tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36262082367099645422024-03-18T22:56:18.445-04:00The Random Ramblings of Joe PhilippsHey, you EU folks: there's some cookie laws which stipulate Alphabet/Google
(owners of Blogger and Blogspot) needs to disclose some stuff to you, which, unfortunately might not show up if you have JavaScript disabled. It's not my fault they're that stupid, that they'd require JS to be on to display that notice, but whatever. You have been forewarned there may be some cookie monkey business going on which you might not like, and Google informs me it's my responsibility to tell you about that.Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comBlogger64125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-60658674365909984062024-02-15T22:48:00.002-05:002024-02-15T22:48:27.109-05:00An Update to the YouTube UpdateI spoke/wrote too soon. The stupid confetti anim is back for the video thumbs up.<br />
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English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-55881864851957576392024-02-04T20:02:00.002-05:002024-02-04T20:02:54.720-05:00An Update to "Three MORE Reasons to Hate Alphabet/YouTube"<p>just a quick one today <br /></p><p>Today, while looking square at a YouTube video thumbs up button and clicking it, it....holy cow...it didn't move. Its thumb didn't rotate towards pointing "northwest" like it had started doing many months ago. It didn't change colors, other than from background of black to white. No "confetti" spewed forth. Honestly, I don't know at this point whether it's one of my Stylus styles or if Alphabet has finally gotten the message that so many people think their former animation is an abomination on mankind. At any rate, I'm glad that appears to be gone.</p><p></p><p>I also noticed one other thing. Like virtually all other animations, I got sick and tired of their animated numbers, from the number of likes, to the number of views. So I wrote some Stylus CSS to hide them. Because my CSS is not too selective, this has the unfortunate effect of hiding them both. If I want to see them, I can always use Stylus' checkbox to turn all (Stylus added) styles off, or uncheck the specific one which hides these. And mind you, I see that these animations do not appear on every single viewing page; not sure what criteria are used to utilize the animated digits. Now I don't really need to do that. What I noticed is that hovering one's pointer (mouse) over those sections shows those figures in the title text.</p><p>Next, I might look into whether their two stupid subscription animations have been nixed too. YT is better without either. It's a stupid attempt at giving people a little dopamine hit when they click the button, or draw attention to the subscribe button itself (as if people don't already know where the subscribe button is or what it's for).</p><p>Now...if Alphabet would only get rid of the other animations they're doing on their other products, like the blooming background on Gmail buttons to indicate when they're sort-of ready for clicking, I'd be nearly ecstatic.<br />
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</p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-49991932114182216522024-01-27T19:10:00.000-05:002024-01-27T19:10:43.716-05:00Getting Let Go Is Never Pleasant, but Don't TikTok it for Heavan's Sake!<p>As I have explained in <a href="https://iheartlibertarianism.blogspot.com/2021/12/sars-cov2-smartest-virus-ever.html">a previous blog post about being injected for COVID-19</a>, my life's journey has taught me that jobs are an extraordinarily precious thing. Except for maybe when I was young (and inexperienced), and except for April 2023, losing work has been very dread-inducing for me. Whether it has been more shocking to me compared to average people is tough to gauge, but I think it has been.<br /></p><p>Matt Walsh over at The Daily Wire made <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QSeshs6aMA">a YouTube video about a recent Cloudflare dismissal</a>, which was some commentary about a surreptitiously recorded video of the separation posted to TikTok. Some of his points deserve retelling and amplification. I will acknowledge though that this very blog post bears some resemblance in spirit to Brittany's actions, although this is more a reflection on the past rather than an attempt to keep my current job or besmirch my former employers.<br /></p><p>Probably the most prominent or manifest point is, by the time you're being told this, the decision has been made, and there is asymptotic to zero chance that anything said at that point will change your separation. Self esteem will generally make you want to argue your case, and explain why the employer is quite wrong. But it will, in general, be a waste of time and effort.</p><p>I will relate one such seemingly unjust dismissal of mine, Tandy (the Radio Shack people). The management must have taken a look at the sales figures, and I must have been low guy on the totem pole after the Christmas rush. Never mind that they were an electronics goods sales outlet, and my hobby since childhood has been electronics, so therefore I have great technical background for the very things they sold. Never mind that at least I perceived that I spent proportionally more time on support tasks, such as boxing up repairs, contacting people when their repaired items arrived back at our store, and the like. (It's what I learned later in college in an econmics class, those would be opportunity costs.) Like Brittany, I was not hired for those ancillary support things, I was hired to sell. And besides maybe the manager, whose job responsibility it was to do those things, I did not sell well enough to justify my continued presence there. I don't remember if I tried pointing those things out at the time, similar to how Britt tried to say she helped out on the sales that did occur but never received any "credit" for them.</p><p>My separation in 2023 was similar in some respects, but really, the writing had been on the wall for months prior. To the credit of the health insurance company, I was even in an "improvement plan" and given every opportunity to meet their expectations. It felt great to be given a chance to continue to help them out, and avoid the unpleasantries of termination. It's just that although I was optimistic I could continue on, at a very low level, I expected that things wouldn't change significantly, and that parting ways was almost mutual.</p><p>Nonetheless, I thought they seemed to be making a mistake by not playing to my strengths, with fairly broad experience and knowledge of IT, but instead expected "the complete package" of mini-project manager, time accountant, bureaucract of sorts, quasi-architect, and so on. This is not to say they didn't have actual PMs, architects, etc., just that they wanted everyone to do these things to some extent, kind of like e.g. "PM-lite." I'm a technician/engineer. I solve problems. I suggest things from my experiences which would be good ways of applying technology to meet objectives. I know how a lot of things can be implemented or improved. Instead of being a standout at anything in particular, I'm more of an IT <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_player">utility player</a>, always ready to help out a teammate. I found it difficult to tell someone, "no, I can't now, I have things I have to do." After all, it is admittedly more exciting and interesting to help several people with several different problems rather than concentrate on something specifc. And it's difficult for management to justify such an employee, so I really don't fault them.<br /></p><p>As an example where we disagreed, they insisted that I should come up with estimates on how long things would take, even things which I've never done before but were thought similar enough to things I have done that I should be able to come up with a number or date. Quite a bit more often than not, (other) things would break that needed immediate fixing, or some other priorities would arise, and the time estimates I <i><u><b>did</b></u></i> give became utter rubbish. Whenever I was forced into giving an hours estimate or date, it always seemed like I was handing them a cudgel to beat me over the head when the date came around and whatever I said would be done was not done. I mean, to me, it was <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hofstadter%27s_law">Hofstadter's law</a>, approximately cubed.</p><p>A good example of that was the PKI improvement initiative, where in meeting after meeting, the PM was getting upset, saying he has to escalate to management, and on and on, when we would tell him such-and-such was not done. It wasn't just me either. My peer Anthony also had to report time after time that the things we were working on were not completed. And I get it; it would be one thing if it were just Anthony and me, or our dozen or so member team, but it's quite another that maybe all told a hundred or so IT people throughout the organization need to be coordinated to get things accomplished properly. Taking the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orson_Welles_Paul_Masson_advertisements">Paul Masson attitude</a> of "it'll be ready when it's ready" doesn't work nearly as well as one would hope for such large groups.</p><p>The thing is, in some sense, I was just a scapegoat for stuff not getting accomplished on time. I think not hitting date targets was endemic to the entire organization. As an example, for one cluster of systems I administered, the company decided not to renew their support contract for the software about mid-year, for a product that needed to be upgraded to its replacement, because its end-of-life was the end of that year. The (separate) team responsible for the programming on that platform was supposed to have its AWS replacement in place by that end-of-life time, but in reality, it was nearly half a year late.<br /></p><p></p><p>I was told that I gave up too easily on working problems, that I was too quick to call tech support for the products that were "misbehaving." Part and parcel of working with software with a support contract is
knowing when you've reached the limits of your knowledge of the product,
and calling in "the cavalry" at the appropriate time. It's quite another thing if it's a product for which you don't have formal support (e.g., a contract), because there isn't another avenue. I don't think I said directly to my supervisor (but definitely to my peers), what in tarnations do you think I should do? Stare at my screen until The Deity implants the solution to the issue in my brain, like Neo learning Kung Fu in "The Matrix?" I dunno...maybe I'm overrating myself as an engineer, though I think I'm <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/average_bear">better than the average bear</a>. Despite my supervisor seeing so on several occasions, or maybe because of it, it seemed as if I was being accused of being lazy or something, and that calling tech support was not the fastest means to get things working again.<br /></p><p>Honestly though, to be fair to them too, there were some times where my supervisor came up with some fairly obvious points (in hindsight) which for whatever reasons, I didn't think of. So to a certain extent, I don't blame them, my skills aren't as sharp some days. Also, from time to time I had some particularly stressful tasks to do where I requested somebody to help me out, where normally it would be a one-person job. It's just that if something really wrong happened, I wanted backup. Still, from the feedback I got from my peers, it seemed as if I was a valued member of the team.<br /></p><p>Still, there is one instance of a fine example of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_men_and_an_elephant">the blind men and an elephant</a> where I remember things quite differently. To lay out some background, for the first couple of my 5.25 years there, like most comapnies at the time, we had an office where we were generally expected to be every day, and could work from home a minority of the time. The only person I remember working from home a lot, about half and half (i.e., every other day) was my good friend who basically got me the job there. To <u><i><b>my</b></i></u> recollection, the only other person who spent a majority of time at home was the guy whose desk was next to mine, after he had become injured. Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit. We transitioned quite rapidly to everybody working from home all the time. When the pandemic seemed under control, their stance changed to "work from home with in-office capabilities"...which meant noone really had their own desk anymore. Instead it was replaced by a "hotelling" Web app. My friend and I preferred the in-person experience, and tried to be leaders in coming to the office at least one day per week. The thing is, that doesn't really have much benefit if we're the only two people from our group doing that on a consistent basis. Still, my supervisor's supervisor remembers it as, before the pandemic, the majority of us were already working from home. So, out of a 10 or 11 person department, two people at home constitutes most of us.<br /></p><p>As an aside, I felt a little bad for management. They likely went through great expense to re-equip a lot of the desks and to lease the hotelling app service. Just before the pandemic hit, they were in the process of upgrading their Avaya system to IP phones, but pivotted to using a cloud telephony provider afterwards. I don't know if they were able to repurpose the Avaya desk phones to use the cloud, but I'm leaning towards "no."</p><p>The best I could tell from being there, the actual day-to-day usage of the desks was maybe 5%, and would only get substantial use, maybe 25%, if there were some sort of on-campus event. Additionally, those two levels of managers mentioned above did indeed offer, probably because the uptake/utilization was so low, for me to have a desk again--my desk, not one that was subject to "hotelling." While the offer was quite appealing, it made no practical sense due to noone else making it to the office with any regularity (except of course my good friend). What made sense was the nearly instantaneous interactions, the overhearing of things, pre-pandemic when everyone was more-or-less required to be there, and WFH was a rarity.<br /></p><p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_Moved_My_Cheese%3F">My cheese had been moved</a> in a massive way. Pre-pandemic, I was doing fairly well. My talents were well utilized. Honestly, the job requirements didn't change all that much, but obviously the environment for accomplishing them changed radically. In an in-office environment, things were relatively easy. When they were no longer, I did not fit in as well.<br /></p><p>So....this is a very long way of saying, although at the time I would have slightly preferred not being let go, I understand why they did what they did, and the decision was almost mutual. We just assigned different merits to different aspects of what I was doing for them.</p><p>To return to Matt's commentary, if you're kinda not doing what you were hired to do, it does make sense to be let go. Britt was a salesperson, but admitted to not closing any sales. Similarly, I was underperforming for Tandy. Despite doing potentially important, useful, and valuable support work, those were not really our missions, our reasons for being there.</p><p>I also have to thank Matt for providing some context, some humbling. It rubs me the wrong way, with respect to work, to point out that I'm single. But at the same time, it's very valid to state that me getting laid off or fired affects only me. There isn't a spouse, or kids, or an elderly parent depending on me to provide for them. At the same time, it'd be offputting if someone were to justify that I should have unusual duties because of that, such as disproportionate on-call time. That's a very murky, grey area to call somebody's time with their kids, for example, more important than whatever I might want to do instead.</p><p>Finally, Matt may be very right when he brings up that we are, unfortunately, a litigious society, whereby if Britt were given more specific answers, it may open up Cloudflare for a wrongful termination lawsuit. Of course, it doesn't suck any less not to have specificity and clarity. But there may be a knock-on effect when making your firing so much more public (I know, ironic I'm doing much the same thing, right?) such that in the future, employers have a lot of incentive to be even <u>more</u> vague. But as I said, my dismissals were justified, and at least for the 2023 one, it was kind of a mutual decsion. It seemed more like Britt was trying to portray herself as blameless and still valuable to Cloudflare. It also might be worth pointing out that rationalizing your (poor) performance by bringing up things like, "part of that time was holiday time," might be problematic. Closer to the truth, it was holiday time for everyone, not just you.</p><p>Metaphorically, I am a blind man. Tandy management were blind people. The management of the health insurance company are blind men. Brittany is a blind...well, not man, but woman. Cloudflare management are blind people. We each have our different perspectives on why remaining or parting ways was good or bad; appropriate or stupid; right or wrong. But as Matt points out, you have to be extraordinarily careful about disclosing details of your separation without the knowledge or consent of your employers. Future employers can, and often will, find them out and likely look askance at you when making a hiring decision. I think this blog post differs substantially from Britt's TikTok in that I'm genuinely not trying to smear my previous employers or attempting to gain sympathy, but reflecting on why what happened, happend, and why, in hindsight, were the rational things to be done.<br /></p><p></p><hr />English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-56182534241444786112023-11-05T20:46:00.000-05:002023-11-05T20:46:40.175-05:00Three MORE Reasons to Hate Alphabet/YouTube<p>For those techies who converse with me often, they have likely heard how averse I am to Web page animations. As if the recent YouTube ad blocker countermeasures weren't bad enough, there are three recent additions to their pages which, to me, required fixing with a CSS injector. And I still haven't satisfactorily fixed one of them.</p><p>The first and most egregious one I noticed many months ago was animating the like/thumbs up button with a silly burst of colors and confetti. I guess they thought the little hit of domamine one might get from affirming an artist's work wasn't quite enough, and it had to be intensified somehow. Well, that just serves to anger me, like any other CSS eye candy. It's novel for the first couple times it happens, then it becomes unnecessary, distracting dreck much like the vast majority of other Web page animations. In fact, almost always now, I try to position my pointer over the like button with as much pointer obscuring it as practical, so I see as little of that idiocy as possible. In fact, I almost always deliberately look away before clicking it, so that I don't see even the little bit that squirts out around the pointer/cursor. Apparently I'm not alone in disliking this. When I Googled for how to get rid of this, one result was a userscript that would change the appearance (I forget how) to the unselected graphic every 10th of a second (or something like that). As I really want to see whether it is filled in or not, I elected not to add this to my collection full-time. I don't know CSS and/or JavaScript/ECMAScript well enough to prevent it, but I sure do wish I did. This one I'm just grinning and bearing, although it is somewhat difficult to describe to you just how much I loathe and detest it (but yes, I will admit, apparently not enough for me to quit using YouTube altogether).</p><p>Similarly, they have somehow thought it is a good idea to animate the like count. They're not all that critical to me, so that is CSS-injection hidden outright. If I want to see it badly enough, I can bring up the enable/disable checkbox list of my chosen CSS injector, and either disable all CSS injection (easier), or just that one rule.</p><p>What was the final straw, and therefore the impetus for today's blog post, is the animated colors cycling around the perimeter of the Subscribe button whenever "subscribe" is pronounced in the video. I don't know, and I don't much care, whether the channel artist enables it, or if there are automation conditions for it (like it being in the last N seconds of the video), or if automated voice recognition does it. Any way you slice it, it disgusts me all the same, for some reason even more than typical animations do. That is now killed by CSS injection, and if I want, I can click on the channel's link and subscribe on the channel's page.<br />
