Vintage Computers

Just saw a slideshow by TIME titled ‘Core Memory: Photographs of Vintage Computers‘. This stuff is immensely interesting to me, both as a Photographer and a computer geek.

My favorite (pictured below) is the picture of Core Memory.  You can essentially picture this as the grandfather of flash memory today (the stuff you stick in your digital camera or phone).  Technology is insane.

Be sure to click through to see all the pictures.

NOTE: imate originally seen on TIME’s website.

The Rental vs Ownership Lifestyle Choice

Authors Note: This post is in response to Mint’s latest article The Renter’s Manifesto which makes a pretty good argument for renting

Some people like to say

Renting is throwing your money away.  At the end of your lease you have nothing to show for it.

I’m sorry, but I need to disagree.  Not only does renting not throw your money away (you’re getting a place to LIVE remember?) but it’s also cheaper than buying in a lot of scenarios.  You may not be building equity, but what can you do with that extra 300 or more per month?  That’s right… build LIQUID equity.

You’d have a hard time convincing me that a Single Family Home is a good investment.  To me owning a house is nothing more than a LifeStyle choice. If it were a purely financial decision there would be a lot fewer home owners.

However; owning a rental unit is 100% different from owning a house.  It’s an investment.  We made that investment a few years ago, and it’s paying off.

Some numbers:

When we were renting we were paying $715 out of pocket per month.  That’s it.  Stupidly, we didn’t have renters insurance, so there’s $25-50/month we should have been paying that we weren’t.   So really… $740/mo

When we bought the house that dropped to about $600 out of pocket per month.  Add on about 75/mo for insurance (for the whole house) and you’re now at $675/mo.  Then there’s maintenance.  We’ve done a lot, to both sides.  new kitchen, lots of new drywall/paint/cleaning/etc.  My records show somewhere in the neighborhood of $2-300/month amortized across the life of our residency.  Now we’re up to $975/month without even trying.

Those are the hard numbers, now the soft:

When we bought the house we put a 10% down payment on it so we had a decent (not huge, and certainly not useful) amount of equity right away.  This put us in a good situation with the principle, however our interest rate was at 7.25% only .25% above the average and we could have gotten better, but it would have increased the bottom line on the house.  The previous owner gave us a hell of a deal (by my accounts at least a 10% discount off the true market value of the home) because we didn’t involve any realtors or banks.

4 years later and we just completed a refinance.  This hurt, a LOT.  but it was also one of the best decisions we’ve made.  It took us from 7.25% to 5% flat but it cost us about 3 years.  It’ll take us 3 years to recoup the cost of the refinance.  That’s ok though, because we’re in it for the long haul.

Now we’re down to about 775/mo out of pocket and we’re not done.

We just bought a single family house because our family is growing and we’re running out of room (remember that I said it’s a life style choice).  That and because now we can finally treat the rental property more like a business instead of an extension of our home.  I expect maintenance costs to shrink dramatically as a result.

If you look at our current out of pocket monthly expenses… it’s almost a no brainer to buy a duplex as a starter home.  I recommend it to every one I know that’s looking for a house.  As long as you’re a little handy and can deal with the tenants calling you in the middle of the night to tell you the pilot light is out… you’re owning for next to nothing.  Yes our out of pocket is more than what it was when we were renting, but there’s a few factors there:

  1. It’s not that much different.  $775 vs $715? 60 bucks and you have the freedom to do whatever you want?
  2. We’ve done a LOT to our house.  $300/mo is way more than necessary and I hope to bring that down in the coming months.  New drywall, new roof, new kitchen… have all been done.
  3. Equity.  While it will cost us 3 years to recoup the cost of the refinance, in those 3 years we’ll not only make that money back, but also pay all that money down on the principle and more essentially getting a 200% ROI.
  4. Going along with Equity… Increased home value.  Our house has increased in value about another 12% since we bought it (remember that we bought it at around 10-12% below market value at the time of purchase) and we’re only paying 60/month more than we were when renting.  Right now we have over 30% equity in our house and more than half of that is being built up by the tenants NOT us.

