Oh Come On, You Can’t Be Serious…

I live in Calgary, and get my cable TV from Shaw, the local monopoly provider. In general, I’ve been quite pleased with Shaw over the years. I use them for Internet access (a 10 Mbps cable modem), analog cable (for my Media Center) and HDTV (with a Motorola PVR tuner), and both of my phone lines. Every month my bill from Shaw is just shy of $200. Compared to the other 800 pound gorilla in this market, Telus, Shaw is an absolute delight to deal with. Telus is a relic, a ex-government organization that hides behind a Byzantine phone menu system that has disconnected me at random half the times I’ve used it. I’ll do almost anything to avoid dealing with Telus (although I’m considering using their DSL service for a project, more on that later).

Shaw has been shuffling their TV channels around a fair bit lately – I believe twice in the past year – making room for new offerings. Their latest switch was moving all of our HD channels from the 300 block down into the 200 block, and they added around 10 new HD channels – ones that are part of some “enhanced” HD package that we don’t get as part of our regular HD package. Ashley sat down a few weeks ago to program the Motorola PVR to record the TV series we like to watch: all the CSI shows, The Unit, Heroes, etc. The fastest way to find TV shows is to use the guide search function, find the TV show you’re looking for, and tag it to record the whole series. That’s exactly what Ashley did – so imagine her shock when two of the nine or so that she flagged didn’t record.

What recorded instead? Well…something did. When we tried to play back two of those shows, it would start the playback stream, the freeze. It turns out those TV shows were on the HD channels that we don’t receive as part of our package. It seems idiotic that the PVR would let the customer flag shows for recording if the customer didn’t receive those channels as part of their package. I can’t flag a Pay Per View event for recording without first paying for it, so the PVR clearly has some capability to differentiate between what it’s allowed to record and what it’s not.

I decided to call Shaw and give them some feedback about how it would be great if their system didn’t work like this, and instead would tell the customer they couldn’t record that instance of the TV show because their didn’t receive that channel. It would be cool if it found another instance of the TV show on a channel that the customer did receive. Or what about an up-sell right then and there if the customer couldn’t watch the show at all with their current package?

There are many ways to do the right thing for both the customer and for Shaw as a business…so imagine my surprise when the Shaw representative I was speaking with (Jay, ID # 5217) proceeded to argue with me, insisting that their system worked perfectly. He said that as a Shaw customer I should be aware of exactly which channels I have access to, which ones I don’t, and keep that in mind when looking at the guide data. I was incredulous. “But I have access to hundreds of channels – you honestly think it’s reasonable for me to mentally compare what I’m seeing in the guide data to what channels I have in my package?”. Jay thought that was perfectly reasonable. Either Jay has super-human memory, or he’s one of those people who can’t understand something negative until it happens to them – which is not a good trait for anyone in customer service to have.

All I was looking for was a “Wow, that must have been frustrating to miss the season premier of two of your TV shows – let me make a note of this and we’ll see what we can do” type reply. Ultimately Shaw sends this type of customer feedback to Motorola so the next generation box might be just a bit smarter than the current one. That’s all I was looking for, and instead I got someone who insisted that I simply wasn’t using their product in the right way. What happened to the customer always being right? Shaw, you can do better.

Rowena’s 25th Birthday Party Photo Shoot

Last weekend a friend of ours was having a birthday and she decided to have her friends come out and join her at Shakers, a “family fun park” that has go-carts, mini-golf, arcade games, and other amusements. I opted to not do the mini-golf or go-cart racing, instead offering to be the event photographer. The afternoon light was quite nice, if a bit overcast. Later on I put the camera away and played a game of laser tag – it’s clearly a game for sissies and paint ball is much better (did I mention that I got a score of zero, getting killed more times than making kills?). Here are a few photos* from the event:

*I’m amazed that I was able to get so many photos given that the battery in my D200 only had a 28% charge and my back-up battery was dead. The D200 has such great battery life (for my needs at least) that I hardly ever think about power issues and forget to recharge it every now and then.