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English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-57018591934378524522023-10-13T13:03:00.002-04:002023-10-15T17:28:32.992-04:00The Price of Chicken with Rice Soup at NYC Delis and Bill O'ReillyBill O'Reilly recently has published rants in his podcasts about the price of chicken and rice soup at a deli he really likes. I don't know precisely where it is, but it is somewhere in the area of New York City, and certainly is in New York State. We have here a textbook case of economics, where something is worth what someone is willing to pay for it, and Mr. O'Reilly is not willing to pay the $14 price at this particular deli.<div><br /></div><div>I somewhat sympathize with Mr. O'Reilly, but I can't quite agree with his assessment, at least not an overall assessment. He states that the ingredients likely cost around $1, and that the deli proprietor is marking this up 14x. While it may be true that this owner is demanding quite a profit in their $14 price, I don't think it's nearly as much profit as Mr. O'Reilly lets on in his podcasts. He and I live in basically the People's Republic of NY, a State where nobody's ever talked about a law they didn't like ;-). As I write this, the U.S. minimum wage is $7.25/hr. For NYC, it's over double, at $15/hr. Rents, leases, and property taxes in the NYC area are just unbelievable, or at least as I'm told by people who I respect/trust, like <a href="https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2mFZoRqjw_ELax4Yisf6w">Louis Rossmann</a>. Without thinking too hard, I have to believe there are other fees this deli owner will have to pay, like licenses and such.</div><div><br /></div><div>I think Bill is a really sharp guy, but somehow on this one, I wonder if he's truly thought this through. It's rare that businesses do not collect more money for whatever they're selling than it cost them to deliver that product (which would be called loss leaders). This deli likely has hefty rent to pay on the space they use. The workers they hire need to be paid. The gas and electricity used to cook the soup and keep it hot need to be bought. Multiple entities will want taxes paid on all of that, and again, a corollary to the above, NYC and NYS residents have never seen a tax they didn't like. It would be truly fascinating if this deli owner would be willing to let the general public look at all the costs which go into selling that $14 serving of chicken'n'rice soup.</div><div> </div><div>2023-10-15 ADDENDUM: I listened to more of this podcast now, where Bill further complains about adding on 3 or 4 percent for paying with a credit card. Bill seems oblivious to how credit card acceptance works. I know from working for at least one small business (doing nothing more than data entry, but they are good friends) that credit card companies charge transaction fees, which are both some fixed fee (on the order of $0.50 IIRC) plus some percentage of the sale amount (typically 2 to 4 percent), combined. All that deli owner is doing is passing on these fees, rather than doing some more complicated analysis and trying to average in those fees over all customers, whether they pay with credit cards or not. I am not 100% sure, but some localities may have laws against such practices, forcing the business proprietors to do just that, build the costs of credit card acceptance into all sales, not just those specific credit card sales.</div><div><br /></div><div>Incidentally, this brings to mind recent proposed regulation which would force ISPs to itemize their bills. The ISPs argue that it would be too complicated for their systems; I think they want to keep things fuzzy and ambiguous so that they can continue to gouge customers.<br /></div><div><br /></div>Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-92147743463005202732023-09-25T21:36:00.000-04:002023-09-25T21:36:20.319-04:00"We Don't Have To, We're the Phone Company" All Over Again<p>Remember <a href="https://vimeo.com/355556831">the old Lily Tomlin skit</a> where she is portraying a phone company employee, and ends with, we don't care, we don't have to, we're the phone company? It's pretty much alive and still kicking in 2023. They can't be bothered with such niceties as accurate information. And why should they? Who's gonna "make" them?</p><p>My tale of woe with the behemoth known as Verizon started with their offering of ADSL, way back in the day around when their downstream offering was (IIRC) 640 kbits down and 90 kbits up. I had what amounted to two accounts with them, one ostensibly dedicated to voice and the other for data (pre-DSL, for anything between V.32 and V.90 modems). As I recall, they basically had to be ordered separately, because the one line was ready as soon as I moved in, but the second had to be physically connected. In order to consolidate that from two phone line bills into one though, it
required a ridiculously priced "records order change," something on the
order of $40, or a little more than one month's bottom line charges (about $35) for one of the two
lines. Like many utility companies at the time, and today, they offered
automatic payment. Not wanting at the time to have yet another bill to
worry about paying, I said sure, fine, do that, and gave them checking
account information for both accounts. </p><p>One fine day, Verizon started offering G.DMT ADSL, with no cost penalties for moving (within their territory), and a discount for ordering a self-install kit online. To quote They Might Be Giants, on "Apollo 18," that's when all my troubles began. As the first line, available at move-in, was on pair one of the RJ14 jack, and the later installed line for data (both modems and DSL) was on pair two, I'm guessing the geniuses at Verizon figured that I was incapable of wiring up something from pair 2 on one plug to pair 1 on another jack, so they scheduled, without my consent or notice, a premesis visit (a.k.a in the industry as a truck roll). And then when I was not around (at my job) for them to do any work, they attempted to charge me a missed premesis visit charge of, IIRC, $70. When I saw my bill for over $100 instead of my expected $35, I of course called them up and said, in essence, what part of self install did you not understand? There was no reason you should have dispatched anyone to my apartment.</p><p>They were quite concilliatory, saying you're right, you should not have been charged that. But here's the thing: they immediately lost my trust and, for me, the future privilege of directly debiting my account when they took the full amount of the bill out of my account anyway. Instead, they chose to have an account credit balance. So let's see if I have this straight: you admit you should not have been entitled to my money, yet a few days later, you take it anyway, and hold onto it, instead of putting it back. Granted, you did not charge my account for THAT phone line for the next two months, because I had a credit balance. You also told me it was impossible to apply that money to my "voice" line, despite billing the exact same name at the exact same address. And you continued to charge me the $35 or so for that other line. Mmmmm hmmmm...OKey dokey.</p><p>Next, a couple of years later, after a couple rounds of speed upgrades, where Verzon was giving me 1.5Mbits down and 384kbits up service, they gave me a choice: if you wanted to enter into a renewed contract, your billed amount will remain basically the same. But if instead you wanted to go with our month-to-month policy, we want an additional $8 per month for the privilege. OK, seeing no reason, no particular additional value at the time for being month-to-month, I said, sure, sign me up for another year. Then, mysteriously, thousands of additional feet of wire got added to my loop...overnight! I kinda had a Dorothy Gale experience, my apartment building magically travelled something like 4000 more feet away from their CO. Suddenly, according to them, my loop was not capable of (reliably) carrying better than 768kbits/sec down, or half the down, nor more than 128k, or one third, up. A few different phone calls to them promised to restore my service to the previous 1.5M/384k, each time claiming I had to wait for these requests to work their ways through the system so to speak, ostensibly that it couldn't be done right away. It took the intervention of a sympathetic Verizon employee, who also frequented DSLReports.com, fixing things behind the scenes to restore my service to what it had been for years. It worked just fine before and after, proving that they don't have to care, they can do whatever they want. Mind you, it's not that I would have gotten any kind of discount for having the slowern 768/128 service, it would be the same as any other ADSL customer.</p><p>Let's fast-forward to September 2023. I finally have had enough of paying an additional $5 per month for the privilege of explicitly paying for FiOS every month instead of auto-paying. I had gone to my credit union and opened another checking account specifically for this purpose. The thought was, I should be able to have some sort of control over how much Verizon takes out of my account; theoretically if I only put $72 in there for them to take, they can't take any more. But, rather than take the chance that I'm going to be charged any overdraft fees, I had them put overdraft protection on that account, linking it to my savings account. I don't know, we'll see how it goes if and when Verizon tries to take too much. But of course, that's just a mundane story of setting this up from the credit union side, nothing to it from a "we don't have to care" perspective.</p><p>When one visits the Verizon site and sets this up on one's (Verizon) account, you enter in all this banking information, and ostensibly apply for your discount. I think the idea is that you can't "pull a fast one on them" and set up payment from a Privacy Virtual Card (a.k.a. privacy.com) account, so they don't show it as applicable right away. A Privacy Virtual Card would have my intended effect, them trying to take more than to what they're really entitled, and being denied. That, of course, is not what <u>they</u> want, the whole idea is to be sure they get the money <u>they</u> deem due, I would think so they don't have to spend anything additional (for collections?).<br /></p><p>I got my usual email notice that a new FiOS bill was available, so as usual, I logged onto Verizon to fetch a PDF of my bill, verified the amount, and logged onto my credit union to set up payment. But then I decided, this is the month to put the plan into action. So I began the process of setting up autopay. What they will ask you is what day of the month the funds will be taken from the entered account. In my case, the bill is due...let's say, the first week of every month. I chose the day before the due date, because it has not varied. Since that seemed pretty explicit, I went back to the credit union site and cancelled the future payment I had set up. But wait...after you compelete your autopay application/setup, a warning comes up stating, in effect, we're not sure we're going to get paid on time, so here's a button you can click to set up payment for your current balance. Sigh....so I logged back onto the credit union site and repeated my payment request ("Bill Pay"). I get it; much like back in the early oughts, and my "missed premesis visit" billing debacle, I guessed the gears grind very slowly, and accounting would seem to be done only on a monthly basis, meaning any changes would only be applied in the next billing cycle. Heh heh....if only.</p><p>Next, I got an email confirming that I have set up autopay. What do you know, it says they'll be taking money from the configured account on the configured day, the day before my next bill is due. Arrrrgggggghhhhh....log back onto the credit union site, RE-cancel my re-set-up payment. Again, they don't have to. They can't be bothered to figure out properly that the selected day is several days in the future, and it is before my bill is due. It's not like I asked them the day before it was to be debited, so therefore their batch processing might miss it. They knew well and good, ahead of time, that it would be ready to go and in effect. And I don't mean whether my discount would happen, I mean when the money will transfer. The amount is not in dispute, I still owe the full amount because it's last month's bill.</p><p>If I weren't such a cynical person, I wouldn't be thinking they're just trying to trick me into paying my bill, and <u><i><b>also</b></i></u> taking their autopay, so they can hang onto my money just like they did when they made up their missed premesis charge. They don't have to have their Web site present accurate information. They don't care, they don't have to; they're the phone company.<br /></p><p><br />
</p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-13067331709673623692023-08-05T19:30:00.000-04:002023-08-05T19:30:01.599-04:00Transgenderism in the Current Political and Social Landscape<p>As the name of my blog implies, being a libertarian, ordinarily I am of the mind to tolerate anything which does not materially affect me. However, such a simplistic statement would preclude principles important to uphold which don't affect me at all, for example, preventing child abuse (because I have not been a child for several decades). And this is a hint as to one of the points of this post, that although I struggle with the fact that I want the best life for as many people as possible, we have to be extremely careful when it comes to children.</p><p></p><p>First, I know the following will be offensive to a certain segment of the general population, but biology can't be ignored. With some rare, maybe even extremely rare, exceptions, people with XX chromosomes are female and XY are male. To be clear, this has extremely close to nothing to do with how people perceive themselves, and by extension, how they wish others to perceive them. A fairly large proportion of people are perfectly happy with their biological gender. But some others figure they'd be better off leading a life following the norms of the opposite gender. To me, this is a construct of society, how people want to be treated by others. Seems this would be driven by that person's life experiences, and their observations of how society interacts with members of some gender (whether the same as their biological gender or their desired gender).</p><p>Because intersex people generally speaking are rare, and as a large majority of society are just fine with their biological gender, most of these latter people are conditioned (mostly by society) to think of gender in binary terms, male and female. It's also ingrained into them that it's undesireable to be/behave like the other gender. Anyone who does is shunned by them as anathema to their lifetime of experience of this conditioning (for lack of anything better to call it). Our society typically has some tolerances for atypical behaviors, but it's not particularly broad. For example, most people do not take too kindly to males in dresses, except for maybe certain circumstances: comedy/theatre/TV (e.g. Corporal/Sergeant Klinger on "M*A*S*H", or Kip/Buffy and Henry/Hildegard on "Bosom Buddies"), Halloween, cosplay, drag shows, etc. <br /></p><p>So in order to be (vastly) more acceptable to society, society sort of by implication demads that at least the external appearance be that of a person's desired gender through sexual reassignment surgery. Present society sort of demands that if one wants to follow the behavioral norms of being what's generally considered female, you must not have a penis, or if male, you must not have prominent breasts for example. But an unfortunate consequence of biology stipulates that if treatment to this end is started earlier in life, that is to say, before puberty, the results are typically better. So of late, there are some physicians who will perform penectomies or double mastectomies on children, and prescribe hormone replacement therapies or puberty blockers.