Browser Fall Cleaning

October 26th, 2009 by Brian

Ever give much thought to the number of add-ins you have installed in your favorite web browser? Yeah, me either.

But, now that many of us are in Spring Fall cleaning mode (I drafted this post in the Spring….), why not take a few minutes to review the add-ons that you have installed in your browser of choice (assuming that you know what a browser is – mine is Firefox).

You may be surprised at the number of ‘extras’ that pile up in your web browser over time. Are you really using all of the browser extensions you have? Google Toolbar, Yahoo Toolbar, (insert anti-virus/malware/spyware name here) Toolbar, etc., and the list goes on endlessly. For me, the answer is no. I routinely install new extensions to test / play / learn and more often than not, forget to remove them if I’ve lost interest or moved on to the next useful plug-in.

Many of these extensions / add-ons / tools are like are the crud that we’re hoarding in the basement or attic – put there because we knew that we would have use for it – eventually – but have since forgotten about it and it is now collecting dust and simply taking up space. In terms of your browser, toolbars take up precious screen real-estate, resources can take a hit and in some cases, sites may not behave properly.

For example, Firebug is one great Firefox add-on and one that I use frequently to analyze sites (Fiddler is a good one for you IE users), but some sites don’t play nice with this app and can cause a poor user experience.

There are tons of useful extensions out there. Just take the time to clear out the ones that are stuck in the attic and you’ll have the room to bring home the next new shiny add-on that’s new and improved.

Agree? Disagree? Have useful comments? Feedback is welcomed.

FiOS Review

October 6th, 2009 by Brian

I live in the central part of Long Island in New York. In my area there has always been only two options for TV service (other than antenna) which are Cablevision (the Optimum product) and satellite TV. I’ve never had satellite TV and other than the great feature of the NFL Sunday Ticket, never had any desire to own satellite TV.

I had the ‘Optimum Triple-Play‘ package for over 4 years. Overall, the service was perfectly acceptable. However, the lack of competition for cable programming in my area did nothing to push them to innovate or offer up compelling products – until Verizon finally launched their FiOS product.

I signed up with Verizon in early September. 30 days in, here is my abbreviated review of my Fios experience to date, compared to my 4 years of experience with Cablevision:

I’ve purchased a bundle deal, as I did with Cablevision; I have the TV / Internet / Home Phone option with Fios. (and the freebie netbook from HP after 90 days.)

TV: Great! Absolutely love just about every aspect of the Fios television offering. An abundance of great channels, plenty of my favorites available in HD. Quality picture, clarity surpasses Optimum. Intuitive on-screen guides. Awesome multi-room DVR. Simple one-button recording. Multiple methods to search for programming – very functional and flexible. Handy widgets. Excellent online features to complement in-home capabilities, such as scheduling recordings (even from your smartphone).

Internet: Good. I have the 25/15 package (25Mb down/15Mb upload). If the speed were consistent, I’d be much happier. In the first 2 weeks of service, the bandwidth would fluctuate between literally .56Mb down to 35MB down. After calls with tech support, it has been more stable, although it still varies much more than I would like. Optimum, although not quite as fast with the base package that I had, was much more reliable.

Home Phone: Stinks. A little clarification; the phone service itself functions just fine. My issue lies in the lack of features that are included with the package. With Optimum I had some nifty little management tools available via the Optimum Voice website which I became very fond of. Things like a complete record of all inbound and outbound calls, available in real-time and on-demand. Ability to email a copy of all voice mails to my personal account. A simple dashboard to control features such as call forwarding, vip ringing, ‘find me’ feature. None of these were available to me when I signed up for Fios service, even though this is supposedly an IP based voice line. However, after much legwork by me, I found out that Verizon does have an application named the ‘Call Assistant’ which does provide some of the functionality I was looking for, such as inbound call log and notification of voice mail by email. But not much else. Oh, and I have to use IE or Netscape to run this app. I use neither of these browsers day to day.

Installation: Two parts to this; 1) Placing the order with the door-to-door salesgirl proved to be simple. Actually having the order go through the proper channels at Verizon to have installation techs scheduled to do the job proved to be another story. After multiple phone calls in the first week after signing on the dotted line, I found out that they had a total of THIRTEEN separate orders for me in their system. For one installation. 2) Labor – the tech who did my install was very efficient, knowledgeable, friendly and helpful. Installed my 3 set-top boxes, necessary equipment in my basement, configured and tested the free wireless router and replaced 3 old splitters in about 3 hours time. No muss, no fuss.

