Posted in Believe it or not!, Internet

Ever Had to Get Your Own Back?

(It just means I’ve been running so fast,
in circles, I finally caught myself…)

Today is the first day of the rest of my life, I hope.

I’ve never been tested for patience like I have in the last few weeks. You know my old laptop lost Internet connectivity and I was forced to research, find, buy, and install a new one. And I’ve been forced to use a teensy ol’ netbook just for keeping up with comments, bless its little heart.

Let me tell you what it was like…

I was checking on comments and emails one morning, long ago, and had taken a break for breakfast, returning to y’all at 10:30 or so, when I could not get on the Internet for anything. It just would not go. I tried a patch cord to a router, and that worked for about five minutes, and then–kaput.

To keep up with my adoring fans, I had to resort to a teensy netbook I’d found at a good used stuff store for cheap. It is so small, one friend called it my “Pocket Calculator”. (I had to find my high-powered sewing glasses!) It works in black and white, no gray tones, and let me tell you, you have to know your way around on the Internet, especially on facebook, to go without color. (All the edit tools on fb are in slightly darker shades of color, so they disappear on my little baby computer. I had to hover around all the time, trying to get the hot spots to ignite so I could edit my many typos on facebook.) I could not read page stats on fb, since the graphs are not in black&white.

Posting, here, was nigh impossible, although I did manage one shortie.

First came soul searching.

I did not want to keep on blogging if it wasn’t what I’m supposed to do. I was a happy soul before blogging and had entered the electric communications world with heels dragging; I wondered if God was trying to tell me something. My husband and I had several discussions and decided to keep on keeping on. That was a weird time, but I survived.

Disclaimer: I am not working for anybody who sells anything I’ve mentioned here! What a joke that would be! I would lose them customers. I don’t even like computers. No, I’m just a happy camper who cannot stop talking. So sorry if you were looking for someone to censor, look elsewhere. I’m only writing this because my non-techy friends want to know how it went for me.

Next was trying to find the right product.

I never was deliriously happy with the tool that was my old laptop, but always figured that was because I never was deliriously happy with this tool we call “Internet”. I sent out an APB for information about what to buy and kept getting the same word from the most trusted places, so delved into the purchase.

At our local “Best Buy” store was a good place to start with their friendly help and rather large selection. We do not like to buy things “sight unseen”, do not like to window shop in catalogs. We had a brand in mind and our IT guy (our youngest son) had recently bought exactly what everyone was recommending and was loving it. And he’s picky.

The PURCHASE!

With no small wave of trepidation, we made a decision, and yes, we bought at Best Buy, for which we are quite happy, as they surprised us with a $50 rebate at the cash register. Wow. Nice.

The price was right.

I did not select the $600 beauty that my IT guy recommended. No. It was the enormously less expensive “notebook” version that caught our frugal attentions. All the same features, sans gaming (yay), for much, much less. And there was that in-store rebate…

The WAIT!

Yes, we brought home a new computer. No, I did not open it for weeks. Why?

I did not want to open the sealed box containing my new toy until I was sure I had Mr. IT’s blessings, and stuff came up to keep us apart.

  1. We had a big Father’s Day get together.
  2. We took a small vacation.
  3. I had canning out of my ears. Heh. And still do.
  4. Mr. IT was out of pocket.
  5. We got company.
  6. Our dear local librarian needed facebook page HELP!
  7. Unknown to me, my cell phone stopped receiving texts. Must be something in the air?
  8. I know there was more that I am forgetting.

The Plot Thickens!

It was my brother of the famed French Toast who visited after we’d made our purchase, and he is quite the expert, himself, and in the course of fooling around with my broken computer, he fixed it.

Huh.

I’m not so cool on rapidly thickening plots when they happen to me . . . .

But I was really glad I had not opened the new one, yet.

In the end, we made a carefully thought out decision to go forward with the new machine, on the advice of my brother and of Mr. IT. My old one might goof up again, at any moment, since we could not figure out what messed it up the first time. It was really old and would soon be outdated and slow. Its keyboard had a couple of irritating keys that did not fire dependably, making me look like a very poor typist, indeed (instead of just a regular poor typist), and it was so old they no longer made replacement keyboards for it.

We open the box!

Actually, I could not bear to open it after being half scared to for so long, so Mr. IT did it for me. We watched him zoom through all the data mazes he’d just mastered while initiating his own similar laptop, and loved seeing the gleam in his eyes–a shining knowledge of what he was doing.

