Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Comcast DTA FAQ


Okay I setup two new Comcast DTA's and here is my experience that I post about troubleshooting.

*If you order two DTA you must hookup both DTA to two TV's.
*Online activation does not work at all
*Try Live chat at Comcast. They manage to get one of my DTAs to activate remotely.
*The other appeared to get stuck on one channel. So what I did was call the phone number on TV screen which activates the DTA by phone.

Now both my DTAs are working great. The negative I have to Comcast is that they only give you two for free and you have to pay extra 1.99/month for each additional one.

Amazon Gift Cards can now be sent via Facebook. Also, an mp3 giftcard promo.

Amazon now has a page where you can send an Amazon Gift Card via Facebook.

To use this new feature, you'll need to first connect with Facebook while at that page, using Amazon's Connect to Facebook button.  Why?  They explain at the Giftcard-Facebook Help pages that:

  "This allows us to access your Facebook profile information, such as your list of friends... [and] the gift card ordering application may need additional Facebook permissions that you haven't already granted, or because you haven't used the gift card ordering application before."

  Some will have privacy concerns with regard to Facebook information.

  You should be aware, also, that the giftcard recipient will also need to connect Amazon with their Facebook account to redeem the gift card.  If, however, giftees don't want to connect their Amazon and Facebook accounts, they can ask the sender to "re-send the gift card as an e-mail gift card." (Instructions for re-sending gift cards are available on that help page.)

  A bit more on the privacy aspect and information they use, which I'll quote here -- it's very similar to what happens when you accept an 'app' at Facebook or send a friend a Facebook 'app' such as 'Poke'... except that the non-Amazon Facebook apps are a bit more invasive, allowing vendors all publicly available info on your friends, including their photos, etc.  The Amazon Facebook gift card app takes, apparently, only pertinent information needed for the gift card:
' This allows Amazon to access your friends' names and birthdays, and post the gift card to your friend's Wall on the delivery date

  [My addition here: You can decide whether the message will be seen only by the recipient or by everyone -- but the $-amount and claim card will be seen only by the recipient in either case].

The connection with Facebook will not become permanent until you sign in to Amazon.com as part of the gift card purchasing process (but you can always disconnect later at any time).
Your personal Amazon data will remain private.

* Amazon will not share Your Account information with Facebook.
* Amazon will not share your purchase history with Facebook.
* Amazon will not attempt to contact your Facebook friends, except to deliver gift cards. '

The press release today explains also that "After connecting to his or her Facebook account on Amazon.com, the sender can choose a gift card design, specify an amount up to $5,000 and provide an optional gift card message.  The sender can also schedule the date for the gift card to appear on the recipient's Facebook Wall up to a year in advance."

ADDITIONAL MP3-THEMED PROMO BUT IT'S NOT A LARGE ONE
I'll just quote it here.
' In addition, Amazon is now offering a "Give 5, Get $5" promotion for a limited time.  Starting today, the first 10,000 customers who give an MP3-themed Amazon.com Gift Card to five different Facebook friends will get a $5 credit good for music downloads at Amazon MP3.  Amazon MP3 has a library of more than 13 million songs and all music downloads sold at Amazon MP3 are DRM-free, which means they work on virtually any MP3 player or phone.  For more details about the offer, visit www.amazon.com/giftcards-facebook-mp3promo. '

IF YOU'D RATHER NOT DO GIFTCARDS VIA A FACEBOOK POSTING
If you're not into Facebook or don't want to connect your Amazon account to your Facebook one, the normally available gift card and gift certificate pages are linked to in this blog's reference area at the right.  The regular offerings:

GIFT cards for Kindle books or any other Amazon.com items,
 Gift certificates, etc.

GIFT cards - UK only, for any Amazon-UK store items



Kindle 3's   (UK: Kindle 3's),   DX Graphite


Check often: Temporarily-free late-listed non-classics or recently published ones
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.
UK-Only: recently published non-classics, bestsellers, or highest-rated ones
    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

Fit Club Tuesday - Project YOU!

