Friday, April 18, 2008
Dilbert site's been revamped
What the heck is going on at dilbert.com! Strips are now shown in a lame flash widget, and the site is often giving me errors, not displaying hardly any content. It does say it's "beta", but it looks more like alpha quality to me. What if I want to view comics on my smart phone? The team that maintains that site apparently hasn't heard of KISS.
Saturday, April 05, 2008
Thursday, March 27 - Trip to England Day 6

Then we drove down to the other side of the city to Clifford's Tower, took some pictures and headed out of York to the southwest to take a scenic tour of some castle ruins. We saw the site at which the Pontefract Castle near Castleford was built and the remains of Sandal Castle near Wakefield.
We tried to find Wentworth Castle Gardens but the directions were too poor so we just gave up and drove across the northern part of the Peak District. Doing that wasn't easy because the glare from the sun made it difficult to see sometimes, the road was just one lane each way most of the time, and we didn't want to drive as fast as everyone else (all the time). Right when we were about to come to the beginning of the motorway near Manchester, traffic came to a standstill, but luckily we were able to wing it, going north to the next on-ramp to the motorway and got on without delay. We drove back to the Manchester airport again, entered the parking garage to return our rental car, but quickly exited after I realized I needed to fill up the car with petrol.
After we returned the car we took a taxi to Barbara and Keith Farar's where we had a lovely dinner. I then gave the kids their baths, and found that I was exhausted, falling asleep next to Norah after reading her a bedtime story.
Here is a Google maps route of the route we took over the past 3 days from Manchester to York and back
Friday, April 04, 2008
Wednesday, March 26 - Trip to England Day 5
Our guest house served a full English breakfast, then we took a taxi to the opposite side of the York city center to the National Railway Museum. The kids were asking the whole time while we were going through the museum when we could ride the ferris wheel, which we saved for the end. (pictures)
We then took a scenic boat tour of York, ate at Bettys Cafe Tea Rooms, and did some shopping in York's city center. We came upon a kid's trampoline in an open square, setup with harnesses so they could do flips in the air, although neither of them would even try doing that. They both enjoyed it and were begging to go do it again for the next two days.
York's city center is what I'd call one big open shopping mall. It's the sort of place the Bayshore Town Center at home is modeled after, but is so much better because vehicle access is extremely restricted. As we found out when we took our taxi, they use some sort of facial identification of the driver to grant access (I don't know if it automated or not). Shopping in York is a great experience and would highly recommend it for anyone traveling to England.
The kids each got to buy a toy from one of the local shops. Norah chose a Cinderella umbrella from the Disney Store and Dejaquan chose a set of medieval knight figures complete with weapons. We got some hot chocolate and coffee at Starbuck's across the way from the Minster (pictures) while we waited for the 5:15 choral service (a way to see the inside of the Minster for free).
The music was very well sung, and the views of the inside were magestic. The kids managed to entertain themselves separately through the whole thing without disturbing anyone, but a woman who was there by herself with her 3-going-on-4-year-old had to remove her daughter near the end. We walked around the church for a little bit but left when the kids got antsy.
On our way back to our guest house we came upon Little Italy and chose to eat there even though we had discussed taking food back to the guest house.
After taking the kids potty in the attic of this restaurant, I discovered after ordering our food that we were sitting right next to the same woman and child we had sat behind at the church. They had just finished eating when our food arrived, so Sarah offered a coloring activity book and crayons for them to use while they waited for their dessert.
We then took a scenic boat tour of York, ate at Bettys Cafe Tea Rooms, and did some shopping in York's city center. We came upon a kid's trampoline in an open square, setup with harnesses so they could do flips in the air, although neither of them would even try doing that. They both enjoyed it and were begging to go do it again for the next two days.
York's city center is what I'd call one big open shopping mall. It's the sort of place the Bayshore Town Center at home is modeled after, but is so much better because vehicle access is extremely restricted. As we found out when we took our taxi, they use some sort of facial identification of the driver to grant access (I don't know if it automated or not). Shopping in York is a great experience and would highly recommend it for anyone traveling to England.
The kids each got to buy a toy from one of the local shops. Norah chose a Cinderella umbrella from the Disney Store and Dejaquan chose a set of medieval knight figures complete with weapons. We got some hot chocolate and coffee at Starbuck's across the way from the Minster (pictures) while we waited for the 5:15 choral service (a way to see the inside of the Minster for free).

On our way back to our guest house we came upon Little Italy and chose to eat there even though we had discussed taking food back to the guest house.
