Haiti Relief Concert at The Hub supports Convoy of Hope
Come down to 811 N Boonville right now. Bring $5+ to donate at the door!!!
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Come down to 811 N Boonville right now. Bring $5+ to donate at the door!!!
Other World Computing ( http://www.macsales.com ) impressed me again with their sale prices on Mac related hardware and accessories. The new MacBook 17" wants an 85 watt current from the car charger and my old one peaked out at 65 watts. It took OWC a while to get one of these in stock to meet the new MacBook demand, but they've nailed it.
http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Virtual%20Reality%20Sound%20Labs/VRTP4N1C/

http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Newer%20Technology/IPH3N1U2AW/

I'm not sure how long these sales will run so gettem' while they're hot.
The snapshot:
* Good for DVDs.
More Detail:
I was happy to hear that Amazon had opened their system to individuals to liquidate DVD and book collections. I selected enough books to fill a box among books that I didn't want to keep and nearly all of my DVDs. I added these easily to my account as 'for sale' by entering the book ISBN or the DVD UPC code. I set my prices based on the provided average value, the lowest price and the Amazon price. I felt good about the list of items I had in the shop. Not a full day went by before my first item sold; a book. This is where amazon drops the ball. They know which book I'm about to ship to the buyer because I entered the ISBN, they showed me a picture and the title and I completed the item creation for sale. But they gave me a $3.99 'shipping credit' when the actual shipping was going to cost over $9. Okay, so The customer payed $8 for my book. Amazon took $4 as commission and gave me $4 as a shipping credit. I shipped the book for $9. I essentially paid that guy to take my book. That's jacked, if you ask me. I didn't need to be rid of it that badly. Amazon has these individual book weights on file. They have to. How could they not. I emailed this to Amazon and explained that I shouldn't be subject to a wimpy system when they are using a powerful system as part of the same brand and service. My $4 commission paid should cover my exposure to customers as well as the ability to allow the customer to pay actual shipping costs. I don't have a shipping scale, nor should I have to weigh each item, I am safely assuming that their system has the weight of each item in an accessible database. They emailed me back with instruction to increase my prices to cover shipping costs. I emailed them back explaining that this was unreasonable. No two books are the same and it shouldn't be on us to calculate coverage of our shipping expenses into the price of the item. My reply bounced. What?! No reply address for any email from any company should ever hit a bounce bin. It should go to someone. Even if that person manually routes it to the right place, acting as a communication routing center for lost or misdirected email. Sure put a SPAM filter in front of that person's inbox, but every time a customer takes the time to email you, you must accept that email, process it with a human and respond appropriately. Every time. Period. Amazon Seller Central: FAIL (...So far. Get your act together Amazon.)
I was sitting at The Hub in Springfield, MO and an ad sales rep for a local web site stopped in to pitch the owners on some ad space. His pitch was enthusiastic and felt like a sales pitch. So, how would these two small business owners know whether or not they would benefit from advertising with this site. This got me thinking about how many small business owners may benefit from the napkin of questions that I wrote up for them, for the next time this type of visitor stopped in.
It might expose them to a new demographic, it might build their local brand, it might make them millionaires.... whoa, whoa, whoa. Let's not get in a hurr. There is no real way for them to know what this ad contract will do for them. For one, their business is new in the city. And two, they have no idea if this is cheap or expensive, valuable or worthless. I can't guide you specifically when it comes to reaching your market with your advertising. However, I can offer some ways that you can handle yourself better in the conversation from a technical perspective. This will help you determine if you will have the tools necessary to identify the effects of your reach into the market and your ROI (return on investment). Here are some questions to ask the sales rep during and after the sales pitch. These will help you determine if you'll benefit and if you'll be able to identify how you have benefited from advertising if you choose to give the site's ads a chance.Luckily I had the fireplace to melt the rest of my tasty beverage into my glass.
See the embedded screen grab video where I poke around at it with my mouse...
I love finding things like this on google maps.
EDIT: Nope. Didn't work. False alarm everybody. The day I'm able to send this email and it shows up in the browser as proper HTML, I'll click my heals. (Work for Posterous or use Posterous? See the post comments for more details...). I originally thought Textile had been implemented when the last Get Satisfaction post that said "Textile!" was submitted. This was my enthusiastic, evangelistic shout out for Posterous.
Finally, you can reliably format the resulting HTML markup from a plain text email by using a few simple syntax rules in your Posterous post.
All of this HTML was spit out using the plain-text markup illustrated at these links: "for paragraphs (Examples of paragraph formatting...)":http://redcloth.org/textile/writing-paragraph-text/ here "for layout (Examples of layout formatting like bullets and blockquotes...)":http://redcloth.org/textile/page-layout/ and here "for text modifiers (Examples of text modifiers like html link formatting...)":http://redcloth.org/textile/phrase-modifiers/.
This is better because:
* All too often I had to go edit a post to fix formatting after submitting it by email.