"There’s nothing in the middle of
the road but yellow stripes and dead armadillos."
Jim Hightower

Wednesday 8 September 2010

ReedsCo – New Updates

Reed Tan has recently updated his Maximum Visibility (MV) watch to a Maximum Visibility II (MV II) with a new movement; different face and hand options.
I think these offer a significant and welcome upgrade to the watch and have recently returned my V1 to be upgraded.
This was originally volunteered by Reed and shows the commitment to his brand and the excellent customer service he offers.

iTunes VAT receipts

If you’re a VAT registered business using the iPad and/or iPhone and are purchasing applications for business use or as part of your application development research, you’ll probably want a VAT receipt from Apple and will have noticed that all the receipts provided clearly state that ‘… this is _not_ a VAT receipt…”

In which case, you may be interested in the following article that describes how Jeremy Richards was able to obtain VAT receipts.

[Update 09/09/2010 – 10:00]

Received 2 VAT invoices this morning – out of a backlog of 8, along with an email stating:

Greetings from iTunes Store Customer Support. I understand that you wish to have a VAT invoices for your purchases. I can certainly see your concern. My name is Srinivas and I will do my best to provide you an appropriate information.

I would like to inform you that, the iTunes Store sells only to customers as end-users for personal, noncommercial use in their respective countries of residence. For more information, you can review the iTunes Store Terms and Conditions:

http://www.apple.com/legal/itunes/ww

Thank you for being an iTunes Store customer. Apple appreciates your business and understanding in this regard.

Regards,

Srinivas

iTunes Store Customer Support

I have replied using Jeremy’s erudite response template …

Dear Srinivas

Many thanks for your reply. Whilst I understand that your terms state that the applications are for personal use I would like to draw your attention to the Apple website that refers to business applications on many occasions. Just look at all these applications on offer. This part is on the iPhone tab 'With iPhone, you get secure corporate network connectivity, access to thousands of business apps, and tool for developing your own company apps.' Are you really telling me that you are selling people apps that they are not allowed to use?

It is irrelevant whether I wish to use my purchase for personal of business benefit. I am a VAT registered individual and I am requesting a VAT invoice. By UK law you have to supply me with one. Please see the [tax office website] for confirmation.

I note that you have already sent me VAT invoices for transaction IDs:

<Invoices Received>

I am currently missing VAT invoices for:

<Invoices Missing>

I look forward to receiving them, etc…

There’s also a similar experience posted here.

[Update 09/09/2010 – 16:00]

All missing VAT receipts received…

Monday 23 August 2010

Fibre to the Cabinet

Given that the speed on my broadband connection has reduced from 2.1MB/s to 841KB/s over the past 12 months for no obvious reasons – the service provider always claims the line length as the issue, I’m really looking forward to BT’s roll-out of Fibre to the Cabinet (FTTC).

If you’re interested in finding out when you’re schedule to go live, then there’s a list here  - I should be patched in by 31st December 2010. Fingers crossed that BT are ahead, rather than behind schedule!

Thursday 5 August 2010

Pixmania – Buyers beware!

Be very careful when buying from Pixmania. For sure, their prices are very competitive, but the goods are shipped from France… and sometimes they’re selling the French version. It is normally noted on the page for the item:

Pixmania 02

This means that:

  • They’ll send you an adapter plug (European to UK) that you have to fit yourself – a minor effort

What they don’t tell you is that:

  • The goods will have French manuals included. You may get lucky and have the English manuals included as well, but a lot of manufacturers are only shipping the manual for the locale to save weight and costs.
  • The number given on the order confirmation email is ‘no longer in service’

    Pixmania 01

The correct number is 0844 369 0372 and it is possible to contact customer service via email as well – first you’ll have to log in with the email address and password you created when you purchased the item.

Calling the Customer Service number is fun too, the system doesn’t respond when you enter the order number and keeps asking for it to be repeated. Eventually, you’ll get to a message that says “All our operators are busy, please call back later” and you’ll get cut off.

