travis' brain dump

The SkyFort Installation

by on Mar.27, 2011, under General

  

Ok, so this was on heck of a project, lol. Ordered up the kit from Sam’s Club (thanks to my parents for letting me use their Sam’s card) for about $1400 shipped. We recieved the boxes, all 5 of them (4 plus the slide) about 4 days after ordering, I was pretty amazed. Here’s the outline review of the process. I wish I’d had more time in single days to dedicate to the project, but overall it didn’t take too terribly long. The first couple of days were hard to work on the project as I only had a couple hours after work.

Day 1 (2-3 hours work):
Unpack the boxes, review all the parts, etc.

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Amanda, supervising the unpacking of the parts.

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The piles growing in the back yard staging area.

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That’s a whole lot of parts!

Day 2 (1-2 hours work):
Let the assembly begin!

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A good chunk of Day 2 was spent not only getting the framework together but leveling the dang thing. Nothing says awesome like having to dig into the ground in odd places to shave off some land to get the main playhouse level.

Day 3 (3-4 hours work):
Finally, some visual progress!

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While I didn’t get quite as far as I had wanted to this day, at least the floor, the picnic table and all the primary supports were in place. The framework was also anchored into the ground at this point.

Day 4 (4-5 hours work):
This was a Saturday. While I’d hoped to get more work in today, it was cold in the morning then a busted cordless drill set me back an hour or so. Had to go get another one from Sears. Bummer.

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I was hoping for a little more done today, at least get the slide and the steps up, but alas, it wasn’t in the cards. Kiddos will have to wait til Day 5 and me skipping a few steps to get the slide in so they have something to play on while I finish this thing. lol

Day 5 (4-5 hours work):
Much more progress today!

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Coming along nicely, next stop, the roof!

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Finally a roof! Assembly of this wasn’t too hard at all. Just more time consuming due to the smaller parts being assembled all over.

A lot got done today visually, but it really wasn’t much more work than Day 4. Still, it was finally coming together and looking like something!

Day 6 (5-6 hours work):
Finally almost there! Major progress visually, despite the fact it only took a few hours to get the monkey bars and the swings operational.

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Day 7 (1 hour work): FINISHED!

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All in all it wasn’t a bad project. My only complaints were some of the upper portions (where the use of smaller parts is more common) didn’t quite fit correctly. Not much modification was needed but you needed to know how to spot some of upcoming problems of placing a piece in a location that you might have to move it from later. Accuracy of the instructions to the parts, I’d give it a 7 out of 10. Nothing structurally problematic though, just mostly cosmetic. The only major issue I had with this was the lack of enough 3″ lag screws and 3/4″ truss bolts/barrell nuts and lock nuts. Those things were the bane of my existance. Nothing a trip to Home Depot didn’t fix, however.

I most certainly wouldn’t say this thing is sturdy enough for adults to play on, but the kiddos… you could load up about 5-6 on there without a single hint of strain. I for one am glad to be done with it. The last day just bugged me getting the final little pieces finished and all checked out. Can’t complain too much though as it sure beat buying something similar from Backyard Adventures or Rainbow for twice as much. Just an FYI, this set is made by a company called Backyard Liesure Holdings which just so happens to be the same company that creates the following playsets:

- Create-N-Adventure™
- Adventure Playsets™
- Backyard Adventures™
- Leisure Time Products™
- Backyard Builders™
- Politron™

Pretty interesting. So all in all I got the same product (for the most part) as Backyard Adventures for about half the cost, although I had to put in the ~24-25 hours of work. Still worth it in the end to see the kids having a blast playing on it. If you’re looking for an affordable, large scale playset. I can’t say I’d warn you away. Just make sure you take your time, read the instructions and assemble the parts properly. :)

Now comes the fun part of destroying the old swingset and playhouse… muhaha!

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Are you one Tough Mudder?

by on Mar.13, 2011, under Fitness, General

  

Tough Mudder… for those that know what it is, you know what I’m talkin’ about… For those that don’t? Well, it’s 8-10 miles of obstacles of rock, water, tubes, walls, wood, fire, electricity and yep, you guessed it, mud.

What am I thinking? Honestly, I’m not quite sure, LOL.

I got drafted by Randy to join in this, sure to be, adventure at the end of June…  Am I ready for it? No way what so ever! What does that mean? Yep, you guessed it… intense training. Am I nervous? You bet!

Training starts tomorrow and boy I can’t wait… *face palm* Surely I’d have picked a better day to start than the day after DST begins eh? *rolls eyes* It’s about 18:30 right now and I’m feeling as thought it’s going to be hard to go to sleep tonight… only to turn around have to get up at the equivalent of 2:45 (3:45 DST) to start working out. For the record… I don’t give a rats rear end about the stupid reasons behind DST. It’s dumb, and it kills people. (I’m actually not being dramatic, read: Is Daylight Saving Time bad for your health?) Regardless, I will be up at the crack of dawn sweating to the P90X blues, working during the day and then taking on another interval training in the afternoons before dinner and slipping into a coma due to exhaustion, er going to bed. What better way to lose weight right? I’m actually doing pretty good.

