A relaxing day with my very own family!

Filed under:Family, Griff, Heather, Opinion, Tech — posted by Tyler on December 25, 2008 @ 7:44 pm    Print Post

Today was a wonderful day that I was able to enjoy with my family, as one should (if at all possible) on Christmas day. I’m very grateful for the reason for the season (Jesus Christ) and I also love all the fun traditions that go along with it. I’m not a big fan of the buy-a-gift-for-someone-in-October-or-November-and-don’t-give-it-to-them-until-the-end-of-December tradition. I figure I might as well get some use out of it from October to December! It just loses value (and causes me heartache) all wrapped up under the tree or shoved in a secret hiding spot in the closet for three months. I’m fine with surprises, but that entails actually being surprised! What is the surprise in knowing there is a present for you sitting under the tree? I suppose I’m surprised when I first discover it there…ok, great! Now it’s time to open it!  Yet, I’m not allowed to open it, “Not until Christmas!” my wife tells me. She has learned to keep it an actual surprise until Christmas morning, or she just lets me have my way and get myself stuff for Christmas (and my Birthday since I was born in December) starting several months beforehand. Which is what I did this year when I purchased a membership to Gold’s Gym (the new one in Tooele opens the first day of 2009), a new wedding ring (since I injured my ring finger in a mountain biking accident and my knuckle is permanently bigger as a result), and genetic testing and personal DNA analysis from 23andMe.com.  Heather also surprised (yes, I really didn’t know I was getting it, nor did I expect it which constitues and honest-to-goodness surprise!) me with an R/C helicopter so I’d have something to open on Christmas.

Of all my gifts I’ve enjoyed pouring through my DNA data since I got the results back on December 19th. It’s been absolutely fascinating, if not for the health and traits data then for the ancestry information that it has opened my eyes to. For anyone else that has been tested, you might find it interesting to know that my Paternal Haplogroup is R1b1c10 (also known as R-U152 or S28) and my Maternal Haplogroup is H3. I found out that I’m 100% European (more specifically from Northern Europe) and of all the groups of people from around the world I’m genetically most similar to the Irish.   And the great thing about 23andMe is that they’re constantly updating my information as DNA research uncovers more and more information.  So this will be a gift that keeps on giving!

My children enjoyed Christmas and we were able to hold them off until 7:45 a.m.  We went to the movies this afternoon (one of our Christmas day traditions) and saw Bedtime Stories.  I love to hear Griff laugh and this show got a few good laughs out of him.  I thought it was decent since I was there with my kids.  It’s amazing how seeing your kids get enjoyment out of something makes it all that much more enjoyable for you.

I hope you all enjoyed the time you were able to spend with your families!  I sure enjoyed a relaxing day with my very own family!

  

Upgraded to WordPress 2.7

Filed under:Opinion, Web Log (Blog) — posted by Tyler on December 14, 2008 @ 11:01 pm    Print Post

I upgraded my WordPress installation a few days ago. I noticed at least one side-effect of the upgrade was that a couple of my posts showed up in the feed as new. My wife brought it to my attention so I thought I’d quickly explain the phenomenon, in case you thought your RSS reader was on the fritz.

Another side effect was that at least one plug-in had to be fixed. If any other WordPress users have WP-Print installed, you’ll notice that when you upgrade to 2.7 it will break. Instructions on the fix can be found here. Actually, I just checked again and noticed that as of December 11 there is a 2.40 version of WP-Print for WordPress 2.7.  Unfortunately, it didn’t show up as an automatic upgrade in the Installed Plugins module.

For anyone contemplating a move to WordPress from Blogger or some other platform, now is the time.  WordPress 2.7 now offers automatic upgrades for the core install.  And just for clarification, WordPress has a standalone install which is what I recommend.  My wife is on WordPress.com (the equivalent of a Blogger.com free blog) and it’s not near as flexible as my standalone install, downloaded from WordPress.org.  The catch with the standalone install is that you have to host your own server or purchase third party hosting.  I use BlueHost and I’ve been extremely happy with them, one of the best prices around, plenty of included features and options, and great up-time.  They’re local, too, which makes it that much better.  I started with WordPress quite some time ago and upgrades were always met with mixed feelings.  I was excited for the new features, but I always dreaded the upgrade process.  Now, I will no longer dread upgrades because it will happen with a click of a button.  WordPress will no longer be for a niche market after 2.7, and I say that with mixed feelings, too.

