Archive for August, 2010


Cary, Cary Chris and I spent the weekend in Hershey, Pennsylvania visiting Hershey Park and Chocolate World.   I didn’t take any pictures in Hershey Park, but did get a few in Chocolate World.

The newest addition to Chocolate World is the “Make Your Own Chocolate Bar” exhibit.  Participants can choose the ingredients and toppings and watch them being added to their own chocolate bar, and can also design a custom label that wraps around a collector’s tin holding the chocolate bar.  Click the link below for the gallery.

Make Your Own Chocolate Bar

A few additional photos from  our trolley tour of Hershey can be found here.

There are an almost unlimited number of options for someone looking for a laptop bag.    Finding any carrying case for your laptop, netbook or tablet is easy; it’s finding the best bag for you that’s the challenge. One of the disadvantages of using a laptop on the go is that they tend to get hot, which means using a laptop in your lap for extended periods can be uncomfortable.  The Trabasack aims to solve that problem by merging the functionality of a laptop bag with the convenience of a lap tray, all while being easy to use for people with disabilities.   Thanks to Duncan at Trabasack for sending me this bag for review.

Click the link below for the full review:

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Finally, the sole surviving tomato plant is bearing fruit.

When Apple first announced the iPad, my first reaction was one I know many people had: “It’s just a big iPod Touch!”.   From a technical standpoint, that description is accurate.   The larger size and screen and addition of the 3G antenna are about the only real differences between the iPad and Apple’s latest iPod.   But I dismissed the iPad without actually trying it out, and that was a mistake.   I have found that for me, the increase in size relates to an exponential increase in usefulness.

My first priority when owning a piece of technology is to protect it from damage. These things can be expensive, and I really want a device to last a long as possible.   I tend to be very protective of stuff I buy for the most part, and so I put cases on everything.  My phone has a case; my iPod has a case.   I really like finding cheap and effective ways of protecting stuff that don’t interfere with the aesthetics or usability.    The iPad has an ultra-slim, sleek profile that really doesn’t want to be covered up.  So my priority was finding a way to protect the device without sacrificing portability or function.

There are hundreds of iPad cases for sale right now.  Some are merely protective, while others attempt to improve the ease of use of the iPad.    After days of research, I finally settled on the Cyber Acoustics IC-1000BK Leather iPad case/cover.

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One of the advantages of having my computer in our living room is that I can connect it to our TV.  This setup works great for streaming movies, but I didn’t have a wireless keyboard and mouse that would allow me to control the computer from couch.

Enter the Lenovo Mini Wireless Keyboard.

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Cary and I built our raised garden this evening, erected on the same spot where last year’s garden attempt had failed miserably.   The garden walls were a cinch to set up, taking only about 2 minutes to build.   Clearing away the area and adding the dirt was the hardest part.  Grass had already overgrown the area, which I spent about 30 minutes or so clearing away.    It is at the point that I must give props to a very handy garden tool: the stirrup hoe.   It’s a tool of singular purpose with a bawdy name (but not as bawdy as it’s other common name, the hula hoe).  It made short work of the grass and weeds.   Pulling weeds is back-breaking work, but the stirrup hoe reduces the stress of the labor to back-bending.   It doesn’t sound like much of an improvement, but stripping a 4′ x 6′ area of weeds and grass in half an hour works for me.  Had we not just finished moving our old refrigerator into the garage earlier this evening, I might have cleared the spot in less time, but a body can only do so much.

So far, here’s what we have:

Will it yield actual food?  Time will tell.

Cary and I worked today on sprucing up the front yard.  Last night, we bought 50 landscaping bricks, 5 bags of mulch, a wheelbarrow/dumping cart thing, and a 4′ x 6′ raised garden kit.  Amazingly, we were able to cram all of this into the Honda Fit (it wasn’t the space that concerned me, but the weight.  The back end of the Fit was ridin’ pretty low on the drive home).

A few months ago, we had re-mulched the tree in our side yard.  The base of the tree was ringed with two levels of landscaping bricks.   At the same time, we mulched the area under the bushes in front of the house.  This area has started to be overtaken by grass and weeds, while the mulched area under tree in the side yard still looks good.   The landscaping bricks really make a good weed barrier.   So this morning, our first task was to pull weeds and line the mulched areas with them.  First, we tackled the bushes in front of the house:

We leveled the bricks pretty well, but they should settle a little more over time.

Next, we ringed the magnolia tree in the front yard with the same bricks:

Truth be told, this tree is looking quite pitiful:

We had originally bought enough bricks for just one layer, but a quick trip to Lowes later, and we had a second layer of bricks in place.  While I cut the grass in the back yard, Cary cut away a dying Azalea bush in front of the front walk.  There were originally three bushes here; we cut one of them away a year or so ago, and one of the remaining two bushes was all but dead.   Once the dead branches were cut away, I managed to get the trunk of the bush out of the ground with a sledgehammer.  Now, only one lonely bush remains:

The front yard is slowly coming under control.  We’ll continue with the back yard over the next week.

We finally managed to drain the pond in the back yard, pull out the liner and start filling it in with dirt.  Happy times.

Before (a view from the side of the pond, taken shortly after we moved in):

After (a view from the front of the pond):

There’s still a lot of work to do, but I’m just glad to have the thing gone.