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General

Angie’s List against the consumer

After purchasing our home last year, my wife and I went ahead and got a subscription to Angie’s List, the site that allows homeowners to share their experiences and reviews with contractors and service providers. The site also claims to offer discounts as well as provides a publication to subscribers.

Although we did find a couple of good contractors (a painter and a plumber), it appeared that a lot of the information on the site, which is user-generated, was growing stale. People stopped writing reviews and when you are paying $53 a year and pretty much be expected to write content for the site, enthusiasm does die quickly.As I said, the information on the site appeared to be sparse, especially in my zip code. Searches came out empty for many categories, even when using the categories Angie’s List uses.

What truly surprised me was that like several other rather crooked establishments and web sites, Angie’s List retains your credit card information and renews your subscription without asking for your explicit permission. I wrote about this before when talking how mlb.com does the same wretched thing. Beyond being just an evil trick to make more money on unsuspecting subscribers, you have to believe that to achieve this feat of rogue marketing credit card numbers are stored in their database. In this environment of corporate databases being hacked and credit information stolen almost every day, that makes me even more queasy than usual. I doubt Angie’s List has the data security prowess to make me sleep better at night.

Although I am loathe to say positive things about Bank of America (official bank of service fees, charges and awful customer service), one thing this mega bank acquired when it took over MBNA was its ShopSafe credit card feature, which generates one-time throw-away credit card numbers, which are so ideal for use. If only you could have a credit card that would have done that for you on every purchase. Then life would have been that much more difficult for the evil doers who make us worry about companies like TJX who cannot cover their own behinds properly and keep our credit information for reasons even they do not know.

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Categories
Computing

Microsoft WordML or a fork your in eye

Had to do some work with Word 2003’s XML format, WordML. It is definitely a good step that Microsoft allows us to read XML out of Word, but the format itself is borderline silly. Case in point – bulleted and numbered lists.

Word does not group together the bullets. Each bullet appears inside of a paragraph and the only thing that it does do is mark the physical offset the tab should appear from the edge of the page. As such, you cannot know where bullets begin or end and if you try to leverage or tweak the XSL stylesheet Microsoft provides to transform the XML file into HTML, it is impossible to convert this bullet-per-paragraph scheme to a normal ul/li scheme. Instead the XSL stylesheet uses convoluted spans with style attributes that use margins to push the bullets into their position.
One other thing is that since the WordML does not use ul/li elements for bullets, it needs to output some sort of character to denote the bullet. WordML, being focused on visual representation in the actual application, uses a dingbat character, which it outputs all the way to the HTML produced from the transform. Dingbats are not really available on the web and as a result you get weird bullets, like the character ‘n’.

In short, I just hope really hard that Word 2007 is much better in XML output, especially since is Office Open XML is now an ECMA standard. I wonder whether OpenOffice is much better…

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Categories
Music

TV on the Radio – Return to cookie mountain

So I get Spin Magazine for free thanks to some online offer.

Spin chose TV On The Radio’s last album as the album of the year. I let myself download their album through my subscription to Yahoo! Music and spent some time today listening to is.

We are all allowed to our own opinions and Spin is too, but TV on the Radio just did not work for me. TOTR sounds like an a-Capella college troupe colliding with a Beach Boys van while listening to a Spiritualized album. Hazey guitar, soft drums, echoey vocals. Not impressed, annoying actually. Delete from music player now.

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