Browsing articles in "Discoveries"
Dec 12, 2008

CFL Equivalent Wattage (Compact Fluorescent Bulbs)

I tried sleuthing for what I thought would be simple answer. But, no. Everyone’s got a different answer as to what’s equivalent and exactly how much a CFL will save you over the life of the bulb.

But with all the numbers, I discovered that the rule of thumb seems to be to look for a CFL that’s roughly 1/4 (one-fourth) the wattage of the traditional incandescent bulb you’re replacing.

Based on the information I found, the chart below should be a good estimate:

Incandescent | CFL Equivalent
150W 42W
100W 23W
75W 18W
60W 14W
40W 11W
15-25W 3W
Dec 4, 2008

AT&T and Verizon DSL Ending Flickr Pro Freebie

In an older post I listed the couple of free perks that came with your AT&T DSL service. One is a free premium account for Yahoo’s LaunchCAST online radio service. The other is, or was, I should say, a free Flickr Pro account. According to Flickr:

AT&T and Verizon Internet Services have reworked their broadband packages and will no longer be offering Flickr pro to subscribers after January 31, 2009.

Well, it was fun while it lasted…

P.S. Yahoo hooked up their LaunchCAST service to CBS to take care of for them due to increased royalties. I wouldn’t be surprised to see them dump the freebie.

Nov 23, 2008

Beware of textbooks-now and bookbyte (Half.com)

Half.com Logo Buying used books online, at convenient outlets like eBay’s Half.com, is an relief to college students everywhere who are already cash-strapped thanks to ever-increasing tuition, fees, and abusive, self-perpetuating, overpriced textbook stores (I rant on textbook stores on an older blog). However, a student wishing to purchase books online must be spry.

A required text for a class might be needed the first week of class, though, it’s often not possible to discern what is required, and what’s not, until the first class meeting. Savvy students will visit the bookstore, or an instructors online syllabus to glean the ISBNs of the required texts. If the stars align properly, the student will be able to get a nicely discounted textbook delivered before class even begins.

Then, there are the situations that prohibit such happy endings. Such situations are sometime the result of shady practices by large sellers on Half.com. Namely, textbooks-now, and bookbyte. The problem with these larger sellers is they claim to have a textbook in stock, only to notify you, many days later, that the book is no longer in stock and they will have to give you a refund. In other words, they don’t keep a tight count of stock, and appear to be selling items that they physically don’t have. To make matters worse, instead of the out-of-stock notification coming within a reasonable time-frame (say, 24 hours?) the notices come several days later. But! They give you a refund. Great. But, what about the lost shipping days? Now I have to go find another seller with the book, and hope they aren’t selling something that they don’t have. Sure, it’s only a few days, but when you in the situation I described above, and the book is needed now, the money refund is only a partial solution.

Textbooks-now (aka textbooksNow) claims “Great customer service” in their book descriptions. However, a friend of mine got shafted by these folks and requested my assistance. She was coming down to the wire, and ordered a book that she needed the next week. Even with processing, and sometimes lengthy media mail delivery times, the book would have arrived on time. Two days passed after placing the order, when she received a notice that the book was out-of-stock and textbooksNow would be issuing a refund. After another day, the refund was issue, but only partially; they didn’t refund the shipping cost. Another email to support, and another day, the refund appeared and the reply email requested that we contact Half.com for any futher billing questions because “they process the payments.” Yeah, I understand how that works, being a Half.com seller myself, but that doesn’t give you the excuse to pawn off your irresponsible business practices and shady dealing to a middle-man.

Bookbyte gave me a very similar run for my money. Luckily, I received the full refund immediately. But, the reason was the same. They were selling books they either ran out of, or never had. When they go to pack the book, it’s not there! Whoops!!

Used book dealing can’t deal with that issue like other online retailers. The others, if they run out of stock, can order stock and will usually ship it to you expedited to make up for the lost time. Used book dealers can’t do the same thing, because their stock is dependent on students selling them books (for pennies of what they’re worth).

