It’s a braaand new car!

Anne is tired of taking the train to the city and I’m tired of walking to to work in the rain, so we’ve been talking about getting another car. We’ve been a one-car household for 4 1/2 years now. We really like our CR-V, but it’s sometimes inconvenient to rely on only one car, especially when one of us goes away for the weekend for whatever reason. It will only get worse when Anne put lots of miles on the CR-V driving to San Francisco.

So we started researching cars.
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What does this dream mean?

I had a dream the other night that my cat opened a lunch stand in our backyard. He had people lined up behind a picnic table and was taking orders for sandwiches.

We had to help him a bit because he was having trouble understanding the orders in english, keeping people in line and making change.

This woman waited a long time in line for some butter for her bread.

That’s about all I remember and that’s probably a good thing, because any more would probably qualify me for the looney bin.

To Heat or Not to Heat

It’s that time again when it gets ‘cold’ in the Bay Area, that being in the 50’s. Gasp! Mostly it means the return of this phenomenon called “rain”, which I think I vaguely remember from when we lived in Seattle. It’s actually quite neat to see fields of dead brown weeds suddenly spring to life again.

Unfortunately it’s also the time when my arch-enemy oxalis returns to take over every livable spot of dirt. Last year I let it get way way too long and it thickly covered huge areas of previously uninhabited dirt around our house, even killing other plants which it shielded from the sun. It wasn’t until it started invading the lawn that I declared war and spent many hours weeding it out and liberally using Roundup on the bastards. A little doesn’t work. You’ve got to soak ’em. I don’t know what those things sustain themselves on, but they sure grow quick.

So as it gets colder here, we are faced with the decision of when to turn the heat on. It’s partially a test of how much New Englander we have left in us. This is summer in New England! Then I start feeling cheap. I wonder how much money we’ll save if we leave the heat off for a couple more days. After, it becomes a contest – how long can we last? Right now we’ve resorted to dressing in layers indoors and wearing heavy sweatshirts. Thank God for the hot tub. We can get really warm, then just hop into bed.

It also seems wasteful to heat the house when we’re only here and conscious for a few hours of the day. The cat doesn’t seem to mind the cold; he’s showing off his new winter coat. I’ve set up the timer in the past so it only heats when we’re here, but it takes so long to heat, it’s hardly worth it.

Our heating ‘system’ is pretty horrible anyway. They really don’t bother to insulate houses in California. We might as well just leave the windows open and enjoy the fresh air. Our house is often the opposite of what it is outside. If it’s hot out, it’s cold inside. Later when it cools down, it’s hot inside. Now, it’s probably warmer outside than it is inside. One of the smartest investments we made this year was a pet door for the cat, so he can go out to the garage to eat and do his business without us needing to leave the door open. All the heat would just go right out the door and escape up to the attic.

Our heat comes from gas, burned from a single vent in the wall between our kitchen and hallway. It takes a couple hours to actually heat up the house and even then the bedroom at the other end is still freezing.

Again, we’ll debate about buying a space heater for the bedroom everytime we see them at Home Depot, but we’ll decline to buy it, mostly likely because Anne thinks we’ll burn the house down.

I imagine we’ll break down in a few days and see if the pilot light is still on. How many days until spring?

Look Mom, no Viruses!

I’ve always been pretty lax about virus prevention. Having mostly Macs, it just really hasn’t been much of an issue. I’ve got this laptop running Windows XP which I’ve had for over a year and a half and I’ve never run any kind of virus scan on it. It is behind my router, but who knows what it’s been in contact with.

If you read the news (or watch any tv show or movie with computers in it), you’d think that viruses are rampant on every computer. They can magically jump through the air and infect your computer. You might as well give up, they’re already emailing your credit card numbers to every Estonian hacker.

Generally I’m pretty careful about the attachments I open and I apply security updates frequently. My mail filters even automatically delete some of the worst email-based worms. But then my XP machine started doing some weird things and didn’t want to shut down, so I decided to check on viruses.

I downloaded Avast, a free virus scanner. I installed it, set it to run a thorough search of my whole drive including archive files and went to bed.

This morning it reported that it found nothing. No viruses, worms, nothing. I was actually surprised. Surely I would have picked up at least one benign virus somewhere. As a matter of fact I can’t think of a time when I’ve ever had a computer virus, except maybe way back in college on some used floppy. Maybe I’m just missing out on all the promiscuous computer use fun.

Hiding from trick-or-treaters

To my neighbors:

I apologize if you knocked on our door on Friday, hoping for candy and no one answered the door. We hadn’t bought any candy and weren’t really in the mood to deal with halloween. So after Anne picked me up at work, we circled the neighborhood a few times to see how much activity there was. There were a lot of kids roaming around, so we decided to go out to eat.

The problem was I wasn’t feeling that great, and we couldn’t decide where to eat, so we just ended up driving around for a while until we just decided to go back to work and hide out there for a while. I never do get very many opportunities to take advantage of the air hockey or pool tables anyway. I’m happy to say both matches were a trouncing! (In my favor, of course.) After hanging around a bit more, we thought it would be safe to return home for dinner at 9.

The coast was clear when we got home. The cat sure was freaked out though – he yelled at us, seemly saying “There were all these people coming to the door and ringing the doorbell and I was really scared!”

Now that we’ve successfully whimped out of Halloween, my favorite part of is now here – the post-holiday discount candy. We picked up some candy corn for ourselves this weekend. Yum.

I broke down.

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So I’m just browsing around, minding my own business when I see that Macintouch says that Amazon has dropped the price of Panther to $99. “Wow, that’s a a pretty good price.” I say to myself. “Nah, I’ll wait until it gets cheaper. Lemme check what Apple charges for Jaguar so I can see how mcuh money I’ll be saving if I wait.” Click. Click. store.apple.com.

“What’s this?”


“Hmm, lemme try this out. My wife works at a university, I should be able to use this.” Click. Click. Yeah, I work for an education institution, really – I promise. Click. Click.

Mac OS X version 10.3 “Panther” – $69

Holy crap. It’s normally $129. At this point I lost all control and ordered the damn thing. Free shipping too. Total of $74.69. Apple already had my credit card on file from the iTunes Music Store which made it painless.

I lasted exactly one week. That’s not too bad. Now I have to go through the painful process of figuring out the places where I changed my OS X configuration and installed stuff so I can redo it in Panther. I hope PostFix is really easier to configure than Sendmail. Gah.