I’ll let you know how I get on with sourcing a UK manual…

<Update> In the end I gave up with Pixmania and downloaded the PDF from the manufacturer’s web site.

Tuesday 6 July 2010

User Interfaces

I use DxO Optics Pro for processing my camera images as the second step in my digital workflow after importing the files in to Lightroom.

I was originally introduced to it by Ken Rockwell and it does a great job of correcting the lens errors and gives excellent results, but it doesn’t currently include one of my lenses – a Nikon 35mm  f/2, so I used the DxO site to register my interest for a module for the 35mm.

It is very easy to do with an online form to be completed.

The bit that foxed me was the spam check at the bottom of the form.

DxO

The attempt show above was the fourth or fifth one I’d tried… It seems that you need to type all the characters in upper-case. Obvious!

Sunday 27 June 2010

ReedsCo – An update

I’ve posted an update to my experience with ReedsCo here. I’ve quoted my comments in addition below:

The watch has been back to Reed and returned. Apart from a very minor glitch that happens when setting the time, where the hands move as you screw the crown down (this only happens very occasionally), the watch has been running reliably and keeping perfect time.

Overall, great service from Reed and (in the end) a very good, working watch that gets plenty of positive comments.

Friday 9 April 2010

Honda Lawnmowers…

Mainly due to my own laziness and not finding enough time to take it somewhere to be serviced, but my usually reliable Honda lawnmower had developed a habit of cutting out periodically. 30 seconds to 1 minute seemed to be the period that it had settled on, but always happy to restart after a tug on the starter cord.

The lawn here is very small and the balance between the inconvenience of the mower cutting out, getting the lawn cut and the time out to (a) find somewhere to get it serviced and (b) to then deliver and collect the mower were all in reasonable balance.

Having looked after and fiddled with cars since I was 17, (I like to think) I’m quite adept at figuring out the problem and fixing it myself.

This issue, however, had me stumped.

From time to time, I would strip down the carburettor and fuel system; clean out the fuel tank; adjust the throttle cables; clean the plug and fiddle with the wires.

Everything seemed clean and tidy and in good working order.

But, the problem persisted.

Last weekend was the first cut of Spring and the mower seemed to have settled on every 10 to 15 seconds as a reasonable running period, which was little too far out of balance even for me.

Google to the rescue.

I searched for ‘Honda HRB runs then stops’ and the first link had the answer – JustAnswer. Right near the bottom of the thread, the comment;

I decided that the fault must be electrical so I started by changing the Spark plug and that has cured the problem.

A second check on an alternative Google hit on DoItYourself confirmed the solution. Well enough for a trip out to Halfords.

Mower ran perfectly once I’d changed the plug.

Monday 29 March 2010

Picture Hanging…

Over the weekend, we moved a few pictures around in the house and hung some that had been waiting for us to find a suitable place.

We hung one large oil picture (140cm x 110cm) in a stairwell having run out of wall space in the rest of the house.

At a guess, I’d say it weighs between 15 and 20kg (30 and 70lbs) as I can lift easily it by myself and hold it against a wall without much difficulty.

After I’d hung it using 2 off No. 3 ‘X’ Hooks (with 2 nails) about 80cm apart it seemed secure enough and I moved on to other jobs…

My subconscious had other ideas and prompted me, as a I was waking up this morning, to double-check and figure out whether the picture would stay fixed to the wall!

After some ‘research’ (i.e. Googling for ‘picture hook SWL’ and ‘picture hook pull out’) I found Danny Lipford (there are other references 1) who has done some testing and has found that the pull-out load on a single nail picture hanger is between 60 and 80lbs (27 and 36kgs) with a Safe Working Load (SWL) – or as it is now known Working Load Limit (WLL), of about 10 to 30lbs less (4.5 to 14kgs).

