After spending the last hour removing spammers with twitter I have finally decided I am done with it. While I found it an intersting communication tool, most of my friends don’t use it and I find SMS direct to be the best way to communicate. I have deleted my account and will probably not return.
No more tweets for you…
June 29th, 2009First attempt to upgrade to SSD drive
June 1st, 2009So I decided to upgrade my internal hard drive to an SSD drive tonight. The only problem I ran into of the install was that it required a GID partition. It took a little bit to figure out where to change this. Once I fixed that, I was able to start the install.
2.5 hours later, I had the OS installed on the SSD drive and my applications copied over. And now my problems began!
When I created my account, it set my UID to a different number. Not a bad thing, I would just have to change the ownership on my old directory. So I changed permissions then set my home directory to the old internal drive.
I then logged out and back in. All of my settings appeared to work. I started poking around and discovered the following:
All of my Firefox bookmarks disappeared. Every single calendar I had was duplicated in iCal. Most of this was due to busysync, but some just ended up with two copies. Trying to delete the duplicate was a small disaster as it decided to send out email to everyone declining every appointment.
Molble Me was missing, not even a system prefernce option. Although the taskbar icon was there. When I tried to sync, I got all sorts of errors.
Time machine not working, and the icon disappeared from my dock. Once I found it, I started it up and found my vault completely empty. I then found several dock icons missing. when I went and searched for them, I found them with my old UID. I was able to change them to my current one and they worked again.
I then started up iTunes to find it completly empty. I then checked the permissions on the files in the Music directory, after realizing the icons in the finder are all set to default folders. I noticed that they had a strange setting for permissions, so I tried to change the permissions and every time I clicked the + key, the finder would crash.
That was the last straw for me, so I changed the ownership on my home directory back to the previous version and set my boot drive back to the internal and rebooted.
I will need to figure out a better method to do this in the future. Lessons learned and time wasted tonight.
18 years of fun and sun (part 1)
May 31st, 2009Day 1: San Diego to Ft Lauderdale
We flew to Ft Lauderdale. It was a very long flight and we had to sit separate from each other. Once we got off the plane, it took almost an hour long trip to get on the shuttle for the hotel. I spent most of the flight reading on the Kindle. I finished Jill Shure’s book “Night Jazz“. By the time we reached the hotel, it was too late to go and get some food so we had to order Italian food at 11:00pm because everything else was closed. The food was just ok, sort of sub-par Filippi’s.
Day 2: Ft Lauderdale sailing away
We got up for breakfast. The hotel advertised they had free continental breakfast, instead, they charged $10 for it. We waited for the shuttle to take us to the to the cruise terminal.
We arrived at the port and dropped our luggage, and went into the terminal. The check in line was really quick, and we waited about 5 minutes to be called so that we could board and have our picture taken.

All Aboard
The room was not ready, so we went to the Lido deck for lunch. I met a gentleman who was a photographer, Stu Lang. His web site is: www.stulang.com We chatted about lenses and things to do for sightseeing in Aruba that would be good photographic spots.
After lunch we wandered around the ship to check out where everything was. We visited just about every deck and discovered where the spa and fitness center was.
Our cabin was ready and we headed over to check it out. We met our cabin steward and then headed out for our mandatory lifeboat drill. Boy was it was hot! One person appeared to have a panic attack and had to take off her life jacket and get some help. I am not sure what was wrong, as I only witnessed from a distance. After the drill our luggage arrived and we started unpacking.
As we unpacked the ship started sailing away from port. I noticed that the port had at least seven (7) ships in port (That I could see). Two carnival, One Holland, Two Royal Caribbean, One Princess and one other I didn’t recognize the logo. As we departed, two other ships headed out ahead of us.
Our captain for this trip s Captain Peter Harris. He is a native of Leicester, England. He spent most of his early childhood in East Africa where his father was a harbor master. He started as a cadet with P&O S.N. company. He worked on both cargo and passenger vessels before obtaining his first watch keeping certificate. He obtain a Bachelor of Science degree as well as a Master’s Certificate and then obtained a job with the Princess lines. He worked his way up through the ranks and ended up being in charge of a Gurkha brigade during the liberation of the Falkland Islands. His ship was commissioned as a troop transport. He returned home for a more quite life as a ferry boat captain where he sailed between Dover and France. He returned to cruising with Holland America where he became one of their first British Officers. He has circumnavigated the world and traveled from the Arctic to the Antarctic circles. He current has a home in a village on top of the famed White Cliffs of Dover.