Contract: Ridiculous. Was necessary to commit to a one-year deal to obtain competitive pricing. With Optimum, no contract was necessary. One funny note on this, Verizon liked to tout their 30 day out clause, which stated you could quit their service at any time within 30 days of your order date with no penalty. Note that I said within 30 days of your order date – that’s right, burned through over a week of that 30 days from the time I signed the contract until the service was actually installed so that I could even begin to test their system.

Support: I’ll give Verizon a thumbs up for their handling of support calls – and I have had several in the last 30 days, primarily around billing screw-ups. Although it’s frustrating that I have been put into the position of having to call for support so many times in the past month, in literally every case the rep was very helpful and courteous. One nice surprise was that on every handoff that had to be made, the rep doing the handoff would explain to the next rep – with me on the phone – everything that had been done or discussed to that point so that I wouldn’t have to repeat myself. Nice.

To sum up, I can say that I will certainly keep my Fios service as-is at least until my contract expires (who wants to pay termination fees?). At that time, me and the folks at Verizon might have to have ourselves a little talk about their internet and phone service. And it’s entirely possible that I may end up back over at Optimum for these two services – unless something even better comes along by then. And unless Verizon does something to completely hose their TV offering, I will be a long-time consumer on this front.

I’d love to hear about your Fios or Optimum experience, please feel free to comment.

Blackberry Curve 8320 WiFi Fun

January 16th, 2009 by Brian

I’ve had the Blackberry 8320 (from T-mobile) for about 3 or 4 months now. I chose this model over the 8310 specifically because I wanted the WiFi option (rather than GPS) for voice and data coverage while at home, since my cell coverage blows chunks where I live.

I’ve been very happy with my BB since I got it and the wireless option has worked very well. Well that is until I had to replace my old Linksys wireless router at home due to old age and failing hardware.

First thing to note, my old router was an 802.11 b/g capable device.  The (first) replacement device that I purchased was a lower end Netgear. I only mention this because the performance of this router simply stunk. Frequent disconnects finally forced me to return it and spend a little more money on a better device, the Linksys WRT110. This router has 802.11 b / g and n capability.

I configured the new router and decided to leave all three protocols running. I also had to re-configure every network attached device since I chose to create a new SSID and use WPA rather than the WEP I had been using on the old one box.

So, the fun part; after changing the wireless settings on the 3 laptops, the Wii, the Playstation and the X7675 printer, it was time to change the two Blackberries. (Oh, did I forget to mention that The Wife has the 8220 flip?) Configured the flip phone first, connected to the AP just fine.  Then finally, my turn. Go through the scan for network process, 8320 finds the SSID, enter the passphrase and click Connect. And – - phone reboots. Huh. I must have done something wrong. Let’s do it again. Go through the same process again and big surprise, same result. After doing this several times, the phone no longer evens sees the network.

After some Googleing,  I learn that the 8320 does not have the ability to connect to an 802.11n network. But wait, the wireless router is transmitting in b / g and n, what gives? Rather than simply force the router to transmit in only b/g, I decide to see if the fine folks at RIM have released a newer version of firmware that may address this issue. I find out that my Curve has the prehistoric 4.2 version installed while a new and improved 4.5 had been recently released.  (Tmobile customers can find new firmware on this page.)

A helpful note for any of you considering the firmware upgrade, leave yourself at least an hour or so to complete this upgrade. You’ll have to download an 88 meg file, backup the blackberry, transfer the new file, etc. etc.

So, I complete the upgrade to the phone, hopeful that this may resolve my reboot / non-connect issue. But, as you’ve probably guessed, no such luck. Still not even seeing my network. Although every other device in my house connects without a problem.

Without any other options at this point, I finally resort to disabling 802.11n on my new router, leaving only b and g available. Once again, go through the BB setup – hold my breath for a moment – and voila, finds the network and connects just fine.

In the end, I undoubtedly wasted far too much time trying to get the Curve to connect to my n network. And here’s the reality; none of my laptops currently have an n-capable network card, nor the Wii, or the printer – and obviously not the phone. Not to mention that I’ll likely never be able to take advantage of the whopping 600 Mbit/s that the 802.11n spec provides.

One bonus out of this entire exercise – the 8320 does not have video capability. Until you upgrade to 4.5. :)