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The wonderful smell of gunpowder in the morning

07 Mar

I will not be posting about every trip to the range in time :) It really isn’t that exciting for most people, but aside from working, that’s about all I do anymore; I shoot lead in one form or another out the end of a gun of one type or another. With the variety of shooting disciplines available at ORSA, it is very easy to spend many hours on a Saturday there as I did this week.

Tiff and I woke up Saturday morning to the expectation of a full day of fun for both of us. Tiff had her sewing day with her friends from school, and I planned to go to ORSA and shoot as many rounds of clays as I could take, then do some benchrest with my Savage 340, and I had Emmett’s Marlin 60 22LR to play with on the plinking range. Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Finally got my gun club membership

28 Feb

Well, as of February 25th, I am FINALLY a member of the Oak Ridge Sportsman’s Association. Tiff and I went to the orientation meeting @ 6:30pm and that wonderfully entertaining presentation lasted about 2 hours. Honestly it wasn’t that bad for me, but I’m sorry I dragged Tiff with me. It was mostly technical stuff, don’t do this, range is open these hours, don’t be a retard with a gun, blah blah, etc etc.

Entrance to ORSA

Sunday afternoon Tiffany and I went to the benchrest range and shot the rifles a bit. I borrowed a 22LR from Emmett so Tiff could shoot with me. I shot my “new” Savage 223Rem. The scope on that gun is horrible….the gun hits about 8 inches high at 50 yards and I can’t get the scope to adjust out. It’s just a cheapo Blaser 4×32, so it’s no huge loss.

Me Shooting the Savage 223

Tiff shot the 22LR (an older Marlin 60) that Emmett let me borrow so she’d have something to shoot. When we stopped at Gander Mountain to buy targets, they had packs of squirrel paper targets (for legitimate target practice for squirrel seasons) and bought those for her to shoot at. I got a pack of the fluorescent yellow targets so I could try to sight in the gun (which was sadly not too successful as you read above). Tiff was hampered by only having open sites on the 22, but she still did pretty well shooting her squirrels at 50 yards. :D

Tiff's squirrels

No shotgunning today as there is a league that reserves all the clay fields for use on Sundays. I normally shoot on Saturday though, so that shouldn’t normally be a problem. I have a lot of guys telling me to reload the 223 so I’m saving my brass. Metallic reloading is significantly easier to get into than shotshell…less equipment and I usually only end up shooting about 20 rounds per trip, so it’s not nearly as high volume as what I’ll need to do for the shotguns.

Anyhow, I’m excited to finally have my membership active and can shoot just about any shooting discipline there. I’m looking at getting some small rimfire rifle for Tiffany next. I really want a 17HMR, but the ammo is a little pricey for the gun’s intended purpose of higher volume target practice and plinking. 17HM2 is an option, but it hasn’t caught on and all ammo/guns would have to be mail ordered. Sooo, all that said, I’ll likely end up getting a Savage MKII in 22LR with a heavy barrel and put a decent 4x or 6x scope on it. I think I’ve decided on a Bushnell 2-7×50 for my 223. We’ll see.

More next weekend I’m sure, though I’m about out of target ammo for the shotguns. I need to build up my stock of ammo again.

 
 

Hawkins Computer Services has an office!

28 Feb

Well after almost 2 years of working from home, we at Hawkins Computer Services finally have a real office space! About two weeks ago, Emmett went on a hardcore search for a good office space in the area that would suffice for the 3 of us. In the span of a week he signed the lease, got internet and phone installed, bought desks, computer equipment, etc, and generally got the place setup.

Entrance to Office

The couple of days before we officially moved in we brought equipment over and Jennifer, Ray, Emmett, and I got the new desks built, painted the walls, put up decor, ran networking, etc. Thursday was our first official day over there and we’re getting settled in. I can’t wait for our first full week over there… should help us all be more productive and improve our communication with each other and clients.

Left: My desk ~ Right: Ray's Desk

Left: My desk ~ Right: Ray's Desk

Ray and I occupy the front room of the office. We’ve got our desks facing each other and have all the power/networking stuff between them. Not that pretty, but a reasonable solution for now. I think we’re going to put a printer against the wall under the “square” on the wall.

