1 0 Archive | March, 2011
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Chase has shitty service

Chase has shitty service

Someone who was tired of Chase and their shitty service, pun intended, decided to tell the company how they really feel. Thankfully this was just manure, but I think it gets the point across.

Is it just me, or does Chase stink? :)

[Consumerist]

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Steampunk’d iMac

I love Steampunk mods. Wish I had the talent, but I don’t. The cool thing is, woodguy32 sells these covers on Etsy for only $265. Throw on another $345 for the keyboard/mouse mod.

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High Fructose Corn Syrup will make you fatter!

The food industry has been working hard to instill in your head that infusing every consumable product in your local supermarket with high fructose corn syrup is a great idea. Commercials on TV aim to ridicule those who slam high fructose corn syrup as a bad product, and make baseless claims about how it’s just as harmless as any other sweetener.

These rats aren’t just getting fat; they’re demonstrating characteristics of obesity, including substantial increases in abdominal fat and circulating triglycerides.

Thankfully a team of smart people with long titles at Princeton can finally give you some hard facts on this “wonder” sugar. Short message: AVOID HIGH FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP AT ALL COSTS!

The team of nerds scientists used control groups of rats to find the true nature of high fructose corn syrup in your diet, and it’s scary.

Compared to animals eating only rat chow, rats on a diet rich in high-fructose corn syrup showed characteristic signs of a dangerous condition known in humans as the metabolic syndrome, including abnormal weight gain, significant increases in circulating triglycerides and augmented fat deposition, especially visceral fat around the belly. Male rats in particular ballooned in size: Animals with access to high-fructose corn syrup gained 48 percent more weight than those eating a normal diet. In humans, this would be equivalent to a 200-pound man gaining 96 pounds.

I really recommend reading the entire article and start reading your food labels as well. I added HFCS to my list of “This shit will kill you” a long time ago.

A sweet problem: Princeton researchers find that high-fructose corn syrup prompts considerably more weight gain.

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Bank of America has the crappiest customers

Turns out Bank of America has some of the worst customers in America when it comes to not paying their bills. Check out this list of the 6 “top” credit card companies.

Delinquencies

More than 30 days overdue.

January February
1 Bank of America 7.35% 7.23%
2 Citigroup 5.75% 5.94%
3 Capital One 5.80% 5.51%
4 Discover 5.55% 5.50%
5 Chase 4.75% 4.67%
6 American Express 3.60% 3.60%

Chargeoffs

When a consumer debt is written off the books and sold to an outside collector.

January February
1 Bank of America 13.25% 13.51%
2 Citigroup 9.80% 11.29%
3 Capital One 10.41% 10.19%
4 Chase 10.91% 9.21%
5 Discover 8.58% 9.11%
6 American Express 7.00% 7.40%

If you’re having trouble getting on top of your credit card debt, you might want to check out the Use Snowball Method Spreadsheet To Pay Off Debts article over at Consumerist.com.

[Consumerist]

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Mac OS X: Safer, but less secure

Mac OS X is like living in a farmhouse in the country with no locks, and Windows is living in a house with bars on the windows in the bad part of town.

These are the words of security expert Charlie Miller.

If you use a Mac but you don’t know who Charlie Miller is, you will soon. Charlie is about to disclose a whopping 20 security holes in Mac OS X, all at once – a record for sure.

He uses a technique called fuzzing, which essentially involves spamming an application’s input channels with corrupted data until it crashes, revealing the flaw. You can read more about it from clicking the link.

According to Miller, us Mac users have enjoyed a false sense of security from not being attacked as most attacks are focused on the market leader, Windows. Market share has played a big role in this, but with Apple gaining more and more of this coveted market share we can only speculate what will happen.

Apparently in cracking competitions, it’s often Apple systems that get cracked first. We already know Apple is concerned about security with it’s big vulnerability fix back in late 2009, not long after Snow Leopard was released.

There’s nothing wrong about feeling safe using Mac OS X. It’s not a very popular platform to attack, not because it’s super secure but not enough people use it to make it worthwhile. Many “fan boys” in the Apple community have laughed at Windows for being attacked and exposed as a vulnerable operating system but I’m sure they would shut up if the tide suddenly turned.

I still wouldn’t recommend running out and installing crap-ware like Norton Antivirus on your shiny Mac, but it doesn’t hurt to adopt some healthy web surfing habits

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Firebug makes Gmail slow

I use Firefox with Firebug. Love it. There’s no other combination out there right now that works as well as Firebug does for web development and HTML/CSS analysis. It’s a power house for dissecting the code and layout and nothing else compares for tweaking, or playing with, style and HTML code live. I can absolutely recommend it to anybody doing web development.

Turns out however that Firebug does not play nice with Gmail these days. I had noticed a lot of slowdowns when using my Gmail account and I thought it was somehow linked to the recent release of Google Buzz, but I was wrong. The culprit was the one and only Firebug! (Did you click the link already. It’s not like I’m dropping subtle hints here!)

Gmail to the rescue with their quick walk through on how to disable Firebug for its Gmail pages, or disable the offending services if you insist on using Firebug with Gmail.

Firebug can make Gmail slow

For the best Gmail performance, we suggest disabling Firebug for www.google.com.

Windows or Linux Users

To disable Firebug:

  1. Open the Firebug pane in your Gmail tab by clicking the Firebug icon.
  2. Click the down arrow next to the Net tab, and select Disable monitor for mail.google.com
  3. Repeat Step 2 on the Console and Script tabs.

If you’d like to keep Firebug running, you may improve Gmail performance by following these steps:

  1. Click the green or red icon in the bottom right corner of the browser window to open Firebug.
  2. Click the Console tab.
  3. Select Options.
  4. Uncheck Show XMLHttpRequests.
  5. Click the Net tab.
  6. Select Options.
  7. Check Disable Network Monitoring.

Mac Users

To disable Firebug:

  1. Click the green or red icon in the bottom right corner of the browser window to open Firebug.
  2. Click the bug icon in the top left corner of Firebug and select ‘Disable Firebug for mail.google.com.’

If disabling Firebug for Gmail doesn’t improve performance results, you may have to entirely disable Firebug.

Following these steps has made my Gmail nice and spiffy again. I won’t stop using Firebug unless a better product comes along so Gmail and Firebug will just have to learn to live together. For now the sandbox has been divided until these two can learn to play nice together.

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