  

I Can’t Sleep!

Filed under:Opinion, Web Log (Blog) — posted by Tyler on November 13, 2008 @ 4:39 am    Print Post

One of the worst things in the world is the inability to sleep, especially when you know that the alarm clock is going to go off at 5:15 a.m.  This happens to me quite a bit on Sunday night when I know I should start off the week with a healthy 6-8 hours of sleep.  I’m usually getting an average of 4-5 a night, sometimes less, but that’s not to say I’d sleep for 10-12 if I had the time.  I don’t know why I can’t sleep tonight.  Wednesday nights usually treat me fair.

Tonight (or this morning, rather) in my attempts to get tired I finished reading my Google Reader posts (I’m currently subscribed to 287 rss feeds) and then I checked out my Google Health profile and updated it with my latest condition, “Difficulty Sleeping”.  I wandered over to my Google Web History and discovered that I’ve had that thing turned on recording all my google searches and all the pages and images I’ve viewed since June 28, 2005.  I’ve made 13,338 Google searches since then.  I wonder if that’s considered a lot of searches in just over 3 years?

My blogging frequency is back to where it started when I tried out the blogging thing on Blogger.com in 2002 (an entire two posts) and then on MySpace (which I cancelled when it was creepy for a 30 year old to have a profile on what was mostly for teenagers and musicians) and now I’m somewhat regretting my cancellation because my old MySpace page now has some other shirtless Tyler Slack on it.  I got on board the FaceBook craze a while back (after a bit of resistance…I was afraid it would be like MySpace) but I don’t do much on it.  I log in after I get an email or two telling me I have friend requests and I make a point to ignore all invitations to join a cause and I still don’t know what a poke is, nevermind a superpoke.  It doesn’t sound like something a married man should be doing.

I created my FaceBook profile after I read a CIO.com article that advised me not to choose just LinkedIn or just Facebook but create a profile on both.  So I did.  In the last few months I’ve really noticed an increase of activity on that site, my goodness!  So I went ahead and imported some feeds to give the appearance that I’m an active FaceBook user, but I haven’t caught onto the idea of updating my status.  I’ve been dabbling with Twitter for a while, but haven’t used it enough to consider it a very useful tool for me, but I’m sure I’ll keep it around.

Now, after all that useless information you’d think I’d be tired.  Nope!  I still can’t sleep!  Here’s to all-nighters!  (We’ll see how excited I am about it when I’m falling asleep at La Caille tonight.)

  

Good times at Miller Motorsports Park!

Filed under:Cool Stuff, USOE, Video, Work — posted by Tyler on October 15, 2008 @ 11:22 pm    Print Post

I took the day off the other day to attend a sales event that NCSI (a vendor that sells network apps and utilities) hosted for a bunch of their customers.  It took place at the Miller Motorsports Park in Tooele, so I didn’t have to drive very far.  Some of the customers came all the way from Wyoming to attend!  They were showing off some stuff from LeftHand Networks (iSCSI SANs).  Pretty cool stuff, but it pales in comparison to the pre-event!

First we were able to get out in a Mustang on closed course track with cones.  We took three rounds through the course to get a feel for it, but their advise to us was to drive the car like we stole it.  I’ve never in my life driven something with that much power!  It was pretty dang sweet!  After we warmed up we took three laps around as they timed us.  I wasn’t the best, but I wasn’t the worst either.  And I never hit any cones, so that was good.

After driving the Mustangs you wouldn’t think that it could get much cooler, but it actually did.  The coolest part of the experience is when we rode shotgun with professional drivers around the actual race track!  Their were three cars out there jockeying for position on the track, just like they would in a real race.  The only thing they held back on was actual tapping.  That’s what they do in a real race that so often ends with a car off the track, so I’m glad they held back a little.  I had my little camera so i pulled it out and flipped it into video mode and took some low-quality video of the experience.  This video doesn’t do it justice, but you’ll still get the idea.  It was a lot of fun!

  

VIDEO: Sniper shoots Georgian reporter during live broadcast

Filed under:D. Sirmize, Media — posted by D. Sirmize on August 14, 2008 @ 1:54 pm    Print Post

I may get into analysis of this conflict in a future post, but for now, watch this tough as nails Georgian reporter continue her live broadcast after taking a bullet from a sniper. Her name is Tamara Urushadze and she’s reporting from the war-torn town of Gori in the former Soviet Republic of Georgia. Talk about grace under fire!

  

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