Caden is 5 (months that is)

It is hard to believe another month has gone but it has – actually more than
a month. I sent out the last update on October 10th. Caden is 5 months+
and growing like a weed that has been fed micarle grow and watered ever day,
ha! ha!

He has attended 3 Louisiana Tech Football games (at least until half time)
and can’t wait for his parents to take him to some basketball games! 🙂

He has made two road trips in the last month, one to Pineville, only a
couple of hours away. He apparently didn’t like the last half of the trip
home, because he yelled most of the way. He did must better on the next
road trip, to Hot Springs Village and Benton, AR (about 3.5 to 4 hours
away). He slept most of the way there, expect the last 30 minutes, and he
slept the ENTIRE way home! His parents were VERY excited about this LONG
nap.

Speaking of sleep, we ARE getting it. Of course, we really can’t complain,
we’ve he has been a great sleeper since we brought him home. He does
however, have his dad’s daytime sleeping habits (I’ve been told).

“A 30-40 minute cat nap is great, all I need and I’m ready to go again!”
ha! ha!

We are hanging around Ruston for Thanksgiving, grandma Breeding and Auntie K
and Uncle Clint are all coming to stay. I wonder if there will be any food
cooked at our house during this time?

On to what you really want! Pictures of the boy!
http://www.nealbreeding.com/cadenphotos.php (the new ones are under the
October and November links).

Here is a bonus shot we took tonight!

img_8051.JPG

God Bless!

Love Neal, Jennifer, Caden and Emma (the dog)

How To Find your Motherboard’s BIOS Version

Neal’s Notes:  This may or may not work.  On Windows Server 2003, it did not report the right bios (or the one I was looking for) and the registry entry was blank.

(Taken from “How To Find the BIOS Version in the Windows Registry,” written by Tim Fisher)

  1. Click on Start and then Run.
  2. In the text box in the Run window, type msinfo32 and click OK. This will open the System Information program.
  3. When System Information first opens, it defaults to the System Summary, a short list with some of the most important information about your computer system listed.
  4. On the right side of the program, locate the BIOS Version/Date entry.
  5. This field contains the BIOS version that is currently running on your motherboard. This field may also contain additional information such as the BIOS date, BIOS manufacturer, motherboard manufacturer and the motherboard model number.

    Note: If the BIOS date is shown, it can be useful in determining the current BIOS version from a motherboard manufacturer’s website if the version is not clear here.

  6. Close System Information.

Try it from the Registry

Note: No changes are made to the registry in these steps.

  1. Click on Start and then Run.
  2. In the text box in the Run window, type regedit and click OK. This will open the Registry Editor program.Note: Do not make any changes to any entry anywhere in Registry Editor to avoid causing serious system issues. These steps only direct you to view a registry entry, not to make changes.
  3. Locate the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE folder under My Computer and click on the (+) sign next the folder name to expand the folder.
  4. In the resulting folders, locate and click on the (+) sign next to HARDWARE to expand this folder.
  5. In the resulting folders, locate and click on the (+) sign next to DESCRIPTION to expand this folder.
  6. In the resulting folders, locate and click on the System folder.
  7. In the results that appear in the window on the right, locate the SystemBiosVersion and SystemBiosDate entries.
  8. The data in the SystemBiosVersion field contains the BIOS version for your motherboard. This field may also contain additional information such as the chipset manufacturer and BIOS manufacturer.
  9. The data in the SystemBiosDate field contains the calendar date associated with the current BIOS version on your motherboard. The BIOS date can be useful in determining the current BIOS version from a motherboard manufacturer’s website if the version is not clear in the SystemBiosVersion field.
  10. Close Registry Editor without making any changes.

Recommended Software

I recently was setting up a new PC for a friend. After uninstalling all of the “extra” junk that the companies stick on teh machine, I started installing the basics of what the DID need.

There are a number of free/shareware programs that I recommend for new PC computers. This list is really for myself more than others, but I figured by adding it to my blog, I could always find the program list in the future. All of the download links go to www.download.com — a safe place to download software (no spyware allowed on their site).

  • Comodo Firewall
    Yep, it is a firewall (download)
  • AVG Anti-Virus Free Edition
    As one would imagine, an AV program (download)
  • CCleaner
    “CCleaner is a system optimization and privacy tool. It removes unused files from your system – allowing Windows to run faster and freeing up valuable hard disk space.” from Download.com (download)
  • Ad-Aware
    Scans your RAM, Registry, hard drives, and external storage devices for known data-mining, advertising, and tracking components and can easily clean your system (download)
  • Mozilla Firefox
    Alternative web browser. I like it much better than Internet Explorer. (download)
  • TrueCrypt
    It can create a virtual encrypted disk within a file and mounts it as a real disk, encrypt an entire hard disk partition or a storage device such as USB flash drive and more. Visit their web site for full details or to download a free copy. (http://www.truecrypt.org)
  • JungleDisk
    Jungle Disk is an application that lets you store files and backup data securely to Amazon.com’s S3 â„¢ Storage Service. More information is at (http://www.jungledisk.com)

There are more I could list, an “Microsoft Office” alternatives, more programs on spyware removal, like Spybot – Search & Destroy (download) and Trend Micro HijackThis (download), but I’ll stop here for now.

October (and September) Update

Well it has been a while since an update… where did September go? Oh yea, school started, which meant life in Ruston got really busy.

I’ve also had a number of after hour web site projects that have been keeping me busy.

Caden is doing great and growing, 13lb 12oz, 25″ as of Tuesday (4 month check up). He (or should I say his parents) survived the 4 month immunizations on Saturday.

Caden has already been to his first Tech Bulldog Football game and he looked really sharp in his Tech gear. He almost got to see, well, um, hear (we left at 1/2 time) the Bulldogs defeat #20 Hawaii.

He has informed me he is expecting a WIN this weekend (at Homecoming) and may want to stay past 1/2 time.

He also is enjoying Church and has been making the rounds… not only to our Sunday School class but the “older” folks that we are such good friends with.

Daycare (or school as Jen calls it) is going well. On his 2nd day of school he came home with his first (of many I’m sure) fund raisers, lol! He also sold the most in his class and has quickly become one of the teacher’s pets, ha!

Jennifer is doing well and is back working full-time (which translates into 4 days a week and some paperwork at home when she gets a chance).

In addition to my web site projects, I’ve been working on a toy/book shelf/cabinet for Caden’s room. Hopefully by the next update I’ll be done with it and have it in the room and have some uploaded pictures to show you.

Guess that is it for now!

Hope things are well with you guys!

Microsoft Office Alternatives

Tired of paying an arm, a leg, and a kidney to be able to type someone a letter, create a budget, or make a presentation? I know I am, but for the longest time, Microsoft has had a corner on this market and they have chosen to consumers to look for alternatives or install illegal version of the software on their computer (which I refuse to do, being a novice programmer).

A few weeks ago, IBM announced a free version of Lotus Symphony. It is still in beta, so I wouldn’t recommend using it exclusively, but once it is out of beta, it would be well worth a look at.

Of course, the other popular alternative, which I currently use at my home is OpenOffice.org, and while it is decent, it is lacking with mail merge and a few other features.
Both of the programs support Microsoft Office file formats, which is great for compatibility with the rest of the world.

One other alternative, worth mentioning is Google’s Docs which allows you to use a word processor, spreadsheet and even a presentation program. It is a great service that allows you access documents from any location.