Tuesday, October 16, 2007
The infinity razor

A while ago my wife purchased me a new Infinity Razor. In short I would be able to say "Good bye to being a slave to the Gillette corporation!" because you would never have to replace it. In reality however after using it 3 times I soon realised that Gillette had absolutely nothing to fear, the Infinity Razor just wasn't as good as my trusty 3 blade Gillette which gave me a nice smooth shave unlike the Infinity which was incredibly rough and didn't at all live up to its expectations. Oh well...it was a nice dream though?

posted on Tuesday, October 16, 2007 9:28:28 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

 Sunday, October 14, 2007
Older people and mobile phones

I have a hard time trying to explain to the older members of my family and friends that leaving a mobile phone on while they are out and about does not.

  • Cause wear and tear to the phone
  • Just because you don't think someone will phone you doesn't mean you shouldn't turn on your mobile phone.
  • You are not charged when someone calls you on your mobile.
  • A mobile is mobile this means you can take it with you when you go out.

I suppose there is really a generation gap here when brining our elders up to speed with mobile phones and new technology. A while ago I blogged about a granny I overheard talking to her friend about how she stored all her files on floppy disks on a state of the art PC she had bought from Dixons not knowing she could have stored it on the machines 60 gig hard disk.

posted on Sunday, October 14, 2007 9:35:41 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

 Friday, October 12, 2007
A new Star Trek film

A new Star Trek film is on the cards! It looks like the star from Hot Fuzz, Simon Pegg will be playing Scotty. I wonder if there will be any plans for a new Star Trek series?

posted on Friday, October 12, 2007 7:30:56 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

 Thursday, October 11, 2007
Bus stop driven government

A while ago I watched an interesting documentary on TV which spoke about how our current Labour government used a system called "target driven government" basically just about everything could be measured from National Health indicators and that in turn could be used to set targets for government institutions. Unfortunately as had been demonstrated in order to meet targets certain hospitals "fudge" figures in order to meet targets and in turn get more funding.

I think the best indicators on how certain government institutions are doing can actually be found at bus stops waiting for (constantly late) buses. Wait a while and sure enough you'll encounter pensioners who have no alternative but to wait for late buses, before long they will start talking about how unreliable the buses are and they keep very good mental records on how badly the bus service is doing.  Wait a little longer and you may hear a story similar to the one I heard about the health service it was a tale I started to hear several times as pensioners started to talk to each other. One story I heard was about a pensioner who suffered a leg injury when one bus collided into the back of another as he was about to get off. They called an ambulance for him even though he insisted he could dress the wound on his leg by himself. He then goes on to tell the pensioner he is sat next to how he had to wait 2 hours. He understood that people who had more pressing issues needed to be seen first and after another half an hour he decided to leave and dress the wound himself at home as he had said he would in the beginning. The other pensioner informs him that each time she has a fall or any other of her friends do that they do not bother being taken to hospital or refuse ambulances because of how bad the services are at the local hospital. When they do need to go to hospital there is a bus service that can take them. However the bus service takes almost 45 minutes to get there and the main reason for this is that is goes around every single stop to pick up people and these people are left waiting for the service for hours when it does not turn up, seldom complaining except to each other when the weather is poor.

Its not only the health service you pickup on but also issues ranging from who are the people on benefits and how some (not all) take the system for granted and laugh about it, how people who are on a minimum wage who do not believe on going onto benefits and struggle to make ends meet especially when it comes to heating in winter. How some people are on benefits and complain that its not enough but have no intention of finding employed work because they are a lot better off, but complain that they do not have enough money for "fags" and milk.

Its funny if you know where to listen you can easily pinpoint where problems are. You can find out what statistics tell you and what actually happens in reality just by listening. I have heard so many tales and it kind of tells you what is really happening. I believe that politicians are out of touch I think they have become as the ruling nobility were before we had a system of elected government. Gone is the politician who made it from the lowest depths of society the self built person who knows the plights of ordinary citizens. Instead we have politicians who have never known hardship they have been born into a privileged upbringing  a new class that fails to understand the common problems plaguing people. Maybe some of them should dress up in ordinary clothes, catch a few buses and while waiting just listen to people talking about every day things. Who knows...they might learn something?

