Where I don't care what others think

Comcastic

June 23rd, 2008 Posted in Life, Problems, Stupid People | 4 Comments »

So its been 6 days since Concast came and switched my family over to one of their triple play bundles. It took about 1 week just to figure out how to order the thing. Their website (my preferred method of ordering things) does not take into account the fact that we are existing customers of internet and television. Several phone calls later I ended up getting some bundle. I’m still not sure what it is, but the first bill will explain that to me.

I wasn’t here for most of the install, but I felt the technician was pretty knowledgable. He left without finishing the installation of my EMTA (the voip modem), but I felt qualified to install the battery and clean up the wiring. I disliked how Comcast activated Voicemail for me, I would have liked to opt into that feature instead of defaulting to it. I called and the lady said she would cancel it, but I have no real way of confirming this. My biggest problem has been with the TV and the digital cable box we have. I was really looking forward to getting a digital output to my digital tv, be it DVI, component, or HDMI. Of course the box they left me with had 2 outputs, composite and RF [standard cable]. That wasn’t exactly taking advantage of my tv that had gone for years with a fuzzy signal. I was also interested in getting the free HD channels that I used to get, like my local ABC affiliate 40-1 (840 on the box). The box I had couldn’t handle passing this signal through, so I called comcast. I gave up the first few attempts. Customer Support representatives said that I had to pay to get HD channels or I couldn’t get them. I would remind them about these free channels, which seem to be the exception in Comcast’s channel lineup. They have a special footnote that reads something like “HD capable hardware required”, whereas the pay HD channels say to the effect of “Extra HD service required”. I wanted the hardware, not the service. No one seemed to understand me. I would even settle for not getting the HD channels, but at least getting a digital output from my digital cable box.

I was finally told by a representative that I could get an HD capable box for $3 a month. That was a pretty acceptable price, under $40 a year. She told me to bring my current box to my local Comcast office and they could switch it out. If it was only that simple…. I showed up at my local Comcast office in Westfield during my lunchbreak. It was packed. At least 5 people ahead of me in line, and the current customer was trying to sign up for a bundle. Only 1 representative was working. I waited my 40 minutes and got up there to explain my situation. Since the account is under my mom’s name, and I don’t look like my mom, the representative told me she would have to call my mom. I informed her I was permitted to act on her behalf for all Comcast related decisions. I told her I had the account number, a bill, and paperwork from my mom (like her SSN) to prove that I was able to do this. This lady would have none of this. I had waited in line for 40 minutes for nothing. My mom was out to lunch, so of course no one was here to authorize me as a representative of her.

I went back after work got out that day (in a rush because I had to be home to make it to the bank before 6). Luckily another representative was there. She was much nicer, and believed I was who I said I was. I told her I wanted a box with digital output for $3 a month. This lady hadn’t heard of such a box, nor anything for $3 a month. I happened to have a printout of my chat with the Comcast.com support representative, and she acknowledged that I had been quoted $3 a month, but she wasn’t really able to do anything about that. I told her to just give me the digital box, and I’ll call someone at Comcast to try and sort this misunderstanding out. We’ve now got the box, and it works fine. My mom has only screamed at it once, when she turned the volume up too loud before turning the surround sound on. I have now bypassed the surround sound, she can’t handle it. But back on my Comcast story. I don’t know exactly what I’ll get billed the first month, but I have a feeling it will be like $8-$9 a month for the digital box (which gets me the HD channels).

I’m interesting in resolving this. If that means I pay $3 a month than that’s great; but if I have to pay the $8 ot $9 a month than that is OK too… as long as the rep that quoted me that knows she made a mistake. Of course calling 1-800-COMCAST got me know where. When I was at the Payment Center in Westfield, there was a local number I could call to talk to someone, but the two representatives at the window had “accidentally” placed their name tags over the last 5 digits (413-4 was all I could see). I plan to look over this month’s bill and figure out what we’re actually paying for, compared to what we actually get.

Today we had our first major outage, the cable lines across the street got fried in a thunderstorm so we were without internet, tv, and phone. It was under an hour before Comcast got everything working (to my knowledge at least). We’ll see how it goes.

Continuing the comsumerist movement, I’ve got to get a new phone sooner rather than later. The battery lasts 1 or 2 phone calls max before it died. Katie may be switching providers in July, so I’m trying to hold off and see. I also think the new iPhone coming out may help adjust some of Verizon’s prices. It looks like Andriod is at least 6 months out, boo hoo.

Yesterday my dad turned 62, and to celebrate we went to a Yankees game at Yankee Stadium. My dad has been a Yankee fan since before he was 10, so its a pretty long time. He’s never been to Yankee Stadium, and wanted to go before they closed it down to open the new one. We had decent seats to the right of home base, 15-20 rows back. Paul Simon was sitting in the row infront of us. My mom was trying to freak out and wanted to call people and take pictures and everything, but since she gave up both her cell phone and camera for me to carry, I would have none of it. (Mom didn’t want to deal with the security people if they asked her about those dangerous cell phones and cameras. Its an everyday occurance that someone carries dangerous weapons in seemingly harmless technology to a baseball game.) He was there to enjoy the game, and if he wanted to be bothered with fans he would have brought his guitar or have broken into song or something. I also didn’t really know who he was until I got home and read the internet. The Yankees won, my mom is terrible at being in an urban enviroment, dad decided he would never come visit me if I was in a city due to the driving, and Kevin wore an orange ponch. I had a rain coat.

