Archive for March, 2007

Caption This

“Armando, this is how far you are from making the team this year.”
(Photo courtesy MercuryNews.com)

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Email from eBay: Old SYI form retires in early May

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Old SYI form retires in early May
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This is a reminder that we will be retiring the old "Sell Your Item" (SYI)
form in early May. This is the form you see when you click on the "Sell"
tab at the top of the eBay home page or when you use "relist "or "sell
similar" to list an item.

Our records indicate that you are still using the old form.

We urge you to start using the new form right away. In early May the
version you're using will no longer be available.

To begin using the new form, just click on "Start selling with the new
version of the Sell Your Item form" at the beginning of the selling
process.

The new version makes it faster and easier to list your items. It also has
great new features such as more fonts and colors, built-in Help, and
reusable templates.

For more information, please read our Helpful Links about the new SYI form
at http://click3.ebay.com/3733479.68070.0.113505

Sincerely,

eBay Product Management Team

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See, here's the problem: The new SYI form is a pain in the butt to use,
and doesn't work well in Opera. I'd been using the old form because it's
easy, just fill in the blanks. The new form wants to use overlays and
dynamic stuff and just generally make things much more complicated than
they need to be.

I'm hoping for a reprieve, or at least a way to access the old form even
after it's supposedly "retired".

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Where’s Mike Rowe when you need him?

As seen on Dirty Jobs… The storm drain vacuum truck.

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Picture Mail: tacky while eating

Poetry on a plate: chocolate lava cake at Quattro restaurant at the new East Palo Alto Four Seasons hotel.

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Gasp, it’s a meme

Linked from GMSV is a survey on web-strategist.com called “My Media Consumption Diet“. Ok, I’ll bite:

My Media Consumption Diet (most used at top, least used at bottom):

  • Web: I’m online all day during the week, and get my news almost exclusively from RSS newsfeeds; I have over 110 subscribed in Opera‘s built-in reader. These aren’t all strict news, though, I also use newsfeeds to keep up with friends’ journals and blogs.
  • Music: Home: ShoutCast or other Internet radio or XM channels on DirecTV. Car: XM radio, usually either 44 (Fred) or 81 (BPM). On long trips I’ll sometimes listen to audiobooks on CD. Office: Shoutcast or other Internet radio, often KDFC in the morning and one or another SomaFM channels in the afternoon.
  • Communication: I use my laptop exclusively (except at work, when I Remote Desktop into my laptop from the company laptop) for email and IM. I’ve successfully merged umpety-ump email addresses into three accounts, and I use Trillian to keep five or six IM accounts all in one client. When I don’t have WiFi (rare and getting rarer) I can use PalmOS applications on my Treo 650 to check mail remotely or send and receive IMs.
  • TV: DirecTV with TiVo. Never ever watch live TV. I watch Countdown with Keith Olbermann every weeknight, and have a very large list of TiVo Season Passes.
  • Movies: We have a large collection of DVDs due in large part to the DVD section at Costco along with the bargain bins at Best Buy and Fry’s. We don’t go out to the movies very often, because it’s expensive and getting to be less and less fun.
  • Books: My book reading is divided pretty much equally between stuff for work–various computer languages or tools–and reading for pleasure. I’ve just finished James White’s Sector General series.
  • Magazines: I subscribe to Scientific American, 2600, MAKE and Newsweek. Half the time I don’t get a chance to read Newsweek before the next issue arrives, and since I get almost all my news online (see above) I probably won’t renew this when it expires.
  • Newspapers: Through their RSS feeds and Web sites, I read most of the San Francisco Chronicle and San Jose Mercury News every day. I can’t remember the last time I picked up a physical newspaper.

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