Monthly Archive for September, 2008

Handyman, 1984

I am getting ready to start rewiring the house and I was going through my how-to books and came across a 1984 edition of Handyman. My dad obviously passed it down; looking at the address label.

I would have been three at the time when this came out. I think that was also about the same time my Dad was rewiring our house at the time. Half of my childhood memories are of my Dad working on the house on weekends. I know he put a lot of time into that house.

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Got to love the penny-loafers. I think Dad had some too.

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It may be 24 years old, but it’s still relevant.

Update for spfldbloggers.com

Sometimes you just want to get to the meat. No breading, no fluff, no salad. Just the meat please.

Replace asparagus for the meat, if you’re a vegetarian.

So I created an option to hide the summary of a post.

Just below the spfldbloggers.com logo, look for a tab that says “Min.” Click it and wa-la, no more blog summaries. And… if you want them back, just click it again.

It’s based on a cookie stored in your browser. I believe they’re chocolate chip. I’ve tried it out in Firefox, Opera, IE 7 and Google Chrome. So far, so good. Let me know if anyone has any problems.

I am working on some additional improvements, so stay tuned.

Something to chew on.

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This is another one from the archives.

Hit the trails.

bike

I finally got back on the bike. I’ve been M.I.A. from my two wheels since I completed my 100. I rode out to the trails off of the Interurban trail from my house. Bugs were thick, but a little protein never killed anyone, right?

Trails are pretty clean and someone has been building some new obstacles.

I had pack of deer scare the crap out of me when I spooked them, also saw a barn owl.

It was a fun ride and my legs are still really strong. I went through the trails with no problem breaking only a small sweat. I passed some guys as I was getting on the trail and they were pushing their bikes up the hill. They were so out of breath that they couldn’t say hi. Sad thing is is that was me back in May.

This weekend is going to super busy, but hope to get in some kind of ride.

Strike.

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This is one from the archives.

Mrs. Shoo and I like to play a game, “If you had more than enough money (note: not all the money in the world, because that would be ridiculous) right now, where would you be?” 9 times out of 10 she says Colorado.

Maybe some day.

Anyone - Where would you be, if you had more than enough money?

Only 2 hours.

Cause it only took me two hours to figure out, and the internetz failed me, I am going to post this whomever might be Googling “Access Denied Compilation Error Vista Premium .net 2.0 Visual Studio.”

I was trying to get Visual Studio 2008 to work on my Vista Home Premium laptop. I was just trying to build a basic C# website and each time I got a compilation error. Note: I was trying to publish directly to IIS.

Compilation Error

Description: An error occurred during the compilation of a resource required to service this request. Please review the following specific error details and modify your source code appropriately.

Compiler Error Message: CS0016: Could not write to output file ‘c:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0.50727\Temporary ASP.NET Files\apm\32a49851\74a0ffaa\App_Web_default.aspx.cdcab7d2.v10qhuqk.dll’ — ‘Access is denied. ‘

A lot of the solutions say to look at this link: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/825791/en-us. All that does is reset your local temp directory so that the Network Service account has full permissions.

What you should do is give the Network Service account permissions to c:\windows\temp\. That solved my problem.

Happy compiling!

Shrooms.

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It’s amazing how much detail a mushroom has. It’s a fungus. Click the photo to see the larger version.

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There were about a half dozen of these in the backyard. Dogs didn’t touch them at all which is really surprising. The grass around some of the mushrooms were stained black from the spores. Kinda cool.

A blur.

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It feels like last week it was the middle of summer and I was up in Chicago with Ed, Josh, and Phil. It’s all a blur now.

Will & Jessie Part 2

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More photos from Will & Jessie’s wedding. Click the blog title to see more.

Continue reading ‘Will & Jessie Part 2′

Congrats Will & Jessie

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2008 has been a full year for weddings. Wonder what 2009 will bring?

The Backup.

I got a kick in the pants last week when the remnants of Hurricane Ike came through town and put a river of water in our basement. Even though it was a small stream of water to the drain and no damage was done except for some wet area carpets, that reminded me that I needed to do something about backing up our digital data.