</p><p>The heart of the issue is that this is permanent, as in, cannot really be reversed. Although at this time I do not have statistics to back the following opinion, I imagine quite a few of these folks have feelings of wanting to transition, maybe even quite deeply held feelings, but the majority of them "grow out of it." I am a personal example of this. At one time, I identified more with my three sisters rather than my brother. But it didn't last. With a few exceptions, I am quite happy to be male. (As an example, one of those exceptions is that I think it's generally expected that men approach women, and it's less acceptable for women to pursue men. Although this is changing somewhat over time, it's still mainly the case. Call it personal experience, I find it extremely difficult to be in that role.)</p><p>Although a bit perverse, I have to believe a certain amount of these supposed cases of transgenderism stem from parents who, for whatever reasons, did not get their hoped birth outcomes, that is to say, they really wanted a girl but they got a boy instead (or vice-versa). So they may subtley or not so subtley suggest to their boy that it would be better if they were a girl. I (think I) get it, even some elementary schools are teaching kids about transgenderism, I (think) in the name of teaching tolerance (which is GENERALLY good). And parents might take the slightest agreement by the child as a sign that they should help them achieve what they want (and by "they" I mean both the child and the parents). The child will naturally want to please their parents, so will be very inclined to go along with this. To be clear, I think this is PROBABLY rare, but not totally unheard of.<br /></p><p>Again, I think it is somewhat normal for some girls to want to be like boys (we even have the term "tomboys" for them) and some boys to be girls for a while, but either through personal choice or societal steering, almost all come to peace with living their lives as their biological gender. I will again point to the permanence of SRS when I make the statement that SRS on children is child abuse. There are any number of things we do not allow minors to do, nor allow to be done to minors. As one very (il)legal example, <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20230704142237/https://www.health.ny.gov/community/body_art/">no minor may be tattooed in New York State</a>. I think SRS on minors most certainly should be one of these prohibitions. It is a very permanent solution to something which, for the vast majority of people, is temporary. I will however have to concede that if we only allow adults to transition, the results are poorer. But at least once one reaches the age of majority, one can be thought as having enough life experience to make such decisions with so far-reaching and permanent consequences.</p><p>Another contemporary controversy is allowing transgendered people to be fully their chosen gender, especially with respect to competitions, mostly sports. Again, this is biology, which has absolutely nothing to do with how society treats a person, or how a person wishes to be perceived. If we were all equal, there wouldn't even be a difference in sports at all; everything would be mixed with no women's division and men's division in a sport. Those who advocate for transgender women to participate fully in living the life of their chosen gender, especially with respect to sport, seem to want to ignore this completely. Men, as a general rule, are bigger, stronger, faster, and so on; I see little point in denying this. That isn't to say that all men are stronger et al than all women, there will certainly be exceptions when comparing any particular man to some woman. But it is the very essence of these differences why we separate these into women's competitions and men's competitions. In no sports do we think of PEDs as acceptable; we must think of male hormones as a performance enhancing drug. And if as stated previously we only permit adults to make transitioning decisions, by that time it's too late, the (naturally occuring) male hormones have already given that person that biological advantage. Therefore it serves very little purpose to allow transgender women to participate in women's sports. Sorry to those who want to advocate otherwise, it's an intractable argument to think social treatment trumps biology. By the same token, if transgender men want to compete in men's sports, all the more power to them. Their chance of success, again due to biology, would however seem to be exceedingly slim.</p><p>Still, I must emphasize, gender differences are very real and in many cases is biologically determined, but hopefully will be narrowly thought of. What I mean is, being male or female is undeniably different, but the societal norms surrounding some aspects of living that gender are not immutable as their biological counterparts are. As an example, for whatever reasons, society places great importance on clothing. As mentioned above, a majority of society does not want to see men in dresses; about the closest most men come to that is a hospital gown. If he's wearing a skirt, it better be a kilt. This sort of thing does change over time, for example it used to be commonplace for men to wear tights, but now mostly only women do, except again for special circumstances; ballet comes to mind. Who knows, maybe some time in the (probably far distant) future, men in dresses will be as commonplace as seeing men in tights was.<br /></p><p>I also have to ask as an open question, why is there an emphasis by many on gender equality? To what end would making everything equal help us? As one example I heard, somewhere around 97% of bricklayers are men. Offhand, I wouldn't think bricklaying is physically demanding, as in, it doesn't require the typically better male strength. I see no reason why we have to have strive towards 50% of bricklayers to be women. To the 3% of you who are, all the more power to you, it doesn't make any difference to me. The majority of nurses are women; there's absolutely nothing wrong with men being nurses, but I see no reason why there should be a push for that to be 50/50 either. Whether societally induced or maybe even biologically influenced, I think it more productive to celebrate the differences in the genders rather than demand equality in everything. I'm all for relaxing societal thinking on what is a man's job and what is a woman's job (I'd like to see more fellow computer engineers be women :-) ), but at the same time, I don't see any reason for a push towards total equity. That is, don't be exclusionary, except where biology clearly plays a role. I mentioned sports before as an example, but that is by consensus of the participants (clearly, because there are some mixed gender sports; volleyball and tennis doubles spring to mind).<br />
</p><p>We also must be extremely careful when it comes to standards. What I'm thinking of as an example is, we should not lower the requirements for firefighters. If there is standard that they're required to be able to carry around some benchmark weight, say in anticipation of being able to perform a rescue successfully by carrying an average someone away from a fire, we can't be lowering that number to accommodate some perception that we need more woman participants. If they can pass such strength tests, I am extremely grateful that they chose to be one. Again, statistically men are more likely to be stronger, but there's nothing to say some women can't be just as strong as some men. But let's not change the standards without some objective reason (like maybe we actually, as a societal average, become healthier and statistically weigh less).<br />
</p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-20959307779815955572023-06-30T19:10:00.000-04:002023-06-30T19:10:35.372-04:00Let Freedom Ring, at Least for Now<p>Recently the Supreme Court of the United States of America handed down some rulings. It is, by precedent now, illegal to try to fix discrimination with more discrimination (which is the plain truth about what the euphemism "affirmative action" is) (Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College) , illegal to foist more debt upon the U.S. taxpayers by the mere whim of a President (Biden, President of the United States, et al. v. Nebraska et al.), and illegal to compel someone to express themselves in a way dictated by someone else (303 Creative LLC et al. v. Elenis et al.).</p><p>On that last point, what did Elenis et al. think, that there is a cabal of Web site designers who are conspiring to keep them off the Web? Move on! Find someone else, it shouldn't be that difficult.<br /></p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-70121622053725505192023-06-04T21:07:00.006-04:002023-06-05T21:09:47.515-04:00Why I Left Verizon Wireless After Less Than a Week<p>Recently, as a courtesy, my former employer let me keep the cell directory number (DN) I had been using while employed with them. The idea is that in exchange for paying for the cellular plan and the handset, I would make it my main or sole cell phone. Basically, this was so they were able to call me when something at the shop went sideways and they needed my help. As a perk, they also let me keep the cellular handset, a Verizon Wireless Galaxy S21 Plus 5G. (It's important to understand that Verizon Wireless and some other carriers have mods specific to themselves, so that if for example you have rooting instructions for a Galaxy S21 Plus 5G, it might not work AT ALL on your handset because you acquired it through Verizon Wireless.) I basically had two choices: port the DN to another carrier, or establish my own Verizon Wireless account. Either way, my former employer no longer wanted to get billed for the DN. I will also add that technically, "Verizon" is not "Verizon Wireless," but when speaking of Verizon Wireless (which I will hereafter refer to as the common abbreviation "VZW"), people often only say/write the "Verizon" part.</p><p>My use case is extremely modest. For a great deal of time, I am
connected to Wi-Fi. Therefore almost every month, I was below 2GB of
cellular data usage, even when using up data for the former employer. In fact, most months, I was below 1GB. The heaviest normal usage was streaming talk radio for stations whose OTA signal is weak (WHAM-AM and WLVL), so not at all bandwidth intensive. The times I did go over 1 gig were usually when I had to tether the company laptop because my home Internet connection was out (generally due to power failure). The one time I did break 2 gig was when, for some unknown reason, the Audacy app decided to use about a gigabyte per hour, until I just plain uninstalled it. As for talking and SMS, I have a Google Voice number, and that forwards calls to a Callcentric number (for about $2/month), which then gets answered by an Obihai ATA, and SMS gets forwarded to email. Optionally, this also gets forwarded to cellular, although I only forward voice, and only when I have cell service.</p><p>If push came to shove in my budget, all I want cell service for is to be able to call more than 9-1-1 if I get stuck on the road (AAA for example). I can do without the cellular data if I am really in a budgetary pinch, and will try calling 9-1-1 if I were to break down (which, as you probably know, doesn't require paying for a service plan).<br /></p><p>I started out by looking at VZW's plans, as this would be the simplest; the former employer would only have to tell VZW to shift billing over to either an existing private, "retail" VZW account (for example, if I wanted to port it to a family plan), or have VZW create a new account for me. As I had no idea for how long I would be unemployed, I was looking for the least expensive plan available. The best I could find was shown as $65/month, their "Welcome" plan. Jeepers! That's $780/year, not including <u><i>other</i></u> charges which I'll cover later. That's an awful lot for just talking every once in a great while, and streaming less than a gig. So, what does the Internet recommend as among the best carriers (or MVNOs)?</p><p>After a few Google searches and Web site readings, I found Mint Mobile (which I'll refer to as "MM") as a reasonable alternative. They had an introductory offer of $15/mo. for 4GB (now 5!!), if you prepay for 3 months. Afterwards, it's $25/mo., or the "same" $15/mo. if you prepay for a year. (And yes, I know they're in the process of being acquired by T-Mobile USA.) I asked them, would it be OK to port a number later instead of account opening time? They said that would be just fine, I would be assigned a "temporary" DN which could be used until I'm ready to port. In like Flynn, I ponied up my $45 or so, they FedEx'ed <b><i>two</i></b> SIMs (one for me, one for me to give away to whomever I think would like MM...a genius marketing idea), stick it in the S21+, it works like a charm (although being a VZW-issued phone, it complains about non-VZW SIMs or eSIMs with a useless FUD notification). I eventually figured out it was MUCH simpler to have MM install an eSIM, because without it, if I ever still wanted to access the VZW DN, I would have to shut down, pop the SIM tray, insert the VZW SIM and boot (and the other way around to switch back to MM). With MM as an eSIM, it's just toggling a graphical switch within the Android settings app for either carrier.</p><p>Finally the day arrived when the handset would no longer be under contract (i.e., had been "paid off" through the former employer maintaining service). An email from VZW, initiated by former employer commanding the release the DN from their billing, arrived with an identification number of some sort (we'll get to that shortly) and the usual porting PIN. Great. I called up MM, read off the ID number and the PIN, and wouldn't you know, it didn't work. What they need is an account number and the porting PIN; what VZW apparently sent along was some sort of internal transaction ID. I tried conferencing in VZW to try to clear this up, but after some time, MM hung up and I was speaking only with VZW.</p><p>During that conversation, I found out that, rightfully so, I was not entitled to the account number; after all, me knowing former employer's account number could possibly allow me to do untoward things with their VZW service. I wouldn't do that anyway, but the potential is there. So...I asked about the possibilities of creating a personal account instead, and transferring billing to that instead of former employer's account, to which they were of course thrilled...more money for them, right? So I go about giving them my particulars, address, email address, and so on. I also made very sure that there would be no contract, no early termination fee, no penalties, no minimum number of months of service, to which the rep replied, no such thing, I am totally free to do as I wish. Then they got intrusive. They wanted me to send a photo of an ID (NY driver's license for example) and Social Security card to an email address. I carefully checked out the MX for vzw.com to make certain it supports STARTTLS (it does), snapped a photo, and sent it via Gmail. Although I could be assured noone could intercept the email, and that noone should be able to see into my HTTPS session with Gmail, I still have to worry about what Alphabet and Verizon will do with that image. I can delete it from Gmail, but cannot be assured when, if ever, it will disappear totally from Alphabet's systems. And what Verizon will do with it is even less clear, unless I want to waste a couple hours of my life reading through Verizon's terms, conditions, policies, etc.</p><p>As a small aside, I will give good marks to Verizon for gathering initial data, such as my SSN and a desired initial PIN, via sending an SMS message with an https URI embedded within to the DN in question. That certainly beats having to tell that rep, who would then also have that oh-so-sensitive SSN. That, however, broke down later.<br /></p><p>The rep with whom I was talking said he would call me back at 18:00 to give me some time to snap the picture and for that email to arrive and be processed. Mind you, they gave me no direction whatsoever on what should be in the subject line or body of the message, so I had to wing it. I had the email prepared and sent by about 17:35. I got an automated reply from Verizon's system with a tracking ID. When this rep called back at 18:00, surprise, surprise, they had not seen it yet--to me due to lack of anything to tie my submission to my account application. As I would later find out, this would most likely be due to the fact that, despite spelling out my name with phonetics, they had used the more common (and incorrect) spelling of my surname. Therefore the name on my driver ID and SS card would not match. The rep seemed to think on the 18:00 call that I should have gotten another email besides the automated one, confirming procesing of the image. Thinking it was just slowness of the overall system, the rep said I would be called back at 19:00 to move forward. Ironically to noone but me, one of the last things the rep said was, I was going to be happy with VZW service. If I'm being totally honest, I knew I was not long for the VZW life.</p><p>That 19:00 call never happened. Mind you, this was the Friday before Memorial Day. But still, it's a promise broken.<br /></p><p>Knowing that former employer would no doubt notice that the DN had not been ported (or otherwise taken off their account), I called up VZW again on Tuesday. That was a long-ish call, in part once again to them misspelling my surname. I was also irked that the new rep asked for my SSN. I thought they had an SMS/HTTPS app to do that so I would not have to recite that verbally. Oh, well, I went along with it anyway. Well...long and the short of it, they finally associated that JPEG file from Gmail with me, ran whatever they do (credit check maybe?), and decided I was worthy of my very own VZW account. And of course, during the process, they sent a message to my handset with a URI pointing to a page for agreeing to terms, conditions, privacy policy, the whole schmeer. And much as I loathe doing it, I did NOT spend an hour or more reading it, and like most others, handwaved that I agreed.