We are going to have a blast at Fit Club Tonight!  For the workout I have chosen Proejct You Type 2!  I love this workout, have had it for a LONG time.  I think it is a great workout and it is now geared towards people with diabetes or pre-diabetes.  The workouts are good, easy to follow and Kathy Smith is a great instructor.

FIT CLUB WORKOUT:

Kathy Smiths Project:YOU! Type 2

The only diet and fitness program developed in conjunction with doctors, certified diabetes educators, and the American Diabetes Association, Project:YOU! Type 2 is the first all-in-one lifestyle solution for those with diabetes or pre-diabetes.

The Healthy Approach To Helping Fight Type 2 Diabetes


Kathy Smith's Project:YOU! Type 2® is a revolutionary new all-in-one lifestyle solution for those diagnosed with diabetes or pre-diabetes. Developed in conjunction with doctors, certified diabetes educators, and the American Diabetes Association, Project:YOU! Type 2 can help you manage diabetes, reduce your risk for diabetes complications, and get back in control of your life.

Here's what you get:

Good2Move!
12-Week Fitness Program for All Levels

Workout Wallet With DVDs and CD.
Includes Kathy's original 8 workouts for fat-burning, strength training, core strength, and flexibility. Plus 2 audio walking programs for healthy outdoor exercise.


12-Week Workout Guide.
Learn how to get started, get moving, and get the most out of your workouts.

12-Week Workout Calendar.
Shows you exactly which workouts to do each day, and when to rest. Plus a daily checklist to keep you motivated and on track.

Good2Eat! Meal Guides
 (reviewed by the American Diabetes Association)

Cookbook.
Full of mouth-watering recipes created around our unique COMBO system, which counts the carbs for you. Plus recipes for entertaining and guidelines on eating out.

Mix-and-Match Meal Cards.
Color-coded cards with delicious meals and simple snacks, which you can mix and match to create your own personalized eating plan.

Good2Go! Support Tools
Program Guide and 12-Week Food & Fitness Journal. All the helpful information you need about fitness and healthy eating in one convenient guide. Plus a 90-day journal to track your food, exercise, weight, and blood glucose readings.

Online Support.
Enjoy access to extra tips and advice from Kathy and an online community of people helping one another succeed.

30-Day Money-Back Guarantee
If you're not satisfied with the performance of this product, please contact Customer Service to return it within 30 days for a full refund of the purchase price, less s&h—no questions asked.

Come out tonight if you are local and give it a try!   We will workout at 7 PM at the CJ Community Center (303 N. Main St., Carl Junction) Shakeology taste testing will be after the workout (usually around 8)  I would love to see you there!  Let's get fit together!! 

Fit Club Recipe:

A little different recipe today, but still just as fun!

Sugar and Spice Body Scrub from Gorgeously Green!!



I LOVE the Gorgeously Green books.  Check them out here and order from here!  You won't be sorry!!

They all have GREAT ideas, recipes and products in them.  I want to do what I can to live as green as possible.

The Gorgeously Green Diet is another great one, Do It Gorgeously is all about making your own products and has wonderful ideas and recipes!

Check them out!



Don't forget to VOTE today!  It's so important to exercise our right to vote!  Just do it!

Discussion:  Do you make your own beauty supplies?  I love to do this and they really do make nice gifts!!

Monday, November 1, 2010

Amazon UK Switches to Agency Plan with 3 Publishers

As mentioned here on Oct. 15, Amazon told its UK customers about its battles to avoid the 'Agency Plan' created by Apple with the larger publishers and that the latter would 'require' online booksellers to accept the plan to fix prices to be the same at all online stores (notably higher in most cases).  See the recent story for details of what Amazon said to its customers in a posting on the Kindle forums.  The short version is:
' Recently, you may have heard that a small group of UK publishers will require booksellers to adopt an "agency model" for selling e-books. Under this model, publishers set the consumer price for each e-book and require any bookseller to sell at that price. This is unlike the traditional wholesale model that's been in place for decades, where booksellers set consumer prices.