I was lucky enough to catch the harbor master departing the ship. This is always a fun sight to see. I recommend everyone on a cruise watch how they get off the ships. I headed back inside the cabin to finish unpacking. A friend of Angie’s had sent us a going away present of champagne and chocolate covered strawberries.
After we unpacked, we headed back ot to check out the Caribbean Deck BBQ they were offering as the sail away feast. The food was good, but the whole steamed shrimp was a little freaky for Angie 😉 I had to peel them for her.
The drink of the day was the Mohito. This was the first time I had tried one. For some reason I thought it would have crushed sugar, but I was thinking of a mint julep. We walked around the shopping areas and I found some cuff links to were with my shirt. We also got to taste some unique liqueurs. We will end up buying some, because they are quite inexpensive and you know what that means… Tasting at my house!
We sat in the lounge bar to wait on dinner. At 8pm we wandered over to the dinning room. We decided we wanted the late seating for dinner. This allows you to get some rest if you take a long shore excursion before dinner. It seemed a little unorganized as nobody was there to take us to our table. We had to wander for a few minutes before we could find it. We joined four other cruise mates at our table. Al, Fern, John, and Kathleen.
Our dinner took a while, so we had to rush to the after dinner show. We found a seat at the back of the theater. They did some audience participation games. One of them was a golfing game that include Stu, the guy we met at lunch earlier in the day. Small world/ship 🙂
After the show, both Angie and I were dead tired so we headed back to bed and quickly fell asleep. I was so tired I fell asleep while importing the photos for the day.
Day 3: Half Moon Cay
We woke up to the lovely sight of Half Moon Cay. This is a private owned island by Holland America, in the Bahamas. The original inhabitants of the Caribbean Islands were the Arawak Indians, and they lived the peaceful existence of farmers and crop growers until the Carib Indians came along in the early 15th century. The Caribs hailed from South America, and just prior to the age of discovery, they swept up through the Caribbean chain island by island in their dugout canoes. They had no problem with navigation, because their next destination was always clearly on the horizon or at least just over it. The Caribs were cannibals! They provided two new words to the white man’s language: Caribbean and buccaneer. The first one is obvious, but the second one needs some explaining. The Caribs sliced and smoker their meat over open fires with grills called boucans. When the freebooters and privateers saw this, they coped the idea and so became known as Buccaneers. No sooner were the Caribs settled in their new home when they had the discoverers to contend with, and soon after that the settlers. Half Moon Cay is one of about 700 island that make up the archipelago of the Bahamas. It is located roughly between Eleuthera Island and Cat Island. It is a private island, owned by Holland America Line, designed for use by cruise ship passengers. Holland America purchased the island in 1997, and has develoed only 45 acres of the 2,400-acre island, with the goal of maintaining as much habitat as possible for wildlife.
We showered and dressed, then headed to breakfast. It was not as crowded as I expected. Most of the people had already left the ship. After breakfast, we went back to the cabin to get our stuff for the day, then headed down to the tenders. There was a long line, but once they started loading it was quick. On the trip over we had to wait because there was a medical emergency that required another boat to go ahead of us to address the emergency. Once they docked we were on our way again.
We sailed into the channel and docked. We disembarked and wandered around the village. We wandered over to where they were serving lunch and got a cheeseburger and some pork ribs. The ribs were very tender and delicious. The cheeseburger was not bad either.
We went back to the information booth to start our shore excursion. When we arrived, they had canceled the excursion because the currents were too strong. 🙁 There is something about Kayaking that just doesn’t agree with us. We have a couple other stops we can try again, but I am not holding out any hope. I even brought my waterproof housing for my camera so we cold go underwater with it.
We had a seat at the local patio bar and had the drink special of the day, custom margarita’s (made with sprite, very strange). They definitely pour a strong drink though. After relaxing for an hour or so, we headed back to the ship. We went back to the cabin and promptly took a nap. We got up an hour or so later and wandered out for afternoon tea. The area that they were serving tea was all full, and we didn’t want to wait thirty minutes or so for a table to free up, so we headed up to the Lido deck for a late lunch. They had Asian and Italian food. The sushi was good, but nothing like Yoshi Sushi at home.
After lunch we split up and I went to play bingo and Angie went to a culinary presentation on Hors D’oeuvres. (kind of a switch, huh?). Angie joined up with me half way through the game. No winner today. After the game we headed back to the cabin to plan the next few shore excursions and dress for dinner.
