Journal Entry: February 6, 2009

Yesterday after work I figured out how to install the cabinet doors on our new island. It’s the most bizarre and, at the same time, coolest latching mechanism for a cabinet door hinge I’ve ever seen. (And, yes, you would be right to assume that’s a fairly small set).

The kitchen looks finished now. There’s still some stuff we plan to do, but it no longer looks like a construction site. That’s easier on the psyche, because I don’t walk in the door and think of all the stuff that still needs to get done anymore. Maybe T– does, since the kitchen is a bigger part of her daily life, but for me it was just about getting the ugly hidden under a sheet of plywood and a couple coats of paint.

I made up some salsa (by which I mean poured a jar of Pace picante sauce into a blender and pressed the “Mix” button for about twenty seconds), and T– made quesadillas for dinner. D– came over, too. We watched Lost, and then D– went home to raid and T– and I watched 30 Rock, The Office, and My Name is Earl.

Other than that, it’s just things and stuff.

Journal Entry: February 5, 2009

Yesterday I had something of an epiphany concerning my posts to this blog, remembering that my original goal was to track my various projects through the idea, preparation, development, and distribution phases. That is to say, when I come up with a new idea for a story, I’d like to post it here, then chronicle the prewriting process, monitor my progress through writing it, and discuss both my reader reviews and the process of trying to get it published, as I go through that.

Same thing for programming projects, and any of the many other distractions I invest my time in.

Instead, I post daily about all the little things I’m doing, treating the ongoing projects more as assumed background information than actual highlights.

So I’m going to try to reverse that (or possibly just separate the two, making project reports separate from my journal entries). I didn’t end up having time yesterday, though, and today’s not looking great.

I’ll do the journal real fast, though. Last night after work D– brought dinner over so he could check out the work we’d done in the kitchen (which is nearly complete, after T– put in a full afternoon painting). We were also watching my niece Sophy, and she and AB played pretty well together.

I also received a new computer case and a new remote, which works with XP. Actually…it came with software that allowed my old remote to work with XP, which is awesome because (1) it had a lot more buttons than the new one does, and (2) my Harmony remote is already programmed for those buttons. So I spent about an hour getting it set up, and now it works like a charm.

Well, an hour for the remote. D– and I together spent almost two hours getting the computer transferred into the new case (a low-profile Home Theater PC shell). It was a lot of work, with not entirely satisfactory results in terms of the installation, but the finished product is a real beauty. It fits on a shelf in our entertainment center, and as I said I have the remote working for it again.

We’re using XBMC as our media center — a port of the old homebrew software for a modded XBox. One of the big advantages of that is that it has Python-based plugin and scripting support, and I actually have a bunch of experience not only with Python, but with Python for XBMC (actually, if you do a search for the phrase “Python for XBMC,” my website is the number one Google result).

So I’m really excited that they have a Windows port of the code, and we’re putting it to good use. I’m sure some of the plugins I work on will make it into my project reports.

That was pretty much my whole night, though. I kept logging into WoW, then timing out and getting kicked off the server because I was paying more attention to my new computer setup than to the game.

Other than that, it’s just things and stuff.

Journal Entry: February 4, 2009

Last night after work we stopped by Best Buy to pick up my new laptop, and then headed north of Edmond for dinner plans at our preacher’s house.

T– has been working with the preacher’s wife, Terry McElroy, at Oklahoma Christian Academy, the private school associated with Oklahoma Christian University. She’s gone in as a volunteer to teach a handful of art history classes to Terry’s class. Last time they were talking, Terry invited us over for dinner.

So we made the drive out there last night, and when we showed up Rob had some delicious Parmesan chicken ready for us. We ate and talked, then moved to the living room and talked, and then had some homemade ice cream and cookies while we talked. And then it was 9:00, and T– and I were tired of wrestling with AB (in a house full of breakables), so we headed home.

