Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org
Online ordering – funny sales trick
I am ordering vitamins online for my dogs at Puritan’s Pride.
They have a buy one get one free deal.
When you get to the shopping cart and you have selected one item, it suggests to Buy 2 Get 3 Free. If ou change your quantity to 2, then it suggests “Buy 3 Get 4 Free”. So I kept going to see where this would max out.. I ordered 3 and it suggested “Buy 4 Get 6 Free”. 4 then said “Buy 5 Get 7 Free”. I kept going up to 20, where it was now telling me “Buy 21 Get 31 Free”. I then tried 40, it kept suggesting more. I don’t eally need 102 bottles of B-50, but it was fun little distraction.
Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org
My saga of getting a KVM solution for Digital (DVI) Monitors
In December I bought a pair of new flat panel monitors. I had no idea the journey I would have to take in order to replace my KVM switch functionality which is simple and inexpensive with VGA monitors. [Read more …]
[A DevLife post]
Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org
Don’t tell me how to vote
Vermont’s statewide town meetings are happening tomorrow. This is a day long event where residents of Vermont’s towns discuss and then vote on budgets and any local elections.It’s a really cool process and a great way to engage everyone in the future of their town. Here’s some info on it from the state of vermont website.
In Huntington, there is a race for the town clerk and town treasurer. There is one woman who has held both jobs for a number of years. There are two people who are challenging her, one for clerk and a different one for treasurer. Because it is so local, to me it’s pretty personal. I am friendly with all of the candidates. I am surprised to see placards for one side or the other on people’s lawns because it is so personal and a slap in the face. I don’t care if George Bush knows that I don’t vote for him. I don’t attend the same parties that he does. Rich and I didn’t wait at his house for the ambulance when Rich cracked his head open on Camel’s Hump. I won’t see him at the pancake breakfast or spaghetti dinner.
One of my neighbors has been calling me every few days but not leaving messages. I can see this from the caller id history on my phone. I know this means that they are trying to call me to tell me who I should vote for. I already got a few of these phone calls. A woman I know and like a lot who is campaiging on behalf of one side left a 5 minute message on my answering machine. Someone I didn’t know called last night who was a little more subtle – encouraging me to vote and then telling me that she supports a particular candidate and hopes I do to.
Am I turning into a curmudgeon? I dunno. But it’s definitely aggravating me enough to write about it!
Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org
What drives Bill Ryan
Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org
MapPoint and Windows Live Local got me lost
Oh I hate to say this but it’s true. When picking up my neice last weekend, her mother and I decided to meet halfway and find a Friendly’s which would be amenable to all the kids. So I used Windows Live Local to drill into the general area and then show me all the Friendly’s. There was one right in the town we were focused on. Perfect. Then I asked Windows Live Local to map it for me and give me directions. We followed the directions and ended up on the wrong side of town in a totally residential area. Rich and I drove back towards the comnercial area and just asked someone for directions. I had sent my niece the link to those same directions, so they got pretty lost as well but finally found their way.
I tried to have it locate a few other businesses that I saw when I went to the real Friendly’s, but WLL puts them all in that same person’s back yard.
For comparison, MapQuest couldn’t find the Friendly’s in West Lebanon, NH though it gives me about ten others in NH and VT. But when I typed in Friendlys (without the apostrophe), it got me there correctly. Google got it right.
To be fair, I went back to WLL and just typed in Friendly, but again, landed in the person’s back yard.
I really like the interface of Windows Live Local. Truly I do. It’s very cool, how the directions pop up and you can actually go step by step on the map even. But this next step of mapping software – the sophistication of typing in a business name and expecting perfect directions (whether from Google, MapQuest or Microsoft) is just not quite there yet. I just don’t want to get lost.
Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org
Watch those default paths in Windows Forms
Ever wonder why your application suddenly can’t find a file that is definitely in the right place? There’s a good chance that you are relying on the default path and that you opened up a FileDialog window. [read more …]
[A DevLife post]
Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org
SetDataSource and “Load Report Failed” in Crystal with .NET 2.0
Okay this was an obscure problem. Luckily, I found the solution quickly enough in this long MSDN forum thread.
The problem was that when I was trying to print the same report multiple times in an app, the 2nd time would always throw the error “Load Report Failed” on the SetDataSource command of my report.
This was happening to me in design time only. Fortunately, not at runtime.
The solution? Are you sitting? You must have something in the Company field of your assembly info. Not just spaces. Not just periods. But real text.
Yup that’s the solution. A caveat – this may not be the only solution and not be the solution for every scenario. But it has thus far made the problem go away. If it returns, I’ll be sure to edit this post.
The reason that I was seeing this in design time, not runtime, was because it was being thrown from an assembly that was not the main executable assembly. The exe assembly had the assembly info all filled out. But in this class assembly, which was being checked during design time, it wasn’t.
Go figure.
Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org
Ski Day – a mini photo journal of a short back country ski in the Vermont woods
After an incredibly disappointing (relatively snowless) winter, we got a nice little 1 1/2 foot dump yesterday and to add to this grand event, today was a beautiful sunny day. Don Kiely asked for pictures, so I took my camera with me when Rich and I went out on a 3 hour back country ski. We ski right out from our back yard to the Green Mt. State Forest!
Here is just in our back yard as we enter our woods. Our woods connect with those of all of our neighbors up and down our road and extend through to the next road over, giving us about 100 acres of private land with great trails that we all work to maintain for hiking, snow shoeing and skiing.