After taking the kids potty in the attic of this restaurant, I discovered after ordering our food that we were sitting right next to the same woman and child we had sat behind at the church. They had just finished eating when our food arrived, so Sarah offered a coloring activity book and crayons for them to use while they waited for their dessert.
Thursday, April 03, 2008
Tuesday, March 25 - Trip to England Day 4
We left for Skipton after running to the bank to pull out the cash we needed to pay for our B&B in York (they don't take credit cards). All the practice driving with Stuart payed off because we got there without incident. We parked near the castle on the north end of the city center and ate at a tearoom on our walk up to the castle.
The castle tour was self-guided (pictures), so we spent a lot of energy keeping Dejaquan from jumping ahead too quickly. The castle was very interesting, seeing just how many rooms were equipped with arrow slits and how each room had its own fireplace to keep it warm. I don't know anything about English history, so the historical references in the displays in each room were insignificant to me.
We let each kid pick one thing from the gift shop. Norah chose a pen with a sliding thing in it and Dejaquan chose a knight figurine holding a sword. Of course as soon as we got back in the car, Dejaquan broke the sword trying to take it out of the knight's hand, and major disappointment ensued.
We drove to York, stopping once to let the kids have a run at a reservoir. We managed to drive into York without making any wrong turns and finding out guest house right away. After checking in I asked our hosts what would be a good restaurant to eat at with the kids, and they recommended Little Italy, giving me verbal directions on how to get there. Of course I didn't remember them right, so we ended up eating at an Indian restaurant, which turned out to serve very good food. The kids even enjoyed it.

We let each kid pick one thing from the gift shop. Norah chose a pen with a sliding thing in it and Dejaquan chose a knight figurine holding a sword. Of course as soon as we got back in the car, Dejaquan broke the sword trying to take it out of the knight's hand, and major disappointment ensued.
We drove to York, stopping once to let the kids have a run at a reservoir. We managed to drive into York without making any wrong turns and finding out guest house right away. After checking in I asked our hosts what would be a good restaurant to eat at with the kids, and they recommended Little Italy, giving me verbal directions on how to get there. Of course I didn't remember them right, so we ended up eating at an Indian restaurant, which turned out to serve very good food. The kids even enjoyed it.
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
Monday, March 24 - Trip to England Day 3
This was an adventurous day. We headed out with the kids in the rental car following Verity & Stuart to go to the Manchster Art Gallery. Although I had visited Japan & Australia earlier in my life, this was actually my first time driving in a country with a road system where you drive on the left side of the road. Accompanied by the width of the lanes also being much thinner than in the States, I unfortunately misjudged the distance between the edge of the car the side of the road and hit a curb, punching a hole in the front passenger tire. Verity & Stuart noticed we had pulled over, quickly stopped and came back to help.
One would think that you'd have exactly what you'd need to change a flat with a brand new rental car, but we found that it was missing both the jack and the locking wrench. So after calling the rental company, we ended up calling the AA (sort of like the US's AAA, but they have their own large fleet of tow/service vehicles). Verity and Sarah took the kids in the other car and headed on down to Manchester's city center while Stuart and I stayed to wait for AA.
The AA arrived within a minute of the time they had estimated in a text message they sent to Stuart's phone. The technician was a very kind and very eccentric old fellow who magically got the flat off and the spare on without the aid of the special locking nut (one of the nuts on each of the tires has a special shape to prevent tire theft).
I drove the car with Stuart's excellent tutoring to the school he and Verity work at then took a double decker bus into the city center (my first time on one of those), and we met up with the women & kids at the art gallery. We were only there for about an hour spending most of the time in the children's interactive exhibit (pictures).
We walked to Lincoln square where there is a statue of Abraham Lincoln, giving him tribute for a letter he wrote to the city of Manchester thanking them for the economic burden caused by their embargoing cotton trade with the Confederacy. After taking some pictures we then ate at a favorite oriental noodle restaurant of Verity & Stuart, which of course was excellent.
We took a cab back to our cars, then Stuart & I took Dejaquan & Norah with us back to Stockport while Verity & Sarah did some shopping. On the way back, I got to further practice driving with Stuart in the car and we stopped at a Matlin to buy a UK2US power converter. There was one on sale for £10, so I figured I actually saved money, with the cheapest one I could find at Radio Shack before coming over was $30.