It is indeed correct that this group of publishers will require Amazon and other UK booksellers to accept an agency model for e-books. We believe they will raise prices on e-books for consumers almost across the board. For a number of reasons, we think this is a damaging approach for readers, authors, booksellers and publishers alike. ... '

  But Bookseller.com reports it's come to pass in the U.K. now, also, with "publishers Hachette, HarperCollins and Penguin now setting their own e-book prices.  Customers buying an e-book from the Kindle store from any of the three publishers are told: "This price was set by the publisher." A Penguin spokesperson said: "I can confirm we are now on the agency model with Amazon as of today."

  Hachette, the leader of the 3 (or the one who required this first) switched to agency pricing in September. Bookseller says that Amazon is the first online e-bookseller to make the switch and that no Penguin or Hachette e-books are yet available for sale on either Waterstones.com or W H Smith's website.

  It seems they just withhold the e-books if the retailer refuses to go on the Agency plan.  With Amazon, the customers tend to blame Amazon, as they did in the U.S., if the e-books are not in the store and many posted on forums they'd rather have a choice and pay more than not have access to the books at all or have to find them elsewhere.  Most posted though that they didn't intend to pay the publishers' new higher prices, since they were often 50% higher.

  The reaction in the UK's forums is more angry than even what we saw in the U.S. forums.  One book, Just After Sunset bought at under £5 the other day, was seen to be £17.99 today, a price shown as 'set by the publisher' as they decided to do in the U.S. (where some customers ignore it and still blame Amazon for the pricing).  However, I just looked and they're removed the price for the Kindle edition and haven't replaced it yet. Also, Bookseller.com adds:
'A small number of HarperCollins' e-books are available at Waterstones.com and W H Smith, with a note from Waterstones.com indicating that loyalty card points do not now apply to e-book purchases.

  It is believed that an issue over loyalty card payments was behind the removal of Hachette titles from sale at Waterstones.com when the publishers switched to agency in September, suggesting that the wrinkes [sic] in the transition may soon be ironed out across all booksellers who agree to the new terms.  One retailer said: "It's still a bit fluid.  Everything is still being resolved."

The only publishers who have signed up to the agency model but have yet to implement its pricing are Canongate, Macmillan and Simon & Schuster. '
See the earlier story for more details and links to sourcing for the history of the e-book pricing wars.


Kindle 3's   (UK: Kindle 3's),   DX Graphite

Check often: Temporarily-free late-listed non-classics or recently published ones
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.
UK-Only: recently published non-classics, bestsellers, or highest-rated ones
    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

Countdown

2 days until Peppermint Mocha is back

4 days until I get my new iPod nano

23 days until our HK getaway

53 days until Christmas

Branson weekend getaway

Brian and I took off Friday  morning and headed to Branson for a nice getaway! 

We got there and immediately went to get something to eat.  Ended up at Cantina Laredo and had a wonderful meal.  I had the portabello mushroom enchilada, we shared the guacamole that was made tableside and so yummy!  We left there extremely full and walked and window shopped at the Branson Landing for a couple of hours.  I got some yummy jalapeno popcorn, Brian got the chocolate carmel.  Both were tasty!  We went back to the camper to get changed and decide what we wanted to do next.

I wanted to go to the outlet stores, so off we went.  I got a few great deals at the Gap outlet (curvy jeans are my new favorite!) and I looked for a cute pair of boots, but didn't find anything I couldn't live without.  I'll keep looking!

We ate dinner at Chester's - a hamburger joint.  Brian got a HUGE burger.  I got the fried green tomatoes and a salad.  We split the cinnamon roll bread pudding.  OMGness, it was delicious.  We walked around some more and called it a night.

