Great Customer Service

I have to hand it to Apple, they do customer service right. Two recent experiences made me appreciate it even more. Last weekend we went into the Apple Store at the mall to see about an armband for Amber to use when working out. After finding the one she wanted, Amber turned to a girl in blue and asked to check out. She responding by asking if we knew we could check ourselves out through their Apple Store app.Turns out, you can buy accessories with your phone. Just scan the bar code of your item and enter your iTunes account password. If you know what you’re there for, checkout is a snap and you don’t even need to talk to anyone. Awesome!

I’ve been having problems with the earpiece on my phone for at least a week. Calls connect and the person on the other end can hear me, but I can’t hear them. Switching to speaker phone or using headphones works fine. So I scheduled a Genius Bar appointment to have Apple check it out. I got there right on time and used their app to check myself in. A few minutes later a guy came out and we discussed the problem. He disappeared into the back room for a few minutes. He came back out and asked me to try a call, which still did not have audio. He immediately offered to replace my phone and did it on the spot. I was in and out in under 30 minutes. No hassle whatsoever, no accusatory attitude about what I might have done to it, just genuine helpfulness and an immediate replacement phone. There’s a good reason I always buy AppleCare, and it is totally worth it.

My Mom Could Never Drive Across Mackinac Bridge

Amber and I are watching Modern Marvels on the Mackinac Bridge in Michigan. (The C is silent – Mack-in-aw.) Stuff like this amazes me – the sheer size and amount of materials required for a project this big are hard to comprehend. To help combat the crazy winds the bridge can be subjected to, the center two lanes are actually metal grates. It can flex as much as 35 feet to the left or right and 10 feet up and down. It’s something like 150 feet from the road surface to the water below. My mom had trouble driving up and down Pike’s Peak and over Skyline Drive in Colorado. There’s no way she could make it over this bridge on her own when you can see right through it.

Makin’ the Switch

I never thought this day would come. I’m going to buy a Mac. Not just any old Mac, but an iMac. The same Mac I made fun of for looking like a giant deformed Jolly Rancher when it was introduced back when I was in high school. Only now it looks like this…

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…and it comes with a very sexy 24″ screen.

I blame my iPod. Thank God for Epic’s computer loan program.

Changes Coming

Well. I’ve been neglecting my site. So much in fact that I didn’t realize it went down a while back. I don’t think it took me too long to realize it, but once I did it took a few weeks to get it working again. To make a long story short – under my current hosting if there’s a problem with my account, there’s only one person who can get it fixed. If that person isn’t available, I’m just out of luck.

Anyway, I recently registered a few new domains (I’m not abandoning this one quite yet) and I’m gearing up to switch hosts to something more reliable and more in my control. I probably don’t have many readers at this point, anyway, but some other changes are coming. I’m working on a new layout and adding some content to make this a *little* more than a blog. The site may be down again for a bit while I get things changed over.

New Diggs

Digg.com unveiled their latest version including expanded topics and some new customizations. If you’ve never been to Digg, you should go check it out. I’m interested to see if the new topics acheive the same general quality as the Tech news has for the past year. I’m also excited because they’ve added the ability to deselect topics from your homepage view, which means I don’t have to see anymore stories about the latest Linux distro or tech deals that I can’t afford. You’ll have to register to gain access to all the new categories (until the list the Beta status in the coming weeks), but you can’t really take advantage of Digg without registering anyway. Don’t forget to add me as a friend.

Spam

I don’t get it. Spammers hit this blog with spam every single day. Almost all of it comes in the form of trackbacks for things like brand name drugs, sex sites, and random names of famous people. When this first started happening, I didn’t know how to handle it. Every little thing made it onto the site, and with the default WordPress install I couldn’t figure out anyway to hold it so that the three of you who actually visit this site wouldn’t be able to see it all.

In the last 24 hours alone, there were 606 spam trackbacks. That’s definitely the highest number I’ve noticed so far. Thanks to the Spam Karma 2 plugin, not a single one of them made it onto a viewable page of this site. And that’s why I don’t see the point in sending me this crap. Why bother spamming a site that gets zero traffic and zero spam views? Maybe they just enjoy wasting my time. Well, guess what? It takes me about 30 seconds to delete all that spam, and if I wait long enough, Spam Karma will do it for me. So they aren’t even wasting my time. So what’s the point?

Edit: I should point out that the default WordPress install does include the plugin Askimet for combatting spam, it’s just not turned on by default.