Right when I pulled up to the curb at their home in Stockport, I realized it would be a good time to return the car for one with a working spare (and jack and proper tools). So I got more practice driving with Stuart in the car to & from the airport. I got to give Stuart credit for getting a good reimbursement on the cost of the rental car. I couldn't convince the desk clerk to compensate for the inconvenience caused by the lack of the jack and locking wheel. When I got back from shopping around the car rental companies for the best price on a 4-door automatic, he had managed to convince the clerk to give us a £20/day rebate, plus waive the fee for not filling up the tank.
That evening, Stuart & I went on a 4 mile run together (he's training for the London Marathon) while the kids ate dinner. After a shower, the adults ate while the kids watched The Monsters.

The AA arrived within a minute of the time they had estimated in a text message they sent to Stuart's phone. The technician was a very kind and very eccentric old fellow who magically got the flat off and the spare on without the aid of the special locking nut (one of the nuts on each of the tires has a special shape to prevent tire theft).
I drove the car with Stuart's excellent tutoring to the school he and Verity work at then took a double decker bus into the city center (my first time on one of those), and we met up with the women & kids at the art gallery. We were only there for about an hour spending most of the time in the children's interactive exhibit (pictures).
We walked to Lincoln square where there is a statue of Abraham Lincoln, giving him tribute for a letter he wrote to the city of Manchester thanking them for the economic burden caused by their embargoing cotton trade with the Confederacy. After taking some pictures we then ate at a favorite oriental noodle restaurant of Verity & Stuart, which of course was excellent.
We took a cab back to our cars, then Stuart & I took Dejaquan & Norah with us back to Stockport while Verity & Sarah did some shopping. On the way back, I got to further practice driving with Stuart in the car and we stopped at a Matlin to buy a UK2US power converter. There was one on sale for £10, so I figured I actually saved money, with the cheapest one I could find at Radio Shack before coming over was $30.
Right when I pulled up to the curb at their home in Stockport, I realized it would be a good time to return the car for one with a working spare (and jack and proper tools). So I got more practice driving with Stuart in the car to & from the airport. I got to give Stuart credit for getting a good reimbursement on the cost of the rental car. I couldn't convince the desk clerk to compensate for the inconvenience caused by the lack of the jack and locking wheel. When I got back from shopping around the car rental companies for the best price on a 4-door automatic, he had managed to convince the clerk to give us a £20/day rebate, plus waive the fee for not filling up the tank.
That evening, Stuart & I went on a 4 mile run together (he's training for the London Marathon) while the kids ate dinner. After a shower, the adults ate while the kids watched The Monsters.
Monday, March 31, 2008
Saturday & Sunday, March 22 & 23 - Trip to England Days 1 & 2
Embassy Suites is pretty nice--we chose them for the pool and extended car parking for a better price than O'Hare's best extended parking rates. They also provide a complimentary full breakfast buffet with the room, so we ate that, then went swimming again until it was time to get ready to check out.
We took the shuttle to the airport, packed the kids coats in our checked luggage and checked in. We had plenty of time because our flight left at 5:30, and we were through security by 1:30. We first let the grumpy/anxious/impatient kids eat McDonald's one last time before sitting down for the long wait. The kids stayed fairly well entertained while we waited, but Dejaquan did keep asking about every 15 minutes how much longer until it was time to go.
Dejaquan sat next to I and Norah next to Sarah for the first couple hours of the flight, but they switched when it was time to go to sleep. I don't know why Dejaquan wanted to sleep next to Sarah, but I guess it was because he had gotten tired of me and just missed his mother. Norah then seemed to be full of energy when there was nothing to do with the lights out (she managed to find lots with which to entertain herself like opening and closing the window cover). After only about 15 minutes, Sarah had managed to put Dejaquan to sleep. So Sarah & I switched again and while I began to type this in with my thumbs on my phone, within 15 minutes again she had worked her magic on Norah.
Near the end of the flight, breakfast was served at 4:30, 2 hours before the plane was scheduled to land, so I only managed to only get 1-2 hours of sleep. I think the kids managed to get 3-4 hours of sleep. Too bad at the time when breakfast was served the flight crew didn't know it would be delayed an hour due to needing to clear what was just an inch of snow off the runway. The pilot remarked that the airport must not be as used to dealing with snow as we are.
Bless their hearts, Verity & Stuart were still waiting for us outside baggage claim after having been there for over 1.5 hours waiting for us to land, get through customs and pick up our luggage. They said that the delay in the arrival time wasn't even posted until the expected time had came & went.
We rented a car, then had them drive us to their place where we got acclimated until it was time to go over to Verity's mum's for a traditional English Easter dinner. While Verity was at her Sunday morning church service, we took the kids to the local playground (pictures) where she met us and we had a short snowball fight before heading back. We played football on Stuart's Xbox until it was time to go.
