Archive for the 'Technology' Category

Testing WordPress for iPod touch

Len on Aug 12th 2008

Well, I’ve got a new brain: an iPod touch. How does this little device do with blogging? I’m using the WordPress application found on the Apple Application Store.  Not bad so far.

I’ve also added Twitterific and the Facebook and MySpace applications to the iPod, as well as some other random things.  With the exception of my church’s building and my car, I have Wi-Fi access pretty much wherever I go, so this will be nice.  I’m using the iPod as a PDA more than as an MP3 player, but it’s been awesome, and synchs with just about everything else on my MacBook, which includes our web-based church calendar and contact management system.  Sweetness!

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Wireless Mighty Mouse Gunk

Len on Nov 7th 2007

Huggies LogoLike many Apple Wireless Mighty Mouse users, my scroll ball occasionally starts to stick. Once it even stopped working altogether.

Apple’s official solution to the problem hasn’t worked for me. Others have suggested that one must crack the case on the mouse to fix it. Still others suggest using rubbing alcohol, and one guy even cut up strips of tape to feed under the ball… Crazy!

However, I have come up with a solution that has worked for me every time, and it’s a slightly surprising one: Huggies Naturally Refreshing Cucumber & Green Tea Baby Wipes.

Honestly, I don’t know if the cucumber and green tea have any bearing on the success of this procedure, but it’s what we had around the house.

Just rub the mouse down with a single wipe, and then flip it upside down, and roll the scroll ball around vigorously with the wipe. For best results, push down with a fair bit of force, and consider using a flat surface, like a table or book when you do this.

Your mileage may vary. If it shorts something out or discolors your mouse, don’t cry to me. :)

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“Aww…Jenny!”

Len on Oct 3rd 2007

Apple Inc LogoJenny failed me.

At least she was nice to talk to. Unfortunately she just didn’t come through. Despite her efforts, the iWork package was still shipped to the physical address. I ended up having to call FedEx and then go track down the truck in some industrial park across the city. But… I got it!
For the record, iWork ‘08 is a fantastic piece of software.

As a bonus, and one that makes the whole frustrating thing worth while, on Tuesday I received an email from Apple with a serial number for iWork. You know, the thing I had tried to purchase the previous Friday? So now I have two legal licenses for the software, and one boxed set. I’m likely going to be gifting the additional serial number to the church, so we can run Keynote off the back computer instead of having Pastor Mike and I use up our laptops when we preach.

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“Thanks Jenny!” - An Apple Customer Support Experience

Len on Sep 29th 2007

Apple Inc LogoI had a roller -coaster of a ride yesterday dealing with Apple’s Customer Support, after making a purchase on the online store. I’ve been using the 30-day trial of iWork ‘08, and have decided to switch to iWork from my Microsoft Office Mac 2004 installation, so yesterday I ordered a serial number for the product, which was supposed to be emailed to me “immediately.”

After about an hour, I had received an order confirmation, but no serial number. I called the customer support line, and talked to a gentleman about my situation. He explained that the online serial number system had been malfunctioning, and that there were two options for me. The first option was for him to cancel the order, and refund payment, so that I could try the online system again later. The second option was for him to ship me a retail-boxed copy of the software on standard overnight FedEx at no additional charge. Being that this was Friday afternoon, he said the “standard overnight” would get to me by Tuesday at the latest… I didn’t love that idea, but it seemed better than refunds and reorders with no promise to succeed.

Some time after that conversation, I noticed that the order, which was originally not going to be shipped anywhere, since it was email-based, had been setup to go to the wrong shipping address. I had corrected the shipping address in the online store before speaking to the gentleman on the phone, so this was distressing. He didn’t verify it with me, and I didn’t think to do so either.

So, I called Apple back, and spoke to a rather abrasive woman who told me there was nothing they could do to fix the problem. You see, according to her, once an order is “Prepared for Shipment” in their tracking system, it’s “out of their hands.” She was very insistent that my only recourse other than to allow delivery to the incorrect address, was to call 1-800-FedEx and ask them to redirect the package. Without a tracking number. Before it had left Apple’s fulfillment center.

I gave it a shot anyway, but FedEx didn’t have any way (or desire) to help me. “It is to-ta-ly up to thee shiping party to mod-i-fy any add-ress in-for-mation.”

At this point, I was frustrated beyond belief. My good friend Calvin was working to calm me on Instant Messenger, but I wanted to scream. I guessed I’d just wait until Apple gave me a tracking number, and then try to contact the local FedEx office to see if they’d hold the package at the depot for me to pick up, instead. I didn’t like that idea, but it was better than the package being delivered elsewhere. However, my dear wife insisted that I call Apple back one last time. As she is usually correct in the appropriate course of action to take when I have lost touch with reality, I complied.

My third call to Apple went better. I had a hunch it would be better the second Jenny answered. She sounded energetic. Awake. Louder than the others had, but not in a bad way. I figured that the best way to approach it was from a calm and honest point. “Hi there. This is my third call to Apple today, and I admit, I am pretty frustrated. Let me give you my order number and billing address for you to open my account, and then I’ll give you the background.”

“Uhh, okay…” Jenny sounded nervous, probably anticipating me turning into a rabid idiot and chewing her out at any moment. She verified my information, and then I explained the situation. After telling her my story, I paused for her response. I heard dead air for a few seconds, and then she said “Let’s see… I’m not sure what the options are, but we’ll make this right, and we’ll get the package to you. Let me try talking to a Manager Rep.” That was great. I thanked her for at least considering that there may be something they could do.

And then it happened. She did it. She changed the address, before she even went off the line to talk to the manager. She startled me, and herself. I hit refresh on my online order status page, and sure enough, it was correct. Jenny had done it!

