A few time a year I travel to London, England for business. Each time I have just paid the daily internet usage fee at the hotel (usually Le Meridien at Piccadilly Circus) but the costs have gone up recently. At 20 GBP per day my one week visit was going to cost me 140 GBP so I decided there had to be a better way.
I went over to carphone warehouse and checked out all their internet stick options. While they all seemed like good and less expensive options there was a huge factor that led me to pick the Vodaphone internet stick. THEY'RE ACCOUNTS NEVER EXPIRE! All the others there would not only have their pay-as-you-go data expire over time but the account itself would expire after as much as 90 days of inactivity.
So for 34.99 GBP I got a Vodaphone stick pre-loaded with 1Gb of data. Vodaphone is the most expensive of the bunch at 15 GBP per 1Gb but since I wont have to re-activate my account and the unused data will always be available on a return trip I figure the extra cost is worth it.
As I had been advised the speeds were not lightning fast. It would be no good for watching youtube videos or uploading and downloading large files but for my day to day emails and source code editing it was perfect. It also worked everywhere, in my hotel room, in coffee shops, and even in the Heathrow express on my way back to the airport.
At the end of my week I had still not completely used up my complimentary 1Gb of data and I am happy to know it will be there waiting for me when I return to the UK next.
For my next cost saving trick I would like to find out if I can activate this same stick to work in other countries by purchasing a Vodaphone account in Switzerland, and India. The connection software makes it look like this is, or will one day, be possible. If anyone has experience with this please let me know in the comments.
In the hype surrounding the release of Google Latitude there has been a lot of questions raised about the potential invasion of privacy this software creates. Google's standard response has focused on the fact that users opt-in to the service and can easily disable it or even manually change their location to whatever they want.
While this is true, this response fails to address the potential use of this service as a tracking device. A Latitude enabled phone stashed in the trunk of someone's car would allow a user to track that cars movements with their own Google account. In the age of annonymous pay-as-you-go phones and applications that allow a user to revert a phone to factory defaults via an sms message it would be possible to track someone with a throw-away phone and completely cover your tracks.
It appears high-tech tracking devices are no longer just for private detectives and spooks.
On a personal note, I thought of this when I logged into my iGoogle account at the office this morning to find the map showed me still in my home. I thought the service had gone down until I realized I left my phone at home this morning. At least I know it will be a lot harder to lose my phone in the future. :)
After making the switch to a Mac I found myself at a loss when it came time to add accents to French documents. After a little web searching I found that this, like most other things, is much easier on a Mac than it was on Windows. However, I also noticed that my google searches kept giving me results for an accent grave (è) only so I am going to cover all the commonly used French accents here.
Adding accents on a Mac is very simple, just hold down the option (alt) key plus the key for the accent you want to create, then type the letter you would like to appear under the accent. Hold shift for capital letters.
Here is the list of the keys to hold down with option (alt) to create each accent (do not type the +):
Grave (è) - option + ~
Aigu (é) - option + e
Cédille (ç) - option + c
Circonflexe (ê) - option + i
Tréma (ö) - option + u
Hopefully I didn't miss any important ones here. Happy accenting!
This is a pretty simple task but I did not find any documentation on it in all my googling so I'm going to lay out the steps here.
First install Thunderbird on your Mac and setup a single email account. This will give a profile to overwrite. Don't worry about tweaking this setup at all as we are going to remove it later anyway.
1.) Backup your Ubuntu Thunderbird profile
From your home directory change the view to allow hidden folders to be visible
Open the .mozzila-thunderbird folder
There should be a folder in there called something like tufiud1h.default (the first part of the name will be different for you). This is your Thunderbird profile. Copy this folder to a thumbdrive or network location of your choice
2.) Import your Thunderbird profile on the Mac OS X machine
Go to Home/Library/Thunderbird/Profiles
Paste the profile folder you copied earlier into this directory. Copy the folder name, you will need it for the next step.
Go up one level to the Thunderbird directory and open the file "profile.ini" with a text editor.
Change the path line to link to your new profile folder. Mine looks like:
Path=Profiles/tufiud1h.default
Fire up Thunderbird and see all your old accounts and emails are back!
3.) Reinstall your addons
A lot of my addons were not working correctly but I did not want to remove them for fear of losing data. Luckily all I had to do was go and download and install the Mac versions and all my settings were retained. I reinstalled Lightning, Zindu, and the Google connector with no loss of settings or data.
I know this is a fairly short overview but at least now if someone google's this they will know it is possible and surprisingly easy.
I've had a dormant Vonage (VOIP) account for a couple of months and finally got around to canceling it today. The account was costing me $15.99 per month so I was in no rush to cancel and just took a while getting around to it.
If you are actually using a Vonage account and are signed up at the $15.99 level I would highly recommend calling and requesting to cancel. The woman on the phone told me she had to give me several "offers" before she could cancel the account on her system.
This included an offer to lower my monthly bill to $12.99 and an offer for 2 months of free usage, in that order.
As with most of the phone companies it appears that calling and pretending to want to leave every once in a while could be a smart move.