Skype and Orange: a post about suckage.

SkypeIn works….from local land lines. *sigh* It doesn’t work from my mobile (Orange network). This is an improvement considering the problems I was having before but it’s still a pain in the butt. Skype have STILL not gotten back to me on resolution from the original report (can you believe it was MARCH) and I’m … Continue reading “Skype and Orange: a post about suckage.”

SkypeIn works….from local land lines. *sigh* It doesn’t work from my mobile (Orange network). This is an improvement considering the problems I was having before but it’s still a pain in the butt. Skype have STILL not gotten back to me on resolution from the original report (can you believe it was MARCH) and I’m losing faith in them which peeves me because I have invested time and money in Skype solutions for myself and clients. I have a mostly useless Belkin Skype phone here.

Orange. Bill for £185 this month. “Billing error” apparently. They forgot to take note of the inclusive minutes and texts. If I’d not noticed, I’d have just been wondering why I was feeling tapped this month. Reminds me all that we are to these companies is a monthly Direct Debit. They didn’t seem to notice that my bill this month was more than THREE TIMEs higher than it has ever been and was actually 8 times larger than it should be. At least they’ve promised to get back to me with something as soon as they can which is streets ahead of the “when we can be bothered” you get with Skype.

At this point I cannot recommend either service to clients. Big companies just don’t get to be this sucky.

Accents with extra local flavour.

Juliet Turner is one of my favourite artists. Her enriched-with-extra-local-flavour accent was a bone of contention with my wife who hated her Omagh-tone and banned her from the house. See how that turned out (though obviously it wasn’t because of that). I’ve seen her live once and would do so again. I remember sitting in … Continue reading “Accents with extra local flavour.”

Juliet Turner is one of my favourite artists. Her enriched-with-extra-local-flavour accent was a bone of contention with my wife who hated her Omagh-tone and banned her from the house. See how that turned out (though obviously it wasn’t because of that). I’ve seen her live once and would do so again. I remember sitting in the residents lounge of a hotel after a post-Y2K celebration dinner and singing Juliet Turner songs with a complete stranger. It was like a secret we shared and while we sang, no-one else even spoke (which considering the amount of beer they had consumed that night at the free bar, was extremely surprising). Belfast Central was one of the songs we worked well with, because it’s a duet, another was the Tom Waits classic, “I hope that I don’t fall in love” which she duetted with Brian Kennedy. I think I’d like to hear her sing “She moves thru the fair” which was done really well by All About Eve about a hundred years ago in 1988.

Children See Children Do

It’s a sobering video: Children See, Children Do Related posts: Digital Circle going independent and my thoughts on the Future The Broadband Blueprint (re DETI Telecoms Consultation) What do you mean you’re not at your desk 24×7????? ..won’t someone think of the children? THE CHILDREN!!!!!!

It’s a sobering video:

Children See, Children Do

Outcome-based action

I don’t think there’s enough meat to make this into a GTD or even a DSN-style mantra. I’ve been thinking about outcome based actions. This is where you make decisions on your next action based not on what you want to do now but rather based on what result you might want in the future. … Continue reading “Outcome-based action”

I don’t think there’s enough meat to make this into a GTD or even a DSN-style mantra.

I’ve been thinking about outcome based actions. This is where you make decisions on your next action based not on what you want to do now but rather based on what result you might want in the future. This requires obviously a bit more reflection and forethought but it’s been valuable to me in business, in gaming and also in personal living.

On the face of it, it makes me sound like a “schemer” because I’m trying to think of the Big Picture when dealing with friends, family and co-workers.

It can lead to you being a little detached at times but that’s not a bad thing. I still feel passionately about things, still have boundless enthusiasm for the things that make me happy but when faced with adversity or an argument, I think it’s better to react with thought, patience and calm. This isn’t to say that emotive thinking is wrong but in my experience I’ve regretted more decisions made in the heat of the moment than I have decisions where I had time to consider possibilities, not with cold logic, but with time to consider both the logical process and the emotive process. One without the other is bad, mmmkay?

Make decisions based not on your personal needs that day or the conversation you just had but always ask, “Is that what you want?”

Inertia

I can’t speak for the bank themselves, but their advertising company deserves some kudos. This made me chuckle. RaboDirect Advert (flash video). Related posts: Flash: a legacy technology Ugh. More Flash. Do not read. ADBE vs AAPL ADBE: Nearly there

I can’t speak for the bank themselves, but their advertising company deserves some kudos. This made me chuckle.

RaboDirect Advert (flash video).

John Welch has a Wii

Nice knowing ya John. And do buy the Rayman game. It’s just really stupid. I got mine a month ago and it’s changed my life. I no longer need human companionship. It’ll be even better when they sort out the obvious thing and make the Mii have any relation to multiplayer across the net. Quite … Continue reading “John Welch has a Wii”

Nice knowing ya John. And do buy the Rayman game. It’s just really stupid.

I got mine a month ago and it’s changed my life. I no longer need human companionship. It’ll be even better when they sort out the obvious thing and make the Mii have any relation to multiplayer across the net. Quite fancy a bit of Wii Bowling while not having to entertain 🙂

And yeah, plenty of PS3s and XBOXen here too…

Who wouldn’t choose Google over Microsoft?

