See comments to https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/20/opinion/sunday/nafta-mexico-trump-ambassador.html.
Many “conservatives” complain about “liberals” attacking Trump and the Republicans. Have they forgotten their obstruction of many of Obama’s initiatives and the false claims about his birth?
After years of obstruction of Obama’s appointees, why are they in such a rush to appoint judges?
It seems to me that many “conservatives” only want to conserve their power. They completely ignore the Constitution, Washington’s Farewell Address (foreign entanglements), Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address (government of the people, by the people, and for the people), and Eisenhower’s Farewell Address (military-industrial complex).
What would we call a party that considered these important thoughts in their own governance of our country?
Saturday, October 20, 2018
Tuesday, October 09, 2018
Abortion: Judgment or Compassion
“Beta O’Rourke May Benefit From an Unlikely Support Group: White Evangelical Women”, Elisabeth Dias, New York Times, 2018-10-09
This shift is that these women are seeing O’Rourke as a “stark moral contrast to Mr. Trump.” They are seeing other moral values that Trump does not have; values that are just as important as opposing abortion.
The problem with abortion as a political issue is that it ignores many problems that are not controlled by an “unwilling” mother.
Shall a teen-age girl be responsible for a child fathered by force, whether by a known or unknown male?
Shall a woman of any age be forced to bear a child whose birth will kill her? What would that do to any previous children she had?
We really cannot make any sweeping pronouncements about abortion without knowing all facts in each individual case.
If we make all abortions illegal, who will be punished? Will it be the unwilling mother? Will it be the “back alley abortionist”? Will it be the not present father?
Ironically, some of these “value” voters are supporting a party that is quite willing to cause unwanted abortions in other countries. How many pregnant women are killed in wars? How many of these pregnant women even support the wars in their countries? And some of these politicians with the “big buttons” are quite willing to obliterate large numbers of women and children.
This shift is that these women are seeing O’Rourke as a “stark moral contrast to Mr. Trump.” They are seeing other moral values that Trump does not have; values that are just as important as opposing abortion.
The problem with abortion as a political issue is that it ignores many problems that are not controlled by an “unwilling” mother.
Shall a teen-age girl be responsible for a child fathered by force, whether by a known or unknown male?
Shall a woman of any age be forced to bear a child whose birth will kill her? What would that do to any previous children she had?
We really cannot make any sweeping pronouncements about abortion without knowing all facts in each individual case.
If we make all abortions illegal, who will be punished? Will it be the unwilling mother? Will it be the “back alley abortionist”? Will it be the not present father?
Ironically, some of these “value” voters are supporting a party that is quite willing to cause unwanted abortions in other countries. How many pregnant women are killed in wars? How many of these pregnant women even support the wars in their countries? And some of these politicians with the “big buttons” are quite willing to obliterate large numbers of women and children.
Labels:
abortion,
back alley,
Beta O’Rourke,
big button,
bombs,
Donald Trump,
evangelicals,
politicians,
Republican,
Ted Cruz,
Texas,
war
Friday, August 31, 2018
Intrusive online ads
Some months ago, I believe it was the online Duluth News Tribune that had intrusive ads for Amazon that took over the screen and the browser tab. the only way I made the ads disappear was to close the tab and open a new tap. I complained about it several times and they haven’t appeared since.
Today, the online Washington Post had two of these same intrusive ads for Amazon. The only way I got rid of them was to close the tabs.
It is one thing to have ads in a sidebar or interspersed in stories. We have the same in print media. The ads help cover some of the costs of putting out the publications so that we pay less. We can skip the ads or we can read them; it is our choice. But these ads are not our choice.
No matter what online publication you are reading, if this happens to you be sure to let the publishers know.
In the case of the Washington Post, send email to readers@washpost.com.
Today, the online Washington Post had two of these same intrusive ads for Amazon. The only way I got rid of them was to close the tabs.
It is one thing to have ads in a sidebar or interspersed in stories. We have the same in print media. The ads help cover some of the costs of putting out the publications so that we pay less. We can skip the ads or we can read them; it is our choice. But these ads are not our choice.
No matter what online publication you are reading, if this happens to you be sure to let the publishers know.
In the case of the Washington Post, send email to readers@washpost.com.
Tuesday, August 21, 2018
I had a dream
My apologies to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. for using a variation of the title of one of his major speeches.
My dream early this morning was about a similar nemesis: those whose only interest is ruling with a false idea of conservatism and a misuse of religion.