</p><p>For those who have not been keeping score, at this point, we're already up to about 6 disagreeable things: difficulty porting to another carrier, asking for highly personal/sensitive information (which no other carrier with whom I've had a relationship demanded), not calling me back when they said they would, asking for SSN verbally when they could have sent another SMS and done it securely, wasting my time because they were trying to do (presumably) a credit check with the wrong data, and making me uneasy about agreeing to something I haven't read. While we're at it, let's add that the originally quoted $65/mo. wasn't really $65/mo., it was $75/mo. with a $10/mo. discount if you agreed to set up auto-pay. Verizon lost that privilege with me when they charged me for a missed premesis visit for self-installed DSL, and wouldn't refund my bank account for the mistake. Yes, overall I'm losing more money than I should, but I don't want them to have that power to reach into my bank account to make mistakes anymore. I guess they figured I was not adept enough to tap off pair two of an RJ-14 jack for my DSL; they were very much wrong, but I suppose really didn't have any way to know that.<br /></p><p>Next, it was my turn to be a slight dunce. While we were talking, the rep put through the order to port the number from former employer's account to the newly minted VZW account (pun intended). Because the rep knew it was likely we would become disconnected due to that action (the number being ported being in-use at the time), I gave her my MM number to reach me if we became disconnected. In hindsight, now they have yet another personal piece of information which, if they were so inclined, they could call or SMS to try to get me back as a customer. Never having done such things before, during that new call I tried going into (e)SIM setting to toggle the VZW SIM; that does not work. The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Interface_Layer">Android RIL</a> is a quirky beast; it required a complete handset restart in order for the VZW SIM to become active again, and to gain control of the MM eSIM too. Well, let's face it, the rep said so, and I thought I would just be clever and toggle the switch in the SIM settings. Of course, when they called back, I had to hang up on them again because both IDs, VZW and MM, were tied to that handset. This one's totally on me, nothing for which to fault Verizon.<br /></p><p>I should also explain, in most places I am, VZW has only 1 or 2 bars of signal, particularly at my home. In those same locations, T-Mobile USA (the carrier behind the MM MVNO, for now) gives me 3 or 4 bars, sometimes 5. And the "5G" logo "lights up" for MM more times than for VZW. So for me in particular, for the core of their product, VZW just comparatively sucks, let alone all their annoying or dubious practices.</p><p>Next, let us delve into the dumpster fire that is the Verizon Web site (which leaving off the "Wireless" is intentional; it is virtually the same for FIOS). Like many contemporary Web sites, it is thoroughly JavaScript (JS) infested, which in this case breaks one's ability to right click on something and open it in a new tab or window. They are similarly as lazy as most in that if there is some function they can't perform, they simply put up a generic error message that something went wrong. If you're going to include JS URI after JS URI, you might want to test if those URIs actually loaded, maybe by doing a try/catch around calling one of the functions in each. OK, maybe I'm six standard deviations away from a normal user, but I run NoScript and uBlock Origin, because I object to all the inclusions of Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, etc. codes, plus clearly ones that, from the names, are ads and trackers. I whitelist or temporarily whitelist JS URIs in NoScript as they're called for by the page; I want to know everything like this which is going on. I don't need to be advertised to or tracked any more than absolutely necessary. You UI/UX folks: it is not always manifest what a user wants. For example, something on my bill MIGHT be something in the billing section, or it COULD be in the account section. I will not know a priori. That is why I want the ability to right-click on something and open it in a new tab! I don't want to think about how to navigate back to where I am! I just want simply to close the window or tab which proved to be a fruitless navigation. If you ONLY provide JS click events, you destroy that possibility.</p><p>Let's also cover the fact that they never send emails with a text/plain part, only text/html. Then again, they're not unique in that regard, not by a longshot. I wish the folks who send these out would realize that HTML email is one of the easiest ways to compromise people, a.k.a. phishing, <u><i><b>especially</b></i></u> financial institutions! Also, please don't patronize us by putting something in the text/plain part like, "we tried to send you an email, but your email client is not capable of displaying it. Please go to this URI." Strip the formatting junk out of your text, and put that in the text/plain part, like decent human beings would. It shouldn't be all that difficult.<br /></p><p>Now, let's talk about the marketing. I guess I don't blame them, they want to earn as much money as possible, so they sent some promotional SMS message about discounts on accessories or additional handsets/lines. Still...having told these folks I'm looking for their cheapest plan which will get the job done, they want me to spend more. Yeah, not gonna happen.</p><p>Also, while I do appreciate sending suveys to ask how they're doing, I'm exceptionally torn in my resonses. They were basically asking, how was your interaction with our rep today? They were absolutely stellar, extremely personable, polite, upbeat, patient and everything. It's just that the company behind them sucks very badly. I really wanted to reply 1 or 2, but I could not honestly do that because the individuals were just fine.<br /></p><p>What was the final, last straw was receiving an SMS that my bill was coming due, and it would be over $81. So we went from $65, to $75, to >$80. OK, time to pull the ripcord. I navigated through the Web site (again, slightly painful) to find their Customer Service number, called it, and said I needed to close my account. The rep noted it was a very new account, and of course asked why. I went through some of the gems in this blog post: poor signal, objectionable Web site, escalating price quotes, wayyyyyyyyyyyy too expensive, maybe some more thrown in; I don't remember. I thorougly expected to get some sort of retentions pitch or transfer, but the most he offered is that it would be only 70-something with autopay. I don't think I said to him, but as previously mentioned, they very much lost me agreeing to that with their PSTN billing snafu. I suspect they knew there wasn't much they could do about signal strength, or the price, and just said, fine, here you go, a disconnect order has been entered. I once again confirmed, if I paid this bill, there wouldn't be any other charges; if I paid the $80+ I would be done; he said yes, I would be.<br /></p><p>What's a mystery to me is that doing subsequent research, namely Googling for something like "most inexpensive Verizon Wireless plans" and reading the results, they have far cheaper alternatives, albeit they're prepaid instead of postpaid. You'd think they'd whip that out and offer it to try to retain me as a customer. No such deal. Honestly, it wouln't have helped anyway; their rate was on the order of $35/mo., over double MM's rate. I also wouldn't doubt it if it came with the same autopay caveat.<br /></p><p>Well, dear reader, I thank you for reading this far; I hope it was at least entertaining. I will just add, at the risk of former employer reading this and crying foul (and maybe wanting their S21+ handset back), I had absolutely no interest in the VZW DN; I really couldn't care less if I retained it. As sort-of mentioned, the DN I hand out to everyone is my GV number, and calls to that get forwarded wherever I want, which can include cellular (at <b><u><i>any</i></u></b> DN). If I'm totally honest, all I wanted was not to have to give back the handset and therefore buy another. It looks like I ended up getting an approximately $1000 cell phone for about $81. It's possible that I could have had it for nothing or next to nothing, if I just asked them nicely to stop service for the DN, but I'm guessing they would have wanted their Galaxy back instead.<br /></p><p><br /></p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-734044919732863822023-05-18T12:26:00.001-04:002023-05-18T12:26:54.533-04:00Montana: The U.S. Constitution Takes It on the Chin Again<p>The government of another U.S. State, Montana, has collectively lost their minds by <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20230517230613/https://www.foxnews.com/us/montana-becomes-first-state-ban-tiktok-law-likely-challenged">banning the distribution of TikTok</a>. This seems awfully close to the Nazi book burning campaign. You are in effect saying that the citizens of your State are far too dumb to handle their own lives in dealing with ByteDance. So on Amendment I grounds alone, you are de facto making illegal the act of expressing myself on the TikTok service because I won't be able to obtain the app. This most cerrtainly seems like making a law abridging the freedom of speech. If you have concerns about government devices, that's fine, you own them, and ought to have absolute control over what they do. But to extend that to everybody is insane. It's like the gross overreach of "Brandon" insisting that one of the missions of OSHA is to get every employed person jabbed (I refuse to say/write "vaccinated"). It's fine that you insist federal employees and contractors be jabbed, but trying to extend that to virtually all citizens is ludicrous. <br /></p><p>What's next because you don't think we can handle it, prohibiting the sales of <u>Das Kapital</u>? <u>Mein Kampf</u>? Sticking your noses in ISPs who do business in your State and erecting the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Firewall">Great Firewall of Montana</a>?<br />
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English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-8474381295848223562023-05-17T22:35:00.002-04:002023-05-17T22:37:27.425-04:00The Recent Rise of Advocacy for a Vehicle AM Radio Regulation<p>I thought it was just "AM" talk radio hosts such as Clay & Buck trying to make their program sound more important...you know, entertainment and "content." But during their very show recently, at least on WLVL, there was a sponsored political ad urging people to go to a URI and ultimately e-sign a pettition to demand action, presumably in the form of legislation or regulation, for vehicle manufacturers to include AM radios in their cars. They even enlisted former US Vice President Mike Pence to help deliver the message. To paraphrase, Mr. Pence talked about how AM stations are a part of your safety, as participants in the EAS. I think this is quite disingenuous, because that implies FM, or for that matter, any other broadcast station, such as TV, is <u><i>not</i></u> part of EAS, whereas by regulation each of them <a href="https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/47/11.11"><i>has</i> to be</a>. I will grant them that MF propagation characteristics (AM broadcast band) are not going to be like VHF (FM broadcast band). But that's partly why FM is typically allowed more power than AM, to cover more area.<br /></p><p></p><p>Please give me a break. Along the lines of terms like "Big Oil," "Big Pharma," etc., this isn't "Big Vehicle" conspiring to silence talk radio, which has its primary home on AM. Automotive electric motor controllers accomplish what they do by turning the current to the motor on and off very rapidly. This is the very same effect you would have experienced with an AM receiver years ago with cheap incandescent light bulb dimmers (that is to say, cheap because they lack noise suppression circuitry). It does the very same thing as the EV motor controller, it chops up the current so that <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulse-width_modulation">the duty cycle</a> is varied, thus ultimately controlling the temperature of the bulb's filament (or the motor's speed). All those square waves produced are similar to the spark gap transmitters that were used it the very early days of radio, very wide band emissions. Without specific noise suppression components in the dimmer, the power wiring acts as a transmitting antenna for this broadband noise. Also keep in mind the scale; a lamp is going to be a few tens or hundreds of watts, whereas an EV motor is typically tens of kilowatts, an order of magnitude or more bigger. Unless some fairly expensive components are added in the circuit for noise suppression, typically all you're going to hear on that AM radio is hash. EV manufacturers do not want their customers complaining about how their radio doesn't work, all they hear is noise. <br /></p><p>It's the same reason why many mobile SoCs (for phones/tablets) will have an FM radio but not AM; a computer is absolutely chock full of square wave signals, so FM is the only practical reception.<br /></p><p></p><p>This is also not to mention, by implication, they're making it sound like it's going to be illegal or something to carry your own AM radio into your EV. Yes, it's less convenient, but if you want to try it, there's really nothing holding you back from bringing your own receiver along for the ride. You're likely going to be quite disappointed with the results, except maybe if you're within a couple of kilometers of a clear channel station.<br />
</p><p>I have confidence that the market will sort this out. If people genuinely want their AM radio without having to carry a portable around with them, EV manufacturers will include an option. It may be a few hundred dollars, considering the heavy duty chokes, capacitors, and shielding it will likely require, but if you want an AM radio badly enough, you can pay for it.<br />
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English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-1950387970068414382023-05-17T21:41:00.000-04:002023-05-17T21:41:58.900-04:00Recent Survey Request From Google About Passkeys<p>Too bad Google's recent survey which I received was not open-ended, and was restricted to only the answers they thought of; that is, no place to opine in freeform text. If they want adoption, they have a LOT of work to do.</p><p></p><ul style="text-align: left;"><li>They call it "passwordless", but if I have to enter a password (it's called a PIN, but same thing) in order to use my YubiKey, it's not passwordless. I might as well just use a normal password login and touch my key for MFA, it's more convenient because my password manager fills it in automatically. I don't know for sure at this point, but I'm going to guess this insistence on having a PIN was part of the FIDO standard for using a hardware key.</li><li>Offhand it doesn't seem infeasible to use a YubiKey for both MFA and passkeys. They're used at totally different phases of authentication. Yet you make that clear that there is a MFA section and a separate passkey section on the page, and put up an error if one tries to enroll a YubiKey already registered for MFA as a passkey.<br /></li><li>Telling me to "hold my phone closer to my computer" is useless if you don't tell me why. I could have opened the side panel and chucked it inside, not possible to get any closer, and it still wouldn't have helped. You have to explain that it is to get a better Bluetooth connection, which was never going to happen because Bluez had not paired my phone at that point. There comes a point where being nontechnical is highly counterproductive. "Page cannot be displayed" is extremely unhelpful. "Name not found in DNS," "DNS lookup failure," or "connection refused" are infinitely more helpful. Similarly, mentioning Bluetooth on that screen on a phone is vastly more helpful than just asking me to hold it closer.<br /></li><li>You listed all sorts of devices, from tablets, to iPhone, to iPad, to Mac desktop, to Chromebooks, but I had to choose "other" because it was a Linux desktop. Seriously...does not your business rely heavily on Linux, but you can't be bothered to offer that as a possibility of using your Web products??</li><li>You confuse the issue by calling it passwordless login and passkeys in different places. When I wanted to turn it off (more hassle than it's worth, honestly), I couldn't find it for several minutes because of the dual labelling. It also wouldn't hurt to put this switch to disable it on the enrollment page, either instead of, or in addition to, where it is now.<br /></li></ul><p>