Buying a single home though…

Just remember that it’s a LifeStyle choice, not a financial one.  If it was a financial one, you already know the answer, it’s going to cost you more for the same quality of home and location…   Financial decisions are all about getting the most for your money which isn’t the case with a house, unless you consider the lifestyle ‘more’.

Oh and one more thing to add…  If someone is renting a house to you, it’s costing them less to own it than they’re charging you, otherwise they’d be pretty dumb.  However; they’ve probably owned it for years and years, which pretty much wipes away the initial cost of ownership.  Closing costs Suck and eat a huge amount of your equity up right away. Just food for thought.

Indian Hill Recreation Area

The whole point of this blog is to help you get outside in the Fairport NY and surrounding areas. But it’s not just to help you, it’s to help me get out there more frequently too. For that reason I’d like to introduce to you a new post series and personal project.

Welcome to Saturday in the Parks.

It’s no secret Perinton has a ton of parks. Everytime I drive down a road I’ve not previously been on I run into a new park (sometimes even more than one). For as long as I can keep finding new parks to visit (and when I’m not out of town) I’ll be featuring one here every Saturday.

But wait, there’s more!

Not only will I be featuring the park, I’ll be posting on location! Combining two things I love: technology and the great outdoors.

This weeks park is the Indian Hill Recreation Area. It’s not so much a park as it is a hiking paradise.

[insert 20min interruption by Jeff the nicest guy in the world and his dog Jayda]

When you’ve reached the picnic table you know you’re at the top.  The last time I came up here I thought it pretty much ended at the table.  However; after talking with Jeff and hiking along with him for a while I realize this section of the Crescent Trail is HUGE.  Several loops, lots of fields, a great place to hike with the kids or the dogs.  There are a few wet sections in the trail so if you decide to take the kids make sure they’re wearing their crappy sneakers.

The farthest I got to (thanks to Jeff) was a spot I could view the grass-roofed house from (which is pretty cool by the way).  I think the next trip to this place might be a little longer and I’ll be exploring the rest of the trails at least as far as the next road.

The locations of the recreation area, the parking lot and the trails can be seen in the Instamapper GPS Track I made below.
http://www.instamapper.com/trk?key=18173962671177867252&width=350&height=300&type=roadmap

Have fun out there! And if you get a chance, check out the grass roof house!

The Great Lamp Caper

Quite possibly the funniest email thread I’ve ever seen(update: link removed to protect the innocent) is being passed around work lately. This is how it starts:

Subject: my Lamp

The lamp from my table disappeared when I was on vacations. Could you please help me to return it back?

Thank you

~Alex (Developer)

Names have all been changed and, besides possible leads on the great Lamp caper, there’s no company confidential information in the entire thread so I have no problem sharing it. To understand why this is funny, you need to know who the 2 parties involved are.

Alex is just a low level Software Developer. Possibly been here a few years, maybe not.

His email is addressed to Dave aka CEO who responds below, and the conversation continues from there.

Dave (CEO): I’m sorry about your lamp. What would you suggest I do?

Alex (Developer): I do not know… as I understand some service people removed lamps from a lot of desks. Some people did not allow them to do this, but I was on vacation. Probably you can tell me who did this, by whose order or/and who is responsible and what I have to do to request the lamp back…

Dave (CEO): On the assumption that you are serious, I have copied Carl in our real estate group who can look into the great lamp caper. I wish you all the best.

Alex (Developer): I sent these emails mistakenly not looking at where I send them. I am so sorry. Please accept my apologies.

Dave (CEO): Don’t apologize. It’s ok. Chris will sort it out.

I find it awesome that he responded and I love the responses, but I sorta feel bad for the guy because it’s been passed on to EVERYONE.

The Start of Something New

This blog is born out of necessity.  Several people I know, myself included, have been searching for good outdoor info in the Monroe County area with no luck.  There’s lots of info out there, but it’s all in books and in the experts heads.  This is an attempt to publicize it as much as possible.

The reason it’s Fairport Outside and not Monroe County Outside is simply that I live in Fairport as do a few other like minded individuals and there’s lots to do out here in Trail Town USA.

Stay tuned, because we’re gonna kick this site off with a fun and interesting project.

