at&t

Why Verizon won’t be taking over Charter anytime soon

I have plenty of positive things to say about both companies even if Charter suffered through financial troubles and Verizon’s services is still quite expensive.

You would think that two companies of which one provides some pretty good Internet service and a fairly decent channel line up and another company known for its excellent phone service and outstanding wireless internet coverage would be interested in joining forces against their rivals at AT&T, right?

WRONG! Sadly, these two modest contenders are not at all happy with each other and the St. Louis area doesn’t really know it. Then of course there are the lawsuits between Charter and Verizon. (Note to self: Insert picture of two grown men sissy-fighting with each other in relationship to how these two companies are behaving.)

Charter is still a cable based internet service provider, whereas Verizon can not find a place in the St. Louis market to provide their FTTx (a.k.a. FiOS) service in the St. Louis area. So the duopoly between Charter and AT&T still exists in the St. Louis area in terms of High-Speed Internet service. (Unless of course, Google comes to bless us with whatever they plan on giving out. PLEASE COME HERE, GOOGLE!)

Meanwhile, Verizon, who beat the snot out of AT&T in both Consumer Reports and Zagats consumer ratings this winter, is still both a wireless carrier competing with AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile not only provides wireless phone service but wireless Internet as well.

One of the great things about Verizon is that I can use my Motorola Droid and tether it to my netbook using a program called PDANet.

Since it has been a while since I have blogged, I think I should explain some of the details of my netbook.

In February, I became involved with a group called a hackerspace. The local hackerspace group, Arch Reactor, had an open house meeting that I ‘m pretty happy that I went to and joined the group. (Hence no time for blogging as of late.) Most of the time we hang around and talk about making stuff (not necessarily hacking, but also art, electronics including Ardruino, woodworking, robotics, and a bit of gardening).

Since most of the guys bring their laptops or netbooks, I used some of my rainy-day funds to buy a refurbished HP Mini from someone on eBay. It was probably one one of the best purchases I made. The computer is in great condition (with exception for a little scratch on the bottom of the computer), there is an extra-long lasting Lithium-ion battery on it. And it still runs Windows XP.

So what if I don’t have Vista or 7 on this thing? Most of the time I am either on the Internet or using UNIX-like program with Cygwin as well as an arsenal of other free open-source software available for Windows. To which I’ve tossed out just about all the software that comes on this system. Norton Internet Security (TRIALWARE! Annoying as hell!), Microsoft Office (Trialware! Use OpenOffice.org instead!), Microsoft Works (Crap). I wish I could toss out Internet Explorer, especially since I am using Chrome. But I figured, the less Microsoft stuff I have to use, the less of a security threat I can be subject to. On top of that, XP is stable enough to do some fancy computer stuff like changing the startup animation, the login screen, and replacing the GUI interface.

Anyway, back to PDANet.

PDANet is probably the best $20 worth of software that you will ever spend if you are both the owner of a Motorola Droid or other Android enabled device and the owner of a Netbook with Windows or Mac on it.

Using your phone and your computer to tether with each other to have wireless Internet is downright awesome. I would have almost have been tempted to cancel my Charter subscription if only Verizon didn’t allow any other ports to be used for things like IRC chat, SSH, or even Usenet. (AT&T is the same way, so I can probably speculate and say that every other wireless provider also is not really all that keen at the moment to use any other port than the ones used for web browsing.)

Clearly, Verizon (and its rivals) have issues still with people using their network for doing things other than downloading stupid videos of cats playing the keyboard. But like any computer system that can be modified (even Windows and Android), there is a way around it.

Having a netbook is does not mean the retirement of my old Linux system that I built myself. In fact, it opens the door to allowing for me to better my computer skills and to attempt to make the two computers communicate with each other (of which despite their form factor have pretty much the same abilities and hardware standards for the most part).

