Smokies Trip

Categories: Personal

Normally, Stacy does all the personal family blogging (and picture posting), but she is still in Kentucky on the second week of our holiday trip, while I opted to drive home on Saturday, so I thought I would post about the trip to Gatlinburg for Christmas. I am sure when she gets back she will have much more to say, and more eloquently too.

We got to the Smokies on Saturday, Dec. 20, where we stayed at the Westgate resort. The weather had definitely cooled off since leaving Jacksonville. Everyone was excited about cooler holiday weather and the prospect of a white Christmas. We got in too late on Saturday to do much, so just went to eat at Johnny Carino’s (they no longer have any in Jax, so we missed it). We enjoyed the drive, our friend Garmin had taken us up 95 through Asheville, which did seem better than going up 75, and we had stopped at rest stop and eat these wraps Stacy made.

We only had a few plans, lots of places to eat from our past trips, but not a lot we HAD to do on this visit. So on Sunday we went out to see the national park and maybe some snow. It was cool, but not as cold as expected, but obviously the higher we got the more it cooled off. The road to Clingman’s Dome was closed, but you could stop at the base of it, where you straddle the North Carolina-Tennessee border. The view was amazing, but the wind sure was blowing, I had hoped we could do some walking, but no one was for that, and Stacy had started to get a cold (I think from the change in weather). From there we went over into Cherokee, NC. Stacy and I had been, but Jacob wanted to see Santaland and Ghost Mountain in the Sky. We will have to go back in warmer weather so he can add to his coaster count.

Once we got back to Gatlinburg, we went to Calhoun’s. I had some very good ribs! Looking back now I am thinking our main activity was eating out, LOL. The next night we ate at Bubba Gump’s. Stacy and I had really liked it previously, but it was very disappointing and over-priced this trip. After we left Bubba Gump’s on Monday we walked the strip to see the Christmas lights. I couldn’t believe how sparse the crowds were, I assume the recession really impacted discretionary travel, but it was still very pretty. I hadn’t dressed warm enough, so we bought jackets in a store, which I probably won’t get to wear again till we go back next year.

All week long we played lots of board games, which went well. Usually someone yells death threats after only a few minutes, so that was wonderful change. Maybe us 3 kids are maturing, LOL. We even had gotten a new game from Santa, a new version of Clue and it was a lot of fun. We also played a newer version of Monopoly where you get $2 million each time you pass GO.

Brianna and I went to the indoor water park on Tuesday, and it was a BIG disappointment. It was one of the reasons we had picked Westgate, but the whole experience was a let down. But the worst for us was the 60 degree lazy river (the water heater had been broken for a week), I thought would be relaxing, not a Polar Bear Dive! While we were at the water park, though, Jacob made his famous peanut butter balls. We had tons of chocolate for the week, will probably pay for it in diet in the new year. That night we went to eat at a new place called Blue Moose, that Stacy’s friend Beth recommended. The burgers were great, and next time I want to try their wings.

Anyway, Stacy still wasn’t feeling good and since Dollywood was closed on Christmas Eve, we postponed that to Friday. Amazingly, considering it was a tourist town, lots of places closed early on Wednesday and were closed on Thursday. But we did go to a great Mexican place called El Paso in Sevierville (apparently it used to be Monterrey, leading to us having GPS issues). I honestly think I could eat Mexican daily, but it was Feliz Navidad for us, LOL.

As is our tradition, we opened gifts Christmas Eve night. The kids are getting SO old, so they get less but bigger gifts, but they seemed really excited about their gifts. Glad Bri liked her record (yes, like LP’s) player after spending hours looking for Beatles albums around town. Christmas day we ate lots of food and chocolate and played games and watched holiday movies. It was so much fun, weird when I think how old the kids are and I figure not too far away from having our family of four maybe include significant others on the trip (of course with Bri’s texting, it is almost like having them along now, :-p ).

