Visual Studio 2008, Beta 2...Installed!

31 July 2007

I'm not generally averse to trying out beta, or even alpha software. On something as big as VS I am. With beta 1 I went the virtual machine route, which worked great. But for beta 2 I decided to actually install the thing on my dev machine at home. I was a little worried, but here in the next few months I'm due for a rebuild anyway.

I did a full install minus Crystal Reports (because I firmly believe that Satan invented and continues to develop it) and Sql Server 2005 Express (already have that). The install took about 40 minutes, with no issues.

I upgraded a WPF project with no negative ramifications. Did the same with one web project. All seems to be working well. I also made your my VS 2005 projects still worked, and they do.

So, in my experience, everything is peachy.

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I Need A Lampe

30 July 2007

I bet you red that titel and thought I couldn't spel...

This is for all of you that meet at least one of the following three criteria: First, you find great value in the pictures of me in weird shirts, reviews, and the occassional posting I do on the blog. Second, you have some money to spare. Third, you are related and like to give gifts to your relatives.

Eisenbrauns has Lampe's Patristic Greek Lexicon on sale for $245. Normally it is around $350. Buy me that and you'll be my favorite person. Seriously.

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I Am Linear A

28 July 2007

These tests that we take to see what operating system, superhero, or whatnot are really a waste of time. But I sometimes do them anyway. Most of them I avoid because I don't find them interesting, but when I saw one on which ancient language I was, I just had to try it out. Of course, if they would have stuck me with ancient Ethiopic or some random dead language from ancient Australia, I would have definitely ignored the results. After all, wouldn't I be a language that I at least find interesting? As it turns out...I am. And what am I? Linear A!

Your Score: Linear A

Not much to say, really. You're Linear A, the first alphabet ever written by the proto-Greeks - at least, as far as survives. Unfortunately, you made a bad career move and ended up being used by accountants and fish mongers, rather than to record epics. However, you did manage all your SEC filings on time.

At least I'm not Older Futhark like Jim Davila. However, I am apparently very much like Charles Halton, whose blog I had never seen before.

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The Things I Will Do For Free Stuff

26 July 2007

The things I will do for free stuff...for example...

Me wearing the Evil Mastermind Shirt

I have a weakness when it comes to free stuff, especially if it comes in one of three categories: food, books, or geek gear. For example, occassionally we'll have to stay late at work to support a release of our website. This is not all that fun. Usually it involves doing nothing, but we have to stick around just in case. All they have to do to make me completely happy is to buy me dinner.

It really shouldn't make me that happy. If I were to go home I would be able to eat a meal that costs very little, somewhere around $3 for my portion. Buying me a meal, even if it costs the company ~$7 does not make up for the time I "lost" by having to stay late. I'm salary, so they don't have to pay me anyway. Sometimes I stay late, sometimes I leave early. Who cares, because I get paid for doing my work, not working exactly 40 hour weeks. But back to what I was saying. The extra time I am spending at work, in terms of how much I get per hour if calculated in such terms, is not anywhere close to $3 an hour, or even $7 an hour. So it's not like they're really compensating for "lost" time. But you know what...it doesn't matter. If I get a free dinner I'm as happy ampersand on a query string. That shouldn't be true. There must me something wrong with me.

I while back Sourcegear was giving away this t-shirt. The only requirement was that you put a picture of you up on your blog wearing the shirt with a link to Eric Sink's blog. Because I have some insane fixation of free stuff in the geek gear category, I will do embarrasing things to myself, such as posting a picture of myself on my blog to get it. And, by the way...I REALLY like the shirt!

Do I need to see a psychiatrist? You decide.

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High Blood Pressure Is Not Cool

18 July 2007

I have high blood pressure. This is not very cool. I'm only 31 and only a little overweight (6'4 and 230-ish pounds). I decided that since I don't want to die soon, I'll deal with this. I don't want to use medicine. If I can fix this through diet and exercise, I will. How high is my blood pressure? Take a look:

My Systolic blood pressure is always high. My diastolic is pretty close to normal. My heart rate isn't too bad. It's that top number that's not so good. Are things improving? Maybe...but I'll need to wait to see if these numbers stay lower.

Step one. Lose weight. I'm doing this by stepping up my exercise program and changing my diet. I'm not dieting. I'm changing what I eat. I'm creating a menu plan that I can live with long term. Right now I'm eating slightly less than I want to be, but the plan is to do that until I reach a lower body weight, and then raise the level of food to a comfortable plateau. But I'm not starving myself. I'm not totally avoiding fat, carbs, or protein. I'm trying for a healthy, balanced, diet. And I am, of course, not trying any of those stupid diet pills. How is it working? I started at 235, June 15. I'm now down to the 226/227 range.

My original goal was to lose one pound a week with a goal of reaching 210 in early December. After a few weeks I was beating that goal pretty badly, so I put in a two pound a week goal. Up until this week everything was going well. My eating has stayed the same except for one change; I'm drinking protein shake after every weight workout. Since I've started I have still lost weight...but it has been much slower. Is it muscle gain that has offset this? I bet that has something to do with it, but I doubt that's it. Of course, if it is muscle gain...I'm happy with that! The scale just doesn't tell me :)

So, a little more details. Here are my general rules for how my food intake has changed. First, eat more fish (there are some healthy fats there that I need). Second, drink almost no Dr Pepper and drink water instead. This has been hard up until recently, though I do partake occassionally. Third, eat less snacks, but when I do eat them, go for fruit. Actually, I'm eating a ton of fruit these days. Fourth, eat more veggies (I haven't ever eaten much until now, and I still probably don't eat enough). Fifth, drink at least one glass of wine a night. Sixth, drink at least one glass of milk a day. Seventh, eat smaller portions of meat (especially beef) and potatoes. Eighth, prefer fruit over fruit juice. However, drink some, because drinking water all the time is BORING. Ninth, more sleep. Tenth, eat less salt. All these things are designed to make me more healthy generally, and some are included specifically for blood pressure.

As for exercise, I've been averaging 6-7 days a week in the gym. 4-5 of those days are weight-lifting days, the rest are cardio days.

For the most part, I've created this plan through reading and listening to podcast material. I went to a Dr a couple weeks ago and got his advice. He basically said that I could eat just about whatever I wanted, but I just needed to work on portion control. Since virtually everything I am reading says otherwise (not to mention common sense), I have decided to completely ignore this man. I am watching my portions, but I'm not ignoring what's going on in my food selection.

This Dr visit really shouldn't have surprised me, though. As I read, I'm finding that there are a lot of very different, and completely conflicting, views on what is healthy and what is not. This is probably true about just about every discipline out there (it is true in every discipline I've spent time in, from biblical studies, to Greek syntax, to software engineering). So I've come to the point where I distrust everything I hear unless I can find real medical studies backing up what someone says. I'm not ignoring advice. I'm looking for it. But I'm looking for it as a guide so I can go do the research myself. I'm not afraid of a little research...I'm used to it :). And not all doctors, nutritionists, dieticians, and fitness dudes are quacks. But a lot of them are. So I have to be careful, and take the search for knowledge into my own hands. It's more work, but it is the only way I can be sure (or at least more sure) that what I'm hearing isn't musings of fools and supplement peddlers.

I'll share what I learn in this process, though I encourage you to be willing to fact check me as I fact check everyone else. Hopefully I'll lose the weight and the blood pressure will go down. If not, then I'll take more drastic measures than above.

BTW, this is all I have been doing for the last month. Exercising, eating heatlhy, resting from said exercise, or reading about exercise and food. No side coding and side work. No blogging (obviously). The search for knowledge in this area continues, but you should see at least a little more of me here.

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