Verizon: Not so Evil

You may recall me recounting my experience with Verizon’s customer support, which didn’t turn out very well. But yesterday I had a very different result when I had reason to encounter them again. This time, it involved actually going down to a Verizon store to have them look at my phone (a Verizon XV6700 Pocket PC phone) because the USB port wasn’t working, which meant that I couldn’t sync it with my PC or charge it (which was a much bigger problem). Actually, the problem was visible–I could look at the port and see that the chip inside appeared to be damaged, which was hardly surprising as I’d been having trouble syncing and charging for some time (it wouldn’t work unless you plugged it in just right, which was rather hard to do).

I thought they’d charge me an outrageous sum to fix it, or tell me I needed a new phone and I’d have to shell out for it. Luckily, it didn’t come to that, as I don’t know what I would’ve done had that been the only option, since I’m only planning to keep this phone until my contract with Verizon expires so I can get an iPhone. Turns out my phone was still under warranty; it’s been over a year since I got it, so I must have went for the extended service plan when I bought it. And happily, the warranty resulted in me getting a brand new phone. Which was nice, because trying to get the old one to sync/charge was really starting to annoy the crap out of me.

Pretty much no data was lost–only a few photos I had on the phone (which were only shots of recent Scrabble games)–and reloading everything onto the phone was a simple and relatively painless process.

In other (related) tech news, Gmail recently implemented IMAP email into their service (which is sort of like POP, but superior). Got that setup with Outlook without much trouble. (But man, what a miserable program that is. Doing something as simple as marking a lot of messages "read" seems to be too much for it to handle without crashing or locking up the entire system.)

After successfully setting it up on the PC, I tried to set it up on the phone. I’ve always just used Gmail’s mobile interface in Pocket IE to read my mail because I could never get the phone’s Pocket Outlook (or whatever it is) to work correctly for my email. Still can’t get it to work with IMAP. Or rather, it looks like it’s working fine, but almost all of the messages it downloads turn out to be blank when I open them. Strangely, not all of them. A message I received from a Yahoo Mail account was readable on the phone, but nothing else I checked was (including stuff from other Gmail accounts). If anyone can figure that out, I’d appreciate the help! Or if there’s a good Pocket PC email management app I could download, I’d go for that. Frustratingly, Gmail has a mobile app for Gmail, but it’s only good for regular cell phones with mobile web, not for more advanced phones like mine that actually use the Internet.

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The Post Office is Evil

According to A Different Stripe, Congress will be holding hearings on the recent postal rate hikes on October 30th, which were supposedly *written by* Time Warner and benefit megacorps while putting the screws to smaller magazines (like, say, F&SF).

But there’s something you can do about it. A Different Stripe also quotes a letter by the publisher of The New York Review of Books:

Free Press, working with a wide variety of small publishers, is hoping to collect well over 100,000 signatures by the end of this week in order to get the attention of the committee members prior to the hearing.

We hope you will join in this effort. These new postal rates threaten the existence of the small independent magazines and journals that are so important to a free press and a vibrant democracy.

Stamp Out the Rate Hike: Stop the Post Office

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links for 2007-10-24

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World Fantasy Convention Schedule

I’ll be attending the World Fantasy Convention at the beginning of next month. I’m not on any panels, but I hope to see some of you at Shimmer’s Pirate Party, which is scheduled for Friday night. When I have other details, I’ll post them here.

I also hope some of you will attend one of the readings I’ve setup for my editorial projects. Both are on Saturday in Suite 556 (5th floor of THE SARATOGA HOTEL):

  • 1:00 PM – Shimmer: The Pirate Issue
    Featuring readings from: Rajan Khanna, Justine Graykin, J. Kathleen Cheney, Jill Snider Lum, and Marissa K. Lingen
  • 3:00 PM – Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse
    Featuring readings from: Carol Emshwiller, John Langan, and Elizabeth Bear

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Stephen King: F&SF is the Gold Standard

Stephen King recently appeared on WNYC’s The Leonard Lopate Show, on which he discussed the state of the short story. In the process of doing so, he heaped a whole lotta love on F&SF, such as this gem of a quote: "I maintain Fantasy & Science Fiction is still the gold standard when it comes to short fiction in the United States of America…"

Here’s a link to the show’s website, where you can listen to the entire interview.

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F&SF Sept./Oct. Acquisitions

F&SF’s September/October acquisitions include:

  • Fulbrim’s Finding Matthew Hughes (7500)
  • Inside Story by Albert Cowdrey (7350)
  • Five Thrillers by Robert Reed (16,400)
  • Immortal Snake by Rachel Pollack (17,300)
  • Litany by Rand B. Lee (14,600)
  • Reader’s Guide by Lisa Goldstein (3000)

And also, since he let it out of the bag on the radio the other day, it’s safe to say that we acquired the following:

  • The New York Times at Special Bargain Rates by Stephen King (3100)

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