Download my iPhone App

iphone_screen.jpgIn my ongoing quest to morph into Steve Jobs, I now have my own iPhone app. (It also works hella fine on iPod Touches.)

It’s got my latest blog postings, tweets, and YouTube videos. You can even “favourite” items you’d like to read later. I’d have put more info into it, but, sadly, the iPhone’s tiny screen didn’t accommodate the size of my enormous ego. ;-)

It’s very useful for killing time in airport lineups, showing to your kids as an example of how to not grow up, and opening once then deleting. :-)

You can download it at http://iphone.todmaffin.com [link opens in iTunes].

appstore.jpg

Your Home Is Leaking Power

Photo by white_duck

Photo by white_duck

I turned my DVD player on last week for the first time in about six months. Only I didn’t really turn it on; I woke it from standby.

I knew these devices were consuming power while “on” (evidenced by the little stand-by light) but I never really knew how much. BC Hydro has published a nice little table of that consumption by an average home-office.

If you actually power down these devices by unplugging them, turning off the power back they’re connected to, or using their hard Power button on the back (of some devices, like many printers) you’ll save about $14 a year under the above scenario. Not tonnes, mind you, but in this economy, it all helps.

BC Hydro also has a pretty decent incentive for saving power — if you join its Team Power Smart program (free) and cut down on 10% of your power consumption over last year, they’ll cut you a cheque for $75. Cold hard cash: the world’s best incentive.

The JFK Assassination: Me and John F. Kennedy

Forty-six years ago, today, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. That much is known. The rest, pretty much, is speculation.

When I was 11, I found myself browsing through the used books section of the Value Village in New Westminster, B.C. My eyes stopped on a weathered copy of the Warren Commission findings — the U.S. government’s official report on the Kennedy assassination. It was a buck, so I bought it. I started reading it that night and I don’t think I put it down until I’d gone through all 718 pages of it.

More than 25 years later, I’m still constantly reading books about the assassination. And in that time, I’ve ended up with a pretty substantial collection of materials. I’d venture to say I have one of the largest private collections in B.C. Some of my favourite acquisitions:

  • Every letter about the Kennedy assassination sent to the Dallas Police Department in the two years following November 22, 1963 (digital copies)
  • A three-inch piece of the infamous wooden stockade fence behind the grassy knoll
  • An autographed copy of JFK: The Case for Conspiracy (Robert Groden, author)
  • More than 20 hours of live uninterrupted television coverage from the first bulletin

Several weeks ago, I finally had the chance to get to Dallas in person, thanks to a speech booking. Definitely went down as a highlight in my life. Here’s a short video I shot of my walk through Dealey Plaza, including when I run into famous assassination researcher Robert Groden.

Of course, when I tell people about my fascination (obsession?) with the Kennedy assassination, many people ask if I think Lee Harvey Oswald did it. I do have a theory. (“Well Chris, what is it that it is – this theory of mine. Well, this is what it is – my theory that I have, that is to say, which is mine, is mine.”)

Like the Warren Commission found, I think Oswald fired shots from the sixth floor of the TSBD building. Except don’t think he was aiming at Kennedy. (To be fair, I don’t really believe my own theory. But everyone’s gotta have an oddball theory, right?)

I’m going to finally write out my theory in the coming day or two and will post it here.

In the meantime, here’s a partial summary of my collection.

Official Findings

  • Report of the Warren Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy (complete text)
    Paperback, first printing, October 1964, 718 pages (32 pages of B&W photos)
  • The Witnesses: Highlights of Hearings Before the Warren Commission
    Paperback, first edition, December 1964, 626 pages
  • The Final Assassinations Report: Report of the Select Committee on Assassinations (complete text)
    Paperback, first printing July 1979, 676 pages