The false idea of conservatism is holding on to power, irregardless of how it affects the vast majority of the citizens. This conservatism puts the interests of some large corporations over the interests of large segments of the population. The misuse of religion is to claim to have the truth even as it acts contrary to the teachings of its greatest prophet.
My dream was that teams of journalists met all over the country to unite against the attacks by false conservatives on the journalists integrity and professionalism. Interestingly, many of these journalists being attacked are real conservatives, like George Will and Jennifer Rubin.
What is a real conservative? We can start by naming a few: Adam Smith, Edmund Burke, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Dwight Eisenhower. All of these have given warning about the order of men that is not to be trusted.
Adam Smith warned about those who live by profit. Edmund Burke warned about the folly of not allowing the colonies to govern themselves. George Washington warned about factions and about foreign entanglements (letting both friends and enemies control our judgment). Abraham Lincoln stated that we had to think anew with new circumstances. Dwight Eisenhower warned about the military-industrial complex.
The best way to counter these false conservatives is to vote in each and every election. These false conservatives do all they can to dissuade people from voting from gerrymandering to false statements about their opponents.
Until such time as real conservatives appear on the scene, I’ll just have to keep voting for Democrats. I don’t support many of the issues of the Democrats, but these issues are not so destructive of our country as the issues proclaimed by false conservatives.
My dream early this morning was about a similar nemesis: those whose only interest is ruling with a false idea of conservatism and a misuse of religion.
The false idea of conservatism is holding on to power, irregardless of how it affects the vast majority of the citizens. This conservatism puts the interests of some large corporations over the interests of large segments of the population. The misuse of religion is to claim to have the truth even as it acts contrary to the teachings of its greatest prophet.
My dream was that teams of journalists met all over the country to unite against the attacks by false conservatives on the journalists integrity and professionalism. Interestingly, many of these journalists being attacked are real conservatives, like George Will and Jennifer Rubin.
What is a real conservative? We can start by naming a few: Adam Smith, Edmund Burke, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Dwight Eisenhower. All of these have given warning about the order of men that is not to be trusted.
Adam Smith warned about those who live by profit. Edmund Burke warned about the folly of not allowing the colonies to govern themselves. George Washington warned about factions and about foreign entanglements (letting both friends and enemies control our judgment). Abraham Lincoln stated that we had to think anew with new circumstances. Dwight Eisenhower warned about the military-industrial complex.
The best way to counter these false conservatives is to vote in each and every election. These false conservatives do all they can to dissuade people from voting from gerrymandering to false statements about their opponents.
Until such time as real conservatives appear on the scene, I’ll just have to keep voting for Democrats. I don’t support many of the issues of the Democrats, but these issues are not so destructive of our country as the issues proclaimed by false conservatives.
Friday, July 20, 2018
Trumpty Dumpty falls off his wall
Trumpty Dumpty sat on his wall.
Trumpty Dumpty had a great fall.
Neither Russian enablers
Nor Republican hacks
Could put Trumpty Dumpty together again.
A collaberation of Melvyn and Janet Magree. That’s collaberation on this bit of doggerel. We didn’t push Trumpty Dumpty. This was from 2016!
And just when you think you have something original, you find that many others had a similar idea. My first inkling was finding Trumpty Dumpty' and Other Trump Poems | HuffPost https://www.huffingtonpost.com/orel-protopopescu/trumpty-dumpty_b_9500428.html. This was from 2016! And if you do a web search, you will find dozens of references more, including T-shirts.
Trumpty Dumpty had a great fall.
Neither Russian enablers
Nor Republican hacks
Could put Trumpty Dumpty together again.
A collaberation of Melvyn and Janet Magree. That’s collaberation on this bit of doggerel. We didn’t push Trumpty Dumpty. This was from 2016!
And just when you think you have something original, you find that many others had a similar idea. My first inkling was finding Trumpty Dumpty' and Other Trump Poems | HuffPost https://www.huffingtonpost.com/orel-protopopescu/trumpty-dumpty_b_9500428.html. This was from 2016! And if you do a web search, you will find dozens of references more, including T-shirts.
Wednesday, July 11, 2018
I am smarter than Donald Trump
I know that I can’t govern the country by my every whim.
I also know that many leaders of other countries are not ready to dance to the tune of the American piper. Especially since the American piper hasn’t gotten rid of the rats in high places.
I also know that many leaders of other countries are not ready to dance to the tune of the American piper. Especially since the American piper hasn’t gotten rid of the rats in high places.
Monday, July 09, 2018
Majority rules...
...but only if the majority votes.
