myself new episodes while we catch up.
Okay, back to my job...
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| Saturday, February 3rd, 2007
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3:05 pm - "It's Saturday, in the mall, I think it's the fourth of July.."
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So yeah, I'm in the mall. I'm actually in the Apple store, waiting for a customer rep to talk to about fixing my powerbook (something's amiss with the optical drive).
When my folks were here last weekend, my mom made Shoots' wife, Sarah, promise to make me get a haircut and make me vacuum my house--she has a reputation for getting things done. Later on she said "you mom must think I run your life!"
To which John replied, "she's got no problem runnin' mine!"
ZING!!
Sarah's officially halfway off the hook, as I just go a haircut. I like it, it's simple, I won't have to do anything to it, though my 'stylist' informed me that I could "gel" it if I wanted to. I suggested I could also pop my collars...
OK, back to work...
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