Archive for the ‘Rants’ Category

People I Hate: God’s Gift to PR (or: why you shouldn’t spam people who have a voice)

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

I was going to write about how Lois Whitman’s clients should not be supporting her idiotic, blatantly unethical, and bitchy ways.

Problem is, I think her server got nuked from all of the bad publicity.  Way to go, genius.  I bet you are going to be happy with all of the bloggers and tweeters talking about your ugly ass.

Canon G10 Raw & Aperture: About Damn Time!

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Took long enough: Digital Camera Raw Compatibility Update 2.4

Dave Coffin had it done a while ago: DCraw

Now, since I’m about ready to die, I’m going to go back to sleep.

Upgrade to Vista… to use these speakers!

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

So I was screwing around looking at Windows Vista information and stumbled upon this little gem on Microsoft’s website:

 

Click to see full image...

Click to see full image...

I began to channel my inner rant-mongerer instantly:

See, I’m a trendy twentysomething and I hang out with all of the other metrosexuals with nothing better to do at the Gateway Apple Store trolling for whatever it is I troll for, and I was inspired by the artful design of some speaker set designed by a European with a name I cannot pronounce from a country I didn’t know existed.  I want to hook it up to my (shhhh…) Dell laptop, but it is running Windows XP.  I didn’t realize that even though the audio out jack thing that looks like a headphone plug needed Windows Vista to be compatible with these EuroFab ButtPlug Bass Thump Pro speakers, even though it looks like it should just plug in.  Thanks Microsoft for enlightening me!

I realized that I did want to upgrade my computer to run Windows Vista.  See, even though my current computer has an audio-out jack, I want to get the best performance out of its sound capabilities.  I hope Vista’s performance will be OK on it:

 

Click to see full image...

Click to see full image...

And yes, children, the Macintosh SE/30 (the best little all-in-one Apple ever made) did have the same audio out jack your MacBook has on the left side.  Amazing, isn’t it!  To think, we had to wait all these years for Vista to unlock its full potential!

One more reason I don’t buy Seagate hard drives…

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

So, my grandma’s iBook G4 has taken another crap.  This time, the hard disk I installed a couple years back has taken a nosedive.  In 2006, I figured Seagate was a decent bet, since they have a 5 year warranty on their products, and I’ve had moderate luck with them overall in the past.  BAD IDEA.

So, forward to this week.  I get her new printer set up, life is good, even though I had to install HP’s shitty drivers on her computer.  Hard disk poops.  Well, the drive is still squeezing, but it’s straining hard, and it’s gonna pop a roid if it doesn’t get dealt with soon.  Earlier in the week, I try to set up an RMA on Seagate’s website, but the RMA function is dead.  Whatever, just maintenance.  Just a minute ago, I go to set up an advance replacement, and what do I see?

Seagate, the #1 hard disk manufacturer charges $20 do do the same thing I’m doing now, but in a different order than how I’m doing it now.  See, if I send them my dead piece of shit, they’ll send me a working one for free within 3-7 days.  But if I want to get a piece of shit first, but then send them the dead one afterwards (oh, I don’t know, to save labor and downtime on only having to strip the iBook once) they charge $20.  Given, they do include a return shipping label for that $20 fee, which is worth about $4 or $5 with the USPS.  Regardless of the order that this RMA is processed, they get a dead drive back, they have to send me a replacement and include packing materials.  So, I revise my previous statement.  They charge me $20 for a shipping label that costs them $4 or $5, but probably less because they likely get preferred rates from their shipping company du jour (which probably isn’t DHL since they went out of business despite hiring the bottom-of-the-barrel ex-con delivery people at likely criminal wages.  Another rant for another day, though.)

Yet another reason to buy Western Digital drives.  They do not charge for advance-replacement; they put a hold on the card, but only charge if you keep the broken turd you supposedly don’t need anymore.  Western Digital has class-leading performance with the Caviar Black, class-creating ingenuity with the Caviar Green, and capacity-leading portable drives with the Scorpio Blue.  There’s nothing not to like about WDC, except that some drives have a 3 year warranty and others have a 5 year warranty.

