June 2005

I’m driving home last night, listening to a tech news program. I’m pretty spaced out after a hard day’s work, so basically what I hear from the stereo is this:

blah blah blah blah Jay McGavren blah blah blah blah…

What the?! I actually swerved a little bit. Why was my name on the radio?

Well, the tech news program was actually a podcast, SlashDot Review, burned to CD and playing through my MP3 CD player. And my name was on there because I had donated to them the week before (to help with their considerable bandwidth costs), and I was selected at random for thanks “on the air”.

The production value for this show is good enough that one can forget it’s not radio. Just don’t let that catch you off guard…

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made me do it.

You scored as Modernist. Modernism represents the thought that science and reason are all we need to carry on. Religion is unnecessary and any sort of spirituality halts progress. You believe everything has a rational explanation. 50% of Americans share your world-view.

Modernist

100%

Existentialist

100%

Materialist

100%

Postmodernist

94%

Cultural Creative

44%

Fundamentalist

38%

Romanticist

31%

Idealist

0%

What is Your World View? (updated)
created with QuizFarm.com

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Detective work…

The gibberish entry that’s been appearing on my checking account statements, “gkard add [some bunch of random numbers]” always bothered me, but I figured it was probably one of the many legitimate automatic payments I’ve set up through the card, and they were just using a weird merchant ID. Besides, the $30 a month was always too far below my pain threshold to inspire me to check it out.

Until this month, that is, when my check card expired and I had to go through all my payees to update their info. I couldn’t figure out who these people were, so I called my bank. All they could give me was a phone number, no merchant name or anything. I called the number and got some kind of automated “card service” line, and I couldn’t even talk to a real person without an account number.

So I Googled for the phone number, and discovered it belonged to GKard, which is a company that sells “prepaid credit cards”. Got a second phone number from their site, called, and talked to a real person this time. I wanted to speak to a supervisor, but evidently they had all left at 5 PM (the call center is in Florida). I told them I’d call back the next day.

Still didn’t get to talk to a supervisor today, so I explained that I suspected fraudulent charges were being placed on my check card. I gave them the number, and they told me there was an account in my name. They also gave me a Hotmail address, and asked if it was mine; it wasn’t. (I quickly wrote the address down; I don’t think they were supposed to give it to me.) Evidently the account was used to purchase a subscription to some Russian (?) website. (I haven’t visited the site yet, as I’m betting it’s not work-safe.)

I told them I wanted the account canceled, and all charges refunded. (I knew this wouldn’t happen, as my bank statement show charges going back through April of last year. Don’t say it… I’ll be quicker to question unusual charges from now on.) I managed to haggle them up to 4 months worth of refund, and I promised I’d be calling back to get the rest. (I may or may not.)

Next task was to call my bank and cancel the check card. (Now I get to call all my automatic payees AGAIN and give them the new card number. Wheee.)

I then set up a new Hotmail account, for the purposes of writing my new friend. The e-mail was short and sweet, to the effect of: “My paypal account isnt working. Can you give me your address and Ill mail the auction payment to you instead?” We’ll see if he bites (or if he’s even monitoring the account any more).

GKard said they’d report this to their fraud department. Now I need to figure out who else to report this to. (Police? FTC? I really don’t know.)

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Simpering Semprons!

Even my long-awaited Archy editor was slow as molasses on my old PC, and I finally decided I’d had it. I went to Fry’s Electronics to pick up a Father’s Day gift, and to learn about my options for computers.

My budget was virtually nonexistent, so most geeks would find the hardware I wound up with laughable, but I think I did pretty good for the price. I got a $40 Matsonic motherboard, a $60 AMD Sempron 2.5 Ghz, and a $40 case. My plan is to assemble everything, then steal the hard drive, optical drives, 3D card, and RAM from my old clunker.

If this works, I’ll get a three-fold increase in speed for $140, plus the beginnings of a basic system for Diana. And I my loved ones won’t have to hear me bitch about my computer any more.

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Just got this automated e-mail from our new Microsoft Project Server installation:

> Below are the latest schedule changes. Contact your project
> manager if there are any problems with the changes.
>
>
> Project: Admin Time Commercial Development Phoenix
> 2005-2006
> Assign to:
> ———————————————————–
> Task Name: Sick Request
> Start: Jun 1 ‘05 Finish: Jun 1 ‘05 Work: 2h Rem
> Work: 2h
>
> Task Name: Bereavement
> Start: Jun 3 ‘05 Finish: Jun 3 ‘05 Work: 0h Rem
> Work: 0h
> ———————————————————–

Well, yeah, I do have one problem: the fact that I’m scheduled for bereavement!

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Dunno where I stumbled upon the review of Head First Design Patterns from O’Reilly, but after reading the sample chapter online, I knew I had to have it. The style is easy to understand, condensed, and every bit as hyperactive as me (sidebars include conversations between Grasshopper and his master on the tao of object-oriented design, for example).

One hour with the first chapter, and I already feel comfortable with the Strategy pattern, something I might not have accomplished in a week with the original Gang of Four book. I also know how to make simulated ducks fly under rocket power as easily as with a pair of wings. What more could you ask for?

Zyps
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A tale of soul and swords…

Someone had left a copy of Soul Calibur II on the shelf in front of me at Target, and I finally decided to stop stalling. I showed the screenshots to Diana, saying “This is the game I told you about that’s similar to Dead or Alive 2. Interested?” Her answer was a giddy “Yes!”, so into the cart it went.

She’s a bit of a button masher, but she’s actually getting pretty good. After playing the section of the quest mode that requires you to parry to defeat your opponents, she can deflect a few of my attacks now.

DOA Ultimate’s Live support was awesome. Why, oh why don’t more fighting games have online capability?

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