....And for some more random pics...

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I just came off of night shift, and I'm sitting here vegitating in front of the computer trying to recover, so I thought I'd just post a few more pics. I mean geez, we have like thousands of them, so why not share, huh.


Our little corner of the world
Mikayla and friends
A funny pic I took with my cell phone camera of our cat Misty. Looks creepy.
Mik took the wheel while we were driving around the mountains. As you can see, I was quite frieghtened.
Me and Eric. (Sorry Deb, I just had to post this 'cause it's funny.)
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Turkey Day Pics

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Here's a few pics from our Turkey Day. I fried up a bird and it really came out great. I think it was a hit! Hope everyone had a great one.


Susan just wishing we'd went to Carrabas

Dad, me, and Mom

Dad and Great Granpa McNeight watching football

Susan telling her dad and Great Grammie McNeight "I told you the fried turkey was gonna be good!

Watching the Bucs lose in HD is not very fun...
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HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!!

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Everyone have a Happy and Safe Thanksgiving!!!! (and don't eat too much!)
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Go Lightning!

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We had the pleasure of going to a Lightning game Friday night. We had a blast. Mikayla even got selected to ride on one of the Zamboni's....how 'bout that.

Each season, the Lightning and the St.Pete Times Forum set aside one game to promote "Tampa Bay Fights Cancer" with the Steve Yerrid Foundation. A great cause, and a great team. Of course, our favorite player is Brad Richards. We've met him personally and he is a genuin, down to earth guy, an awesome athlete and has a passion for helping kids with childhood cancer. Kudos to the Lightning and Brad.... and oh, the B0lts beat the Devils in OT 3-2!
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WOOT OFF TODAY!

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Ok, in an earlier post, I told you a little about Woot.com. Well, here they are today, having a WOOT-OFF! You've got to check it out.

Click here for an "Woot Auto-refresher" link. It automatically refreshes the Woot page so that you don't miss any Woots.

Rich
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Blogger-thingy Update

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I've made a couple of little changes on the blog today. A while back, in order to leave a comment, I set it up to have folks sign-in on blogger to leave their comments. This was so that I could know who left the comment. But, after even more review (and my wife telling me it was a pain in the butt for someone to have to do this), I realize now that the effort to have someone go through the motions to 'sign-up' with blogger was a little excessive. Therefore, I have changed it back to where anyone can leave a comment, anonymous or not, without having to sign up. This wasn't meant to pick on anyone in particular (Brett)..oh, sorry. Anyway, my hopes were that anyone could leave a comment and enjoy the webpages. So, hopefully this will make it easier and please don't hesitate to tell me what you think about any post, or anything else for that matter. I'm still leaving the word recognition option there..and this is there to prevent spam comments. (Believe it or not, spam leaves comments...don't ask)

Thank you guys for visiting and I hope to hear from you soon
Rich
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How 'bout another recipe - il collard la pizza verde

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il collard la pizza verde (en. Collard Green Pizza) Fine Southern quisine, in an Italian kind of way. Southerners tend to make improvements in everything (hey, I married a New Englander...now look how nice she is!!!). Really though, it sounds pretty good..I think I'll try it.

Only in the South...Collard Green Pizza

No matter what kind of pizza your making, it will taste so much better if cooked using a grill, I like using a pizza stone;Only in the South...Collard Green Pizza1 (1-pound) store bought pizza dough (or use recipe below)

8 ounces cream cheese, softened
1 cup mayonnaise
1/2 cup marinara sauce, plus 1/4 cup
1/2 cup cooked collard greens, drained
1 large ham hock, cooked and meat removed
4 slices bacon, cut into large pieces
1 cup shredded mozzarella

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.Stretch dough and press into an 8-inch pizza pan. In a medium bowl, combine cream cheese, mayonnaise and 1/2 cup marinara sauce. Coat the pizza dough with the mixture. Top with drained greens, ham hock meat, and bacon. Cover with cheese and remaining 1/4 cup marinara sauce. Bake 25 to 30 minutes until golden brown. Slice and serve warm.
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Another favorite website...

