Archive for August, 2007

Google Maps updates…Awesomeness

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

Apparently Google has done one of their shifty updates without telling me personally about it. I am not sure if I appreciate that they didn’t inform me. I guess if they had, I probably would have blocked the email to the spam folder in my Gmail account….

The update that I am discussing is the new feature hidden under the “link to this page” link in the Google Maps site. It used to just link you to the page, so you could send someone the link and show them what you are looking at too. Now, however, they are giving bloggers, and more especially programmers, a leg up by providing the HTML for embedding the map directly into a website. This makes life alot easier when you are creating a web page that is just going to give directions from one place to the other, and doesn’t necessarily need to have the Google Maps API. Oh life is made one step easier for me!

Here is an example of what it looks like:

View Larger Map

This of course if from my favorite Sushi place in Chicago to Navy Pier, a place I have never been.

There are some problems with the new features, as I was not able to embed a map from the Lego Store in Chicago to Lego Land in San Deigo. It said I did not have permissions to view that link. Also, when I was playing around with it, I was not able to do the custom options with

Sphere: Related Content

Old Broadcasts - radio broadcasts from olden times

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

If you are into music, and radio, and interesting things, you should check out OldBroadcasts.com. The blogger there has found nearly 40GB of Old Time Radio Broadcasts. Everything from Batman, CBS Mystery Theater, and Dimension X.

It is fun and interesting to listen to these old Radio Broadcasts the way they were originally aired.  The site promises to have more fun and exciting Broadcasts every week, as well as providing all of the Radio Broadcasts for free.

 Old Radio Broadcasts

Sphere: Related Content

d13 gallery didn’t work right, so I updated it

Monday, August 27th, 2007

This Plugin Support has been moved here:

D13 Gallery Support Page


I went to the website that the d13 gallery plugin points to in the wordpress admin page. It was a completely different site. Apparently the original developer lost the domain, and stopped supporting the plugin. So I can pick up where he left off.The problem that I had was that the plugin was not working correctly on my category and “next page” pages. The reason was that it was using relative links for the images. I fixed it by putting a slash into the links, and voila it works again!

To Download Please go to : D13 Gallery Support PageNote: It works with Wordpress v2.2

Sphere: Related Content

OK OK Dell is Freakin Hilarious

Thursday, August 23rd, 2007

So, I was legitimately looking for a laptop for a friend on the previous post, and so I made the bottom of the line computers that would be as close to each other as possible.  This post is exactly the opposite.

I went in and chose the same computer as I chose before, the Inspiron 1501, and I gave it the most expensive option at every turn.  I added every accessory, and every accessory to the accessories (printer cables, cartridges, etc).

I expected to find the same thing, where the prices stayed in approximately the same  scaled pricing, cheapest to start gives cheapest at the end.  Not the case.  It was jacked.  The cheapest laptop became the middle cost, the middle became the most expensive, and the one that started the most expensive became the cheapest. What the hell?  I double checked it.  It doesn’t make sense.

$499 became  $7759

$599 became $8096

$699 became $7346

The features for each are too numerous and ridiculous to name, list or number here.  I also just dont care to compare 100+ items from each to the other.  Sorry, if you want to go ahead.  Give me credit for giving you the idea. Thanks.

Either way, this is a very interesting thing that I have come across. I think it is something that should be addressed.  Has anyone else come across this, or does anyone know of a reason for it?

Also, how often do the prices on these things change?  What causes the change?  Does Dell have a rhyme or reason? I think they are playing the game like anyone else, they just are able to make it seem like you are getting a deal whenever you are on their site.  Wish I had the time to play games like that with my customers..wait, I don’t have millions of dollars and I don’t even have inventory.

Got something you want me to sell?  Want me to play games with my customers and try to squeeze extra $$ out of them by playing mind games, and intuition games?  I can do it, I’m good at messing with people’s heads!

Sphere: Related Content

Dell’s Computers and building your PC online

Thursday, August 23rd, 2007

Ok, so I am looking for a computer for a friend on Dell’s website. I usually tell people to use them because they have the best warranty out there and if they are getting a laptop or taking a desktop to a dorm, you want the best damn warranty you can get. Usually, the three year complete care warranty is the best. You break it, or some asshat spills their guava-mango margarita on your keyboard you can get it replaced/fixed for free. Take it up to your local Dell shop, and they do the fancy fingerwork (on a keyboard, sicko) that will get your parts usually within a couple days. Sometimes, if you are lucky, or you slip the guy $10 he will even install the parts for you, ahh commerce.

Back to the subject at hand…I am building a computer online. I decided to start with what looked like their Home and Home Office base model (inpiron 1501), and then opened a new tab for each of the starting price ranges for that model. $499, $599, and $699. Dell has started putting a crazy warranty offer at the beginning of the process of building the machines. SKIP THAT. You don’t need it and you will have the option of ordering those things later, without getting all the extra crap you will never use. Then I proceeded to build an exact copy of the same laptop starting at the different price ranges. On the first one, I chose the bigger screen, the lowest RAM (1GB) and the middle HD (80GB). On the second two, I chose the lowest of everything. On all three, I chose the aforementioned3-year complete care warranty, and the required matching Service Parts and Labor Warranty.

