Yesterday. I talked Kelly into seeing the new Star Trek movie with me so we ventured out to the movie theatre again for the first time in a long while. Happy to say we weren’t disappointed. There were a few things in the movie’s …. er, logic that left us scratching our heads and the fight scenes were confusingly hard to follow, overall it was a very entertaining flick.
Happy Independence Day
Happy Independence Day to all of my fellow Americans. Let us take time to reflect on where our country started and where we would like to go.
Gone forth for Fourth
We’re spending day three at Kelly’s parents’ home for the Fourth of July weekend. It’s been a fun one, with lots of bike riding (we brought them with us), bubble blowing, and just having fun. Our bike rack served us well in getting the family’s bikes to Virginia, with the kids’ bikes packed in the back of the van. Even Rocket was comfortable in the back of the van, with the seat down so he could actually see out the window. Never heard him actually wag his tail while in the van before.
The bubble blowing was the biggest hit, though. Kelly’s mom Linda found a recipe for “bubble juice” and made a big bucket of it. We’ve used sticks with straps on them to create enormous bubbles – some 3 feet wide by 20 feet long! It’s been so much fun that we’re going to get our own bubble kit when we get back home!
Today we’re heading to a friend’s stable so the kids can ride the horses. Then it’s off to the pool to cool off. The Virginia weather’s been markedly cooler than North Carolina’s but a swim will be just as welcome this afternoon!
Compuserve Classic closing
Not long ago I blogged about being a Compuserve user way back when. Well it turns out that Compuserve pulled the plug on the “classic” accounts at the end of last month.
Truly the end of an era.
(h/t Mark Hinkle)
Cheap Thoughts: Disposing of a nylon flag
I noticed this morning that our weather-beaten nylon American flag is starting to tear. The proper way to dispose of the American flag is to burn it. However, how does one burn a nylon American flag without the EPA showing up at one’s doorstep?
More tomatoes!
We enjoyed our first batch of cherry tomatoes with dinner Friday night, courtesy of our fast-forwarded tomato plants. Travis and I picked another five from our plants this morning and we enjoyed them for lunch!
Our plants have grown so massive that I’m kicking myself for not spreading them farther apart. It’s tough getting to all the goods!
No shortage of water … yet
I noticed Friday that we had the first week in a long while in which it didn’t rain. Our spring and early summer has seemingly had rain every 4-7 days but last week was dry. I was missing that smug feeling I expected to have with a large rain barrel (“Lake Turner”) of rainwater that I haven’t tapped since September and another 40 gallons in a separate container. We’ve also been adding the water we run through the pipes before our shower gets hot and also water we collect from the air conditioning condensation, so there’s been no shortage of water.
Now that we’re into the second half of summer we’ll see if this water becomes necessary. I’m going to hook the rain barrel up to a timer again so that my tomato plants get regular water, but I don’t expect my plants to put a big dent in the supply.
North Carolina: first in independence?
I was pondering Independence Day as the Fourth of July is this week. I was thinking how we celebrate our independence on the day the Declaration of Independence was signed, even though independence wasn’t actually won until the Treaty of Paris was signed in 1783.
Reading up on this, I hadn’t before appreciated the role that North Carolina played in independence. Continue reading
Taxing online retailers
After fighting to keep North Carolina from becoming a broadband backwater, this particularly galls me. The North Carolina General Assembly is pushing a finance bill that would tax online retailers. Rather than pay a tax in a state where it has no presence, Amazon simply pulled the plug on its affiliate program for North Carolina residents. So rather than doing something positive for the state, the attempt to tax companies like Amazon has actually hurt North Carolina small businesses that depend on those referrals by cutting off access to that income.
This outcome is not surprising. Tax a company with no presence or investment in the state and that company has little to keep it from pulling the plug on serving that state. That hurts our citizens more than it does the companies targeted, and that’s just plain dumb.
I sure would like to see a smarter approach by the legislature towards technology and the Internet. Those who regulate technology should at least make an attempt to understand it.
UNC-TV explains its tower situation
UNC TV has posted an online video explaining its tower situation and why its DTV transition didn’t go smoothly. It turns out when Congress delayed the original February cutover date WUNC lost its commitment with its tower crew. Therefore it will have to wait until the crew can get back around to switching antennas off its Chatham county tower.
Update 23 Aug 2009: UNC is now back at full power!