Thursday, April 29, 2010

Price Patrol: Painting Your Home's Exterior

 
 

Sent to you by Sparkie via Google Reader:

 
 

via DIY Life by Jaime Derringer on 4/28/10

Painting your house's exterior is laborious, but makes a big statement. Photo: Getty Images

Many people don't enjoy painting: the taping, the monotonous strokes, the sore shoulders, the hand cramps, the mess. But there's one thing we all can agree on: Boy, a little paint sure makes a big difference.

So, if you're looking to make a big change to your home's exterior, what better way to do it than to give it a fresh coat of paint? Your house will look and feel brand new. We're talking major curb appeal, which adds to the value of your home.

So the question is: Is this a task that you're willing to DIY? Or would you rather spend a ton of money to have someone do it for you? Let's take a look at the costs of each approach. Then you decide: is it worth the sweat equity?

HIRE-IT-OUT APPROACH
Painting your exterior is about a 3 on a difficulty scale of 1 to 10. Skill aside, the actual process is laborious and intense. First, you have to prepare the home for paint, which requires scraping off any old paint, power washing, and removing exterior fixtures like lights or shutters. This is the most trying part of the process, and the longest. Then, you have to wash it and of course, paint it. The tasks are definitely doable, but make no mistake: this is a job for a committed DIYer. And a brave one, too. If the idea of getting on a 28-foot extension ladder or standing on scaffolding all day makes you queasy, you might want to consider bringing on a professional.

If you hire house-painting professionals you'll likely pay somewhere between $1,500 and $3,000 for an average single-story, three-bedroom home, but for two-story homes up to 3500-square-feet can go up to more than $5,500. This is for labor costs, but you'll still have to spring for the paint, which is $25 to $50 per gallon. A gallon of paint covers about 400 square feet, so if you have a 1500-square-foot home, you will need about 5 gallons of paint and primer. That is at least $250, to start.

DO-IT-YOURSELF APPROACH
If you're up to the challenge, choose a day when low humidity, low winds, and temperatures between 50 and 90 degrees Farenheit are in the forecast. Avoid painting areas of the house under direct sunlight; paint in the shade, and follow the shade as the sunlight shifts. Also, consider the time commitment: Removing paint, pressure washing, priming, and painting are the major steps in the process. All together, it can take anywhere from a few days to a week.

But the money saved can make it very worth your while. Painting the exterior of your house can easily be done for less than $1,000. If you can borrow the major tools and already have a lot of the materials, it can cost as little as a few hundred dollars! Let's break down the costs of DIYing this popular home improvement project.

airless paint sprayerAirless paint sprayer. Photo: The Home Depot

Tool Rentals:

To do the job yourself and save money, you'll have to rent some special tools. (If you have reason to believe you'll use these items again in the foreseeable future, then go ahead and purchase them.)

Pressure washer: Don't try to scrape every little last bit of paint off your exterior when this handy tool can do it for you in a jiffy. Plus, it gets all that extra dirt and grime off, too. About $50 to $70 per day. Or, you can spring for one for about $299.

Paint sprayer: Have mercy on your hands! A paint sprayer will save you so much time and pain when painting large expanses. Approximately $70 per day.

Scaffolding: For most two-story homes, a ladder just isn't going to do the job. Renting scaffolding will save you so much time and energy. About $15 to $50 per day, depending on the size.


Tool and Material Purchases:

Heat Gun:
These are pricey, but they'll get the bulk of your house's paint off effectively. $60

Paint Scraper: This hand tool, with interchangeable blades, will save you a lot of agony getting off some of that old paint. $28

Putty Knife:
This knife's long, narrow blade comes in handy for more scraping and evening out the surface and crevices. $7

Pole Sander: After removing all the old paint, attach sandpaper to this long-handled tool to sand the house's surface. This allows the new paint to better adhere to the surface.

Sandpaper:
Keep a generous amount of sandpaper on hand, so you can keep refilling your pole sander. Sand by hand to access tight spaces.. $3 to $10

Wire Brush:
This works for hard-to scrape areas and to help loosen thick, tough paint. $11

Extension Ladder
: (If you're not renting scaffolding.) Extension ladders come in all sizes, from 20ft to over 30ft. Choose the best size based on the height of your home.

Paint: Remember that the paint is going to take a beating, so it might be a good idea to pay the extra few dollars for better quality paint. Plan on spending $25-$50 per gallon.

Masking Tape: Just like you would for an interior room, grab a few rolls of masking or painter's tape. Consider that you're using a paint sprayer and over-spraying often occurs. $15 for 6 rolls

Plastic sheeting: Use this (with your masking tape) to protect surrounding areas, such as walkways, windows, decks, stairs -- just about anything surrounding the house. $28 for 400ft.