We got up ready to roll on Sat.  Had breakfast at the camper, then off we went to explore.  We ended up at the Titanic Museum, it was really cool and we both loved it.  You get a boarding pass with a passenger's name on it and you can look for things that belonged to that passenger and at the end you find out your fate.  My gal  lived, Brian's passenger did not.  It was a sobering experience, but so interesting.  They wouldn't let us take any pictures, too bad

We had lunch at The Gardens.  It was a great place to get some healthy food.  I had a mushroom burger and Brian had salad and a quiche.  Then we split some carrot cake.  YUM!

 We then headed over to the wax museum for a little fun.  Brian would NOT pose for any pics, but I took this one of him by Frankenstein, of course he turned around the second he saw the camera. 

 I had to pose with I Dream of Jeannie!

Dancing with Austin Powers


And look serious with the Men in Black!
We had fun!!  We headed back to the camper to do a little work.  Duty calls sometimes, I'm just thankful that I have a job that allows me to work from wherever I am!



We went to dinner at the Bleu Olive.  It was really good.  I had a flirtini!  It was yummy and then I had pasta with sundried tomatoes and olives.  Brian had a beef kebob and some garlic mashed potatoes.  Service was excellent and the food was very good.  We highly recommend it!

We then went to see the show SIX.  This was good.  Six brothers perform without any musical instruments.  They sound like they are singing with a band.All the sounds you hear are made with their mouths. Amazing!  It was a good show. 


Sunday we just took our time getting around, had some breakfast.  I forgot to take my shakeology with me, but I did take SVELTE.   I was so glad that I did.  This was tasty!  Brian drank the chocolate on Sat morning and the cappuchino on Sun. He liked both of them. I had the French Vanilla (yummy!) and the Spiced Chai.  I LOVED the Spiced Chai.  It was so good.  I was cold, so I warmed it up.  It just hit the spot.  The drinks are around 300 calories.  It worked great, kept us full until lunch and no dairy!  YAY! These are more of a protein drink and I think would be great as an after workout drink!

What are the Benefits?


Tested to be low-glycemic
High in protein, low in sugar
Provides 20% daily value of fiber
Healthy alternative to weight loss
Dairy-free and gluten-free
Great snack to grab and go


Check out Svelte on facebook and twitter
Look for Svelte at your local Whole Foods or other health food stores!

Then  we headed home for the Halloween festivities and to take photos of Nick and Lauren for their engagement.  I'll post some of those after they have decided which ones are their faves!  Madelyn looked adorable.  We didn't have many trick-or-treaters, but enjoyed the few we had.

My favorite trick or treater:



Discussion:  What did you do this weekend?  Anything fun?

CNet: LCD vs. e-ink: The eyestrain debate. Thoughts on the NookColor. PCW Top 5 Tech

CNet's David Carnoy weighed in on the debate over whether or not e-book reading on LCD screen causes more eyestrain than when reading on an e-Ink screen.  For him, it doesn't matter, but he apparently understands that for other humans it can be a problem though he prefers to think that it's not due to the LCD screen that others have a problem.

  In my own case -- with a focus only on words one after another against a background that puts light right into my eyes, there's quite a difference.

  I (and others report the same) can read a book on e-ink for hours but on my LCD screen, which I DIM -- and it has a reputation for being an excellent screen) -- I can read an e-book for no more than 20 minutes.  I then need to squint my eyes to continue, no matter how far down I dim that light.  I also use a lamp to help my eyes adjust to the light difference between the light source (LCD) and surroundings, and that helps me read books for about half an hour.  I do it only because I like to see some of the color illustrations on my Kindle 4 PC.

