Birds resting on the arches over the water fountain in front of Toronto's city hall.

What I’ve done with my month

10.28.07

Well, we’ve been in our new house for a bit over a month.  How it goes by so quickly, I don’t know.  But it did.  Today, we overcame the last bottleneck on the way to prepping the house to live in.  The bottlenecks have been:

1.  Organizing things by floor - Took awhile to make decisions about where things would go.  Our old home had 8 rooms and the new one has 7.  That changes things a bit.  Basically, we lost our workout room and plan to use the family room in the basement as the workout room.  Meanwhile, we’ve turned one of the bedrooms into our family room/office where that took two rooms in the old house.

2.  Infrastructure - Where to store things.  Since much of the house wasn’t ready for art/knick knacks, we had to find place to put those things.  The best idea, of course, is to leave them in boxes.  To that end, I built a series of shelves in the garage and a big closet upstairs.  And added a few to the master suite’s closet.  Once that was done, we could make some things disappear and just use the extra bedroom for staging on the top floor.

3.  Organize the kitchen - Is there much more important than getting the foodstuffs arranged?

4.  Painting the living room/dining room.  Now that that is done, we can start pulling art and knick-knacks out of the closets.  This will allow us to free up that space for the final bits still in the spare room.

Here’s a breakdown of what has been done since we moved in, by room:

Garage - Built some 2′ x 4′ x 8′ shelves to go against the side walls.  In the closet, I build some 1′ x 2′ x 3′ shelves to store boxes and an overhead shelf to add an extra location under the stairs for better use of the vertical space.  Still some org to do, but it is about 90% finished at this point.

Workout room - Still in progress, but I had to cut some wall out to run cable up to the kitchen.  That room will be one of the next to be primed, but the last to be painted.  This week I’ll be building some bookshelves and a TV shelf for the room.

Dining room/living room - Painted.  That was enough right there.  Later today (after the football game is over) we’ll be unwrapping the furniture and putting everything back in place.  Can’t wait (except for the game).

Kitchen - Other than running the cable and starting to prime, I only had two other projects.  There wasn’t a good place for a trash can of any size.  So, I took a single-width cabinet space which already had slide-out shelves and converted it.  I bought as large a trash can as I could and removed all but one shelf.  I tried to make a lever which would slide the shelf out, but it seemed more complex than I could work out.  So I removed the hinges and simple made it so the door slides straight out and the trash can is exposed.  So far, working great.  Though I am considering buying a telescoping slide so we can get the can in and out a bit easier.  But that will go on the back-burner for awhile.

The additional project was reversing the sliding glass doors.  As they were, you had to go to the extreme corner to open it.  I though it would be better if you could just open the closer section.  It took some work, but now it is how we want.  Not too difficult, but it took a few hours to get it all worked out and swap the rollers to the bottom of each.  That also included swapping the security sensors, which took a bit of time.

Master suite - Added two shelves in the closet and a few towel hooks in the bathroom.  Still need to find a better power solution for the bath and maybe a few minor changes.  And I need to put some vents into the master closet.  It doesn’t smell, but the air isn’t very fresh.  I think a few vents will help it to circulate some air and keep the air a bit better.

Family room/office - Put up the cherry shelves Dad and I made.  Still have a few to add to the mix this week and that will finish designing the office space.  I also changed the closet in that room so we could organize our computer peripherals.  Wireless printing allows me to put our little printer in the closet.  You don’t even hear it print now.  Just open the door and there it is.

Laundry room - Put in the washer/dryer set we brought from the States.  Had to cap the gas line.  Sounds easy, but when you can’t get any real help at Home Depot, it takes hours.  Really, the Home Depot near here is the worst place I’ve shopped for home supplies.  I’m hoping my trip yesterday was my last for awhile.  All that is left is the option of putting up a shelf for easy access to detergent and such.

Spare bedroom - nothing.  Thank goodness.  

Extras

Put up the compression shelves in the stairwell on the 2nd floor.  Didn’t take up much space and gave that landing some extra character.  

Moved the central vac accessories to the downstairs stairwell.  Not a final solution, but one which works better for us at this time.

Replaced the doorbell.

Okay, that’s enough of that.  The game is under 5 minutes and I want to chill before we restart the work.

 

Almost home

09.16.07

Sitting here watching the game tonight and reading a comic book.  Doesn’t happen often, maybe once every ten years for me at this point in life.  Especially since I don’t buy comics but happened to find some at the library on Friday.  I also realize this is my next to last day of relaxation.  And it feels good.

Not that relaxation is a bad thing, but I’ve been going a bit nuts living in the Entertainment District.  Living in the small apartment makes me jealous of free-range chickens….and aware that I could never survive prison cells.  Not a chance.

But, sometime on Tuesday afternoon we should get the keys to our new home.  I can start moving our apartment belongings up and into the new house and getting things ready for our in-storage belongings on Wednesday and Thursday.  From then, I get to shine for a change.  Unpacking, including the physical lifting and moving of everything and organizing the house.

Yeah, I’m kind of nuts.  But boy will it be fun.

Best Life Magazine: Health & Fitness: Eat these eight foods every day to cover all your nutritional bases

09.14.07

Best Life Magazine: Health & Fitness: Eat these eight foods every day to cover all your nutritional bases

How often do you see a list of 8 foods you should eat every day and each of them is tasty.  Well, except for the walnuts.  Not big on walnuts since we used to collect and crack them when I was a kid.  I think a quarter of my weight must be made from walnuts I cracked and ate in my youth.

Still, everything else looks good.  I’m eating yogurt and oats every day.  Though I’m only getting the oats because every loaf of bread on Toronto seems to be full-grain and better than the white bread we had in the States.