We headed out for the pre-dinner show. The line up was Mikey Finn and Cathy Reilly a world famous Banjo player and former Miss Delaware. She is also the first female elected into the banjo hall of fame. I didn’t even know such a thing existed. After dinner, we strolled back to the room. We wanted to get to bed early because we have a full day at sea tomorrow.
When we got back to our room, they had made a towel animal and put it on our bed.
Note: I was hoping to get the entire newsletter done all at once, but I am having a hard time finishing it as a whole. I decided to take it a few days at a time. This way you will be able to at least get a few days at a time. I will try to finish a few days at a time. I am also very unhappy with how this has come out with the image layout and formating. I am going to be looking for a new vacaction bloging software.
some day the bear gets you.
May 31st, 2009OK, so today I wasted 3 hours with Time Warner. Channel 4 Padres hi-def went out on my cable a few weeks ago, but only on my TV. The initial call went like this:
Me: I am calling to report a problem with channel 704 on my TV
TWC: Is this on your Tivo?
Me: No, it’s my TV
TWC: Do you have a cable card?
Me: Yes (Thinking, how the hell else would I get 704 on the TV?)
TWC: Oh, we can’t help with that, we have to send someone to your house.
Me: <sigh> Ok, I need an evening appointment
TWC: sorry, the latest we have is 4pm – 6pm
Me: <sigh> Ok, I will waste my weekend and have you come then.
A week later (this morning), they show up at 7:30am. The guys comes in and I show him the problem. He says he will replace the cable card, and goes out to the truck. 15 minutes later he comes back with a cable box and tell me he is going to test. I look at him funny as he starts to plug it in to power and ask him how he intends to hook it up? I explain that:
1) I have no free ports in the TV or my reciever and I will not be uncabling anything
2) How is this testing my cable card, as the box does not have a removable one to put this one in and since all my other cable cards are working it’s not the cable.
He finally gets it and then admits to me he doesn’t have any spare cards in the truck. I am dumbfounded and ask him how he can be dispatched for a cable card problem and not show up with spares? He makes some lame excuse that TWC doesn’t like these cards and they don’t carry them. I am just shaking my head at this. I politely told him he is full of crap since Tivo’s are not going away anytime soon so you will not be going away.
Anyway, he disappears for another 30 minutes. He returns from meeting another service tech. He has two more cable cards. One is a single stream and the other is a multi-stream card. We them in the TV and they both generate a 161-1 error. He calls it in and nobody in tech support has a clue and passes him off from one group to the other.
HUGE SIGH!
I do some quick internet searches and tell him this is a known problem when a card is bad. I notice that neither card was in a sealed static plastic pouch so they are probably bad. I finally gave up and sent him on his way and told him to make sure the notes on the account so when I call them back they will know what we have already tried.
I wait about 30 minutes to call them back and get the standard on hold music. It tell me the wait is 6 minutes. 30 minutes later I get a service tech. I explain my problem and what has already happened and she tells me that a few weeks back they changed the frequency that channel 704 is on and that I should do a re-scan of channels.
I do this and Eureka, 704 is back. I had a long chat with her about why the very first tech didn’t know this as well as put in a complaint about the guy who showed up this morning being totally unprepared. (Oh BTW, he had to use my phone to call in because the cell phone he had was crap and kept dropping calls).
The second thing of the day was I planned to take my jet ski into the shop. I go out to hook up the trailer to my truck and discover that one of the wheels is flat. Not a big suprise because it has been sitting for 3 years. It appears the sidewall has cracked and split. No biggie, I will just take the wheel off, go get a new tire and then return. You would think it would be that simple, right? Well no!
I get out my jack from the truck and get the wheel ready to be removed. I am able to remove four of the 5 lugnuts. But for some reason the 5th one will not come off. It appears to turn, but is not unscrewing. It does not appear that the bolt is turning and the nut does not appear stripped. I spend a good hour trying to figure this one out when I just give up!
If anyone has any idea, I am all ears 😉
Today’s day out
April 12th, 2009The week ended with a win for the Padres. They are leading their division and have won five of the first seven games. This might not be that bad of a year after all.
After the game, I swung by the gaming store today. I was looking to see 3.5 books (they have none) and miniatures. I found a few, but their selection is pathetic. I remember when I was playing in the 80’s stores had shelves and shelves of miniatures. Also the quality appears to be much cheaper than I remember.
I picked up three miniatures:
Maria Roseblade
Amiryth Elmlighter
Crimson Fist, Male Monk
Lastly, I swung by REI to pick up some last minute things for the cruise.It’s less than a week away.