• It’s Wednesday. Where’s Mac OS X Lion?
  • Downloading Lion…
  • Starting Lion install…
  • MacBook Air is now running Lion. Upgrade was fine.

Tomorrow is officially Mac OS X Lion day! Looks like the Internet will be busy sending bits around.

Trying to buy a doorbell online. Surprising that very few websites let you listen to the chime. 🙁

Next year will mark our return to the Winnipeg Folk Festival! 353 days to go.

Soggy Outside

Inside: 76 °F with air conditioning.

Outside: 91 °F and 75% humidity with a dew point of 81 °F.

Remodel Update Week 6

Week six was a big one! The difference between last week and now is really fun. Last week we had a dirt floor in the basement, now there is cement. Last week you had to take a ladder down the last half of the steps, now there are now steps. Last week they framed the mudroom, now it is enclosed (sort of).

  • The old exterior wall was knocked out in the new mudroom which gave us the first sense for what that intersection will be like. We think it will be great.
  • The egress windows are framed in and the windows will be installed this week! We will be able to see what the light will be like in the family room.
  • Holes have been knocked in the cinder block on the basement wall and rebar put in that goes down the entire length. This week they will pour cement in those channels for additional wall strength.
  • We got our air conditioning working again with the new furnace and condenser on Friday! Just in time for a miserably hot spell!

I’ve been amazed at all the structural engineering that has gone into lowering the floor. The extra 7" will be worth it though. This week windows get put in and most of the framing happens.

Perceived Project Progress

Our remodeling project is scheduled for 12 weeks. I’m very familiar with project execution, that is a big part of what I do for a living. Watching the progress of our remodel I’ve been thinking about real versus perceived project progress. The chart below reflects the relationship.

Perceived Project
Progress

When we build software there is a decent amount of time getting groundwork put in. You have to get the build process working right, get your integration tests working, get version control working the way you want it. You probably need to use some framework code. It is a lot of stuff that doesn’t really feel like progress to a non-technical person.

Then you start framing out the software. Big swaths go in place, but mostly just stubs. Everything looks like it is coming together really fast, but it is largely a façade. Things are just in place to make sure it all comes together right.

At the end, it feels like the thing is so close to done but it just keeps dragging on. The edge cases have to be handled, error handling needs improvement. You need to log things. Not to mention that final design of the visual elements. This is where people get frustrated.

I fully expect the same thing to happen with this remodel. It seemed like a long time to get the structural stuff rolling. This week it seemed like a lot started to happen, and with the framing right around the corner it will feel like we are almost there. Then, things will take a very long time to get the light switches all wired up right and all the final punch list items completed.

While I ride the Perceived Progress line I’m going to try to keep a good grounding on the Actual Progress line. It is the only one that matters after all.

Car Seat Toy

I brought Tyler’s car seat into the house so it could be put back in the van. He then decided to spend a half-hour getting in and out of it. Great fun!

Car Seat Does Fit in Mini

Tyler got to ride in my Mini Cooper for the first time today. His infant seat definitely would not fit, and the car seat wouldn’t fit rear facing (and how would we get him in if it did?). Now he is facing forward and while it isn’t spacious, it can be done.

Minnehaha River?

After Fridays big rains I was curious to see what Minnehaha Creek was running like when I came home. In short? Like a river!

For a fun comparison look back to this picture of the creek in February from nearly the same spot.