Too many votes are decided by too small a portion of the eligible voters.
I thought of this because of the misnamed Freedom Caucus and Tea Party.
We have the freedom to govern ourselves, not to do as we please without any consideration of other people.
We have the ability to tax ourselves with representation instead of by some government we have no right to vote for.
Would it better to call the Freedom Caucus and the Tea Party anarchists?
Monday, June 18, 2018
Immigration
Comment to “Trump cannot get its story straight…”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/paloma/daily-202/2018/06/18/daily-202-trump-team-cannot-get-its-story-straight-on-separating-migrant-families/5b2701f030fb046c468e6ef6/?utm_term=.4fad262b503d
Gosh, the inhabitants of this continent over a thousand years ago had a lousy immigration policy. First they let those drunken, war-mongering Vikings in. Then they let some murderous Spaniards in.
Pete Seeger captured this mistake with his tale of two Indians watching a little boat come ashore from a bigger boat. A man stepped out of the little boat and said "Buenos dias, señores." One Indian looked at the other and said, "Well, there goes the neighborhood!"
And this invasion from Europe just grew and grew until it was a flood that overwhelmed and often killed the original inhabitants.
I think these illegal aliens should go back where they came from.
Gosh! What am I going to do? I am a descendant of these illegal aliens. But how can I "go back where I came from"? I would have to be sent back in pieces. I have known ancestors from England, Germany, and Poland, and probably as my name suggests, from Ireland.
Interestingly, many of the ancestors of these "illegal" immigrants once upon a time freely crossed the Rio Grande, moving back and forth for trade and for better weather. Then a bunch of these Europeans decided they wanted the land north of the Rio Grande, and...
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/paloma/daily-202/2018/06/18/daily-202-trump-team-cannot-get-its-story-straight-on-separating-migrant-families/5b2701f030fb046c468e6ef6/?utm_term=.4fad262b503d
Gosh, the inhabitants of this continent over a thousand years ago had a lousy immigration policy. First they let those drunken, war-mongering Vikings in. Then they let some murderous Spaniards in.
Pete Seeger captured this mistake with his tale of two Indians watching a little boat come ashore from a bigger boat. A man stepped out of the little boat and said "Buenos dias, señores." One Indian looked at the other and said, "Well, there goes the neighborhood!"
And this invasion from Europe just grew and grew until it was a flood that overwhelmed and often killed the original inhabitants.
I think these illegal aliens should go back where they came from.
Gosh! What am I going to do? I am a descendant of these illegal aliens. But how can I "go back where I came from"? I would have to be sent back in pieces. I have known ancestors from England, Germany, and Poland, and probably as my name suggests, from Ireland.
Interestingly, many of the ancestors of these "illegal" immigrants once upon a time freely crossed the Rio Grande, moving back and forth for trade and for better weather. Then a bunch of these Europeans decided they wanted the land north of the Rio Grande, and...
Monday, May 14, 2018
Donald Trump’s New Book
How to Make Enemies and Squander Influence.
This was my reaction to Trump’s opening of the new U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem.
With apologies to Dale Carnegie’s How to Make Friends and Influence People.
This was my reaction to Trump’s opening of the new U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem.
With apologies to Dale Carnegie’s How to Make Friends and Influence People.
Wednesday, May 09, 2018
Comment to “Kofi Annan and populists”
Those of us who have the interest or the time can access a large variety of news and make some sense between opinion and facts.
Unfortunately, too many people get their news and opinion from a half-hour or an hour of watching a rather limited number of facts or opinions.
See
Labels:
facts,
Kofi Annan,
Nathan Gardels,
news,
opinion,
Washington Post,
World Post
Monday, April 23, 2018
This is justice?
The pickpocket who steals a rich man’s wallet may be sent to jail.
The rich man who steals a widow’s savings might never see the inside of a jail.
Doesn’t happen? Think of the housing crisis of the 90’s.
Labels:
housing crisis,
jail,
justice,
pickpocket,
rich man,
widow’s savings
Thursday, April 05, 2018
Character, content, Martin Luther King Jr.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said that we should all be judged by the content of our character. Unfortunately, President Donald Trump is a character without content.
Shame on Wisconsin stay-aways
In the election for a Wisconsin Supreme Court Judge, Rebecca Dallet, a Democrat, beat Michael Screnock, a Republican, 56 to 44 percent.
No matter what your party affiliation is, this is very bad news. The turnout was 22 percent!! This means that just over 12 percent of the voters supported Dallet with their time.