A Perfectly Normal Sunday

On a Sunday afternoon a few weeks ago it was gorgeous outside so Rachel and I spent the afternoon with the little one.  So what she’s not born yet?  We’re anxious parents so we couldn’t wait.

Rachel’s brother George & his wife Stacie gave us Oregon shirts for Christmas last year & we just got a package from them for the baby with a Oregon onesie in it.  It was too cute to wait a few months before using so we had a perfectly normal fun Sunday afternoon at the park.  Leave us alone.

Recommended Cameras

I get asked all the time if I have any camera recommendations.  My first questions are always: “what are you looking to get out of it?”, and “what is your price range?”.  I have some stand-by recommendations depending on what the answers are.  I threw together a product recommendation page that takes care of the recommendation part for me.  Of course I’m always willing to give advice and feedback, but those who know me might turn here first to get some info from now on.

You can buy direct from amazon right through my recommended products page for the same prices you’d get on Amazon.com.  However; if you buy from here I get a super tiny percentage.  So… If you’re looking to buy a camera and you find one on my recommendation page that you like I’d love it if you buy it here.

Thanks!

NOTE: I’ll keep the recommendation page up to date with the latest stuff as often as I can with the latest and greatest.  However; remember these are my RECOMMENDATIONS, they won’t always be the hottest new stuff, because a lot of the time I feel the new stuff is just fluff, and the older models are better for the money.

WebCam Tracker v0.9.0

For whatever reason I wanted to spend a little more time on my WebCam Tracker program by throwing a UI on top of it.  I did and it turned out reasonably well for my first foray into SWT.

3 things I would still like to do:

  1. Thread the image retrieval process.  It’s done but something happens with the output streams on the new thread which causes it to hang when System.out is called.  If I figure that out it’ll be easy to re-implement.
  2. Implement the progress bar at the bottom of the window.  It should be able to track the progress based upon the provided duration easily enough.
  3. Come up with a better widget for picking the duration and delay times.

Since I took a little bit of extra time to glossy it up a bit, there’s no sense in making it go to waste.  I threw the code & the distribution up on Google Code.  You can see it at WebCam Tracker.

Another time-lapse I did using WebCam Tracker.  Kinda neat.

Sunset over Lake McDonald

Let me know what you think, and of course I welcome any comments/feedback about the app.  Not that I’ll necessarily do anything about them… I don’t plan on spending much time on it… but I’d like to know.

How I Stole From a Monastery

Ettal Monastery So, I have a confession to make.

Randy Aldrich is a thief.

I stole from a Monastery back in 1998.  Not much, but it happened.  We stopped at Ettal on our way to Neuschwanstein & I took a little booklet that described the abbey and the monastery.  At the time I thought they were free.  I didn’t know that they weren’t until we got back on the bus and someone else asked me:

You bought one of those!?

To which I responded “bought?”

Anyway… turns out they were 5 Marks (at the time Germany had not yet adopted the Euro).  Herr Stoker told me just to drop a 5 in the donation bin at the next church we went to and I’d be square with the big guy in the sky.  Seemed like a good enough Karma move to me, so that’s what I did.

The picture to the left is a scan of the cover of that book, which I still have and will probably keep forever just as a reminder.  However; even to this day, I don’t believe I’ve ever read it… *sigh*.

That being said, the Monastery is beautiful so if you’re in the area, I highly suggest it.

Diamond Sportsmen Club's APA Permit

Man, the APA can be some real jerks sometimes…  Looks like the formation of the Diamond Sportsmen Club got off to a rocky start.  Found an article detailing some of the things they had to agree to which went well above and beyond standard APA guidelines.  One of the more interesting bits I found is that the club bylaws were part of the APA permit meaning the APA had the final say on any changes to the rules the club wanted to make.  Bizarre.  I’m not sure if all of this still applies today, I’d be interested to find out.  Might talk to the president one of these days to see…

Diamond Sportsmen’s Club Agrees to Cumbersome APA Permit
Personal Monitoring, APA-Managed Logging, Biological Survey Imposed

By Carol W. LaGrasse
July 2002

The State’s 1998 acquisition of the 139,000-acre Champion International lands in the northern Adirondacks gave hunting club leaseholders on timber industry tracts a wake-up call. All 298 hunting camps are slated to be demolished, including those camps on the 110,000 acres of land where a forest management corporation will hold title to the underlying land with the State owning conservation easements.