My loyal Linux machine is in need for some hardware upgrades that due to the current economy, it was much cheaper to find a netbook to take care of some of the dirty work that the Linux machine could have. That and the netbook is about 20 decibels quieter than the Linux Machine. An issue that is on my todo list when I head out to Micro Center, when and if the Missouri state legislature (particularly Cynthia Davis and Jane Cunningham) pull the head out of their butts and realize that a socialized healthcare system is the reform this country needs to get people back to work. The same can be said about the Tea Party which is also threatening to kill Metro. (Vote YES on Proposition A on April 6th! I like riding the bus, but if adding a half-cent sales tax to cut the time I spend commuting to and from Downtown (which is an hour!) is wrong, then I definitely don’t want to be right!)

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Attention AT&T: You are not the government! So don’t tax us like you are!

There is a saying that goes “Don’t steal. The Government Hates Competition.” Well, AT&T feels obliged to challenge that by charging Missouri’s 1,000,000 land line customers a $6.10 municipal tax. The municipality doesn’t see any of that money, as proven by an angry Florissant Mayor Robert Lowery, Sr.

Here is what happened. A few years ago, there was a lawsuit in Missouri where AT&T was told to pay a $65 Million settlement back to 300 cities in the state of Missouri including Florissant, University City, and unincorporated St. Louis County. However, AT&T is taking it out on their land line customers that they are suppost to be paying back by charging them $6.10 Municipal tax that was suppost to occur once. The Missouri technology tax is only about $4 for ever $100. St. Louis County only charges about $2. But AT&T, being AT&T, has decided to charge this $6.10 tax that they made up against their land line customers FOR THE NEXT FOUR YEARS!.

So instead of paying back it’s customers in 300 cities in Missouri the $65 Million in back taxes, they will make a profit off the 1 Million Missouri customers of about $73.2 Million each year for the next 4 years. (If you think that is not that much, There are only about 5.9 Million people who live in Missouri. meaning about 1 in 6 people in our state will be paying an extra $73.20 per year.) In the end they will make up more than $292.8 Million, nearly four and a half times the value of the the initial settlement.

AT&T gets to make money off the customers they are suppost to be paying back, and there is no law against it! After this incident, customers will want laws against what AT&T is doing! The fact that private industry is create a tax in addition to what customers are paying them is concerning and should be a wake up call to how the government regulates business practices.

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Finally, an article about Technology!

I haven’t been able to talk about technology in so long.

I love my computer. It’s the closes thing I have to having a car at the moment. During the latter part of 2006 and earily part of 2007, I spent a little bit of money each month collecting parts to build my own computer. Sort of like a gear head saves up money to build their own hot rod…or like that Johnny Cash song “One Piece at a Time”. Helping me out with the inital construction of this do-it-yourself project was a copy of Building a PC for Dummies.

Since 2007, I’ve been using this computer. But like any machine, parts eventually breakdown, need to be replaced, upgraded, or repaired.

So at the beginning of this year, I decided to make a Wish/Todo List of things that ought to be upgraded, fixed, or replaced, mostly in the order of the things that needed the most attention. I wasn’t looking to make a street machine out of an economy car (especially since I don’t have the budget to do that), I just had a gut feeling that in order for me to protect my investment, I should do whatever I can to make it last as long as it could. Especially since my computer is the nicest and the most important thing that I own.

The hardest part about maintaining my computer is finding a computer store. There is no CompUSA or Circuit City anymore. The lack of small computer shops also doesn’t help, especially with Big Box Stores like Best Buy dominating the market.

It also doesn’t help that Google search indicates there are about 64 nail salons within a five mile radius of the nearest intersection near my home and only about 7 places to get your computer repaired, of which only 3 have a selection of parts that you can browse around and look at. Throughout the St. Louis area, there are probably about 25 places where you can get your computer serviced, most of them Best Buys. The rest of them are for companies that maintain corporate business machines. Of course, where you can find a computer shop of any kind, more than like there are probably about 20 places to get your nails done within a quarter mile of each of those locations. So much for women with ambitions. (Fathers: Get your daughters involved with Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math! The world needs more geeky women especially if you have to go across town to get your computer fixed but theirs a nail salon on every street corner.)

