Video Tour of the Newark Apartment

Come along with Scott and take a quick video tour of the apartment at 1180 Raymond Blvd., in downtown Newark, New Jersey. We have been frantically cleaning the apartment over the last two days and the apartment is in great shape for a quick run through.

Correction: In this video I accidentally referred to 1180 Raymond Blvd. as a gothic structure when it is obviously art deco. Sorry.

Download the Video in Quicktime
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Runtime: Approximately 3.5 minutes
Specs: Apple QuickTime 640×480 at 30fps

November 6, 2006

Dad sent me a correction: He bought his Westinghoust 37″ LCD monitor through Crutchfield and not through Best Buy because the price was better through Crutchfield.

It is “back to the grind” day. I was well on track to getting into the office at a normal time today but every time that I made a serious attempt to leave the apartment the phone would ring and I would have to work for a little while and that just went on and on until almost ten! Then I was finally able to run down and order my car and to walk over to Subway and get myself an egg and cheese sub to get me through the morning.

This morning before escaping from Newark I got an email from Carrie Hooper (now Carrie Russo) whom I have not heard from in probably eleven or twelve years. She is back living in York after having been living in Connecticut for a while. The Internet is really amazing and I think one of the ways that it is going to really affect the lives of the generation following me is in the way that it allows people to stay connected with each other over time and distance. For people of my generation we are using the Internet as a great tool for “reconnecting” to people. Tools like MySpace, Classmates.com, etc. are designed around finding people that you have lost contact with and for people my age this is a new paradigm for rediscovering lost social connections.

But truly we are in a transitional age. To the generation older than mine the idea of social connections was rooted well in the mists of time. Social interaction was done in person or through “pre-arranged” media interactions like postal mail and telephone. Mediums that required a pretty significant knowledge of the person that you are looking to contact and up-to-date interactions with them to be sure that your address database was accurate. The older generation is getting some of the benefits of the Internet’s ability to bring people together in new ways but most of its benefits are lost to them as they had too much time between the time that they made social connections and when the Internet would have given them the ability to re-establish those connections.

For my generation we are able to, by the time that we are in our thirties, rediscover our childhood and adolescent social connections. We will grow old knowing that the email address of our friends will never again change even if they move, nor will their new, portable telephone number. Their websites will always exist in the same place with the same name giving us the latest details on their lives. We went through the disconnect the same as our parents and their parents did after moving, after school, after college, between jobs, etc. but we are putting those pieces back together and making our lives a continuing fabric of friendship and social knowledge.

What we have yet to see, however, is with the following generation. In these young adults and teenagers of today we are about to witness the first group of people who will, en masse, never lose touch with each other. The very concept of the social disconnect created by changing life phases will be unknown and foreign to them. What has been a key underpinning of the human experience since Noah and family departed the ark and went their separate ways to find farmland – the transient nature of most human sociological interactions – is gone. Imagine an entire population for whom every person that they have ever interacted with to any degree being available to them by phone, email, instant messenger, text messaging or whatever at anytime, anyplace.

How with this change in human interactions affect our society? One can only speculate. But the ramifications could be, will most likely be, significant. Mankind has always been driven by the desire to find long lost friends, through wondering what has become of so many of the people that they used to know, of needing to only manage current social connections with a small fraction of a lifetime’s worth of established connections. Children today need to handle the ability to continuously interact with an ever growing number of people for the rest of their lives. The human experience is changing! We are less alone and more a part of each other’s lives than ever before.

Work was surprisingly slow today. What a nice break this has been. All weekend I didn’t get a single call and so far this week looks like it is stacking up to be a nice, relaxing, “normal” week. And Saturday is Veterans’ Day which does not mean that I don’t have to work on Friday as it is not an actual bank holiday but it is a slow day with the Federal Reserve Bank being closed.