And I had offered to paint the new cabinets when we got home, expecting that to happen an hour earlier than it did, but I still felt obligated so I got out the paint and tape and rollers and got to work. Three hours and four coats later, it was done. The island looks great now, missing only the doors on the cabinets, and T– plans to get the woodwork around the new window painted during the day today.

It’s kind of amazing how fast it has all come together.

Anyway, I finished up around 12:30, left a voicemail for my boss telling him I’d be a little late showing up this morning, and then headed to bed. I was true to my word, getting in right at 10.

Still, it was a good night’s work.

Other than that, it’s just things and stuff.

Journal Entry: February 3, 2009

Yesterday I got home from work and wedged myself under the kitchen sink to try to fix our garbage disposal. We’d disconnected it as part of our wiring project over the weekend, and then discovered that the power wiring wasn’t labeled (it’s usually color-coded for the hot wire and the neutral wire, and on an electric motor hooking it up wrong causes the motor to spin backward, which almost always causes problems and can often cause the motor to burn up).

Umm…so, anyway, physics lesson aside, I had left the garbage disposal disconnected and after two days (and all the dishes of a horde of visiting family), that was already becoming a problem by the middle of the day on Monday, so, as I said, I crawled into the tiny space under the kitchen sink and got to work.

It wasn’t as difficult a task as I’d expected, because the disposal had a small removable panel on the bottom of it to give access to the wiring connections. Unfortunately, it took me some trial and error before I found that panel, but within about forty minutes I had it dismantled, traced the wiring to the wall, connected it up, and then closed everything up and got out of the cabinet. We’ve run the disposal several times since then, and it seems to be working fine.

Pretty much right after that I headed up to Home Depot to pick up some painting supplies for T– and a single piece of plywood to act as a temporary countertop on our new island until Matt can come back down and make something more professional-looking.

I got home from Home Depot a little after 7:00, and T– had dinner waiting for me. I ate real quick, then we installed the countertop (with much measuring and then nudging, and then measuring again, and then cursing, and then nudging some more), glued and nailed it down, put the doors back on the wall-mount cabinets, and called it quits for the night.

That was sometime between 8:30 and 9:00, and I logged into WoW to take care of some chores while we watched Chuck and Heroes.

Other than that, it’s just things and stuff.

Journal Entry: February 2, 2009

And here’s another week-in-one.

Last Monday I got to work right on time (which is something of a rarity on Mondays). On the drive in I heard a brief weather report on the radio, and I mostly zoned it out until I heard, “…and then tomorrow afternoon even more snow and ice…” and that made me wonder what exactly I’d missed.

A couple hours later, I found out, because I heard conversations over the cubicle wall concerning all the accidents that were occurring out on the roads. Hefner Parkway was closed down entirely — the highway I take for ten miles to and from work — and Tinker Air Force Base was closing down so we would be next. That sort of thing.

They did let us leave early, but I had to take back roads to get home (since Hefner Parkway was closed) and it took me over an hour. I made it home unscathed, but I passed nine accidents on the drive — three of which I watched happen.

I hate icy conditions.

Anyway, I made it home and curled up on the couch and then didn’t leave the house for two days. Tuesday was a snow day at work, so I got to stay home with AB and T–. T– suggested we make a blanket-tent for AB, and followed that up with, “but I’m no engineer,” so I got the hint that she wanted something big and fancy. I did the best I could (and it’s photo-documented on her blog, which you probably read a week ago).

In addition to that my next hard drives came in for my computer, but one of them was DoA. I spent most of the afternoon and evening figuring that out, then getting the other one up and running. I also majorly rearranged our entertainment center to make room for the computer up there.

Wednesday we were offered a three hour late start because the ice was hanging around. I seriously considered taking the day off anyway, but I ended up going in and had a pretty productive day. Driving wasn’t too bad by 10 Wednesday morning, and by the time I drove home there was nothing but slush on the roads. We had dinner with D– and K– and N– at El Chico, then K– and N– came over to play some Rock Band.

