I’ve not seen this email

I’ve not seen this email forward before so I thought I’d post it here….

This is an actual letter sent to a bank in the United States. The Bank
thought it amusing enough to publish in the New York Times.

Dear Sir:

I am writing to thank you for bouncing the cheque with which I
endeavoured to pay my plumber last month. By my calculations some three
nanoseconds must have elapsed between his presenting the cheque, and the
arrival in my account of the funds needed to honour it. I refer, of
course, to the automatic monthly deposit of my entire salary, an
arrangement which, I admit, has only been in place for eight years.

You are to be commended for seizing that brief window of opportunity,
and also for debiting my account with $50 by way of penalty for the
inconvenience I caused to your bank. My thankfulness springs from the
manner in which this incident has caused me to rethink my errant
financial ways. You have set me on the path of fiscal righteousness.

No more will our relationship be blighted by these unpleasant incidents,
for I am restructuring my affairs in 2000, taking as my model the
procedures, attitudes and conduct of your very bank. I can think of no
greater compliment, and I know you will be excited and proud to hear it.

To this end, please be advised about the following changes:-

I have noticed that whereas I personally attend to your telephone calls
and letters, when I try to contact you I am confronted by the
impersonal, ever-changing, pre-recorded, faceless entity which your bank
has become.

From now on I, like you, choose only to deal with a flesh and blood
person. My mortgage and loan repayments will, therefore and hereafter,
no longer be automatic, but will arrive at your bank, by check,
addressed personally and confidentially to an employee of your branch,
whom you must nominate.
You will be aware that it is an offence under the Postal Act for any
other person to open such an envelope.

Please find attached an Application for Authorized Contact Status which
I require your chosen employee to complete. I am sorry it runs to eight
pages, but in order that I know as much about him or her as your bank
knows about me, there is no alternative. Please note that all copies of
his or
her medical history must be countersigned by a Justice of the Peace, and
that the mandatory details of his/her financial situation (income,
debts, assets and liabilities) must be accompanied by documented proof.

In due course I will issue your employee with a PIN number which he/she
must quote in all dealings with me. I regret that it cannot be shorter
than 28 digits but, again, I have modelled it on the number of button
presses required to access my account balance on your phone bank
service.

As they say, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.

Let me level the playing field even further by introducing you to my new
telephone system, which you will notice, is very much like yours.

My Authorized Contact at your bank, the only person with whom I will
have any dealings, may call me at any time and will be answered by an
automated voice. Press buttons as follows:

1) To make an appointment to see me;

2) To query a missing payment;

3) To transfer the call to my living room in case I am there;

4) To transfer the call to my bedroom in case I am sleeping;

5) To transfer the call to my toilet in case I am attending to
nature;

6) To transfer the call to my mobile phone in case I am not at home;

7) To leave a message on my computer [to leave a message, a password
to access my computer is required:
password will be communicated at a later date to the Authorized
Contact];

8) To return to the main menu and listen carefully to options 1
through 7;

9) To make a general complaint or inquiry.

The Authorized Contact will then be put on hold, pending the attention
of my automated answering service. While this may on occasion involve a
lengthy wait, uplifting music will play for the duration. This month
I’ve chosen a refrain from “The best of Woody Guthrie”:

“Oh, the banks are made of marble
With a guard at every door
And the vaults are filled with silver
That the miners sweated for”

After twenty minutes of that, our mutual Contact will probably know it
by heart.

On a more serious note, we come to the matter of cost. As your bank has
often pointed out, the ongoing drive for greater efficiency comes at a
cost, a cost which you have always been quick to pass on to me.

Let me repay your kindness by passing some costs back. First, there is
the matter of advertising material you send me. This I will read for a
fee of $20 per page. Inquiries from your Authorized Contact will be
billed at $5 per minute of my time spent in response. Any debits to my
account, as, for example, in the matter of the penalty for the
dishonoured cheque, will be passed back to you. My new phone service
runs at 75 cents a minute (even Woody Guthrie doesn’t come for free), so
you would be well advised to keep your inquiries brief and to the point.

Regrettably, but again following your example, I must also levy an
establishment fee of 2% of my balance or $50 (whichever is more) to
cover the setting up of this new arrangement.

May I wish you a happy, if ever-so-slightly less prosperous, New Year.

Your humble client,”

Charles White

Wow – a company VERY

Wow – a company VERY close to home paid £4500 to have their web site guaranteed to appear in the first page of all major search engines for selected terms. Unfortunately the gullible person who signed the agreement has no idea how easy it is to manipulate search engine results – remember elephant toes? – and says “well for the amount we’re paying them its not too bad”. Excuse me? Pay me that amount and I’ll personally write to google and ask to be ranked as number 1…..and to think that payrises are in short supply this year!

Nasty web page ahead! Clicking

Nasty web page ahead! Clicking on this link makes my Windows98 (fully serviced pack with uptodate patches) reboot! No idea why it does it. At the moment my WindowsXP box is installing NTServer so I can’t test it on that just yet 🙁 Anyone else brave enough to see why it does it? (it also does it in Mozilla too)
Update After a bit of digging, using the SamSpade tool, the above url resolves back to ShopCreator domain which uses cold fusion to power the web server (which has used some sort of tool to export IIS3 webserver pages). Anyway, going to the shopcreator.com server also causes the machine to reboot. If I try to get the main page using SamSpade it causes a gpf blue screen complaining about instability in MSTCP.VXD and the pc has to be rebooted manually. – Very weird
Update2Works ok in W2K server,service pack3.

Did my first practise exam

Did my first practise exam on Windows2000 this afternoon and got the ip addressing question correct even though the question itself did not make much sense. And all due to the NET ID options in subnetting 🙂 I got 31 questions correct and 5 wrong. The wrong ones were stuff I hadn’t actually studied yet so i was quite pleased. A lot of the questions I had covered on the course – so thats a good sign! Try it yourself at ExamCram2 On a related note I was looking at the Bootcamp information and they reckon you need 120 hours of self study before attending the course – over 3 months thats 80 minutes a day – thats a fair amount of studying!

I’m at a Windows2000 training

I’m at a Windows2000 training course this week, hence the reason for no posts so far…..One of the things we were looking at yesterday was the makeup of short file names for long named files for backwards compatibility. Being the curious sort (also sad according to the instructor) I decided to create 68000 files to see if the name changed to a ~2 at the end of the filename after 65000(ish) files. Left it running at 3pm yesterday and it was at 38000 this morning – i think it stopped overnight when the screen was locked. It is now running extremely slowly and sometimes takes 20 seconds just to copy a 20 byte file – mind you sometimes it does 1 file a second – weird!