hate web page previews?

Perhaps the single most annoying thing about the internet right now:

worst thing about WordPress.com - Snap Shots
worst thing about WordPress.com - Snap Shots

You are trying to read a webpage. And one of these Snap.com pop-ups ruins the experience.

In the case above, it does not even show a preview of the linked site. YEEESH.

This is CRAP.

This “feature” is turned on by default in WordPress.com blogs. It’s easy to turn them off, but few people bother to do so. (They are turned off on this blog.)

And yes, I emailed the editor of the offending site above to ask that she turn them off too.

Can’t wordpress find a better way to monetize than this?

Snow Crash – book review

Leo Laporte is constantly touting the 1992 novel by Neal Stephenson as one of his favourite books.

I finally downloaded it from Audible.

The book Snow Crash is heavily influenced by previous cyberpunk novels, notably those of William Gibson.

The story takes place in Los Angeles, in the area formerly known as the United States, during the early 21st century. In this hypothetical future reality the United States Federal Government has ceded most of its power to private organizations and entrepreneurs …

Snow Crash – Wikipedia

This book was cutting edge and provocative in 1992. But in 2008 I found it long and amateurish. The plot unlikely.

There are a some very cool sections, but too few.

Not recommended. Read Gibson instead.

John McCain is simply evil

I read an article in the admittedly left-leaning Rolling Stone magazine called MAKE-BELIEVE MAVERICK:

A closer look at the life and career of John McCain reveals a disturbing record of recklessness and dishonesty

If even half of what’s written in this scathing article is true, it would be a disaster to have this guy in charge of anything.

… Few politicians have so actively, or successfully, crafted their own myth of greatness. In McCain’s version of his life, he is a prodigal son who, steeled by his brutal internment in Vietnam, learned to put “country first.” Remade by the Keating Five scandal that nearly wrecked his career, the story goes, McCain re-emerged as a “reformer” and a “maverick,” righteously eschewing anything that “might even tangentially be construed as a less than proper use of my office.”

It’s a myth McCain has cultivated throughout his decades in Washington. But during the course of this year’s campaign, the mask has slipped. “Let’s face it,” says Larry Wilkerson, a retired Army colonel who served as chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell. “John McCain made his reputation on the fact that he doesn’t bend his principles for politics. That’s just not true.” …

MAKE-BELIEVE MAVERICK

It’s on newsstands now.

Is McCain finished?
Is McCain finished?

Yahoo Domain Rip-Off

I have a number of domain names registered at Yahoo!

They offered an excellent rate when I first signed up. But now …

… Starting July 1, users who have registered domains with Yahoo’s small-business site will see their annual fee for the service jump from $9.95 to $34.95. …

CNet

I will be transferring those domains to another company charging between $10-$15 / year.

Boycotting Yahoo completely would be a natural reaction for me too. But I love their flickr photo service still at $25 / year for a Pro Account.

do you hate your phone?

I do.

The advertising for cost is so deceptive:

Great Plans Starting at $25/month

… means get ready to pay $60+ / month for an average users.

I have a minimal plan like that with FIDO and yet often get bills of over $100 / month.

In addition to fees, taxes, extra minutes, and long distance charges, I get charged $.95 / minute “roaming” in the USA.

That’s added for both incoming and outgoing calls. (Remind me not to pick up your phone call when I’m in the USA.)

I’ve been trying to resist the urge to buy an iPhone. Ian just got one. Loves it. His first monthly bill was only $80 … quite reasonable.

But I’m bound to want to move on before the 3yr service contract expires with FIDO. What would I do then?

related: Why We Love to Hate Our Cell Phone Company – PC World

Seinfeld uses a PC ??

Who’s going to buy that?

Jerry had a Mac in his apartment for the entire TV series.

Jerry Seinfeld was part of the old Think Different Apple advertising campaign.

Microsoft is going to start a new US$300 million advertising blitz to try to regain some of the street credibility they have been losing over all these years. The campaign is built around the idea that “Windows breaks down barriers that prevent people and ideas from connecting.” Sounds like corporate PR-puffing, but there’s a twist: it will star Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld.

Seinfeld will get US$10 million to star in the presumably funny commercials, which is quite a good chunk of cash compared to the low fare that John Hodgman (Mr. PC) and Justin Long (Mr. Please someone slap that guy) must be getting for their long series of TV, internet and print ads. Let’s hope they are better than the Apple ones. …

Gizmodo

This is a brave gamble. Certain to grab attention. But will it backfire on Microsoft?

The campaign starts Sept. 4th.

who to believe about oil prices

A superb audiocast called Supply and Command by On The Media is essential listening for anyone angered.

It explains why and how the media has been duped by Big Oil.

portfolio-oil.jpg

Also recommended is this article by Howell Raines. (He’s on the Big Oil hit list, for sure.)

