Daily-Weekly Finds #23

Apple files a patent for solar sells on portable devices… WTF?  I’ve had portable calculator driven by solar cells for many many years.

Nvidia Steps up for Call of Duty  PC Players.   WTF?  Console’s have had the maps for a month now.

Dell studio Line…  OK, let’s take the XPS line, paint them BLACK and call them the Studio Line.   These notebooks are OK, but damn, is that the best you can do?

Understand the impact of High Item counts in Exchange.

Blogger Gang Signs:

original here

Those fine folks at Insomniac are opening an office in the East.

Another Example of why Best Buy Sucks

Destructoid NARP Party

Saturday night I attended the Destructiod NARP (No Apparent Reason Party).   First Destructoid, for which I was not familiar with prior is a community for hard core gamers.  The primary reason I went was to meet Robert of Infinity Ward.  I was led to believe there’d be good IW SWAG.   Unfortunately the RockStar guys clearly one-up’d infinity ward.  There was GTA4 stuff everywhere, multiple Tee’s for just about everyone as well as stickers and what not.

The prize for the COD tournament was a signed Infinity Ward poster.  (whoopie)…

I understand this was Desctructoid’s first event.  Overall as a party goes it was pretty good.   There was a good group of folks playing Rock Band, a game I still don’t ‘get’.  Clearly sucking and looking stupid at Karaoke isn’t enough. At least with Rock Band you get to share the shame with 3 other people playing guitar and drums.   Some of the ‘bands’ were OK, at least they can push the buttons, but the singing, well, I should probably just stop here.

There was another station set up for people to play smash brothers.   Which to me was about as lame as it gets.  If I had shelled out $50 for that game I’d have to hurt someone.

There was a pre-release showing of a Ninja game.   Imagine the sword fighting of the Lord of the Rings PS3 games or Prince of Persia, mixed with the run around task based game Assassins Creed, only not as good and you’ve got this game.   I’ll certainly pass on that release.

The COD tourney was somewhat of a joke.  Very unorganized, and I’m sorry to say, you need sound to play that game.  That wasn’t possible hooked up to the big screens above the bar.

This review may sound negative and perhaps it is.  But the party was a blast and I’m sure it will only be better next time. 

Wh00t!

Daily-Weekly Finds #22

Change the Signal meter on your Blackberry to the actual DB strength…  [via One Mans Blog]

Fedora 9 on a thumb drive.

Cringlely is spot on when it comes to analysts.

I originally was going to read Corey’s book Little Brother.  But now I’m so sick and tired of seeing a blog post about it DAILY on Boing Boing that I’m not going to read it.   (great, now I’ve given it another mention).

Google Health is live…   Why not, the already know everything else about you why not your health too?

Thank you Cincinnati Bell Wireless

Today’s experience with Cincinnati Bell only emphasizes why I don’t do business with them.

We have approximately 12 Blackberries from various carriers using our Blackberry Enterprise server.

About once a month one of them will just stop working.  Typically this is usually a device over seas or a device that one of our guys who travels over seas uses.  He’ll make a call to his provider (T-Mobile) to change his plan to something over seas and the break his data package nearly every time.

The conversation usually goes like this:

Salesperson: Is BES working?  I haven’t gotten email in a couple days.
Us: Yes, all 11 other phones are currently working and show activity as recent as a minute ago.  What did you do?
Salesperson: I called (T-Mobile) and asked them to change my plan for international use.
Us: call them back and have then fix your stuff.

Today was special though.  Another user who’s carrier is Cincinnati Bell (ATT under the covers regardless of what the tech support m0m0 tells you) called.

User: I messed up my Blackberry, can you re-activate me?
Us: What did you do?
User: I installed Blackberry desktop manager at home to sync my contacts at home too.
Us: That’s a bad idea, wipe the device and reactivate your password is xxxx.

A few hours later:

User: It won’t activate.
Us: After poking around on the BES server we can’t see any reason why it shouldn’t work.    Let’s call your carrier.

Placing call to carrier…

Tech Support:  How may we help you?
Us: A user jacked up his Blackberry and we’re trying to figure out why it won’t re-activate.  Can you look and see if there have been any changes?
Tech Support:  Why yes, I see we changed your account 48 hours ago.  The BES plan is now $20 more than the Consumer plan so we changed you to the consumer plan.
Us: WTF?  So when were you going to let us know this happened?
Tech Support:  I don’t know if they are going to send a letter out or not.
Us:  So 6 months ago we purchased the phone and told you we were going to use it with BES and you sold me a $30 unlimited plan.  Who made the decision to simply disconnect us from our company server?  Who there thought, Oh, this user doesn’t need the corporate package?  Let’s just cut them off at the knees.
Tech Support:  Let me transfer you to someone that can help.
Tech Support 2:  So I understand you’re unhappy about the price change?
Us: No, what I’m unhappy about is that you just broke my connectivity to my employer without warning.  That you made me look stupid to IT because I thought I may have jacked up my phone, or that their stuff was broken.   What I’m upset about is that I’ve spent quite a few hours figuring out how I might have done this, and IT has spent time looking into a problem that isn’t theirs.
Tech Support 2:  I understand, I can reactivate your corporate package, and offer you a $20 credit for 6 months will that help? 
Us: Yes that will help.

The price increase doesn’t bother me, most corporate data plans are around $50 a month.  What bothers me is that these fine folks couldn’t plan ahead 30 days and warn the user that the cost will go up unless they choose otherwise.   Instead they decided for this user that they no longer wanted/needed the package and defaulted him to a package that for the same cost did absolutely nothing for them.

Thanks, Cincinnati Bell Wireless.

Daily-Weekly Finds #21

So some things do last forever…  A light bulb that’s been burning for 107 years.

A useful tech note for troubleshooting common connectivity problems with SQL Server 2005 and Analysis Services.  Did it answer my question?  Nope, apparently my problem isn’t common, but it did lead me down the path to get things to work, although I’m certain it’s not set up properly.

Office Mac 2008 SP1 out today…  Allegedly includes VBA again.. [via Gizmodo]…  I hope it has the features that we paid for when we upgraded :)

A combine Demolition Derby, something I must attend someday.