Just to be sure, she checked with a manager, made a few other changes to ensure promptness of service, and came back on the line to assure me that all was as it should be, at least, as it should be for being a substitute for what I ordered in the first place. I was ecstatic. I told Jenny she had the magic touch, and that I’d blog about her. She seemed flattered, but I’m sure it’s not the first time some weird random webgeek was impressed by her technical support enough to write about her; she was probably freaked out.

Either way, Apple, and by that I mean Jenny, made things right. I should have the boxed version of iWork ‘08 by Tuesday at the latest. And you know, even though I’ve had some issues with Apple, they still have better support than Toshiba, Earthlink, RoadRunner, or Vonage, which are the other corporate beasts I’ve battled before. Apple hasn’t lost my business yet.

Thanks Jenny!

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Technical Difficulties

Len on Sep 26th 2007

Apple Inc LogoI recently wrote about my MacBook, and how pleased I am with it. It is my first Mac, and has largely been a joy to use.

It’s not all perfect, however. Over the first six months of using the machine, two very nasty habits developed. First, the Superdrive (CD-R/DVD-R combo drive) started to mangle a lot of the writable media I threw at it. Eventually it got to the point where it wouldn’t burn any discs correctly at all. This was a real problem, as I burn audio CDs from our church for distribution.

The second, and more annoying habit was that the screen would flicker randomly. When it first started, it was a very slight change in brightness. I remember thinking it was my eyes because I was up late, writing a sermon. In time, it got worse, and was quite noticeable. At one point, the left half of the screen went all-but-completely dark. That was the last straw.

I found a number of folks with the same screen issues on the net, and decided that I ought to get the machine serviced, as I suspected it needed a new power inverter. I scheduled an appointment with a “Genius” at the Apple Store in Syracuse, 70 miles south of my home. The guy I spoke with was great, and said that he thought I was right, and that they should repair both the screen inverted, and the Superdrive. He told me it would be two weeks. I was prepared for that, and left it with him, as pleased as one could be in such circumstances.

Diana and I went from Syracuse out to the Watkins Glen area to spend a week with her family. Two days later, I got a phone call that the MacBook was back, and had been successfully repaired.

We picked it up in Syracuse on the way back from our vacation, and the screen was noticeably brighter, and didn’t flicker. The burner worked, and incidentally, even sounded better (which makes sense, because as I found out, they replaced it with a different model).

Everything was good. The key word of course is “was.”

Two weeks ago, on September 12th, the flicker came back. It’s not as bad as last time, and so far the screen brightness hasn’t deteriorated as far, but it does seem darker. This bothers me immensely, and because my warranty will be up in December and the problem doesn’t seem to be a one-time-thing, I’ve decided to purchase the additional two years of AppleCare.

Despite these problems, I still love my MacBook. It’s the best system, from a software and workflow standpoint, that I’ve ever owned. I hate to sound overly dramatic, but it really has changed the way I work. I guess that’s why it’s worth it to me to pay an extra $250 to have two more years of coverage. I’ll probably post in the future about the experience I have when I eventually get this flicker fixed. I certainly pray that it goes as smoothly as the previous one, and stays fixed.

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My Conversion Story

Len on Sep 8th 2007

Steve Jobs Kool-AidHi, my name is Len, and I’m a computer geek.

I’ve been a computer geek since I got my first PC in third grade, a Tandy 1000 running a crippled version of DOS and a proprietary GUI called DeskMate. I was a rabid BBS user, and first got on the (text based!) Internet when I was nine years old via a MajorBBS system, and headed straight for IRC, finding the then-new Undernet. I was nine years old. A year later I had personally built my first computer, and a year after that was running a part time BBS that catered in custom game levels and other…er..software. I wrote custom software, and built (and rebuilt) a number of computers throughout my tween and teen years, not getting another prebuilt system until my first laptop in 2002.

I tinkered with Amiga, Mac, and other obscure systems occasionally, but I mostly stuck with “IBM compatible” hardware, and used DOS, then Windows and eventually Linux too, for fifteen years.

Then something crazy happened in December ‘06. I drank the Kool-Aid. I bought a Mac. And a wireless mighty mouse, wireless keyboard, and iPod Nano. I’m a convert.

I had always been interested in Macs, but never bought one because the usual arguments for resistance: compatibility, price, goofy interface, etc. However, with Apple switching to Intel chips, and Mac OS X basically being a pretty interface to a UNIX system, the new Macs caught my eye. A friend of mine bought one of the black MacBooks, so I tinkered with that a bit, and was sold. I decided to buy one, and get a copy of Parallels just in case I needed something on Windows.

Three of us from my church ended up with MacBooks, and we love ‘em. I haven’t found a single reason that I actually need Parallels, though the new version lets me play a few games I enjoy. The software bundled with the Mac (iLife ‘06) rocks, and I’m hearing even better things about the new iLife ‘08. I’ve actually installed the new iWork ‘08 trial, and I love it. I’ll be purchasing it soon. The bundled apps aren’t the only cool software packages available. There is a whole wealth of quality freeware applications, and many open source projects are cross-platform and available. Plus, my favorite Bible software, Logos, is working on a Mac version.

My only complaint is the bundled browser, Safari. I like Safari, and used it for the past number of months, but as of today I’ve switched back to Firefox. Safari doesn’t work with (or perhaps the the sites don’t work with Safari, but I digress) two sites I use regularly, our church database, and my WordPress post editor. Safari is currently being worked on in anticipation of the October launch of OS X Leopard, so hopefully it’ll work after that, but we’ll see. If all I have to do to make this the best system I’ve ever used is to install Firefox, I don’t have a problem with it; I install Firefox on all my Windows and Linux systems anyway.

I love my Mac. :)

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