Jef and Alex getting things going in the first of many go-cart rounds.

 


I think Ashley was yelling at someone to get out of the way – she does that when driving too. 😉


That’s right kids, this isn’t bumper-cars, it’s go-carts!

 

Continue reading Rowena’s 25th Birthday Party Photo Shoot

Could Someone Write a freeDB Idiot Filter?

I use Exact Audio Copy (EAC) to rip my CDs because over the years I’ve heard countless glitches in CD rips I’ve made from my collection – EAC is a great tool for getting bit for bit perfect rips. When I put in a CD, my hope of course is that it’s in the freeDB database so I don’t have to type in the names of all the tracks. I’m a fan of a particular genre of A Capella music, typically referred to as “College A Capella”, which usually involves 20-something college students doing all-vocal versions of modern pop songs. At any rate, I bought a new CD (Best of College A Capella 2006) and popped it into the DVD drive and EAC happily identified it. It wasn’t until I was using MediaMonkey to embed the album art that I noticed that the artist name and song name were identical across all 20 tracks. I know it can be tricky entering in information for multi-artist CDs, but the odds of a group doing a song called “The Reason” and their group name being “The Reason” are pretty damn slim, don’t you think? Off to re-type a lot of information…

The New, Wider Template for JasonDunn.com

Thanks to the amazingly talented Darius Wey, I have a new, wider template. Two reasons drove this decision:

  1. Wanting to give a better experience for the rising number of people with wide-screen, higher-resolution monitors. I still think it’s silly for someone with a big wide-screen monitor (1920 x 1200 for instance) to be browsing in full-screen mode because it negates the multi-application advantage, and most Web sites won’t scale up to that size anyway, but I did want this blog to fill more of an average-sized browser window (something in the 1000 pixel wide range).
  2. The purely selfish reason of wanting to be able to put up higher-resolution photos because I think they’re nicer to look at. If you don’t have a high-speed connection, it might make things slower for you, but since this is my personal blog I don’t mind being a little self-centred. 😉

If the site looks odd to you (things out of place), you should empty your browser cache or press CONTROL+F5 (on a Windows machine) to force a page refresh and things.

Re-Building my Workstation PC

I’ve been in semi-stealth mode the past few days, but not by choice: my main workstation is massively screwed up. I’ll probably post a detailed explanation on Digital Media Thoughts
later today, but in a nutshell here’s how it went down:

  1. I purchased and installed Acronis TrueImage 11, as I always do with every new version of their software. I’ve used it for years and really like it.
  2. I installed it, rebooted, everything seemed fine.
  3. The next morning I rebooted and was informed that there was no operating system on my hard drive. It seems TrueImage had mucked up the master boot record.
  4. I used Vista’s repair tool to fix the master boot record, which worked, but then Vista would complain about a missing/corrupt DLL after login – I’d only see a black screen. I could boot into safe mode, but after two days of research trying to fix this problem, I gave up.
  5. I tried to restore back to the TrueImage backup from the night before this problem, but guess what? Same corrupt MBR and Vista problems. Did I mention that I overwrote the TrueImage 10 daily backup with the TrueImage 11 daily backup?
  6. I fought with it all day, then gave up and installed a “clean” image of Vista for this machine. Unfortunately I had an ATI video card in this machine originally, and now have a NVIDIA card…and Vista really didn’t like that. Even after uninstalling the ATI drivers, when applying the 34 patches since I made this build, Vista would bluescreen over and over. Crash crash.
  7. So I gave up on EVERYTHING and did a clean install of Vista from scratch and have been re-building everything.