No matter what your party affiliation is, this is very bad news. The turnout was 22 percent!! This means that just over 12 percent of the voters supported Dallet with their time.
Thursday, March 29, 2018
Invasion of Iraq
Comment to Sinan Antoon’s New York Times article “Fifteen Years Ago, America Destroyed My Country”, posted at http://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/19/opinion/iraq-war-anniversary-.html?comments#permid=26407775.
“The only thing we learn from history is that we do not learn from history.”
Over 200 years ago a certain people were very upset that its laws were being made by a distant country. They rebelled and successfully fought a revolution to govern themselves.
Now many of the political descendants of that people celebrate that revolution but think nothing of dictating the laws and policies of other countries without the consent of the governed.
“The more things change the more they stay the same.”
“The only thing we learn from history is that we do not learn from history.”
Over 200 years ago a certain people were very upset that its laws were being made by a distant country. They rebelled and successfully fought a revolution to govern themselves.
Now many of the political descendants of that people celebrate that revolution but think nothing of dictating the laws and policies of other countries without the consent of the governed.
“The more things change the more they stay the same.”
Friday, March 23, 2018
“Free-range parenting”, what’s the fuss
Utah has passed a “free-range parenting” bill that frees parents from hovering over their children. Some people thinks this is terrible and irresponsible.
See https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/controversial-free-range-parenting-now-legal-utah-heres-means-203114763.html.
Thanks goodness I was a free-range kid from the time I was six (1944). I walked to school by myself. I walked to playgrounds myself. I went to the movies with my younger brother. And when I had a bicycle I rode many places far from home.
See https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/controversial-free-range-parenting-now-legal-utah-heres-means-203114763.html.
Thanks goodness I was a free-range kid from the time I was six (1944). I walked to school by myself. I walked to playgrounds myself. I went to the movies with my younger brother. And when I had a bicycle I rode many places far from home.
Thursday, March 22, 2018
More on erratic behavior of online newspapers
I’m sitting in a coffee shop, using a MacBook Air, early 2015, macOS Sierra, version 10.12.6.
I was able to access and sign in to startribune.com. I then clicked on e Access or whatever and asked to log in. I didn’t keep track of the details but was told my account didn’t have access to that version. I went back to the web version and clicked on eEdition. Voila! and no intrusive overlay ads. And I have access to the “Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee”.
Now the question is would I get the same result using my iPhone as a hot spot to my AT&T account.
I don’t feel like checking right now. I would rather read the funnies.
And I read the Star Tribune and after that I accessed the Duluth News Tribune. I forget the details on what I did, but I am almost done reading the opinion page. Strange that I couldn’t access the DNT at all from home but I can from a coffee shop.
I was able to access and sign in to startribune.com. I then clicked on e Access or whatever and asked to log in. I didn’t keep track of the details but was told my account didn’t have access to that version. I went back to the web version and clicked on eEdition. Voila! and no intrusive overlay ads. And I have access to the “Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee”.
Now the question is would I get the same result using my iPhone as a hot spot to my AT&T account.
I don’t feel like checking right now. I would rather read the funnies.
And I read the Star Tribune and after that I accessed the Duluth News Tribune. I forget the details on what I did, but I am almost done reading the opinion page. Strange that I couldn’t access the DNT at all from home but I can from a coffee shop.
The hubris of automation
A woman walking her bike in Tempe AZ was struck and killed by a driverless Uber car.
Uber and others should consider the old joke about automated airplanes.
“Ladies and gentle, welcome to the world’s first completely automated flight. Although there are no pilots in the cockpit, we would like to assure you that every detail has been worked out. Please sit back and enjoy your flight, flight, flight,…”
Uber and others should consider the old joke about automated airplanes.
“Ladies and gentle, welcome to the world’s first completely automated flight. Although there are no pilots in the cockpit, we would like to assure you that every detail has been worked out. Please sit back and enjoy your flight, flight, flight,…”
Saturday, March 17, 2018
Greatest Deliberative Body?
Whatever happened to "The Greatest Deliberating Body in the World", aka the U.S. Senate?
If it were a true deliberating body, it would have 100 opinions to begin with before settling into one or two. Instead we start with two lock-step opinions arguing over a foregone conclusion reached by a small majority.
Comment to Maureen Dowd’s column “Trump, Flush With Power” seems to think that Trump will be crashing soon after firing some competent people and replacing them with Fox News people. But some commenters thought Trump would get away with a lot as long as the Senate enables him.
Posted at https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/17/opinion/sunday/trump-fox-news-dowd.html?comments#permid=26368531.