For the record: Samsung has a 500GB with 3 platters, compared with 2 on WDC’s, which means the Koreans might be good at cramming lots of glass and metal into itty bitty living space, but the Indian guys over at WDC got better areal density, and hence faster drives with fewer moving parts to break.  I’ve never had a Western Digital drive fail on me, personally, but I’ve also never had a Samsung drive fail either.  I’ve got a 3.5″ 120GB 5400RPM Samsung ATA drive that’s over 6 years old and still kicking, and I had a 2.5″ 120GB Samsung 5400 RPM ATA drive for my PowerBook G4 that worked like a charm, too, until I sold it.  Samsung’s RMA policy was unclear for a long time, until recently, which is why I shied away from their drives.  I have nothing against Samsung at the current time.

Back to the point: Seagate (having bought Maxtor, the shittiest drive maker EVER, and Maxtor having inherited the title from Quantum whom they purchased back in the day) is not impressing me with their RMA service at all.  I guess it doesn’t matter anymore about their RMA service since they fixed that nasty problem with all their 1.5TB drives. Now if only I had a computer that worked with their firmware updater

Adobe firing 600 people, sucking harder than ever

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

Adobe, one of my favorite and least favorite companies, is laying off 600 people and not exhibiting on the show floor of Macworld San Francisco 2009.  It’s amazing how a company that had amazing products like the blessed Photoshop 3.0.5 can become the company with the Creative Suite 4 Whizbang Ultimate Orgazmo Edition (for $2499.)  Someone point them to Wikipedia for an economics refresher.

I’d say the first sign of the shit hitting the fan at Adobe was when Apple owned their ass with Final Cut Pro back in the late 90s.  Kinda amusing, since Apple bought the basis for Final Cut from Macromedia, the creator of the Flash software that Adobe recently absorbed.  The second sign of doom was when Adobe decided it was better to ship crap for $1299 then roll bug fixes into the next release version of their dreck for only $399 to upgrade.

Quark used to be the butt of every customer support joke in the biz, but Adobe is determined to get to #1 in that area, too.  By God, if Adobe can squander their lead with InDesign and give the market back to Quark, while at the same time, crapping on enough loyal supporters to build enough hatred not to upgrade to CS4 from CS3, they might just go under.

I can only hope that Apple has another trick up their sleeve; something in image editing, something that would tie together with Aperture beautifully and make Photoshop look like the bloated 20-year-old crapware it is.  Cross your fingers folks. This could get interesting.

Windows Vista is as Slow as, um…

Monday, December 1st, 2008

I don’t know what else is as slow as Vista.  However, upon installing XP Pro, Vista Ultimate, and a few other selected OSes on my MacBook Pro via VMWare Fusion (great effing product, by the way), I realized what everyone had been complaining about so much.

Vista really is DRM masquerading as an operating system.  And a poor OS at that.  At least I can sleep at night knowing that m DVI port is free and open, unlike the poor sods with new MacBooks and MacBook Pros that have the Mini-DisplayPort who must deal with HDCP incompatibilities.  Boo fail.

Time Warner and RoadRunner Suck Balls

Friday, November 21st, 2008

EPIC FAIL:

To: drunkentech@gmail.com
From: Mail Administrator <Postmaster@rrsecurity-abuse.com>
Reply-To: <Postmaster@rrsecurity-abuse.com>
Subject: Mail System Error - Returned Mail
Date: Fri, 21 Nov 2008 15:33:28 -0500

This Message was undeliverable due to the following reason:

The user(s) account is temporarily over quota.

<abuse-desk@rrsecurity-abuse.com>

Please reply to <Postmaster@rrsecurity-abuse.com> if you feel this message to be in error.