  Yet, I can surf the web on a computer of any type for 10+ hours a day without a problem because in surfing the web your eyes are looking all over the place and get to relax from one short-term position of focus, with images and other stories to catch your eye (as with a paper newspaper).  That's why it's called surfing ... or browsing.  It's not a heavy focus on just one plain-text word after another, contained, with not much movement of the eyes for relaxation and then, with that more intense form of light (vs reflected light from e-ink screens) coming into your eyes, it has more effect on some of us.

Carnoy gets a quote from Barnes and Noble's CEO, William Lynch, that B&N did "extensive research on displays" and "discovered" that "eyestrain with LCDs was not the huge issue many people were making it out to be." He added that B&N is using a "high-resolution next-generation panel from LG" that is backlit with LED.

 Carnoy then asks his optometrist for his take on this and reports that the doc doesn't feel there's that much to the eyestrain idea.  It doesn't matter, he feels, if a light is shining into your eyes when you are doing serial reading (words in a string) for long-form sessions as opposed to short magazine reading or surfing the web.  He doesn't believe today's LCD screens cause any eyestrain for anyone but that it's just a matter of "aesthetics" whether they prefer an LCD screen or an e-Ink one for reading.

In the comments section for the article, some point to differing light-sensitivity that people have.  One would think that was common (and good) sense.

But the most interesting Comment of all to that article was one which I'll put here, as his explanations for perceived or reported LCD eyestrain comes from someone who has studied this at length and of course has reasons for his most definite bias, as he is a co-founder of e-Ink:
' Hi David,

While LCDs are adequate for reading, E Ink was invented and engineered for the best possible reading experience. Your readers might like to hear about a few technical factors that are not well known and contribute to the difference:

1. Ambient brightness
Over the years many people have told me that reading an emissive display is bothersome to them while E Ink is not.

I think one reason is that as you read, your eyes skip along the lines of text, dwelling for a fraction of a second on small groups of words. Your eyes are constantly moving ? hundreds of times per minute. So it is very important that your eyes be able to refocus on the surface of a screen within a split-second.

Emissive displays are ill-suited for this. While you are reading a book, you see a lot more than the screen. Your field of vision is wider than the page alone and your eyes often glance off the page. With a backlit screen, every time your eye switches from a bright screen to the dimmer ambient room, your eye muscles must make an adjustment. And the more adjustments, the more chance for eyestrain.

With paper or E Ink, the page is the same brightness as everything else in the room. Your eye needs less adjustment effort to go back and forth. You can see and understand information more immediately. Paper is the ultimate "glanceable" display and that helps improve comprehension and maximize reading speed.

2. No parallax / closer to the eye

Have you ever gazed at a calculator display and noticed a bit of a shadow? That is parallax. The same thing happens on your emissive LCD. The white color is actually coming from a backlight behind the LCD; the black color is coming from a shadow cast by the liquid crystal material in the middle of the LCD glass sandwich. So black and white are different distances from your eye. This degree of shadowing changes with the viewing angle. There are also two sheets of glass and multiple polarizer films between your eye and the white background, which creates a slight feeling of separation between screen and real world.

In an E Ink display, the electronic ink contains black and white particles that are both moved physically by electrophoresis to the front of the display. So both black and white are exactly the same distance from your eye. Furthermore, both are at the front pressed up to the top layer of glass. This greatly contributes to the feeling that the information is printed on the top of a page.

3. Less glare

All E Ink display surfaces are treated to be matte like a printed page. Most LCDs are not. This is not an obvious feature when you buy the product, but it makes a huge difference to legibility in some settings.

4. Same contrast across the entire page

Although modern LCDs have greatly improved their viewing angle uniformity, there is still a detectable difference in contrast ratio across the page. These differences in contrast make it just a tiny bit harder to resolve images as your eye skips along the page. As the screen gets larger or closer to your eyes, as with a handheld book, this angular difference is increased.

