New Computer

My new Mac arrived on Friday, a full business day ahead of when UPS said it would come. I was so happy to have the weekend to break it in, but it barely took an hour before I was up and running with it.

Moving to a new computer is just so easy in the Mac world. I made one final Time Machine backup on my old unit, ejected the external backup drive, plugged the drive into the new computer, booted up the computer, told the computer to restore my data from the backup, and then walked away for about 30 minutes.

When I came back, just about all my data and settings were on the new machine. For some reason, my Filemaker Pro database is never up to date in the backups, so I retrieved that from the old unit. Then, I checked to make sure all my apps were working by opening them up one by one. I had just jumped two operating systems (from Mountain Lion straight to Yosemite without going through Mavericks), so I was surprised that the only thing that wasn’t working was iPhoto. Even iWorks ’08 was working fine.

I was also surprised that I only had about 2GB of space left on my hard drive after the move when I was only using about 100GB on the old machine. This hard drive is only 125GB, down from 250GB. So I moved my iTunes folder to an external drive to clear up a little space. I tend to only keep my backup drive accessible when I’m traveling, but I’ll now have to keep the media drive handy, too. A bit of a pain, but I wasn’t going to spend something like $300 on the 250GB hard drive when I have about 2TB of space in my external drives. Solid state drives are expensive!

The only thing I couldn’t get working right with the new computer was my external display. Its resolution isn’t compatible with Yosemite’s, which is programmed for the super high definition ‘retina’ display, so the colours were off and everything was blurry. I also can’t use the Mac in clamshell mode (lid closed) while connected to the external display unless I’m plugged into power. That wasn’t an issue with the old unit since its battery was dead, but I don’t want to kill this battery, so being plugged in all the time isn’t an option. I’ve decided to do without the external display. The resolution on the 13″ Macbook Air is such that I can see everything just fine. I’m going to move the external display to the living room and get the cable I need to hook my iPad to it so I can watch movies more comfortably out there.

Physically, my new MacBook Air isn’t much different from my old one. Only the power port has changed as I now have the wider Magsafe connector. That means that my collection of chargers, including the DC one, is now obsolete and will be part of the sale of my old unit.

Yosemite hasn’t been too bad so far. It is hideously garish, but I’ve been tweaking settings to make it a little less offensive. My biggest peeve with it so far is that the green button that used to maximize your window now takes you into full screen mode. I don’t like full screen mode and I’m annoyed that I have to remember to hold the option key before pressing the green button to get the maximize effect.

I am so far unimpressed with the new Photos app, but after spending some time talking with an Apple tech, I made the decision not to hack my Yosemite installation to make iPhoto work for me. Part of making this huge purchase was to get up to date and if that means learning the new Photos app, I will.

There are other things about Yosemite that I look forward to exploring this winter when I am on decent internet as there is now a greater compatibility with iOS. Apple is trying to get users to move everything to the cloud, but even if I had decent internet in Canada, this makes me nervous. I prefer to keep my data local, but I’m so far liking keeping the calendar and reminders in the cloud.

I am appreciating the extra RAM as this machine is much zippier and I’m also liking that I haven’t had a single runaway kernel since Friday. I really thought the old machine was going to implode before the new one got here and it just seemed to get worse and worse the closer I got to delivery day! I know that I’m going to be happy to have a working battery tomorrow when I’m forced to go up the hill to send emails and won’t have to bring the charger with me, just the computer and phone.

I still have some updates to do to a few apps and to iOS, but even though I’m unthrottled, my internet connection is terrible and I can’t get them done. This is also what’s keeping me from wiping the old machine so I can list it for sale since internet recovery doesn’t work well on this connection.

I just can’t get over the fact that I live in a first world country and I have all this amazing tech and I can’t do something so basic as download security upgrades. My government is too busy fighting imaginary boogey men and trying to rig elections to care about things like connectivity… My booster should be in Plentywood tomorrow so I’ll have it by Friday and hopefully it will make the ‘night or day’ different I was promised. If it doesn’t, then I’ll have to start thinking pretty hard about where I’ll be spending next summer. 🙁

Scorcher

It’s been hot here the last few days! I haven’t really noticed because I’ve been working and my home has a little thing called AC. With heat has come massive swarms of bird-sized mosquitoes, so it really hasn’t been outdoor weather!