In other news, I have been helping Katie look at laptops for college. We’ve narrowed it down to a few choices, and I’m confident she’ll end up with a super one. I expect to repeat the process for my brother when he’s ready, but I might not make a spreadsheet that computes the value per dollar for each choice. This reminds me I need to replace my small form factor pc at some point. I’m between a Mac Mini, one of those little Linux boxes, and another Shuttle Barebones.

I’ve finished battling with online banking for now. All the banks recognize me online now, and I think the basic features I want are working. Polish National Credit Union ended up making me a new account and just abandoning the old one, so I have yet another username to remember. Its not too bad though, unlike their web interface… now thats awful!

Time to break from writing and start doing. I’ll be back later.

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Statistics after graduation

June 13th, 2008 Posted in IT | 1 Comment »

I’m watching a South Hadley School Commitee meeting on my local cable channel right now and they’re talking about some statistics regarding graduating seniors. The guidance department always generates numbers like 50% of seniors are attending a certain college, another precentage are going on to work, and some joining the military. I wish I had the numbers to share, but I missed that part of the meeting.. and its really nowhere to be found online.

This year it seems the commitee is worried about a decreasing number of students attending 4 year colleges. The Guidance Department spokesperson offer the fact that many students move on from 2 year schools to 4 year schools in an effort to justify the shift in numbers, citing increaseing financial pressure on the middle class. I don’t doubt that those circumstances may be the case, but I’ve always found the method this information is gathered to be very strange. I think graduating seniors are surveyed twice ever. Once before they leave, and once in December of the following year when the come back to speak about their experiences. Every year guidance says how challenging it is to get students to respond to their surveys to collect accurate data. I also know that only sampling a population twice isn’t a very accurate way of capturing the results of 12 years of education.

What I’ve never seen the high school done is contact students in a way thats convient for them. I remember getting my survey from the high school.. via mail. My mom kept it on top of my bureau until I got home and was able to fill it out. I wouldn’t expect every parent to do that, and how many kids actually know how to work the mail these days. The high school should really embrace technology to make this process much easier for them, but more importantly for the students.

Social networks like Facebook and MySpace make it very easy to track classmates. If you’re not “friends” with them, you could at least send them a message or identify what their current network is. I know that if I was sent a survey electronically to my email or facebook I would respond. I would probably respond to a survey 10 years from now. I doubt I’m completely alone. Sure, you won’t get 100% participation, but there are lots of people out there who will take 2 minutes to answer 5 questions if they know what its about.

I’m not saying graduates should be placed on a SPAM mailing list to send surveys out every few years, but social networks are keeping our social graphs from high school for some time after our graduation. I’m still friends with many people from South Hadley High School that I haven’t seen in years.

There is no miracle solution to get data from people after they graduate, but if you try to collect it in a way thats friendly to them… you’re certainly more likely to get something back. If I were incharge of implementing this, I might do a few things. 1: Get a facebook group going. Most schools already have something like this going on. 2. Create a 1 page web based survey. Something dead simple that takes under 5 minutes to figure out. 3. Distribute that web survery to members of the group. Have friends pass it along. If you want to get really fancy, attach some reward and send it out pyramid-scheme style. Boom. Instant data.

I’m going to check my email. I doubt there is anything there is any survey there asking if I’ve graduated my two year school yet, or if I’m still attending my four year college.

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Bleach

June 11th, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

I think my mom is trying to kill us. She just cleaned the bathroom, and whatever she did was producing a terrible bleach-like odor. I almost evacuated to the basement of the house, though I didn’t take the time to compare the gas’s density to that of air to see if the basement was indeed the safe place to go. I think I’m ok for now, Kevin turned the bathroom fan on which seems to be clearing up the problem.

There are a few things I feel qualified to do, some of which I feel I am an authority on. When I feel qualified to do something, sometimes I feel like its my right to do so. I dislike it when people assume that since I have expressed no previous qualifications or might not be the first person that comes to mind, that I am completely unqualified. It just frustrates me sometimes when I feel like I should do something and no one else wants or expects me to. Ya know?

Right now I am very frustrated at some code I’m working on. Its being completely uncooperative, and its not the easiest to debug. The current implementation is very obfuscated, which goes against my usual technique of making things as clear and as easy as possible, even if I have to sacrifice some coding technique in the process. I have an idea how to get things working, but its a lame fix. Stupid programming languages. I do have a project I want to try in rails again, I just wish I didn’t have to plan so much before programming with rails. I feel like I have the skills to build a basic application, but I don’t have the skills to cleanly build on to that application as I develop. My plan is to spec everything out first and then build it, instead of my spec as you go plan.

My aunt just got a facebook and requested me as a friend. I cannot decline her, because we do know each other.. but I would be uncomfortable with her sharing some information back with my mom. Its a tricky thing, I think I’m going to set up one of those limited view things for her. Those are a lot of work to setup on facebook, I wish I could see my profile and click a X or something to close boxes to configure that view.

I was lucky enough to get invited into DropBox. Its a neat program to facilitate sharing files between computers automatically. If anyone wants an invite I have a few to share. Just let me know!

I’ve got to run, I’ll be back later!

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