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Shopping Web Development

Newest member of club moron: Bank of America

I am not a fan of Bank of America by any stretch of the imagination. Any establishment gouging its clients with fees, more fees and then some fees again; where the whole profit notion is based on those fees – that’s motivation enough for me to seek refuge.

The end to my relationship with BofA’s predecessor in Massachusetts, Fleet, came when I had to pay $35 for them to process an incoming funds transfer. They make money off of holding the money, but for just keeping the computer on, I got to pay them for the service. I feel bad for the masses who hate the bank and stay with it for laziness. I am digressing…

I originally had a TWA frequent flyer card issued by MBNA, which after the airline folded became an ‘Elite Rewards’ card. Elite Rewards is a mediocre, but free, program where you earn a point per dollar and then eventually redeem them for gifts and coupons, all at rather silly ratios. Still, it is free and that’s nice. The card also has what I feel is the best feature ever for a credit card: Shopsafe. Shopsafe  is a service through which your credit card gets a one-use, limited duration, limited funds credit card number, linked to your real number. This is so brilliant because even if the virtual number is stolen, the damage is limited. In a world experiencing lax security at TJ Maxx where companies still insist on storing your card number for later use (don’t trust them!) – I would rather use a one-time number that will turn invalid immediately. Store that.

MBNA was taken over by Bank of America. Bummer but I would even stick with the devil to keep Shopsafe available.

Even Bank of America saw the utter genius of Shopsafe so they kept it alive, but never cared to drum up the marketing around this unique feature. Moronic. Then, I go to Elite Rewards’ website tonight and find out that despite the fact that I ordered gift cards from them while it was still MBNA at my current address, the only address they have for me is the one from 2000. Elite Rewards is owned by Bank of America. I am a Bank of America customer. They send me bills at the correct address. Better yet, I even get my Elite Rewards statements at my home address. Yet when it comes to giving back to me my rewards, the effort is nil.

I would not mind that if the hideous website would allow you to update your address. Wrong again. You can update your profile. What is profile? Your travel profile. The word profile that you and I use on websites, well, that word does not apply. You just have to call them. Moronic again because call centers are expensive. Oh yeah, they pay for that with the FEES that their customers pay. Right…  Even the ‘contact us’ submission is moronic: if you do not have a complaint to report, you cannot submit your request. Oh, and guess what – if you DO have an issue with the delivery of the reward, THAT is where you get to enter your current address.

As the founding member and head moron, I welcome Bank of America’s Elite Rewards to Club Moron.

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Computing Web Development

Microsoft Windows Live Writer does rock

Yes. You are allowed to refuse to believe me. I still beg you would. Microsoft has a winner in a small free application called Windows Live Writer.  The tool is essentially an offline editor for your blog posting, and WordPress and many other services are supported. And like me, even when you are the host of the blog on your own domain, not through a blog site.

The interface is simple to use, it is very WYSIWYG in the sense that it even downloads the style of your theme so when you write you will see how it looks, and thus avoiding WordPress’ awful awful web-based editor. It is a small application, it has many creature comforts and even allows you to write to multiple blogs.

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Computing Web Development

Weird Firefox 3 Issue

So I succumbed to the urge an installed Firefox 3 on my home machine. Most extensions are there now, except for my beloved TinyURL Creator, so things are pretty cool. That, except for the weird icon that I have appearing above the File menu (and cannot appear to be removed) that looks like this:

firefox-3-weird

What is FF FD? Any ideas?!

UPDATE:

I believe I have a solution to the issue. One of my add-ons/extensions was apparently not compatible with Firefox 3 (and I *did* tinker with it being a bit of a hopeful thinker – ‘How bad can it be?’) or that have a conflict with other extensions (sounds very Mac OS 9…). In any case, if this happens to you, the procedure to detect the offending extension is pretty simple:

  1. Go to the ‘Tools’ menu and select ‘Add-ons’.
  2. Click the ‘Extensions’ button which will list all available extensions.
  3. One by one, disable all of them. Extensions should have a ‘Disable’ button available when you click them in the extension list. Although you will be prompted to restart Firefox after you disable the first one, you can disable all of them and only then restart.
  4. Restart Firefox. It will most like take a bit of time, but it will start and I will be that you will not see the pesky FF FD icons anymore.
  5. Now, one by one, or two by two (whatever) re-enable the extensions. You will eventually get the FF FD back there, but by this method of deduction you will get to know precisely which is the offending extension (the last one you enabled!).

Hope this is of help.

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