
Note: not a doctored imag e

Note: not a doctored imag e
I am so angry at Optus – you’d think they’d be able to change my phone plan for me when I ask. I have already rang them three times in the past month and each time they’ve told me I’m on my old plan. It’s ridiculous!
Then they start reading the notes on my file: “customer is unhappy that we have not changed her plan ask requested, wants to be on the $79 cap plan…”. I stop them and say “that was last year” and they say “oh, yes, right.” This is the THIRD time that I’ve had to ring them 3+ times because they are incompetent.
I get my bill and it says I’ve been charged for all these calls/SMS/voicemail that I shouldn’t be charged for on that given plan. So I ask them to fix it and they say it won’t be backdated. “It’ll begin in 48 hours from today.” That is not good enough!!!
Not only that but they tell me I should just stay on my plan because it has better benefits. Or that it’s exactly the same as the new one. THEY DON’T KNOW WHAT THEY’RE TALKING ABOUT. At all. Free 5 minute calls to certain numbers is NOT THE SAME as free unlimited calls to many more numbers. Why on earth would they think I’d prefer the former?
I’m not on a contract, deliberately so I can change plans to suit me. It means I don’t get a phone bundled in for free, but I get what I want. You’d think that they’d try to keep my custom.
Lately I’ve downloaded a few programs/extensions that I highly recommend. So I’ll share my finds with you.
1. MediaMonkey
Although I love the idea of SongBird it was still a bit too buggy to use as one’s default music player, so at the moment I’m using MediaMonkey, the free version of which is about the equivalent to iTunes but the “Gold” version ($19.95) is an iTunes killer. I love it because it has all the functionality I wanted (and some things I didn’t know I’d want):
Of course it also has all those functions you’d expect: the little browser window thing that iTunes has, the ability to burn and rip cds, podcasts, auto-copying to folder, auto-renaming etc.
Also, I keep my music on an external hard drive and when I unplug it MediaMonkey doesn’t decided to move where the library is kept, which iTunes kept on doing. That was the final straw.
*and no, they’re not giving me anything to write this review. my overwhelming positivity is simply as product of being so pissed off with iTunes/Windows Media Player.
2. Thunderbird 2.0* + GMail IMAP + MinimizeToTray extension
I’ve always been waiting for Thunderbird to be obviously better than Outlook, in the same way that Firefox undeniably better than IE (oh, shush, if you knew better you wouldn’t want to argue with me *wink*). I’m not sure why but it’s not quite there yet – it’s equally good as Outlook for what I use it for, and the extensions make it better… maybe I’m just asking too much.
OH, but I’ve been using it predominantly as RSS feeder for years and years now. Mainly because I didn’t have a need for the email functionality – UNTIL NOW!
I was so excited about ability to access Gmail on IMAP for free. I followed the instructions and it all worked. Though a few things to note: you may need to open the Google’s IMAP and SMTP ports on your firewall. And if you’ve selected to use British English then the instructions all say to use “your_username@googlemail.com” rather than “your_username@gmail.com” – but just substitute your actual address.
And then it’ll all work like clockwork. Because it’s IMAP and not POP when you read an email on Thunderbird it reflects that on Gmail online and vice-versa. UPDATE: This Google help file is very useful and is only shown when you go looking for IMAP help.
I’d also install the MinimizeToTray extension and then you can leave it running all the time without taking up toolbar space.
*Note: The MinimizeToTray extension doesn’t work with 3.0pre – that’s why I recommend 2.0.
3. DownThemAll extention for Firefox/Thunderbird
DownThemAll is kind of like an internal firefox/thunderbird wget – it allows you to download all the images/webpages/zipped files etc that are on or linked on a given page. It allows for regex commands – so I use it to automatically download the .doc/.pdf./ppt/.rtf files on the lecture notes pages of my uni subjects: /(\.(rtf|doc|pdf|ppt))$/
It also has an accelerator, which does seem to make large files download quite a bit faster* and the ability to pause and resume downloads. I highly recommend it!
*though it may be just the placebo affect – i’ve never really tested to see if it is quicker
Edit:
What I’m in need of – RSS for non-RSS pages