My desk, desktop, laptop, etc

I have created my little corner. Emmett bought chairs and desks and monitors. I brought one of my spare desktops over to use for the time being and I’ve been bringing my laptop for…. well I don’t really know what… I just find it’s useful to have two computers sometimes :)

Kermit's Office

Kermit's Office

Emmett got the back office…there are a couple of chairs for clients on the opposite wall.

Contents of my top drawer

This is Tiffany’s favorite part. The contents of my desk drawer. CDs, network tester, tools, and a stash of taco sauce in case I get lunch one day and want some taco sauce. Not sure why that’s so hilarious, but she insisted on taking a picture.

 
 

Latest work – Internal Kiosk Site

27 Jan

I finally have something really cool to show from my job. We have a client who wanted a “Kiosk” in their rental office that guests could browse through the various units they have available. It did not need to do anything that different than our normal web work….choose arrival date, number of nights, number of guests, etc. The challenge was how to do it all with JUST a touch screen for input. The “kiosk” was going to be one of the new “all-in-one” MSI Wind Top PC’s with a 20″ touch screen.

Index Page

Index Page.... simple, no nonsense. Also -- Boring

I had some idea of what was going on since I built a small .mobi site for this company last year geared toward the iPhone/iPod Touch. It turned out OK, but was nothing I really felt stood out. It works, but I honestly don’t think it gets much attention. I’d like to revisit it sometime and make some improvements with what I’ve learned on this project.

Date and Nights Selection

The site will not be available outside of this office, but I’ve got some screenshots AND A VIDEO showing off the functionality. I’m not much of a designer, so it’s not as pretty as it could be probably, but it works I think. I’ll post a couple of the fun jQuery stuff I found/did as well. I think the most instructional and entertaining part was modifying the jQuery quicksearch plugin from www.rikrikrik.com to be able to use an on-screen keyboard.

And somehow I don’t have a screenshot of that…will update later :)

Rather than creating a separate keyboard and try to tie it into the event handling for quicksearch, I ended up extending the plugin, adding new functionality through the options passed during the .quicksearch() call so the keyboard was fully integrated. It took some trial and error, and it likely could be done “better”, but it works, and functions great.

$('table#cabin_names tbody tr').quicksearch({
				position:'after',
				attached:'#uber_wrap',
				labelText:'',
				inputClass:'sel wide',
				watchElement:'li.alpha_btns',
				keyboard: true,
				keyboardId: 'alpha_btns'
			});

The ‘watchElement’ option is the elements that should trigger the qs() function in quicksearch. ‘keyboard’ defaults to false, but when set to true, it renders the html to insert the keyboard and bind the events to do the proper stuff. ‘keyboardId’ just lets you define the element Id so you can style at will. This extension of the plugin likely has no real use beyond sites designed for touch screens, but it was still educational, and was an interesting introduction to plugins in jQuery. I’ve never written my own, but if I find some functionality I need in the future, maybe I can break into that field too.

# of Guests

Anyhow, there’s not much else to say. This site was designed specifically for this screen, specifically to run in Firefox, specifically in Fullscreen mode. If I had more time I think it could be made to be a bit more flexible, but I suck at CSS, and I just didn’t know how to make a few things flow fluidly on different sized screens. Enjoy!

kiosk_demo

List of cabins available for selected dates and # of guests

One of the other really fun things to write/integrate was the scrolling buttons. I realized after the initial design that having regular scrollbars just wouldn’t be usable with a touch screen interface. Theoretically I could have altered the Firefox userContent.css to enlarge the scroll bars to the point they would have been usable, but that just didn’t feel right. Once again, though, jQuery plugins to the rescue! I found a nice little scrolling plugin that allowed me to bind relative scroll positions with easing to click events on the fixed-position nav-box on the right side. Not sure I’m thrilled with how it looks right now, but at least it’s functionally complete. Can always tweak it down the road.