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English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-71916931575214905572023-05-08T15:31:00.004-04:002023-09-04T15:17:17.568-04:00Wisdom From the Comic Pages - Ep0<p>Not sure if this will be a continuing feature on this blog or not, but who knows, there may be more, so this is "episode 0" (because we computer types really like our zero-based numbering).</p><p></p><blockquote><p>Talk show hosts, political candidates, news programs, special interest groups...they all become successful by reducing debates to the level of shouted rage. Nothing gets solved, but we're all entertained.<br /></p></blockquote><p style="text-align: right;"> --Bill Watterson, author of "Calvin and Hobbes," 26-Nov-1995 </p><p style="text-align: left;">That indeed seems to be the business model of many talk shows, including Premiere Networks hosts, WBEN-AM hosts, and many others I know of. There are some that are much more focused on intrinsically apolitical topics, e.g. home improvement, car repair (miss you, "Car Talk" guys, but I understand everyone wants to retire, and listeng to your "Best of" will do for now; miss you, Tom Torbjornsen), financial/money/planning advice ("The Money Doctors," "Money Talk with Bob Brinker," "Jill on Money," etc.), computers and technology ("Sound Bytes," "Léo Laporte The Tech Guy," "Rich on Tech"), and so on. Certain others have a strange, interesting mix ("The Financial Guys," "The Home Repair Clinic with Jim Salmon").</p><p style="text-align: left;">I mean, there's little doubt that people to whom I used to listen, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, etc. thoroughly believe in most of what they say. But sometimes...sometimes my opinion is that they really don't genuinely believe in what they're saying, or believe in it only half-heartedly, and are doing it as schtick to try to gain or retain listeners. And on some occasions, all the host had in mind was to hammer their point, not to let their guest speak.</p><p style="text-align: left;">But after all, that is their mission: gain as many listeners as possible and retain them for as long as possible, not necessarily have a balanced discussion of any topic. The late, great Rush Limbaugh said as much during some of his shows. Don't get me wrong, it can still be worth the listen; I wouldn't want it curtailed. It's just that Bill was insightful.<br /></p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-61180150906491464582023-04-19T14:42:00.002-04:002023-04-19T14:42:45.823-04:00Slightly Extreme Example of Phisher Fail<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhc84Y4QE65Sk_fHhnqylOYxOvlJN9YHJT_-Zj50a918cs2WzAluoRMM_nUJnmzhjs2WH_nq_YBWprqyql3jDffAAp77kwvQckKlvM_2oelts88pscWVC8jJ0kjNc_DxkEfbUwiHIBRKhACO1B1eqpXaEJ3SOkxyOodNFNpkTglqbbKdWuuQMVfW_nKzw/s642/spammerOops.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="465" data-original-width="642" height="232" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhc84Y4QE65Sk_fHhnqylOYxOvlJN9YHJT_-Zj50a918cs2WzAluoRMM_nUJnmzhjs2WH_nq_YBWprqyql3jDffAAp77kwvQckKlvM_2oelts88pscWVC8jJ0kjNc_DxkEfbUwiHIBRKhACO1B1eqpXaEJ3SOkxyOodNFNpkTglqbbKdWuuQMVfW_nKzw/s320/spammerOops.png" width="320" /></a></div><p>Thank you, Google, for tossing this in my Spam folder, where it belongs. Oh, well, too bad, phishers; it might help to have a better grasp of the language before you send out your messages. Why in the world would I want to suspend my package?<br /></p><p>-- <br /></p><p>English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br /><br /></p>Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-38166243178849931582023-04-06T14:41:00.001-04:002023-04-06T14:49:39.236-04:00The Ridiculous Length of Terms and Conditions<p>I decided I wanted to change cellular carriers recently. I won't tell you which one I was targetting, but I'll just say I was on their "cart checkout page" and it had the usual something along the lines of "by clicking 'complete purchase,' you agree to our (link)terms of service, our (link) privacy policy," etc., etc. Now, I like to be a principled person, and do not want to blindly accept things I haven't read. However, companies make it extremely difficult to follow these principles.</p><p></p><p>I tend to read slowly compared to most people, mostly because I tend to reread lines and not realize it particularly soon (maybe half way through them in most cases). This seems to be particularly true for legal documents, as virtually all terms of services/terms and conditions are. But what will help me immensely is if I have the text read out loud, even if by a TTS package (I like Festival). So, I set about to copy/paste this prospective cellular carrier's terms and conditions page into a text file. Then I ran the Festival package's script text2wave on it.</p><p>Any guesses as to the size of the resulting .wav file, in terms of time? How about nearly one and three-quarters <b><u>hours</u></b>? So, in order to conscientiously read these T&Cs to which I'm supposed to be agreeing, and assuming I could read as fast as Festival's output sound, I would be spending over an hour reading it, even if I used some software to read it sped up.</p><p></p><p>One characteristic of Festival's output is that the tone it uses falls as it continues on throughout a sentence, ostensibly to sound more natural. What's particularly funny about this cellular carrier's T&Cs verbiage is that the very first paragraph begins with such a run-on sentence that with a male voice, Festival is just more-or-less groaning instead of pronouncing by the end of it.<br />
</p><p>The lamentable truth is that most of these sites' T&Cs are very similar, with the company's or organization's name substituted in the right spots. I just wish for a Web site where some standardized ToS, privacy policy, and so on can be posted for all the world to see, and sites/companies/organizations to incorporate them by reference, so that they can be READ ONCE. Keeping conscientious can therefore be a whole lot less onerous.</p><p>I suppose I can sort of rationalize click- or tap-through. After all, I don't think even lawyers read through every law written for a particular jurisdiction. Think of it: you could probably spend years if not a decade or more of time dedicated solely to reading, in my example case, international law, U.S. law, New York law, Erie County law, and Cheektowaga law. The text of this cellular carrier's T&C is about 85 KiB; imagine how much would be required for all laws in all those jurisdictions. Yet somehow we're expected to be bound by and follow all of them. It's just fairly close to impossible.<br /></p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-14287634040587332612023-02-05T14:44:00.002-05:002023-02-05T14:44:34.119-05:00What Do _*You*_ Know About the PRC Balloon?<p>For all these folks pontificating about this ostensibly PRC surveillance balloon, I'd like you to answer a few questions for me, because I have not been made aware of the answers. I don't mean that these answers are not out there somewhere, but in what I've heard and read, as of the writing of this post on 05-Feb-2023, I don't have them.</p><p> These answers make a whole lot of difference as to what actions should be taken. There has been a lot of criticism of public officials (such as "Brandon", his Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, his Secretary of State Antony Blinken, his Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas, and so on), mostly along the lines of, why haven't you shot this down (yet)?<br /></p><p></p><ul style="text-align: left;"><li>Within let's say 20 kilograms, how massive is it?</li><li>Does it contain hazardous materials of any kind?</li><li>Does it contain biohazards?</li><li>Does it contain anything nuclear/radioactive?</li><li>Does it contain any of these sorts of things in a container which is designed to mask its presence which would come apart if lower in the atmosphere (with a barometric trigger for example), or is impacted?</li><ul><li>OK, at this point, because an Air Force fighter has shot it down, and it is in the Atlantic somewhere off the coast of South Carolina, we know the likelihood of these is small</li></ul><li>Even though many commentators have stated the lack of population density over some of the States it has drifted, would you want the payload of this thing crushing your house in two? My point would be, a population density of 1 per 100 square kilometers is still nonzero. And to think anyone can control its descent somehow to me is tenuous at best. Just ask the Aussies who had the misfortune of being somewhere near the remains of Skylab.<br /></li></ul><p></p><p>Look, as the saying goes, even a blind squirrel finds a nut on rare occasion, and I think this is one of those times. Even though I can't stand much of what Brandon espouses (or I wouldn't call him "Brandon"), this was the right call, deferring to his cabinet. Actually, it came out recently that Brandon wanted to shoot this thing down on Wednesday, but instead his administration delayed until around today, when it would be much safer to do over the ocean. It's also supposed to be an oxymoron to say "military intelligence," but darn it, it's their jobs to be on top of things like this, and at least this time it seems like their jobs were done properly.</p><p></p><p>The better question to ask would be, how did we allow it to get over our nation to begin with? Was it launched from the PRC, or could it have been a PRC agent working within North America? Please just remember, we probably didn't detect it, and everything should be judged from what we do now, not what could have been done. We can't go back in time and look at what we would have done when it was presumably over the Pacific.<br /> </p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-65408854837241124442023-01-16T15:53:00.000-05:002023-01-16T15:56:30.668-05:00Wyoming Government, Have You Lost Your Collective Minds?<p>This should be a rather short post.</p><p>Wyoming legislators have instroduced <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20230116044453/https://wyoleg.gov/2023/Introduced/SJ0004.pdf">a bill to phase out electric vehicle sales (Archive.org)</a> in the State. I get it, sort of. You want to showcase that you are an extremely prominent and important source of natural energy resources. Isn't this socialist, where the government decides what will be produced in your economy? Have you not seen how horribly this works in practice? This is absolutely, positively no better than the New York State government deciding <a href="https://archive.ph/q1BKM">I can't buy gas appliances in 2030 or thereafter (Archive.today)</a>. The thing NY is trying to hang their hat on (unsuccessfully in my opinion) is that we're polluting and causing anthropogenic climate change.<br />
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English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-66957620349696811202022-12-25T20:00:00.001-05:002022-12-25T20:31:24.560-05:00Some Actions to Consider for Blizzards<p>I am writing this on Christmas day 2022. As many have probably heard from news services, the Buffalo, NY, US area (and just about as bad or worse, Cheektowaga, where I live) got absolutely pummelled by a blizzard. I have memories starting about 1970; before that, there just isn't anything left to recall. This would include the infamous Blizzard of '77, though I was just a young kid and for the most part only remember that yay, I got a whole extra week off of (public) school. To me, this was far worse than anything I have ever encountered. I happen to live now only about 20 m south of where I grew up. I never remember a time that, for more than a day, continuously, I could not see across the street, or about 15 m away. And the whiteouts even persisted for a few seconds to less than 10 m. The snow was coming down at a fairly rapid clip, but the key difference is the cold front became stationary and caused winds to blow nearly constantly at about 50 kph, with one peak gust at 89 kph.</p><p></p><p>This had been predicted at the beginning of the week to arrive sometime late Thu, 22-Dec or early Fri., 23-Dec. Worse yet, there would be rain starting a day or so before, and a rapid fall of temperature, meaning there would be a layer of ice, then snow on top of it. The predictions were also for the stalling of the front, and a prolonged period of high winds which would blow the snow around. It turns out that blizzard conditions got started about 8am or so local time when I woke up on the 23rd. At around 9am, my power mains went out.</p><h1 style="text-align: center;"><u>BIG, HONKIN' DISCLAIMER</u> <br /></h1><p> Before this goes any further, I just want to make sure it is understood that:</p><ul style="text-align: left;"><li>I am not an expert at any of this. Do <i><b><u>NOT</u></b></i> take anything I say as advice. Do your own research. I am just giving you <u>points to think about</u> and research for yourself.</li><li>Everybody's body/health/economics/home are different. <u><b>You</b></u> have to decide carefully what works for you; what you can physically handle, what stresses you can handle, what your budget will allow, and maybe in particular, how tight/loose your home is with respect to insulation and weatherizing. What I think works for me might not be advisable or be downright dangerous for you to do. I come at this from the perspective of a single family Cape Cod style built in 1956, which is downright abysmal compared to today's well-engineered and sealed houses.</li><li>Whatever you do, that's on YOU. I am ONLY suggesting. You follow any of this at your OWN risk.<br /></li></ul><h1 style="text-align: center;">OK, with that out of the way, let's crack on.</h1><p></p><p>The following things are fairly simple and don't cost a lot. And by comparison, I mean that acquiring and/or installing a backup generator is certainly an ideal, but it can be quite expensive. My thinking is, this list is supposed to be cheaper and simpler than that.<br /></p><p>There are a number of things I thought to do, or not do, right away. Unfortunately, some of these are an afterthought because I found out the hard way it would have been wise to do <i>before</i> this storm hit. And I thought I would share these with you as things to consider to maximize your comfort and minimize any losses (e.g. spoiled food due to lack of refrigeration). I also explain my reasoning for many of these.<br /></p><ul style="text-align: left;"><li>If you have enough time to acquire some, invest in some rechargeable batteries designed with USB power outputs (often called "power banks"). These will come in handy for charging a cell phone. Make sure they are charged (or are charging) as soon as the weather service (e.g. NWS here in the US) predicts the arrival of that storm. In this year's case, that was Mon. or Tue. for a storm that arrived Fri., so several days' notice.<br /></li><li>You may want to charge your cell phone from a laptop's USB port. Iit might be worth it to trade cell phone time for laptop operation time.<br /></li><ul><li>Charge up your laptop's battery, if you can, just like the power banks mentioned above, well before the storm hits. <br /></li><li>Some of them will have a PD (Power Delivery) port specifically for the purpose. Often for the Type A port, the plastic in them is yellow, instead of black or white for USB 2 or blue for USB 3. Often they will have a little lightning bolt icon beside them. None of that is really standard, but are common conventions of many manufacturers.<br /></li><li>Some laptops may not switch on the power to any USB ports unless the computer is operating. In a power out situation, boot the laptop and then put it to sleep. Often this will still keep the port(s) on.<br /></li><ul><li>For Microsoft Windows, suspend or sleep is usually available on the logon screen, in the lower right hand corner, on the same menu you would use to shut it down.</li><li>For Linux, it is often an option (e.g. "suspend") on the logging out dialog, or on the login screen somewhere (upper right hand side of the screen for LightDM). Also, <span style="font-family: courier;">sudo systemctl suspend</span> will work for many folks.</li><li>Sorry, I don't have experience with Macs, or other systems.</li></ul></ul><li>Your vehicle is probably an OK source of charging power, either with USB ports built in, or through a 12 V power supply which plugs into an auxilliary power outlet (what used to be used for electric cigarette lighters).</li><ul><li>In the modern, work-from-home world, you may not be operating your engine as often as when we were all commuting to an office. You may want a float/trickle charger to keep your battery at maximum. Batteries will have a slight power draw from the car's electronics (example: hold your radio's station memories), and they do self-discharge.<br /></li><li>I happen to have picked up a Simonize brand one from Ollie's Bargain Outlet, which even comes with a quick disconnect connector, making it easy to plug in once I park in my garage, and disconnect when I want to go somewhere. For the record, I'm driving a gasoline car, not an electric or hybrid.<br /></li></ul><li>If you're fairly certain the power will fail, consider bumping your thermostat up a few degrees a few hours before the storm is predicted to hit. You may not be able to heat your home because of that lack of power (for the blower fan in your furnace, mainly), and you will be riding down a thermal hill so to speak. If you start higher, you may enjoy more heat for longer. Of course, this thinking has to be balanced with the fact that heat transfer occurs faster when the temperature differential is greater. I cannot easily give you the math for what would be optimal for you, but in my case, normally I keep my house at 21, and I put it at 24. It wasn't scientific at all, it's just what I thought would be a decent compromise.</li><li>If you're a ham, charge up those HTs! I put my BaoFengs in their charging cradles the day before.</li><li>Charge up those cell phone accessories, such as rechargeable Bluetooth headsets. It might be better not to use them at all, but for example you might need both hands free while talking to someone, and the best (or only!) way to do that would be through your Bluetooth headset.</li><li>Some mobiles have some settings for battery longevity, such as cutting off charging at 85%. You probably want to maximize available battery for the duration of the event, so turn this feature off. Make a note of doing this, as in, what menus/submenus of the settings app you needed to go through to get to that setting, and maybe set a reminder to turn it back to longevity mode after the event is over. Then charge to 100%.</li><ul><li>Depending on how much time you have between doing this and the expected arrival of the event, and availability of the features on your device, you might want to/have to turn on fast or super fast charging (I have a work-issued Samsung Galaxy S21+ that has all 3 of these feature "switches").</li></ul><li>If you have tablets, make sure they're all charged up, and similarlly aren't limited to less than 100% charging.<br /></li><li>Once the power does fail:</li><ul><li>Keep an eye on your basement sump, and bail it as necessary. I have a rectangular bucket that I bought for washing my floors that worked just fine, but really anything like a serving or mixing bowl should work.</li><ul><li>It is a plumbing code violation where I am to empty (pump?) your sump into the sanitary sewer. I think, but am not certain, this is more for capacity reasons during a rainstorm than content reasons. Nonetheless, in order to minimize going outside and letting heat out/cold air in, I was emptying this bucket into my laundry tubs.</li><ul><li>Consider carefully (sort of "why") that this ordinance was put into place, and act accordingly.</li><li>Maybe instead you have a basin, bin, or tank you could empty your sump water into, and empty that outside when it gets full. Again, the goal is to minimize the amount of time you spend with your outside door open.<br /></li></ul><li>Of course, a more expensive solution, which I do not yet have, is a battery operated or Venturi action pump. Again, this list assumes you're kinda on a budget.<br /></li><li>Set a periodic reminder on a mobile device to check your sump at an appropriate interval.</li><ul><li>On Android, I found the program "Repeat Alarm" which seemed pretty good for this.</li><li>Once it was on the aforementioned S21+ (the only device with Internet access at that point), I temporarily turned on the radios and used Google's Files program to transfer it to some of my tablets, to save the mobile battery for any emergency communications and use the tablet's battery for the reminders.