5. No aperture ratio loss

The pixels on LCD screens do not have a full aperture ratio, because each pixel must be separated by a black border. The border hides the underlying transistor and separates the areas of the color filter. There are actually 3 sets of borders per pixel, since color LCDs have RGB subpixels. This all adds up to tiny black gaps between each pixel. As LCDs reach higher resolutions there are even more dead gaps as a percentage of viewing area.

E Ink screens have a 100% aperture ratio. There is no black mask and no black border between pixels. When two neighboring pixels are white on an E Ink screen, the pixels merge to form a solid block of white. Therefore the blacks and whites on an E Ink screen are uniform, again improving image quality.

Russ Wilcox, co-founder E Ink <-- absolutely biased in favor of E Ink! =) '

This is all a concern as some of us are considering, as a SECONDARY e-reader, the coming NookColor, for color magazine reading or for photography and travel books.   Also of interest is the ePub (but not its proprietary form of Adobe DRM) and library capabilities *IF* the new Nook functions better than the eInk Nook does (and certainly better than it did in its first buggy half year) as I find its menu system and processes have too many steps, it's too slow to respond (when you're used to the Kindle  (UK: K3)), and the Nook's search and annotations systems are quite poor.
  But also of interest is that it will view though not edit Microsoft Office documents.

  Searches can function as 'flipping' through a book in search of something and that's important to me, as is the dictionary function being right on the front screen as it is for both the Kindles and the new Sony e-readers.  Annotations should be FINDABLE rather than depending on your ever reaching those pages again (a drawback of the current Nook).

  However, the new Nook software update coming may help. Oddly, Engadget's look at the NookColor the other day left them feeling the NookColor has to be sped up, even though it's not an eInk device.  B&N has another two weeks to get it ready for reporters to touch (they wouldn't let Engadget operate it).

As of now, I'm also looking at the fact that the NookColor is almost one pound (15.8 ounces) and gives "up to" 8 hours on a battery charge, and it takes 3 hours to do a full charge.

 Those are drawbacks to it being a primary portable e-reader, but the color will entice, even if it is an LCD screen and we now know what an LCD screen is like, for book-reading outside where the sun shines.  There should be a good market for it though, from people who won't need to use it outdoors and who want color above all else and have not bought an e-reader because of the lack of color.  I imagine that's a large potential market.

I'll be writing more about the NookColor, but I would personally not, at this point get a color LCD screen device as my primary ebook reader but am considering the new Nook as a supplemental e-reader and also because I'm a long-time B&N member and want them to survive, as they're not in the best financial shape currently but should certainly make it through fine if they do things right with the Nook.
  It's important to me that their bookstore in my neighborhood, which I like to visit, stays, when the 3 others in this area gave up the ghost this past year.

  The IPad has a great screen but is decidedly not pleasant for me to try to read a book on although some others can do it (the Nook will add an anti-glare coating and it'll be interesting to see how effective that is), but the market shows clearly that the Kindle's eInk screen is a huge attraction for avid book readers and many of us are reading and buying books much more than we used to because it is so strangely pleasing to read on an e-Ink screen and with the Kindle's features and functioning.

  That's a good reason for B&N to keep the E-Ink model, as the new model does not 'replace' that but is an addition to the line. The new model will not offer 3G access and will depend on WiFi networks in the home or available nearby.

PC World's TOP 5 Tech Products of the year (out of 100 chosen)
PC World's Cody Hahn reports on their pick of the top 100 best technology products for 2010.
  The surprise for many in this was that "Google Android 2.2" is number one rather than the Apple iPad.  They also list their Top 5 tech products and services:

  . Google Android 2.2
  . Apple iPad
  . Amazon Kindle (third generation)
  . Netflix
  . Samsung Galaxy Tab (7" tablet with flash and 2 cameras)

No surprise that the Kindle 3 is in the bunch.


Kindle 3's   (UK: Kindle 3's),   DX Graphite

Check often: Temporarily-free late-listed non-classics or recently published ones
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.
UK-Only: recently published non-classics, bestsellers, or highest-rated ones
    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.