Fun screen to write. "Buttons" are actually labels for hidden checkboxes. jQuery styling changes make it look fancy

Individual cabin page...small photos are clickable to rotate through pictures

 

DDMworks Twincharges an Ariel Atom

26 Jan

DDMworks is one of my favorite companies ever. Dave has sold me a few parts from his company and I’ve always been more than pleased at the quality and value of the parts and service I’ve received.

He apparently has gotten into tuning Ariel Atoms which I was, until now, unaware of. Glad to see he’s getting a bit of well-deserved time in the spotlight. This car looks obscenely fast. 375 wheel horsepower and 1375 lbs? That’s Bugatti Veyron levels of power-to-weight ratios.

I hope I can get a ride in this car sometime :D

http://www.autoblog.com/2010/01/26/ddmworks-twincharges-the-ariel-atom/

http://www.ddmworks.com

 
 

Chilhowee Sportsmans Club Sporting Clays

03 Jan

As I mentioned in my previous post, I recently went to Chilhowee Sportsman’s Club for the second time. This trip was planned at the last minute after having a conversation with one of the member’s named Curly on the ShotgunWorld.com forums. He and I were discussing the components needed for reloading on Friday night and he invited me out to shoot with his group on Saturday. I went out there about 11 and we sat in the clubhouse drinking coffee and getting to know each other. I actually did not realize that we were going to be shooting Sporting Clays at first. I’ve been so caught up shooting skeet the past few weeks, I just assumed that’s what we were going to do. But after getting one of the carts, we headed on up the hill and started one of the most interesting afternoons of shooting I’ve had yet.

I learned today that Sporting Clays and “5-stand” are not the same game. They have similarities, but are vastly different in terms of scale. In 5-stand there is one shooting platform with 5 positions, and in the field there are 6 or 7 different clay presentations and you shoot a combination of those presentations at each station.

Sporting Clays has (at least at Chilhowee), 14 stands that are scattered around the woods above the club, and each station has it’s own two throwers. All stations are thrown as either report or true pairs, and can be very challenging. All of them are difficult to some degree, and learning how to lead a target that’s dropping down a hillside is quite a challenge, as well as a test of patience as some of the incoming birds come towards the stand from far away…much too far to try to hit with the imp. cyl. and mod chokes I was shooting today. I can see the advantage of extended, knurled chokes in this game….one stand might have two very close crossing targets similar to skeet where a cyl and imp. cyl choke would work perfectly, and then the next stand would have two LONG range targets launched as a true pair where I was wondering if even a full choke would put enough shot out there to hit them. One of the guys I was shooting with proved it was possible though ;) It was astounding seeing him break both targets well past where I would have guessed the shotgun would be useful.

All in all though, I really enjoyed the 14 stand circuit at Chilhowee. The flight paths are extremely varied, and you have to take trees into account as some paths cross between groves of trees so you must time your shots well and do not always have continuous picture of the bird. Even without that fact, the staff at Chilhowee uses the mountainous terrain there to great effect, aiming some birds along ridges, or rising out of a gully. One of my favorite presentations was two birds launched as a true pair, coming up the valley from about 11 o’clock and behind trees almost the entire way. There was a very small window about 20 feet wide where you had to hit the targets between a few trees, otherwise they were in the ground just past the next tree.

If you are in the Knoxville, TN area and enjoy clay sports, you should definitely try out Chilhowee. They are a bit on the expensive side for non-members, but the experience is worth the slightly higher cost compared to most other fields I’ve been do. Check them out at http://www.chilhoweesportsmansclub.com

One of the main purposes of this trip as I mentioned before was to meet these guys who all reload their own shells and were willing to help me find some hulls that were good for reloading as well as showing me some of the benefits of doing so. The light 3/4 ounce loads that Curly uses were amazing. Very light recoil, almost no gun movement, and still capable of breaking every target out there. Even ignoring the cost effectiveness of reloading, merely the wonderfully light, shoulder-sensitive loads you can create makes it worth it. The 1-1/8oz factory loads I have been shooting feel like monsters in comparison. I am definitely looking into the equipment and components I need to start loading my own hulls as soon as reasonably possible. Problem is you kinda have to buy in bulk to make it cost effective….i.e. large chunks of money out the door at once rather than the current method of buying smaller amounts of ammo, but at a greater cost over time. So we’ll see. I’d like to get started soon, but I’m not sure it’s financially that wise/possible.