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It's Woot.com. These guys are funny as heck and they sell some nifty gadgets. I love gadgets. A one deal per day thing. And the shipping is always $5, no matter what. The real fun comes when they do a "Woot-Off" (every few months or so - it's a suprise, you never know). I've bought a few things from Woot and have found some pretty good deals. You have to read the item descriptions for each day's woot because they are hilarious. Even if you don't buy anything, it's still funny to read.
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Web Hits 100 Million Milestone

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I saw this article on CNN today and thought it was interesting. It's hard to remember what our world was like before the internet (I think it was better sometimes :-) )

Notice the dudes name in the article from Netcraft. He must be one smart fella :-0


Web reaches new milestone: 100 million sites

POSTED: 2:32 p.m. EST, November 1, 2006

Story Highlights

• The Web now has 100 million sites
• There were 18,000 Web sites in August of 1995
• Web sites have become a way to bond and belong
By Marsha WaltonCNN

(CNN) -- Are your Web surfing fingers getting tired?
There may be a reason. Netcraft, an Internet monitoring company that has tracked Web growth since 1995, says a mammoth milestone was reached during the month of October.
"There are now 100 million Web sites with domain names and content on them," said Netcraft's Rich Miller.

"Within that, there are some that are busy and updated more often, and that represents the active sites, which are at about 47 or 48 million," he said.
Bloggers, small businesses, and simplicity have combined to create the dramatic growth of sites, much of it just in the past two years.
"The bottom line is it's much easier to create a Web site nowadays, and it's much easier to make money with a Web site," said Miller.
Netcraft uses the domain name system to identify Web sites, check how many of them are in a particular location, such as what operating system and Web server software they're running, and then publishes its information in a monthly report.
There were just 18,000 Web sites when Netcraft, based in Bath, England, began keeping track in August of 1995. It took until May of 2004 to reach the 50 million milestone; then only 30 more months to hit 100 million, late in the month of October 2006.
Netcraft says the United States, Germany, China, South Korea and Japan show the greatest Web site growing spurts.
Today there are seemingly endless Web sites for shopping, social networking, and, of course, sleaze.
But what was the subject of Web site number one in 1989?
"When the Web was started, it was started as a mechanism for sharing high energy particle physics data," said Professor Rebecca Grinter of Georgia Tech's College of Computing.
The creator of that Web site, Tim Berners-Lee, wanted experts to be able to share data on particle smashing, even if they weren't at CERN in Switzerland where he was doing research. CERN, in Geneva, is the European Organization for Nuclear Research.
Research facilities and universities soon started seeing benefits of this new tool for things as lofty as nuclear physics and as mundane as sharing restaurant recommendations.
Even today CERN proudly proclaims on its home page, "The world's largest particle physics laboratory, where the Web was born!"
It did not take long for this technological baby to flourish.
"As is true of many things, if you teach a lot of students how to do something, these students go somewhere, and around '96, lo and behold, you see this much more significant transition of the Internet," said Grinter.
Soon, a Web "explosion" took place when businesses realized they could use the Internet to make money.
"Web sites begin to be incorporated into advertising. So that just sort of raises the awareness of the general public," said Grinter.
And by the mid-'90s the cost of personal computers had fallen enough so that the Internet began entering peoples homes and schools as well as their workplaces.
The cost, and the complexity of creating Web sites have both diminished since the beginning of the 21st century.
Computer users no longer have to be experts in HTML, or hypertext markup language, to be masters of their own Web sites.
"There have been price wars going on in both the domain name and Web hosting industries for some time now, and as a result it's very affordable to create your own Web site, and the tools, the software being offered by these companies are much better," said Miller.
Blogs and social networking sites link family, friends and experts in just about everything.


Bond and belong
"What we've seen is people finding interesting new ways to use the Web to showcase their information and their expertise; particularly in niches in all kinds of subjects where it's really just opened the door to new uses of the Web," said Miller.
Whether it is sharing photographs on Flickr.com, showing off an amateur video on YouTube, or looking for a mate on Match.com, Web sites have also become a way to bond and belong.
"The history of humanity is the history of being part of a group, having a group mentality, and the Internet makes a whole other set of those groups possible," said Grinter. "And they don't have to be physically proximate to you, you can create content for people who are physically distant," she said.
So will a URL someday be as common as a birth name and a Social Security number?
For some celebrities, it already is. Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt registered domains for all three of their children.
And in both the business world and the social scene, a Web site is now an identifier almost as common as a phone number or an e-mail address.
"The Web has gone from being a very straightforward thing where you put some text and perhaps some images, to being this incredibly powerful medium in and of itself. You can engage so much more dynamically, and so many more people are doing so many more things. And who knows what will come about tomorrow?" said Grinter.
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