</li><li>Choose a very loud sounding, distinct alarm for these reminders, and turn the volume up to maximum. The one I used is called "Orion." You don't want to be in another part of the house, or asleep, when some hard-to-hear, not cranked to the max reminder happens.</li><li>If possible, set up more than one device like this, and power down all but one. If you run low on battery on the one device, you can boot up the next one. It also doesn't hurt to have some redundancy; you might want to consider also running this on your phone, despite the above admonition of saving its battery, because you might have your phone with you in a pocket at all times as opposed to a tablet on a table or desk somewhere.<br /></li><li>For this particular event, I was initially checking every 15 minutes, but this gradually lengthened to once every 30 minutes, then 60 mins, then 90 mins, then 3 hours, 4 hours, and finally 8 hours. By 10am on Sat., the rate of water ingress looked like it was slow enough, or maybe nonexistent, so as not to have to worry about it anymore.<br /></li></ul></ul><li>Minimize opening your refrigerators and freezers. You don't want the room heat ingressing into those and warming its contents, even the air.</li><li>Transfer as much as feasible into refrigerators that are in cooler spots. As an example, my kitchen has a fridge, and that room was about 23 to 25 degrees, while the one in my basement was in an 8 degree environment. This is to minimize heat ingress while you <u>do</u> have to open the fridge (again, higher temperature differentials mean faster rate of heat transfer). Much less heat is going to go into the one in my basement compared to the one in my kitchen, so I "consolidated" much of the contents into the one in the basement.</li><ul><li>As a side note, I keep some things in the fridge just to slow mold growth (bread, rolls) or chemical reaction (cells/batteries self-discharge). I did not bother transferring those "nice to haves" to the basement, as they weren't as critical be kept cold to keep from spoiling.</li></ul><li>Minimize going outside. You don't want to lose heat while you're going out and coming back in.</li><li>When you do go outside, just before you come back in, tap your shoes/boots on the door threshold to throw off any excess snow. You don't want to have to heat up that extra snow with what little heat you may have left.<br /></li></ul><ul><li>For this next tip, the inspiration was, about 2/3 of the way through the M*A*S*H episode "Twas the Day After Christmas." "Colonel" Klinger, "Corporal" Potter, and Hawkeye are in the company clerk's office discussing what to do, because a snowstorm in the area is about to bury Uijeongbu. Potter talks about killing the generator to save fuel for emergency use. As a result, they would have no refrigeration, for example to keep blood and some drugs useable. As a result, they take these outside. So, how does this apply to losing power in the winter (or a blizzard)?</li><ul><li>Empty your freezer(s) into a box or boxes, and put it/them in your garage. Even just placing it/them outside might be enough for you.</li><li>If you don't mind thawing them after the event passes, many products in your fridge will be just fine if you also take them outside and they freeze.</li><li>Pack snow into a pot or pots, and put them in your refrigerator. The snow will absorb heat. Given that you want to minimize access to its insides, it's difficult to say how often you should check and remove these pots to empty them of their water and pack in new snow.</li></ul><li>I have a cheap battery trickle charger with an LED on it, which I
got at Harbor Freight. I put it on my lawn tractor battery in
November. During the power failure, this LED was slowly discharging my
battery! Lead-acid batteries do not "like" to be discharged, which is
the main reason for putting a trickle charger on it in the first place.</li><ul><li> Unhook this for the time being.</li><li>Make yourself a reminder to reconnect it when power has been restored and is stable.</li></ul><li>You may want to consider unplugging more expensive appliances that might be susceptible to power surges and spikes that may occur when the power gets turned back on.</li><ul><li>Turn off the service switch on your furnace. The last thing you want is your controller board to get zapped when you need to get your house back to warm as soon as feasible.</li><li>Water heater, especially tankless. Same thought as above with regard to the controller board.</li><li>TVs</li><li>sound systems (a stereo in my case)</li><li>computers/monitors</li><ul><li>In my case, they're on UPSes, which protect them from all but the most egregious spikes.</li><li>I have a bunch of computers not on the UPSes which I switched their power strip off, because they're dependent on the router and its DHCP server starting first. <br /></li></ul><li>ONT, cable modem, satellite receiver, etc.<br /></li><li>some peripherals, such as printers</li><li>I don't have a new enough one, as I think my older ones are pretty robust, but your refrigerator(s)<br /></li></ul><li>There are usually several options on cell phones and some tablets that optimize battery life or battery longevity. In a section above, I mentioned the 85% charging cutoff of Android on an S21+ for example.<br /></li><ul><li> I suggest making notes of what changes you make, especially how to access these settings (which menu choices you have to make in the settings app to access them), in part so that you can "undo" them and get back to how you normally like them in non-emergency situations.</li><li>One of the biggest battery sucks is the display. Reduce your idle timer to minimum, usually in the settings section for "display". Mine is normally at 5 minutes, I put it on the minimum of 15 seconds. <br /></li><li>Turn off unneeded radios. For example, if you don't need Bluetooth, shut it off. If you don't have working home Internet (mainly cable subscribers), turn off Wi-Fi. Turn off NFC. And so on. (I'm not sure if turning off the UWB switch on an S21+ would save battery or not.) Airplane mode would be close, but chances are you do not want to turn off the cellular radio(s) because friends or family members might be trying to contact you to make sure you're all right. </li><li>There may be a setting for CPU usage. The Android on an S21+ has settings for best battery life, compromise, and best computing performance. It's that first one that you may want to consider choosing. I personally did not; I left it on compromise.</li></ul><li>Shut off unused parts of your house. In my case, my top floor serves mainly for storage. I don't go up there too often because it's typically too warm in summer and too cool in winter. I shut the door to its stairwell so heat from the main floor would not rise up there. <br /></li><li>If you have a gas range/cooktop, turn on one or more of the burners. I own a propane torch, so I also have a torch lighter tool that worked OK to start them. Another good choice is an outdoor portable gas grill lighter. For the most part, for my particular home, it held its own as far as the furnace thermostat about 4m away read. There are <b><i><u>SEVERAL</u></i></b> caveats to consider <b><i><u>VERY</u></i></b><u> carefully</u> before doing this.</li><ul><li>I do not know why burning gas in a furnace is so prone to carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning, should they fail with for example a heat exchanger crack, while it seems perfectly fine to cook with gas ranges and ovens. There are also ventless gas space heaters. Keep in mind the principal that light towards the red end of the spectrum is lower energy than that of the blue end. This is important, because CO is produced by incomplete (e.g. cooler) combustion, so if you're seeing blue flame it is probably better than seeing yellow flame. Even if there were some small amount of CO production, my particular house is quite leaky, and with the winds that were extant during this blizzard, I think any such fumes got diluted fairly rapidly. Again, this is not at all scientific, just my general thinking. To be really safe, I ought to have a regularly maintained CO alarm.<br /></li><li>I have a "space saver" microwave oven above my cooktop that I did not want to "bake." I bought it with the house, and so I do not have documentation for it. I suppose its design assumes that if you are running all burners below it, you are using its integrated range hood. Of course, without electric, there is no operating range hood. When I kicked in the two rear burners because I wanted to gain instead of just maintain temp, one of the plastic tabs that facilitate removal of the range hood air filters did get soft and droop, so it was likely too hot in there. Especially in this event, where vehicular travel was basically impossible, you do NOT want to need the services of the firefighters.<br /></li><li>The area around my cooktop did get quite warm. Make sure ANY combustibles are WELL away from these flames. Seems obvious, but I thought I would mention it anyway.<br /></li></ul><li>My gas oven is microprocessor/microcontroller controlled, so that was a no-go for me. You may have one that does not require electricity. Same <u>extremely important</u> caveats for my cooktop apply to operating a gas oven.</li><li>If you are at all concerned about your pipes freezing and bursting, it is often said that trickling water cannot freeze, so turn on one or more of your faucets at JUST a trickle. You may also want to write yourself a reminder that once the heat's back up, turn off all the faucets that you turned on to a trickle (list them in your reminder and check them off as you shut them, just to make sure).</li><ul><li>It might be even better, especially if you have a basement, to shut off the main valve at your meter and drain the rest by opening all your faucets. The short bit of pipe between either the floor or the wall doesn't SEEM like it would be susceptible freezing, since typically that far down in the Earth the temperature is constant and nowhere near freezing.</li><li>Put something in the bowl of your toilet(s). If you don't have proper plumbing antifreeze handy, such as used for RVs, windshield washer fluid might serve well enough. You may also consider putting this in your tank(s). If you have pets that are prone to drink out of the toilet, of COURSE you want to be exceptionally careful about this.<br /></li></ul></ul></ul><p>
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English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-54991379349547550212022-07-11T22:56:00.002-04:002022-07-11T22:56:36.028-04:00Weirdness From Firefox<p>I just spent the better part of an hour trying to figure out why Firefox was crashing (well, not in the traditional sense of a "I die right now with, e.g., a SIGSEGV or something", but a "GAAAHH!! your tab has crashed" message. This is on a Xubuntu 18.04 on a Core i3 Dell computer, all updates applied, even starting FF off with a brand-spanking-new, just minted profile (to eliminate the possibility of one of my usual extensions being the problem). I even hit the "L" in <span style="font-family: courier;">aptitude(8)</span> to reinstall it. Every time I would go to https://en.wikipedia.org , boom, no more FF tab, please send a crash report.</p><p></p><p>I even went over to my Xubuntu 20.04 system, no such issue. Even with all my usual stuff loaded and enabled, Wikipedia was just fine. And then the weirdest thing....</p><p></p><p>I was entering in the URI for another time, where FF suggested YouTube. Eh, what the heck, let's do it. I watched a Mr. Beast vid about him doing without food for 30 days.</p><p></p><h1 style="text-align: center;">spoiler alert</h1><p style="text-align: left;"> </p><p style="text-align: left;"> </p><p style="text-align: left;"> </p><p style="text-align: left;">He didn't make it, got about half way through, was doing a shoot with Gordon Ramsay, and just <b><i>had</i></b> to eat what Gordon made. So he lost (most of) the hair on his head.</p><p style="text-align: left;"><br /></p><p style="text-align: left;">Anyways....not believing the Mozilla people could screw up that badly as to have one of the world's most popular Web sites bring it down, I tried it again after the vid. No crash, in fact it was fine. I even ran it with my usual profile (including ublock Origin, Tampermonkey, NoScript, Stylish, and several others) without issue.</p><p style="text-align: left;"></p><p style="text-align: left;">So, no idea why, but it was really weird for, I don't know, about an hour. The one other thing I'll "say" right now is, I did delete some profiles...because after a while, you just gotta. MT, emptier, new-empty...you run out of things to call it. Now I have to wonder if someone managed to compromise Wikipedia and plant some very targetted, JavaScript malware on it. Doubt it, but that seems at least plausible to me.<br /></p><p>
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</p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-46502396241869405802022-02-27T12:07:00.002-05:002022-02-27T12:18:21.439-05:00On Balance, One of the Stupidest Services Ever: Kolide<p>I have been hearing ads recently on the "Security Now!" podcast for Kolide. In one sense, I get it. You attract more flies with honey than with vinegar. It's better to make your employees partners in your endeavors than an adversary. The whole idea behind Kolide is that you make device compliance issues a bunch of warnings rather than enforce them. "Hey, you don't have a complex enough lock screen unlock code!" Big deal. I can ignore that all day long. Now on the other hand, "you can't use your device unless you enter a complex enough unlock code"... that is nearly infinitely more difficult to ignore. I wonder how many companies who need strict protections (like the one I work for now, a health insurance provider) trusted Kolide and paid their $6 per month per device and subsequently had a data breach as a result of not having device standards compliance. The whole idea of using something like InTune is so you don't have your data disclosed unnecessarily. Merely suggesting is not nearly good enough. Data security is too important.</p><p></p><p>Another aspect which this totally ignores is that the people who tend to something like InTune are supposed to be security professionals. While many people who carry around these InTune-managed devices may be security-oriented, it's not their job, only an aspect of their job. Subscribing to Kolide is like assuming the device carrier and the security professional are peers, whereas in many, many cases they are not. You're in effect giving the end user, who may not be informed or educated enough, the status of someone authorized to make policy.<br />
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</p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-11314918523336842082021-12-29T09:34:00.002-05:002021-12-29T09:34:26.339-05:00SARS-CoV2: The Smartest Virus Ever! Part 2<p>This will be a short-ish one, a followup to <a href="https://iheartlibertarianism.blogspot.com/2021/12/sars-cov2-smartest-virus-ever.html">SARS-CoV2: The Smartest Virus Ever! </a><br />
</p><p>Uncle Mark said yesterday that we had a record-setting (reported) one day infection rate for COVID-19, 17% or something like that. Yes, that's quite high. The omicron variant is doing what viruses do, become better at spreading themselves. But as previously stated, although it spreads much more easily, thankfully its effects are markedly less severe. Along with this, in the same press conference, Uncle Mark said that the mask mandate is working, because hospitalizations are down.</p><p>Admittedly, credit for this thought goes to WBEN-AM host Brian Mazurowski, who presented this at the beginning of the 29-Dec-2021 "B-Maz and Beamer" show.</p><p>So wait...the purpose of the mask mandate was to reduce spreading of COVID-19. But you JUST said infection rates are record high. Again, holding to your control-the-public policy without any apparent logic behind it is eroding our confidence in you. Now...I don't think Mark Poloncarz has sinister intent, I really don't. But I don't understand his insistence on these mandates.</p><p>By the by, Uncle Mark also accused our County Comptroller of foul play by bringing up that the Erie County Health Commissioner got paid a LOT of money for handling the pandemic, particularly the overtime claimed. He went so far as to accuse <span><span>Stefan </span>Mychajliw</span> of antisemitism, simply because the Health Commissioner is Jewish. It's just deflection, Uncle Mark didn't address the amount, which is apparently more than anyone else in a similar job in NYS, just chose to throw around accusations, to the point of uttering profanity.<br /></p><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