For a short time I was uploading my pictures, music, and documents to my domain host for gotshoo.com as a backup. My account allowed for 350GB+ of storage and I wasn’t even close with web stuff I had out there. So I setup an automatic process with Rsync, a linux utility to sync directories, to upload new stuff every night. And that worked great till I got an email from my domain host stating that I was violating their terms of service, but for $20 extra a month I could keep uploading my stuff.

I graciously deleted my stuff and forgot all about any type of backups.

Backups are always an issue after you’ve lost the data, never before you lose it.

Mrs. Shoo has a laptop that she uses at home and occasionally takes to school. Sometimes she’ll copy her work over to a flash drive and copy it to her network drive at school. At the end of year last year, the computer guys told all the teachers to make sure to save any local data on their workstations to their network drive as their workstations were going to be wiped out with a new install. My wife being the diligent data up-keeper did that and made a backup to her flash drive.

Well, at the beginning of this year of course her data was gone from her network drive. She was lucky that she had backed it up herself.

And it’s always in the back of my head that I should make a backup because what if a hard drive crashes?

A good rule of thumb is that you can’t go wrong with 3 different types of backups. Example: A. To another computer, B. To a flash drive or any other media, C. To an online repository. Each has their drawbacks but the more redundancy the less chance of data loss.

A company I was indirectly working with had a storage device with a million images fail. They lost 2/3 of their data. Their backups were incomplete and they were not able to recover their lost images.

So I’ve been looking at different options in backing up the Shoo household data. My requirements are that it has to be cheap to affordable, automatic, and so easy that I don’t have to worry about Mrs. Shoo calling me if there are problems.

The first line of defense that we’re going with is the Windows Home Server. This Microsoft product has actually been getting rave reviews and a lot of positive feedback. It’s a system built on the very stable Windows Server 2003 platform, does redundant storage over multiple hard drives without RAID, and does automatic backups. Also has a web interface for downloading files from shared folders.

What’s great about it is that HP offers an appliance with hot swap hard drives or you can buy the OEM and build your own server. The software by itself is only $140, down from a $170, and you can order a 120 day trial from the Home Server website. I had an old AMD XP 1800 box laying around, so now I am putting it to good use.

To do automatic backups, you install a connector piece on the workstation that needs to be backup. It talks to the Home Server, defaults to backing the machine up between 12-6am and that’s about it. And that’s about as simple as a process I need. So as long as we leave our computers on at night, they’ll get backed up.

But I’d like to get our data physically outside of our house, so the next line of defense that I am working on getting setup is with Delta Copy, similar to Rsync but runs as a Windows service, to copy data to my parents’ house. Who knows, our house could be gone tomorrow.

What my Dad and I will need to do is open up the correct ports in our firewalls, create some login, and schedule the task. The hardest part will be setting up a time when we are both free to get it working.

So the Shoo’s will soon be backed up, of course there are a number of different ways that I could have done this, but setting up a Home Server and syncing up to my parents’ house seemed most viable for us.

For anyone looking to just do a simple backup for one computer, Vista has a pretty solid backup program that works great backing up to a flash or external hard drive.

Green parking.



parking, originally uploaded by gotshoo.

Corner of 6th and Adams.

I’m a PC.

I’m a PC.

Much better than the Seinfeld-Gates commercials.

Blogging Buddy.

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If bones were like phones to dogs, Buddy would have an iPhone iBone.

New blogs on the block.

Hey, it looks like some hooked up the dial-up internet for the Illinois Times (note: wearing shorts, but posting from the basement).

Brand spankin’ new Red Cobblers was just featured in the Cap City section of the Illinois Times.

Which is another great excuse to highlight the number of blogs that have been added to spfldbloggers.com in the last few weeks.

Blogs added for the month of September:

Moments of Clarity by Gretchen - Gretchen was just featured in the SJ-R along with fellow Spfldblogger 411 Mommy.

Second Street

Message in a Bloggle

On Par