Caulk: Make sure to fill in gaps and openings using caulk before you begin painting. $2 to $6 per tube.

Caulk Gun: You will definitely want one of these because your hands will start to hurt without one. There will be a lot of caulking to do! Around $30.

So...are you ready to do it yourself -- and save?

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Circuit Diagram

 
 

Sent to you by Sparkie via Google Reader:

 
 

via xkcd.com on 4/20/10

I just caught myself idly trying to work out what that resistor mass would actually be, and realized I had self-nerd-sniped.

 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Now Witness the Firepower of This Fully Operational (and slow motion) Saturn V

 
 

Sent to you by Sparkie via Google Reader:

 
 

via Universe Today by Nancy Atkinson on 4/26/10

Apollo 11 Saturn V Launch (HD) Camera E-8 from Mark Gray on Vimeo.

This is so cool – and impressive, most impressive! A 16mm camera located near the base of the Saturn V rocket captured incredible detail about the ignition and lift off of the Apollo 11 mission to the Moon. The high-quality video slows down 30 second of footage to about 8 minutes, but it's worth every second to watch! The narrator explains it all in great detail. You'll see the first moments of ignition where the flames light and expand, then get sucked back into the flame trench; and fire and ice all in one video. It really is awesome!

(...)
Read the rest of Now Witness the Firepower of This Fully Operational (and slow motion) Saturn V (3 words)


© nancy for Universe Today, 2010. | Permalink | 10 comments | Add to del.icio.us
Post tags: , , ,

Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Sunday, April 18, 2010

The 5 best FarmVille extensions, userscripts, tips, tricks and cheats

 
 

Sent to you by Sparkie via Google Reader:

 
 

via Download Squad by Sebastian Anthony on 4/14/10

You'd be lying if you said you'd never tried FarmVille. Well, theoretically you could claim to be one of the few that has yet to try FarmVille, but with over 80 million users you're probably lying.

True, most of those 80 million are middle-aged housewives that think an 'extension' is a way of increasing the range of the vacuum cleaner, but by my reckoning there must be some Download Squad readers that also play FarmVille. This post's for you, power users; power farmers. Why calculate your crop harvests in your head when a userscript can do it for you?! Or, indeed, why should you spend time adopting animals and accepting bonuses when there are peas and asparagus to plant?

Remember, Chrome 4 and above supports Userscripts -- though where Chrome Extension versions exist, I have included a link. Firefox users will have to install Greasemonkey.

Let's start with the most basic of extensions -- a harvest calculator:

1. Farmville Harvest Calculator [Greasemonkey Userscript -- Chrome Extension]

Available for both Firefox and Chrome, this tool does exactly what it says on the tin -- calculate harvest times -- but, if you use the Chrome Extension, it also removes the ad bar down the right side! No longer will you be distracted by all the pretty single ladies while you farm. Don't Facebook realise that farming -- and gaming -- are far more important than finding an easy girl that wants to play with your hoe?

2. FarmVille Wall Manager [Greasemonkey Userscript -- Chrome Extension]

FarmVille Wall Manager, or FVWM, has a truly vast number of options. In essence it automates the process of scanning your Wall for FarmVille-related updates. By default it doesn't automate much, but by clicking the 'FVWM Options' on the left side bar of your Facebook News page you can enable the automation of everything.

It's hard to resist such menu options as 'Get free XP?' but there are even esoteric things, such as defining which kind of horse you want to adopt: maybe you want the pink pony foal, but not the white foal? White sheep but no black sheep? No problem!

Note: the developer says Facebook is trying to prevent the automation of this userscript/extension. If you refresh too often you might get banned -- so don't do it more than once per minute! Also, if you have problems getting the script to run, check the Userscript page -- Facebook URLs can be troublesome it seems.

3. FV Feed Filter [Chrome Extension -- Greasemonkey Userscript (not as good!)]

If, like me, you find automation a bit too cheaty, use the FarmVille Feed Filter instead! Click its button in Chrome (or visit the your filtered FarmVille Facebook page in Firefox) and you'll be rewarded with a very, er... quaint interface.

Better yet, you can hide the FarmVille updates on your main News Feed -- and just click the button when you want to FARM. I'm all for addictive gaming experiences, but it sure is nice to have the POSSIBILITY of getting away sometimes -- and that can be hard when your News Feed is full of delicious sheep and plants and free XPs...


4. Glitch/cheat/hack your way to stardom!

OK, there aren't any actual cheats in FarmVille, but there are definitely creative uses of the game's mechanics. The hay bale trap, for example. Then, because 'winning' in FarmVille is mostly about having the most XP and coins, you simply need to make sure you spend most of your time earning XP and getting coins -- so make sure you have as many neighbours as possible! By simply clicking 'Visit/Help Friend's Farm' you can earn a small fortune -- help 20 neighbours a day, if you have the time for it.

