Archive for the 'Dave’s Thoughts' Category

09 Mar 2011

Posted by under Dave's Thoughts,Family

To the moon…

Well not quite, but my delightfully shabby old Mazda truck rolled over 333,333 km on the way into work yesterday morning. That’s about 90% of the distance to moon (at apogee). We bought the truck in 1998 with 170,000 km on it so I guess we can only claim about 45% of the earth-to-moon distance for ourselves.

The truck is a 1993 (pre-Ford) Mazda B2600i 4×4 extended cab. It has been a really great vehicle despite it’s thirst for fuel and propensity to leak oil on my garage floor. We have used it, and used it well, for landscaping, house moves, dump runs and hauling motorbikes. It’s been subjected to the type of over-loading that Jed Clampett might cringe at, but hasn’t let us down. Maybe it’ll even survive Steven learning to drive it – he’s old enough to get his learner’s licence this June!

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19 Feb 2011

Posted by under Dave's Thoughts,Family,Mr. FixIt

Gallimaufry

It’s been a while since the last post (especially if you missed the 1-day Robbie Burns Day item) so I’ve got a gallimaufry of topics that I’ll lump together here. It’s a cold miserable day – again. Brenda is so mad about the groundhog’s prediction at the beginning of the month that there will be 6 more months of winter that she appears to have hunted down poor old Balzac Billy and made a nice vest for herself…

Maybe you’ve wondered where our Sinterklaas post was for this Christmas season (OK, maybe not); well, we were busy welcoming our newest nephew into the family at the beginning of December.  As a result, we held Sinterklaas and Zwarte Piet off by a month and had the annual Langendoen Christmas gathering on the first weekend of January after the new year.  We all met at Ronny and Carla’s place outside of Rocky Mountain House and had a great weekend with all of the cousins having a fine time skating and sledding and eating far too many treats that Oma picked up at the Dutch store.  We had a fun weekend and, despite the serious blizzard that swept across southern Alberta that weekend, none of us had any trouble on the roads. Anyway, here are a few pictures:


During one of the cold snaps that we keep having this winter, I noticed that I’d start the van (2002 Mazda MPV) up and the radiator fan would immediately start running on high, even if it was -28°C out. A few days after that, the fan started randomly running on high at any old time. A little trouble-shooting and googling uncovered the fact that the fan control module was the likely culprit and that it was the subject of a recall to replace it. So I took it to a Mazda dealer only to find out that it had already been replaced on our van. So I shelled out $100 for a new one and then waited 2 weeks for a day nice enough to do the repair outside.

It’s not too bad of a job, but I had to pull the battery and the battery tray out to gain access to the three wiring connections. All three were a pain to disconnect – 5 years of accumulated grit always makes separating under-hood connectors difficult. Once that was done the swap was pretty simple. The new module has a different part number than the old one, so I hope it’s improved.

One trick that I’d heard about when disconnecting a car battery is to use an automotive “settings keeper” to preserve the vehicles computer settings and radio presets. This prevents the computer from forgetting the various bits of data that it uses to optimize settings for fuel economy and performance and maybe saves a bit of gas for the few weeks after the repair. I couldn’t find one locally, so I made my own. Sadly, it didn’t work. After the repair was done the radio presets were lost. I think that the 9V battery couldn’t keep up in the cold. Next time, I think I’ll try wiring a 12V wall-wart transformer to the cigarette lighter adapter, rather than the battery.


The kids have this coming week off school, so we are hoping for a bit of a chinook and maybe we can take the opportunity to have a family outing – maybe a day in Banff? Or at least an afternoon matinee in a nice warm movie theater if the weather won’t cooperate.

…it seems that miserable groundhog got what he deserved…

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06 Nov 2010

Posted by under Dave's Thoughts,Photos

Heart Mountain Hike

The first week of November has been marvelous with clear sunny skies and warm temperatures – I’m pretty sure that the worst day this week was better than any day in September!  At least that’s how I remember it, don’t go confusing me with any facts to the contrary…

With such fine weather it was only natural to try and squeeze in the second hike of the year with my brother Scott.  (My second hike, not his – Scott’s been out 16 or 17 times.)  The days are getting pretty short and mornings cool – we didn’t get out of town til after 9:00 and I had to be back to Calgary by 3:00pm, so we picked something close; Heart Mountain, just south of Exshaw. I’ve never gone up the mountain, just up Heart Creek and that was at least 25 years ago.

The trail is a pretty steady uphill grunt and I don’t think that I was going as quickly as Scott normally would.  The trail is up the north face of the mountain and it was cool in the wind with no sunshine to warm things up. There are a couple of little scrambly bits near the top but we stopped just before the second one as we’d used up half of our time.  I was a little disappointed not to make it to the top.  The disappointment did fade some on the trip back down when my knees started to give out.  The last half hour getting back to the car was pretty painful and I was glad that we’d not gone any further!

