Jul
29
2008
4

Casa Pura Vida – the renovation part II, III and IV

It’s been a little while since I posted an update on Casa Pura, our humble house in the North of Italy. I just returned from a very short trip last weekend and the renovation is going quite well I can say.

Let me start where I left you: beginning of March. As I said back then, we were in the process of gathering proposal from various suppliers, such as the elettricista, the tubista and the muratore. The main goal for 2007 was to install the electricity, water heater and the tubing / piping for the water (both hot and cold). If possible, we also wanted to make a passage from the first floor to the second floor (at the moment, the only way of getting to the second floor is from the outside–which is a little cumbersome in Winter).

Part II – April/May 2008

As I said earlier on, we prepared detailed documentation of where we wanted the electricity installed. Finally, after having visited Italy in March and after having communicated a lot by email and phone, we had an appointment late April to start installing the electricity. Although we had documented everything very thoroughly, it is vital to be present when the elettricista first arrives. The documentation gives some guidance, but in no way gives him enough of an idea about the specifics of what you want. So, be there when the guy starts his work.

In two days, the elettricista did all the milling in the walls and got the electricity working. Not with all the fuse boxes and sockets and all, but the basic stuff was working. After having done this, the muratore would have to come and fix the tubing in the walls. Then, the elettricista would finish his job, by installing all the sockets, the fuse box, et cetera.

So far so good. Beginning of May and we had the first part of the renovation behind us: electricity is installed.

Then the second part started: looking for a tubista and a muratore. During the week in which the elettricista finished his work, a tubista and a muratore were also contacted to look at what needed to be done. The tubista was okay with all our requirements and we set an approximate date for the works to start. The muratore also came to look at the house, but wasn’t particularly interested from the looks of it. While the geometra was inspecting the house with his, he was smoking cigarettes outside. Well, maybe that’s how things work here in Italy we thought.

Part III – June 2008

Anyway, about 6 weeks later we had planned two weeks on site and that’s when we had also set up appointments with the tubista (or idraulico as others seem to call it), muratore and elettricista. We had planned for the muratore to first arrive. He would have to fix the tubing of the elettricista after which the sockets and the fuse box could be installed. Next, the tubista could come to install the tubing for the water and gas.

We arrived in a Saturday and had expected the muratore to arrive first thing Monday morning. Before that happened we first decided to tear down the wall separating the two small ‘living rooms’. The prior owners used one of those rooms as a bedroom and the other as a living room I think, but we wanted to get more light in there and start using it as a living room. Tearing the wall down was done in about half an hour, but taking the rubble down to the garage (we’re storing a lot of rubble there we gather all over the place) took us about 6 hours. The end result was good though.

Fast forward to Monday morning. Apparently, the muratore had figured since we were going to be there for two weeks anyway, he might as well just come in the second week. In other words, he didn’t show up! Hmmm, this screwed up our entire game plan. Second problem: the tubista that was originally planned for didn’t want to come anymore. He had a different gig somewhere else. Nice going!

Luckily enough, the geometra was able to arrange a new tubista on the spot and on Tuesday the guys started to install the tubing. This was done in two-and-a-half days and that was all for the first week

Then the quest for a new muratore began. I dropped by the geometra who was not able to find a new muratore at first. I dropped by the local flower shop (the owners of the flower shop own the house next to us) and asked for a muratore. They knew some, but all of them were busy. I then dropped by at the hotel in which we stayed for a while before the house was ours. They also knew a few guys that could get the job done, but all were occupied. Just as I was thinking I was out of options, a guest in the hotel overheard our conversation and chimed in. He told he knew a muratore. He gave me the phone number and off I went, back to the geometra. Long story short: Monday morning (after first having promised Saturday, but one of his guys was ill) he turned up with four guys and in little under 8 hours, he had fixed everything. Phew…

The next two days were great. It was the connecting the dots: doing a little painting, having the elettricista install the sockets and the fuse box, having the tubista do the hot water. Almost half a year of preparation resulted in a massive change in the looks of the house (internally at least) within a few days.

Other things we did in the two weeks we were there: a lot painting (not just inside, also outside), cleaning the garden, buying tiles for the bathroom, buying a toilet, buying a natural stone kitchen surface.

Part IV – July 2008

The next major challenge was the bathroom. We had originally planned for my dad to drop by in the two weeks we were there to do the tiling. But due to a family emergency, he wasn’t able to come. My mom and dad however did want to go to the house, so they planned for two weeks of holiday in July. Right after the party for my 30th birthday they left and took all the stuff with them that was needed to do the tiling. In two weeks, they took care of installing the tiling, cleaning a lot more and fixing three little supporting walls on which the kitchen surface would have to be fixed.