Early in 2001, The Nature Conservancy announced that it was acquiring 26,000 acres near Long Lake in the Adirondacks from International Paper Company, where many hunters hold camp leases. More uncertainty was created for such leaseholders at the time, as the land preservation organization divulged incomplete plans to sell some of these lands outright to the State of New York and to make a timber management arrangement on other of the lands with conservation easements involving the State.

Responding to the growing threat to the future of hunting camps in the Adirondacks, the Diamond Sportsmen’s Club organized with an ambitious plan to become independent of timber company leaseholder status. Key members of the new club belonged to the Barney Pond Club, which leased the land for their hunting and fishing camps around a 37.8-acre pond from Lassiter and Diamond International. The sale of the land where the Barney Pond Club was located endangered the future of the lease, and the cadre of alert members moved quickly to acquire the 3,283 acres near South Colton in St. Lawrence County where the club had existed for 46 years.

“Private ownership of land in the Adirondacks is best for the people of the North Country,” declared Richard Todd, the president of the Diamond Sportsmen’s Club, in a letter published in February 2001 in the Press Republican, the Plattsburgh daily. “The ‘good old days’ are gone when we could count on leasing property from the timber companies for recreational use.”

During the latter half of 2000, the club executed the purchase of the Barney Pond Club from the new owner, Lothair, Inc. On the property were 42 existing camps. To make the $1,360,000 purchase financially viable, they invited additional members, who would build their own camps on the property or use the existing ones. In addition, they made a provision for recreational members who would have extensive rights to use the land, but not have their own camps.

“You can own a piece of the Adirondacks,” enticed the flyer that the club distributed. It offered the public individual transferable memberships, with the one-time payment of $5,000. All members would pay annual dues, the amount depending on their status as hunting and fishing camp owners or recreational members. In addition, the camp owners would pay the real estate taxes on their buildings.

The club’s fall 2000 announcement projected that the final size of the club would be about 125 to 150 full memberships, each entitled to a camp, in addition to 50 to 75 recreational memberships.

The Adirondack Park law gives an exemption from APA jurisdiction for hunting and fishing camps of less than 500 square feet in Resource Management zones and no square footage limitation in other land categories. This exemption was one of the important concessions that powerful local Assemblyman and Majority Whip Glenn Harris won in the course of the battle with Governor Nelson Rockefeller over the passage of the final form of the Adirondack Park Agency Act in 1973. The obvious interpretation of the provision is that the sportsmen would not have to apply to the APA for permission to build additional hunting and fishing camps of any size in Rural Use areas, where 68 of their 76 new camps are to be located. The other eight new camps are to be in Resource Management.

Over the recent decade, it has been observed that the Adirondack Park Agency does not like to see hunting and fishing camps constructed under the exemption, especially when several are contemplated. Informed sources say that the APA staff warned the Diamond Sportsmen’s Club that it would not be able to escape the jurisdiction of the agency. Instead, the staff persuaded the club that they should apply for seasonal residences instead of building “hunting and fishing camps.” They enticed the club into more elaborate plans with the idea that the upgraded status of the buildings would be beneficial to the club members because there would be less restrictions on the buildings and that the buildings would be larger.

However, once an applicant is involved in negotiations with agency staff, elaborate permit conditions very often attach themselves to the application, driving up the cost of the project and generating future encumbrances on the operation of whatever facility is contemplated.

At the official monthly APA meeting on June 13, 2002, the staff presented the draft final application from the Diamond Sportsmen’s Club to the APA commissioners. The results, although predictable, were disappointing. The number of new camps had been decreased to 76, making a total of 117 (considering that 41 of the existing camps are to remain), rather than the “125 to 150” advertised by the club or the 155 that were in the club’s original application. The club has already filled 119 full memberships, which is the camp-holding category.