It was a good outing, but boy, am I ever stiff and sore now.  I’m just not used to that kind of effort.  I’m wondering if it is possible to rename the trail to “Robaxacet Ridge”…

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26 Oct 2010

Posted by under Dave's Thoughts,Geekstuff

iTunes + Apple TV vs. Shaw + HD PVR

Well, we aren’t the biggest TV watching family in the world, in fact we managed to go for 10 years with only “peasant-vision”.  (That’s over-the-air analog television, in case you can’t remember life before cable TV.)  It was only developing the basement and the subsequent unleashing of my inner geek’s requirements for 7.1 channel HD home theatre in 2006 that made us call Shaw and ask, “Don’t you guys also provide cable TV on the same wire as the internet?”

Anyway, for the past 3 plus years we’ve been coughing up the big dough to Shaw for HD content to justify having spent all that money on the home theatre setup.  When I took the layoff from work in April, we looked at our finances and decided that the the cable TV could go, we only really could name about 3 TV shows and often to forgot to watch them – even if they were on the PVR.  I do miss the motorcycle road racing (WSBK and MotoGP), but not that much.  Besides, we told ourselves, with the Apple TV (especially after souping it up with a big hard drive) and an iTunes account we can buy or rent more stuff than we ever watched on cable for less than our monthly Shaw cable expenditure.  Sure enough that’s been more than true over the last 6 months – HD cable was costing about $60/month, but we spend about $10 to $15 a month on iTunes movie rentals and show purchases.

Now fall is here and the cool weather has driven us indoors and there are a few shows that we’d like to watch, so we need to find them in the iTunes  store.  Sure enough, the Canadian  iTunes store carries a couple of the shows we’d like to watch and we can make a more reasoned evaluation of whether we’d pay that much for that show.  ($70 for House season 7?? Meh.) So far, so good.

But then we discovered a show that we wanted but were thwarted when it turned out to be unavailable on the Canadian iTunes store.  All it takes is a  little bit of searching and the show turns out to be available on the American iTunes store.  But you can’t have a US  iTunes store account if you don’t have a US credit card – so I guess that’s the end of it.

Of course not! We are nothing if not totally up for a “stick it to the man” challenge! It didn’t take much research to figure out this trick:

  • Head to a local store that sells the “Vanilla” prepaid MasterCard (corner store, drug store, grocery store – whatever is handy)
  • Purchase a Vanilla MasterCard in an amount that seems reasonable for the iTunes usage you anticipate over the next 6 months.  Why six months? Because Mastercard applies a fee on the card starting the 7th month after activation – you don’t want to be going to all this trouble only to have the man stick it to you!  Note that you can always use the card directly anywhere else besides the iTunes store as well.
  • Scurry home and spend a moment to do a little research about our neighbours to the south.  Which states have no sales tax? (MT or OR are good choices). What is the area code for that state (MT = 406)? What’s a nice town in that state and what phone exchange and ZIP code would be plausible in case the iTunes store does any data validation?  Write some of this stuff down.
  • Now,  activate the prepaid MasterCard at the www.vanillamastercard.com site, using the ZIP code you chose. *

UPDATE: August 2011

You need to ensure the ZIP Code registered to your Vanilla MasterCard matches the ZIP code in your iTunes account. Previously the Canadian site allowed registration with a US ZIP Code, but the card setup has changed. To do this you need to register the card on the US site by going to https://www.vanillamastercard.com/languages.html …then select USA (English), and enter your card details. Edit the card info registering the US ZIP code chosen above.

  • Fire up iTunes and open up the store,  if you already have a Canadian iTunes account then sign out and select Sign In again.  The easiest way to get to the US store interface is to “Create New Account”, continue through the splash screen then click through on the “If the billing address is not in Canada, click here” link.
  • Select US as the new region.
  • Now the US iTunes store interface will load and you can Sign In and select “Create New Account” again, continue through the splash screen noticing that the message at the top now says “If the billing address of your payment information is not in the United States, click here”.
  • Accept the T&Cs and set up your account using the Vanilla MasterCard number and expiry date plus matching address and phone info from your research.   The only critical address detail is the ZIP code which must match  the one registered for the Vanilla MasterCard. Of course, you’ll need to use a unique email address for the new account.
  • Bingo! You have a live iTunes account on the US store.  There should be no problems switching back and forth between the two stores. Just use the appropriate email address to login to the store that you want to use.

Of course, all of the preceding information is purely theoretical and strictly for educational purposes.  No recommendation, nor endorsement, of your personal propensity to misbehave, wear an eye-patch, or say “Arggh, matey” is implied by any of the content of this post.

*  Bonus geek points if you buy the card in the middle of the night, rip home and try to use it a couple of times before the store clerk gets around to activating the card.  The card is supposed to be activated for immediate use, but if you beat them to the punch it turns out that your card is credited $1.03 for each time it is denied!  We managed to recover $2.06 out of the $6.95 activation fee that we’d just paid to get the card!  Now that’s stickin’ it to the man!

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