Thursday I had another late start (although that one came out of my vacation time), and another good day at work. Then I spent most of the evening trying to figure out how to get my USB remote control to work on XP, and finally ordered a new one that would.

Friday…we got started. It was my RDO, and I took the opportunity to sleep in. Then I did some work on the computer (financial stuff, mainly) before we went to lunch at P F Chang’s. T– had been craving it, and I’m always a fan.

After lunch AB went down for a nap and I helped T– rearrange some furniture in the living room. Then I spent a couple hours playing WoW while she boxed up all the dishes in the cabinets above the sink. Sometime after 6, her brother Matt and his whole family showed up (wife and three kids).

For as long as we’ve lived in this house, T– has wanted a window between the kitchen and the living room. It’s a big blank wall on the living room side, but a relatively narrow space between the cabinets in the kitchen. So we decided it would make the most sense to rip out the cabinets (or, actually, delicately detach them, so they could be preserved for later use), and just make a big window.

Unfortunately, that meant relocating a couple electrical outlets and a couple light switches, not to mention a 1 1/2-inch copper vent pipe that ran from our kitchen sink up through the roof….

So, yeah, it was no small task. As he did when he showed up to help us with the Tulsa house almost a year ago, Matt showed up, spent a few minutes standing back and looking at the project, then grabbed a hammer and started busting things.

We got a ton done Friday night. We took down the decorative trim above the sink (undamaged, so it could be replaced afterward), then took out the two cabinets (which took most of two hours), and wrapped up by cutting a long rectangle out of the drywall on the kitchen side between two studs. It was more ceremonial than anything else, just getting started. We all turned in around 11:00, but I didn’t get to sleep until 2:00 or so. I ended up playing WoW instead, and got my two main characters to 80, so yay.

Saturday morning I woke to the sound of a drywall saw, around 9:00. I took my time getting ready, then finally headed to the kitchen to find a box of donuts on the table (yay Krispy Kreme!), and the whole window cut out of the drywall on the kitchen side. We had four studs to remove, and now the electrical and plumbing issues were more clearly visible.

I helped Matt cut out the other side of the window, sawing through the drywall in the living room (and making an unholy mess in the process). Then we made a shopping list and headed to Lowe’s for two hours before grabbing lunch (which was my call, and a terrible mistake).

Anyway, while we were at lunch I called K– and asked him to come over and help us with the wiring, and he graciously agreed (which probably saved us two to three hours of trial and error, and quite possibly some major damage to my house’s wiring). Then we took out the copper pipe, capped it above the sink (and it’s everyone’s opinion that that won’t cause major plumbing problems in the future), and then got to work cutting through the studs. Matt had a circular saw to start them, but it barely got halfway through, and we have to do the other two inches through forty-year-old timber with a handsaw in a confined space. It was exhausting. Matt and I traded off, him doing all of the right-handed cutting, and me doing some of the left-handed work.

We finally got the last stud out just as K– showed up. He got to work trying to figure out just what was going on within that wall (electrically-speaking), and it turns out it was nuts. But whatever, that’s why we got K– there. I discovered I couldn’t find my caulking gun, so I had to make a run to B–‘s place to borrow theirs. When I got back, K– was ready to start running wiring.

I helped him run wire, fishing it through old holes bored through the studs, while Matt cut wood and got started framing in the window. He couldn’t do a lot with Kris and me working there, though, so he got a forced break for an hour or so.

Partway through all this T– and Amy ran up to Little Caesar’s and brought back pizza for dinner, so we took a break to eat. After that K– put in another hour or so, which was enough to get the new junction box in, as well as the new outlets and switches fully installed. He left it to me to connect the switches to the garbage disposal and dishwashed under the sink, and to the new pendants lights T– had gotten to go over the sink. I got it all done except for the garbage disposal, while Matt rushed to get back to work putting in the window.

