The story of how I sat on my Kindle
I sat on my Kindle.
This is one of the main things you should not do with your Kindle: sit on it. When you sit on it, it stops being a Kindle. The only thing it’s really good for after you sit on it is throwing it at librarians like a Frisbee. You can still use it as a 4gb thumbdrive, but that is besides the point.
I’ve sat on a few books in my life, and the books remained readable. Not the Kindle. They don’t tell you that when you buy the Kindle. They don’t say, “Hey, you can’t sit on this thing, you know.” If they had said that, I probably would have sat on it anyway, because who thinks he’s ever gonna sit on his Kindle? Not me.
I had gotten into the habit of placing my Kindle on my bed (just like any other paperback books that I read), and the Kindle, being so small and slim and flat had gotten into the habit of burrowing under my mess of blankets and pillows and other cuddly stuff that typically exist on a bed.
And all that, together with a tiring game of Team Fortress 2 forms the recipe for disaster. I sat on my the pile of blanket on my bed and heard a sound that blankets don’t normally make. That sound was the final squeak of a Kindle just before it became not a Kindle anymore.
Amazon Support is enlightened enough to send me a new Kindle right away. But as I’m not currently in USA that means that it would be a good two weeks before the new Kindle arrives.
Meanwhile, let me find other things to sit on.
Micro-T WK Edition Mark II
Awaiting phase 3 upgrades.. Car is damn fast now, wheelie like mad, but motors gets too hot..
I think ISP should NOT provide average speed information
M1′s reply on why ISP shouldn’t provide average broadband speed promise to consumers.
http://www.ida.gov.sg/doc/Policies%20and%20Regulation/Policies_and_Regulation_Level2/20070612111424/M1.pdf
I think it is perfectly valid. Some consumers are so dumb as to use 100mbps plan and get 6mbps speed due to poor configuration. Some thought that 6mbps = 6 megaByte per second.
But the WTF thing is newspaper decided to slap M1 by quoting only the most improbable variable that affects connection speed.
In a 20-page statement, SingTel pointed out that average Internet speeds experienced by users vary depending on how many are using the network at any given time. Speeds are also dependent on radio signal quality which can be affected by external interference, it said.
M1 aired similar views. In its response, it said it strongly objects to the proposal for ISPs to state average Internet access speeds as ‘there is basically no sound, objective and equitable basis to do so considering the many variables involved’.
It said computer processing speed and power supply would also affect Internet connection, as would the type of operating system used. Instead, it urged the IDA to improve public education on broadband Internet services.
In its response, StarHub said ‘requiring operators to disclose expected average Internet access speeds would serve to create even more confusion and disputes with end-users’.
Actually providing average speed is workable. But that is only if users are educated. Too bad our internet users are dumb.
As I have said and I will say again, I think that people should only use technology WHEN AND ONLY WHEN they know precisely what they are using. No point calling yourself an internet user and not knowing how to even setup an internet connection, and then when issues arrive leave all the responsibilities to customer support. Customer support are not the ones who want to use your laptop or internet connection. You are the one. That is not knowing how to use the internet. Someone else knows how to use and allow you to use it. That’s all.
Too bad, we are living in the iPhone generation. Consumers are getting dumber and dumber. There are people who change their phone to iPhone because “iPhone can watch youtube!” when they old phone can do that too, but the user is unaware of it.
Despite the technological penetration, we are living in a society where the bulk of the technology users think they know technology, but actually don’t. Such a society is definitely not one where you should reveal average speed information to, especially when they don’t know that 99.9% of the factors determining internet speed are not up to the ISP’s control.
Until the day when we have zero user calling customer support to complain about slow internet speed (but actually because the computer is flooded with spambots and viruses), [AND SOME OF THESE PEOPLE ARE FROM SCHOOL OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT FROM SMU!!!], we are definitely not ready for such transparency from ISPs.

