11 Sleeps Until Christmas
- lunch today
- trim the tree on saturday
- pre-christmas party on sunday
- work christmas next thursday
- family christmas next saturday
- family christmas on christmas day
- family christmas on boxing day
Blogged with Flock
Blogged with Flock
Blogged with Flock
Tags: Iotum, Facebook Free Conference Calls, iPod, iTouch, Touch
Upgrading to Flock 1.0.3 completely changed my morning, transforming it into a lovely experience - full of balloons and ponies and candy floss.Wow - why did I wait! I’ve been using an older 0.09 version, stubbornly.New Flock, supercharged Flock, has just rocked my socks off with it’s integration of Facebook.
It can track and show and remind me of all sorts of neat tidbits about my friends.It does a nutty good job of media, blog editing and even the main *My World* default start page is good, I’ve got to admit. Tracking stuff in an RSS reader, recently viewed sites and Flickr accounts.
I grabbed the screenshot on the left with just a *print screen* and pasted it into the Flock blog editor - and magical things happened - a Flickr dialog box opened, and asked me a few things, and then the Flock editor turned the screen capture into a .JPG, uploaded it to Flickr and referenced it here! Can you believe that?!?!? I’m not even kidding.
I know - I know - it’s a big step - after all, most folks have just recently gotten brave enough to switch up IE for Firefox. But whoa - Flock Rocks. I wouldn’t lead you astray. I even like it more than Opera. (Sorry Opera - seeing some incompatibility issues still)
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I toast you - you priceless, amazing, beautiful, hilarious, feisty and ferociously loyal woman. With a great, lovely glass of red wine. I know you are approving of the vin rouge.
You, craver of life and adventures.
You of the contagious, infectious laugh and gentle touch.
You, champion of what is true and right and good.
You, fighter of evil and no-goodniks.
You, not afraid to stand up for what you believe in, and for who you believe in; consequences be damned.
You, scoffer of politics, and flaunter of goodness. You, possessor of confidence and conviction.
You, fearless speaker, fearless mentor and fearless friend. You bring out the best in everyone, and you don’t even mean to. With your laugh, your touch and your spirit, you have the magic gift that makes everyone feel smarter, braver, prettier, stronger, faster and happier - just knowing you makes people simply better persons.
Today you move from present tense to past tense. And that is a terribly shitty, yes, utterly shitty tense to have to move to. It matters not. You will always be in the present to all the people who love you .
Love,
Jules
I've got it bad.
iPod Anticipation. But thanks to Iotum's Free Conference Call Application on Facebook, I'm going to be set up nicely! I WON!!!!
It was karma. I was looking for a reason to try out Free Conference Calls - and voila! Impetus, fate, incentive - you name it, the bells all rang a few weeks ago. I set up a conference call with my boss! On Facebook! Nothing like testing and playing with technology. I'm fairly certain it's in my job description. :-) Fairly.
Alec Saunders has more of the details - it's impolite for a gurl to toot her own horn too much. :-) What can I say - the Free Conference Call Application completely rocked my socks off. Thank you Alec!!!!!
Christmas is nutty. It’s a perfectly good excuse to buy lots of lovely pressies, and make sure that something gets tucked away for yourself as well. Heck, the shopping is good, the dollar is strong and more often than not, the price is right.
I am a big fan of The Funky Flea - and am waiting patiently (or not so patiently, as I am Instant Gratification Girl) for an outstanding quilt.
This afternoon the Canadian Minister of Industry, Jim Prentice, released the rules that will govern the 2008 wireless spectrum auction. This auction will help determine the new entrants to the wireless (cell phone) industry in Canada.
Last week, CBC (the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) aired a segment of Marketplace that delved into the intricate, technical dance required to achieve broadband speeds in for internet services in Canada. Marketplace is more of a consumer advocate, anti-corporate expose show than anything else, and it’s often a delightful bit of entertainment, wrapped up in good-to-know news bits.
You know you are mainstream when you are featured, either negatively or positively on Marketplace. ;-) What you don’t want to have is Wendy Mesley or Erica Johnson sniffing around your recycling.
The Marketplace investigators hit the streets of Toronto (albeit, a very old street, where you can tell that the squirrels have had the past few decades to wreak havoc with copper phone lines) to interview a variety of folks who have *high speed* internet services, but are stuck with low speed downloads.