posted on Thursday, October 11, 2007 10:48:16 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

 Wednesday, October 10, 2007
The onion chopper

I wasn't a big fan of the onion chopper when my mother in law first brought it about and it didn't work when I first used it and then I discovered I wasn't using it correctly. Instead of pushing the chopper down slowly all I had to do was give it short fast taps on the top to chop up the vegetables.

posted on Wednesday, October 10, 2007 8:08:44 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

 Sunday, October 07, 2007
Cool Wi-Fi signal status shirt

How cool is this? A Wi-Fi Detector T shirt! Be the envy of all your friends for a just a mere $29.99 at ThinkGeek you can show people where the Wi-Fi is at!

 

posted on Sunday, October 07, 2007 2:26:42 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]

 Saturday, October 06, 2007
Your friend the ISA

I am by no means a money saving expert, in fact I can sometimes be a little naughty splashing money onto a credit card every now and again to purchase a really "must have" gadget. However most of the time I like to make credit cards work for me as per my last article Making money off your credit card using 0% cards.

One of the things that gets me when I talk to younger (and some of my older) friends is what they do with their savings. There seems to be a common theme that goes a long the lines of "Oh I don't earn enough money to worry about a proper savings account". These very same people will have a standard savings account you get from your high street bank which pays a very low rate of interest and on top of that the bank will also be paying the Inland Revenue tax on your behalf off the interest before you get it. While at the same time that so called "paltry" amount could be placed inside a MINI cash ISA and be earning 5% interest tax free!

When I explain the above there is still a reluctance as they seem to think an ISA is some kind of a special shares thing they need to sign up for. Its only when I explain that just about anyone can open an ISA account and that it can be treated as just a normal bank account except for the following rules.

  • You can only deposit £3,000 in a cash ISA each year
  • If you saved £1,000 and then withdrew it you would only be able to put £2,000 back into that ISA within the tax year.
  • If you have £3,000 in your cash ISA by the end of the financial year you can place a further £3,000 when you get to the next tax year.

I don't think enough people make use of these convenient financial products.

For more financial tips take a look at Money Saving Expert

posted on Saturday, October 06, 2007 1:20:08 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

Cut on PS3 price

Just been reading an article on my wife Karen's blog about a cut in the price of the PS3.

Sony will be releasing a cut down version of the PS3 which is cheaper however not backwards compatible with the PS2 and PS1. The price is quite attractive at £299, however I am not prepared to buy a cut down version of the PS3 if I can't play my old PS2 and PS1 games. However if you are looking for a cheap Blu-ray DVD player the PS3 is definitely it.

On another note the full version of the PS3 will be coming down from £425 to £349 which is a much more palatable price. I am still facing the dilemma between and Xbox 360 and a PS3.  I love the Wii console but I also want a serious games console and I really love all the amazing features that come packed in the PS3.

posted on Saturday, October 06, 2007 10:34:48 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

 Tuesday, October 02, 2007
You know you are a geek when...
  • You only buy devices that are wireless
  • You feel sorry for people who are still on dialup Internet access
  • You can't remember the last time you wrote a letter by hand
  • You only stay in contact with friends who have e-mail addresses
  • You can't remember the last time you had real printed photos as everything's online.
  • You think something's wrong with your friends when you don't see them online everyday.
  • You know what a mac address is.
  • You know what a WEP key is.
  • You have a blog, hosted on your own server
  • You treat yourself to a new gadget every couple of months from Ebuyer or "I want One Of Those"
  • You've setup not one but two wireless networks in your house with 2 lots of firewalls.
  • You write your blog posts in a pure HTML editor because you can't stand the GUI one.
  • You have more than one PC and one of them is called "your server"
  • You use the command prompt for everything
  • You know more about your ADSL connection and how to fix it when it goes wrong than the person on the helpdesk of your ISP.
  • Your friends and family rather call you when they have an IT problem at work than talk to their own internal IT guys.
  • You prefer to build your own PC's
  • You're reading this blog post late at night smiling when you should probably be in bed.
  • Your mobile device can access e-mail and probably has Skype and WiFi
  • You criticise actors in "cyber" movies who write syntactically incorrect code.   
  • You plan your holidays by which hotels have wireless access
posted on Tuesday, October 02, 2007 11:39:26 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]