So on Friday, we went to Dollywood. The weather was very warm so all but the water rides were open. The mystery mine ride was a ton of fun, but being the old geezer I am, I pinched something on the second ride and hurt the rest of the day. Stacy still had the cold, so we went to a lot of the Christmas shows, while the kids rode. When we left there, we ate at Ruby Tuesday, so Jacob and I could get the unlimited fries, because that is a BIG deal in our house.

On Saturday, I rented my Chevy HHR, which Jacob was jealous of, and drove home. I hit every accident and construction delay possible in Georgia, south of Atlanta, so it seemed to take forever, but I was glad to get home. On Monday, I picked up my “boys”, Tucker and Graedy, and we are having a bachelor-week, except for the time I spending at office working on web site and installing some network-storage.

We have a wonderful Christmas, and hope you all did. Definitely check back in a week for Stacy’s version.

Why ECP5 Networks…where did the name come from?

Categories: Personal

A long time ago (ok, 1998), I wanted a name for when I did consulting. Mainly it consisted of simple networking and computer repair, and was almost all cash (hope the IRS doesn’t read this), and was rarely invoiced. So to be interesting I decided that the name of my one-man company would be ECP5 Networks.

The name I bill on actual invoices these days for my networking/web development/database work is still ECP5 Networks, but that is about the only place you see it. When I launched my first personal web site in 2000 it was name edpearson.net, but had the ECP5 on it and a logo (a logo I designed, so not much to look at). However, when I launched this current personal site, I opted for a different domain as I now have a family and thought that each member would use it, currently, that is only Stacy. In face, the ECP5 doesn’t even appear on the site currently, except under my Curriculum Vitae.

Anyhow, as I am doing more consulting, I wanted to come up with a new look to the site and therefore a new logo and branding. So I am back to thinking about how to use the ECP5 name and it got me to thinking that I use the name as my Twitter id and on many forums around the Net, but only in my head did it mean anything, so thought I would explain…for all of you dying to know. LOL

Growing up, my family heritage was a pretty important thing to me, as I had important lineage, at least if you asked my two grandmothers. Anyways, I was named in honor of my grandfather on my dad’s side (the Edward) and for my mom’s maiden name, Clay. My dad’s name had taken after his granfather, but wasn’t just alike, so it wasn’t like we were ever Jr.’s or Sr.’s etc. However, we shared the initials of our progenitors. For my dad LDP followed from Lorenzo Pearson, who started our family funeral home (the history is here) and for me the ECP came from my grandfather, Edward Clarence. My cousin, Edward Courtney had been similarly named, but he always went by Courtney.

So anyway, being the history person and thinking my heritage was cool, I counted and realized I was the fifth member of my family to be named something with the initials ECP. So decided my “corporate” identity would be ECP5 Networks.

I am hoping I have a new logo soon and can re-design my site and actual use this as the beginning of a real brand, even if just for web, database and network consulting. But at least now if someone were curious, they would know, maybe this will even be a blog Stacy will read.

Dreamweaver CS4 as PHP IDE

Categories: Adobe Open-Source web development

As I recently Twittered, I am excitedly back into doing some web development. Currently, it is a final re-launch of the Pearson Funeral Home web site, that basically was designed 2 years ago, but never got launched, so now I am re-writing the code for it to be more secure and have more functionality, as I have learned a lot in the past 2 years.

Anyway, since Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 is out, I thought I would try the trial and see if I thought it was worth the upgrade. The last version I bought was Studio 8 when it was still Macromedia. I hadn’t seen anything big in CS2 and/or CS3 to push me to upgrade the studio, other than the post-merger integration of Fireworks and PhotoShop…but that is another topic.

However, being a Dreamweaver user since version 2, in like 1997?, I wanted to give CS4 a try and see what they had added to make the case to upgrade.

The biggest improvements I wanted to see were better performance, better PHP code completion, CSS suggestion and I wanted to see how the Live View feature would work.

My basis of comparision, besides Dreamweaver 8, was Aptana, that I have been using inside Eclipse. It is NOT WYSIWIG, but has functioned well for code generation, and has a great price point..FREE!

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