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Soundtrack to Larry
The San Diego Years: 2006–?
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Firefox! (?)

Happy Firefox 3 Download Day! Um... I think. At this writing, I'm not seeing that it's been officially released yet, even though it was scheduled to be so today.

Update (3:10 PM): It's out now. Go download it today and help Firefox break a world record.

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They like me! They really, really like me!

I had a job interview this morning. It went fairly well, but I didn't feel quite sure about it until late in the afternoon when they called me back. They said they enjoyed talking with me, and they offered me the job!

More details to come. Right now we're going out to pick up some Chicago-style pizza to celebrate.

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Finally, another interview coming

I got a rare kind of contact from my listing on Dice.com. It was an e-mail directly from someone in a technology company who wasn't a recruiter or an HR person, but actually the person for whom I'd be working if I was hired. So I called him back quickly.

It sounds great. It's a Perl/Linux/open-source shop all the way. What's more, they and their products are very well known in the open-source world. I confessed not having direct experience with the product I'd be working on, but that didn't seem to be a negative. I have an interview in less than a week.

Hey, here's an open question for those who have interviewed with smallish programming shops--I know there's one or two of you out there. ;-) How would wearing a tie, say an unconventional '40s-vintage tie, affect my chances of being hired (compared to going business-casual with no tie)? Positively? Negatively?

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Rebuilding my geek cred

I think I've successfully stomped a bug in Perl's YAML module that's about 5 years old.

Maybe I can do this crap after all.

(Finding someone to pay me to do this crap, that's another story.)

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Bring back the umlaut

Most people's exposure to umlauts in English is limited to the affected, so-called "heavy metal umlaut" in band names like Motörhead, Mötley Crüe, Spin̈al Tap, etc.

What is not commonly known, except by those who've seen old books in print, is that the umlaut was used in written English as recently as the early twentieth century. It was used when a vowel appeared twice in a row within a word but spanned two syllables. Examples would be "preëminent" and "coöperate."

I think it's time to bring back the umlaut.

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Charles Mingus, renaissance man

Fans of jazz will immediately recognize the name of Charles Mingus, reknowned composer and bass player.

What even his biggest fans may not know is that he also wrote and self-published a handbook in the 1970s on toilet-training cats. May I present exhibit A.

Could be a handy bit of trivia to use the next time you want to win a bet.

(I can't remember if I wrote about this before. If so, it's been a long time, anyway.)

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Unemployed geeks seeking little green men

If, like me, you are a fan of the SETI@Home project and you self-identify as a computer geek, but you are unemployed (or underemployed) in your field, come join the Unemployed Geeks team.

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Nine Inch Nails gives its fans The Slip

Fans of Nine Inch Nails and Creative Commons–licensed music should check out NIN's newest album, The Slip.

[danger, do not follow this link, let Larry know if you can see it]

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Warning from an iPod update

iPod warning
Originally uploaded by Larry G.
As you go through life, take a moment every once in a while to stop and smell the fine print. You might find a little gem like this. What it says... )
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Peerflix and prevarication

UPDATE (June 2): I ended up getting my $9 after all. Still irked about the runaround, though.

Peerflix is shuttering their DVD-trading service. In the process, they are shooting themselves in the foot from a public-relations perspective.*

Some time ago, they rejiggered their service so that users would be swapping DVDs on a cash-equivalent basis. If you sent a DVD to someone else, you'd get dollars added to your account. If someone else sent you a DVD, dollars would be deducted from your account. You could even deposit cash in your account if you couldn't build up enough of a balance by offering DVDs for trade.

Then last month, Peerflix announced that they were shuttering the swapping service, and that any users who still had a balance in their Peerflix accounts would need to request a cash-out by April 30, otherwise their balances would be forfeit.

The catch? All cash-out requests are subject to a $10 "processing fee," in spite of the fact that users are being forced into this if they want to see any of their money again.

Well, that's the visible catch. There's a bigger and more invisible catch, too, one that I have experienced first-hand. Every time I've logged into my Peerflix account and requested a cash-out, I've been silently redirected back to my account page. Hmmmmm.

True, I could contact their support department about this. In fact, I did. Twice. The first time, I never received a reply. As the deadline drew closer and I still couldn't get the website to acknowledge my cash-out request, I asked for help again. This time I did get a reply—but it was only to say that I'd e-mailed them from an e-mail address that wasn't associated with any of their users' accounts, and that I should e-mail them from that address for security/privacy reasons.

It's true, I was using a different e-mail address. This is because I keep a personal domain name and I generate a unique e-mail address for every company I do business with. But I do receive e-mail at those addresses, and I did spell out my unique-to-Peerflix address in my e-mail to them. Could it have been that hard to write back to me at that address to confirm it was really me? (Meanwhile, I wrote back to the CSR with a very acerbic reply. I've received a second reply as I've been writing this post, but I'm not in a good frame of mind for it at the moment.)

How much am I out if I don't get my money back? Only $19. Not as big a deal as others; I've heard that some unfortunate souls have sunk a lot more than that. But it's no longer about the money for me; it's the principle of the thing. Everything about my experience to this point suggests that they are handling this the way a U.S. medical insurer handles claims—that is, make a promise to your customer, then when they actually ask you to live up to that promise, find every means at your disposal to weasel out of it and make it look like the customer's fault.

Any other disgruntled Peerflix users out there? Anyone thinking about, or already in the process of, banding together and making a case to the Attorney General of California or setting a class-action suit in motion?

* For evidence of self-foot-shooting, see the string of comments to the article "Peerflix Procrastinating on Customer Refunds" (25 Mar. 2008) on TechCrunch.

P.S. (1:49 p.m.): The e-mail reply was just a robotic confirmation ("Thank you for contacting Peerflix Customer Support. Your inquiry is valuable to us and we will respond to it within 48 hours. Have a great day!"). Wonderful. But, paradoxically, easier on my blood pressure.

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Larry "The Al Pacino of Analogy" Gilbert
User: [info]l2g
Name: Larry "The Al Pacino of Analogy" Gilbert
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You need trepanation like you need another hole in your head.
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