Well, I’m sold on USB-C

I like the connector, and I like the speed.

Screen Shot 2019 08 23 at 10 04 29 PMI just transferred 44.5 GB to my zippy new 4 TB drive in about 10 minutes. Don’t know exactly but I was surprised with the “Ding” that said everything was finished.

I had a 3 TB drive that died a couple of years ago. I didn’t replace it because I never got around to it. This one is fast and it’s quiet.

I like keeping local backups of documents and photos just because in the event of one of the primary backups failing, I still have the ability to reconstruct my computer. It was that redundancy that allowed me to bring this new computer up even with partially corrupted backups.

This little device is a WD. It’s a tiny little thing not solid state but cheap rotational storage is a good thing.

I had to get out of the house today. I had no plans other than to check the pricing of phones (for the other half) Best Buy’s price was discounted but Apple Refurb has better pricing and the phone is backed directly by Apple.

I think that’s where the purchase will be made.

However, always a shopper I saw the drive sitting on the shelf for $100 and thought, “Huh, that works for me.”

So I’m transferring stuff to it as fast as my evil little fingers will allow.

I did a few of my favorite things today. Saw a different view, washed & dried the car by hand, shopped a bit. There are some other things I’d like to have done, but I’m saving that for another day.

You know… people really should leave a message

Call center holdingI’m on a call with someone else, and my gym calls. Of course, I couldn’t know they were my gym until I reverse look up their number, I had to do a reverse lookup to figure out who called because god forbid, they’d leave a message OR have an actual identifiable number.

Guess what they’re calling about? I’m sure that it’s because the bank changed my address and even though I changed the address on the Gym’s website I’m fairly sure that they’re calling because the bank refused to pay them on the debit card I provided.

Annoyances, like gnats, seem to be never ending in my world.

I’m waiting on hold, 20 minutes at this point to get through to them so that I can sort this issue out. Sigh… 20 minutes is excessive I’ll admit, but now it’s the principle of the thing. I know it’s nothing to do with the representative I’m trying to reach. They’re just obviously busy. The issue was started by the freakin bank and I’m the one who gets to waste time sorting it out. After all it’s not the banks fault, “We do this for your safety and convenience…” Uh yeah so you say.

Oh well, it gives me time to look for a job, blog, work on a web site. I suppose when I get bored with all those things, I could rub one out… That’s healthy right? I won’t I know that by the time I’m really into it someone will answer the phone and then hang up on me because they think is an obscene call. Weird, now I can’t stop thinking about it.

Shutterstock 417051781Apparently, their phone system hangs after 30 minutes. Not cool, I’ve dialed back… IT’S ON NOW bitches!

I’m trying to get out of San Diego, and as part of that I’m trying get things sorted out before that move because I’m going to be in no mood to deal with petty assed shit when the move is completed.

But the really annoying thing is that whoever called me form the gym couldn’t be bothered to leave a message and that’s just flat unprofessional.

Killed one AirPod between the previous call and the hold time with the gym. Thank goodness I was only using one at a time. Switched over to the right ear. Left ear is recharging.

The hold music is very annoying and I could see people being really pissy when they finally get through to a representative. I do hope they don’t just turn the phone system off at 5:00. That would really piss me off.

What was it I said about customer / technical support a while ago? Not very supportive and it will only get worse. I’m sure that the poor person on the other end of this line is stressing. I’m going to be nice if they’re here in this country. if they’re not… I may be a bit cranky. 

47 Minutes and holding…

Sigh…

OK, so this is funny. While I was searching the web for appropriate photos that expressed my situation. (I typed Hold Times in Google) and came up with images of oral sex, lesbians touching dicks for the first time, and various other… stranger, pictures of people engaging in sex.

I guess I’m not the first person to think of sex while waiting on hold.

For those of you that can’t afford or don’t want to pay Adobe…

Affinity logo 190920160826Might I suggest the Affinity line of products?

Back a while ago, Adobe moved to a completely Cloud based paradigm. This offers a lot of very nice features not the least of which is that All Adobe products are available, and fully updated all the time. This is subscription dependent, nonetheless it’s very nice. 

It’s also very expensive for the small business who may or may not need to use the Creative Suite products only occasionally. Yes, you can turn the subscription on & off as needed and you still have access to view files created in Adobe products just not edit them if for instance you were to pay the monthly fee only as needed. This is a expensive option for individuals or small businesses, especially if you’re just an occasional user.

So being in the individual / Small business class of users I started looking for an alternative.

Typicality,  I use the big three. Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign. So I started looking for replacements. I found Affinity.  

I tried their Photo application. It was nice, a bit different from Photoshop and it’s in the differences that there was some of frustration. If you’re used to Photoshop, you tend to reach for tools that are present but not available in the habitual way that you’re going to grab them. 