The ultimate irony here? I couldn’t get the client software for Windows Home Server to work, which is why I was still using Acronis TrueImage. If the Windows Home Server software had worked, I wouldn’t have bought TrueImage 11 and been put in this situation. 🙁

Random Bits of Dell XPS M1330 Knowledge

Here are some random bits of information I’ve discovered about my Dell XPS M1330 in the past few days:

  • The issue where, upon resuming from sleep mode, the M1330 will drop from 1280 x 800 resolution down to 1024 x 768, seems o have no fix at this time. I called XPS tech support and they weren’t even aware of the issue (which I find hard to believe, it’s mentioned all over the place). It happens perhaps 25% of the time, and the only fix it to go into the display settings and set it back to 1280 x 800.
  • Upon resuming from sleep mode, the screen will light up as normal, then go black, then come back. This is irritating. The solution (which I found in this forum) is to go into the Task Scheduler (just type Task at the start bar and you’ll find it). Look under MICROSOFT > WINDOWS > MOBILEPC and you’ll see a task listed called TMM. Right-click on it and select DISABLE. This will address the issue.
  • Although the XPS tech I spoke to insisted otherwise, upgrading the graphics driver for the NVIDIA GeForce 8400M GS with a driver right from NVIDIA isn’t possible. Only a driver directly from Dell will work, which sucks because it means I’ll never be able to have the highest-performing drivers.
  • I have a D-Link DIR-855 802.11n router and was having a lot of connectivity problems with the XPS M133o – it would always connect initially, then it would drop the connection…but only for certain types of requests (seemingly). I could ping anything (I ran a ping -t), but no Web pages would load, nor would email. Vista’s “Detect and Repair” thought that the connection was perfect, so it was no help (I suspect it does a ping to check connectivity). This issue was driving me crazy, but after installing the 1.05 firmware on my router, and updating the BIOS on the M1330 to A06, it’s now working fast and stable.

UPDATE: A solution was presented in the comments section: disabling the TMM scheduled task. I did that, and guess what? No more resolution switching. No more “fade to black” effect. Nice!

It’s Official: The US Dollars Has Tanked

My wife Ashley cashed a cheque for $93 USD today (a deposit from a timeshare rental we made for some friends) and came back with less than $93 in Canadian dollars. I was puzzled. Last I checked, there was still a 3% difference. It seems that a lot can happen in a short period of time. Even if, on paper, the US and Canadian dollar has reached parity, the banks alway screw you over just a little bit extra. Here’s what the Royal Bank of Canada has to say about the exchange rate:

usd-in-the-crapper.PNG

Simply…amazing. For the first time in my 32 years on this planet, the US dollar is now the weaker currency. And for someone such as myself that gets paid primarily in US dollars, that’s just depressing. I know Canada’s surging natural resource industry is partly to blame, but there are a lot of things very wrong with the US economy that, if fixed, would make a big difference. This just sucks.

Somebody Broke Adobe’s Web Site

adobe.jpg

It’s so incredibly rare when major Web sites go down or get broken, I was shocked to see Adobe’s home page generating all these errors – betcha’ someone’s getting thrown down a few rungs on the ol’ corporate ladder. Thankfully I was still able to find the Adobe sub-page and grab a copy of Adobe Acrobat Reader 8.1.

WordPress and YouTube Videos

I wonder how many releases of WordPress there are going to be before they address the issue where WordPress mangles pasted in YouTube code? I know there are many YouTube plug-ins out there, but I’m not looking to have to jump through hoops to implement YouTube video code – I want to take the YouTube code from YouTube, paste it in, and submit my blog post. It’s truly bizarre that such a massive bug can go un-fixed for so long – and I’m not the only one that’s noticed this. The work-around right now is to switch to the raw code view, paste in the YouTube code, then hit Publish without switching back to the visual editor. If you do that, the YouTube videos show up just fine. Need to edit it? You have to re-paste the original YouTube code into your post.

Come on WordPress crew: I love your CMS, but there are some gaping holes that need plugging up.

Killer Halo 3 Commercials

The marketing engine is in full swing for Halo 3 now, and this morning while watching the UFC 76 Countdown I saw a great commercial for it. I’ve never seen anything quite like it – they essentially built a diorama with dozens, possibly hundreds, or Halo 3 miniatures and film around them with an eerie piano melody slowly building. Very cool stuff.

There are also some interesting live action trailers that are impressive. Great stuff!