A little way into the woods I have hung a small section of Tibetan Prayer Flags on two trees that have always felt like a gateway. The flags remind me to leave all of my worries behind as I enter our woods and on the way home, to be mindful not to let those worries affect me and those around me. Not always successful, but I try, I really try.

We have some nice ski tracks already thanks to Rich and I first packing down the trail yesterday afternoon with our big old wooden snowshoes and then our own skiing and our neighbors’ as well. Luckily nobody postholes our trails in our own woods!
After winding our way through the woods for about a mile, we come out onto our neighbors land and ski along the fencing for their livestock towards the entrance to the Beane Trail. This is where we enter the forest and can head up to the Long Trail if we want. I did this the other day on snowshoes with my neice.
My happy happy skis. These are back country skis. Much fatter than x-country skis, with flex, free-heels (I have leather boots and 3-pin bindings) and metal edges. Lighter weight than my tele equipment. Perfect for woods skiing that’s not too steep. I’m not great on these – I can turn somewhat but have to rely on snowplowing to ensure I don’t kill myself. When I ski somewhere that I need more control, I go for the tele gear.
This is on the logging road that is part of the Beane Trail. It’s a public trail so we were lucky that it just had a nice ski tracks and the snowshoers had kept to the side (and the postholers* had stayed home). At the beginning it is nearly flat, with just a slight incline. After about 1/2 mile you can head up the mountain on the trail proper (but definitely not on skis), or continue out on the logging road that goes through the woods and up the mountain. We did that for about another mile. We are now in the realm of thousands of acres of public land. Yippee. Another option in this direction is to head to the Catamount trail which is a 300 mile long ski trail that goes from one end of the state to the other.
Up up up we went. It was a BLAST coming down.

On the way home, we took a detour out to another neighbor’s field before we headed back into our woods. What a gorgeous day! And mild temps too, about 30 degrees.
The end. Hope you liked it, Don. 🙂
*Post-holers – people who trash a ski trail by walking in boots. Skis and showshoes are good etiquette in the winter.
IT Jobs: Sr. Net Consultant, Las Vegas
Sr. .Net Consultant
Las Vegas, NV
Contract or Full time
SKILLS
C#.Net (C sharp in Visual Studio.Net, Compact Framework)
XML
Web Services
Microsoft SQL Server
Microsoft IIS – ASP and ASPX development
.Net Web Applications
RDBMS Design
C++
Visual Basic
Object Oriented Programming and Design
HTML
Java Script
Java, J2EE (Servlets, JSP, JDBC, Struts Tag Libraries, Web Applications)
Additional requirements
5 years of related experience
Bachelors of Science in Computer Science or other related discipline
Contact:
Kishore Khandavalli
Telephone : 802.383.1500 Ext 105
Fax: 802.383.1501
iTech US, Inc.
kk@iTechUS.com
www.iTechUS.com
Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org