Archive for the ‘Life’ Category

This Week’s Shopping (Or Lack Thereof)

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

There hasn’t been much to report recently, because I haven’t been doing much shopping or cooking. I’ve had a cold for a week and half, and my doctor also started me on a new medication for my knee pain and swelling; the combination of the two things has been exhausting and pretty much killed my appetite. We’ve picked up one or two things from the store, like milk, but no “Real” shopping trips or coupon adventures to speak of. I’ve just been picking away at the food in our pantry, and going through the drive-thru to pick up a McFlurry or two – I don’t know what it is, but when I feel sick, ice cream always makes me feel better. It’s like I’m lactose super-tolerant or something!

I thought I would need to go to the store yesterday, because our fridge was looking so bare. But then this package arrived from FedEx:

El Monterey

I’m going to be writing a product review for El Monterey over on Contest Corner, so they sent me a huge box full of frozen entrées! Free meals, and the only cooking I have to do is press a button on the microwave – I’m pretty sure I could hear angels singing when I opened that box. 😉

Once I start feeling better, I’m looking forward to getting back into my normal routine. So in the meantime, let me live vicariously through you: Tell me in the comments what deals you’ve scored lately!

Our Trip to Washington

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

The Space Needle

We had a wonderful time in Washington last week! It was great to see our friends and family, and the Maroon 5 concert that I won tickets to was amazing. If you’d like to read more about the show and see some of the videos that I took, you can click here for my recap.

Going Out of Town This Week

Monday, October 11th, 2010

I won tickets to see Maroon 5!

We’re going out of town this week, because I won concert tickets to see Maroon 5 at the Tacoma Dome through the SIRIUS FM sweepstakes! We decided to make a trip of it while we’re there and stay a few days to visit our friends and family who live in Washington. I won’t be around to answer comments or emails until next week, but don’t worry – I’ve got some great guest posts, giveaways, and other fun stuff scheduled to run while I’m away! See you next week!

WordCamp Portland Recap: Day Two

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

WordCamp 2010

After day one of WordCamp, we were looking forward to another fun and informative day at the conference. But getting there turned out to be quite the adventure!

Portland Marathon

When we parked in front of my brother-in-law’s condo the night before, we saw signs all up and down the streets notifying us that the road would be closed the following day for a marathon from 6 AM to 12 PM, and any cars parked there after 6 AM would be towed. So, we just set the alarm a little earlier, and Jai went out there at 5:45 AM to move the car. When he walked outside, he saw that the whole street was completely empty; all of the cars had been towed except for one, which a tow truck was in the process of hauling away. Jai ran over to the tow truck and flagged them down so that he could find out what was happening. The tow truck driver was a little sheepish and told Jai that they had been instructed by the police to “Get an early start” on towing the cars – they had towed everyone half an hour before they were supposed to, and despite the fact that we had all complied with the sign!

The tow truck driver told Jai to get in, and he would take him to where they had moved the car. As it turns out, they had hauled the car down the street and parked it in a random private parking lot. Once there, a police officer confirmed the situation with Jai, and let him know that no one had been ticketed – obviously, they couldn’t do that since they were the ones who had violated the sign, not us! – and that he could just leave the car there and pick it up in a couple of hours with no worries about ticketing or any further problems. Jai walked back to the condo, told me what happened, and we finished getting ready.

Once we went outside, we were in for another surprise. All roads were closed as far as the eye could see, and the marathon had already begun – we couldn’t even cross the street to get to the parking lot where our car had been moved, because there were too many runners. Even if we did, there was no way to move it; we were completely blocked in by the race. There were no police or anyone around who could explain what was going on or what we could do: We were trapped!

Did I mention that this all happened at 8 AM before we even had a cup of coffee?

Finally, we decided to walk back to the condo and dropped of a key with a note for Jai’s brother explaining what had happened and asking if he could move our car after the race was over, since we would be at WordCamp until that evening. We were worried that the car would be impounded after the race if we left it in the private lot, even though we had no way of moving it whatsoever. We decided that we would have to a take a cab to get to WordCamp, but we had no idea where they would even be able to pick us up with all the streets closed. We decided to walk back to the car so that we could grab a notepad that we had left in there, and then we would try to walk to an open street so we could hail a taxi.