Once you have a steady stream of freebies from neighbours, the next step is efficiency. Making the most of what you've got. Fortunately, like every game out there, and because the Internet is awesome, there's a 10-part FarmVille power-levelling guide. It's pretty damn extensive, but if you really want to be the best...


5. Speed up FarmVille and increase responsiveness

As most gamers know, the single best way to improve your gaming performance is to speed things up: a faster Internet connection, a better graphics card, a de-fragmented hard drive! The same can be said for FarmVille, though of course the speed gains are mostly a matter of convenience.

On all but the most modern computers, FarmVille runs slowly. That's the power of Flash for you. There's simply no way a frickin' farming simulator should slow a 3-year-old computer down to a crawl -- and fortunately there's something you can do about it! First, drop the video quality by clicking the button in the top-left corner -- next, make sure your Flash player is up to date.

Finally, there are some fairly low-level tweaks you can make, to squeeze a little more performance out of Firefox: check our post from last year, or enable pipelining (but be careful). Chrome is already as fast as it gets, so I'm afraid I have no tips for you!

* * *
As always, if you've got a pro-farmer tip, leave it in the comments. We promise not to judge you...

The 5 best FarmVille extensions, userscripts, tips, tricks and cheats originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 14 Apr 2010 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Add to digg Add to del.icio.us Add to Google Add to StumbleUpon Add to Facebook Add to Reddit Add to Technorati

Greasemonkey - Firefox - Mozilla Firefox - Google Chrome - FarmVille

 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Use of time before 15 page essay due in 12 hours

 
 

Sent to you by Sparkie via Google Reader:

 
 


funny graphs and charts

Use of time before 15 page essay due in 12 hours

Graph by: mashabedda via Graph Jam Builder





 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Incredible Images of Iceland Volcano from Just a Few Kilometers Away

 
 

Sent to you by Sparkie via Google Reader:

 
 

via Universe Today by Nancy Atkinson on 4/18/10

Lightning visible in the plume of the Eyjafjallajokull volcano in Iceland on April 17, 2010. Image courtesy of Snaevarr Gudmundsson.

Astronomer Snaevarr Gudmundsson from Iceland was able to travel to within just a few kilometers from the Eyjafjallajokull volcano, and shared his incredible close-up images with Universe Today. "I stayed near the volcano from about 16:00 hours to 22:00 hours on Saturday and watched its impressive eruption," Gudmundsson said in an email to me. "Amazing event, awesome explosions of 1200 °C hot magma reaching ice and water. I shot more than 550 images during these hours of continuous enjoyment. Sounds ridiculous but its ever changing appearance was never boring."

The massive plume put on an impressive display – from lightning forming within the plume to an incredible amount of spewing ash. On one of following pictures you can see helicopter for size comparison of the plume
(...)
Read the rest of Incredible Images of Iceland Volcano from Just a Few Kilometers Away (586 words)


© nancy for Universe Today, 2010. | Permalink | 2 comments | Add to del.icio.us
Post tags: ,

Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

More Pretties For You

 
 

Sent to you by Sparkie via Google Reader:

 
 

via Tom's Astronomy Blog by Marian on 4/14/10

While getting an author's permission to use his photo on the blog, I visited his site and found some truly amazing work.  The author, Daniel Lopez, very nicely gave me permission to use any of his photos on the blog, and I wanted to show you some of the outstanding images he's created.

Rayo Verde - Daniel Lopez

Daniel has several progressive shots of this green flash.  That glowing horizon with the uniform burnt sky and landscape must have been something to see.

Conjunction of Saturn and the Moon 01/03/07 - Daniel Lopez

Now here I spent so much time staring at the Moon with my mouth hanging open, I almost didn't see Saturn (at 8:00 o'clock) in this shot.  I had to shrink the image to fit the blog, of course, but it enlarges!

05/04/07 "lenticular sombrero teide" - Daniel Lopez

Look at how bright the landscape is with that clear star field.

07/02/07 gorro teide - Daniel Lopez

I can almost smell the air in this shot.

nubes flecha, Oct 09 - Daniel Lopez

Can you imagine standing there looking at this?

Teide sombrero - Daniel Lopez

This will take you to Daniel's site, and…
This link will take you to an animation of a total lunar eclipse Daniel put together.  NICE!

I'll be linking Daniel to this post, and he's agreed to answer any questions you have about his work.  Daniel says he doesn't speak English well, and asks your patience.  I found his English to be excellent, by the way.


 
 

Things you can do from here: