Category Archives: Uncategorized

Advertising on Facebook-Improvement Idea

I’ve done some Facebook advertising for some non-profit organizations in Japan. I’irrelevant Facebook adve been impressed with it. Mind you it’s very much based on the kind of stuff that Overture (Yahoo! Search Marketing) and Google-Ad Words do. But it allows for better demographic targeting as Facebook knows so much about its members. 😉 (I’m not scared, are you?)

Actually I’m so not-scared of Facebook knowing my info, that I wish it would not show me ads for regional events, when I’ve already posted that I’m going to be out of the country…. With that said, that location stuff isn’t really working yet. Lots of third-party FB apps, but nothing that Facebook can really use to even better direct its advertising to me.

On the other hand, Gmail ads are probably the most relevant and helpful advertising I get. Like it knows I’m going to New York and Halifax soon, and recommends all kinds of helpful services for these areas. But even then Gmail can only be as relavent as the email I send and receive, and 80% of the advertising there is also un-interersting.

I think Facebook should know I’m a native speaker of English and stop advertising ESL classes, and also know I’m going to be out of the country on July 19th and not tell me about some “Elections in America” seminar in Tokyo at that time.

eモバイルのスマートフォンを使って、SNS挑戦

このページへは携帯電話からのみアクセスできます最近またまたちょっと日本語社会に入らなきゃ気がして、今時の社会の入り方といえば、SNSだよね。そこでMixiをやっている日本人の友達が居て、その友達はSoftbankの携帯でMixi日記を投稿したり、他の友達の日記にコメントしたりしていた。それで僕もやってみたいと思ったら、Eモバイルのスマートフォン(S11ht)でアクセスしようとしたら、「このページへは携帯電話からのみアクセスできます」と表示され、PC版へのリンクが出ます。凄く重くて、スタイルシートのフォーマットもぐじゃぐじゃ、使い物にならない。それで、Mixiを止めて、Facebookモバイルで遊んでいた。もうすぐふるさとのハリファックスに19年ぶりに遊びに行くし、カナダの学生のころの友達や幼なじみと連絡をするにはFacebookが一番だ。

しかし日本語好きや日本かぶれの僕はつい気になって、また日本のSNSを朝鮮したくなる。。。そこで昨日Googleの急上昇ワードで、無料ケータイゲーム&SNSサイト[モバゲータウン]または(モバゲー)を見つけた。携帯小説もあるらしくて、加入しようとしたら、Eモバイルのスマートフォンが未対応ということがわかった。残念だった。モバゲーはEmobile対応していない。
携帯小説はやっぱ、Sharpスペースタウンだ。
それとSNSはやっぱ、Facebookだ。

News Hosted by Google (with bad maps)

According to this article,
Google has started hosting news for the Associated Press and the Canadian Press.

Anyway, I was reading this Canadian Press article about a murder in Halifax, and couldn’t happen to notice that Google OS thinks it’s Halifax UK…

Here’s a link to it… be interesting to see if it gets fixed:News hosted by google bad map

http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5iA0gRWag8Bi2xYzl98t1-zVE8zXQ

withdraw from NAFTA in six months???

What is Canada to America?

Recently, I think Hilary Clinton said, that if the United States doesn’t get a better deal now, that the US will “withdraw from NAFTA in six months” .
from the American perspective, is like someone threatening to change their checking-account bank, or maybe life-insurance company. For Canadians, it’s like a spouse saying to a husband/wife, that if you don’t get your act together, I’ll leave you in six months.

If you viewed them as a spouse or even partner, I think you should say “how can we work together better”, rather than saying “if we don’t figure out a better way to work together, we’re gonna need some distance”. Even if the latter is implied legally, I don’t think it needs to be said by the politicians/leaders themselves…. I think how a politician treats their “friends” Canada, during an election, shows how they will treat there own constituency after they’re voted in… It’s like the politician who ignore kids because they can’t vote yet.

On an aside, I’m also angry at the Canadian who leaked that details of the conversation Obama had with Canadian officials

Where am I?- Facebook App

I’m trying to add this cool little Facebook App called “Where am I?”, that shows you were I am and what I’m doing with a little Google Map.  I think it has a problem with Japanese though, cause when I put my address in, it gives me the following error:


ERROR in /home/f8/www/geostatus/class_db.php:
Invalid SQL: SELECT id FROM locations WHERE name=_utf8’東京都品川区東五反田2丁目7-18’ LIMIT 1
Illegal mix of collations (latin1_swedish_ci,IMPLICIT) and (utf8_general_ci,COERCIBLE) for operation ‘=’
MySQL Error 1267


Darn.

A Rare Snow Fall in Kawasaki

八幡神社 Hachiman Shrine

八幡神社八幡神社This is a pic I took from my regular commuting station, Miyamaedaira (宮前平)… I guess it’s called Hachiman Shring or something… 30 seconds of googling suggested it might be dedicated to ancient Shinto war-gods… Whatever…. It looks pretty in the snow… Can anyone guess what the light is across the top of the picture?

