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8226
General Software Discussion / NewEgg
« Last post by Deozaan on June 18, 2008, 06:48 PM »
I ordered a 500GB SATA hard drive from NewEgg. It was Dead On Arrival (DOA). It was making clicking sounds and my computer wouldn't recognize it. But just to be sure I called tech support (India) to verify that it was defective.

I was at first very unhappy with the tech support since it said I had a 13 minute wait and after 15 minutes the first time I was disconnected before talking to anybody, then when I called back I was disconnected again after only 2 minutes. Finally when I called the third time I was on hold for about 20 minutes before someone answered. Someone with an Indian accent. It didn't look pretty.

But I have to say that this was probably the best experience I've had with Indian tech support. His accent wasn't too thick and we got through the troubleshooting steps without much delay and without feeling like he was reading a script. Yes, I'm sure he probably was following a script (I've worked tech support before for Dell and DirecTV--you pretty much always follow a script or you get in trouble), but it didn't seem to me like he was reading everything word for word. In other words, he either knew what he was talking about or was good at rephrasing the script into his own words. Or I guess it was just a really awesome script, but that's unlikely.

So we determined it was DOA, I got my case number, then I referred to NewEgg documentation for how to get an RMA and send it back for a working drive. I saw on the packing slip that I could do the RMA stuff online, went to the website and it said I had to pay shipping to send it back.

I was not happy about that at all!

Nevertheless, I bought the shipping label, printed it out, and shipped the hard drive off. Sometime within the next couple of days I decided to write a customer review on NewEgg for the product. I informed other customers that the drive came defective and mentioned that NewEgg was making me pay to send it back. I also found out that "TigerDirect" and "India" are in the inappropriate words filter for customer reviews. I can understand why they don't allow TigerDirect, but why "India" was a "bad word" is beyond me.

Then I found a form to send an e-mail, and the blurb talked about NewEgg's "Legendary Customer service," (all while cynically thinking, "Legendary? Yeah right!") and proceeded to write an e-mail using my "angry voice" to express my displeasure with having to pay extra to get what I paid for in working condition. I mentioned that I could have bought it from TigerDirect for less, once these extra charges had been placed on there. I got an e-mail back the next day saying sorry for the inconvenience and that the shipping costs would be refunded to my card.

That appeased me but the experience still left a sour taste in my mouth, so to speak. Their reputation had dropped a level, in my book. I still felt a mixture of "Thanks!" and "You're smurfing right you'll be refunding my money!"

I got that e-mail two days ago, on the 16th.

Today I received another e-mail from NewEgg.

Apparently someone in NewEgg Product Support had read my customer review, forwarded my information and the review to someone else who could do something about it, and asked them to correct the error of charging me for shipping. All of his own volition.

That action right there completely restores my faith in NewEgg. Even though the "problem" was already taken care of due to my own complaining, this man has fixed the real problem: removing the bad aftertaste of the experience and restoring (and improving) my faith in NewEgg.

NewEgg: I just have to say this experience was a bit rocky, but in the end I'm a very happy customer!  :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup:
8227
Haha, only saw the video now - great stuff. But pretty scary sounds Cody is making! :)

Probably because his "beak" is really more like alligator jaws.
8228
Okay here's mine. Doing the tail fins is hard :(

CRE_Cody the Doco Bird-0682e681_ful.png

Edit: Here's a picture with Cody Babies and a video (avi format) is attached (zipped in a RAR). Cody doesn't seem to be very happy when the babies show up.

Cody the Doco Bird.png
8229
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 3 Released
« Last post by Deozaan on June 18, 2008, 01:04 AM »
I miss my All-in-One Mouse Gestures. The only one updated for 3.0 are FireGestures which is missing one I used to use all the time!

This one only allows one command per gesture but All-in-One was smart so that if I did an upward movement it would open a new tab, but if I did the same upward movement when clicking on a link it would open the link in a new tab. FireGestures seems unable to do that. :(
8230
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 3 Released
« Last post by Deozaan on June 17, 2008, 12:24 PM »
Anyone check the filesum hashes to compare RC3 to 3.0 Final?
8231
General Software Discussion / Re: Let go of your bookmarks!
« Last post by Deozaan on June 16, 2008, 11:58 PM »
I use Firefox as my bookmark tools. If I find an interesting page/site I want to come back to later, I open it in a new tab. Then I have Firefox restore all previous tabs when it loads up. So sites I visit often are always right there when I launch Firefox, and sites I don't normally visit but have found interesting lately also stay open until I haven't used them for a while and decide to close them.