Anyway, the first thing I wanted to do was replace the things that were not working anymore. Since Ebay was where I picked up many of the parts, I though I would go there.

The first part to break down was the DVD-RW. Prior to its breakdown, I mainly used that to play CDs and DVDs. Originally it was an internal drive with a custom external case which was removed to be installed internally. There was no SATA port on it, it still used the bulky IDE ribbon. Of course, since I’ve been doing quite a bit of maintenance on my computer the past couple of days, I am seriously considering making a backup of the files on my harddrive which is getting full.

But something must have happened over the past couple of years. As many of my recent eBay purchases have been duds. I’d expect this kind of behavior on Craigslist. Though I picked up a replacement on eBay for my DVD-RW, accessories were not included. Of course, no one bothers to write “Fragile” on the softbag (rather than a flat-rate cardboard box) that items come in. Yeah, I know I’m not buying parts on Amazon, but seriously. Who ever keeps packaging these items has never met my family who for some reason has a tendency to toss unmarked fragile items.

Anyway, I ended out having to pay another $20 at Best Buy for an SATA ribbon so I could connect the device to the motherboard. (Yeah, $20! It’s not even made out of gold. Speaking of which, I need to find that website I heard on the radio that has HDMI cables for cheap since the ones at the shops are intentionally overpriced!)

As much as I am glad to have replaced this part, eventually, I’d like to save up for a Blu-Ray device. But Linux has yet to crack Blu-Ray completely.

Item number two on the honeydo list was a memory upgrade. About the time I had wanted to do this, Circuit City was going out of business of which the local Ciruit City had the memory that I was interested in was also closing up. So by the time I completed this task, I ended out having to buy the new memory for less on CompUSA.com. Still, having one less place to spend my Saturday afternoons completely sucks.

Third item was installed last night. I knew the day would come that the graphics card would need to be replaced. I put it off for as long as I could, especially since the past few months the bills have sucked out any opporitunity to make a computer repair possible.

If the economists are wondering why consumers aren’t at the shops buying things, they apparently haven’t been paying attention to the bill collectors like the folks at AT&T who have been sucking people dry in order to take the government stimulus money that was suppost to be used for going out and spending things. I mean, whose not going to notice a stedily increase on their phone bill by as much as 18 cents in one month on top of the overpriced service they already have? At any rate, the recession has been a major contributor to the posponing of a couple of items on my list.

But as much as I have tried to put off any repairs, eventually there comes a time when the computer itself has had enough. Thus, yesterday the GPU had konked out.

I wasn’t at all surprised. Things were starting to become terrible. Anything using Flash would lock up be it Videos on YouTube, Games on Newground, or music on Blip.fm. Even using small low-memory tasks such as the text editor would not respond to typing words on a keyboard immediate. Eventually, the computer started to restart and the screen would freeze. After about two years of using this component daily, which had a regular temperature of about 70° C (so hot, I took one of the pannels off the case just to have cool air on the outside keep the rest of the computer from being damaged) the device finally died. Ironically, the same day, on of the fans near it had also burt out. But this fan was not as important. It seemed to be better at turning the computer into a dust magnet.

I am no stranger to burnt out graphics cards. Though I’ve never play alot of high graphics games (though I wish I could), a bad graphics card on the second laptop that I owned warented its need to be sent to San Jose for repair. It was the fact that my computer got to go places and I didn’t that was part of the inspiration for me to build my own computer. It has also inspired me to question computer repair in general.

This morning for example, I have discovered that the battery on my motherboard that keep the internal clock running has died. (Damn the luck!)

Why is it that the message that indicates the battery is dead looks like this:
Warning! Now System is in Safe Mode.
Please re-setting CPU Frequency in the CMOS setup
F1 : to continue DEL : Bios Setup

I’ve visited three websites that have confirmed that this warning is a sign that the clock battery is dead, though on one of them, one guy decided to overcomplicate things and blame it on an overclocked graphics card. (Which is unlikely since I’ve only had it for about 24 hours now.)

