Linda had to go into the bakery today which left me to catch up on phone calls and errands. I made more phone calls to contractors this morning and had better luck than yesterday reaching people or at least leaving messages. I rescheduled with Gary from GM Construction to come discuss the pole barn project. I also got hold of Bratcher Electric and determined that the annual maintenance on the whole house generator could wait until we are ready to do the conversion from propane to natural gas, which they can handle. In talking to Mike Bratcher I also determined that we can install a main panel in the garage just after the transfer switch and then run power directly from there to the pole barn rather than from the main panel in the basement. While we are at it, we could redo the sub-panel in the garage, feeding it directly from the new main panel rather than the main panel in the basement. The basement panel is very crowded and we have wires carrying electricity back and forth unnecessarily.
I got a call from Butch with an update on the negotiations of the sale of the major portion of their business assets. Linda has been advising them relative to valuation, accounting, and tax issues and we have been helping them with purchase agreement language. It looks like they are in the final stages leading up to a closing of the deal. Their big annual event is coming up in early July and they will likely be busy with the transfer of inventory and training of the buyer during and after that event. I need to get our bus down to their place to work on some projects and help Butch work on getting their bus conversion done enough that they can live in it this winter in the southwest. Based on things going on at both ends, it looks like the window for that work will be mid-September to sometime in November, weather permitting.
Our converted coach friends, Pat and Vickie, have some older Motorola GMRS handheld radios that they like but the charger bases have disappeared. My ham radio friend Scott (AC8IL) is in the commercial mobile communications business so I checked with him to see if chargers were still available. They were and he had a couple of the drop-in style charger/bases in stock! Scotty is just that kind of guy. I picked them up this morning and will deliver them to Pat and Vickie at the GLAMARAMA rally.
Apple Roku sounds like an interesting dessert, but it’s not. It might be an either/or situation, but it could be a both/and. John Dewey was a both/and kind of guy, so I favor that approach. We were intrigued by Steve and Karen’s Roku Internet TV streaming device last night so I stopped at Best Buy today on my way home from running my errand to see if they had them in stock and if so at what price. Not only did they have them, they had three different models. The “stick” was $50, the Roku 2 was $70, and the Roku 3 was $100. (The Roku 3 does not have A/V connectors like the Roku 2, only HDMI, but it has a five times faster processor.) But that was not all, oh no. They also had the Apple TV device for $100 and two other similar products, one of which looked like an Amazon/Kindle thing and the other one a WD thing, whatever that is.
The Roku units (2 and 3) have access to a lot of content on a free, subscription, and pay-per-view basis. The Apple TV unit has access to content on the same basis but the selection may not be as extensive; it’s hard to say for sure as the devices are not easy to compare directly. The Apple TV unit, however, has one huge, unique feature; it can mirror anything on an iOS device, such as our iPads, to a TV/monitor. The iPad can also be used as a control panel for the Apple TV device.
We do not have to choose between a Roku and an Apple TV unit, of course, we can get and use both if we want; it’s just a matter of money. Between the two TVs in the house and the two in the bus it could be a lot of money if we wanted dedicated units of both types on all four TV/monitors. We always have the option of moving things back and forth, but in general I prefer not to do that. To the extent we can afford it I prefer to have the house and the bus set up so that the only things we move between them are the things we have to, such as ourselves, our food, our laundry, our computers, our cats, and some of our ham radio gear (at least for now). The best solution, however, may be to get one of each device and move them around as needed. That would give us the best cost/benefit ratio, but not the most convenience.
When Linda got home from her day at the bakery we finished the Egri Merlot we had opened the other night and caught up on the day’s events. We decided to try the Apple TV device first and see how it worked in our situation. Linda made an onion, mushroom, tomato Ragu, and served it over the leftover power grains. It was very tasty. After dinner I went to Best Buy to get the Apple TV device while Linda prepared fresh strawberries for dessert. Fresh strawberries are a favorite treat of ours. She served them with small pieces of Dandelion Small Batch Chocolate made from 70% Ambanja Madagascar 2013 Harvest beans. The chocolate was excellent and unique. It was a thank you gift from our son and daughter-in-law for Linda’s babysitting services while they were in San Francisco, California.
We connected the Apple TV box to one of our HD TV/monitors and went through the setup procedure. We decided to test it on some PBS content, which required us to set up an account with PBS and enter a validation code that the Apple TV box provided. We also downloaded an app onto Linda’s iPad2 that allowed it to mirror whatever was on its screen to the Apple TV.
We used the mirroring feature to watch Season 1, Episode 5 of Doc Martin, but it proved to be unusable. The image was fine on the iPad2 but the Apple TV could not keep up. I found that to be odd as our home WiFi network should have more than enough bandwidth to deliver the data stream between the devices, but maybe not. I presumed that the limiting factor in our network was the data rate coming into our DSL gateway from our AT&T landline, but that was obviously fast enough to deliver the content from the gateway to the iPad without buffering hesitation.
We turned off the mirroring and finished watching the episode on the iPad. Still, the content delivered directly from the gateway to the Apple TV looked great, and the mirroring will be useful for showing photos and anything else on our iPads. We may reconfigure the Apple TV to use one of our other wireless networks and see if that helps.