Archive for July, 2006

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Wednesday, July 26th, 2006

Ugh, I feel like crap today. Didn’t sleep much, AF arrived fast and furious… I sat at my Quicken for 20 minutes trying to make sense of the numbers. I think I finally did. I got to the point with the kids that I just told them to only bother me in an emergency and I shut my door. So here I sit. Got NPR podcasts on to entertain me, but I have this difficulty just sitting here listening, not using my eyeballs. So yeah… here I sit.

I should do a podcast. Some of these are pretty good. But I don’t have much to say. You can be completely horrible technically but if you have good content, someone will sit through it I suppose.

Pure comedy gold…

Monday, July 24th, 2006

Ann Coulter on the 700 Club.

On her book that calls liberals “godless”:

But I really haven’t heard people protest about that. No, they’re upset about what I say about the Jersey Girls. But, oh, yeah, OK, we’re all godless. So I think we all are on record now, officially liberals have admitted they are godless and don’t even mind it.

On Darwinism:

[...]they have species that could, in theory, be a transition between one animal and another. But as I say in the book, this is like saying, you know, Elton John looks like Janet Reno. Therefore Elton John gave birth to Janet Reno.

The only thing that would have been better would be if Pat Robertson had done the interview. Scary. But funny.

Praying for a day off from school…

Friday, July 21st, 2006

This is interesting. School boards around the country are trying to figure out how to accomodate religious holidays.

Sikh, Muslim, Buddhist, Jewish, Hindu, and Christian — each faith has its holy days. Schools across the country are asking how to respect them all.

Consider the University at Albany, which canceled classes on major Muslim holidays. Faculty wanted the move out of concern for Muslim students after the Sept. 11 attacks. But then came the questions: What about Hindus? Buddhists?

President Kermit Hall last fall decided to return to the original calendar.

“Can you operate a university and give each religious group an accommodation? I think the answer is, ‘No,’” he said.

Make that “maybe.” School administrators across the country are rethinking their calendars as their student bodies become more diverse. [...]

Some schools close for the beginning of hunting season. San Francisco schools have Cesar Chavez Day on March 30 to celebrate farmworkers, and Chicago schools have March 5 to honor Casimir Pulaski, a Polish count who helped the American side in the Revolutionary War.

Religion is more sensitive. Some districts mark “special observance days” when no test or exam can be scheduled. Other districts find inspiration in the business world — each student gets a number of “floating” days to celebrate his or her own holidays with an excused absence.

“‘Choose your own holiday’ has become more popular,” said Kathryn Lohre, assistant director of Harvard University’s Pluralism Project, which studies diversity in religion. “It takes pressure off the school boards.”

New Jersey’s board of education now lists 76 excused religious holidays, from Russian Orthodox to Sikh. New York City schools are even more flexible. Students with a letter from parents get an excused absence for a holiday in any religion.

Hmm, interesting. That list of NJ excused holydays can be found here. In this state, heck, in this town, there’s such diversity, an incredibly fast-growing immigrant population, primarily from India and other Asian nations. Our school calendar recognizes traditional Christian and Jewish holy days. I have to wonder if the time will come that school will be scheduled on those dates, and families will be asked to use their “floating holydays” for Good Friday or Yom Kippur?

I’m not sure how I feel about all this. Looking at the Roman Catholic holydays listed (because those are the ones that would affect my kids) would I take my kids out of school for All Saints Day? How about the next day, All Souls Day? Both would be excused. According to this list, my kids are entitled to 9 excused absences (assuming, of course, all the Catholic holydays fell on a school day.) Would I allow that to happen? Of couse not. But if a family is religious- well, they might. How does the administration of that work, what are the teachers’ responsibilities? How are standardized tests, finals, projects, scheduled? I

Nothing’s ever as simple as we’d like it to be, is it?

Stopping churn

Wednesday, July 19th, 2006

The AOL Customer Retention Manual is making the rounds today. Wow, I wish I had one of these back in the day! I worked for a now defunct cellular service, and it was part of my job to convince people not to cancel their lousy service and switch to someone else. Of course, back then there were only two services to choose from, so it wasn’t terribly difficult, but still, by the time a customer was speaking to me, he (almost always a he) was close to irate. We’d credit minutes (remember, back then you paid for each and every minute, inbound, outbound, PLUS the local and long distance land charges) & offer free months of service. Then when they still insisted on canceling- we made them send us the request in writing. If they were really freaking we’d say it was ok to fax the request, but they still had to follow it up in the mail. And we weren’t allowed to actually cancel the account until we had at least the faxed request in hand.