I’d have had a dull film of weary irritation and confusion over my eyes, had I been doing the same tasks. In fact, I’ve been known to crash a brand new computer while trying to turn it on…

It’s LOVE!

I knew I would love my new computer when I got engaged to it at the Best Buy, but now that we’re married, I’m totally hooked on getting to know this thing. Here’s why:

  1. Touch screen. Although this screen will have to be de-smeared from time to time, OH MY, does it simplify computer work!!! As Mr. IT says, if you can reach it, you can make it go. All I can say is go to a computer place, try out a touch screen, and you’ll see. It does take some getting used to, but I’m ready to grow up, here.
  2. Touch screen with “Paint”. What this means is that you can select a color and drag your finger all over the page in the Paint program, and DRAW. It’s far above its old “etchasketch” un-usefulness, now.
  3. Touch screen with a stylus. You know all those new pens that have floppy, semi-translucent erasers that don’t erase? That’s a stylus and it is for navigating a touch phone when your fingers are too big to let them do the walking. And it works on this computer, oh MY! It also turns Paint into a really useful artistic outlet because it is very nearly like using a crayon, pencil, or brush in your hands.
  4. The new PhotoDirector application that makes me look like some kinda pro! No excuses for wimpy photos, ever again! I cannot wait to master this one.
  5. Speed. I need speed. Living in the Arkansas Outback, I am on what the techies love to call “the last mile”. It’s one of the white dots on the service maps that show most of the USA is red, except where I live, which almost does not have any service at all. A blogger’s nightmare and a writer’s dream come true.
    But with this new computer, I get service. Whew.
  6. Slim and trim. This machine has no DVD player. That’s fine. I don’t do DVD’s when I’m blogging, socializing, or emailing, and I don’t do computers when I’m not. If I wanted to watch a movie or listen to a song, my old laptop still does that just fine. But I hardly have the time, anymore, so . . . my laptop has gone on a diet and looks very wonderfully thin.
  7. Light weight. This I love: I can pick it up with one hand, even if my arm is extended and my joints are aching today. Yay.
  8. Smaller. Fits into almost any purse that has nothing else in it. Which means all sorts of cute options for carrying it around. Ha.

Okay. You want to know what I got. It is an ASUS X200M notebook. And the model number there was very nearly the price.

What’s not to love, since I now know where my sewing glasses are?!

And this is the end of the post telling of the saga of my finding a new computer. Enjoy!

Oh, and just a peek at the competition:

The ones that got away...
The ones that got away…
Posted in 'Tis the Season, Connect, Inspiring, Play

Where Is Your Favorite Vacation?

Alpine Vistas
Alpine Vistas

I live about an hour from the loveliest little spot for a vacation. Seriously, it has EVERYTHING!

Let me count the ways:

  • Antiquing. Lots of antique stores for your viewing/shopping pleasure. One huge mall and many small near-museums with absolutely everything. Seriously, I almost hate to share this part of it. I want it all for myself…
  • Horse racing. If you’re into that. I’m not.
  • Art. Galleries galore, including such well-knowns as Kinkade and Chihuly, and several with geological finds that have been made into art, such as geodes. It’s been judged the fourth art-friendliest city in the nation.
  • Riverboat ride with dinner and live music.
  • Al fresco dining in a below ground restaurant–always cool by dinnertime.
  • Real museums, including a Tussaud wax museum.
  • Amazing architecture. Totally astonishing architecture, at every turn.
  • Breath-taking vistas
  • Impeccable groundskeeping
  • History, history, history–built with government moneys, yes, by your great-grandfather’s hands to keep your great-grandmother alive, before we paid people to do nothing.
  • Food. Oh my. And prices that make you want to live there. One whole restaurant devoted to the breakfast of your dreams. On fun place decorated all over with pennies glued to the walls. Another, gourmet and pristine, a sanctuary for its guests and for its workers, who are legal immigrants, escaped from Romania, who wait on you perfectly and cheerily, with charming accents.
  • Hotels. We’re talking, here, of totally expensive, but enchantingly historic, insanely beautiful, antique hotels…
  • And–tada–fountains. Fountains full of water so hot, you can use it to make your tea; so pure, it’s piped to the public straight from the ground, to drink. Famously healing hot waters…

And now you know where it is: Hot Springs, Arkansas.

So impressive, the first time I went there, I was five, and even then, I knew I had to go there someday when I could see the whole thing.