–===========================_ _= 8772888(331)1227299608

Content-Type: message/delivery-status

Reporting-MTA: dns; rrcs-fep-03.hrndva.rr.com

Arrival-Date: Fri, 21 Nov 2008 15:33:28 -0500

Received-From-MTA: dns; rrcs-mgw-02b.hrndva.rr.com (172.28.193.155)

Final-Recipient: RFC822; <abuse-desk@rrsecurity-abuse.com>

Action: failed

Status: 4.2.2

From: Ian <drunkentech@drunkentech.com>
To: abuse-desk@rrsecurity-abuse.com
Subject: Contact Us
Date: Fri, 21 Nov 2008 12:33:22 -0800

I’ve had an intrusion attempt from a customer on your network.

Nov 21 12:26:15 fatmac com.apple.SecurityServer[26]: getpwnam() failed for user laura, creating invalid credential
Nov 21 12:26:15: — last message repeated 1 time —
Nov 21 12:26:15 fatmac com.apple.SecurityServer[26]: Failed to authorize right system.login.tty by client /usr/sbin/sshd for authorization created by /usr/sbin/sshd.
Nov 21 12:26:15 fatmac sshd[131]: error: PAM: Authentication failure for illegal user laura from rrcs-97-76-164-202.se.biz.rr.com
Nov 21 12:26:15 fatmac sshd[131]: Failed keyboard-interactive/pam for invalid user laura from 97.76.164.202 port 43476 ssh2

Thanks for addressing this problem with your affected customer.
——————————————
Ian, The DrunkenTech
drunkentech@drunkentech.com

5 Great Ways to Get Crappy Technical Support

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Being a computer technician, I deal with all sorts of people.  Some are the most relaxed, nice people on earth.  Others are the most entitled, self-centered assholes you’ll ever meet.  With that in mind, I’ve formulated my list of the easiest ways to get shitty tech support.  I believe this sort of thing also applies to automobile repair and appliance repair:

  1. Call incessantly about the status of your computer.

    When I tell you your computer will be done before the end of business, and that I’ll call when I’m done (or with an unfortunate status update), that does not mean call me every 90 minutes “just to check in” or show up saying “I was told it would be ready by 3:30.”  The more time I’m talking with you, the less time I’m working on your computer.  Turning your repair in 10 hours from check-in to passing deep burn-in is a gift from the Gods of Luck anyways, and you’re pissing them off, too.  When I’m not harboring the desire to hurt you, I typically do better work.
     

  2. Blame handicapped children for breaking your computer

    If your computer looks like it made love to an elephant before being flung across the pavement to your doorstep while in a bag of manure, it isn’t covered under warranty.  And when you tell me that you “let a mentally disabled kid at my church use it, but then he dropped it down the stairs” that means that (A) You’re going to hell, and (B) You’re still paying for your repair.  If you have a funny story that doesn’t try to deflect responsibility or get you out of paying for the repair, most technicians will be much more likely to help you out and not to the bare minimum to get you out of their face.  If you try to blame retard children, you will burn.
     

  3. Claim that you cannot be without your computer because it is business critical

    If your $50 million business runs off of a $999 refurbished consumer laptop, that’s a good example of being a shrewd businessperson.  If your $50 million business grinds to a halt because your $999 consumer laptop experienced a hardware failure, that’s a good example of being a douchebag.  Delivery businesses do not rely on ONE truck and airlines do not rely on ONE jet (unless you’re US Air, but that’s another story).  A mobile business cannot rely on ONE computer without a backup mechanism.  Period.  If you’re losing $5000 in business per day, then ponying up for another $999 laptop to make up for the losses is a no-brainer.  You’re a fool to not cover your ass and ensure your business doesn’t shut down because of an equipment failure.  Speaking of failure, do you have a backup of your business critical data?
     

  4. Claim you just want your computer replaced because your flight leaves in an hour

    If you show up and just say you want a new computer, and you don’t have time to argue because you have a flight to catch in one hour, you will be waiting WAY longer than you need to for service.  Strangely, though, you seem to be willing to wait that ridiculously long time for service despite your impending travel plans.  DOUBLE DOUCHE.
     