Today is the start of a four-day weekend for me. I’m burning out from a really long and unending transcription marathon, so it’s nice to have some time to just breathe. Of course, I utterly failed at sleeping in this morning, but I did take it slow. I waited for the post to come, then went to town to run some errands.

By the time I’d hit the post office, the bank, and the thrift store, it was only 11:10 and much too early for lunch, so I decided to go walk around the Shurniak Gallery. This gallery is a real gem for Assiniboia, featuring lots of beautiful art in different mediums. There’s mostly paintings, but also some sculptures and other things. I’ve been to the gallery once, in October of 2013 for a music concert, and I didn’t have time to view everything.

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The artwork on display would belong in any world-class museum. My favourite medium is oil, so I spent a lot of time admiring the colours and brushwork on a variety of paintings. You really have to go through the entire building because there’s artwork tucked into every corner.

The gallery now has a cafe serving soups, sandwiches, and coffee beverages at a reasonable price and is really a lovely place to wile away an hour. Admission is free and donations are welcome.

After visiting the gallery, I decided to check out the lunchtime buffet at the New Moon Cafe. I usually do the buffet at Andy’s, but a neighbour told me that New Moon has ‘more stuff.’ It did and it was tasty and the same price as Andy’s, but the ‘more stuff’ isn’t things that I enjoy, like breaded and fried mystery meat in a very sweet sauce (typical Canadian-Chinese offerings passed off as ginger beef or lemon chicken or sweet and sour pork). So I’ll probably to stick to Andy’s, which has really good pizza! But I’m glad I tried it out and I did enjoy my lunch very much, especially the chicken wings and broccoli!

After lunch, it was time to get groceries. The grocery store parking lot is absolutely chaos as the store renovations progress and I had to drive around the block to find a parking spot! It’s no wonder they are so adamant that baggers take out orders as I don’t think everyone would be bothered to walk their carts back several blocks!

They had some good deals today on everything on my list, so it was a fruitful expedition. Shopping in that store is such a chore because there’s no room and people for some reason don’t get that and just leave their carts in the middle of narrow aisles. I really hope that the expanded store will give us a little more room to move around. I really do appreciate the increased amount of selection in the store, though, especially when it comes to ‘ethnic’ foods and am optimistic that when I come home next May, I won’t feel a strong urge to go do a big Moose Jaw shop like I did this year.

Next thing on my list for today, make sure that I’m ready to move to my new computer, which should be here Monday but I suspect could surprise me tonight… I don’t think I’ve ever moved to a new machine running a newer OS before, so I’m not convinced that a ‘restore from last Time Machine backup’ will work.

It’ll be cooler over the next few days, so I’ll be able to start running some tests to determine where I’ll be installing the new booster antennas. There was a very justifiable delay in getting the booster out (which the Facebook followers know all about), so probably won’t get it till about this time next week. I can’t wait to write a report on that and give the awesome store and tech I dealt with some much deserved praise!

New Booster Order

Thanks to the wonderful generosity of many of you and others who are not blog readers, I was able to order my new booster a couple of minutes ago. If I had had to cover the purchase entirely on my own, I would have had to wait till another cheque landed at the end of the month. I really need that new booster now because my internet connection is getting worse as the days pass and I finally have confirmation on why.

Because of the local topography, I can only connect to a tower that is located quite a distance aways in a popular vacationing spot where people camp and have cottages. We are in the heart of holiday season and SaskTel has confirmed that my especial difficulties this past week have been due to the tower being overloaded and my weak signal not being able to get push through the interference. Of course, the congestion on that tower would be diminished if folks in my area could connect to our local tower, something I will bring up with the president’s office when it finally gets back to me.

Shipping for the booster was 95USD/125CAD to my hamlet or Assiniboia or free within the United States, so I’m glad that I’m so close to the US border and have several places in Montana I can ship to. I was nervous about shipping to my usual destination, the bar in Opheim, because they just leave packages out in the open and unsecured. A bit of Googling found a package service in Plentywood, which makes sense since it is directly due south of Regina.

I just called them to make sure that they are still operating because they website hasn’t been updated in a while and they are! I am so glad to know of this service! Plentywood is 163KM from me, versus 100KM to either Opheim or Scobey, so it won’t be my first choice of location to pick up things, but it’s good to have the option for valuable packages. I’ve been trying to plan a touristy trip just northwest of Plentywood on this side of the border, so I’m going to combine the two trips and spend less on fuel than if I did the tourist thing one day and a border run another day, and definitely much less than I would have paid for shipping!

