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Word of the Month: SPLOST III Referendum

September 12, 2008 by mickmel Leave a Comment

Reading Time: < 1 minute

As I dropped my daughter off at school this morning, I couldn’t help but notice the marquee out front.  Check it out to the right.

“WORD OF THE MONTH: SPLOST III REFERENDUM”

Now, I can understand why the school is pushing SPLOST.  It’s a proposed 1% tax to help give more money to the local schools.  But is that really their “word of the month”?

In case they had mistakenly forgotten to remove the top line from the marquee or something, I checked the other side and it was exactly the same, so it seems to be intentional.  I had expected the word of the month to be something like “respect” or “freedom”, but I guess I’ll be helping my five-year-old with “SPLOST III REFERENDUM”.

That’s pretty dumb.

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: elementary, school, splost, tax, word

Pitiful email from East Cobb Pediatrics

September 11, 2008 by mickmel Leave a Comment

Reading Time: 2 minutes

This was pretty sad.  I got an e-mail today from “[email protected]”, with the subject line simply “Flu Vaccines”.  Here is the complete body of the e-mail:

Flu season is coming and we wanted to let you know that we have flu shots and FluMist available now.  FluMist is indicated for healthy individuals 2-49 years of age. We will offer parents of our patients FluMist this year.  Please let us know when you schedule your childs appointment if you are interested.  It is not recommended for people with asthma.  Flu shots are indicated for individuals 6 months and older.  Please call or send us an appointment request through our website to schedule your appointment.  Thank you and we look forward to seeing you at your next visit.

Please log into your account, go to the My Patient Page, choose My Preferences, and select No Communication to opt out of future commnuications.

If you do not wish to receive this kind of communication from East Cobb Pediatrics, you can choose to opt out of it by logging in here (was linked) to change your preferences.

I thought it was missing some very key pieces.  To start, I had no idea who it was from until I saw the opt-out info at the bottom.  I’ve certainly never heard of “medfusion.net” before.  Also, it mentions that we should “call us or send us an appointment request through our website…”, but doesn’t provide the phone number or website URL.  Granted, I can look those up if I need them, but that’s just silly not to include them.

I thought it might be helpful to suggest some changes for future e-mails.  I hit “reply” and sent them a short message with some thoughts.  It bounced right back.  Apparently “[email protected]” is just a dead address.

We’re big fans on ECP.  They take great care of our kids and they do a nice job.  They just might want to work on their e-mail skills.

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Filed Under: Business

Add your church site search to your Chrome home page

September 4, 2008 by mickmel

Reading Time: 2 minutes

One of the most talked about features of Google Chrome is the rather innovative home page.  It shows your nine most often viewed sites, along with some goodies along the sidebar.  The sidebar can include quick-search boxes for sites you often search.  As often as I’m searching our church site, I thought it’d be great to have it listed there but I couldn’t make it show up.  After a bit of tweaking, I got it to work.  Here’s what I did.

First, it’ll help if you have a true on-site search of some kind. From what I can tell, there’s no way to add search boxes if you use the Google custom search on your site.  If you find a way around that, let us know.

As for our site, it only took a couple of very small changes:

  • The search needs to produce a GET request, not a POST request.  The difference is that a GET request will put your search term in the URL, which is critical to make this work.
  • You may need to change your search string variable. I noticed that most sites use “s=whatever” when you search, so I changed ours to that to help Chrome easily figure out what we were doing.
  • That’s it!
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As for getting it onto the sidebar, here is the two-step process that tends to work.  Try it with our church site if you want.
  1. Perform a search on the site, just like you normally would.
  2. After that Google should recognize that it’s a search and give you a new shortcut.  Start typing the URL of the site in the address bar at the top (“M-T-B-E-T…”).
  3. After a few letters, a small bit of text should appear on the side that says “Press [tab] to search mtbethel.org”.  Go ahead and press [tab] and search for something.
  4. Done!
You should now have a quick-search box for our site on your Chrome start page.  There’s no way to manually remove it, but it will go away by itself after a while.  There seems to be a limit of three search boxes on your page, so if you have three already you may need to repeat step #3 (the [tab] search) a few times to encourage Chrome to replace one of the other ones.
That’s it!  Chome even uses your favicon to dress it up, and they look very nice.  If you have any questions or problems, please let us know in the comments below.