Now that I think back on it, I am pretty sure the advent of tabbed browsing and restoring tabs at launch when I stopped bookmarking.

Although I guess sometimes I also do use Gmail for bookmarks. I'll send an e-mail to myself, or someone I think would be interested in the site, containing a link and a short description along with some keywords (tags, basically) to make it easy to search for--years later from right within my Gmail.
8232
Living Room / Re: Philips Flat TV 20"
« Last post by Deozaan on June 16, 2008, 11:49 PM »
640x480 spread over 20 inches?  :stars:

I guess that would be good if you have vision problems, but other than that it would really, really suck.
8233
You can buy a 500GB SATA HDD for $70 at TigerDirect right now. The discount ends Tuesday the 17th (tomorrow). But you can get the same or similar 500GB SATA HDD from NewEgg for $80.

Stop talking your parents into buying you old IBMs and Macintoshes so that when you need something you can really use, they'll have the money for it. ;) :Thmbsup:

Alternatively, you could get a summer job. :( Sucks but that's life.
8234
Living Room / Re: Simply Google
« Last post by Deozaan on June 16, 2008, 10:18 PM »
* Deozaan shrugs.

I guess people just need to learn how to use the tools they rely on. Everything I ever need from Google I can get from the main page (because I know how to search) or in one click (for when I don't know how to search).
8235
Living Room / Re: Simply Google
« Last post by Deozaan on June 16, 2008, 01:45 PM »
That actually looks more complex than Google. Google is pretty simple all by itself. One search box you can type anything in.

That seems a lot more simple than 30 different search boxes.
8236
I mostly just remember avoiding my father when I'd tinker around in the command line and accidentally break the computer somehow. I'd get a stern talking to and then stay away from him. I always wondered how he fixed it.  :-\ :D

My brother (who is 10 years older than me) got a TI-99 as a graduation gift. Which means I was about 8 years old at the time. We also ended up with a similar BASIC games book, but they had graphics and ASCII characters.

8237
Living Room / Re: What are your favorite gadgets and gizmos?
« Last post by Deozaan on June 16, 2008, 01:04 AM »
This is the CycloDS Evolution of coffee makers.

Ha! I get it! Homebrew. ;D :Thmbsup: :P
8238
General Software Discussion / Re: Let go of your bookmarks!
« Last post by Deozaan on June 16, 2008, 12:57 AM »
I haven't used bookmarks for years.

Except at work to easily access the company intranet pages for information I use frequently.
8239
Windows XP System Restore usually makes me wait 5-10 minutes while it reboots and performs the Restore only to tell me that it couldn't restore to the point and it failed.

I've only been able to get it to work perhaps 2-3 times total in all the years I've run XP. It's not very dependable.
8240
Living Room / Re: Dino Run - cool online retro style multiplayer game
« Last post by Deozaan on June 15, 2008, 12:52 PM »
Fun game! I got a high score! Yay!

Screenshot - 6_15_2008 , 11_49_50 AM.png
8241
Announce Your Software/Service/Product / Re: Hard Drive Serial Numbers
« Last post by Deozaan on June 15, 2008, 11:45 AM »
Is it just me or does this thread have all the earmarks of a spam post setup line?

Yeah, that's what I thought at the beginning, but Google didn't found nothing.

Also, the capitalization of every word is different from normal spamming methods, as well as the second post to add a smiley that requires you to click on the [more] link to find. Not to mention that Mrs.D has customized her profile with a signature, location, Bio, and user icon.

I think it's a genuine question.
8242
but the problem in the shops is that if there is someone to help you they are generally young and/or not at all knowledgeable. Their sole purpose is to aid you to getting your purchases to the checkout, not help you to make the right purchase.
-Perry Mowbray (June 08, 2008, 06:05 AM)
And, often, they will hand out totally erroneous "information" based on a mixture of willingness and ignorance.
-cranioscopical (June 08, 2008, 08:00 AM)

Exactly! My sister was in the market looking to buy her son a Nintendo handheld, talked to the sales clerk about the difference between a Game Boy Advance and a Nintendo DS. The sales clerk told her information about the opposite products. In other words, when he was telling her about the GBA, he was really giving her information about the DS, saying the GBA could play DS games, could connect to the internet, had Wi-Fi multiplayer, etc. She ended up buying a GBA for her son when she could have just bought a DS for a relatively small amount more and gotten all the feature of the GBA and much more capabilities from the DS.