If it were a true deliberating body, it would have 100 opinions to begin with before settling into one or two. Instead we start with two lock-step opinions arguing over a foregone conclusion reached by a small majority.
Comment to Maureen Dowd’s column “Trump, Flush With Power” seems to think that Trump will be crashing soon after firing some competent people and replacing them with Fox News people. But some commenters thought Trump would get away with a lot as long as the Senate enables him.
Posted at https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/17/opinion/sunday/trump-fox-news-dowd.html?comments#permid=26368531.
Friday, March 16, 2018
Erratic behavior of online newspapers
I sent the following email to the publishers and editors of the Star Tribune and the Duluth News Tribune.
Good afternoon,
Good afternoon,
If this email is upsetting the end of your day, I’m sorry. But the erratic behavior of the online versions of your newspapers has been upsetting my month and many months before.
In the case of the Star Tribune, it has unwanted pop-up ads that are difficult, if not impossible to delete. Several days earlier in the week it occurred almost every day and I was ready to cancel my subscription. The telephone chain to do so was ridiculous. Yesterday, the eEdition worked fine, and I relented on cancelling my subscription. Today the pop-up ads were back.
Jon of Feedback was very patient and supportive, but one piece of advice I should never have followed: resetting my iPad. That wound up clearing all my saved passwords. Now I have to look these up for my next visit to any of a number of password-protected sites. And the problem of unwanted pop-ups is back.
In the case of the Duluth News Tribune, it may or may not come up with the eEdition. On my iPad it was going in a circle of getting halfway to the eEdition and then wanting me to put in my password again.
At the moment, the eEditions are working on my MacBook Air, but I would rather eat breakfast with an iPad by my side: it takes up much less space on the table.
See my blog entry: "A newspaper’s takeover of subscribers’ computers"
I am not alone in enduring these, but I wonder how many of your users have the knowledge and patience to work through this annoyance. I know my wife who has over twenty years of computer experience wouldn’t and she is growing very impatient with my repeated complaints. I know that I no longer wish to be an unpaid debugger of your software.
So, please cancel my subscriptions to the Star Tribune and the Duluth News Tribune. I’ll renew them when you have fixed this problem.
Oh, yes! I will post this email to my blog.
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
A newspaper’s takeover of subscribers’ computers
Given the increasing complexity of software and its decreasing user-friendliness, I think 1984 has arrived. We are supposed to follow robotically through the latest commands of the software designer, aka Big Brother. And like in 1984, we have no idea what we are doing or should be doing.
I have almost 59 years of computer experience. I started with a summer job in which I used a textbook to learn to program an IBM 650. That was a set of large refrigerator size boxes with punched cards in and punched cards out.
Over the next twenty-plus years I went on to program and debug larger and larger computers. I was often an advocate of newer techniques, like using compilers instead of machine code or using email instead of typed memos.
Then personal computers appeared on the scene. Some of them easy to use, some of them opaque to use. In 1984, the Macintosh appeared. It was a real break-through in ease of use. Many laughed at WIMP (Windows, Icons, Menus, Pictures). They preferred the complex set of coding that had to be done for the simplest tasks.
I was hooked and became a Certified Macintosh Developer. I was eager to get the latest Mac with many great features: color, faster and smaller storage devices, and more.
Then OS-X (operating system 10) appeared. It had many nifty features except ease of transferring older programs to it. I never got around to rewriting my genealogy program and have lost all that data (except that which I had printed out). On the other hand, there were many new features that were a delight to use.
But as one OS X after another followed, the Mac started being persnickety. Printers that were easy to use became a nightmare. Where is the setting to print an envelope. Why does the scanner work well with an old OS but gives dark blobs on a newer OS?
Then sin of sins, without asking me, Apple decided I should install the latest operating system just because I was using wi-fi at a coffee shop. Not only did Apple decide that I should upgrade, it decided that all my files in the Document folder should go to iCloud. But that was more data than my free 5GB. It asked me to upgrade my account to 50GB. The extra $0.99 a month was no big deal, but I still haven’t completely reorganized my Document file so that I don’t need be hooked up to the web to use those files.
The same increasing difficulty has struck many web-sites. I now subscribe to four newspapers. Most of them generally work well with only a few quirks that take awhile to figure out. Just like the print versions, the newspapers are filled with ads. Generally you can just scroll past them.
But sometime last year, the Star Tribune began to have intrusive ads. They would take over the computer with no obvious way out. Not only would the ad page take over the tab slot on a browser, there was no way to get out of it except close the tab or follow it on to other pages in the ad chain.