Danny said the “While the fasteners pulled out of the wall at the pounds listed (except for toggles, which remained intact), they started showing signs of failure at 10-30 pounds less…

Danny didn’t say which hooks the load reductions applied to, but I’m going to assume the 10lb reduction was on the small hook and the 30lb reduction was on the large hook.

This would give a general WLL of 50lbs (23Kgs) for any of the hooks.

If I can remember back to my Strength of Materials classes; the load divides evenly and that although the vertical load of 10kgs will place a side load on the frame and tension in the wire, in this case the hooks act as pin joints and only react the vertical loads.

This would mean that each hook is supporting a maximum of 10Kgs (22lbs) with a safety factor of between 2.3 and 3, which I think is acceptable given the pictures location and likelihood of it receiving extra load (aka children – or adults, fiddling with it!)

Footnotes

1 – I also found the exactly same tests reported here, but neither quote an original source and couldn’t determine who should get the reference.

Tuesday 16 March 2010

Absolute Sonos

I have a small Sonos system at home, with a bridge, two zones and one controller. Although the zones form their own mesh and have a level of resiliency, the weak link in the chain (in my installation) is the bridge from the Sonos network to the home network and NAS where the MP3 files are stored.

Unfortunately, the last time I powered up the computer system after fixing a plug, there was a loud bang from underneath the desk as the power supply to the Sonos Bridge blew up.

When I rang Absolute Sonos to source a replacement, they very kindly sent one out FoC. I thought it was very kind & generous – certainly somewhere to go when I expand the existing system.

The system is now working perfectly again. Thank you.

Wednesday 24 February 2010

ReedsCo – A work in progress – Part II

I received a call from Geoff Allnut on Friday. The news wasn’t good…

“I’ve taken the back off and can see that the watch has a Chinese movement. I can’t get spares for these in the UK, so suggest you send it back to ReedsCo in Singapore”

Geoff liked the look of the watch but felt that the Chinese movements are not as well made as the Swiss ones. When I asked about how difficult it was to retro-fit a Swiss movement in to the watch, Geoff said “very”.

So back to Plan A. Reed is happy to repair the watch and I’ll send it to him over the next few days.

Update – 26th June 2010

The watch has been back to Reed and returned. Apart from a very minor glitch that happens when setting the time, where the hands move as you screw the crown down (this only happens very occasionally), the watch has been running reliably and keeping perfect time.

Overall, great service from Reed and (in the end) a very good, working watch that gets plenty of positive comments.

Thursday 18 February 2010

ReedsCo – A Work in Progress

They say that in football that it is a “Game of two halves” and it seems that my watch is similarly one of two parts…

I had left the watch for a couple of days whilst I was abroad; it had stopped and I needed to set the time.

ReedsCo - MV Series - Crown + ShaftI unscrewed and pulled out the crown the two clicks to engage the hour hand; set the time and pushed it back in. It didn’t seem to be sitting properly, so I pulled it out again. At which point I had the following in my hand.

Reed Tan was very apologetic and has agreed – to save on the postage between here and Singapore, for me to get a local watch maker to refit the crown + shaft.

I have used Geoff Allnutt on several occasions and he provided great support. I’ll let you know what he says.

Tuesday 9 February 2010

Watch links

My brother recently sent me some great links to watch based web sites. I thought they might prove useful or interesting for other people.

SteveG's Watch Launchpad

This link takes you to a chaotic start page crammed with may different watches, but it’s worth exploring the links as the detail photography is superb.

MK II Watches

A watch micro-brand specialising in diver style watches.

Second-hand Heuers

A couple of great sites for second-hand Heuers

Breitling Navitimer

The is a great site tracking the history and models of Breitling’s Navitimer range

Rolex

A fully comprehensive site covering Rolex watches

Japanese Watch Photo Database

The watch photo database contains thousands of images that have been contributed by members of watch forums and from a wide variety of other Internet sources.

There are great some reference Seiko, Citizen and other catalogues here too.

Friday 5 February 2010

Amazing how accurate Dilbert can be!

Although I’ve been happily in a relationship for the past couple of  years, I was on the dating scene for a little while.