But again, back to the topic: I think the article headline is a bit misleading. In a situation as described above, I would return the product because it wasn't the product that I intended to buy. It would still be working of course, but it would be a valid return.

I've also returned video games that work because they were gifts and given to me for the wrong console (PS2 instead of GameCube). I returned an LCD monitor because about 20 days after I got it the same store was offering a better LCD monitor for a lower price.

My point in all this is that just because a product is still working that doesn't mean there's not a good reason to return it.
8243
Living Room / Re: cody spotted on You Tube
« Last post by Deozaan on June 15, 2008, 11:10 AM »
I thought it was funny, too. Probably because I'd already seen the first one and already got over the "What the heck was that stupid thing?" and learned more about the origins of how it came into existence. I think the narrator really does a good job of being dramatic and his inflection and tone are perfect for all the terrible spelling mistakes and crazy things the story says.

It's pretty funny if you think of it like those Mystery Science Theater 3000 movies. They are so stupid it's fun to watch just so you can laugh at how stupid it is.
8244
Living Room / Re: does win XP 64-bit suck?
« Last post by Deozaan on June 15, 2008, 11:08 AM »
I got my 64-bit CPU in 2006 and happily installed Windows XP 64bit edition. Within a day or two I was back to XP 32bit edition because there were no drivers for my video card and other hardware, and most of my favorite programs didn't work or had problems.

So I've been wary of installing a 64-bit OS ever since. However, I think that now there are enough 64bit computers out there that companies have realized the importance of making 64-bit compatible software/drivers. You may have to give up a couple of your old favorites, or just upgrade to a newer version. I think if/when I go to a 64-bit OS I'd probably go with Vista.
8245
Wow! This looks great! I can't wait until Tuesday!
8246
Developer's Corner / Re: Do you use a good office chair when programming?
« Last post by Deozaan on June 15, 2008, 10:41 AM »
My two crappy metal chairs with fabric covered cardboard (or some kind of manufactured wood) both broke last month within weeks of each other. So I just bought a decent office chair for about $150, but strangely enough I can't find any information or pictures of it online.

It's an executive style chair made out of what is probably fake leather. It has massage motors in the lower and upper back. Seems pretty comfortable to me. It's a lot better than my previous chairs.
8247
Living Room / Re: What are your favorite gadgets and gizmos?
« Last post by Deozaan on June 15, 2008, 10:30 AM »
This one isn't that unusual, but one of my most used "gizmos" is a Nintendo DS Lite.

But what really gets me using it a lot is a CycloDS Evolution, which lets me run homebrew games and applications on my DS. I've also dumped the ROMs and gamesaves from my original game carts and put them on there so I don't need to switch out a cart any time I want to play another game. They're all there on my MicroSD card inside the CycloDS.

DSLiteCobalt.jpg

evo-case-and-cart.jpg
8248
Living Room / Re: cody spotted on You Tube
« Last post by Deozaan on June 11, 2008, 04:13 PM »
If I remember correctly, the story was written by a young kid as fan fiction. People thought it was so stupid/funny that they used the game engine to turn it into a machinima. Here's the original and the sequel in plain text fanfic form.

I didn't see Cody.
8249
Limitations!

When people absolutely MUST do something within certain limitations, they get very creative about how to accomplish it. Compared to even just 10 years ago, resources are practically unlimited, thus it's easy for people to get lazy and fall back on all the extra resource padding they had.

If you were to run the exact same software applications from 10-20 years ago on a modern machine, it would fly. That is, of course, assuming there aren't any hardware or driver conflicts and you actually could get the software to run.
8250
Living Room / Re: Six Free Online Storage Services
« Last post by Deozaan on June 06, 2008, 11:13 PM »
http://www.adrive.com  offers 50gb free

Adrive seems neat, except that it's in beta and will likely require subscription fees once it is out of beta. I'd certainly hate to have the old Bait and Switch pulled on me by uploading several gigabytes of personal data to be backed up only to be required to pay to get access to any of it once the beta ends.
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