Before he could finish that, though, we had some aesthetic work to do. Whoever prepped the house to sell before we bought it, decided to put on a thick layer of texturing over every inch of exposed drywall to hide any flaws or damage. It mostly worked, but when we pulled the cabinets down we revealed huge swathes of the wall that were untextured (and, in the process of removal, flawed and damaged). There was also more than a little damage done to the drywall around the window, that had to be patched before we could put the window’s trim up.

So we got to work patching and taping and scraping mud, and then had to wait hours for the mud to dry before we could do a second coat. Matt did all he could Saturday night, which essentially meant getting the entire window done except for the trim — that is to say, a header installed behind the drywall above the window, because it’s a load-bearing wall, two extra 2×6 supports in the wall below, the base plate (which is basically a shelf), two upright 2x4s to support the header (which had to be covered with 2″x36″ stips of drywall that T– and I had to carve out of the scrap at 11:00 at night), and then 1/4-inch thick doorjamb to hide the uprights and the header. All of it, of course, precision cut to fit, to prevent problems down the road.

We got done at midnight. Around 11:30 Matt started wondering aloud what there might be around to eat, and T– ended up making a chocolate cake, which we all stood around eating while we admired Matt’s handiwork as Saturday became Sunday. It was a little bit silly, but made perfect sense at the time.

That was it for the night. We couldn’t do any more until the drywall joint compound was dry, so we went to bed.

So Sunday morning I woke up to the sound of a sander. T– and Matt made an early run to Lowe’s to pick up some forgotten things, and then we all got to work on the walls, sanding the seams, applying a second coat of mud, and then T– and Amy tried out some spray-on wall texture we’d found at Lowe’s. It wasn’t a perfect match for whatever they’d done to our wall, but it was close enough (and, most importantly, it broke up the smooth lines of the drywall tape, which stood out like a sore thumb).

We also drew Matt off on two side projects (although I ended up taking care of one). The first was an old dining chair that AB had broken by toppling it over, nearly a year ago. When it had landed, the right-side upright supporting the back of the chair had split, and it’s been sitting unused in a corner ever since. We showed it to Matt and he filled the split with carpenter’s glue, put in a well-placed wood screw to hold it together, and then clamped it down to dry for the rest of the day.

Then there was an old in-wall space heater in the bathroom that has never worked (and was distgustingly worn out). I pulled it out of the wall and found it mounted in a big sheet-metal box. I capped off the wires, ripped the box out of the wall, then cut a sheet of drywall off our scrap to fill the hole. Then we just taped it, mudded it, and painted it over with the same paint they’d used on all the walls in our house.

Luckily, there was plenty of that. They used a beigey off-white on all the walls, and a flat white on all the woodwork in the house, and there was about half a gallon of white leftover and probably two gallons (in a five-gallon drum) of the off-white. During the morning, once the drywall mud was dried, we pulled out all our leftover paint and got to work painting where it was needed so Matt could finally put up the trim.

By eleven we knew of a couple things they had forgotten at their eight o’clock Lowe’s run, so I went to pick up what we still needed and got some soda and chips for lunch while I was out. Then I got back around noon to find K– and N– there, admiring our handiwork. I also took everyone’s order and placed a call for some Buffalo Wild Wings, which are popular with Matt and his family. So at noon I was back out on the road again, down to Northwest Expressway to pick up the wing, and then I had to drive the fifteen minutes back home with that delicious odor strong in the air. It’s amazing any of the food made it back to our house.

Anyway, that was lunch, and afterward Matt started putting up the window trim. He also tacked together the base of a new peninsula bar (another whole project), and T– got started painting it, so he could put the cabinets on it when he was done with the trim.

Finishing up the trim actually took until about 4:00, and he had a midnight shift to work at the end of his two-and-a-half-hour drive home, but he hates leaving a job unfinished, so he was scurrying to finish everything he could. While his family started packing up absolutely everything they could (including tons of tools he’d brought to use over the weekend), he mounted the cabinets on the base, secured them down (with considerable effort to keep them perfectly square), then put on a front plate and framed in an interior cubby in the wasted space between the cabinet backs (you’ll have to see it, probably, for that to make any sense). Then, with his frustration clear on his face, he finally had to give up on finishing the countertop. It was six by the time he left, and he took a few minutes to tell us what we would have to do to finish it off.

