One of the disadvantages of being as massive a nerd as I am, is that scheduling becomes very difficult when I bring all of my gadgets along.

For example, I am now officially unable to count the number of times where I have been somewhere, and my grandmother decided that it was time to leave, without giving me any advance notice at all. So everyone will be sitting in the car while I have to put my computer to sleep mode, disconnect the hdd, switch my SIM chip back into the iPhone, put everything in the backpack, zip the backpack up, and make sure I didn’t leave anything behind.

This is because except for the flash unit, I’m making about 100% utilization of the things in my backpack, so when I’m visiting someone, just about everything has been taken out of my backpack.

The frustrating thing about this is that the comment "do you want to walk home?" has been tossed around a lot. It’s being tossed around rather lazily, I think — If you can’t wait five minutes for me to pack up, then maybe you should’ve told me we were going to be leaving five minutes sooner.

In the west, when we’re going somewhere or planning something, someone takes the effort, and five seconds, to pop their head into whatever room I’m in and let me know when we’re leaving. Typically, even if it’s several hours in the future, I make a note of it, and I am ready to go fifteen minutes before our departure time, just in case.

One of the disadvantages of being as massive a nerd as I am, is that scheduling becomes very difficult when I bring all of my gadgets along.

For example, I am now officially unable to count the number of times where I have been somewhere, and my grandmother decided that it was time to leave, without giving me any advance notice at all. So everyone will be sitting in the car while I have to put my computer to sleep mode, disconnect the hdd, switch my SIM chip back into the iPhone, put everything in the backpack, zip the backpack up, and make sure I didn’t leave anything behind.

This is because except for the flash unit, I’m making about 100% utilization of the things in my backpack, so when I’m visiting someone, just about everything has been taken out of my backpack.

The frustrating thing about this is that the comment “do you want to walk home?” has been tossed around a lot. It’s being tossed around rather lazily, I think — If you can’t wait five minutes for me to pack up, then maybe you should’ve told me we were going to be leaving five minutes sooner.

In the west, when we’re going somewhere or planning something, someone takes the effort, and five seconds, to pop their head into whatever room I’m in and let me know when we’re leaving. Typically, even if it’s several hours in the future, I make a note of it, and I am ready to go fifteen minutes before our departure time, just in case.

Well, I finally went ahead and started trying to fix a bunch of the things on the U60. Unfortunately, I’m not that great at making sure everything works, although my friend Lando, who is an UNIX hero, was able to make sure everything was working just fine.

In all, we got some paths fixed from when I first installed the Blastwave package manager, we got Apache2′s userdir settings working, and I’m sure there’s something else that I’ve now forgotten. So, a big shout out to Lando, an UNIX hero.

Also, I’ve gotten a hang of setting up new software on the U60 with Blastwave, so I was able to set up and use GNU screen, IRSSI, and links. All interesting pieces of software. Gnu screen is really cool, and with that and irssi, I’m now able to log the IRC channels without having any other machines turned on. I think it’s time I started using the U60 for more things, because I’m starting to get used to it a bit.

Anyway, all of this leads up to the U60 becoming a very usable system, and, y’know, if anyone wants an account on it, feel free to ask.

Well, I finally went ahead and started trying to fix a bunch of the things on the U60. Unfortunately, I’m not that great at making sure everything works, although my friend Lando, who is an UNIX hero, was able to make sure everything was working just fine.

In all, we got some paths fixed from when I first installed the Blastwave package manager, we got Apache2′s userdir settings working, and I’m sure there’s something else that I’ve now forgotten. So, a big shout out to Lando, an UNIX hero.

Also, I’ve gotten a hang of setting up new software on the U60 with Blastwave, so I was able to set up and use GNU screen, IRSSI, and links. All interesting pieces of software. Gnu screen is really cool, and with that and irssi, I’m now able to log the IRC channels without having any other machines turned on. I think it’s time I started using the U60 for more things, because I’m starting to get used to it a bit.

Anyway, all of this leads up to the U60 becoming a very usable system, and, y’know, if anyone wants an account on it, feel free to ask.

Yesterday, we went to the "beach." I quote the word beach, because we weren’t at an ocean, nor am I even 100% sure of the name of the place where we were, just that there was in fact, sand, with people, at the edge of some body of water, that was set up in such a way that it was available to the general public. Therefore, we were at a beach.

In order to understand my misery, I should help you to know that in Arizona, the humidity typically sits around "zero" and "zero." We have no such thing as a "heat index," and whenever you perspire, it evaporates off of your body, and you actually feel cooled by it. In Michigan, even though the temperatures aren’t insane, or even crazy yet, there’s this massive amount of moisture in the air, which causes normal people like me to perspire, which causes people who are too modest to remove their shirt to get into a very "sticky" situation.

With my clothes sticking to my body, and a small headache forming, we decided we needed to rent a boat and venture out onto the water. So we walked the quarter-mile to the rental shack, even though the boats were just 20 feet away from us, to find out prices. Then we needed to go back to get money, then we needed to go back to the rental shack to actual get the rentals, then back to the boats, then after an hour of fun on the lake, we needed to go back to the rental shack and back to the car again.

Speaking of our hour of fun on the lake… we made the plunge to get two boats. Wade insisted that at least one of them be a rowboat, so we got one paddleboat, which Seth and Patrick wanted, and I took a rowboat, along with Wade and Kyle.

Unfortunately, the rowboat was a disaster. Part of the mount for one of the oars was broken, so the whole thing didn’t work properly, and made a terrible and loud noise. We managed to get Pat and Seth to trade us, although they didn’t seem to appreciate it too much, I think I made up for it later on by allowing them to use my computer to check myspace.

So yeah, that was my disjointed description of a day that I’m sure was actually better than I make it sound like.