This cartoon in yesterday’s desk calendar was very true of my experience. The next one I need to find is the one about free dinners and trips out!

Dilbert - Dataing Engineers

I did check Dilbert’s site before posting & think this is shown within the Terms of Use

A new watch

Breitling Navitimer circa 1970

I’ve had a (circa 1970) Breitling Navitimer 806 (s/n 1352977) for over 30 years after my uncle gave me one that needed some slight ‘maintenance’ – it was missing the strap; the glass was badly scratched; all the phosphor had fallen out of the main hands and the minor hands had also fallen out.

I’d always thought it was from 1965, but checking the serial number (1352977) here suggests that it was made in 1970.

However, it was still far and away the very best watch I’d ever owned. I was even more open-eyed once I’d been to the local dealer and found out how much it was worth… Once I’d saved up enough money – about 10 years later, I brought it back up to a good condition and very proudly wore it on special occasions.

Mind you, it is a bit like Trigger’s broom and has had the  glass and strap replaced a number of times. I guess watches are a bit like a Porsche’s paintwork;

Paintwork. How many times have I had some fool walk into the yard and ask me if the unblemished paintwork on a 20 year old motor car is original. Of course it bloody well isn’t. Have you never scraped a bumper whilst parking, had someone catch the side of your car with a shopping trolley, had a wayward golf ball land on your bonnet and if there is anyone out there who has never had a stone chip I will stand right here on my soap box and eat my underpants. If any or all of the outside of the car has been painted (properly), that’s fine - If it’s had surgery that required 2 quarter panels, a bonnet, a boot lid, both doors, the front wings and the off side wing mirror then that is a different matter. – from 911virgin

A growing family and a succession of houses needing repairs and updates put paid to any serious expansion to my ‘collection’, though I did add a Titanium Tissot in the mid 1990s.

Recently, my brother – who’s also keen on watches, sent me a link to Harry Tan’s personal site where there was an article on Reed Tan who lives in Singapore and offers his own watch designs.

ReedsCo - MV SeriesI looked at the site and really liked the clarity and simplicity of the ‘Max Visibility’; it was very good value at SGD280 (about £125, €143 or $198), so I ordered one from the web.

The watch arrived safely a few days later and looked every bit as good as the pictures on the site. If I did have any comments, it would have been about the length of the hands and the size of the date aperture – something Reed agreed with during an email chat.

I was perfectly happy with the watch, but thought I could add a second Reed Tan if and when Reed updated the ‘Max Visibility’ to the ‘Max Visibility II’.

However, after a few days, the watch failed keep time accurately, which was raised with Reed.ReedsCo - MV Series

His response was exemplary, the watch was returned and repaired without issue and the hands were changed to the latest – longer, specification.

The watch was returned a few days later and has worked perfectly ever since.

It has also drawn very complimentary remarks from several people in the office – one with a Panerai and the other with a Tag

I’m sure Reed’s watches will be very successful in the years to come!

Sunday 17 January 2010

HD TV - Blue line

I’d been confused by a thin blue line appearing on the RHS of my Panasonic TXP42V10B TV.

There were lots of suggestions following a Google search, but it turned out to be connected to the picture mode I was using.

If I had the TV set to ‘THX’ and was watching Sky, then the blue line appeared. If I then set the picture mode to ‘Normal’, the line disappeared.

Wednesday 6 January 2010

Adding NAS folders to a Library

Just found this great article that adds folders on a NAS Drive (Buffalo TeraStation in my case) to a Windows 7 library.

'Read the Effin Blog! - 10 October 2009'

Method 1 works perfectly!

17 January 2010 - Update

It may be unrelated, but I’ve been getting a number of ‘Network Busy’ errors from the system. The linked files that I’d created pointed to folders that were subfolders of mapped drives. It’s possible that this is causing a conflict, so I’ve removed the references to the links from the Libraries and from the system.

I’ll post an update in a few days if this fixes the problem.