<br />Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-85993945727879964812021-12-26T23:50:00.001-05:002022-02-27T12:29:48.883-05:00SARS-CoV2: The Smartest Virus Ever!<p>Look...I hate to sound like the latest right-wing zealot to spout governmental conspiracy theories about COVID-19, but in the past few months, the various governments under which I live seem to be making it easier and easier to conclude that. Still, I cannot lay claim to being a totally original thinker on this stuff; admittedly, a lot of my thinking has been shaped by what is on WBEN-AM and Premiere Networks (in particular, Clay and Buck). I apologize in advance if this seems a bit unorganized, there is just so much to say/write on such a wide variety of subjects that it's difficult to put them in any particularly good order.<br /></p><p></p><p>Let's just start getting to it by expanding on a comment made by WBEN's Tom Bauerle (paraphrased), and the title of this blog post:</p><blockquote><p>This virus has to be the most intelligent, smartest virus in history.<br /></p></blockquote><p>I live in Cheektowaga, NY, US, which is the suburb to the immediate east of Buffalo, which is in Erie County (or "EC" for short). Near the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, to my recollection, it was EC which imposed a 10 pm curfew. I understand their motivation: they wanted to limit human interaction, they didn't want people hanging out at the bars to the normal 4 am the next day as the legally required closing time, therefore less chance of spreading the virus. But why 10? I guess it's because this virus is so smart, it knows when 10 pm rolls around, and almost instantly becomes more communicable. There were limits on size of gatherings. Again, the virus is so incredibly smart, it knows the difference between 10 people gathering and 11. It also magically knows the difference between 50% occupancy and 51% occupancy.</p><p>I mean....I sort of get it. Most times, governement does indeed have really good intentions. But it needs some exposition.<br /></p><p>Let's just take the view back a notch or two, and think about what the fundamental purpose of government is supposed to be. First and foremost, it is the embodiment of the behaviors that a majority (plurality?) of its citizenry, or more succinctly put, the law. At the next level, it's what we agree we should not be allowed to do and what we should be obligated to do. For example, we all collectively agree it's quite wrong to take a human life, with the exception of self defense. We therefore have disincentives like taking away your personal freedom (imprisonment) if you somehow convince yourself you need to murder. Notice this doesn't prevent murder, it only heavily disincentivizes it. Similarly, government sets forth certain obligations that the citizenry is somewhat uninclined to do. Those who choose not to fulfill their lawful obligations are similarly punished for not meeting those obligations. An example might be paying taxes. If paying taxes were totally voluntary, the vast majority of people would likely not pay, but the thought of reprisals such as fines and jail compels most people to do it.</p><p>To bring this back around to an attempt at reducing COVID-19 spread, it seemed like good ideas at the time. Let's not fill public places to capacity, that will put more bodies in one place, therefore reduce the barriers for transmission from person to person. Let's not hang around each other for longer, because the longer we congregate, the more of a chance the virus has to hop from person to person. We do it this way because people, as individuals, are presumed not smart enough or motivated enough to do it on their own, that they need to be governed by the representatives of society, the constabulary, to do or not do things like congregate for the greater good of the society as a whole. And to that end, sometimes arbitrary limits have to be chosen, like 50% capacity, 10 or fewer people at once, or 10 pm curfew, to act as an easily understood and enforced limit.</p><p>The whole idea behind making these restrictions mandatory was in part in the interest of the government itself, to "flatten the curve" as the saying is. Erie County Medical Center for example did not want so many people to get so infected that they would be overrun by people all requiring a ventilator to survive. And then they would have to make some extremely unpleasant decisions, literally who would live and who would die due to lack of treatment resources. This is also by extension to limit the expenditure of finite resources such as Medicaid and Medicare. Again, the presumption is made that we are too dumb or too reckless if these decisions are left up to the individual, that in essence we can't be trusted to do the right things.</p><p>But along the way, we see government taking greater and greater liberties with our liberty. Take for example former Governor Cuomo. He wrote many executive orders under the emergency powers granted to him under the law. Several months later, many NY citizens expressed to their representatives that enough was enough, power/authority needed to be returned to the legislative branch, Uncle Andy can't go on pontificating like a monarch forever. Being a Democrat governor and having a basically Democrat legislature, nothing substantive was done, power was not returned. Oh, there was political theatre kind of like, "we told him he'd better back down!" But no, power was not really taken back, he still basically got to rule by fiat. Auntie Kathy is really not that different. And seemingly not that particularly smart either.</p><p></p><p>Take for example the edict that all medical personnel will be vaccinated, or they're out of a job. Wait...so, the very medical people who are trying to help reduce the suffering of people, and presumably have <b><u><i>FAR</i></u></b> greater medical knowledege than any governor or legislator, are not capable of making an informed decision as to whether they should be vaccinated or not? Are they actually somehow motivated to do evil to our society? They <u><i>wish</i></u> for our citizens to suffer? I find that extraordinarily tough to believe. NY is awfully big, and you're telling these people that in order to work at their chosen profession, they can't work in all of NYS? Look, not at all to belittle people who work at so-called unskilled jobs, but the somewhat harsh fact is that darned near anyone can do what you do with little training, you're interchangable. Not so much for the medical profession, it is not at all easy to become a licensed physican, nurse, or what have you. (And again, we have a goverment in place so that not anyone can claim to be a physician, we make sure you're qualified before you're allowed to work on people. We as a society have agreed that checking the qualifications of a physician before allowing them to do anything to us is just too burdensome and complex to do alone, so we have society do it for us and have licensures.)</p><p>At the same time, those in power have to realize the waning confidence we have in you.</p><p>You imposed restrictions on congregation and travel. Hello? I didn't think the US Constitution Amendment I was allowed to be suspended just because of viruses. Doesn't it apply at all times? I used to be rather annoyed at these proclamations for that reason. But then...well...let's just say, it came to light that certain cases of COVID-19 can be asymptomatic, that the person carrying it would have no idea they're infecting others. That tempered my anger quite a bit, and thought, yes, it was reasonable for society to impose this restriction because I was genuinely too dumb to decide for myself. Yes, I could be a dummy, not so smart. I can admit it.<br /></p><p>Ah, but later on, along came vaccines. The promise was that if you got vaccinated, you wouldn't have to wear a mask anymore, you could congregate to your heart's content, travel wherever you like, life would pretty much begin returning to normal. It seemed like we were starting to get it under control. Yay! In fact, government was stepping in and acting as our agent to make sure the developers of these vaccines were compensated out of public funds, to take away the objection that it was too expensive to get vaccinated. And I can somewhat support that, it's one of the very few things I think government can do to really, really help us. Again, we're mostly too self interested to willingly spend on vaccination help, a hypothetical "help the unvaccinated get vaccinated" charity of sorts. The caveat to that support, and the danger, is when the pharmaceutical companies have the economic incentive to push their wares as it were. (I know, that sounds like a typical "Big Pharma" opposition. It's not really intended as such.) I have heard of cases of death where the cause was listed as COVID-19, even though it was fairly obvious it was something more like heart failure or blunt trauma, simply because reimbursements would be different.</p><p>But now, it seems as if the goalposts are being moved on us. We now have booster shots. For now they're optional, but Auntie Kathy has put forth the idea, get ready for "fully vaccinated" to mean "boosted." Again, the implications run deep as this might mean even MORE medical professionals will be told to take a hike. Sadly, the US Supreme Court has ruled that these NY vaccination mandates are not unconstitutional, as in not against Amendment I's protections of religious freedom. I refer to the well reasoned, well written <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20211225073145/https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/21pdf/21a145_gfbi.pdf">dissent by Justice Neil Gorsuch</a>. It's these very acts of making a continuously changing legal landscape and be willing to throw fundamental freedoms out the window in the name of the pandemic that is really eroding our trust in you.</p><p>Now, I do find it necessary here to explain that not keeping up with developments and relying STRICTLY on the past is somewhat dangerous. While I generally like and agree with much of what Clay and Buck talk about, c'mon, guys, this needs to be tempered with a willingness to be flexible about recent revelations. But I do get ya. It seems like government will take any opportunity to usurp just a little more control, whenever they can, in the name of pandemic control. You do make a compelling argument though that it will be decreed that booster after booster will be necessary, and possibly at some point be legally required for certain circumstances (e.g., NY medical profession). There HAS to be a better defined end. We can't really go on like this indefinitely.<br /></p><p>I'm also quite miffed at how these fiefdoms of government are trying to exert influence whenever and wherever they think they can. I cite as an example that you cannot go to Highmark Stadium or KeyBank Center, which are EC owned properties, unless you're vaccinated, because EC's Uncle Mark said so. I was offered the chance to go to a Sabres game, but due to that edict, at the time I could not.</p><p>What really bugs me the most is that it seems we've already begun to go down the road where unvaccinated people are second-class citizens.</p><p>Again, we have to step back a couple of notches and ask the question, what is the end goal? Is our end goal really to inject people? Again, there is the economic incentive for "Big Pharma" to hawk their vaccine products (and get paid for them). But really, shouldn't the end goal be immunity? Vaccination is not the SOLE means of conferring immunity. Some sources state that the immunity from contracting COVID-19 and recovering from it is several times more effective than getting vaccinated. Not only that, I've even heard that getting vaccinated after recovering from COVID-19 <u><i>reduces</i></u> immune response in some people.</p><p></p><p>I had a severe illness lasting about 2 weeks in late Feb. 2020. The symptoms of it were influenza symptoms. At no point during that did I feel in grave danger, like not being able to get enough breath, but it was approaching that. All I remember is that for the first couple of days, my eyes hurt a little to move, and I did not wake up fully. I had a cough for months after that. It very well could have been COVID-19. I never had a formal test for it, but colloquially, virtually everyone I converse with about that episode seems to think it was. The timing seems to have been just too good for it not to have been, in their minds. But now that I have had my "Janssen jab" as I like to call it, I guess I'll never know. Any antibodies I have could have been from a COVID-19 infection, could have been from the vaccine. I don't know if medical science could tell the difference at this point.</p><p>Considering all the reports of side effects of getting vaccinated, such as injection site pain and being laid low for a couple of days, I really did not want to get vaccinated, partly due to that aforementioned belief that I had COVID-19 already and therefore natural immunity. Also, for a while now, I have had a sore upper left arm. Put those two together, and I really, really wanted to wait for my sore arm to heal up so that they could inject that. I did not want to add the pain of injection to something that has been so chronically sore, and I did not want them to inject my dominant arm. But alas, the let's go, Brandon we have as a President demanded the serfs in his fiefdom were to get vaccinated. Since where I work now is de facto a federal contractor, this has direct applicability to me.<br /></p><p style="margin-left: 40px; text-align: left;">I want to take an aside for a second to explain that I think I have been responsible for precisely three jobs in my entire over-half-century life. Every other job I've had has been the product of someone else's influence. Even delivering newspapers in my early teens is the result of a friend of mine recommending to the Courier Express that I be the one. I think Kwik Fill/United Refining Company of PA only hired me because my oldest sister recommended me. I think Radio Shack/Tandy only hired me because of the recommendation of my friend. Similarly, I think I only delivered for Domino's due to the influence of my friends. I only worked that summer for Al Boxall's Concessions due to one of my friend's urging. I never had to interview for Information First or for ExuCom because my friends and acquaintences ran them. I only worked at UCA&L/SSG/ClientLogic/Sitel because of urging of one of my college instructors (thank you, Vince Wood), and for a second stint because of a director level person I befriended in the first go around. No, the only jobs I really got for myself were, supervising the computer lab for a few hours per week in college, working for a few years for a guy I met at a mutual friend's wedding, and for Amazon when they first opened up their sortation center in Lancaster, NY. And the latter was frankly anyone who could show up on time and pass a drug test; I don't think they rejected too many folks for that one. I'm reasonably certain I would not be working where I am now unless that aforementioned friend I met at the wedding called me up when somebody left. (He had closed down his business and decided to work more conventional jobs instead of being self-employed.) I've applied for and been interviewed for many more jobs, but for whatever reasons, it was not to be my path. Jobs that I think I should have been perfect for, I have been rejected. I guess this is quite a long way of saying that for whatever reasons,
work is not particularly easy to find for me, seemingly more so than
average. So....I like to be warm...and dry...and not be hungry...so a job is particularly precious to me. Not having one is unsustainably not an option. Yes, I have enough savings that, barring once in a decade events like needing to buy a vehicle or replacing my furnace, I could live comfortably for several years. But again, that's not sustainable, long term. Anyways...enough of the aside.</p><p style="text-align: left;">So, much as I am not anti-vaccine at all, I had little choice but to get jabbed. I very highly doubt that my sore arm would have qualified as a medical exemption. I also looked at my company's religious exemption form. It wants an attestation signature from my spiritual leader. I think this presumes it would be an imam, a priest, a rabbi, a pastor, or similar. I am a nondenominational Christian. Sorry, my spiritual leader is Jesus Christ, so it's more or less impossible to get His signature for that form. Besides, as Justice Gorsuch points out, I don't think it needs to be any religion at all, just a sincerely held moral objection. But just the same, I hear that the objection of using fetal stem cell lines to develop the vaccines is the main objection by Catholics. However, I see on the Vatican's Web site that Pope Francis is even encouraging vaccination. (And He is said by Catholics to be infallible.) See, having at one time considered myself a Catholic, it's extremely tough for me to square that with the Vatican's pronouncement that it considers this research morally objectionable, and the only reason they think vaccination is morally acceptable is because there is no other vaccine available. This implies that the pandemic poses a greater danger to the faithful. This is the sort of thing that leads me to declare myself nondenominational.<br /></p><p style="text-align: left;">What I am is pro-vaccine choice. But apparently, according to a few lexicographers such as Merriam-Webster, I am an anti-vaxxer merely because I oppose a mandate. That's just blatantly incorrect.</p><p style="text-align: left;">This let's go, Brandon mandate is just wrong from the word "go." It's logically ludicrous. Again, what is the goal? As before, the real goal should be immunity, not vaccination. But even trying to consider the goal of "vaccines for everyone so we can have herd immunity" falls painfully flat. There is no explanation as to why OSHA needs to enforce this for the magical number of 100 or more employees. Again, it is the most smart virus in human history if it knows that you work with 99 or fewer people and therefore pass you by. In my own case, it's ludicrous to mandate I get a vaccine; I work out of my home, I have ZERO virus-transmitting interaction with vendors, contractors, my coworkers, or even the public. It's medical insurance company theatre, with the only audience being the federal government. This virus is also so extremely smart that it knows that you're unemployed or retired, and won't bother you if you are. Otherwise, the mandate wouldn't be for ONLY people working for companies of 100 employees or more, it would be for EVERYONE. To me, there is no sane way around that; it's either everyone medically eligible, with Amendment I exceptions, or no mandate at all.</p><p style="text-align: left;">Yet another thing that makes no logical sense is Uncle Mark's mandate that masks be worn in all indoor public places. The stated goal is to reduce the COVID-19 spread so that hospitals are not overrun with new cases. Let's start with its start. If it's so darned important, why was it not enacted immediately? Why wait until 6 am the next day? If the goal is to reduce new hospital admissions, why is the criterion for the mandate to end a tentative date, and not when admissions numbers drop?</p><p style="text-align: left;">Even the prospect of wearing a mask is dubious at best. The majority of sources I have read or heard state that the gear that everyone goes around in is so ineffective (maybe 5%, 10% at ABSOLUTE BEST) as to be negligible in containing coronavirus. You'd have to have everyone in an N-95 to even approach being effective. The typical mask is little more than a chin diaper. Besides, the way a lot of people wear it is nothing short of knee-slapping hilarious. They must think they never breathe through their noses at all, because they're not covered at all.</p><p style="text-align: left;">Last year, Uncle Andy was urging (heh, oddly not mandating) everyone to wear a mask. What the heck, make it of whatever colors you like, put whatever artwork (or advertising?) you like on it. What's the big deal? Well, I'll tell you what the big deal is. Apparently, Andy, you've never had to wear corrective lenses in your life. If you did, you'd realize that especially fall through spring, the very act of breathing will fog them up, making it impossible to see at all clearly. Could you be that daft?