Interior house painting

Heather's mom arrived last week for a two week visit.  They've both been busy painting the interior.  Much of it was plain white, and the one room that wasn't, the family room off the kitchen, had wall paper that was starting to lift/peel a bit.

The pic below shows the living room with the wall paper removed and then painted chocolate brown.  Heather and her mom did the 4 paintings over the couch to match.  My earlier post "Interior House Pics" showed the family room.

The next pic shows the living room, just as you come in the front door to the right.  These walls were all white before.  Now the far wall is a medium sage green, and the other wall is khaki.

A Simple Mission

If you've ever tried to fly one of those cheap mini remote helicopters, you'll really enjoy this video. The first minute is the most clever.  Overall it's about a minute too long, but still cute.

His helicopter has two counter-rotating main blades.  Mine has only one with a tail rotor, and it's even more tricky to handle.

Getting help for the economy from retirees

From Retired and Useful on Scott Adam's blog:

When we think of how to patch up the ailing economy, we reflexively think about youth. We think about education, and innovation, and getting healthcare for young working people. I think we're leaving some low hanging fruit on the trees with the older generation.

I think about this when I hear about young families struggling with childcare expenses at the same time a bazillion retirees watch Jeopardy and wish they had something better to do. Is there really no way to solve those two problems at the same time?

Certainly retired people could be helping with childcare, tutoring, crime watch, and other functions that directly benefit society, at least a few hours per week. Can you think of any other ways to harness senior power to juice the economy?

LCD or plasma for TVs?

Lately I've been asked a few times about which is "better", plasma or LCD?  In 2004 I posted "The display technology guide", but that's now kind of out of date.

Bryan pointed me to this more recent May 2007 article, Home Theater: Plasma Vs. LCD.  Since I had last looked, plasmas have dealt with some of their negative aspects, like the risk for burn-in.

So what about the question on which is better?  First, I'd ask this simple question:

Will you be watching in a typical family room?

Yes:  You should get an LCD, because most family rooms are brightly lit, and the one major strength of LCD is that they are bright.

No: You should get a plasma, because they are better than LCD in almost every other category other than brightness.

Don't be tempted by plasma's superiority in every category except brightness, because most family rooms are very bright which means LCD's win most of the time.

Fixing WordPress "smart quotes"

If you run your own WordPress blog, you may be annoyed (like me) by the smart quotes feature that automatically turns pairs of regular quotes into so-called "smart" open and close quotes.  I find this annoying, because if you cut-n-paste out of WordPress, these smart quotes can cause problems depending on where you are pasting to.

I found the wpuntexturize plugin which fixes this feature.  Now my blog post use just regular quotes.

Gas leak!

On Monday there were four trucks from the Gas company in front of my house!  Now that I have your attention…

There was nothing really that dangerous, but we did have a minor gas leak at the house.  Shortly after moving in on Sept 6, Heather complained that she thought she could smell gas in one corner of the basement.  I could smell gas a little, but not too strong, so decided to wait to see if the smell would go away.  Last week on Wed, we had some friends over on the deck, and one commented that over on the far side he could smell gas.  So I figured it was time to call the gas company (Xcel Energy).

I called last week on Thurs, and a guy shows up in an hour.  Right away he finds a leak in the gas meter, right outside the basement window.  He fixed the leak in about an hour by replacing some parts on the meter.  I asked if we had been in any danger, and he said not really.  The only danger was that the leak could have abruptly gotten worse which might have been dangerous.  He said they put so much of the odor into the gas, even the teensiest leak smells pretty strong.

So what about the four trucks?  Well, the next day on Fri, we could still smell gas, but I figured it might be some kind of lingering odor.  But after still smelling gas in that corner all weekend (although not as strong), I called again on Monday.  A different guy shows up, and using a meter he gets a gas reading right at the ground where the pipe feeds into the meter.  He says he has to call in for a specialized crew to pinpoint things.  Once again, nothing dangerous, other than the risk that it might get worse.

About an hour later, the trucks show up one after another within about 5 minutes of each other.  The first to show up is pulling a trailer with a small backhoe.  Yikes!  So now I've got 4 or 5 gas guys on my front porch talking about what to do.  They say they need to start digging at the gas meter, and tell me the bush (that was planted way too close) needs to come out.  Fortunately, it wasn't a particularly attractive bush, so I say go ahead.

In the pictures below, you can see them driving the backhoe across the lawn on plywood sheets, so no damage to the lawn.  They pulled the bush out (which still took 4 or 5 pulls from the backhoe), then dug things out by hand.  Fortunately the leak was right there at the bend, so they didn't have to dig up any sidewalk or lawn.  The leak was at a seam in the underground pipe.  It was all original pipe from the late '70s, so it had just worn out.  They had it all repaired and things filled back in a couple of hours.  Other than the missing bush, you can't really tell that anything major happened.  I was really pleased that they didn't trash anything.

The good news about all of this was that the lease were all on the gas companies "side" of things, so there was no charge to us for them to fix things.

I also got to meet another of our neighbors, Sandy, who coincidentally works as an engineer for Xcel Energy (the gas company), and even new a couple of the guys on the crew.

Interior house pics

I've finally gotten around to taking a few pics of the inside of our new house.  Heather has done a great job setting everything up.

First you might want to check out an aerial view (you can rotate this view).

The pic below looks into our family room from the kitchen.  Right now the TV is in front of (hiding) the brass fireplace.  We'll eventually mount it above the mantle, and paint the brass with black paint.

Family Room

The next pic looks from the family room back into the kitchen (my back is to the fireplace).

Towards kitchen

Next, if you go out the sliding glass door from the kitchen (on the left in the pic above) onto the deck, this is the view just after sunset (looking southwest):

Finally, a pic of my office.  I still haven't fully unpacked.  The entrance to the office just behind this pic, on the left.  There's also a full wall of bookcases behind me.  This is on the main floor, and the window looks out towards the street.

My Office

I'll take more pics later, so stay tuned.