We went to Verity's mum's house to join Nuela and Verity's friend (and wedding planner), Allison , for the rest of the day for a lovely Easter dinner of roast of lamb. We played games (mainly Connect Four, but I also taught Stuart how to play Othello), had an Easter egg hunt, and Stuart and Dejaquan played football in the backyard.
We ended the day back at Stuart & Verity's place, playing some more Xbox football and baths for the kids.
We took the shuttle to the airport, packed the kids coats in our checked luggage and checked in. We had plenty of time because our flight left at 5:30, and we were through security by 1:30. We first let the grumpy/anxious/impatient kids eat McDonald's one last time before sitting down for the long wait. The kids stayed fairly well entertained while we waited, but Dejaquan did keep asking about every 15 minutes how much longer until it was time to go.
Dejaquan sat next to I and Norah next to Sarah for the first couple hours of the flight, but they switched when it was time to go to sleep. I don't know why Dejaquan wanted to sleep next to Sarah, but I guess it was because he had gotten tired of me and just missed his mother. Norah then seemed to be full of energy when there was nothing to do with the lights out (she managed to find lots with which to entertain herself like opening and closing the window cover). After only about 15 minutes, Sarah had managed to put Dejaquan to sleep. So Sarah & I switched again and while I began to type this in with my thumbs on my phone, within 15 minutes again she had worked her magic on Norah.
Near the end of the flight, breakfast was served at 4:30, 2 hours before the plane was scheduled to land, so I only managed to only get 1-2 hours of sleep. I think the kids managed to get 3-4 hours of sleep. Too bad at the time when breakfast was served the flight crew didn't know it would be delayed an hour due to needing to clear what was just an inch of snow off the runway. The pilot remarked that the airport must not be as used to dealing with snow as we are.
Bless their hearts, Verity & Stuart were still waiting for us outside baggage claim after having been there for over 1.5 hours waiting for us to land, get through customs and pick up our luggage. They said that the delay in the arrival time wasn't even posted until the expected time had came & went.

We went to Verity's mum's house to join Nuela and Verity's friend (and wedding planner), Allison , for the rest of the day for a lovely Easter dinner of roast of lamb. We played games (mainly Connect Four, but I also taught Stuart how to play Othello), had an Easter egg hunt, and Stuart and Dejaquan played football in the backyard.
We ended the day back at Stuart & Verity's place, playing some more Xbox football and baths for the kids.
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Friday, March 21 - Trip to England Day 0
Sarah, the kids, I got back from our trip to England today. With England just switching over to daylight saving time this morning, and the 6 hour timezone difference, it made today a long day. Anyway, I'm pleased to provide a day-by-day journal of our trip. I wrote entries for each day on my new Palm Centro (the successor to the Treo) I got just a couple days before we left. My Zire had died a few weeks ago and we decided now would make the most sense for me to get a mobile phone and have it with us on our trip--and it did prove to be helpful. Overall, I'm happy with the Centro, despite the lack of graffiti. It doesn't take too long to get used to the mini keyboard, and I suppose is faster to use than graffiti, although I never did master that.
I'll try to post an entry for each day, a day at a time. We took a decent amount of pictures. I'll try to download those and have them ready for each post. Although we didn't actually get to England on the first day of our trip, here it is, day zero: Friday, March 21:
Left for Chicago to stay overnight at a hotel while Tim worked on gutting the bathroom in our house. Of course the weather refused to cooperate, and like it seams every year, we had one last final snow storm at the end of March. The snow was coming down fast making it hard for the plows to keep up so it took twice as long to get there as it normally would.
After we checked in at 5pm we took the kids swimming and they had fun. We grabbed some free popcorn and pretzels for a bed time snack and ordered in room service, which actually turned out to be pretty good food (the dinner, not the popcorn--the kids ate that). Since the kids had naps on the way down, it took them a while to go to sleep. This seemed to be a theme for most
I'll try to post an entry for each day, a day at a time. We took a decent amount of pictures. I'll try to download those and have them ready for each post. Although we didn't actually get to England on the first day of our trip, here it is, day zero: Friday, March 21:

After we checked in at 5pm we took the kids swimming and they had fun. We grabbed some free popcorn and pretzels for a bed time snack and ordered in room service, which actually turned out to be pretty good food (the dinner, not the popcorn--the kids ate that). Since the kids had naps on the way down, it took them a while to go to sleep. This seemed to be a theme for most
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