Bug in Rampart For Gameboy

I have a lot of DS games, but one of my favorites is Rampart, which is one of two games on the title: GBA Rampart, Blue Army Defeated (GBA)

The first time I played Rampart was in this shopping mall in Richmond BC, when I was staying at my brother’s place in the summer of 93′, visiting from Japan.

It’s definitely an old school game. But the building walls and strategy… guess it appeals to the little kid in me who used to enjoy making similar battles in his head with Lego pieces… Also if you’ve ever liked Tetris, Rampart is a natural step, as the pieces for building walls are based on Tetris pieces. So fast forwarding again to my life now in Tokyo. After a long day at work, Brain-Age or Kanji-kentei, reading ebooks just can’t keep my tiredness and fatigue at bay…

I had great expectations for Metroid Prime Hunters on DS, but the requirement of using the pen to jump… makes it a pain, if you’re used to the Gameboy controllers…

But Rampart does the trick for me… I have missed my station because I was so into defending a castle or something. But then there are occasional hic-ups… Like my DS’s batteries going dead or say… a bug.

If you can see this screen shot, and know the rules of Rampart, you’ll see that I completed the wall around the upper left castle. And despite this, Rampart has a problem, particularly with these very close castles, where even if you surround it, it times and and thinks you’ve lost the game… I hope if they ever release the game for DS, that they fix this bug… and wouldn’t it be nice if they gave me a free upgrade for my troubles. 😉

Rogers Wireless Nightmare

Story 1
I moved back to Canada in 2003. I needed a phone to start my job search. I asked around and only Rogers would accept

foreign credit cards, so voila I signed up for two years with Rogers and got their Sony Ericsson T306.
After about 3 days of

giving my phone number and calling people, I was wondering why nobody was calling me back.
I tried calling my cellphone from a

pay phone. When I did, I heard the following message. “The cellular subscriber has not yet activated their voice mail. Please tell

them to activate their voice-mail before they can receive calls”.
I signed up for a mobile phone, not a mobile-answering

machine. Who cares if I haven’t activated my voice-mail yet’ I don’t even like voice-mail (on mobile phones, unless they sent it

to you as an MP3 which would be cool). I don’t think I missed any million-dollar deals, but still my social life did suffer directly

because of this major system design flaw.

Story 2
Some time after getting my Sony Ericsson T306 I decided to try and

read my email on my T306. I tried to set up my email accounts on my phone. It didn’t work so I gave up. I’m guessing now that it

was perhaps a network outage ‘, ‘at the time I set it up, but I don’t know why it wasn’t working, and I can say for surety that most

end-users would have just had my reaction. If it’s broke, and not than important, why bother fixing it?
In mid-October of 2004,

I started using this mobile CRM web application on my phone’s browser. For only 5 MB of data transfer I got a whopping $150 data bill

for October. I quickly proceeded to get onto a discount data plan, which would bring down the cost of my Internet use. I also started

shopping around for other carriers with the cheapest data plans, considering various camera phones, blackberry and smart phone

devices. The cheapest I found was Fido who was offering $40 for unlimited data on regular phones and $20 for their sort of weird but

funky Triband-Hiptop. Although bothered by the Hiptop’s lack of ability to click-and-call telephone numbers in the browser like most

mobile phones, I couldn’t beat the price.
In December I stopped using the browser on the Rogers T306 and gave it to my wife,

and canceled my discount-data-plan with Rogers, as I wasn’t intending on using the T306 for Internet use anymore.
In February

when my Rogers January bill came, it said that I had downloaded 6,381 KB of data and that my data charges were $319.05. I proceeded to

contact their Online Customer Service for which I was replied that I used the services and cannot have the amount credited back to my

account.
To which I replied ”Please be more specific as to the type of data you’re claiming I used.’
Online Customer

Service: ‘the Browser was launched on various different days at various different time, not possible to be an error’
I have

since confirmed with Data Customer Care that the email function (for most cellular phones, including the T306) uses the same protocol

as their Browser, which means they can’t tell what was ‘launched’ during the various different times.

On March 6th, I

finally found the cause of the data transfer; the email function in the T306, which I configured more than a year previously had

started working some time between October 2004 and December 2004, which was almost indeterminable as it doesn’t give any special

notification when new email arrives (compared with SMS which beeps every message), nor does the bill from Rogers give any specific

details for email usage. I proceeded to erase the settings to prevent it from continuing to download email, and promptly contacted

Roger’s Online Customer Service to share my discovery about the unknown data transfer. I never got a reply to that message.
/>I called Rogers on April 4th. I was put on hold and then the line disconnected. I sent a message to ONLINE CUSTOMER SERVICE

requesting a call back regarding the situation. They never called back. Instead they wrote back saying ‘Our GPRS data network has no

means or method available to ‘force’ a wireless product to initiate a data connection, unless the product is manually actioned to do

so.’
The Sony Ericsson T306 doesn’t need to be manually actioned to do so. It has the ability to have it be set up once, not

work because of an outage in their GPRS network, and then when the network starts working at some unknown time later, of ‘checking

email’ and downloading it without the mobile-subscriber ever being conscious of it.