No one seems to be able to to explain in plain English this concept of overclocking. I have no interest in overclocking. Overclocking can be expensive, dangerous, and cause damage to the rest of your computer. As much as hardcore gamers are interested in overclocking their hardware, everyone else who just want to use their computer and enjoy doing things–including gaming–is not interested in burning computer rubber.

Tim "The Toolman" Taylor: Patron saint of the overclockers. "More Power!"

Tim "The Toolman" Taylor: Patron saint of the overclockers. "More Power!"


Since my primary interest in a new graphics card was to get things working again, and since serendipitously I had been browsing graphics cards on eBay a few days before this incident, it was my good fortune that I was able to find an ideal graphics card on sale at Best Buy. The best part about it is that the temperature on the new graphics card has not exceeded 47° C.

Crisis averted, so far. I just need to replace the old clock battery and thing will be peachy keen.

There is so much about my computer that I don’t know that is not mentioned in that little booklet on how to hook up the motherboard. There is no troubleshooting section. There is no FAQ. The only anwsers that are available are online…of which if you don’t have a computer available how are you suppost to get those answers.

There needs to be a big book of things about your computer and the mainstread book industry, the niche book industry, and the guys who run technology websites don’t bother to metion.

Sure their are a dozen books right now that will tell you things like how to get Twitter to work on your iPhone, but for everyone else like myself who could care less and can actually know which part is breaking down and making that burning toast smell inside your computer there is no book. There are message board, but in the rare case that you have a rare problem that you know the cause is that you didn’t overclock anything and that the solution is NEVER let the guys at Geek Squad (more like Theif Squad) look at it and decide to send it to their one-size-fits-all repair center that fixes everything else but that particular problem.

There haven’t been too many books in English or in the United States that tell you these things. You read stories bout how some guy in China killed himself because he lost an Apple iPhone prototype while in Africa they are taking in the electronic waste. It’s as if our only purpose in this part of the cycle is to take consume the items made in China only to “recycle” them into the trash to Africa. Nothing to learn, nothing to save. Just consume it.

One of my intentions for this website, and the revamping of this blog, was to explain technology in plain english. Explain how things work, what those BIOS warnings were talking about without trying to blame the user for something the really never did. I mean, you are a smart person. You found this blog. So you must be doing something right. Why not tell your friends?

I just hope that by writing more about technology it will lead to bigger things, like writing books…perhaps the book about computers.

It’s so easy for people to be controlled and to stay in this bubble of not needing to know thing that they should know or knowing just a little bit not to be taken advantaged of.

There should be more books on how things actually work inside your computer. It shouldn’t have to take a college education to learn what things are and how to use them.

When things go bad, do what is right!

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AT&T: When Corporate Censorship Backfires

Things seemed to be working out OK for AT&T. They had the Apple iPhone 3GS coming out. Then suddenly, when all is at its zenith, disaster strikes.

ATT_watching_your_internets

Apparently, AT&T decided now would be a good time to censor the Internet, since they did such a bang up job terminating Usenet service by creating the image that pedophiles and pornographers hang out there. Nevermind that unlike the Internet, the Usenet is composed of a fixed set of news groups, which–if done properly–Usenet providers (like AT&T) could block out and report ilicit content. GigaNews, a popular Usenet provider, made that clear last year. (It is also believed that most of the fake postings solicting such garbage throughout the Usenet is being PROPAGATED by the ISPs. Not only are we not interested in such vulgar content, but what business is that bullsh*t doing in comp.lang.tcl?)

But AT&T has some bigger plans in mind, since they can use the excuses that shut down Usenet service in the same way Senator Joseph McCarthy used Communism during the Red Scare. Mainly on content that is against AT&T.

Here, AT&T can break the rules of network neutrality by making anything they see objectionable or against AT&T into contraband.

Take ATTGreed.com, for example. This website is promoting the awareness of a contract dispute between AT&T and the Communicantions Workers of America, a telecommunications union, and the Internation Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW). As far as AT&T see it, this website is objectionable.

