Peek-a-boo

Peek-a-boo

I had my first day back at work today after two weeks at home with the ladies. I’ve got a lot to talk about, but I’m too tired to type it out right now, so I’m just going to share two of my favorite photos from the last few days. Both of them were taken on my cell phone. Every time I snap a photo like this, I’m glad that I put the time into comparison shopping camera phones – especially when you compare it to the photos that Annie’s camera takes. Anyways, lots of content coming very soon, in the meantime, enjoy these photos (and there’s plenty more where they came from).

Zoe's feet

Qwest vs. Comcast

I sat down the other day to call Qwest and Comcast to find out what my options are for internet access. I was expecting to find that DSL would be a little cheaper, but that cable would be able to be installed more quickly. My primary concern at the moment is cost, but installation speed is a close second. I was surprised to find no real advantage to either one.

I called Comcast, and the girl on the phone was extremely helpful (which has been true of most of the people I’ve spoken with at Comcast). She answered all my questions and gave me any bit of information I might need, as well as letting me know about some options I didn’t know were available which saved me some money.

She knew I was about to call Qwest to compare pricing and she said “I’m pretty sure you’ll find it’s a little cheaper for DSL, but I really think you’ll be happier with us…” and then she sweetened the deal by giving me the installation kit for free and knocking $10/month off my bill for the first three months. I asked about this, and it turns out Comcast gives their operators some leeway to give some free stuff to customers to motivate them to stick with their services if they’re thinking about leaving.

It boiled down to about $45 per month with Comcast. That’s $10 cheaper than normal because I’m going to have normal cable services as well. The installation fee was only about $10, the modem/install kit was free, and she knocked $10 per month off my bill, so for the first three months I’ll only be paying about $35, and back to $45 after that. Also, they could get someone out to install the cable on the day we move in, so that’s nice.

Then I called Qwest (actually, I called the company that would be my ISP, DSL Northwest, who I’ve used before, and are pretty good). Maybe I just got a guy who doesn’t normally run the phones, but it was like pulling teeth to get any information out of this guy. He told me that it’s $51 per month for stand-alone DSL services (nice that I don’t have to get a phone line anymore), with a $20 installation fee. He was unclear on whether or not Qwest would also charge me an installation fee. Finally, he said that they could have DSL installed in 5 days, which is a dramatic change from the 2-3 weeks Qwest took last time I got hooked up (which was, admittedly, four years ago). He seemed to be in a hurry to get me off the phone, so I did, but I felt like it was a toss-up.

Both Comcast and Qwest are within $5 of each other, and both could get my services hooked up by our move-in date. Neither one had an outrageous installation fee, and neither one required a phone line. In the end, I chose Comcast simply because I’ve generally had good service with them (the phone calls are a good example, but we also had Comcast internet in Washington), and I’ve had nothing but bad experiences with Qwest. I know it’s a silly thing to base this choice on, but with no clear advantage to one over the other, why not base it on the fact that Comcast actively wants me as a customer, and was making offers to get me, while Qwest didn’t even want to answer my questions?

The good news (for scott):My

The good news (for scott):
My Linux box appears to be working! I had a 6GB drive that windows wouldn’t touch, but Linux installed right onto it!

The good news (for steve):
The cute little toaster computer is working! I’m not sure if he had to reinstall Win2K, but I’m guessing he didn’t have to, since he hasn’t mentioned it.

The bad news (for anyone who didn’t back up their fojar inbox):
The hard drive with the mail on it was unrecoverable. Any mail that was saved outside of the “inbox” folder on fojar was saved, but everyone’s inboxes were wiped. Of course, if you use an email client that stores your mail locally, this didn’t affect you.

The other good news:
My copy of Halo is actually on the way! Turns out Fed Ex couldn’t find my house (huh?) but I gave them a call, and found out the package is actually in Portland somewhere, and hopefully I’ll get it soon!

The other good news (for people who hate Qwest):
Not only is Qwest getting investigated by the government for questionable financial practices, They’re in hot water here in Portland, too! Willamette Week is encouraging everyone to withhold the franchise fee that Qwest passes on to us, since they’re not paying it to the city, so why are we paying it to them? (Note, as tempting as it is to do something mean to Qwest, I’m not going to do this. My Qwest status is tenuious enough as is without me tempting them to shut off my account by not paying a 35 cent fee).

Edit 10/26/2005: We no longer control the fojar domain, so any links pointing there are broken.

7:30am Phone Call

The phone rang at 7:30am. After a few seconds of cheerful greetings from this guy who thinks I’m someone else, it comes out that he’s looking for Mitch… but he has the correct phone number. Knowing college towns, I suggest that the person he’s looking for probably moved out and we were assigned his old phone number. This is when he reveals to me that Mitch runs a contracting company and posted MY phone number in “the Contractor’s Handbook,” which is where he got it from. The caller apologized, and warned me that I would probably be getting quite a few more calls.

Oh goody.