Together with my dad I fixed the kitchen surface this month in a short weekend trip to Italy and also did some more painting. Unfortunately my dad wasn’t able to get the tiling on the bathroom floor done, but this is not such a big deal as for now, we take a shower outside. We’ll probably fix the tiling on the bathroom floor somewhere later this summer.

All and all, I think the renovation is going quite well. We’re still on schedule to getting most of it done and over with by the end of the summer, or at least, before the winter season. One thing we won’t be able to get done is the inside stairs. Well, it’s okay to have this wait until next summer or so.

Money-wise we’re going slightly over budget, but it’s not more than 5% or so, so we budgeted things quite realistically. I’ll try to post a budget overview later on.

Some lessons learnt:

  • Always confirm appointments twice, thrice or four times. Be sure to confirm appointments two weeks in advance, one week in advance and also one, two or maybe three days in advance. This helps at least making sure the workers turn up
  • Don’t rely too much on prior documentation. Ask for price lists, hourly rates and do the calculation yourself. A fixed price offer: forget it
  • Be there when the workers first arrive. This is when you need to explain what you want, where you want your tubing, et cetera. Even though workers might have seen the house before they start working, you need to make sure you’re there to finalize the specifics of the works

p.s. note that the old pictures have been taken with my Pentax K10-D and the new pictures with my iPhone, so the old ones are of way better quality than the new ones. I think the contrast with the old situation is even more than the pictures show.

p.p.s. A big thanks to my dad and mum: they’ve been great in helping out so far!!!

Written by Alef in: Abroad, housing | Tags: , ,
Jul
23
2008
3

The 30th birthday and a public smoking ban

Hey, today I’ve turned 30, 1 month and 6 days. Somebody asked for my age today and for the first time I mistakenly said 29. Then I corrected myself and for some reason, I didn’t like doing that… Yeah I know, it’s nothing turning 30, it’s just like any other birthday… The thing is, you can’t say you’re in your late twenties anymore… So in a sense, it’s not nothing :-)

Anyway, I hosted a party a few weeks ago, to celebrate. All and all it was great, although a bit weird. Around 100 people turned up, so you would expect he dance floor to be quite filled. On the contrary, the dance floor was completely empty even though I hosted the party in the F L E X B A R, one of the more popular places in Amsterdam these days.

The thing is that finally, the public smoking ban in bars and restaurants (in addition to all other public places, where it was already forbidden to smoke for ages) went into effect on the 1st of July. The weekend I hosted my party was the first weekend out for many with the new smoking ban. Combined with some nice weather, this caused everybody to stay outside for a long time…

So at first I was a bit disappointed since I had hoped for the dance floor to be full and all, but after a while I began to enjoy the party outside as well… Eventually the dance floor filled up anyway and we had a great night…

Some music:

Written by Alef in: At home | Tags: , ,
Jul
22
2008
0

How to convince prospects NOT to become customers

I’m looking for a different bank. My current bank does not give me the level of service that I’d like. Even worse, they’re selling the branch that handles by business affairs to a different bank, hence leaving me with two banks to deal with; one bank for my personal affairs and another for my business affairs.

When I heard this, I started looking around for a different bank. I asked around for a while and did some research and settled on a few banks to contact.

One of them I heard about from a friend of mine, so I figured I wanted to contact this one as well. I went to their website, but noticed it didn’t work with Safari. Well, I thought, that’s a bummer and I was almost about to close the browser window and leave it at that. Then I decided to give them another try and opened up Firefox. To my surprise, with Firefox it didn’t work either! That’s really bad I thought and wrote them an email that went somewhat along the lines of the following:

Dear sir / madam,

I’m looking at a possible move to a different bank.

I visited your website, which unfortunately does not work with both browsers that I use (Safari and Firefox). Could you let me know if and when compatibility with Safari and/or Firefox will be added, so I will be able to read more about your services?

best regards,
Alef Arendsen

The customer service department (or whatever department it is), responded with the following email:

Dear mr. Arendsen,

The XXXXX internet site only works with Internet Explorer.

We cannot tell if the new system will support other browsers in the future.

kind regards,
XXXXX

So, they do have a new system (that currently might be in development), but it will not support other browsers. Or at least, they cannot tell.