When it comes to the cost of gasoline, who should we believe? Here are some nominees and their viewpoints:

1. The oil companies: It’s supply and demand at its most basic, just like your professor outlined in your freshman economics course.
2. The petro-toadies in Congress: All we have to do is open up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the waters off Florida and California.
3. The Department of Energy: OPEC has to pump more, and we’ve got to allow more refineries by rolling back environmental restrictions.
4. King Abdullah: OPEC pumps plenty of crude but “despicable” oil-futures speculators in the West are driving up the prices due to their “selfishness.”
5. Senator John McCain: Exxon Mobil has done such a good job of demonstrating the magic of the marketplace that it deserves another $1.2 billion in tax breaks.
6. Senator Barack Obama: Impose a windfall-profits tax to remind American oil executives that price gouging can backfire politically.
7. About 90 percent of the print and TV reporters in America: See No. 1. It really is that ol’ devil supply and demand.
8. The White House: Never mind. Nobody’s home.

For my money, a sounder answer as to whom to believe is Don Barlett and Jim Steele, the investigative reporting team that has won two Pulitzers and two National Magazine Awards for exposing government theft and corporate greed. Their 2003 series for Time magazine on oil economics remains required reading for anyone who wants a better understanding of how gas at $4 to $5 a gallon represents a carefully arranged screwing of consumers. “The bottom line for the oil people is, How much can I make while spending the least I can get by with on refineries, synthetic fuels, and for exploration and drilling on the vast, unused acreage in existing oil leases?” Barlett says. He notes that Canada has become the United States’ No. 1 oil supplier by funding joint government-industry exploration of the tar-sand fields of Alberta. “The most chilling statistic is Exxon Mobil’s. It spent twice as much last year to buy back stock as it did on exploration.”

As journalism has passed from a hungry to an elite profession, there’s no shock value in the fact that Exxon Mobil paid only $5 billion in U.S. income taxes last year while it paid $25 billion to foreign governments. …

Portfolio magazine – Crude Reporting

Click through. You are getting screwed.

gaspriceseb1.jpg

Apple bungles iPhone 2 launch

apple-unhappy.jpgMany of Apple’s biggest fans are “disgusted” with the many problems with last week’s introduction of the latest Jesus Phone

Steve must be furious.

On the other hand, Apple sold over 1 million iPhone 3Gs. And handled over 10 million downloads from App store.

Both way over expectation.

Best advice is to update an iTouch or iPhone 1 with the new firmware. Skip the iPhone 2 unless you really need one and live in a big American city.

we need switch to VOIP phone service

I’ve balked on the overpriced iPhone in Canada.

Thank the Gods I don’t use “text” messaging.

OTTAWA – Cellphone users are about to be hit with new fees as two of Canada’s telecommunications giants plan to bring in a levy on incoming text messages.

Bell Mobility will begin charging customers 15 cents per incoming text message on Aug. 8. Telus Mobility is moving to the same billing practice effective Aug. 24. Until now, their pay-per-use customers who send text messages have been charged a 15-cent fee per message, but it hasn’t cost anything to receive them.

The pending new charge has sparked outrage on blogs, with customers saying they can’t control who sends them messages, especially when spammers obtain their cell number or retailers send them unsolicited messages.

“This charge is unbelievable. If someone sends me “spam” on my Bell phone, I have to pay for it? I made the mistake of giving my cellphone number to a car rental agency and now I get spam text messages,” a Bell customer ranted on a Canadian technology blog.

“I actually work for Bell and I think this incoming text messages being charged is bogus!” posted another. …

Get ready to pay for incoming text messages – Canada.com

Thanks George.

VOIP is Voice Over Internet Protocol. Phone calls made over the internet should be much less regulated than the oligopoly the cell phone companies have now.

I need something like a SKYPE phone. It’s been called “The World’s best phone” — but it’s not available in Canada as yet.

skypephone.jpg
Skypephone

Or should I simply drop my mobile phone altogether.

iPhone in Canada too expensive

I’m willing to pay $100 (tax in) for TRUE “unlimited” North American phone and web.

Rogers is not offering that.

What’s wrong with Rogers’ rate plan?

For one thing, it comes with a mandatory 3-year contract. In the U.K., O2 offers an-18 month contract and throws in the iPhone for free. And although both AT&T (T) and Rogers offer calling, data and text messaging for $75 a month, Rogers at that price gives Canadians a third less calling time, half as many text messages, and puts a 750 MB cap on 3G data usage — with steep fees for users who go over their monthly limit.

It’s this last element that has struck Canadian Apple fans as most unreasonable. One of the features that makes the iPhone so popular is how effortless it makes websurfing and multimedia downloads — activities that can quickly rack up the megabytes. That’s why heavy users usually pay extra for unlimited data usage.

Rogers claims that its top data plan — 2 GB per month for $115 — is enough to download 16,000 webpages. But users point out that a single Facebook page can account for 1.2 MB, which reduces browsing from 16,000 pages per month to 1,600.

10,000 Canadians petition for iPhone rate relief – Fortune

iphone-canada-rogers.jpg

Count me out when the phone debuts July 11th.