A Day in the Life, January 2009

Once a year for the past four years, give or take, I’ve taken some photos of my home office workspace – mostly for my own amusement. It’s really neat for me to be able to look back on the way I’ve changed the technology and layout of my office over the years. I have some photos of my condo in 2001, and the technology I was using then, and it’s hilarious to look at. Big-ass CRT monitors everywhere! I took these photos for this thread over on Digital Home Thoughts – the timing was great because my office hasn’t been this clean or organized in months. I cleaned it up (with Ashley’s help) because a radio reporter for the Calgary Eyeopener, a CBC Radio One program, was coming over to interview me about unboxing videos. Yes, it’s radio, but I didn’t want to answer the question “Why is your office so disorganized?”. 😉

Jason's Office, January 2009

Jason's Office, January 2009

Jason's Office, January 2009

Jason's Office, January 2009

Jason's Office, January 2009

Jason's Office, January 2009

Jason's Office, January 2009

Jason's Office, January 2009

Jason's Office, January 2009

A Kijiji PayPal Scam? That’s A First For Me

Yesterday morning I put up a few items of IKEA furniture on Kijiji. I’m always amazed at how quickly I receive responses for the things I list – I’m either selling things too cheaply or have a super-compelling pitch style. 😉 I received a message from someone yesterday – they were the second person to express an interest in the item, so I wrote them back saying that I’d keep them informed if the first person bailed on the purchase. This was the response waiting for me this morning:

“i will like to purchase the item out rightly,I am willing to offer you $1400 for it and i will be paying you with my credit card via my PayPal account,I will also like you to send me your paypal details(PayPal e-mail address) including your phone # so i can effect payment to you right away and make sure you get back to me so that i can arrange for pick up as i will like the item to be picked,so no shipping included.i will appreciate if you can get a PayPal Bank account to make things more easier for both of us. NB:Honestly, I do not know the actual worth of this item because I’m always busy sailing. If my offer is not ok, Let me know so i can shoot up abit or bring it down as the case maybe. Thank you for your understanding, while i await your urgent response.”

So they want to pay $1400 for items that I listed for $250? And all because they’re too busy sailing in the land-locked provice of Alberta? Gosh, what a deal for me! I’d better hand over my PayPal email address and my phone number on record so I can get all that extra money! Sheesh. I’m not sure what sort of scam they’re trying to pull with my PayPal email address and phone number – I suspect some sort of identity/account theft, though if PayPal’s security is that lax, that concerns me a bit. Regardless, it’s good to remember that if something seems to good to be true, it is.

Hello From Las Vegas

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In Las Vegas for CES 2009. Feet are sore. Too tired to type in complete sentences. Wore a pedometre today, walked 12,888 steps. Might not seem like a lot, but my feet are yelling at me. So tired. Hardly slept at all last night, woke up at 5:15 AM to fly to Vegas. Staying at the Wynn Encore. Got great coupon, only $20 more than staying at the Sahara. Wynn Encore is nice, but like all Vegas hotels it takes 20 minutes of walking to get anywhere, all routed through the casinos. Staying in Vegas for the longest time ever for CES: five days, leaving Sunday. Seems like an eternity already. Did Pepcom Digital Experience tonight, brought video camera, didn’t use it as much as I should have. Going to sleep now…

Now THIS Is Photography…

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I have the pleasure and honour of knowing two very fine photographers who attend the same church as I do: Dave and Quin Cheung, who together make up DQ Studios. I’m constantly impressed by their skills as photographers (and their humility), but it’s rare that I get a chance to see a complete set of their work for a client. They published a photo slideshow of a recent shoot they did of a wedding in Argentina, and the results are beautiful. Their work definitely gives me something to strive for!

Don’t Be A Facebook Whore

“Keeping up with Plaxo, LinkedIn, and Facebook is bad enough, but I now sense that really ugly things are happening to those platforms making them less and less useful to me. It’s the rise of the social networking application. You know what I am talking about, those applications that are built by third-party developers to take advantage of the social network ecosystem the companies are so proud to create but we all come to hate over time. My friend Ira is a Facebook whore. He signs-up for every cause, group, or application sent to him by, well, anybody. Then what’s even worse is he expects me to sign-up too so he can send me whatever crap is the specialty of that subgroup. I love you, Ira, but I just can’t do as you ask.”