Live News Coverage

  • NBC Television, 4.5 hours
    Homemade DVD, uninterrupted live coverage from first bulletin (A&E Television production)
  • ABC Television, 2 hours
    Beginning with bulletins during “Father Knows Best.” No commercials.
  • WFAA Television, Dallas, 14 hours
    Including JFK’s arrival in Fort Worth on 11/21/63, his speech on the morning of 11/22/63, his arrival in Dallas & the program interruption on WFAA. The first reports are made by Program Director Jay Watson & Jerry “Mr. Peppermint” Greene, who both saw the assassination. One of the people they interview in studio is Abraham Zapruder. The reports prior to the assassination are strange to hear as the reporter gives a rundown of what President Kennedy will be doing during the rest of his time in Texas. He also gives the route of the motorcade a number of times. No commercials.
  • CBS Television, 7 hours
    Begins with the first bulletins during “As The World Turns.” Has a few commercials until the wall-to-wall coverage begins about fifteen minutes into the footage.
  • Various JFK Newscasts & specials
    11/23/63: WLS-TV Chicago with Frank Reynolds
    11/24/63: NBC-TV Oswald shooting caught live
    11/24/63: WABC-TV New York
    6/19/67: JFK: The case of Jim Garrison
  • KNX/CBS Radio in Los Angeles
    CD format, morning of November 22, 1963.
    (It’s a little errie. The station was carryng the network broadcast of the Arthur Godfrey Show. The covers the first ten minutes of this 70 minute CD.  At one point, they break away for a station ID. The time given was one minute before the assassination took place. The Godfrey show had to have been taped, because after the first couple of bulletins from CBS News, they went back to the show & everyone was still laughing it up and having a good time. A few moments later, CBS began their wall-to-wall coverage.)

Non-Fiction Books

  • They’ve Killed the President, Robert Sam Anson
    Paperback, first printing, November 1975, 363 pages (16 pgs colour/B&W photos)
  • They’ve Killed the President, Robert Sam Anson (second copy)
    Paperback, first printing, November 1975, 363 pages (16 pgs colour/B&W photos)
  • Inquest: The Warren Commission and the Establishment of Truth, Edward Jay Epstein
    Paperback, October 1966, 175 pages (4 pages of B&W photos)
  • Six Seconds in Dallas, Josiah Thompson
    Paperback, 1967 (1976 edition), ~410 pages
  • JFK: Conspiracy of Silence, Charles A Crenshaw, M.D.
    Paperback, first printing April 1992, 203 pages (8 pages of B&W photos)
  • Dallas and the Jack Ruby Trial: The Memoirs of Judge Joe B. Brown, Sr.
    Soft-cover, first printing, 2001, edited by Diane Holloway, Ph.D, 218 pages
  • Mrs. Paine’s Garage and the Murder of John F. Kennedy, Thomas Mallon
    Hard-cover, first printing, 2002, 209 pages
  • JFK: Breaking the News, Hugh Aynesworth
    Hard-cover, first printing, 2003, 252 pages
  • The Unanswered Questions About President Kennedy’s Assassination, Sylvan Fox
    Paperback, fourth printing, 1975, 228 pages
  • Appointment in Dallas: The Final Solution to the Assassination of JFK, Hugh C. McDonald
    Paperback, first printing, October 1975, 215 pages
  • The Ruby Coverup, Seth Kantor (1978)
    Paperback, second printing 1992, 418 pages
  • The Assassination Tapes (1977)
    Paperback, first printing, July 1977, 323 pages
  • The Assassination Chain, Sybil Leek and Bert R. Sugar
    Paperback, first printing, October 1977, 342 pages
  • Best Evidence: Disguise and Deception in the Assassination of John F. Kennedy, David S. Lifton
    Paperback, first printing April 1982, 891 pages (34 pages of B&W photos)
  • High Treason, Robert J. Groden and Harrison Edward Livingstone
    Paper, second edition November 1990, 477 pages (including 4 pages of colour and B&W photos)
  • LBJ and the JFK Conspiracy, Hugh McDonald and Robin Moore
    Paperback, second edition, January 1979, 230 pages
  • Legend: The Secret World of Lee Harvey Oswald, Edward Jay Epstein
    Paperback, first printing 1978, 407 pages (16 pages of B&W photos)
  • Mortal Error, Bonar Minninger
    Paperback, first printing October 1992, 404 pages (24 pages of colour and B&W photos)
  • JFK: The Case for Conspiracy, F. Peter Model and Robert J. Groden
    Paperback, first printing 1976, 299 pages (32 pages of colour and B&W photos)
  • On the Trail of the Assassins, Jim Garrison
    Paperback, first printing December 1991, 361 pages (8 pages of B&W photos)
  • Assassination of JFK: By Coincidence of Conspiracy?, Bernard Fensterwalf, Jr.
    Paperback, first printing April 1977, 580 pages
  • Contract on America: The Mafia Murder of President John F. Kennedy, David E. Scheim
    Paperback, first printing April 1989, 485 pages (16 pages of B&W photos)
  • Dealey Plaza National Historic Landmark, Conover Hunt
    Soft-cover, second printing 1997, two-colour (orange and black), 87 pages
  • Kennedy Assassinated!: The World Mourns: A Reporter’s Story, Wilborn Hampton
    Hard cover, first edition 1997, 91 pages
  • JFK: First Day Evidence, Gary Savage
    Hard cover, first printing 1993, 408 pages
  • Assignment: Oswald, James P. Hosty, Jr.
    Soft cover, first printing 1996, 318 pages (16 pages of B&W photos)
  • The Day Kennedy Was Shot, Jim Bishop
    Hard cover, first printing 1968, 531 pages
  • The JFK Assassination: The Facts and the Theories, Carl Oglesby
    Paperback, first printing May 1992, 316 pages
  • The Death of a President, William Manchester
    Paperback, 1967, 763 pages

