I was thinking about setting up a 15 gallon paludarium or a terrarium with some grass on the terrestrial part or in a certain spot. Has anyone ever experimented with grass and have you had any luck with it, also I hear Kentucky Bluegrass is works well.
A hard way of removing them is picking them off individually after you put your lights out. Another way is to bait them by putting a piece of lettuce on a string and leave it there for an hour or two or a whole day and take it out. Another way is snail chemicals, which I highly advise from doing...
This is kinda of a no brainer. The HP will most likely encounter heating issues later on, and with the onslaught of heat other components will be at risk. On the other hand some Toshibas do have heating problems, but you can extend both of their lives with a cooling pad. They're simple, cheap...
http://www.petshrimp.com/yellownoseshrimp.php
It's kinda hard to find the correct information about these ones, they are like red nosed. For a LFS that is a bit high(well for me).
They have fairly bad vision, so feeding can be a real challenge to new owners. Try bloodworms or other live/frozen food. Some people just drop the food where they want and wait for the frog to find it or use tweezers and put it in front of them.
http://www.plantgeek.net/plantguide_list.php?category=1&filter_by=2
There is an extensive list of low light plants that are easy to keep and require little maintenance. I would go with some moss if I were you.
Like the others said, they do absolutely fine in sand substrates. When I first introduced mine they had an issue of sand sticking to them while gliding across the sand, but that went away in a day or so.
The best addons to get is Ghostery, Web of Trust, No Script and Ad block Plus with the Ad Block plus update. Also you might have malware or spyware on your computer, do a scan.