Our hall table that we ordered from Target online was delivered today. What perfect timing. Now we can get it assembled and set up and everything that is going to go into it put into place before Susan arrives tomorrow. Otherwise we would have been putting furniture together with Susan there to watch. We have been needing a hall table for a while. Now if we can just get the apartment building to get their butts into gear and to get the hall closet door fixed so that it will close all of the way we will be all set. The box arrived and is 51 inches tall and weighs in at 99 pounds! That is a big, heavy box.

I did some looking at the map today and discovered that Rye Harbor in New Hampshire where Andy and I love to go to get seafood. Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard are about the same distance away as well. There is a lot of good stuff not too far away. I have never done any amount of vacationing in Massachusetts. There is a lot there that I would like to see. I have been to Boston but only ever for a few minutes, literally, with Andy on our way to Rye Harbor one time. And I have never been to Plymouth (originally Plimoth) or Cape Code or the islands there or even Long Island. Some of the guys that I work with were telling me that this is the perfect time of year to head to Long Island’s north shore and to check out the wineries there.

November 5, 2006

The big task of the day is working on the wet rug. We decided that the rug is a loss and we need to dispose of it but doing so is going to be the real challenge. It is large and wet and heavy. This falls clearly into the “Scott’s Bad Idea Awards List”.

Dominica whipped up some breakfast this morning since we had gone grocery shopping last night. This is one of the very few meals that Dominica has cooked in our Newark kitchen. It is kind of weird to cook here. It almost doesn’t even occur to me to be a possibility since we have done it so little.

We had to forgo showers this morning since the wet rug is taking up the entire bathtub and there is no place to move it to. Quite the dilemma. We did some basic cleaning around the apartment and decided that it was going to be a total waste of effort if we didn’t go take care of the futon mattress issue. The old mattress is just a 4″ deal that isn’t holding up at all and is not comfortable and was super cheap. So we are getting something new to replace it with.

We drove out west to East Hanover to Futonland which was exactly like the futon store in Maryland that John used to shop at. I guess that there can only be so much variety in futon stores. We found an 8″ foam core mattress that we liked and a pink cover (guess who picked that out – it almost matches the former bathroom colour in Geneseo) and some pillows for the futon.

There was an Indian restaurant right down the plaza from Futonland so we decided that we hadn’t been able to get Indian food for weeks so we had to do that for lunch. It ended up being a really good Indian place. The food was awesome. So we are planning on going back there sometime as it isn’t really all that far from Newark.

We found a CompUSA right in the same area so we ran in there to get some silver thermal grease that I have been needing for a couple of projects and ended up finding So I Married an Axe Murder and Forty Year Old Virgin very cheap.

We came home and put the new futon mattress in place and got to work cleaning. I did more computer work than cleaning. Dominica did a crazy amount of cleaning around the house. She got tons done in addition to doing some reading for her Java class. She was uber-productive today.

The apartment is really starting to look good. I can’t believe how much we got done today. We took the old mattress that we don’t want anymore and we put the wet, nasty rug on top of it and had the porter take it all away. That worked out pretty well. Now we just have the nice hardwood floor that looks way better than it does with a carpet. Unfortunately Oreo really needs the carpeting because he slides all over the place and he needs someplace to roll around because that is how he scratches his back. He loves rolling around on a nice shag carpet.

Okay, of all the operas in the world that I will never see there is, of course, the Opera based on the real lives of Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan. Wow. The end of the world is at hand.

We found out that our building’s bowling alley opened last night. There is now a reason to head down to the basement. It is too bad that I have carpal tunnel syndrome of all the people in the world I am now in that very tiny percentage that live in a building with their own bowling alley. What an ironic twist of fate has befallen me.

I was determined to get a podcast done over the weekend but I just didn’t get any spare time at all. None. In fact we didn’t get nearly as much done as we had hoped that we would as it was. There was just a lot to be done.