I was in a little bit of a hurry myself, because while we were frantically trying to put together some old cabinets, the rest of the nation was enthusiastically looking forward to the freaking Super Bowl. K– and N– were throwing a watch party at their house, and I didn’t want to miss it — but of course I had to do everything I could to help out while we had Matt around. T– had really wanted to go to the party, too, but as soon as Matt left she crashed.

Me, I got cleaned up in a hurry and sped up to Edmond. The game was phenomenal. B– and E– were there for a couple hours, and I got to grill B– about a programming project I’m doing for him and I got to grill E– about my novel, which she recently read. Then their daughter’s bedtime rolled around so they had to leave, and I finally watched some football.

The game ended (for us) around 10:00, and I went home to watch the special episode of The Office with T–. We also watched some SNL, and then finally gave up and went to bed.

While I was gone, T– had done some painting above the sink and on the new window shelf, but there’s still a lot of painting to do. That’s something T– and I know how to do well, so we didn’t waste any time on it while Matt was around. Now we have a week or two of patching and sanding and painting before it’s really finished, but it already looks awesome.

Watch T–‘s blog for pictures. She took a bunch, before and during and after, and I know she intends to do a blog post when she can find the time. She’s looking at a really busy week even without the painting, though, so I don’t know how soon it’ll happen.

Other than that, it’s just things and stuff.

Journal Entry: January 26, 2009

Bah, another long recap.

Last Tuesday morning while I was at work, T– called me to tell me our refrigerator wasn’t working. She’d opened the freezer and found condensation on the ice bucket. She picked up some dry ice during the day, and the refrigerator finally started going again, but we’d been meaning to get a new one for a while (although up until then it had been for convenience reasons, not need).

So Tuesday night we went out refrigerator shopping while D– watched AB. We found one we liked at Lowe’s, but they didn’t have it in stock. We shopped until 8-ish, then took some dinner home to D–, and watched some TV while I tried (unsuccessfully) to find some user reviews of the model we’d picked out.

Then Wednesday morning, while I was at work, T– called to tell me she’d gone to another Lowe’s in town, and they had one in stock, and they said they could deliver the following day. After work Wednesday, we met D– and K– and N–, as well as my little sister and her family, at Qdoba for some burritos. Good stuff. Then D– dropped me off at home, and I spent the rest of the evening converting my HTPC from Boxee to XBMC. (If that sentence doesn’t already make sense to you, you wouldn’t be interested in the explanation, either.)

Thursday morning while I was at work, T– called to tell me the delivery guys had brought the fridge, but they weren’t able to connect the water supply for the icemaker, because the connector on the end of our supply line was the wrong size. Bah. Then we intended to go to the gym after work, but we didn’t. Instead we ordered some pizza from Pizza Hut, which was fabulous. And I finished Grizzly Hills with my Shaman.

Friday morning while I was at work, T–called to tell me the plumber had come by to connect our fridge, and it was going to cost us $100. That’s a chunk of change for a quarter-inch connector on a copper pipe, but whatever. It’s done and that’s what matters.

We had D– and K– and N– (along with N–‘s parents) over for dinner Friday night, and T– made chili. It was fantastic, and we only ate about half of the batch she made up, so I’ve got plenty of leftovers. Yay! We watched some silly videos on YouTube, I tried to show off my new XBMC plugin to D– and K– (and failed, because XBMC doesn’t like Vista), and then K– and N– headed home.

D– hung around and we played WoW while T– watched TV, then right around the time I should have gone to bed, D– and I decided to watch Pineapple Express. Funny stuff. Better writing than Half Baked, but lacking the whimsy. Still, an excellent flick if you think stoners and F-bombs are hilarious.