</p><p style="text-align: left;">What's even more funny about Uncle Mark's mandate is some towns and villages, primarly on county borders (such as Marilla), whose heads of government publicly said, yeah, nah, we're not doing that, we're not eforcing jack, good luck with that. We're not going to force our businesses to lose business due to the fact potential customers can just travel a few more minutes down the road into, say, Wyoming County, and shop there. It became even MORE hilarious when Auntie Kathy likewise decreed a state-wide masking mandate, with the responsibility for enforcement being the counties. And several county sheriffs' offices likewise said publicly, yeah, about that...we have no intention of enforcing your silly mandate.</p><p style="text-align: left;">It has also struck me as almost Marxist-Leninist to call keeping spread out as "social distancing." The implication to me is, "hey, I don't want to be antisocial. I'd better do it for the community good." While that is kind of true, I have always thought of it as "personal distancing," and putting the word "social" in it was a weird turn of phrase, but sort of carefully chosen. Besides...it's a joke how it is being followed by a LOT of people. They are either woefully bad at judging what 2 meters or 6 feet is, or they just don't really give a damn. People stand IN THE MIDDLE OF aisles that are 2 or 3 meters wide. How am I supposed to keep 2 meters away from you if the aisle is not at least 4 meters wide? I ALWAYS try to be mindful of where I am, and my surroundings. Stores were not built for personal distancing, the aisles were spaced for reasonable density of product. As a result, many firms decided to make all their aisles one way. People also seemed to not be able to grasp that and follow it.<br /></p><p style="text-align: left;">What even further erodes confidence in public officials is the fact that even vaccinated, and if applicable, boosted people are dying of COVID-19. Yet the media narrative continues to pound that this is a disease of the unvaccinated. Guess what? It is therefore now proven fact that contracting the disease is not the sole province of the unvaccinated. This again does not take into account that a lot of immunity is conferred by recovering from the disease, but it is nonetheless possible in <u>all</u> these cases to get, transmit, and sometimes die of COVID-19. I will have to emphasize, though, that either natural immunity or vaccination statistically does help quite a bit. It's not all doom and gloom for the vaccinated, it's just not the panacea that the media seem to think it is.</p><p style="text-align: left;">Another erosion of the public trust occurs when you use misleading statistics. From the very beginning of the South African announcement of the next significant mutation, the omicron variant, yes, it's somewhat concerning that it is many more times communicable than the delta variant. But at the same time it is much, much less virulent. Virtually all research since has proven this to be the case. So why do you continue to try to justify your actions and mandates solely on infection rates? If, for example, 1000 more people contract delta, and 60 of them need hospitalization, but when 1000 more people get omicron, yet only 15 of them need hospitalization, what's the difference? That base rate of 1000 new infections is meaningless without the companion severity statistic. Omicron is 4 times less of a problem in our example. You need to start thinking and talking more in terms of what matters, namely our capacity to handle it. You're making us conjure up the old phrase, lies, damned lies, and statistics.</p><p style="text-align: left;">Speaking of statistics, why is it that the "more free" states, like FL, TX, TN, etc. are having much less infection rates now, but in states with more controls imposed seem to be worse off? Could it be that their more hands-off approach is working better, that initially letting people be more free has had the side effect of more people being naturally immune?<br /></p><p style="text-align: left;"></p><p style="text-align: left;">Anyhow...there's really no good way to wrap this up. As mentioned in the beginning, there are so many interrelated subjects to cover, there is no particularly good way I know of to organize it all. The thing to keep in mind is that although control measures seemed by most to be the thing to do early on, we are getting awfully weary of your explanations of why you think we need to continue to live such restricted lives.<br /></p><hr /><p>
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br /><br />"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
</p><p></p><p>By the by....in case you couldn't tell, "Uncle Andy" would refer to former NY Governor Andrew Cuomo, "Auntie Kathy" to current Governor Kathy Hochul (pronounced like "HOE-cull"), and "Uncle Mark" to EC Excecutive Mark Poloncarz.</p><p><br /></p>Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-46626001053472347152019-12-23T19:34:00.004-05:002019-12-28T13:56:25.547-05:00(updated) I Am Eligible for a General Class Amateur Radio LicenseThis should be a quick one, possibly with an update after the initial post.<br />
<br />
This past Monday evening, 16-Dec-2019, I went to T-S-K Electronics in North Tonawanda, NY, and took the tests for FCC Technician Class, then General Class, Amateur Radio license. Unfortunately, the Volunteer Examiners (VEs) are not permitted to show you which questions were answered wrong, but they will tell you how many you missed (2 for Tech, 5 for General in my case). When talking about license grants, my Technician course instructor (Kevin Kedzierski<span class="st">, </span>WA2FKV) said the VEs will send out the documents that night, and should start to be processed by the Postal Service on Tuesday. Kevin's prediction was that I would have my call sign by Friday (20-Dec). Well...not to be; although I have proven my authorization to operate, it's not official until a call sign shows up on the FCC's licensing site. (That's actually one of the questions in <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20190517144306/http://www.ncvec.org/page.php?id=369">the Technician Class question pool</a>, how soon after passing your exams are you allowed to get on the air, and the (correct) answer is, when your license grant appears in the <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20191115100316/https://wireless2.fcc.gov/UlsApp/UlsSearch/searchLicense.jsp">ULS database</a>.)<br />
<br />
Before someone takes the test(s), they may create an FCC Registration Number (FRN), in lieu of using one's Social Security Number (which I have done). It is that account which you may log into to download a PDF of your license for printing. I've been logging in virtually all week just to see if perchance my application has been processed. Although...when you pass, you get a document called a Certificate of Successful Completion of Examination (CSCE). One of the blanks you can fill in on that form is an email address, which I think the FCC will use once they have made your license grant. Every time I hear that I have new email, I keep hoping that it's the FCC, but at the moment I'm a little skeptical, because one, it's hand-printed on the form (and people screw up my surname, Philipps, all the time, too many Ls and not enough Ps, which is part of the address), and two, because I suspect they wouldn't do anything on weekends (it's Saturday as I write this).<br />
<br />
So...I wait for things to happen, over which I have little control obviously. But still, I'm thinking almost like The Chipmonks, with their "hurry, Christmas, hurry past."<br />
<br />
UPDATE: 27-Dec-2019, the FCC processed my license application. Hello, world, from KD2TFB.<br />
<br />
<hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br />
<br />
"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-87818278094469683152019-12-17T00:53:00.001-05:002021-12-04T14:12:42.752-05:00Knowing the Details Is a Lot Better Than NotI apologize in advance for a bit of rambling, but there's just no good way I know of to write everything I want. <br />
<br />
It's one of those unfortunate things that's money-driven (of the many, I know, I know...). In order to display ODB II, you have to have, you guessed it, a display. For almost all passenger vehicles, the only display available is plugging a scan tool into the ODB II port. Boy, I with that wasn't so.<br />
<br />
Let's flash back for a moment to when I owned a Plymouth Acclaim. This thing was a beauty with respect to ODB II. Turn the key to the run position three times within 5 seconds of being off, and the malfunction indicator lamp (MIL), a.k.a. "'check engine' light," would start flashing 2 digit codes, and end with the pseudocode 55. Of course, unless you have a ready reference (thank goodness <b>these</b> days for DuckDuckGo, Bing, Google, Yahoo!, etc., but not back then, as well as for cellular data) you'd still be in the dark as to what the two digit codes mean. But at least you can memorize a few of either the more dire or the more benign ones.<br />
<br />
Today I had a little bit of a scare. At first I noticed a light was on on my dash which ordinarily <i>isn't</i> on. I don't know why, but for no particular reason, my mind first interpreted it as a brake warning light. But then on closer inspection a few seconds later, I realized it was the MIL. The first thought after that was that the motor could refuse to run at any time, and I'd be stuck. I happened to be on my way to my Amateur Radio FCC license exams (hey! Got two wrong on Technician and five on General, so I am effectively a General and just awaiting my call sign) so was a tad worried about how I would get home (although to a large extent, it's less of a worry because I'm an AAA Plus member). Would it even start after my tests? Would it conk out on the way home?<br />
<br />
Turns out, no, it didn't, although my trip home was longer because I decided to avoid a highway (I-290 east for locals to Amherst, NY). Ironically, before going to my exams, I talked, in person, to the manager of the aforementioned repair shop about coming in on the 19th for other work (brakes, battery, and oil change). We had also talked about the possible causes of poor fuel economy, oh the irony (stay tuned :-)). I was thinking, should I just drive the car to the shop and walk home? Geez, Louise, who knows what's wrong? I may not even make it <u>that</u> far. But then after I got home and settled a while, I remembered...a long, long time ago, I can still remember how I--made a trip to Harbor Freight. And I knew if I had a chance, to use that ODB II reader tool I bought....OK, OK, enough with the unrhymed "American Pie" parody :-). I had to think for a second, where I might have put it, lo those many years ago.<br />
<br />
Eventually the memory cells kicked in long and hard enough so that I could retrieve said ODB II scan tool, and I did hie to the waiting Elantra with it. Drat. I bought the tool when I had a Lumina sedan; I didn't know eactly where Hyundai chose to hide their connector. But eventually I found it. But alas...it'd also been so long ago that I did not remember how to use the darned thing! Back into the house I did go, once again to consult first the product documentation, and then Google University. Hint: it doesn't quite work right unless the key is in the run position. (Hey! Shout out to you Cen-Tech manual writers! How's about bolding some "quick start on using our product" instructions on that one? I gave up after trying to read your "how to use this tool" section). One nasty neck kink later trying to look up under my dash for the ODB II connector, and I was in like Flynn.<br />
<br />
Hmmmm....the display shows "A/T". Oh, no...my transmission is toast? Well, no...that's just a discovered "query-able" endpoint as I might call it (not sure what the formal term would be; I tend to think in more general IT/client/serer terms as that is my profession). Thankfully there was nothing to read under "A/T". "Engine" on the other hand...that was a P0455. OK I'll spare you the extra Googling and just tell you it's a large evaporative system leak.<br />
<br />
So no, it was highly unlikely the engine would just quit. It would cause a decrease in fuel economy, because those fuel vapors are no longer being collected in the canister for that purpose, they'd just go, unburned, wasted, into the air. If I did give into my fears, I would have walked home in the mid December cold for nothing.<br />
<br />
Alas, the reason information is withheld is no doubt economic, possibly in two ways. First, it's more expensive to incorporate a display into a car, at least one from the 2008 era when this car was made. Not only that, but then there would need to be extra time for programmers to make that display useful, much as Plymouth had to have done. And people's time costs money. Second, you think some segments of the car repair industry wants such empowering information? I hate to be cynnical, but Idunno, there could be big repair sort of like there is big oil and big pharma.<br />
<br />
So...armed with the knowledge of what the implications of a P0455 are, I can more confidently go on and do some errands, and not...welll....cower in fear? Maybe that's a little harsh. But nonetheless, once again, knowledge is power.<br />
<br />
<hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br />
<br />
"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3626208236709964542.post-4664314360934037232019-09-27T20:38:00.000-04:002019-09-27T20:38:23.212-04:00Amazon Is Getting Really Smart: Amazon LockerAbout a year or so ago, while shopping on Amazon, I first saw a delivery option of "<a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20190927221716/https://www.amazon.com/b/?node=6442600011&ref=locker_short_url">Amazon Locker</a>," or for the rest of this post, "AL" for short. If you've ever heard of the term "porch pirate," you'll know that this <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There_ain%27t_no_such_thing_as_a_free_lunch">no-additional-cost</a> service was designed to combat just that. I don't think I have to worry about this personally because of the character of the neighborhood I live in, but I imagine there are quite a few people to which this happens all too frequently (<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xoxhDk-hwuo">thank you, oh so much, Mark Rober</a>). (OK, OK...I'll admit, crime can happen anywhere, so no neighborhood is totally safe or free of it.) There's quite a few things that I have ordered that make me worry about someone coming along and just helping themselves to it, not to mention leaving cardboard boxes out in the rain (which is another problem AL solves).<br />
<br />
With Amazon's acquisition of Whole Foods, that was a natural choice for one of my area's first ALs. It is really nice and fairly well secured (6 digit code required for retrieval). I have retrieved many an item from there over the past months, but going to Whole Foods is kind of out of my way. So imagine my surprise when I was wandering through Rite Aid on my way home from my employer's office looking for something to treat my nascent cold and I see an Amazon logo.<br />
<br />
What's more, there was a label "Aldo" on it. Aldo. Why "Aldo" of all things? This is the <u><b><i>really</i></b></u> smart part: it looks like newer ALs have names. Amazon is thinking I'll do exactly what I did, seeing a new (to me) AL, go home and search for it on Amazon's site. When I did, I could correlate the name seen in person on the Locker with the one on the Web site. And that's a good thing too. I would have guessed Rite Aid's address to be on Sheridan Dr. Since it turns out it's actually on Evans St., I would have been looking for "Sheridan" in the listing of search results for ZIP code 14221. But there it is in the list: "Amazon Hub Locker - Aldo". Also in the listing is Karriem, Langu, Minerva, and Aliva. I don't know what the variety of names that they use is, but if each has a unique name, all the better. As well, consider that for my part of the world, these names are not common, but they look enough like names for them to be at least a little memorable. You're not wondering, was the name I saw John? Nancy? Bob? Sally? Greg? Diane? Mike? Darlene? No, at least for me it's esoteric, so possibly more memorable.<br />
<br />
But alas, as you might imagine, there are some minor downsides. For
one, there are limitations on the size of things that will ship there,
which you will find at checkout time. Certain classes of goods (<span class="a-list-item">hazardous materials, shipped from other countries, etc.</span>)
cannot be shipped to one. Sometimes at the time of your order, it will
be predicted that there will be no more locker space left. You're
automatically limited by the hours of the retailer, but in Rite Aid's
case, that's 0800 to 2100, quite a wide range indeed. You have 3 days
to pick up, after which time your order goes back. At least at my Whole
Foods, I've never gotten the barcode on an iPhone or 8" Android tablet
to work. But all these niggles pale in comparison to the assurance that stuff will not be setting in my driveway, open to anyone who might see it and be inclined to help themselves, as well as generally being guaranteed the boxes will not be soggy. (well...you never know due to package leaks, flooding, overhead plumbing gone wrong, etc.)<br />
<br />
<br />
I hope as many businesses as possible strike deals with Amazon for these alternate pickup arrangements (looks like they also have "Amazon Hub Counter," which as it sounds, you pick up from a person instead of just electronically unlocking a locker). Then it won't matter much where I'm going, there will be one close by. The businesses can benefit too. Like Rite Aid, put it far from the entrance, and you now have potential customers seeing your wares as they go to pick up their Amazon stuff. There's still those impulse buys that will happen, even if it's cheaper on Amazon :-).<br />
<br />
<br /><hr />
English is a difficult enough language to interpret correctly when its rules are followed, let alone when the speaker or writer chooses not to follow those rules.<br />
<br />
"Jeopardy!" replies and randomcaps <i><b>really</b></i> suck!
Joe Philippshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17956826353185091299noreply@blogger.com