The Scobleizer writes: Doubleclick turned down Microsoft and were bought by Google instead. I’d previously riffed off Paul Graham on this idea that Microsoft may actually be dying by attrition. I know there’s a lot of people who are wowed by WPF but I’m not particularly bothered and yet the same sort of thing from … Continue reading “Who wouldn’t choose Google over Microsoft?”

The Scobleizer writes: Doubleclick turned down Microsoft and were bought by Google instead.

I’d previously riffed off Paul Graham on this idea that Microsoft may actually be dying by attrition. I know there’s a lot of people who are wowed by WPF but I’m not particularly bothered and yet the same sort of thing from Adobe I see as exciting.

Part of it is that I really see no need to allow myself to get mired within a “Microsoft-built standard” even if they make it as open as an very open thing. I just don’t trust them. They’ve spent too much money and time trying to tie people to their products that I feel a lot of bias against trusting them in the future.

The idea that the movers and shakers might ignore Redmond is further support for PG’s assertion that Microsoft is Dead, even if just “figuratively dead”. I know I’m not alone in considering this.

But does this make us actually biased against Microsoft or are we just not part of the Windows ecosystem. I have friends in the IT world who would always consider a Microsoft solution and I have friends who would never consider a Microsoft solution. Very few of them are non-partisan.

I’ve seen things I liked and disliked. I wasn’t very impressed with Microsoft’s CRM solution. It just didn’t add anything that I hadn’t seen in a hundred other CRM solutions and neither was it the cheapest. And it required not only signing up to Microsoft’s CRM solution but to use it you needed to be running Windows servers, Exchange Server, SQL Server, Outlook on the desktop and Windows as your operating system. These additional requirements killed it for me. I just couldn’t work up the enthusiasm as each extra step was one more lock-in. And what, if in a year, they vastly increase their fees for these components? I’ve a heap of stuff invested and all my data locked in so either way I’m buggered.

So in the end it’s not that Google is not evil but more that Microsoft just isn’t anything to write home about. I mean, for example, their Mac Mojo corporate mouthpiece waxed on about how much they love Entourage. Big bloody surprise there. The team that built it, loves it. Whoop-de-fecking-doo. Entourage to me was the end of two useful email clients. Outlook Express for the home user (which was largely supplanted by Mail) and Outlook (which was a must-have app for any Mac user in a corporate environment). Entourage was a pale shadow of either and the additional insult of including Project Center for the “soccer moms” rather than actually building a version of “Project” for, say, business people who wanted to use a Mac in business, smacked entirely of market segmentation and trying to keep the Mac in the home and off the corporate LAN. Entourage was an insult and nothing from the PR mouthpiece of Microsoft can try and disguise it for what it is.

I still agree with Paul Graham. Microsoft isn’t dead in a corporate sense, but they have proved time and time again that they have absolutely nothing interesting to say.

This is a company that harps on about creating opportunities, unbridled innovation and unlimited potential. What they mean is opportunities for them, unbridled ways of exploiting the market and unlimited potential for profit.

[Update: The Lone Sysadmin adds a good ending:

The reason I can’t save my Microsoft Project file as a web page is then there wouldn’t be a need for the Microsoft Project Server 2007!

Microsoft: not interested in helping you just get your work done.

That’s just poetry.]

[Update 2: The Inquirer says:

Microsoft has lost its ability to twist arms, and now it is going to die. It can’t compete on level ground, so is left with backpedalling and discounts of almost 100 times.

What we are seeing is an unprecedented shift of power. It is also an unprecedented admission of failure. And the funniest part about the moves made? They are the wrong things to do. Microsoft is in deep trouble.

This is based on Dell offering XP-based system again and Microsoft selling Vista for $3 in China. Priceless]

Followup on Skype Problems

The last thing I got from Skype on my SkypeIn frustrations was on 17th March. Thank you for contacting Skype Support. Maybe there is something wrong with the numbers of the certain area code that you have. As I have mentioned I will get more info from the PSTN this Monday. I really hope that … Continue reading “Followup on Skype Problems”

The last thing I got from Skype on my SkypeIn frustrations was on 17th March.

Thank you for contacting Skype Support.

Maybe there is something wrong with the numbers of the certain area code that you have. As I have mentioned I will get more info from the PSTN this Monday.

I really hope that the problem will be resolved very soon.

I’m still waiting for a reply. A month of service wasted so far. Craptastic Service, Guys

It’s been one of those days…

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It’s better to have a cool name than not…

James writes about the difference between Jaiku and Twitter: I actually registered for Jaiku last year but soon gave it up for the busier Twitter. That’s the argument Robert Scoble makes in favour of the latter – that community (and simplicity) wins. He might be right… I reckon that Twitter is just a better name … Continue reading “It’s better to have a cool name than not…”

James writes about the difference between Jaiku and Twitter:

I actually registered for Jaiku last year but soon gave it up for the busier Twitter. That’s the argument Robert Scoble makes in favour of the latter – that community (and simplicity) wins. He might be right…

I reckon that Twitter is just a better name than Jaiku. It’s a name that’s a lot more likely to be adopted because it got an onomatopoeic quality (No, it’s not the right word but it’s as close as my tired mind will find tonight.)

I kinda want a Twitter-like service but I want it to set my iChat/MSN status as well. And I want it to be set-able from my phone so that when I choose “Meeting” on my phone, all of my communications services also change to “Meeting”.

Where’s the Web 2.0 companies springing out of nowhere to create that, eh?