 
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Shooting Catch-up

02 Jan

Wow, it’s been a long time since I’ve written much here. Been kinda busy I guess. And at the end of any given day, the last thing I really want to do is sit down and type a lot ;)

I’ve been shooting a lot of skeet though recently. I’ve lost track of how many rounds I’ve done… maybe 15 or so. I started out horribly. My first round ever I hit 4. It was really disappointing, and the next couple rounds were about the same. A couple weekends ago I went Saturday and Sunday and something finally clicked. I told myself when I headed out Saturday, “I’ll be happy if I hit 10.” That’ll be 2 better than my previous best.

Unfortunately, when I got there, it seems a bunch of kids were shooting with their parents…and taking FOREVER about it. Also, one of the mothers should not have been holding a gun. She would consistently shoot, then swing the muzzle down, turn and face the group of people and start blabbing about how she missed/hit/chipped a target….all while pointing the gun at them…. Range Officer kept yelling at her about it, and she kept doing it. I’m quite glad I was not on the field with her. So while I waited for them to be finished, a couple other guys and I sat in the range officers office and chatted.

Finally it was our turn. We had a group of 6, but were all fairly efficient about getting through our stations. At the end, I totaled up my scores and had hit a 13! Whoa, maybe I’m starting to get the hang of this :) We went back inside to warm up (it was about 35 degrees out), and then went and shot one more round before it got dark. This one went even better with a personal scoreĀ  of 17! I started feeling a lot better about the game at this point, but it was dark and it was not one of the nights they turn on the field lights so we could shoot into the evening.

The next day (Sunday), one of the members of the gun club I am going to be joining invited me to go out shooting at that club. Drove up there and shot 3 rounds of skeet, all of them in the mid-teens. I think they were 14,17,16 if I recall correctly.

About a week and a half later I went back to the ORSA club again with Bob Hedrick from church and we shot 4 rounds and I didn’t really keep track of my scores, just focused on improving my form and learning what I could from the other much more experienced shooters.

Now we’re somewhere around Christmas… Jeanette wrote something about our days of shooting on her blog. Won’t touch on that too much right now. Maybe I’ll write another post.

Today (Jan 2nd), I was invited by yet another person I’ve met locally to go with him and a few of his friends to Chilhowee Sportsman’s Club to shoot Sporting Clays. That field has a large Sporting Clays field consisting of 14 stands, with various presentations and either report pairs, or true pairs. A single round is 100 shots, although there is some way to do a 50-shot round, though I’m not sure how. Anyhow, it was a lot of fun and a great learning experience. Downside is it’s fairly expensive. Average cost for 100 rounds of skeet or trap is about $20… member prices at ORSA are $2.50/25 for a cost of $10/100 which is as cheap as I’ve ever seen clay rounds. The 100 round Sporting Clays at Chilhowee are a steep $37 for non-members, and $27 for members. This is somewhat understandable given that Chilhowee is run as a business, whereas JSHEC is funded by the TN Wildlife Resources Agency, and ORSA is a non-profit organization. Regardless, it’s about the only field like that I know of in the area, so it’s worth the extra cash to shoot such a unique collection of targets once in a while. I can’t see myself going more than a few times a year though at that rate.

Anyhow, I think I’m done with this post. It may not read very linearly as I’ve written it over about 2 weeks, forgetting about it over most of the Christmas break, but I tried to fix the time-sensitive wording to make more sense.

 
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My letter to Comcast.

07 Dec

Edit: I have resolved this issue with Comcast and they have taken care of things in a satisfactory manner. No more letter of outrage ;)

-B

 
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Posted in Activities

 

Is the ‘Bandwidth Hog’ a Myth? – Bandwidth hogs – Gizmodo

04 Dec

Is the ‘Bandwidth Hog’ a Myth? – Bandwidth hogs – Gizmodo.