Books Not Directly About the Assassination

  • A Day in the Life of President Kennedy, Jim Bishop
    Paperback, eighth printing, October 1964, 145 pages
  • Kennedy, Theodore C. Sorenson
    Paperback, sixth printing, 1966, 858 pages
  • The Making of the President 1960, Theodore H. White
    Paperback, seventh printing (some time after July 1967), orig. published 1960, 428 pages
  • With Kennedy, Pierre Salinger
    Paperback, first printing, October 1967, 452 pages (8 pgs B&W photos)
  • Assassination: 20 Assassinations That Changed the World, Lee Davis
    Hard cover, first edition 1993, 139 pages
  • The United States Secret Service, Walter S. Bowen and Harry Edward Neal
    Paperback, third printing, May 1960, 227 pages
  • The Kennedy Imprisonment: A Meditation on Power, Garry Wills
    Paperback, first printing, February 1983, 312 pages
  • The Dark Side of Camelot, Nelson Thompson
    Paperback, first printing 1976, 172 pages
  • Portrait of a President, William Manchester
    Paperback, first printing October 1964, 158 pages
  • A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.
    Paperback, seventh printing April 1967, 940 pages
  • A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.
    Hard Cover, first printing 1965, 1031 pages
  • Profiles in Courage: President John F. Kennedy, (no author credited), forward by Allan Nevins
    Paperback, 25th printing December 1963, 211 pages (8 pages of B&W photos)
  • The Kennedy Wit, edited by Bill Adler
    Paperback, seventh printing 1964, 127 pages

Novels

  • A Time to Remember, Stanley Shapiro
    Paperback, first printing 1986, 274 pages
  • The Plot to Kill the President, Jack Pearl (not about Kennedy)
    Paperback, first printing August 1972, 288 pages
  • Executive Action, Donald Freed and Mark Lane
    Paperback, fourth printing December 1973, 250 pages
  • Libra, Don Delillo
    Paperback, first printing 1989, 456 pages

Documentary Films

  • Who Killed JFK: Facts, Not Fiction
    VHS, CBS News, 70 Minutes, 1992, hosted by Dan Rather, from a “48 Hours” production
  • The Murder of JFK: Confession of an Assassin
    VHS, 76 minutes, interview of James E. Files
  • The Men Who Killed Kennedy: The Truth Shall Set You Free
    VHS, 50 mins, A&E Television/ The History Channel
  • JFK: The Case for Conspiracy: The Assassination and Medical Evidence
    DVD, 113 minutes, New Frontier Video, editor Robert Groden
  • JFK: The Case for Conspiracy: Vol II
    DVD, 90 minutes, New Frontier Video, editor Robert Groden

Fictional Films

  • Ruby
    VHS, 206 minutes, Polygram, 111 minutes
  • JFK (Director’s Cut)
    VHS, Oliver Stone director, 208 minutes
  • Executive Action
    MP4 file, 90 minutes, Warner Bros., starring Burt Lancaster, David Miller director

Audio

  • Assassination: The Death of JFK
    Audio CD, ~35 brief interview clips from various JFK experts, critics, etc.
  • Audio interview of Lee Harvey Oswald on New Orleans WSDU Radio, August 17, 1963
    Interviewed by William K. Stuckey about the Fair Play for Cuba Committee
  • Audio interview of Jim Garrison
    Interviewed by Johnny Carson