I was kind of amazed by their reply, since I would have expected a message a bit more commercial. I guess that’s not what they’re up to at this bank, which leaves me with one bank less to explore :-)

It’s a lot more difficult to convince prospects to become customers than it is to keep existing customers from walking away. That’s why extra effort should always be put in replying to emails like these. Apparently they’re happy with their current customer base…

Written by Alef in: At home | Tags:
Jul
02
2008
2

Twitter + QuickSilver & some music

Yesterday I posted a little tweet about using Twitter and QuickSilver together. Since I had installed Leopard, I got rid of QuickSilver–Spotlight served me well enough. It’s a bit of a pain however to constantly have to navigate to a web page or a client application to be able to post a tweet. That’s why I installed QuickSilver again and took the Growlified Tweet Deluxe script. Now I’m able to just press ctrl+cmd+space, press the ‘.’, then type my message, press tab, type ‘tw’, press enter and I’m done…

The page is in Dutch, so I’ll provide a short English translation of the script provided by the guy whose name I can’t seem to find out from his blog:

  • Install QuickSilver
  • Download the script
  • Put the script in ~/Library/Application Support/Quicksilver/Actions/ (create the Actions folder if it doesn’t exist)
  • Restart QuickSilver

Personally the guy doesn’t use the script anymore, since for example @-tweets do not work. If somebody is able to fix the problem, I’d be glad to know about that :-)

In the meantime, to close the day with, some music:

Written by Alef in: At home | Tags: ,
Jul
02
2008
0

Italian Affair: party this Saturday

I’m hosting a party this Saturday with a friend of mine. I recently turned 30 years old and I figured I couldn’t let this pass without a memorable night. The same is true for a friend of mine. At the time, we both were in Milan and sitting next to a DJ friend of ours. 15 minutes later the first invitations were sent out and little over two months later, we’re all set for the Italian Affair, this coming Saturday. If you feel like joining and don’t have anything to do on Saturday night, don’t hesitate to drop by.

More info somewhere else on this blog.

Written by Alef in: At home | Tags: , , , ,
Jul
01
2008
1

Platform-independent GUI toolkits suck (sort off)

I think platform independent GUI toolkits will never ever really make dedicated client application obsolete. Just as web apps, they can also not give you the seem experience as a dedicated client application. It’s all a matter of the wrong level of abstraction. Let me show you two examples

I’m one of those hopeless Twitter users. I use QuickSilver to post my Tweets (as of today actually) and Thwirl to receive my tweets from other Twitter people. Thwirl is one of those Adobe AIR applications that doesn’t only run on Mac (I’m a Mac user), but also on Windows and other platforms.

I registered two accounts with Thwirl, but after a while got fed up with one of the Twitter accounts, so wanted to get that out of the way. This meant I had to open the Thwirl preferences. As a Mac user, I automatically navigated to the top left of my screen and opened up the thwirl menu (see picture below), to look for a ‘Preferences’ menu item.. Nowhere to be found!

The thing is… virtually all Mac OS applications have their preferences pane accessible through a ‘Preferences’ menu item in the application’s menu in the menu bar. Having been a Mac user for quite a while now, I didn’t know where to look for the preferences pane other than in the menu bar anymore… I then started to look for a hint of something preference-like in one of the Thwirl windows. Thwirl has no main window in which all Twitter accounts are displayed… Each Thwirl window is dedicated to one Thwirl account. Therefore I found it surprising to find the preferences for the entire Thwirl application in one of the account windows (see picture below–in the top right corner, you can see a little wrench that represent a link to the preferences pane). Opening the preference pane shows both accounts and after I deleted one, I was only left with one…

Now, the thing is that all of this is completely unnatural to Mac users. Preferences go in a preferences pane, accessible through the application menu in the menu bar. The problem with AIR in this case is that it doesn’t provide integration with the OS X platform to such an extent that applications running on AIR can introduce a menu item in the menu bar.

Then something else. One of the Mac applications that I like is Growl. It’s a unified notification system that applications can post to. I thought it would be great to have some kind of an integration between Thwirl and Growl so I started searching for it. There were plenty of posts on the net, but none of them showed me how to do it. I quickly found a post summarizing all Twitter clients on Maclife.com and this post confirmed what I thought: no Growl support for Thwirl.

I guess this is due to fact that Adobe AIR tries to be everything (well, it’s just a GUI toolkit…) for everyone (Windows, Mac, Linux, et cetera), but by abstracting away the specifics of the underlying platform it’s running on, it’s immediately going to loose some of the niceties of those specific platforms: such as Growl integration (although this is not even part of the standard OS X platform).

My take: AIR is the wrong level of abstraction.

This doesn’t mean by the way that AIR isn’t useful. I’ve seen plenty of very cool applications that successfully use Adobe AIR. Thwirl isn’t one of them and that’s because I think a dedicated client application could do soooo much better using all of OS X’s features. For some applications integrating with the platform to such an extent might simply not be needed. There Adobe AIR might be a good fit…

Written by Alef in: At home | Tags: , , , , ,

Powered by WordPress | Theme: Aeros 2.0 by TheBuckmaker.com