Good article I would love to see the answer to.

Now I’m no insane downloader. I’ll buy an album on itunes, and I do stream video from youtube and hulu quite a bit, but at most I’m around 30-50GB of transfer/month (and yes I do keep a rough track of how much I use via Conky).

Mostly posting this just for the article to get some publicity as the author requested so hopefully some of us can see the “real numbers”. Cable companies have been ripping us off for long enough, and they need to be forced to innovate if they are going to keep charging these exorbitant rates.

 
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Thanksgiving Weekend Trap Shooting @ Deer Creek

29 Nov

It’s been a few weeks since I’ve written much about shooting, but it’s not for the lack of activity. With the holidays coming up, there’s been a lot more doing, and less writing and downtime. My RSS reader had 700+ unread entries the other day!

In the shotgun department though, I’ve shot a couple more rounds of skeet at John Sevier HEC since I went to Chilhowee and did my first round I wrote about previously. I’ve registered for the required Hunter Safety Course that is a prerequisite to getting a hunting license if you were born after 1969. That is 4 evenings in late December. I am not exactly sure what, or even IF, I really want to hunt, but I’d like to, at the very least, try. Be a good excuse to bolster the arsenal down the road ;)

ANYHOW, now that you’re caught up, here’s what my wife’s cousin’s husband (is there a term for that relationship???) Kevin, and my father-in-law, Rich, did Saturday after Thanksgiving. Neither of them had ever tried clay games before and I brought my guns with me on our visit to Ohio in hopes that I could find some time to go shooting, so we loaded up the guns and manual trap launcher and a couple boxes of clays and went to Deer Creek.

CZ @ Deerk Creek. Kevin got a bird in the picture!!!

CZ @ Deer Creek. Kevin got a bird in the picture!!!

Deer Creek has an outdoor rifle range and an “unsupervised” shotgun range. It really is little more than a big grass field with a bunch of warning signs that people use guns there ;) This is the first time I’ve shot at such a location, every other time being at some kind of club that had range officers, waivers, and fees. I do have to say that it’s nice to just yell “pull” and see the bird go up, rather than having to load each clay manually into the launcher, though.

That said, it was a really enjoyable time. There was one other big “family” group there that had maybe 15 people and 3 guns, so they were all taking turns pulling for each other and shooting. We had 3 guns (CZ, Mossberg, and Winchester Model 1300) and 3 people, so one pulled, one shot, and one took pictures and watched. But all that to say, it really wasn’t crowded, and the informal “field” setting with all manual equipment was kinda nice.

Rich and the CZ. Kevin pulling

Rich and the CZ. Kevin pulling

Since Kevin and Rich had never used shotguns before, I gave them a brief overview on how the two pump guns operated, and the CZ’s over/under action. All 3 of us rotated through all the guns and it was actually a really enlightening time for me as well as I got to shoot 3 fairly different guns back to back and start to get a feel for the finer differences between how each of them handled. If you’re paying attention to the pictures though, my CZ got LOTS of use. I am pretty sure it got picked up more than either of the pumps, although I found myself picking up my Mossberg quite a bit as well. I love how light that gun is, and even with the more significant recoil, it just is a fun fun gun. The fixed cyl. bore choke definitely hurt though if i let the bird get too far out into the field.

Kevin and the CZ. Rich pulling

Kevin and the CZ. Rich pulling

Each of us would take between 5 and 10 shots and rotate to the next person. Kevin and I started getting creative and started playing a game where we would see who could break the bird first. Rich pulled singles for us and we tried to line up on the clay as fast as possible. I think we ended up tied, or at least very close. A few of them we fired exactly at the same time and it was really hard to say who got the score. But you know, it was more about the fun than the actual score :)

In the end I think we launched about 150-175 clays (we started with a partial box, so I’m not sure exactly how many we ended up with), and close to the same amount of ammo. I actually am kind of irritated as I keep a log of the shots I put through the CZ, but with each of us swapping guns all afternoon, I lost track of how much we shot through it. I’m going to log 100 I think, which is probably a little over, but “close enough” :P

 
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