Another opponent of AT&T has been the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF). Considered to be the ACLU of the Internet (only they won’t tell you to take down your Christmas lights from the town court house or don’t pray before the big football game), the EFF has been a strong supporter of network neutrality, something that AT&T believes should be reserved for those who can pay more. Since we’ve been doing quite well without AT&T meddling with Interent traffic for the last 35 years, it is only right to see things from the EFF’s Point of View. But if you see things from the EFF’s point of view, that means you side with their causes, such as free speech and fighting against warrentless wiretapping. Stuff AT&T likes the opposite.

AT&T is going to have some reallly big problems this week as they have decided to kick the beehive known throughout the internet as 4chan /b/ (NSFW). 4chan has been seen as a wrecking ball of a website, known for its various Internet pranks. Considered the home of the Internet group “Anonymous” which has caused grief against the ChuchCult of S$cientology (Co$), Anonymous has been seen as the group on the Internet nobody messes with.

But now, Anonymous finds itself in a pickle. They can’t campaign against AT&T in the same way they do with the Co$. Desipte the upper echalon of Anonymous warning their followers to stand down (NSFW), as fighting against them would justifiy AT&T’s violation of network neutrality, there will still be that one idiot who will try to be somebody…to which Anonymous will make his life a living hell for about the next six months. Anonymous is thinking about their next move.

But why stop at cutting off the uncouth nonsense of 4chan when you can block off anyone who attempts to inform the public that AT&T is censoring websites. 2600.com, home of 2600: The Hacker Quarterly. Competitors like Sprint and Verzion. The Democractic Party (turns out AT&T has been bankrolling the Telecom industry’s status quo lobby which the GOP much appreciates). Given the money, and the request, you could probably put in a work order now at AT&T to block out something or to slow it down.

Unfortunately, AT&T picked on Anonymous. To which on Monday and Tuesday of this week, the hacker group has plans on causing AT&T grief but in some non conventional form. The group has already convinced AT&T users to switch to other networks. (Ironically, I had been waiting for an excuse to do it. But my reason, was Mashable heard a rumor that Android 2.0 may be coming to Sprint, which is pretty cool.)

Hopefully, Anonymous will find a way to give AT&T hell for upsetting the balance of the Interent.

Even this guy, who is a total badass, would not want to be around when Anonymous takes on AT&T!

Even this guy, who is a total badass, would not want to be around when Anonymous takes on AT&T!


Followup: (7/27/2009 12:00 PM CDT) Slashdot indicates that the block was pre-emptive and has ben lifted in some areas. Still a pre-emptive strike is still letting the genie out of the bottle–once it’s out, there is no way of putting it back in.

Much of the online community, and tech news sites, still see this as a brewing storm which may become “the perfect storm”. (Tech Central probably has it right: “Everybody Stand Back!”).

This could get ugly.

Followup (7/27/2009 8:00 PM CDT) shortly after that update was posted, 4chan founder Christopher “moot” Poole was able to clear the air. AT&T also posted a statement–after they saw there stock drop for most of the morning until it rebounded this afternoon. Part of it was the “vox populi”, the other part was probably the fact that Verizon’s 2Q Earning suck.

No big surprise. I recently went to a Verzion store that just moved into the neighborhood. Those guys are pushy! I just wanted to browse the phones, and they’re asking if I’ve entered my name in to a queue. What is this a restaruant or a phone store? I’m surprised this REALLY didn’t happen to me while I was there.

Anyway, back to this story.

AT&T has been know for not being surgical in their security measures. The result is the chaos that occured this weekend that in the long run will cost AT&T to see there churn rate sky rocket. (Higher the churn rate = more customers leaving. Anyone who sticks around for that will see their own rates go up so that AT&T can recoup the loss. May explain the 19 cents added to my bill since the previous month. I have got to break up with them!)

AT&T needs to be more precise with their network security. But precision cost money, like hiring American workers at their call centers cost money. (They ought to be paying people to work here. They didn’t call themselves Amercan Telephone and Telegraph just to hire people in India or the Philipines, which may explain why the CWA and IBEW aren’t happy with them.)

Outside of all that, I think that is it unless Anonymous does something.

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