Symantec is Weade-worthy No More

09.02.07

Finally ditched the last version of Symantec Internet Security.  I had the 2004 version, which I used on my old computer.  When it died, I scavenged parts to build my PVR/server and installed the software on it.  Don’t know exactly what their license is, maybe that was not allowed.  

I do know it is ridiculous when you own a valid software license and can’t uninstall it on one computer and reinstall on another.  At least on a personal level.  I can see it, to a degree, for corporations or large organizations, but that is because you often purchase or download one copy and install it on the network.  Here, in my home, I had a valid copy and will have to go purchase another over-packaged box.

Why is this the case?  Well, a few weeks ago my server’s power supply failed.  It knocked out the system drive and I had to rebuild the system from scratch.  I installed the OS on one of the older drives, with software, before I realized that drive was also acting up.  So, I installed it on a pristine drive.  I had registered Internet Security on each of the drives (the first thing I do after installing my OS is to install security).  But, on the final drive, it came back with an error. I had registered the software too many times.

I looked on the Symantec site and finally got routed to start a chat conversation with an operator.  I told them my problem and the response was, ‘Sorry, the server deactivated your serial number.’  That was it.  I asked again and got the same answer.  I finally gave up and uninstalled the software.  As I did so, I realized that I have refused to buy an upgraded version since the copies were were using at work on university computers were causing lots of problems by taking way too many resources.  And how the university was moving from it as well.

In the end, my server isn’t without security.  I don’t really do that much with it and it doesn’t have any important information on the drives.  I don’t order using my credit card on it.  If they hack in and want to see the shows I record, Tivo-style, they’re welcome to it.  So Windows Firewall and installed PC Tools Antivirus, free at Download.com and worth checking out in place of an expensive, resource hungry software with way too many strings attached.

Wall paper and stickers

08.07.07

Ferm Living US

I posted an earlier site for painting designs on your walls, but this seems a bit easier.  Especially if you aren’t as artistic as you would like.

Amazon.com: Duo Shower Rod & Towel Rack - Brushed Nickel by Polder: Kitchen & Dining

08.07.07

Amazon.com: Duo Shower Rod & Towel Rack - Brushed Nickel by Polder: Kitchen & Dining

A second shower rod would certainly make it easier to keep towels and the shower curtain cleaner and dry.  I’m not so certain I’d drop $50 until I tested it with an inexpensive expanding rod just in front of the rod holding the curtain.

Metolius How-To Guides

08.06.07

Metolius How-To Guides

Metolius has some excellent guides for adding climbing walls and such to a home. Will I ever build such a thing? In my dreams, mabye. But it will be really nice if I can pull it off in our new home.

For additional info, indoorclimbing.com has a great site: Build a climbing wall and build a campus board (which has some nice info on how protective well various substances such as bark and pea gravel protects you).

Iola Design: Bamboo Cabinets and Shelves TreeHugger

08.06.07

Iola Design: Bamboo Cabinets and Shelves TreeHugger

Cleaning up the hard drive and ran across the picture on this page.  Nice looking room, especially with the shelving running around the furniture providing a place to organize and store items but freeing up the central space.

I’m so-so on the shelves.  Not certain I could make something like that easily.  I guess once you had the shell you could drill and screw directly into the back of the shelf boards to secure it in place.  I still think there would be a problem with warping without using a metal support on the back.

e-zine with modern & contemporary design from young designers and creatives - [DESIGNSPOTTER.COM]

08.01.07

Tech at home: Maps

07.31.07

A long time ago, I had the idea of writing about technologies which I use on a regular basis.  To include my honest opinion about the technology and how I use it, whether to the full capability or not.  Time ran away, as moving can do, and I’m just now getting back to the thought.

I then had to think about what to start with.  Technology can, after all, include an extremely wide range of items from our world.  Language could be a technology, as computer languages are considered.  Why not English or Spanish or sign language?  I was struggling a bit.

In the end, I wanted to begin with something that didn’t plug into a wall socket.  No batteries.  No knobs or pins or wheels.  I finally discovered it last week when I was walking around Toronto and realized I left my map at home.  At that moment I realized what a valuable bit of technology it is.

The Map
I really don’t know why it took me so long to figure out I should start with maps.  I have tons of maps.  Use them all the time.  I have books on them, I have them on the walls (or will once I get a house), I’ve even created a few.

Jaen Isle map

Maps are one of the oldest known technologies we have.  It is believed they existed prior to any written language.   They are, in many ways, the language of space as translated to two dimensions.  As much as musical notes, when written on a page, represent sounds.

The map I use the most frequently is from a British company called Mapgroup and is a PopOut Map of Toronto.  They offer maps for cities around the world and we originally used one for traveling in Munich last summer.  Using folding paper, you get four maps including southwest Ontario, the Toronto transit grid, a view of greater Toronto and a local view of the downtown area from the waterfront to slightly north of Bloor.  Overall, it gives you an amazing amount of information I can easily carry in my back pocket or my wife in her purse.

For $7 USD, this might be the most affordable per use item I have purchased with the exception of my keyboard or mouse (certainly not my Macbook Pro, though I love it, that thing is expensive).

Map Info
I could probably go on and on about maps, but I’ll cut it short (for once!) and give you some info about maps.  Take a moment and look at some different designs and understand a bit about one of our oldest technologies.

Links
Wikipedia entry on Maps
Wikipedia entry on Cartography (mapmaking)
Library of Congress: Geography and Maps

The Map Rooom: A Weblog About Maps

Online Map Collections
Odden’s Bookmarks: A massive collection of maps
American Memory

The British Library

Some Books I Recommend
As soon as I get them out of storage, I’ll list these as well.