So long, land-line & Mr. Miyagi

Another successful t-giving holiday for all, save for Papa Z who was stuck at home with the flu. An apple crisp and homemade pumpkin pie reigned as the champions of dessert as did the Denver Broncos and Atlanta Falcons.

I don’t have any pics from Tgiving, as I don’t have an interweb connection at my new place yet — and no “free” wireless networks seemed to be floating around either. Hopefully we’ll get that taken care of this week. What WAS floating around was an excellent cell phone signal — I have never had “full bars” on any phone I’ve ever owned in any place I’ve lived - ever. In any location of my apartment, I have a 100% signal.. it’s like we live in an antenna. It’s beautiful. So long, land line.

We moved in on Saturday and I hope to be unpacked by Spring ‘06. .. thanks to Tim H. for helping out … and thanks to Greg G. for showing up when we were almost done. Gulliver’s Moving had a major hand in the unloading portion, so a round of thanks to those guys. They didn’t break anything! At least, not that I’ve noticed. Plus, the cable guy came on the same day we moved in — that’s some quality service. So we got to see the Redskins lose to San Diego — BAH.

In other news around the world, on Thanksgiving Day, Mr. Miyagi finally waxed off. Very sad.

Blizzards AND tornadoes hit the midwest this weekend — and after an earthquake caused a volcano to erupt a hurricane destroyed the rest of it.

In NYC, two guys were arguing and one shoved the other into the path of a subway — take it upstairs, guys. Seriously.

I played “Call of Duty 2″ on the XBOX 360 and I must say it was pretty frickin’ sweet — I would by no means ever want to get one as the games are way overpriced — but if you find yourself at a Target or wherev try it out for a lil’ bit.

November 28, 2005 • Posted in: Ramblings

One Response to “So long, land-line & Mr. Miyagi”

  1. Easy1 - November 28th, 2005

    Once you get cable Internet you might want to consider Vonage on top og your cell $15/month 500 min to anywhere in the US and you get your voicemail on the internet if u wan to.