When we got to the parking lot, we finally saw a police officer that we could talk to. We explained the situation, and she said that we actually could get out – she directed us to drive in the wrong lane and under caution tape so that we could make our escape. She directed us to go down a specific street to meet up with an open road, and when we got there, it was blocked off by “Road closed” signs. However, a woman standing nearby (presumably a volunteer for the marathon) said, “Need to get through?” and lifted the signs up so we could drive through and get to the only open road. Needless to say, it felt like we needed to know a secret handshake just to get out of the parking lot!

It took us quite a bit of driving to make it to WordCamp because so many streets were closed, but we eventually got there. We were half an hour late at this point, but we weren’t the only ones – as we approached WebTrends, we saw people literally running into the building! Fortunately, we hadn’t missed anything; none of the sessions had started yet, and we even had time to get a cup of coffee and sit down with a bagel before things got underway. PHEW!

Measure Twice, Blog Once Panel

“Measure Twice, Blog Once” workshop about blog analytics – click here to view the slides from the panel.

After our crazy morning, we settled in for the day’s sessions. I attended “Measure Twice, Blog Once” by Adam Ware, while Jai went to “WordPress: The Designer’s CMS” by Chelsea Otakan. Next up was “Town Hall With Matt Mullenweg“, the founding developer of WordPress, followed by “Blogs and Social Media – Food Cart Success Story” by Brett Burmeister of Food Carts Portland and “SWAN DIVE! …into the Best WordPress of your Life” by Mark Jaquith.

i can has cheezburger

Afterwards, it was time for lunch – this time, we had deli sandwiches, chips, hummus, and veggies. During the lunch break, they handed out another round of door prizes and took a moment to talk about some of the sponsors of the convention. One of these sponsors was the Cheez Burger Network, who presented a short slide show about CheezCap, the “Cheezburger Custom Administration Panel” which they developed for WordPress. Decked in a FAIL Blog t-shirt, the Cheez Burger employee then showed us slides of some funny LOL Cats from I Can Has Cheezburger – every conference should have a presentation like this!

hooman before coffeelolcatscheezburger networkCheezCap

Click the thumbnails to see the LOLCats full size!

Afterwards, we listened to a tongue-in-cheek presentation from Wikipedia employee Steven Walling, titled “It’s a Trap! The Top Five Reasons to Avoid WordPress at All Costs”, followed by “WordPress for Artists” by Cory Huff of TheAbundantArtist.com. Later in the afternoon, they set out yet another snack of delicious chocolates from Yummy Box Lunches.

It’s a Trap! The Top Five Reasons to Avoid WordPress at All Costs
"Anything That Requires a Buttload of Plugins"

Reason Number Five to Avoid WordPress: You are using “Anything That Requires a Buttload of Plugins”

Jai and I headed to different rooms for the last three panels: I attended “New and Exciting Ways to Organize Your WordPress Powered Website” by Michael Fields, “Using the Apture Plugin to Tell Interactive Stories” by Michelle Anderson of The Miracle in July, and “5 Tips for Better Search Engine Optimization with WordPress” by Mark McLaren; meanwhile, Jai attended “WP Clients: Plugging Clients into their WP Site” by Amanda Blum, “WordPress and Github? Not as crazy as you think!” by John Metta, and “Building Child Themes: The smart way to develop WordPress themes” by Aaron Jorbin.

Register_taxonomyNew and Exciting Ways to Organize Your WordPress Powered WebsiteWordpress.com Stats Plugin

Photos from the “New and Exciting Ways to Organize Your WordPress Powered Website” panel

SEO Panel5 Tips for Better Search Engine Optimization with WordPressKeywordsTip #5

Photos from the “5 Tips for Better Search Engine Optimization with WordPress” panel – click here to view the slides from the presentation.

I was impressed by WordCamp. I thought the conference was well done, and I was pleasantly surprised by all of the food and drinks that were included. The technical panels which Jai attended provided us with some valuable information – you may remember that when we began transferring my blogs over to WordPress, we encountered errors with the Blogger importer and a huge number of comments from the old site did not come through. We could not find any information about this problem anywhere, so those comments are still missing. Well, we finally found out what happened! At the “How to Support WordPress” panel, Sheri Bigelow talked about some of the major support issues that WordPress has encountered in its history: One notable instance was when Blogger made changes to its importer tool at the end of April 2010; which is the exact same time that I was moving my sites over! It took them some time to work out a solution, but Ms. Bigelow says that it has since been resolved and provided a link to the patch – click here to access it. Now that we know what the issue was and have a fix for it, we should be able to retrieve all the old comments that didn’t transfer over – that alone made it worth attending WordCamp Portland!