Saturday morning I got up in time to take AB to the gym, while T– stayed home to get the house ready for a baby shower for N–. I worked out for about an hour, then picked up some lunch on the way home. After that I sat on the couch and played WoW while all of N–‘s friends came over to help T– set up for the party. Eventually there were just too many women in the house, though, and I finally bolted.

I stayed at D–‘s place for a couple hours, and when T– called me to come home I found all the guests gone and the house already completely cleaned up. That was unexpected. T–‘s parents were there, though (that was expected), and we went out to dinner at Ole, my current favorite Mexican place for the way they prepare their complimentary salsa and queso.

After dinner we introduced T–‘s parents to a couple of our favorite TV shows (Leverage and Big Bang Theory), and then I stayed up late playing WoW while the rest of them retired early. I finished Grizzly Hills with my Death Knight.

Sunday morning I had a goofy dream, and when I woke up I spent some time trying to figure out how to turn it into a story, and in the process came up with a story idea entirely unlike the dream (except that it’s also goofy). I’ve always wanted to do something in an Oscar Wilde style, and I think this could be just the project for that.

Anyway, after church we had leftover chili for lunch, then I stayed at home with AB during her nap while T– and her parents went shopping. They got back in time to watch another episode of Leverage before heading home to Wichita.

Then I spent the evening on the computer, and T– watched some TV and did some painting. It was a relaxing end to a pretty packed weekend.

Other than that, it’s just things and stuff.

Journal Entry: January 20, 2008

Back from a long weekend and, as always, hating to be at work.

Not that there’s anything to complain about with regard to my job. I just hate having to work. Call it a character flaw.

Friday was my Regular Day Off, so I stayed up late Thursday night playing WoW, slept in on Thursday, then went to IHOP for brunch with T–. After that we ran by Petsmart to pick up a new litter box for the cats, and spent some significant amount of time there just letting AB marvel at all the captive animals. She went wild.

Then in the evening we went to County Line Barbecue with D– for dinner, grabbed some flavored Rum on the way home, and played a little Rock Band before we turned on Tropic Thunder. T– didn’t exactly hate it, but it wasn’t enough to keep her up past 11:00, either. I made it to the end, and then some. I was up until 2-ish playing WoW.

Saturday morning T– went to a baby shower for N– at church (which is well-documented and beautifully-illustrated on N–‘s blog), and left me home alone. I did a little project for her (took down a pantry door and painted over the exposed wood from the hinges), and of course played some WoW. We had a pretty quiet afternoon, and then around 5:30 T– headed to her friend Rebecca’s to do some scrapbooking in the evening. I kept AB.

D– came over to help out, and brought the same pizza that had resulted in catastrophic emissions from AB the last time we’d tried the same setup, so I ran to McDonalds to get her a Happy Meal. I expected her to object, since we were eating the pizza right in front of her, but she just loves Happy Meals too much to have mustered any real resentment.

We tried to Cars and Lion King, and finally settled on hooking up the drums for Rock Band and AB pounded away until I put her to bed. After that, it was a fairly quiet night. Instead of jumping into WoW once AB was dealt with, I figured out how to recover the music from T–‘s iPod and spent the rest of the night trying to get it relabeled. Without even realizing it, I stayed up until 2:00 again working on that.

So Sunday morning I slept through church. T– and I took AB to Mazzio’s for lunch, and she got her pizza after all. She also counted up to six, with a little coaching. She can do her ABCs up to “G,” too, if she doesn’t know we’re listening. She keeps going after that, but it’s mostly gibberish.

Then Sunday night I intended to go to small groups, but I spent the afternoon feeling incredibly sick. I laid down to take a nap around 3:30, hoping I’d feel better after an hour, but T– woke me up to tell me she was leaving and talked me into staying in bed.

I got up about an hour later feeling better, and spent the rest of the evening on the computer, working on various projects.

Then yesterday I had off for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. We ran by N–‘s in the morning to check out her newly-appointed nursery and make a mess of her coffee table trinkets, then grabbed some barbecue from Steve’s Rib and took it home for lunch. Not a lot of variety in our meals this weekend, but a lot of deliciousness!