Filed Under: Business, Marketing, Technology Tagged With: chrome, search

Banzai Wild Waves Water Park is apparently a huge rip-off

September 4, 2008 by mickmel Leave a Comment

Reading Time: < 1 minute

The picture to the right says it all.  The consumerist has a post today showing the actual size of the product vs. the image shown on the box.  I know that all of those things are exaggerated a little bit, but this is crazy!

We buy these kinds of things from time to time, but this is one that we’ll certainly avoid.

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: banzai, pool, water

How will “Chrome” affect your church site?

September 1, 2008 by mickmel Leave a Comment

Reading Time: < 1 minute

As you may have heard, Google is releasing a new browser tomorrow called Chrome.  Based on what’s been revealed so far, it should be excellent

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, though we won’t know for sure until we get our hands on it.  If nothing else, it’s expected to be very fast and very stable, which are the two main jobs of any decent browser.

But what about us webmasters?  Will we have to start worrying about another browser when building our sites?  Not really.  The great news about Chrome is that it’s built on top of Webkit, which also powers Opera (and a few others).  This means that the basic rendering engine is one that you’ve probably already checked your site against, so it’s nothing new.

Keep an eye on my SEO site

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tomorrow to see when Chrome is available for download.  If you have a Windows machine, it’ll certainly be worth trying, even if it doesn’t live up to the hype.

Update: It’s available!  You can download Chrome here.

Filed Under: Business, Marketing, Technology Tagged With: Browsers, chrome, google, webkit

Why is Home Depot closing stores?

August 31, 2008 by mickmel Leave a Comment

Reading Time: 2 minutes

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I had an interesting experience at Home Depot this evening — it was like the good old days again.  I went to the plumbing aisle, was greeted by an employee, and he gave me prompt and accurate information on how to fix my problem.  Perfect!

The problem is that this has become a rare experience.  More often than not, I’ll have to walk quite a distance to find an employee, only to wait in a line that is three or four deep.  It’s sad.

A few other recent Home Depot experiences:

  • I was back in the lighting section, which happens to be (apparently) near the break room.  Employees kept streaming by, but most would either avoid eye contact, or give me a brief “hi” and briskly walk by.  The ones that I was actually able to engage with would promise to find me someone, but it never happened.  It was a fun time.
  • I was there on a Saturday morning, and the store was packed, as is often the case on Saturday mornings.  They had about 3/4 of the checkout lines open, but each one was still really long.  To take advantage of this, they parked an employee at a table behind us to pitch HD credit cards to us.  WTH?  Get out from behind that stupid table and work at a register!  It made them look really dumb.

So why are they closing stores?  Blame the economy, blah blah…no!  Their customer service now sucks.  It’s a sad cycle that I’ve seen happen too many times.  My friends and family have heard me rant about the awful customer experience at a few stores, and they’ve all since gone under (at least ours have): Office Max, Media Play, K-Mart and Comp USA.  I don’t imagine Home Depot will go out of business, but they’re sure following the same trend.

It’s caused by a vicious cycle that is hard to break:

  • Things are great
  • We need to raise profits even higher, so we’ll cut back on staff
  • Reduced staff, so sales drop (bad customer experience)
  • We need to recoup those lost sales, so let’s cut back on staff even more
  • Sales drop further…

Some of them (K-Mart and Media Play in particular) were almost hilarious.  I remember once in K-Mart just getting frustrated and just yelling out loud for someone.  It didn’t help.  Now that K-Mart is a Sears, which for some stupid reason doesn’t have an auto center.  Isn’t that the point of having Sears?  It’s right across the street from an awesome Target

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, so this Sears is dead meat already.