Jai on the Webtrends balcony

Jai on the Webtrends balcony

Me

Yours truly – recognize the suit?

In addition to these panels, we also enjoyed talking to other bloggers, developers, and designers who attended. We met so many great people at WordCamp – I thought I’d link up to everyone I met that I have a card for, so you can check out their websites:

Amy O’Bryant of SnoValleyScene, a new blog devoted to everything that Snoqualmie Valley, Washington has to offer – another good one for my local readers!
Maria Webster of dotFiveOne – Geekspace for Women, a blog celebrating what geeky women are doing;
Toby McKes, developer at the Cheez Burger Network who wins the prize for “Best business card”!
Mandi Ellefson, owner of Cocoon Design;
Michelle Samuel of Tinker Friendly Design, who creates logos and websites for her clients;
Andrea Jardine of BeKnown graphic & web design;
Jake Becker, a plugin developer who runs WatchCount.com;
Anne McCallister, a professional organizer who owns Inside The Box Organizing;
Karen Groves, a fellow British expat and owner of Groves Design;
Robert Adrian and Brandon Laws of Xenium HR;
and Michael Fields, who presented the “New and Exciting Ways to Organize Your WordPress Powered Website” panel and displays his artwork on Art.Mfields.org.

Thanks to everyone who organized WordCamp PDX 2010 – we look forward to attending next year!

WordCamp Portland Recap: Day One

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

WordCamp 2010

Jai and I spent the last four days in Portland, Oregon for the WordCamp PDX conference. This conference is aimed towards bloggers and developers who use the WordPress platform. Since I recently moved all three of my websites to WordPress, this was perfect timing to attend the conference and expand our knowledge.

Wordcamp Portland was held at the WebTrends building, which was very convenient for a number of reasons. Jai’s brother just moved to a condo nearby, so we had a place to stay that was only minutes from the venue. Also, my hairdresser works at 220 Salon, which is very close to WebTrends – we left Friday afternoon so that I could get my hair done before the conference!

View from the Webtrends building
View from the Webtrends building

We settled in Friday evening, then headed over to Webtrends for the first day of the conference on Saturday morning. We arrived around 8:30 and enjoyed the coffee and breakfast that was provided before the first sessions started.

First day of WordCamp Portland

The workshops were split into two rooms, Track 1 and Track 2. Track 1 focused more on publishing and promotion, while Track 2 focused on the technical aspects of WordPress: building themes, troubleshooting, optimizing, and so forth. I spent most of my time in Track 1 while Jai attended the sessions in Track 2 – which was great, because we were able to absorb all the information on offer and compare notes later. I’m knowledgeable about HTML, and since Jai is familiar with PHP/CSS also, his skills compliment mine perfectly. When we moved these sites from Blogger on to WordPress, I came up with the design concept and graphics, and Jai figured out how to create a theme that would suit my needs. He also greatly helps me by troubleshooting problems when technical issues arise on the site, so he’s my right-hand man for so many things!

The first three sessions that I attended were “From Personal Blogger to Professional Marketer” by Melissa Lion of the blog Recovering Californian and Julie Yamamoto, account director on CMD Agency’s earned media team; “Are You Cheating on Your Blog?” by Aaron Hockley; and “Running a Membership/Subscription Site with WordPress” by Jason Glaspey. Meanwhile, Jai attended “Custom Post Types” by Devin Price; “WordPress MultiSite” by Pete Mall; and “WordPress & Accessibility” by Domanique Alicia.

My WordPress temporary tattoo!
My WordPress temporary tattoo!

There was a break for lunch, where we were provided with pizza and our choice of soda, water, coffee, or even beer. During the lunch break, they also gave away their first round of door prizes. Organizer Morgan had a box full of paper slips with the names of attendees on them, which was used to draw the winners. After the second or third prize had been handed out, she drew the next winner: “Beeb Ashcroft!”

Gift bagMy door prize!

Yes, I won a prize at WordCamp – I told them it was fitting, since I run a contest blog! 🙂 The wonderful gift bag contained two bottles of wine and a t-shirt from Twilight Pizza Bistro, who donated a few of these gift bags for prizes as well as supplying the delicious pizza which we enjoyed for lunch. They are located in Camas, Washington – so local readers, take note!