The frustration is short-lived and as you adapt to the changes they’re not as jarring. So stay patient and don’t try to transition on a high pressure project. (You’ll make yourself crazy… I speak from experience!)

Then I tried Designer. This is Affinity’s response to Illustrator. Again, there was a level of frustration transitioning.  But it was short-lived, once again it was the differences between the applications that I stumbled over. 

Most recently, Affinity released Publisher, an answer to InDesign.

I’m still learning this one. Thus far I’ve been pleased. Again, there are differences but perhaps because of my previous experiences with Affinity’s other applications or just the layout of tools It’s not been a big frustration. Either way, using Affinity’s Publisher I’ve been able to turn out a couple of projects with a minimum of headaches.

The applications work well, They open Adobe native files and can save, import, and export, into a variety of formats as you’d expect, and they’re relatively inexpensive. Photo, and Designer work on Mac, and my iPad. Publisher, for the time being is running on the Mac but I’ve not seen it for the iPad yet.

Affinity produces Windows versions of their applications as well.

They’re generally smaller than the Adobe equivalents. An added perk for me is that they don’t spatter support and utility files all over your drive. So if space is at a premium on your drive, Affinity may provide you with some relief in that area too.

I can tell you, saving 50+ dollars a month adds up.

Based on the stability and functionality I’m seeing from Affinity I’m going to be retiring my old Creative Suite.

Ya know… Sometimes when you put People and Technology together things just get messy

KeyboardEarlier this week I found I wasn’t able to transfer cash to my Apple Pay card. This is a problem because I actually use Apple Pay for a lot of things. 

The Apple Pay card in my phone was telling me that the transaction was being declined by my bank. The Bank said it was a problem at Apple, Apple said it was a problem at the bank. And I, the consumer was left in the middle.

I call the bank, they tell me that Apple is presenting them with the wrong address. I ask the bank what address they have on file. They read me back the correct address. Then tell me that they can’t see the address apple is sending to them and direct me to Apple.

I spend an hour on the phone with Apple, who was very helpful as we walked through all the addresses on all my devices and guess what? They were all correct.

I call the bank back the next day and while I’m trying to resolve the issue I hear something, I’m not even sure what, from the Customer Service Representative at the bank Whatever it was I  asked her to read me the address character by character.

BINGO!

PunctuationYou see I’d changed the address to my P.O. Box. but the banks system had stripped out the “.” periods. This resulted in an incorrect address being presented to the bank. Since everyone else was preserving and sending the “.” periods, exactly as I’d entered them.

To a computer;

P.O. and PO are completely different things. To give you a simple example of why… P.O. is four characters and PO is only two. Most programmers or Software QA people know this, and  even program / test that variations will pass through verification.

I tell the Customer service rep at the bank to put the periods back in the address and everything will be fine… She can’t.

What?

The banks computer system strips them out. So now I have to strip them out of any and all addresses on file with ALL vendors who may be using that debit card for payments. Yep instead of correcting the source of the problem, I, the customer, now have to contact all the vendors who have my address correctly entered in their systems and change them.

I tell the Customer service rep that “.” periods are considered part of the proper address and that they shouldn’t be stripped out. She implies in a way that I’ve encountered more in San Diego than anywhere else that I’m wrong. “We use the preferred Post Office method…”

Really? I don’t recall getting the memo.

The Customer Service Rep reiterates, “Its for your protection.” Then proceeds to tell me that it’s to prevent someone from improperly using my card to order stuff… I stopped listening.

My response was that the only person this situation was preventing from using the card was the card holder and that the bank shouldn’t be making alterations to addresses because this is an easily predictable, and inconvenient outcome. I think asked her why then, was everything working just fine for the past month? Why was it that the system apparently arbitrarily broke in much the same way as it had a month ago?

For those questions she had a ready reply, “It hadn’t ever worked.” 

So now she’s telling me that what I witnessed with my own eyes was incorrect. 

OH HELL NO!

Knowing I was being a bastard, I made her review a month of transaction data and I fucking forced her to admit that in fact there had been transactions approved with the addresses having “P.O. Box”.

I’m an arrogant bastard, I’m pretty sure I’m right, when I open my mouth. That being said,  there is always the possibility that I missed something or that I am flat out wrong. I accept that. But if I make a blanket statement … You can bet your bottom dollar, I’m looking right at the facts to support that statement.

Sadly, I can only assume that things are going to get worse. I recognize that I have to adapt to the times, I have to be flexible. But there are some things that you just don’t do. You always have to maintain backward compatibility.

Especially when you’re dealing with computer systems that behave by default in an absolute way.

The company I was working for had this same problem with telephone numbers in the software we were forced to use. (555) 555-5555 is not the same as 555-555-5555, 555.555.5555, or 5555555555 to a computer. But to a human being they’re all equal, it’s about readability and stylistic preferences.

At the company, because of the way the data was actually stored in the database if you were looking up an account by phone number you had to enter all the variations.