The $499 computer became $903

The $599 computer become $908

The $699 computer became $1008

What was the difference between these computers?

Lowest:

PROCESSOR Mobile AMD Sempron™ 3500+ (1.8GHz/512KB)
OPERATING SYSTEM Genuine Windows Vista® Home Basic
LCD PANEL 15.4 inch Wide Screen XGA Display
MEMORY FREE! 1GB DDR2 SDRAM at 533MHz, 2 Dimm
HARD DRIVE 80GB SATA Hard Drive (5400RPM)
OPTICAL DRIVE 24X CD Burner/DVD Combo Drive
VIDEO CARD ATI RADEON® Xpress1150 256MB HyperMemory™ (Integrated)
SOUND OPTIONS Integrated Audio
BATTERY OPTIONS 29 WHr 4-cell Lithium Ion Primary Battery
WIRELESS CARDS Dell Wireless 1390 802.11g Mini Card (54Mbps)

Middle:

PROCESSOR AMD Athlon™ 64 X2 Dual-Core Mobile Technology TK-53
OPERATING SYSTEM Genuine Windows Vista® Home Basic
LCD PANEL 15.4 inch Wide Screen XGA Display
MEMORY FREE! 1GB DDR2 SDRAM at 533MHz, 2 Dimm
HARD DRIVE 80GB SATA Hard Drive (5400RPM)
OPTICAL DRIVE 24X CD Burner/DVD Combo Drive
VIDEO CARD ATI RADEON® Xpress1150 256MB HyperMemory™ (Integrated)
SOUND OPTIONS Integrated Audio
BATTERY OPTIONS 53 WHr 6-cell Lithium Ion Primary Battery
WIRELESS CARDS Dell Wireless 1390 802.11g Mini Card (54Mbps)

Highest:

PROCESSOR AMD Athlon™ 64 X2 Dual-Core Mobile Technology TK-53
OPERATING SYSTEM Genuine Windows Vista® Home Basic
LCD PANEL 15.4 inch Wide Screen XGA Display
MEMORY 2GB DDR2 SDRAM at 533MHZ, 2 DIMM
HARD DRIVE Size: 120GB SATA Hard Drive (5400RPM)
OPTICAL DRIVE 24X CD Burner/DVD Combo Drive
VIDEO CARD ATI RADEON® Xpress1150 256MB HyperMemory™ (Integrated)
SOUND OPTIONS Integrated Audio
BATTERY OPTIONS 53 WHr 6-cell Lithium Ion Primary Battery
WIRELESS CARDS Dell Wireless 1490 802.11a/g Mini Card (54Mbps)

So, from the above you can see that the cost difference from Lowest -> Middle is $5, what can you get for $5!? A better battery:

53Wh vs. 29Wh

and a better processor:

Mobile AMD Sempron™ 3500+ (1.8GHz/512KB) vs. AMD Athlon™ 64 X2 Dual-Core Mobile Technology TK-53.

From Middle to Highest?

More RAM:

1GB vs. 2GB

More HD space:

80GB vs 120GB

And a better (??) wireless card:

Dell Wireless 1390 802.11g Mini Card (54Mbps) vs. Dell Wireless 1490 802.11a/g Mini Card (54Mbps)

What have we learned here today? Don’t trust Dell! Yes, and No. What I would say is that you should definitely shop around, and consider what is important to you. If processing speed and storage are important and that last $100 isnt going to kill your pocket book, I would say go for the last one, wear the thing out, and get your parts replaced every 2 months (earn that $300 warranty). Actually, no matter what you get from them, get that warranty and don’t worry about protecting the lappy like its an egg…treat it like a toughbook. Use the thing to level out your dining room table, instead of putting your car on blocks, put it on laptop. Got a frisbee, don’t need one, Dude, you got a Dell, Flip it here. Use it as a cutting board, drink holder, sit on it when the seat is dirty, and don’t worry about the guy in the dark alley. Use your Dell Laptop to protect you, it probably weighs 8 lbs anyways, and 8 lbs of plastic and metal upside your head will hurt pretty bad.

Moral1: Dell buys/manufactures all their parts for as little as possible. If you don’t get the warranty you might as well take your wallet out and burn it right now. You will be replacing parts, if you don’t why did you get a laptop, it never leaves your desk.

Moral2: Shop around the site, what you think is expensive may be a ruse to make you go for the cheap one, which turns out to be REALLY expensive.

For my next trick, I set them all three up with everything and see the difference.

Sphere: Related Content

64330 pages viewed, 54 today
22310 visits, 24 today
FireStats icon Powered by FireStats