Newspapers and Magazines

  • Dallas Times Herald, November 22, 1963
    Reprint, Headline: “President Dead, Connally Shot”
  • Dallas Morning News, November 23, 1963
    Reprint, Headline: “Kennedy Slain on Dallas Street: Johnson Becomes President”, 3 sections
  • Fort Worth Star-Telegram, November 25, 1963
    Reprint, Headline: “Ruby Plea: Insanity; Kennedy Rites Held”, 1 section, 16 pages
  • The Globe and Mail, November 25, 1963
    Reprint, Headline: “Oswald Slain in Dallas Jail”, single front page (printed Nov 25, 1999)
  • Life Magazine, November 25, 1966
    Original, Cover: “A Matter of Reasonable Doubt” (first publication of Zapruder film images)
  • Life Magazine, 1963
    Reprint, Cover: “John F. Kennedy Memorial Edition”
  • Saturday Evening Post Magazine, November 23, 1963
    Original (publication deadline was prior to assassination, so no JFK content exists in magazine)
  • Saturday Evening Post Magazine, November 21, 1964
    Original, Cover: “The Undying Heritage of J. F. K.”
  • Saturday Evening Post Magazine, December 14, 1963
    Original, Cover: “In Memoriam: A Senseless Tragedy”

Misc.

  • Small piece of wooden stockade fence from Grassy Knoll
    About 3” long, brown, not original 1963 material
  • JFK: The Case for Conspiracy
    Robert Groden, 48-page full-colour photo magazine, autographed by author
  • “Be a Member: The Sixth Floor Museum”
    Four-panel brochure, orange and black
  • Every letter about the Kennedy assassination sent to the Dallas Police Department
    in the two years following November 22, 1963 (digital copies)

The First Slide in Your PowerPoint/Keynote Presentation

About four years ago while giving a keynote presentation about leading “the Facebook generation” in the workplace, disaster struck. I was about mid-way through the speech, talking about new models for employee benefit plans, when the following popped up on the screen — in front of 2,200 people:

hot_cowboy_girls_spam

That might look like a three-inch wide JPG on your screen right now, but imagine that about two-feet wide and a foot tall. Because that’s what it was in front of the audience.

Clearly, I’d forgotten to turn my instant messenger app off and I got hit by a roaming spambot. Along with 2,200 unsuspecting nice human resources executives.

It taught me two lessons:

  1. Never authorize a friend request from suziewhore83; and,
  2. Turn off all TSRs (IM apps, applets, online backups, email notifiers, etc.)

The only thing you want running when you’re giving a presentation is your presentation software. Nothing else.

Remembering to Shut Them Down

The hard part is remembering to shut all the apps, applets, and widgets down before you press Play on your presentation. That’s why I use the same first slide on all my decks. Here it is:

first_slide

The slide is never shown to people in the audience. It’s just there to remind me to turn everything off. (A “TSR” is a throwback to DOS days — it refers to any program which launches, then hides, but stays in memory doing things or stays ready to become active at any time.)

Force Quit: Make Sure Everything Is Closed

Don’t just assume that because your Windows Taskbar or Mac Dock is clear of other running applications you’re ready to go. Those TSRs hide everywhere, and often invisibly. Here’s how to make sure everything is closed.

On a Mac, quit all the applications in the dock. (You won’t be able to quit the first icon called “Finder.” That’s okay.) Now, press Command-Option-Escape. A list of applications will appear. It will look something like this:

force_quit

If you’ve done it right, there shouldn’t be many (if any) applications in the list. If there are, go to that application, save everything, and try to close it. If it won’t close, highlight its name in this dialog box and press “Force Quit.” (This is similar to the Ctrl-Alt-Del method to force Windows applications to quit.) If you’ve done this and things still pop up during your presentation, launch Activity Monitor and force-quit the offender from that program.

On Windows, right-click on the Taskbar and select Task Manager. You’ll get something that looks like this:

windows_task_manager

As with the Mac example, select the program that you want to quit, then click the End Task button.

Banned by Facebook: An Exercise in Futility

Some months ago, I logged in to my Facebook profile to throw a few targeted ads up. I’d done Facebook advertising before and found it to be moderately successful — enough that I aimed to do a campaign every couple of months.

Imagine my surprise when I logged in one morning to find this:

For some unknown and clearly arbitrary reason, the gods at Facebook banned my account for running “abusive” ads. The essence of the message above is: “You tried to post an abusive ad. We’ve banned you. There’s nothing you can do about it. Now go away.”