Been there so many times, and haven’t seen it all, yet. Talking about it (to my history-loving heart) is never overdone.

Our Grandfathers' Handwork
Our Grandfathers’ Handwork

For more photos, view here.

For more about Hot Springs, view here, and here.

So…Where is YOUR favorite staycation?

Posted in Good ol' days, Inspiring, Photos

My Dad

My Dad, a Veteran of the Korean Conflict
My Dad, a Veteran of the Korean Conflict

He served in the Army, bought a house on the G.I. Bill, raised five kids, worked hard at Kuhlman’s Plastics to provide you with laundry baskets and us with something to eat, gave us airplane rides on his feet, built three rooms and a basement onto our house when we grew too large for what we had, taught me how to back a bent nail out of a 2×4, mowed our two-acre yard with a walk-behind mower, sang a beautiful bass in the church choir, planted a big garden every spring and kept it pretty-well weeded, and lived to see his children’s children.

More about my dad.

My dad’s eggshell collection.

Posted in Believe it or not!, Connect, Guest Post

Nervous Yet?

… Where I share how I could’ve done better…

You know how people often promote their blog sites by asking readers questions? The idea is that a question forces the mind to be more engaged, you know, and readers love answering questions.

Well, Canadian Danny Iny takes it one further and asks his readers to come up with the questions, first, and then the answers.

Subscribing to his site, I therefore receive a question almost every week, and if I can think of an answer, I usually reply.

See, the question thing works…

And, just this once, my reply was chosen to be the topic for a guest post Danny would so kindly trust me to write, and which guest post appears, here, today.

Of course, I shared from my propensity NOT to practice what I preach.

Of course, when I got really real, (of all times!) he picked me.

Of course, you all can see what, from my own collection of plenty of bloopers, I dared to share, and NO, it’s not about YOU!

To say I am excited is an understatement.

So. Please go read what I wrote about surfing, (which I’ve never done, ha!) and what to do about how floods and the tide of life can drag you under (which I know a lot about!)

And comment!

And thanks a million!

Posted in 'Tis the Season, Light show, Science

STORMS for Friday!

Meteor Storm, That Is!

The prediction of a possible 15-20 meteors every minute for late Friday night, May 23, and early Saturday morning, May 24, excites everyone who’s ever stayed up to watch the night sky. DO let it inspire you to stay up, for the first time, if you never have before.

To find the storm in the night sky, just look at Polaris, the North Star, which you may find by tracing a line straight “up” from the front two stars of the Big Dipper–the two stars that form the front of the dipper.  Or just face north and look up. You won’t be able to miss it.

Scientists predict the best time to be at the hour that is midnight in California or 4 a.m. in New York. Do your own math, there.

The fact that most excites me is the prediction of many fireballs and bolides. Check out this Website for cool graphics and information about those.

Won’t you join us!

For ideas on how best to make this happen, try this routine:

  1. Select, in advance, an unlit place to view this glorious sight. An open field away from civilization would be good. Your own house, with a couple of street lights blaring, not so good.
  2. Explain the plan to your children before you put them to bed. Go over a few pieces of child-appropriate science on the topic and answer questions. A globe might help. Don’t let them be scared; let your excitement sparkle as you explain the beauty and awesomeness of the event.
  3. Put them to bed in outdoor-friendly clothing, just this once.
  4. SET YOUR ALARM for 1/2 hour early. It takes awhile to get everything all around. Why miss a single event?
  5. Rise on time, fix plenty of hot cocoa, or whatever warm drink you’d like them to have. Gather flashlights, sweaters, blankets, lawn chairs, bug spray, etc. and load into car if you have to drive to an unlit place.
  6. Wake the children and bumble them outdoors or into the car. Set up your night-sky-watching station and begin the fun. It should be every bit as much fun as watching a fireworks display on July 4, but not as convenient an hour.
  7. Be sure to explain to your children that most of the world will not get to view this because it will be daylight everywhere else when it arrives.

Have a wonderful time! I cannot wait!

 

Why You Would Kill a Christian

Killing Christians is a practice as old as Christianity. Those who practice it do nothing more than imitate their predecessors. Predecessors who attempted but failed to snuff out the life of our faith in its infancy.

The practice of persecution is hard for some to understand but it’s actually an understandable act. In fact, I can think of at least ten reasons to kill a Christian.

You’ll probably enjoy reading more here.

The Christian Martyrs' Last Prayer
The Christian Martyrs’ Last Prayer (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

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