After lunch, Jai and I attended three more sessions together – “Why Crush It When You Could Whack It?” by Garron Selliken, “Business Blogging for Nonwriters” by Jessica Neuman Beck, and “Photos on the Go via Email” by Austin Passy.

Photos on the Go via Email Panel

“Photos on the Go via Email” Panel demonstrating the Postie pluginclick here to visit PDX by Pix and see some of the photos that the audience uploaded during the session!

After this, we split up again and I stayed in Track 1 for “Live Media On Your Blog” by Dr. Normal and “7 Models for Making Your Podcast Pay” by Paul Colligan. Meanwhile, Jai headed over to Track 2 for “Editing PHP and CSS for Beginners” by Shayne Sanderson and “How to Support WordPress” by Sheri Bigelow. Between these sessions, there was also a short break for some delicious Whiffies fried pies. I had two “Mounds of Deliciousness” chocolate/coconut pies, and they were very yummy!

The conference wrapped up at 5:15, and then it was time for the “After-After Party”, which was held at West Cafe. Attendees had a chance to mingle and enjoy cocktails and appetizers – there was a very generous quantity of fabulous food. It was a great wrap-up to the day! The party ran until 10 PM, when we headed back to our hosts’ house to sleep and get ready for day two of WordCamp.

If You Left a Comment on This Site in The Last 24 Hours, Please Read

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

:(

This afternoon I discovered that my web provider, Bluehost, had a very serious database error that caused my comment table to crash. What this means is that when my readers tried to leave comments today, they were erased and not posted. I’m not sure when exactly this issue arose, but I do not see any comments on the site with today’s date, so I fear that this could have gone on for as long as 24 hours. The database was repaired at around 5 PM PST this afternoon, so comments should be back to normal now.

Here is the explanation that Bluehost tech support provided me with:

DaveB: [6:00:40 PM] The comments table had crashed. It was likely due to a pending write that occurred as soon as the mysql server had issues. Unfortunately, the comments submitted during that time never got written to the database so there’s no way recover them.

🙁

I am so sorry to all of my readers who left comments and entered my giveaways today. Because of this problem, I am extending all of the current giveaways by one day.

WordCamp Portland Conference This Weekend!

Monday, September 13th, 2010

WordCamp 2010

Jai and I will both be attending the WordCamp conference in Portland this weekend! WordCamp Portland is a conference for WordPress users and developers held on September 18th and 19th. This will be my first blog-related conference, and I’m looking forward to it! WordCamp offers all sorts of workshops about using and optimizing WordPress, so Jai and I are looking forward to expanding our WordPress knowledge!

We’ll be in Portland with limited access to email this Friday through Monday, but don’t worry – I have lots of great guest posts and other fun stuff scheduled to run while I’m gone!

Readers: Are any of you attending WordCamp Portland? If so, be sure to let me know so I can say hello!

Welcome to The New Site!

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Welcome to the new Super Coupon Girl on WordPress! I am still in the process of updating many of the links from the old site, so please bear with me this afternoon as I fix the links and get everything transferred over!

New Site Goes Live Today!

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Wordpress

I just wanted to let everyone know that the new site will go live today! I’ve taken great care and precaution to make this move as smooth as possible – hence why it’s taken some time! – and I will be setting up a 301 redirect from Blogger, so you should be taken to the new site automatically once it’s up. Because this is a major switchover, here will likely be a brief period where the site may go down or have broken links. Don’t worry, because we will be working tirelessly behind the scenes to rectify any issues that may arise!

Starting The Transfer to WordPress – Please Read

Monday, May 31st, 2010

It’s almost here! After spending many, many hours learning my way around PHP & CSS and designing the new layout and graphics, the brand new Super Coupon Girl on WordPress is almost ready to go! I am now starting the next phase of the process, which involves importing all of the existing posts and content onto the new host. Once everything is switched over, I will be setting up a 301 redirect from Blogger, so you should be automatically taken to the new site when it’s up. I have a better idea of what to expect after Contest Corner’s site transfer, and I will take every precaution to ensure that the move goes as smoothly as possible. That being said, there will likely a short period of technical snafus as everything is migrated over – so if the site goes down or has broken links, don’t panic! We will be working hard behind the scenes to remedy it.

Switching all three of my websites over to WordPress has been a very time intensive process; once this project is complete, my time will once again be freed up for other endeavours. Thank you for bearing with me as I set up the new and improved site – I think you’ll agree that it was well worth it!