I’ve been looking for a tool that coverts webpages without rss feeds to an rss feed so I can just add the pages to Thunderbird and have it automatically check for updates.
I’ve come across things like Dapper and YahooPipes but they seem far too complicated for what I want. I don’t want to have to sign in to be able to set things up and I’m happy to have the whole page just as an RSS feed. If you have any suggestions it’d be greatly appreciated :)
*also I’m using Firefox 3.0beta 4 and Update Scanner is also still only in Beta support for Firefox 3 – I haven’t updated because of Mr Karan’s advice “Firefox 3.0b5 is less stable than 3.0b4 – stay away!”)
I had this great idea: i was going to listen to my music ordered by track length, starting with shortest tracks first and decide which is my favourite song for each 15 second-length bracket.
Now one could argue that means this grossly favours songs that are shorter or longer than the standard 3-4 minute song…
For example, Vault Character by Calvin Harris wins 0-0:15, easily beating the only other possible contender ‘(Turning the Single Over)’ by Figurine, which lost because it’s not really a song as such. [And I must say I love how imeem or whatever-that-site-is says "log in to hear the rest of the song" when the song is 22 seconds shorter than the 30 second limit :P]
…I, on the other hand, think that’s the brilliance of my idea :D The radio discriminates against those which do not fit the standard song length, so this is simply positive discrimination.
It’s clear that I’ve come up with this as a form of procrastination, sadly it’s failed, as i’m already bored and i’m only at the 1:10 minute mark :P
There’s already been a report in the newspapers about this supposedly offensive t-shirt, which means aca/today tonight must be hot on the trails.
Oddly, I really don’t find it very offensive.
http://www.goatboy.com.au/products.php?product=She%27s-Dead
Although i do think charging $49.95 for an American Apparel t-shirt with with a picture printed on it is ridiculous. *Plugs Threadless again* (via)
Figures reveal that given the choice, most men will plump for a curvy girl. Apparently men like curvy women. Who knew?
It’s certainly not a scientific study, but never-the-less slightly illuminating.
Oh, and I’d choose the size 12 followed by the size 14.
I’ve often pondered whether the huge catalogue of music available on the internet would mean it would be easy for music to be plagiarised and released by other “musicians” without it being obvious.
Here’s one example of that very thing happening. An electronic artist called Laromlab has clearly misappropriated the songs of others, as this statement on his record company’s website shows:
“Here are the original track names and artists that make up the Laromlab album:
Laromlab / Original Title / Artist
1 Rock!! Hard!! / Nightvision / CrazyQ
2 Mission for Glory / Haschkaka / Dubmood
3 C: Dancer / Cybernetic Dancer / DMA-SC
4 Phat and Phunky Pt. 1 / Phat and Phunky Pt. 1 / CrazyQ
5 Zipp Zapp / Zip Zap Space Attack / CrazyQ
6 They’re back!!! / Return of the Fighters / DMA-SC
7 Sid Attax / Atari Attacks / CrazyQ
8 Return of Da Stomp / Local Hero / CrazyQ
9 Punk Funk / Pink Phunk Monster / CrazyQ
10 Nightdrive / Stars of the Night / DMA-SC
11 T-girl Dancing / T-Girl / Lotek Style
12 (Hidden) / Hiapoe / DMA-SC”
After searching through my collection I found that I did have one track related to Laromlab, “his” remix of Daft Punk’s Around the World. I wonder who actually did it.
howdy all,
the lovely threadless are having a sale on all their t-shirts. i’ve bought two t-shirts from threadless in the past and even with choosing the “expensive but fast” postage option the t-shirts are cheaper than buying them in shops. especially with this sale – many of the t-shirts are US$9! (and to think i paid US$15 just weeks ago). so say AUS$15-20 including postage. and the material is better quality than what you’d get at Jay-Jays or whatever.
They have all types of t-shirts, i especially like the ones with slogans or satire, eg:


But they also have some that are just interestingly designed (and often have a hidden message in the design), eg:
I was really happy with the t-shirts i bought. The other reason I’m doing free advertising for them here is that anyone can submit a design to threadless, and anyone can vote for which designs they think should be printed.
Anyways, check out the t-shirts, the sale is on until [Edit] Sunday 23rd March. Wednesday 26th March.

I liked the internet better when it was full of copyright infringement and not discriminatory*.
*strictly speaking it was just that all americans assumed i was in america