This is bizarre to me. The only campaigns I’ve run are simple and certainly not abusive. Naturally, the Advertising Guidelines they’ve posted don’t help an iota. Under Facebook’s rules, one can’t post an ad that contain “political agendas,” that “advocates against any organization,” or is “grammatically [in]correct and [doesn't] contain proper sentence structure.”

Good thing the web as a whole doesn’t have that last condition.

The ad I ran that appeared to trigger this ban was this:

banned_ad

I’ve read Facebook’s guidelines several times. The only thing I can think of that bugged Facebook was the use of the CBC logo. However, considering CBC has officially endorsed my unofficial CBC fan page as its own, it’s rather a moot point. Or perhaps it’s because I didn’t put a period after “corp” — even though most Canadians know the CBC’s nickname: “The Mother Corp.” But I can’t believe this ad is “abusive,” as Facebook claims.

More Arbitrary Facebook Ad Guidelines

Among the offenses that will get you banned permanently from placing ads on Facebook are:

  • Using a ‘&’ instead of the word ‘and’
  • Ending a sentence with an ellipse (‘…’)
  • Running an ad promoting a political point of view

The Solution

Facebook should take a lesson from Google, which at least tells you why your ad wasn’t approved and gives you an opportunity to fix it. If Facebook were to just email and say “You should use a ‘.’ after ‘corp’,” I’d be happy to fix it. I get my ads run; Facebook gets money. Problem solved.

Instead, people create a second profile with a fake name and run ads under that name instead, pointing to the same destination page as the original banned ad. In fact, considering these banning decisions are made by actual human beings, there’s a good chance that one could post the exact same ad under a different name and have it sail right through the approval process. One person’s “abusive” is another person’s “mild irritant.” We’ve already seen this in the approval process of Apple’s App Store.

Unfortunately for Facebook, I’ve given up trying to get this ban reversed. Instead, I’ve put that money into Google ads and other online promotional means.

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Podium

Just back from some engagements last week and thought I’d pass this funny little tale along.

I’ve got a few A/V requirements when I present, notably that I like my notebook right at the lectern with me, and that I like the podium (stage/riser) to be free of anything else like chairs, tables, and so on. I tend to move around a lot when I speak, so this helps make sure I don’t faceplant (which, amazingly, hasn’t yet happened in 13 years of professional speaking).

Fast forward to the evening before my presentation. I’m at the event’s reception, meeting the delegates and sponsors, and up walks my client. We introduce each other, go over a couple of last-minute details, and then she leans in and asks, very politely: “Um, so we were able to get you a clear podium, but I wasn’t sure why you needed one?”

I told her that I move around a lot and would just prefer that there’s enough room up there for me to wander. She gets this blank look on her face, then one of those “Oh-my-god-I-completely-misunderstood” looks on her faces.

Turns out, she thought a “podium” was something you stand behind (actually, that’s called a lectern), not something you stand on.

And this was the result.

Why "template responses" should be banned.

I sometimes wish customer support staff should simply not be able to use canned response templates. More times than not, I find support people don’t read your email at all — instead they seem to glance at it, find a few keywords, and match it to a canned response they have. Prepared.

Here’s today’s exchange with NetNation/Hostway, the provider I used in the past (and still, sadly, retain some domain names with).

Enjoy this nonsensical response.

Their original email — 2:24 a.m.
The service(s) listed below are about to expire and require your immediate attention. You must renew or your service(s) will be deactivated upon expiration. Your service(s) and possibly your business will be interrupted. Domain: thirdtuesdayvancouver.com.

My response — 11:19 a.m.
I would like to renew this, but when I go to account manager (following your link) it doesn’t show me that domain. Help! I do not want this domain deleted.

Their “response” — 11:48 a.m.
We received a request that you no longer wanted this domain, so it was closed, and autorenew was removed. If this is no longer the case, please provide us with the last 4 characters of your account manager password, and we will re-open it, to enable renewal of the domain.

Do you have any experiences like this that turned frustratingly comical?

Lies that the “Please Hold” Voice Tells You

iStock_000007282579XSmallI make a lot of phone calls in the day. Note that I didn’t say I talked to a lot of people. Rather, and probably like you, I spend my day listening to a lot of corporate “please hold” messages. It’s gotten to the point that I can pretty much guess at exactly what they’re going to say before they plop me into the queue.