When AB went down for a nap, I got out some more paint and put a new coat on the fireplace mantel, which was showing some nasty signs of wear and tear. Luckily AB took a long nap, so all the paint was dry by the time she got up.

Then in the evening T– made some steaks for dinner, and we watched a couple new shows plus the first few episodes of season one of Psych. It was fun, and I got to sleep early enough that I was on time for work this morning, quite in spite of the holiday.

Other than that, it’s just things and stuff.

Journal Entry: January 15, 2009

I had a busy lunch break yesterday. Called Sprint, TiVo, Blockbuster, Pikepass, and AAA Fire & Casualty Insurance, mostly doing account maintenance. I also picked up some text messages for my cell phone, so I can send and receive without worrying how much it’s costing me.

After work we met D– and K– and N–, along with N–‘s mom and step-dad at Taco Cabana. We also had my niece Sophy, who T– was babysitting for the night, so it was quite a crowd.

Dinner was fun, then afterward K– and D– and I went home to play Rock Band while the rest went a-churching. I also showed off my new media center setup (it’s some slick software on a cheap computer), which is pretty sweet.

We played through about half the No Doubt songs that D– had gotten. I’m working on transitioning to Lefty mode, which is surprisingly challenging. The biggest problem I have is sight-reading. There’s all these standard patterns that I’ve memorized on normal mode, and they look just enough different reversed that I can’t automatically recognize them anymore. So I’m stuck thinking through every single beat again, like when I first started playing.

There’s a few things I was doing wrong, that I can see clearly now with this transition, though. So that’s good. I just need to get back up to speed.

Once T– got home from church K– went home (picked up by N–), and D– headed to his place to make a raid. T– and I watched an old episode of Numb3rs through Boxee’s internet browser (CBS now has a well-stocked web channel, along with Comedy Central and everybody on Hulu). Meanwhile I played some WoW, messed with remote settings, and subscribed to some shows on Hulu. It was fun.

And over too soon. I went to bed around 11:30, and had trouble getting up this morning. Luckily tomorrow’s RDO and Monday’s a Federal Holiday. I was this close to taking a day of vacation today, and making it a five-day weekend, but I gave in at the last minute. Four days should be good enough.

Other than that, it’s just things and stuff.

Journal Entry: January 14, 2009

Let’s see…what did I miss?

Friday night of last week we were invited to B– and E–‘s place for dinner and a movie, with commentary. T– and AB and I went, as well as D– and K– and N–. We had barbecue and chips and dip, and watched Star Wars Episode 3 with the Rifftrax audio from the guys who did MST3K. After that, T– took AB home, but I hung around to watch Top Gun get made fun of. It was awesome.

Saturday morning T– and I went to the gym, and then I spent the rest of the day playing WoW.

Sunday morning T– and I went to church, and then I spent the rest of the day playing WoW.

Oh! I also received my new Windows Media Center Extender Remote from NewEgg, which is an IR remote plus a receiver that plugs into the computer through USB. All I really wanted was the receiver. I spent much of the last five days in frustration, trying to figure out how to make the computer respond to keypresses, and finally figured it out last night. I got home from work, took a short nap, and then basically spent the rest of the night setting up the remote. It was irritating, but now it’s awesome.

Oddly enough, the software that was crucial to making it work is the same program I aggressively learned a couple months ago to let me run multiple instances of WoW at once (namely, AutoHotKey). If I hadn’t done that, I still wouldn’t have a clue how to get Windows to recognize and respond to the IR signals.

So that’s awesome.

I skipped Monday night, but and you’d be safe guessing it mostly consisted of me playing WoW, but I actually had a brief business meeting right after work (with D– and a coworker at The Dugout, discussing a programming project), and then spent an hour playing Rock Band with T– and AB. Then I spent the rest of the evening playing WoW.

Other than that, it’s just things and stuff.