It’s been a financially exhausting month, another case of taking a leap forward financially and another giant one back. Thanks to your help, I’m back on track. It’s been so stressful the last few weeks dealing with a failing computer and increasingly poor internet. I’ll have my new computer and booster by next week and should hopefully be much less stressed in my last couple of months here this year. Thank you again so very much!

Reflections From the End of the World

As long-time blog readers will know, I was based in Yukon for two years and traveled all over the territory and parts of the Northwest Territories. What some of you may not know is that I spent time shopping for a home base up there, but any decent land meeting my criteria wasn’t affordable. I was looking for a frontier experience but not a deep bush one, something I could easily drive to and that would have basic services.

I eventually decided I didn’t want to be that far north as it would limit my mobility. To my surprise, I discovered that I wanted to live where the vast majority of other Canadians live, within about 100KM of the US border.

And then I found an anomaly along that densely populate strip, southern Saskatchewan, which promised the wide open space and frontier experience I wanted right in the heart of the continent. I had my pick of affordable lots and I settled on the perfect compromise between deep rural living and suburbia, a charming little hamlet with most services. It didn’t have internet at the time of purchase, but was slated for improvements that would be cellular connectivity in the next year. No one cared if I used it as an RV home base and never developed it (an issue I faced when I was looking at properties 10 times the cost in southern Alberta). And incredibly, I could pay cash. It was perfect.

Sure enough, when I arrived the following year to spend my first summer on my very own land, we were on the coverage map! But surprise, the telecom company had made a huge mistake in locating the new tower and we still didn’t have service. As those of you who have been following the saga know, I’m now able to prove that SaskTel made a mistake. They are a Crown corporation and accountable for how they spend their money, so with a little help from the NDP in pushing the ‘this is a waste of public resources’ angle, I just might get this resolved within my lifetime…

Something else has come up that makes life here difficult and which will be next summer’s fight, our lack of civic addresses. Even though we have a post office, I frequently can’t get things delivered to it because ordering systems now have a database of valid civic addresses and I can’t just make one up and put my PO box number in the next row. I’m figuring out how to work around that. I have a neighbour who works in town who says that as long as it’s not 10 parcels a day, I can have things sent care of him and he’ll drop them off when he passes by my place in the evening.

Today, I saw how absurd the civic address thing is when I couldn’t confirm on the Elections Canada website that I am registered to vote. I called and the front line person I spoke to couldn’t find where I lived. I’m waiting for someone higher up to get back to me.

A reader who probably isn’t reading anymore actually came through the hamlet recently, although she didn’t look me up. She has the same attitude as others that I live ‘in the middle of nowhere’ or ‘at the end of the world’ and therefore I don’t deserve basic services. Having lived and traveled through the far north, where I never had major connectivity issues (a shortage of bandwidth, yes) or difficulty getting parcels or proving where I lived, I still don’t think that I was that naive in believing that I could get such services here in southern Saskatchewan even in a rural community.

I’m figuring out how to make my life here work and I’ve been asked by more than one person why I don’t cut my losses and just go.

It’s easy to lose sight of the positives when I’m so consumed by an issue like the lack of connectivity. But believe me, there is more positive here than anywhere else I’ve ever tried to make a life.

Most especially, once upon a time in Quebec, I faced many of the same challenges (especially lack of connectivity) even though I lived just 50KM from the capital of the country. It was impossible to get anything done there because of the entrenched corruption and apathy at every level of government. I saw that in most of the rest of Canada, how traditions and procedures are deeply rooted and unchangeable.

There’s something delightfully rustic about this part of Saskatchewan in that it never quite figured out how it fit into the 20th century and so is still struggling to fit into the 21st. The population basin here is older, coming from a generation that doesn’t understand the need for internet or cellular phones. We still write cheques here and call each other rather than email.

It’s the frontier I was looking for and I am part of the first wave of young pioneers flocking to the area in search of some of the last affordable real estate in this country. Since moving to my hamlet, two couples of my generation and another gal my age have moved here. More are going to come as they get squeezed out of Assiniboia, whose prices are steadily rising to Moose Jaw levels.