I finally got rid of my “work related weight gain” that I acquired last summer due to insane hours and lack of working out for 3 months and the subsequent 2 months of recovery I needed after. *NOT* doing that again. Only 15lbs from goal weight overall! Of course, after I finish up with this I have no idea what I will weigh… In other news, along the way I’ll be hitting up a couple 10k’s if all goes well. The Bolder Boulder is a must but if I’m training for the Tough Mudder, you can bet I’m going to decimate my time from last year. Last year I came in at 1:14:50. I’m looking for sub one hour this year. While I don’t know for sure if I’ll land in the upper 40′s, I will be breaking the hour barrier and at least be in the mid to upper 50′s. (personal goal setting at it’s finest!)

Here’s to hoping I don’t hit the snooze button tomorrow!!!

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G2+CM7 Review

by on Feb.28, 2011, under Tech Stuff

  

So far? I’m impressed.

I remember the old days of flashing a windows mobile ROM was a “plug-n-pray” operation… Those things were (and I’m sure still are) down right scary. It was all to common to find oneself “bricking” a phone if just one little thing was out of place. Then along came Android.

My G2 is my second Android phone. My first was a Motorola Cliq that met an unfortunate fate after being ejected into the snow during a snowboarding trip in Park City, Utah. Somehow those beautiful photo’s of  mountaintop vistas posted on facebook just didn’t make it feel any better to drop $500 on a new phone. Alas, it was time to move on. I learned some really important things with my Cliq. It was my first exposure to modified ROMS on the Android platform and really made me respect what was actually being done on the back end to create solid custom ROMS that reliably installed and ran well. The guys that ‘cook’ these things up really do some great work. Flashing my Cliq was the best thing I ever did with that phone and it was actually quite easy. Still, nothing compared to how easy it was to flash my G2.

There are plenty of help pages out there on the web to get you going as far as rooting your device and installing custom images so there isn’t any need for me to go into that here. One of the best tutorials resides on the site I obtained my current ROM from. Just drop out to Google and lookg for CyanogenMod. GREAT work being done over there as far as I am concerned. Don’t forget that before even moving foward, you have to root your phone. Otherwise you might as well not even look up information on custom ROMS for any other reason than to look at the pretty pictures and wish you had one. You can’t load a custom image without a rooted device, period.

I for one rooted my phone quite literally the day I got home with it. It’s a must on these devices as the carriers tend to pack so much bloatware and unneeded software on these phones it’s a wonder they even boot. A root and cleanup is almost mandatory if you want your phone to perform well. I don’t blame the platform one bit though as it’s somehow a necessary evil in this market to pack things on for people to have  ‘readily available’ applications and get support from vendors. *rolls eyes* With a rooted G2, all that’s left is to load up ROM Manager (available on the market) which installs the Clockwork Recovery image (once you’ve installed RM, applied the img and rebooted) and of course download CM7 from the site. Once you place the images on your SD card, you can run ROM Manager to get things going. Backup your phone (always important) and let the rom drop into place by installing it from the menu. Keep in mind you should backup important things like contacts (if you’re not syncing them), emails (if you’re not syncing them) and SMS messages if you’re so inclined to retain these things because custom ROMS demand wiped devices on a fresh load. It’s not like backing anything up is difficult these days with all the apps for it out there right? suck it up and go for it!

Anyway, so I loaded up CM7. Right away I noticed the system booted faster. While the G2 was already much faster than my Cliq, the new boot time was much faster than the carrier ROM. Out of the box, CM7 looks and acts smooth. Screen transitions, default notifications, the default launcher were all things that just jumped right out at me. The phone just seemed to run more cleanly. Battery life seems to be only slightly better than stock and the memory usage is a little higher, despite not being able to tell from a performance view. I haven’t run into any problems loading apps from the market and integration of my preferred home screen launcher, Launcher Pro, works well. I am a big fan of some of the upgrades that Gingerbread brings to the table. Things just tend to run a little smoother overall and thus far haven’t experienced any issues at all with wifi calling, tethering, texting, emailing (gmail and exchange), surfing the web, facebooking, blogging, streaming or any other things which I typically use on the phone.

Keep in mind if you want the Google apps you’ll need to load it up in the beginning of your process in the same fashion that you loaded the ROM from ROM Manager. It’s also downloadable from the same site as CM7. I’d recommend it unless you’re into loading your apps manually from the apk files and don’t want any integration with Google. It’s not like it eats up that much right? :)

Again, I can’t find any real fault with this ROM and can only sing its praises. It runs much better than the default G2 load from T-Mob and isn’t that hard to install. I hope those guys continue to keep up the good work. I can’t wait to see what’s ahead from this project.

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Andy’s voicemail…

by on Feb.12, 2011, under Humor, Politics

  

LOL, so Andy calls me while he’s out driving and leaves me this voicemail:

“So over at like I-70 and Wadsworth, there’s a  guy, you know, protesting war blah blah blah whatever… His sign actually says, and I quote ‘ Half the government is run by Klingons, the other half byFerengi.’ I’m not even joking… Bye.”

I couldn’t help but laugh. I love it it when Andy calls me with these random happenings he sees while out and about. He always finds the funny ones. The sad thing is, this guy’s sign kinda makes sense if you let you geek show a little and think about the implications of what he says. Great stuff Andy… keep it comin!

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