The following questions are ones that I've recieved so far. If you have a question please send me email at DanPenn@MSN.com

How much time did everything take?
The first year (2006) it took about 110 hours of preparation and installation. This year we moved to a new house and I purchased two additional lighting control units (for a total of 64 unique lighting channels) and a bunch more lights. All music needed to be re-programmed to account for the new lights and control units. So while I had a bunch of experience under my belt it still took me another 100 hours to complete this years show.
How much did everything cost?
Last year (2006) it cost about $3000 to get up and running but that included about $1200 worth of electrical work that was wasted when we moved to a new house. This years costs included about $400 in lights (many of which were purchased at 50% off after Christmas), two new LOR lighting control units ($540), new electrical outlets ($350), extension cords ($200), man-lift rental to place lights on the roof ($150) and miscellaneous supplies ($200). Total for this year was around $1840...bringing the total to around $4840 for both years. As with last year, please don't tell my wife. :-)
What products did you use?
I use four 16-channel lighting controllers (model #1602W which I purchase pre-assembled for ~$270 each) from Light-O-Rama. The FM transmitter is a Ramsey FM25B. It's sold as a kit for $139 but I bought it pre-assembled (new) off EBay for $159. The PC controlling everything is an old Dell 400MHz Pentium II running Windows XP. I'm also using X10 from my home automation system to turn on the radio transmitter and two signs telling people what FM frequency to tune to.
How much sleep do you get?
Not much during October and November...probably 4-5 hours per night. I managed to subsitute 2 more hours of sleep I would normally get with an additional two shots of espresso (total of four) and life is good!
How much electricity do you use?
Not as much as you'd think. Since the lights are on only a small amount of time the amount of energy consumed is no more than somebody who lines their eves with icicle lights and leaves them on in the evenings. Plus, over 1000 of the lights are LEDs which consume a fraction of a normal bulbs electricity.