November 4, 2006: A Relaxing Weekend in Newark

As planned, this morning was IKEA shopping morning. We got up a little after seven and drove down to Elizabeth around half past eight. We stopped at Burger King for breakfast and then hit the IKEA store shortly after they opened. Getting there really early did help a lot and we were able to go right in and get the Billy bookshelf and a few assorted sundry items that we needed for decorating around the apartment quite quickly and easily. Far better than our previous experience at the store.

On the way out we also did some shopping in the IKEA Swedish grocery store. We discovered delicious Lant Chips along with several types of northernberry preserves like lingonberry (aka cowberry), cloudberry (aka bakeapple) and gooseberry. Very delicious stuff.

We came home to Newark and set to putting together the shelving unit. It was much better construction that the stuff that we are used to buying and very competitively priced. We are very pleased with the quality of the unit. It is able to hold a lot more books than we are used to and it is a lot more attractive. Once that was completed our job was to clean the apartment and to get as much stuff as possible put away now that there is enough shelf space in the apartment. We moved the old, small shelf that had been in the living room into our bedroom.

One project that I attempted today and am now very sorry for having tried is washing the living room throw rug. We got this rug when we first moved to New Jersey and were living in North Brunswick and it has traveled with us to here and we decided that we wanted to wash it before Susan came to visit this week. The original plan was to have taken the rug to a cleaner but that didn’t end up working out so I decided that I would give it the ol’ college try myself. Bad, bad idea. Of course the only place where I could hope to wash the rug was in the shower but that didn’t work at all. It is a fairly large throw rug and when I first put it into the shower everything was going fine until it dawned on me that as the shower water soaked into the rug that the rug would be getting heavier and heavier and very soon it was too heavy for me to lift. Oops. So that ended up turning into a much larger project than I had anticipated. I spent about an hour cleaning the rug just to discover that things like Oreo’s corn starch bone bits were not about to come out of it one way or another. So I am not sure how valuable the whole cleaning process was anyway. Now we are stuck with a rather large, completely water-logged rug that we have no reasonable way to spread out to dry. We are pretty sure that we are going to be stuck throwing the rug away which, in reality, is only so bad. I never liked that rug anyway.

Dominica did a lot of cleaning around the apartment today while I was struggling with the rug. After several hours of working on the apartment we talked and decided that it was time that we acquired a television or a television like device for the apartment so that we would have something to watch movies on since we have been stuck using Dominica’s 19″ computer monitor in the living room “alcove” which is a very cumbersome place to view movies in. So we drove out to Union, NJ which was a total parking lot the entire way. I guess Christmas shopping comes early in New Jersey. We got to Best Buy and found out that they don’t carry any 1080p monitors, just HDTV (1080p is the step above HDTV and is the standard for high quality home theatre now as it is the common output shared between HD-DVD and BluRay as well as the output from video game devices like the X-BOX 360 and the PS3) at least in reasonable sizes like what we are interested in which is between 32″ and 42″. Dad has the 37″ Westinghouse 1080p that he got from Best Buy and he loves it. We were hoping that they would be carrying that model but they no longer carry it in the store and you can only order it. That would really defeat the purpose of the spur of the moment shopping spree that we were on and would not make the television usable by Susan this week.

We settled on just doing some grocery shopping and then we headed back to Newark. We decided to just watch The Wedding Crashers and then headed off to bed. The movie was pretty good. Nothing classic but entertaining.

A Quick Tour of Broad Street, Newark, NJ

I just happened to have the camera in the car today and had to make a surprise swing around “the block” in downtown Newark so I took the opportunity to record a quick trip up Broad Street from south to north. The video quality is pretty rough with bad lighting and a dirty windscreen but at least it will give you a feel for the area just south of where we are currently living. You can see Military Park, City Hall, the new New Jersey Devils Stadium under construction, Market St., etc. At the end I pull up to 1180 Raymond Blvd and you get a glimpse of the building. Enjoy.

Down the Tour of Broad Street, Newark, New Jersey
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