The club has already received one recreational, non-camp owning, membership of the “50 to 75” originally advertised. At the June 13 APA meeting, Project Review Officer George Outcalt told the commissioners, “Applicant may not do any more recreational memberships.” An outside observer familiar with the APA could conclude that the APA staff has imposed a moratorium on the club’s recruitment, at the current total of 119 full members and one recreational member.

The only other construction allowed beyond the individual camps or “seasonal residences” would be expansion of the 480-sq. ft. clubhouse with a 720 sq. ft addition. At the entrance to the club’s property, the club would be allowed one sign set well back from the road, with only the club name displayed. Gone would be the invitation to join the club that has been proudly announced on the signs by the roadside.

Describing the buildings of the former Barney Pond Club at the APA meeting, the agency staff showed slides of the existing camps, including 30 that predate the APA Act, according to the monthly Adirondack Park Agency Reporter, published by Susan Allen of Keene Valley. Nearly all the existing camps are very small and modest, with no utilities. Instead, they have outhouses, gray water systems, and wood or propane stoves. Some have on-site generators.

The new buildings are considered a subdivision into sites for “single family dwellings,” not “hunting and fishing cabins,” according to the 29-page final APA permit. Yet, 70 of the 76 new camps would be built without electric power, telephone service, wells, and indoor plumbing. The six buildings that would have modern services are all located on a town highway, Raquette River Drive. The prohibition of indoor plumbing for all but six of the camps is inconsistent with the staff expert’s determination that soil conditions are suitable for septic systems. Even more questionable from the point of view of public health and convenience is the permit requirement that the same 70 camp owners must carry in their drinking water. It seems that the buildings are really camps rather than single family dwellings.

To add insult to injury, the permit spells out the details of underground disposal leach fields that must be built for the waste water, as though there could be any pollution potential from a few daily buckets of water from a kitchen sink without running water. Imposing further wasteful expense, the permit requires that existing “wastewater disposal systems” less than 200 feet from a pond or stream have to brought into “compliance” with the permit conditions for new systems.

The floor area limitation of 1,000-sq. ft. seems at first glance to be double that allotted in the law for hunting and fishing cabins for Resource Management areas. But the permit application has the unusual inclusion of decks, porches, and even small sleeping lofts in the total floor area. Furthermore, trailers are prohibited except for temporary use during the construction of the site-built camps. The trailer prohibition was originally self-imposed by the club, but the club allowed this clause in their rules to be written into the permit, putting this rule under control of the APA, rather than the members.

Other landscape restrictions are that the cabins must be “a color that blends with the surrounding environment” and buffer strips around Barney Pond with no vegetation cutting for a distance for 300 ft deep without APA approval in the form of a new or amended permit. These requirements contrast with the APA law, which spells out the amount of cutting allowed around water bodies as 30 percent of the shoreline on any lot. The APA staff and its non-profit alter-ego, the Adirondack Council, invariably chip away at the amount of cutting allowed in law as supposedly too generous. In fact, the club’s permit points out that the Adirondack Council withdrew its request for a public hearing when the number of proposed camps was reduced from 155 to 117 and additional vegetative cutting buffers were imposed around Barney Pond and a stream that runs through the club’s land.

Future Bonds to the APA

Far-reaching parts of the permit impose requirements for APA management of the club’s land in the future.

The club must prepare a forestry management plan for the APA’s approval. This intrusive involvement of the APA could impede the plans that the club originally announced that there would be marketable timber on the harvested land in ten to fifteen years. In addition to forestry issues, the permit requires the plan is to “minimize the potential for conflict with recreational uses of the project site by club members.” Not only does this provision set the stage for bureaucratic dealings with the APA, which, under the permit must approve the plan before any trees are harvested, but the provision could also set the stage for litigation by an obstructionist club member dissatisfied with the degree of preservation or upset about the look of logged-over land.

