Monthly Archive for April, 2005

Bloglines down - and I am out

Well, here it is. The worst case scenario. Bloglines, my web-based feed reader, is down. I can’t log in, although my firefox extension keeps showing me a huge amount of unread posts. I can’t believe I’ve become so dependend on that damn thing. I feel like I’m paralyzed because I can’t check on my feeds. Manually clicking all those links to the sites I read daily seems like a far-distant past, and I don’t think I’ll have the patience to actually do it. So all that’s left for me to do is to go and do the grocery-shopping now, hoping that Bloglines will be up on my return. Arghh.

The IKEA-Zodiac connection revisited

Vivid readers of this weblog (and I know there are at least three…well, two), may remember a post about Neal Stephenson’s first novel “Zodiac” and its appearance in IKEA bookshelves. Here’s the link to that posting, in case you want to read it.
Well, today we made another trip to IKEA and this time I was prepared and brought my camera. So, while my girlfriend was marveling at beds and shelves I was busy shooting Zodiacs in the showroom. Here’s my most favourite Zodiac:

zodiac and chair

More photos after the jump (to make sure those dial-up users don’t get mad). But be sure to actually click it, because you’ll never see such an assortment of Swedish editions of “Zodiac” again in your life. I promise.
Continue reading ‘The IKEA-Zodiac connection revisited’

Package thriller

In Austria, at least on my street, when there’s a package to deliver, it’s not delivered. Sure, if the package fits into the inbox they jam it in, making sure everything inside breaks or is at least bent out of shape. Otherwise they just leave a yellow slip, which tells you to pick up the package yourself. The catch is that it always says on the slip that you’re supposed to pick up the package at your local post office THE NEXT DAY. Sure, why not? I mean, the imbecile doesn’t know how to ring a bell or is too lazy to climb a flight of stairs, so why not make a trip to the post office to get the package a day later.

Today there were two yellow slips in the inbox, and half an hour ago I tried to pick up the packages, because sometimes before his lunch-break the delivery guy drops off the packages he was too lazy to deliver. Sure enough, the packages were NOT there. I aggressively complained to the guy at the counter:

Me: “Uhh, by the way, isn’t the delivery guy supposed to actually deliver a package?”
Guy: “Yeah.”
Me: “Why doesn’t he do it then?”
Guy: “Well, he should…..”
Me: “…”
Guy: “…”
Me: “So, will the packages be here in about two hours?”
Guy: “Yeah, they should.”

I’ll keep you updated.

Update:
The packages were there. I picked them up. I made an angry face. Guy was not impressed. So it goes.

Hotmail storage update

Here’s an update to my rant from two days ago. This is what Hotmail added to their frontpage, below their pompous announcement that now every account supposedly boasts 250MB storage:

*250MB inbox available only in the 50 United States, District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

Well, they’re really quite quick. One year after announcing their plan to upgrade all accounts, and about three months after first adding their “done” announcement to the login-page of Hotmail, they decide to add this disclaimer. How lame. Robert Scoble, Hotmail simply sucks. And you know it!

Hotmail vs. GMail

I don’t know why I even bring it up again, but somehow it just makes me angry. I’ve had a hotmail account for ages, and I had it even before Microsoft decided to buy the service. Now, back then I didn’t know too much about the Internet, so I can’t say if Hotmail would have sucked as much as it does now, but its current state is simply unbearable. Robert Scoble, famed Microsoft blogger, yesterday posted a piece on Hotmail and the advantages it has over a service like GMail (from a marketing perspective). I’ve been reading Scoble on and off, and while most of what he writes has absolutely no relevance to me, I’m almost always irritated by the things that have. One of those things that irritate me is his unconditional love for Hotmail, which is clearly going down compared to most other webmail services, especially GMail.

When GMail started its beta service offering 1 GB of storage, Hotmail was quick to announce that they’d update every account to 250 MB of storage. Of course, that’s not as much as 1 GB (well, today it’s more than 2 GB at GMail), but it showed good will. My account hasn’t seen that upgrade until today, and it’s been about a year since their announcement. So, what gives? What the hell is wrong with these people? And what is wrong with people who think that getting more users per day is more important than actually providing a good service? Well, I guess that’s a question only a marketing guy like Scoble can answer.




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