And I realized today that pretty much everything they say on those messages is a lie. Case in point:

“We are experiencing a higher-than-average call volume.

Bullshit. I’m looking at you, Shaw Cable. You’ve had that on your “please hold” message since 1821. It’s not that you’re suddenly experiencing more calls, it’s that you’ve chosen to not add more staff. I mean, did suddenly — just before I called on Tuesday at 11:20 a.m. — hundreds of people flood your call centre to order the iPhoto slide show channel?1 Give me a break.

Some companies even have the audacity to take this one level further with “Because of overwhelming demand for our product, we’re experiencing…” Really Rogers Cellular? You’re doing that well? Because your financial statements are reporting the opposite — that, in fact, your bottom-line income2 for 2008 actually dropped as compared to the previous year. Yeah. Overwhelming demand.

“Our menu options have changed.

No. They haven’t. Companies use this line because they want to rope people into listening to their whole spiel first — which often includes product ads.3 Menu options don’t change often. Even if they do, do you really have to leave that on your message for the next five years?

“So that we can route this call to the right agent, please choose from one of the following options.

This is one of the oldest tricks in the books. It’s called the “Operator 123″ trick in marketing circles. You know those ads that say to call their number and ask to speak to operator 123? Here’s the secret: there is no operator 123. That was ad number #123 you just responded to and by asking for a specific operator, you’ve helped them track which ad you responded to.4

That’s basically what’s happening with many of these corporate “please hold” messages. You’re going to talk to the same operator no matter what button you push. What you’ve done instead is logged a little reference in some tracking database what product you own or what your complaint is. And then, you simply get pawned off on whichever agent comes up next.

“Your call is important to us.”

Oops, excuse me — I throw up in my mouth a little. The paradox here is that the companies who dole out this rote, weak statement are the ones who seem to care the least about their customers — at least judging from their customer service. I mean, how do they know my next call is going to be important to them? Maybe I’ll just yodel for the first 30 seconds. That’s not going to be so important…

“Please choose from one of the following options.”

This would be great, if the options they’re offering have anything to do with why I was calling. Today, my financial institution called me seven times in the space of an hour. I was on an important call at the time and let it go to voicemail. Since there were so many calls in the space of such a short time, I wondered if there was something wrong. So I called their number.

Now remember, I am calling to ask why they called and if it were important. Which option would you pick?

  1. Check your balance, pay a bill, transfer funds, or change your personal access code
  2. Branch information or for our phone directory
  3. Loans, mortgages, or lines of credit
  4. Information on our new tax-free savings account or other investments and rates
  5. Visa questions including lost and stolen cards
  6. Personal or business banking needs

I guessed 6, only because it was the most generic. Of course, it was at the end.

Which of course, brought me to the most frequent lie of them all:

“To make sure you get excellent customer service, this call may be recorded.”

Um, what?! I’m going to get better service because a hard disk somewhere is recording our conversation? Get real. I have no doubt that if the call goes weird, you might be able to use it to train future reps on what to do, but the fact that you’re recording our chat won’t help me get anything. Here’s the real reason they record the call: Legal reasons. Organizations these days want a record of everything. Especially government and public sector organizations. It also helps them prove to you they were right and you are wrong, should it come to a dispute. But really, aren’t they always?

There are fewer and fewer companies which offer something as simple as this:

You’ve reached the customer support line of ABC Widgets. Please hold for an operator.

Would it be that hard?

Luckily, the Internet has a solution for everything, and some sites offer a tip sheet on which buttons to press to get through to a human being faster. For instance, when you call Tivo, just say “Live Agent” at the recording and it’ll blast you through. Not so easy at Dell Support where the secret code is5 1, 7266966, 1, 4, 4.

  1. This is actually a real channel — called The Frame — that Shaw sells. Go watch channel 165 on Shaw digital cable and see for yourself. []
  2. which Rogers calls “comprehensive income” []
  3. Call the Apple Store in Vancouver and the first thing you’ll get is a message proclaiming proudly “The iPhone 3GS is here!” Then, when you actually get to speak to a human you discover that no, the iPhone 3GS is not here. Hasn’t been for weeks. And they have no idea when they’re coming in. []
  4. I’m not saying that’s a bad thing; it’s pretty clever marketing, actually. []
  5. I’m not making this up []