I like to splurge on something once each year, typically a gadget.
- In 2000 I bought a Toshiba 1605 laptop. I bought while on leave and took it with me to MCT and MOS training. That laptop was pretty good at the time with 32MB of RAM that I upgraded to 196MB. It had an 8GB hard drive running Windows 98. It also had a built in modem that worked fairly well.
- In 2001 I bought a Sony MVC CD1000 Camera. I had been working at Pennswoods for quite a while and I had no bills to speak of. Money was no problem for me.  I also started up my business, signing a 5-year lease on a commercial building. The next month, 9/11 happened and I was told to prepare for deployment.
- In 2002 I bought a Kyocera QCP 6035 smart phone. During this year I also took a trip to Washington state for vacation. This was a good phone. It sometimes froze on me when I opened the flip, but it generally worked really well. It allowed me to combine my palm pilot and cell phone in one device, and I was all for that.
- In 2003 I upgraded to a Kyocera 7135 smart phone. This was my favorite phone of all time. Palm OS, clam-shell design. What's not to love? Apparently it can no longer be activated in the US because it does not have a tracking GPS built into it. I was deployed at the beginning of the year and left the 6035 with my parents. When I returned, I read reviews on the 7135 and got it within a month of my return. If I could have this phone now (activated of course), I would still think of it as the better phone even though it lacks bluetooth support. I have not come across a phone that I felt I would enjoy more (inside or outside my price range).
- In 2004 I was flat broke and bought Ramen noodles. This was between deployments, between jobs, and I had serious car troubles. It was a dismal time for me. I spent each evening at a different house, moving from couch to couch.
- In 2005 I purchased an HP dv1000 laptop. I tricked it out with a whopping 512MB of ram, 80GB hard drive, and extended battery (lasts 3+ hours). I should also point out that during the summer of 2005, I was again broke. My business was my sole source of income and not doing as much as I wanted it to. However, everyone else I knew was broke, and we all enjoyed that summer playing pool, eating at Dennys, and taking road trips to Western PA, Eastern Maryland, and Southern Virginia. I don't know how we afforded any of it.
- In 2006 I purchased a house. Not exactly a gadget, but I believe it will outlast all of my other gadgets. Business was doing a lot better for me during this summer. Up until winter came, things were truly looking up.
- This year, the year of 2007, I purchased a xv6700. This is a Windows PPC 6700. It comes with 64MB of ram, has bluetooth, wifi, is evdo capable, and will take mini-SD cards. It has a touch screen and a slide out keyboard that works really well. This device is more of a computer than a phone, and in that regard works very well. The phone side of it leaves a bit to be desired. There seems to be a slight delay between when you press a key and when it updates the screen, which is a bit distracting when placing a call or entering your pin. Otherwise, this is an amazing gadget. The phone portion is vastly improved if you use a bluetooth headset. Plantronic Voyager 550 is the one I got and unlike those earpieces that you corkscrew into your ear, I barely notice that I'm wearing the headset. I linked to a video review that I would highly recommend watching even if you're not in the market for such a phone/ppc. There are reasons I chose a phone that is more of a computer than a phone, and I will go into that next.
As you may have read, I am working for "the man", a big corporate entity in Virginia. My main business has become a sideline endeavor for the foreseeable future. I still have customers I support, and I'll still do a lot of the same stuff. But, I'm not taking calls constantly for the business and not using my phone that much as a phone. I'm shifting to work I can do remotely such as server administration, scripting, and device configuration. Most of this can be done via web and email. With an email/web/ssh capable mobile device, I can even handle some emergency tasks from just about anywhere.
On another note, not splurge related, I have finally been placed on Night One. This is a wonderful shift that is basically 3-4 (alternating) nights each week. I will always work Sunday night, Monday Night, and Tuesday night. Every other week, I will work Wendesday night as well. The shifts go from 6pm till 6am. Once I am done at either Tuesday or Wednesday morning, I am off to do my own thing until the following Sunday night. The long shifts sound horrible, but I much prefer the shorter work week (even though I might go home to do even more work, of a different kind).