I really couldn’t have said it better myself – check out Robert Cringely’s full article. What’s going on now with social networking sites/applications is similar to what happened with email. The signal to noise ratio is rapidly becoming more noise than signal, and it’s frustrating to watch happen. Let’s take Twitter for example: like any form of communication, it has it’s uses for some people, but like most new forms of communication, it gets abused at first – kind of like when your mom first gets email and she spends the first year forwarding you jokes and urban legends. I think we’re at the high-water mark of Twitter abuse and maybe 2009 is the year when people stop twitting everything they do/see. Or maybe Twitter will just die – they have no business model after all – and this will all be moot.

Back to Facebook: I went through my “friends” list and removed about two dozen people. I thought I could be all clever and create a list and move some of my business contacts into it, but it seems with lists you don’t get much control over what they see…so it seems that putting people into the limited category is still the only option if you want to have your real friends see what’s going on in your life, and your business acquaintances see a simpler, more sanitized version. I can’t be the only one that wants to share more of my life with my friends than with people I know in a professional capacity, but Facebook sure doesn’t seem to understand that.

May 2009: Are You Ready For This Movie Fans?

May is going to be one hell of a month for big blockbuster movies! I can’t wait – I’ll definitely be going to the movie theatre three times that month. Check out what’s coming…

The Best Fan-Made Fake Movie Trailer Ever? THUNDERCATS, HO!

I lost count of the number of movies that they pulled from – someone should host a contest where you have to figure out how many movies they used…but since they listed them in the YouTube sidebar, I guess it wouldn’t be a very fun contest. 😉 Among the many I saw were Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Troy, Lord of the Rings, X-Men, Aliens, and more. They used frame by frame Photoshop retouching to overlay Thundercats “faces” onto the actors. I can’t imagine how long this would have taken – go check out the high-quality version.

VistaPrint.ca: We’ll Happily Overcharge You

I’ve been using VistaPrint to print my business cards for years – they have excellent prices, and great quality prints and paper. Almost two years ago, VistaPrint opened a printing location in Canada, and started serving Canadians from Vistaprint.ca. Seems like anyone in Canada should order from Vistaprint.ca, doesn’t it? You’d expect to save on shipping because it’s within the same country, and the prices should be in line with what Vistaprint.com offers, right? Wrong. I was ordering some new Digital Home Thoughts business cards today, and check out the differences between the .ca and .com sites. First up, we have the .ca pricing of $77.95 for 500 cards:

vistaprint-canada

For $78 I could get the cards printed locally and likely have quality nearly as good as VistaPrint. Now check out VistaPrint USA’s pricing:

vistaprint-usa

The base price for 500 cards is only $5 difference, but VistaPrint is known far and wide for their sales – they have a constant sale on their business cards, so the 80% discount isn’t unusual. Amazingly, the Canadian arm of VistaPrint rarely, if ever, offers any type of promotional sales – and you’ll notice that all of their base prices for upgrades are also higher than the US prices. So why would I order from them?

Well, maybe shipping will make up the difference? Wrong. Priority, 7-day shipping from the USA is $20.31. Priority, 7-day shipping from within Canada is $29.36. Even once I factor in a 25% or so currency difference, ordering from VistaPrint USA was more than 50% less expensive than ordering from VistaPrint Canada.

What does VistaPrint assume, that Canadians are stupid and lazy, and won’t bother looking on the USA site?

How To Disable Vista’s Offline File Sync Center

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If you’ve ever been browsing a network drive and right-clicked on a folder and accidentally selected “Always Available Offline” (it’s easier to do than it sounds), you’ll have no doubt seen the little green Sync Center icon that comes up every time from that point forward – even when you’ve de-selected all the offline sync folders, and it has absolutely nothing to do, it still loads at every boot. The solution to stopping it isn’t found inside the Sync Center itself – where you’d think it would be – instead you have to go to the Control Panel and double-click on Offline Files. Once there you’ll see the above window, and it’s as simple as clicking on “Disable Offline Files” (in the image above, I’ve already done this) and rebooting. Voila – no more Offline File Sync Center.