Man that part of the job sucked.

I remember one customer who had been through three reps before he got to me. His calls were constantly dropped- service was so intermittent back then, and he was calling to have the dropped calls credited. This was routine. The customer would call every month, request dropped call credit, and a customer service rep would manually review the account for calls to the same number within a minute or two- indicating that the customer had to redial a call that was dropped. We’d refund a minute of air and land changes for each one. Tedious, annoying, but in the interest of customer retention, a must. Anyway, the computers were down this day. The customer service rep told him so, and asked him to call back later. He asked for a supervisor, she told him the same, he asked for a manager. The call got bumped to my department (marketing) and one of my co-workers told him the same- sorry, the computers are down, please call back later. Now he was yelling, and she shrugged and handed me the phone (yeah, exactly… ). I apologized profusely, and again told him the computers were down, and that’s when he said, “what does that mean??” OK, remember, this was 1988. This was obviously an older executive who probably had never used a computer for any reason (only clerical workers used them- we didn’t even have PCs, just CRTs.) The poor man had never heard the phrase “the computers are down” and he just couldn’t understand what we were telling him. I explained it simply meant that the computer system wasn’t working, similar to a power outage, and it meant we were unable to access his account information. I promised to call him back when the system was working again (I avoided the term “back online”…) and offered to credit him a month’s service fee. Problem solved, he was a happy camper once again.

But, it was a cool time to be in the industry. When I started working there we were one office of about 65 people. That was the entire company. We provided cellular service for the NY met area. There was us and AT&T- every market had one “baby bell” and one private service (that was us). Our ownership changed a lot while I was there- shortly after I left the entire industry changed to a completely different, more competitive format. It had to, no way could it expand the way it needed to the way it was set up.

Shortly before I left we had 100 employees. Boy we had fun with that. Five of us were pregnant- hey, thats 5% of the company! Three were gay (at least out, anyway), 3%! Single moms? 10%! Hey, we were easily amused, what can I tell ya?

Further evidence that I’m a geek

Wednesday, July 19th, 2006

Star Trek / Monty Python Camelot mashup

Star Trek does the Time Warp…

Birthday musings

Tuesday, July 18th, 2006

So tomorrow I turn 43. I sure don’t feel 43, although I don’t know what 43 should feel like.

When my mom turned 43 I was about to get married. She was definitely older at 43 than I am! Or was she?

I have friends in their late 40s, early 50s who look and act younger than me. We are a generation that is refusing to accept “middle age” in the classic sense. Even though there’s no denying that we are in fact, middle aged.

I expect to make a lot of changes in the coming year. My tenure as full time stay at home mama is coming to an end. I don’t know what type of job I’ll get but I do know I’ll be getting a job. In all honesty I’d like to work full-time, but I know that’s not reasonable yet- not till Tim is a bit older. And even then- I still don’t feel comforable leaving teens/pre-teens home alone in the afternoon, if I can avoid it. So part time, maybe late hours, I don’t know…

I’d also like to formalize my little “business” of doing web design. I’ve been hesitant- feeling like I don’t know enough, but I’m starting to see that I don’t really need to know enough, what I need to know is where to find things out, who to pass work on to that out of my scope- I can do that. I don’t need to be the fixer, I can be the one who troubleshoots, consults, and finds the fixer- people need that.

I want to blog more. I want to take more photographs and share them here and elsewhere (the new camera that I’m getting (yay!) should help with that!)

Construction on our home is moving along, and I’m excited about moving into our new mastersuite, and excited about helping Nick & Tim set up their new personal spaces.

Andy is moving on. It’s going to be odd around here without him, I’ll miss our tag-team joking around. I’m so excited for him though- my biggest hope is that he really follows his heart and dreams, and doesn’t make the mistakes I made by following other people…

I need to get back into the healthy eating / healthy body mindset I enjoyed oh-so-briefly last year. It felt good. I let emotion/depression dictate my life again over the past 8 months, and I feel lousy about it. Things have to change, because it’s affecting me, it’s affecting relationships… so yeah, there’s that.

That would be the big one.

upgrade and comment stuff

Monday, July 17th, 2006

I updated to WP2.03, and changed my smilie plug-in, so some smilies are broken. I fixed most

Comments form was buggy- if you’re so inclined can you drop me a comment so I can see if it works? If not can you email me at annie@whatstruckme.com? Thanks !