I’ll still continue to use Home Depot, but not as much as I used to.  I’m a home-fix-it novice, and need help when I go to the store.  If getting help is a big pain in the butt, I’d just as soon skip it.

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: comp usa, home depot, k-mart, media play, office max, sears, target

Google Ad Manager now available to all

August 26, 2008 by mickmel Leave a Comment

Reading Time: < 1 minute

First released in March as a limited beta, Google Ad Manager is now available to anyone that has an AdSense account.  According to Google’s blog, Ad Manager…

can help you sell, schedule, deliver, and measure both directly-sold and network-based inventory. It offers an intuitive and simple user interface, Google serving speed and reliability, and significant cost savings. Best of all, Ad Manager can be optionally integrated with Google AdSense to offer you an automated way to maximize the revenue of your unsold and network-managed inventory.

If you sell ads on your site, or run ads from more than one company, this is likely to be a very useful tool.

I’m just getting my feet wet with it, so I can’t say much from personal experience.  How about you? Have you tried it yet?  What did you think of it?

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: adsense, google ad manager

Krispy Kreme without doughnuts is like Burger King without burgers

August 23, 2008 by mickmel Leave a Comment

Reading Time: < 1 minute

We hadn’t been to Krispy Kreme in a while and thought it might be a fun treat this afternoon.  We were disappointed that the “hot doughnuts” light wasn’t on, but we still figured we’d get some.

In the drive-thru, we ordered a dozen glazed doughnuts and a coffee.  “Sorry sir, but we’re out of glazed doughnuts.”  What?  This is a Saturday afternoon (3:45ish) — how could they be out of doughnuts?

So I asked the next logical question — “how long until more are ready?”, figuring it would just be a few minutes.  Nope, that’ll be an hour and a half!  At that point, we simply left and went to the ghetto Sonic up the road.

It kind of reminds me of the McDonald’s near our old condo.  I’d often grab breakfast there on my way to work, and twice (about a year apart) they ran out of Coke.  I always thought that was crazy, but I think this Krispy Kreme trick is far more insane.

What’s the worst “we’re out of that” that you’ve ever encountered?

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: burger king, coke, doughnuts, krispy kreme, mcdonalds

Taco Bell in ruins

August 21, 2008 by mickmel Leave a Comment

Reading Time: < 1 minute

A while ago, our local Taco Bell burned. Grease fire, I guess. It quickly became an eyesore, but I assumed it would be dealt with. Apparently not.

It’s been at least six months now, and the only change is that they boarded up the windows and barricaded the entrance. What’s up with that? Why doesn’t Taco Bell clean up this mess? It reflects VERY poorly on their brand.

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Filed Under: Business Tagged With: fire, taco bell

AT&T Tech Support Woes

August 19, 2008 by mickmel Leave a Comment

Reading Time: < 1 minute

If you don’t follow Michael Masnick’s blog at Techdirt

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, you really need to.  The guys calls things like they are, and makes great points every time.

Today he absolutely kills AT&T for their horrible service.  I’ve not had to deal with them in a while, but my previous experiences have been rather similar.  Fortunately, we got rid of DSL a while back and our cable has been pretty solid for us.

His problems, in a nutshell:

  • His DSL was down for a while on Friday, then real slow when it came back up.  It takes over three hours and six different AT&T reps to fix a rather simple problem.  Along the way, they helpfully give him the “correct” number to call if they get disconnected, which is different every single time.
  • On Monday, he decided to try out the free wi-fi that AT&T gives you at McDonald’s.  Getting it to work (login problems) takes more than three hours and 12 different reps — and they don’t fix it!

His main problem boils down to the same as ours — it’s AT&T or Comcast, and both have their problems.  This is what a lack of competition can lead to

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: att, cable, comcast, dsl

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