  5. Get your repair expedited because it’s business critical, then leave on vacation for 6 weeks

    I love people who don’t fall into the traps I’ve mentioned above, but do what it takes to get their machines repaired ASAP.  I’m more than happy to get their machines repaired fast, since I know their business relies on it (allegedly).  Then, I see the computer collect dust on my shelf for a month and a half because nobody wants to pick it up.  ”Oh, mister so and so went on vacation. Can you hold it until after Memorial day?”  to which I reply “Uh, it’s Thanksgiving…” and she says “Oh, I meant St. Patrick’s Day.”  Pick up your stuff.  I am not a Public Storage location for your computer, and I made an effort to help you.  Show some respect.

Now, I’m sure a lot of you will want to know where I’m at because you don’t want such a bitter, evil person working on your computer.  Despite what you might think, I’m quite competent and reasonable.  I’m not a complete jackass.  I’ve been fixing these things for almost 15 years now, and I’ve seen damn near every sorry excuse in the book.  I’ve also seen almost every kind of person bring their computer in for service.

Asking questions about how you can prepare for a computer failure, asking what can be done to prevent a failure, and asking what, if anything, can be done to accelerate a repair are all legitimate questions.  It’s all in your approach.  I’ve had customers bring me food and drink, which is COMPLETELY unnecessary if you’re a nice person who understands that, with anything, there are rules and limits.  Some of those can be ignored, some of those can be massaged, but others are just hard motherfuckin’ facts of life (thank you Ving Rhames.)

Being calm, sane, and reasonable is actually a selfish act on your part.  It will usually get things done better and faster than if you’re an impatient knuckle-dragger.  Spend the 5 extra minutes to do some breathing exercises before going to your computer tech, and you’ll be much happier.

iPhone 3G Proves the Economy is Going Strong!

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

The iPhone 3G launch and all of its surrounding hype with 3+ hour lines shows that despite what analysts and economists say about the state of our economy, we don’t need people to work or save their money to pay their gasoline bills or mortgages.  Everything is just fine.

iPhone 3G - A Small Flickr Set

Why I Hate Most Apple Users

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Maybe that statement is a little extreme, but here’s the gist of it.

The PowerBook G4 Titanium (the one that takes the original AirPort card) was announced in January 2001 and discontinued in September 2003 when the Aluminium PowerBook 15″ was released.  The AirPort card for said Titanium G4 was discontinued in mid-2004 and is located under the bottom shield.  This guy, after finding out his “normal tools” won’t work to open his Titanium G4 (note to douche: a Torx wrench is not a non-standard tool) goes to an Apple retail store assuming “we can take care of it” means “we will work on your 4-7 year old computer for free.”  Maybe I’m wrong, but most places won’t work on 4-7 year old equipment for free.

Upon arriving at the Genius Bar, said douche is frustrated to find out he has to pay $30 to get it installed.  Again, maybe I’m wrong, but most computer places won’t even install equipment you buy online and take to them to install.  They can’t guarantee its function, let alone the function of a product that was discontinued 4 years ago.  Last I checked, many of the PowerBook G4 Titanium models are legally vintage which means Apple doesn’t even provide parts for those models outside of the state of California!  What if technician broke a pin or something?  He’d be up Shit’s Creek with rapids right down the way if that happened.

So douche didn’t pay the $30 out of general principle, but felt the need to order his Torx T8 from Taiwan, which probably cost about as much as that install fee did anyways.  Never mind the fact that every Home Depot I have been to probably carries Torx wrenches, and never mind the fact that I have a set of Craftsman tools that (I believe) has a T8 in it.  No, that would have made the comic not so fun.

(BTW, the 99¢ Only Stores here in Southern California have Torx driver bits most of the time.)

Way to bitch out Apple for not supporting your old hardware for free, asshole.

Link to douchebag’s comic here.