A similar annoyance is a side-bar ad with a misleading message: “Log In”. It is not a log in to the newspaper, but an ad for using a Google product for signing in to web sites.
A friendly guy at Star Tribune’s support department helped me try to clear things up. But it was drastic, including resetting my iPad. Guess what that did? It wiped out all my cookies so that I had to enter saved passwords all over again. Good thing I have the passwords stored in an obscure place.
Rather than making my life simple by easily accessing my bank accounts, reading the latest news, and sending email to friends, I seem to have gone into standby debug mode.
Unfortunately, one of those pop-ups appeared again this morning. That’s it. I asked the Star Tribune to cancel my subscription. Bye to “The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee” and many other comics that are not in the Duluth News Tribune. Good-bye to many in-depth state stories and editorials.
I do have relatives who spend a small fortune calling Geek Squad every time time they need to make some software change. Do you think the Star Tribune would pay me for all my efforts? Do you think your phone will run forever without re-charging?
P.S. Well, maybe I'll keep the Star Tribune subscription for a few more days. It worked fine this morning.
I have almost 59 years of computer experience. I started with a summer job in which I used a textbook to learn to program an IBM 650. That was a set of large refrigerator size boxes with punched cards in and punched cards out.
Over the next twenty-plus years I went on to program and debug larger and larger computers. I was often an advocate of newer techniques, like using compilers instead of machine code or using email instead of typed memos.
Then personal computers appeared on the scene. Some of them easy to use, some of them opaque to use. In 1984, the Macintosh appeared. It was a real break-through in ease of use. Many laughed at WIMP (Windows, Icons, Menus, Pictures). They preferred the complex set of coding that had to be done for the simplest tasks.
I was hooked and became a Certified Macintosh Developer. I was eager to get the latest Mac with many great features: color, faster and smaller storage devices, and more.
Then OS-X (operating system 10) appeared. It had many nifty features except ease of transferring older programs to it. I never got around to rewriting my genealogy program and have lost all that data (except that which I had printed out). On the other hand, there were many new features that were a delight to use.
But as one OS X after another followed, the Mac started being persnickety. Printers that were easy to use became a nightmare. Where is the setting to print an envelope. Why does the scanner work well with an old OS but gives dark blobs on a newer OS?
Then sin of sins, without asking me, Apple decided I should install the latest operating system just because I was using wi-fi at a coffee shop. Not only did Apple decide that I should upgrade, it decided that all my files in the Document folder should go to iCloud. But that was more data than my free 5GB. It asked me to upgrade my account to 50GB. The extra $0.99 a month was no big deal, but I still haven’t completely reorganized my Document file so that I don’t need be hooked up to the web to use those files.
The same increasing difficulty has struck many web-sites. I now subscribe to four newspapers. Most of them generally work well with only a few quirks that take awhile to figure out. Just like the print versions, the newspapers are filled with ads. Generally you can just scroll past them.
But sometime last year, the Star Tribune began to have intrusive ads. They would take over the computer with no obvious way out. Not only would the ad page take over the tab slot on a browser, there was no way to get out of it except close the tab or follow it on to other pages in the ad chain.
A similar annoyance is a side-bar ad with a misleading message: “Log In”. It is not a log in to the newspaper, but an ad for using a Google product for signing in to web sites.
A friendly guy at Star Tribune’s support department helped me try to clear things up. But it was drastic, including resetting my iPad. Guess what that did? It wiped out all my cookies so that I had to enter saved passwords all over again. Good thing I have the passwords stored in an obscure place.
Rather than making my life simple by easily accessing my bank accounts, reading the latest news, and sending email to friends, I seem to have gone into standby debug mode.
Unfortunately, one of those pop-ups appeared again this morning. That’s it. I asked the Star Tribune to cancel my subscription. Bye to “The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee” and many other comics that are not in the Duluth News Tribune. Good-bye to many in-depth state stories and editorials.
I do have relatives who spend a small fortune calling Geek Squad every time time they need to make some software change. Do you think the Star Tribune would pay me for all my efforts? Do you think your phone will run forever without re-charging?
P.S. Well, maybe I'll keep the Star Tribune subscription for a few more days. It worked fine this morning.
Labels:
Apple,
bugs,
debug,
Geek Squad,
Google,
IBM 650,
iCloud,
iPhone,
laptop,
mainframe,
on-line newspaper,
pop-up ads,
Star Tribune,
support,
Univac,
worms
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)