But another provision could be far more expensive and cumbersome. This is the requirement that the club submit to the APA a biological survey prepared by a professional ecologist. This final permit requirement is less onerous than the draft permit requirement for a natural resource management plan that would include “an inventory of vegetative and wildlife components,” recommendations for their “enhancement and protection,” and address recreational conflicts with resource protection. According to the Reporter, Mr. Outcalt told the commissioners on June 13 that the club asked that the resource management plan be eliminated, but that the staff did not recommend that. The APA’s staff member Ray Curran stated that the biological inventory was needed because, “We have a rare plant somewhere near the site; we think the habitat might be there.”

The Reporter pointed out that one of the APA Commissioners, Frank Mezzano, who is well-known locally as the former supervisor of the Town of Lake Pleasant and a member of the Hamilton County Board of Supervisors, remarked at the first day of the two-day commissioners’ meeting that the natural resource and monitoring plans “are particularly onerous to me.”

As finally passed during the second day of the commissioners’ meeting, the imposition on the sportsmen’s club includes a two-phase resource management plan: a qualitative biological inventory to be completed within three years and a resource and recreation management plan before any new land use and development in the future.

Commissioner Mezzano took strong exception to the management and monitoring requirements even after the resource management plan was modified for the final commissioners’ vote on the second day of the meeting. “I’m very supportive of the project but I still for the record have to voice my consternation about the biological inventory, the resource management plan, and the monitoring plan,” he stated for the record, according to the Reporter.

The qualitative biological inventory requires that an ecologist identify “any rare, threatened or species of special concern, or NY Natural Heritage Program species or communities listed as S1 or S2,(1) deer wintering concentration areas, natural fish spawning areas, as well as surface waters or special habitats.” For a full description of this potentially costly permit condition the permit holder is referred to an eight-page document called “Guidelines for Biological Survey,” which contains only a two-paragraph description of a “Qualitative Biological Survey.” The description sheds little light on the standards for mapping and detail of the required inventory. The only indication of the degree of detail required is a list showing the names of three past qualitative biological surveys and a reassurance that, “In large projects it is not expected that the biological survey aspect would total more than one half of one percent of the value of the project.”

To gage the potential impact of the requirement of a natural resource inventory, it is only necessary to recall that the Whitney’s withdrew their application for the subdivision of 15,000 acres of their 45,000-acre estate several years ago because the APA imposed the requirement for a biological inventory of the entire estate. At the time that the Whitneys dropped their application, an informed source said that this requirement was the reason that the Whitneys dropped the project. Later, the 15,000 acres were sold to the State of New York.

A most unusual encumbrance on the operation of the club is the requirement for a “monitoring plan” to be approved by the APA. This plan is to include a mechanism for recording how many members and guests are on the site on a daily, weekly and monthly basis, the types of activities undertaken, and the location and number of new camps built each year. The official reason in the permit for this monitoring is that the numbers are meant to help the staff in the future if the club proposes more development.

Finally, the APA imposed a long-term burden on the Diamond Sportsmen’s Club by incorporating much of the club’s official by-laws into the permit. The permit requires that prior to making any changes to the club’s rules or the standards for the club’s cabins, the club must submit a draft of the proposed changes to the APA for formal approval, as a new or amended permit. This boils down to giving veto power over the club’s by-laws to the APA.

Some of the camp rules may be important to the members, but conditions may change, resulting in the need to change the by-laws in the future. For instance, one rule prohibits a camp owner from renting his camp to someone else. Why should the APA care if a hunter offsets the cost of his camp by renting it to a friend or relative when he is not using it? The hunters may have made a mistake by allowing the APA to incorporate their by-laws into the permit.

If the APA becomes more comfortable about imposing such cumbersome permit conditions, some with barely a hint of statutory authority, the efforts of sportsmen to resist the tide of the State’s aggressive land acquisition will face increasing difficulty.

Notes:

(1) S1 and S2 refer to the top two species rankings of the New York State Natural Heritage Program, a wildlife inventory program of the State Department of Environmental Conservation in conjunction with The Nature Conservancy’s Natural Heritage Program.

Originally posted by The Property Rights Foundation of America
who reprinted it from the New York Property Rights Clearinghouse, Vol. 6 No. 1 (PRFA, Summer 2002)

Also happened across Adirondack Counsel Newsletter Summer 2002 in which the agreement/permit was announced.  Interesting stuff.