Erica Johnson managed to snag an unsuspecting Bell spokesperson to speak to the disparate speeds, and the marketing use of “up to” in selling broadband internet services… The Bell rep didn’t stand a chance. Her next step was to call Bell tech support, to see if she couldn’t resolve the speed issue with a wee upgrade or tweak. Alas, it’s the 21st century, and tech support has dropped to the level of fast food servers in most cases. Nuff said. Hey - I was in tech support, but in the ’90s. It was different then. Erica was able to finally reach a 2nd level technician, who was able to confirm that the slow speeds with Bell were a direct result of the resident being FAR from the Bell C.O. Of course, they didn’t spell it out like that, but that was the general jist.
The Marketplace coverage was fairly decent. Of course, they didn’t play fair with Bell, but that just makes better viewing pleasure for the folks at home. They did indeed share a few of the gotchas of trying to get high speed, [computer hardware, quality of installed copper or co-ax lines into your house, your distance to the service provider’s high speed equipment, how many folks in your neighbourhood are on the internets at the same time] and if even 15% of the watchers have a better understanding that it’s more than just the *service provider* who is responsible for the speed, or lack thereof, then I believe their mission has been a success.
Funny - over at the CBC’s website for Marketplace, there have been 155 comments left so far in response to the Broadband Internet episode. Ranging from hard core tech folks poking holes in most of the story, to quite a few irate folks complaining about Erica Johnson’s faux pas of driving and talking on a cell phone. The comments are even better than the original story. Such is life.
Over the weekend, the wiz and I were gallavanting through various different electronics retailers on the way to eat massive quantities of wings. You can’t make this kind of stuff up, really. They were going to be really good wings.
We were on the quest for Guitar Hero 3 (which we have since discovered are completely sold out in North America, let alone Canada. The only way to get it is via the ebay grey market - which we did.) Regardless, I was able to get my hands on a snappy Jabra bluetooth earpiece for the wiz for christmas, and yes, I’m convinced he will approve, as he walked it up to the cash register at Best Buy for me.
The checkout line was immense. I grinned. I’m not good at checkout lines, and if it hadn’t been for the fact that I had the last Jabra in the store in my hot little hands, we would have dumped it and headed on to the wings. Really good wings.
Still, I was getting close.
One of the cashiers hollered over the din of the crowd - Credit and Debit, Credit and Debit at this cash.
I made my way to the cashier - and again, he confirmed - Credit or Debit? Sure, I said, in a confused sort of way. And then asked: credit or debit - that covers just about everything - what’s the other option? The cashier replies: Cash. I choke: Good god, I say, that doesn’t count, no one has cash!
The cashier reples: The Russians do. The Russians have the cash.
Ok.
Blink.
I stand corrected, considering that I don’t have any cash, and I’m not Russian. That cashier must be onto something.
I realized this weekend, after spending countless hours waiting for my home PC to slice and dice images for a project I’m working on, maybe it’s time to think about a new computer?
Once I tallied up the total time spent on the project (and I’m still only 1/2 done), I realized I could have been complete in a weekend if I had an Apple.
Gulp.
Dare I consider the possibiities?
I’m looking for an iMac G5 - it can be used, of course, I don’t need to drink from the Chalice of Macintosh just yet…. i’d like to dip my toes in though.
Throughout the whole film it was one tense scene after tense scene. The continuous thoughts of both the Wiz and I were ” Ohmygod, do we have enough health insurance”? Only to have to remind ourselves continuously that as Canadians, we are covered. Completely covered.
We have a few challenges processing international orders, so I hope you’ll be able to help me with some additional information. Can you provide me with the name, telephone number (usually found on the back of the card), and location of the bank that issues your card? Thanks, that will be very helpful. We are not able to start processing your order until we receive this information.Also, because of the strict security guidelines issued recently by Visa and MasterCard, we need to ask you for additional identity verification information based on the large dollar amount of this purchase. If you could also fax us a copy of the credit card you are using (front and back) and a photocopy of corresponding photo ID, that would allow us to process the order much more quickly. Our fax number is 801-XXX-XXXX. Please do not email this information—-email is not secure.Imagine my surprise.
I appreciate your request and the position your are in, however, I will NOT be sending any of my detailed, personal information to an unknown destination. Your disclosure of email not being secure, yet sending you all my private information to a FAX number is a secure and acceptable process is laughable. The information requested above would provide you or anyone associated with your organization with enough information to completely take over my identity, financial or otherwise. There is no mention of your privacy policies, document management or any procedures that would be undertaken to protect any information that might be sent to you, how it would be stored or how it would be destroyed.