So, as a hard-learned rule, I avoid sellers with a high number of sales. I’d rather pay another buck or two (I’m still saving substantially compared to the campus bookstore) to a fellow student who KNOWS he/she has the book, and WANTS to sell.

Maybe they were honest mistakes. Maybe my friend and are one of the very few who had a problem. By the looks of these seller’s feedback scores and the comments left, obviously I’m in the minority. All I’m saying is, be wary. Be spry.

UPDATE: The friend I referred to above that suffered the textbooksNow incident emailed me to let me know made an error in the recount of the events. In her words:

“I had to email them and ask where my book was after I noticed that my FOUR books hadn’t come in the mail for over 2 weeks. Then they emailed me saying they didn’t have the books. So it is even worse than you say in your blog.”

I remember it now, because the long delay is why she asked for my help in the first place, since I had a lot of experience with ordering books through Half.com. Indeed, it is worse.

Oct 16, 2008

Maybe its Karma [Google Left Navigation]

I’ve been laughing at my friends who were chosen, apparently at random, to be guinea pigs for what appears to be some kind of sick experiment for a left navigation on iGoogle. Today, I was hit with it. It sucks. I don’t like it… and while it did add some functionality to the Gmail widget, I don’t like the robbed screen real estate.

LET ME GO GOOGLE!!

Update: After reading the Google blog, it turns out everyone in the US now has this “feature.” I want the feature to turn it off.

Sep 9, 2008

My Photos Across the Web [A Little Narcissism]

I did a little self-indulgent searching recently using Google Blogsearch and came across a handful of blogs that have used the photos I share on Flickr. Of course, I would only be able to find the photos that were properly credited, but… meh. I’m not making any money off any of it anyway. (but, that doesn’t mean using my photos without credit is cool!) Anywho, click past the break if you wanna massage my ego. (I update this post as I find more uses) Continue reading »

Sep 2, 2008

AVG Needs a Better Marketing Dept [A NEW! BETTER! FASTER! One]

AVG inserted this little advertisement into my copy of AVG Free 7 alerting me to all the GREAT things available to me if I were to upgrade to AVG 8.0.

New? Check. Better? Check. Faster? Oh, you betcha.

New? Check. Better? Check. Faster? Oh, you betcha.

Sep 1, 2008

The Big Bell Box Meal [Taco Bell = Value]

[Note: I wrote up this draft MONTHS ago, but never finished. Now the Big Box Meal has been pulled from many menus and they don't offer the Bacon Club Chalupa with it, only some much cheaper, less filling standard menu item. So, yeah, it's a lot more of a rip-off now. But, for the sake of documentation - of a better time, one could say - here's my first impression of the ORIGINAL Taco Bell Big Bell Box Meal (as it first appear here on the West Coast USA).]

In traditional unboxing fashion, I present to you the unboxing of…

TACO BELL’s BIG BELL BOX MEAL!

I’ve been wanting to order this meal for some time after first seeing it on Taco Bell’s menu. Where I live, by the way, Taco Bell is a VERY popular fast food restaurant. I believe Taco Bell would have to be my second favorite place to eat, right behind In-N-Out, of course. The psudeo-Mexican food is also something good you can count on, but mostly, the prices are resonable while all the other fast food places have doubled theirs in the past 5 years making a meal price seem like the tab on a steak dinner look mild.

Anywho, the Big Bell Box Meal consists of a hard shell taco, bean burrito, Cinnamon Twists, the new Bacon Club Chaplupa and a large drink. The large drink, to remind you, is the standard drink size you’re given when you order any meal.

It’s not like the amount of food you get it amazing, and the box is nothing other than a gimmick (though, it is convenient!) the same food ordered individually VS. the price of one “Big Bell Box Meal” makes it worth it.

Calories? Who’s counting? I found one estimate at 1550 + drink.