So the services we want are going to come because the market will eventually force it, but we can shape how those services will look. None of my neighbours today appear to really care about my fight for connectivity, but I am keeping records so that I will be remembered as the one who brought broadband internet to the St. Victor valley, much like people are lauded for bringing the railroad. The metaphor sounds silly, I know, but that’s what the government is actually using when it talks about increasing broadband internet across Canada!

Another thing is that big oil is coming in the near future. There is going to be money to be made here and our cheap property values are going to skyrocket. This is something that the economists on Bay Street are talking about, not just our belief. They say that Saskatchewan is the only Canadian real estate market that hasn’t exploded yet and when it does, people are going to make a killing on their investments, like some Manitobans did.

I know I have to be patient because this is an unshaped world I’m living in. It is so bright with promise and I want to be involved in shaping the future of the area I have decided to make my home. I refuse to sit and wait for other people to make the changes I need to be able to thrive here. Wanting to make things better and actually doing something about them is very different from bellyaching.

I love it here. This is Home.

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Addressing Comments

For some reason, I haven’t been receiving comments to my email, so I’ve been missing the fury behind the scenes.

Nicole asked why I am expecting other people to pay for the booster. Well, I’m not. I’ve been crunching numbers for days trying to figure out how the hell I’m going to make this happen this month. It’s either the booster or I find an apartment in town for the rest of my time here. I’m just grateful the company in Texas is helping me spend my money in the right place.

Yes, I had a very good month of July. I also had the July money earmarked for several other things because I have been backed up on other things. The booster wasn’t in the budget so I’m now having work extra hours to make up for it. I have been doing 14-hour days now since about July 15th with no end in sight because of this extra $1,200 expense. Yes, I can cover it. But it is causing me stress that I shouldn’t be experiencing. Just because you can pay for something doesn’t mean you can afford it.

I’m never made such a blatant a public request for help in my seven years full-timing. I didn’t ask for help when I had $4,000 worth of damage after losing my brakes on the Sea to Sky Highway. I didn’t ask for help after my car was totaled and motorhome home being badly damaged after being rear ended in 2012. I didn’t ask for help after my truck broke down in New Orleans in early 2013. I didn’t ask for help when I had breakdown after breakdown coming north in 2013, which was the same time I didn’t ask for help putting down my cat because it was going to cost my entire food budget for the entire month. And speaking of food, I didn’t ask for help in February of 2014 when a client was a month late paying me and I literally had nothing to eat in the house for three days or in December of 2014 when I got dropped without warning by a client and had no income for a month while stranded in a foreign country. Just a few examples of the top of my head.

I’ve hinted at times that I could use some help and been very grateful to receive it in the form of blog donations, a meal out, or a place to park my rig while watching other people in my online community hold fundraisers for other RVers in distress and come out in droves to help.

I haven’t asked for help because I believe in personal accountability and that my budget shortfalls are not anyone else’s responsibility. But you know what? This isn’t a budget shortfall. This isn’t something I could have prevented because I sure as hell didn’t vote for the government that gave SaskTel all this power.

Yes, I chose to live here. But come on, was I that crazy to believe that a community located between the U.S. border and the Transcanada, the most densely populated part of all the other provinces, would not be online at SOME point in the next decade?!

So going through GoFundMe was more of a social exercise and these four ladies who commented on my last post definitely helped to prove my theory:

How many people hear of someone in distress halfway around the world and rush to send them help when there is someone in their own community needing help? It’s as though because we are in the first world, we are so much better off than anyone else that we shouldn’t have the audacity to ask for more.

I don’t blow my own horn the way some people do on their blogs and talk about what I do for other people and how much time I volunteer or how I make it an effort when I am financially able to to take someone else out. I don’t talk about the hundreds if not thousands of hours I have donated to answering the questions of other RVers, although I might have mentioned once or twice that blogging has been at times nearly a full time job.

So pardon me for saying that for once, it’s my turn to get some help. Nobody has ever offered to hold a fundraiser for me, so I’m holding it for myself. Some of you might be lucky to have parents or family to go when times are tough. I’ve been on my own for a very long time. You are my community. And like with any community, there are those who help each other out and there are those who don’t. I’d rather be part of the community. Sometimes you give and sometimes you receive. That’s how it works.

Once again, thank you to everyone who has saved me about 12 hours of work towards paying for the booster.

BTW, yes, it is for work, but I’ll be lucky to be allowed to claim a third of the cost on my taxes.