Chicken coop plans

house plans with photos

house plans with photos

The only downside of this was the Skype setup. If we were on Vista/Windows 7 machines at home I have no doubt I could have made a Skype call to it before leaving the office.  The directions and setup are that easy and straightforward.  But when it comes to Macs/XP systems the instructions are “If you are connecting with Windows XP or Mac, please refer to the User’s manual for more information.”  Basically you have to know how to log into your router to get an IP address for the device.  Not a problem for me.  But it might be for some other folks.  Once you can get to the web interface of the device it’s a breeze.  I was able to add the Skype account I created to it and had no problems connecting.

I give it a cool Yule rating of 4 for anyone who has a baby or just wants to watch their cats play during the day.  It would have been a 5 but for the price.

A state Department of Transportation spokeswoman said that the $102 million allocation for the Big Dig includes $8 million for the design and construction of a pedestrian bridge at Leverett Circle. The remainder, according to Cyndi Roy, was allocated to settle potential Big Dig construction claims, the largest of which involves work done by Cashman Kiewit Perini Atkinson for the Atlantic Avenue section of tunnel work. The spokeswoman, Cyndi Roy, said settlement funds would be drawn “from insurance settlements and remaining project financing” and were factored into the project’s cost.

• $10 million for public safety information technology, including criminal history system modernization, procurement of a new fingerprint identification system, and rebuilding the network that supports information sharing among public safety and law enforcement personnel;

The plan specifies projects marked to receive funds and create jobs before next July, lays out many of Gov. Deval L. Patrick’s spending priorities in greater detail, and provides information about local level initiatives around Massachusetts that will likely receive attention throughout 2012 and beyond.

In fiscal 2012, the plan calls for $571 million in transportation spending, $275 million on community investments, $206 million for higher education, $168 million on housing, $138 million on energy and environment investments, $125 million for information technology, $121 million on economic development, $113 million on state office buildings, $100 million on health and human services, $31.5 million on the courts, and $21 million on public safety.

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