Web Pages That Suck.
Good Daily Reading.
Backup Your DVD’s.
This is the software combination I use. To backup the DVD”s that I own. Um, yeah.
Here’s the kitchen as of this morning. The guy who measures the cabinets for the granite will be here in a half-hour, and it’ll take a week and a half for them to cut it and come back out to install. In the meantime, the plumber will be here tomorrow to put the gas line, disposall, and range in, as well as widen the drain pipes from 1.5″ to 2″.
Meanwhile, we picked up a faucet from the Lowe’s (the selection there, while large, was underwhelming) and the aforementioned disposal last night—nothing like the last minute, eh?
Finally, we have to return to IKEA this weekend to pick up 20+ drawer pulls (we’re going with the TAG model, which is sort of an elegant stainless swoop.)
That is all
I’m feeling like one for realizing that it’s 3PM, the kitchen installers have been working since 9, and haven’t had lunch. The lead installer threw me a hint at about 2 when, admittedly, I was on the phone and otherwise occupied, by asking where we ordered out for food around here. I didn’t catch it. I usually pride myself on being a nice guy-the guy who picks up a pizza for the workmen who stay late (we did this last week for our electricians), but this time I dropped the ball. I went down at 3 and offered, but the lead told me he had food coming.
I’m trying to do some freelance work, but it’s bugging me.
Oh, yeah, they’re doing a really nice job down there too.
This weekend, Jen and I went out and seriously looked at large-format printers. She’s been working on identities for a client, and our aging, 13-year-old Laserwriter 630 has started being balky after four years of faithful service.
Faithful readers may remember my research from the old weblog, and the same basic problems applied here as well: Give me reliable tabloid-sized color printing from OS X, out of the box, for under $500—without any PostScript or other driver hassles. We revisited the same two contenders, a Canon and an Epson, and found a new entry, built by HP.
The Canon apparently doesn’t like non-Canon brand paper, and the HP looked nice (network card, lots of slots on the front for memory cards), but I’m hesitant these days to buy anything HP after my last experiences with their hardware. We settled on the Epson 1280 and brought it home. Today, trying to distract ourselves from the noise downstairs, we hooked it up and got it printing. Boy, it’s nice. Clean, crisp prints with little or no hassle, directly from Illustrator, Quark, and Safari.
Here’s the first coat of poly on the floor. It’s now got three, but this is the first. Tomorrow at 7:30, the cabinets arrive, and they get installed. w00t!
The Cauzzis graciously offered to make us some dinner last night after I called up and invited us over to their house. (Miss H. took pity on us months ago when she heard we would be without a stove for a week, and offered to feed us. How could we turn that down?) We stopped to pick up some supplies and made our way to their house 45 minutes late, which throws the baby feeding/sleeping/eating schedule off—and consequently the adult feeding/sleeping/eating schedule, which is already more of a loose guideline without my fucking it up. There are many times when I am oblivious to outside stimuli—it usually involves power tools and a home project, and this was one of them. I’ll post a picture here of the main cause of my lateness, and apologize once again in public: I’m sorry.
Notice the floor in the pantry in the upper left-yesterday morning it still sported a layer of linoleum and luuan, until I got to the edge of the doorway and had to pull the threshold up. After a brief consult with my wife, I yanked the rest of it out and sanded the pine planks down in there as well. The rest of the room has been edged, and with the exception of some minor buffing to be done, is ready for a coat of polyurethane. All this was accomplished for a total of $144.52, which is $555.48 less than the price we were quoted a few months ago. Knowing this, I’m happy we bought the more expensive range, because it just got paid for.
Meanwhile, in the Cash Flying Out Of Our Pocket department, five men appeared in our driveway this morning at 8AM to trim back the trees that have been threatening to topple into expensive houses in our neighborhood. The silver maple that adjoins our property and hangs over the garage got topped off (more like a Marine buzz cut on the first day of boot camp) and the dead Dutch Elm that’s been drooping in the backyard is getting cut to the stump. There’s been some controversy over property lines and responsibility for this particular tree, and we finally got tired of waiting for the neighbors to do something about it before it fell into their house. Surveying seems to be a sort of hit-or-miss science given the age and shifting landscape—Jen and I measured out the back property line this summer, and as far as we can tell, the tree is five feet on their side of the line. Either way, I’m just glad we did something before Hurricane Keighleigh or Brandi or Sholene came and flattened their garage.
The downside to all this: I have to cut the initial check and get reimbursed by my neighbor. The upside: They’re stacking the Elm, in firewood-sized logs, in OUR yard. Burn that, bitches.
If you’re in the market for a floor sander, I highly recommend the model shown (Silver-Line). It uses velcro sanding pads, so you don’t have to deal with round drums and screws and other crap like that.
Tomorrow I go back for the edger and clean up all the places where cabinets won’t be.