I spent a considerable amount of time on the Air Canada site last week, booking my flight to Vancouver. You have no idea how many people want to go to Vancouver on a Tuesday. I picked what I thought would be an innocuous time… noon.
Click, click and another click, and I had the flight booked (for some reason it says it’s going to take me 5 and a half hours to get there, but that’s another story). Then I was presented with the option of being able to pre-book a seat. Wow!!! This is new, I thought. Alas - there were only 7 seats available. All were in the *middle* - meaning no window or no aisle options. Eww. Now, had I known that prior to booking that specific flight, I would have chosen a different time to fly. Why wouldn’t Air Canada let you see the seating *before* doing the final booking?
It’s like buying Ticketmaster Tickets before knowing you were going to be in the nosebleed section. It’s like reserving a room in a hotel, and then finding out you are tucked behind the kitchen. Eww.
Now, not only am I disgruntled because I *have* to fly on Air Canada, and not with the friendly Westjetters, but already I’m dreading being stuck in the MIDDLE of strangers. Both ways, I might add.
The city yesterday shelved a proposal to add a 5% tax to Toronto liquor. "It's just not feasible right now," Mayor David Miller said. "You'd have to set up a whole new department of alcohol tax collection in the city. We can't find a way to make it work, so it's off the table." City staff had estimated that a 5% liquor tax could rake in $44-million annually.City pulls plug on proposal to introduce 5% tax on alcoholInstead of trying to tax something as complicated as alcohol, why not simply increase parking tickets by $5? Imagine the amount of money that could be raked in. Heck, why not increase street parking pricing by $0.50 an hour? You could make up $44M in no time.Silly politicians. Instead they jam TTC riders and try to tax liquor. How about going after the low hanging fruit once in a while?
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I had to break down over the past few weeks and become intimately engaged with my new neighbourhood dentist. A recent blowout of a retainer resulted in utter oral demise.Wow. Dentist offices have come a LONG way in 4 years. They’ve come a VERY VERY long way in 20 years. No paper. Nothing in filing cabinets. In Fact, no wall of filing cabinets…. No longer are you just lucky to have a poster of a grinning cat over your dental chair to keep the boredom (or tears) away. No sir.
The privatization of the dental industry in Ontario (at least) has led to the rapid adoption of technology and competitive landscape you see today. My dentist is awesome.
Sure, there’s a flat panel TV on the ceiling over the chair, but the biggest piece of interest is that there is also a monitor right ON the chair, and I can watch digital x-rays of my teeth as they develop. X-rays now take about 12 seconds, and they are immediately scanned into the software so we can all look and discuss the good, the bad and the tartar. The dentist can map every troublespot, every nook and every cranny. And it’s all digital. All save-able. I bet I could have even asked her to email me a copy of the x-rays. I’m going to ask her that next week. Now think about your doctor’s office. The paper. The filing cabinets. The disarray. Sure, specialists like dermatologists, plastic surgeons and the like have advanced a little more than your GP, but the vast majority of doctor’s offices are still relegated to the 1070’s in terms of technology for patient care. Go figure. No competition, no privatization, no need to treat the Ontario medical organization like a business. Sure, you sign a great paper release on Privacy, and then poof - the whole thing goes into a black hole. I’ve left a smattering of health care history across the province. How private is that? :-(In case you are looking for a dentist in the Richmond Hill area, here’s the link to my dentist!Estate Dentistry ;-)
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Tags: ontariomedical association, dentist, doctor, Estate Dentistry
Also today, Research In Motion announced it is rolling out Facebook software for its BlackBerry, another data-intensive application. Judging by the way some people use Crackbook, as one wag I know calls it, this could bankrupt Canadian Facebook addicts. So it’s not surprising that RIM’s first customer for the service is T-Mobile USA, not a Canadian company.globeandmail.com: Kapica's Cyberia - Will easy data plans sell cellphones?I don't mind using my berry for Facebook the odd time. I just use the browser. It's not pretty, but it's functional. I'd love to see what Rim has come up with for a true Facebook Blackberry Application. Alas. It's blocked from being downloaded.:-(
Blogged with Flock
Tags: Blackberry, Facebook