The proper way to do these kinds of things is to store only the relevant data and apply a mask for presentation. On the input side you toss any characters that are not numeric. This allows extraneous spaces to be ignored as well, and results in the entry of a phone number always returning a result. This way you don’t end up with 10 duplicate accounts because someone couldn’t find the Customer’s original account.

The same is true of “.” periods in address fields, or the “#” or extra spaces.

Rural Route # 56 and R.R. 56, or Route #56 all mean the same thing to humans. But a computer should be told to remove the “.” and the “#” so that the machine is evaluating only Rural Route 56 and RR 56, or Route 56. Once again you apply a presentation mask but it’s about making the data consistent and retrievable. Rural Routes are more difficult because the range of variations is large. It’s programmable, but requires experienced programmers.

I know I’ve digressed. This is the kind of stuff I’ve tested for again and again. I’ve had this discussion with newbie programmers more often than I’ve had sex. It’s tougher to get the point across to programmers from other countries, especially if their home language doesn’t have a lot of punctuation symbols.

This issue is not limited to addresses and phone numbers. It can apply to passwords too.

You know when a computer tells you to use special characters like the !,#, or $ to make your password more secure? If the programmers weren’t paying attention, you can change your password to contain one of those characters and then have a password that you cannot use.

It takes some code to process those characters correctly in a password input field. They have to be passed literally from string input into a chunk of code that manipulates the character data into a token. The company I worked for, actually told you on the website to use one of these characters in your password. But the mobile application’s password input routine wouldn’t accept the character. So you could login just fine on the website but you couldn’t login from the mobile. To make things more frustrating for the customer, the application would say “Incorrect user name or password”

They still haven’t fixed that. Now that they have a bunch of foreign newbies in technical support, I imagine there’s going to be a lot of seriously pissed off people very soon.

That’s not my problem anymore and more power to the company. I reported it, software engineering ignored me and well you get what you pay for.

Cheap, arrogant, inexperienced American or  foreign programmers, tend to make these kinds of mistakes. Once they get a few miles on ‘em and have actual human Software Testers telling them what’s not working they tend to wise up.

I can tell you which kind of programmers are working at my soon to be former bank. Yep, I’ve had odd little problems for the past 4 months and those problems are becoming more of a nuisance. This bank is a credit union in San Diego and since I’m in all likelihood not going to be living in San Diego, well the solution is obvious.

I share this with you gentle reader, because I suspect it’s only going to become more of a problem. 

Image5As we isolate people from processes and turn more over to automation we will be placing ourselves at the mercy of typos. 

Imagine having made payments to a vendor for years, then suddenly the vendor isn’t getting paid. When you try to figure out what the hell has gone wrong, you have to deal with someone that doesn’t understand the problem or doesn’t’ have the power to make a necessary change to resolve the problem.

That’s the future we’re heading toward. 

It won’t be an artificial intelligence like SkyNet that subjugates us, It will be dumb computer programs that nobody can change or control.

I’d suggest you start laying in a supply of pretty colored trading beads.

Just a thought… I could be wrong.

Well, Thank goodness I’m a planner

277 512For the second time in just over a month my debit card is not working.

About a month ago, knowing that I would be relocating to my house from the Apartment, I changed the address on the bank account.

This was after talking to a particularly unhelpful representative who not only deactivated my existing card saying that it was expired… It wasn’t! It was set to expire in Aug not June. This resulted in massive inconvenience because it affected all my bill payments and I had to contact everyone linked to the old debit number to give them the new debit number.

At the time, while sitting in the bank I changed the address providing the bank with my driver’s license and other proof that I was who I said I was and that I was in fact the owner of the account. I had the representative make the changes manually and signed the appropriate paperwork in person.

I also got the appropriate email from the bank confirming the change. My new card was working and everything was hunky dory. (Aside from the inconvenience.)

Over the last couple of weeks I started getting emails saying that I needed to confirm my address For Your safety and convenience. I figured it was routine and didn’t pay much attention. After all I’d just confirmed In person right? 

I logged into the bank website and there were no messages or action items for me to perform. I thought OK just the computers sending spam.

This morning my new debit card is deactivated… So I’m without access to my cash, AGAIN!

Once again, I logged into the banking website and yet again there were no messages or action items for me to complete.

Obviously, I’m going to need to go to the bank because I’m not interested in talking to their phone representatives. And someone needs to know that this has caused me to rethink my association with their institution.

I have enough going on in my life without worrying about if the debit card is going to be shut down for no apparent reason.

 Thank goodness that I have a wad of cash in my wallet. Otherwise this could be a real problem.

I’m thinking that as soon as the final paychecks from the company are deposited, I’m going to close the account and move my banking back to the local credit union. At least they don’t screw with my money at the drop of a hat.

My time in San Diego is coming to an end and honestly… I’m not going to be looking back.