In that April 5th email, they also

advised me to speak to a manager at their Data Customer Care department at 1 866 931 3282.

They then proceeded to send me

a letter warning me to pay, or they’d cut off my service, and also a bill for $1033.98, most of which was the disputed data-charges.

On April 7th, I tried to call a manager at the number provided, but was met with a most un-customer-oriented analyst who

refused to escalate my issue and hung up on me after accusing me of verbal-abuse (I’m getting embarrassed even mentioning this, as

some might think that I was abusive, like the rape-victim not wanting to mention it less people think she was ‘asking for it’). That

day my phone was also cut off. I called up billing that day and explained that I was currently disputing the data-charges, but that I

was happy to pay the outstanding voice-charges. I made a payment for $310.49, and was told that my phone would be reactivated without

re-activation fees and would have 20 days of phone use during which time I was to resolve the dispute. The phone was not

reactivated.

Reporting this to the ONLINE CUSTOMER SERVICE, I got a thoughtful reply on the 12th : “I have unfortunately

been unsuccessful in making an arrangement in obtaining a Data Customer Care Manager to respond to your inquiry. For this reason, your

exact intervention is required by calling. ”

My phone was still not reactivated despite paying the outstanding voice-

charges and being assured it would be activated for the following 20 days.

I then called, trying again to talk to a manager

at the DATA CUSTOMER CARE. The analyst still insisted on drilling me heavily before passing me to her supervisor. But first she tried

to negotiate with me, saying that a $100 credit is the best she could do. I explained that I am quite technically knowledgeable,

having experience in mobile-technical support myself, and was sure that few end-users could have gotten as far as I had in discovering

the problem, and how they might be putting others in danger of similar unfair data usage charges. I further explained that because I

was a ‘techie’, that I was one of the kinds of people to try out new services and then recommend them to less-technically enlighten

folks, saying “this is great”, or on the other side saying “that is a waste of time”. I further attempted to impress on her that I was

about to become the latter if I hung up without resolving this case with Rogers. She then put me on hold for 20 minutes after which

time I got to speak with her supervisor, Iv, who was quite understanding about my plight. However he did insist I took too long to

contact them and that the best he could do was credit me for half the amount, about $360. I tried to impress upon him that I had taken

timely action as noted above, but he could not concede. In fact he went as far as to imply that I was somehow at fault for having

relied on the ONLINE CUSTOMER SERVICE for such important communication to the ONLINE CUSTOMER SERVICE, and that I should have called

DATA CUSTOMER CARE directly sooner. I explained some of my problems with DATA CUSTOMER CARE and asked why they even have an ONLINE

CUSTOMER SERVICE, if not for providing a convenient method for customers to contact them. He did agree that the communications systems

in Rogers could be better, and that if I requested a phone call, that it should never take longer than 24 hours for someone to get

back to me. He also agreed that the networking department needed to report better on data-usage and that he would escalate that

problem internally in Rogers, but he still couldn’t concede that I was entitle to a 100% credit of the disputed data-charges. After

spending more than an hour on the phone and not feeling like continuing, I reached the conclusion of asking him “What do we do when we

cannot reach an agreement?” at which point he informed me that he could escalate the problem to his manager. I requested he do so, and

I was put on hold for another 5 minutes to get the voice mail of a M in Montreal. I stated my account number, telephone number, and

requested a call, and am still waiting for the reply. They still hadn’t reactivated my phone after this call.

I received

another notice of terminal of service from Rogers dated April 10th, this time stating that my credit-rating would be effected if I

didn’t pay the outstanding fees. I called the numbered on that letter (1-800-539-9605) on April 21. It is a dedicated number for

over-due payments. The number asks for the last three characters of my postal-code. I proceed to speak them and it tells me that they

don’t match. I assume this is because they are trying to match it with the number I’m calling from which they probably don’t have

on file as it’s not my home or work telephone number. I then asked for an agent and the telephone system proceeded to disconnect my

call. I then tried saying ‘Agent in a loud’ audible voice. I then got through to an understanding analyst who after explaining that

I was still disputing some charges, but that I had made a partial payment two weeks earlier, quickly reactivated my phone for 20 more

days.

Olympic Hot Springs

Went to the most wonderful natural hot spring yesterday:

http:///www.nwhotsprings.net

From this site, we looked for natural hot springs with the least hiking time, with relative proximity to Vancouver. Olympic in Washington was the best we could do.
We left at 7, in our new mini van (not exactly new-new). We arrived at the border where I got in trouble for not having my passport. We then proceeded on, past Bellingham to Burlington and turned west on the W20. I hadn’t read the instructions from mapquest that closely and discovered there was a small ferry ride, but that was OK, we got on right away and slowly made our way through the beautiful Deception Pass.

We finally wound up in Port Angeles from where we could see Victoria BC across the water.

About 16 km from there we found ourselves in the Park which contains the hot springs. As written on the web site, the hotsprings are not promoted by the parks’ people at all. None of the maps at the entrance of the park make any reference to it. I was warned about this on the web site, so I knew not to be discouraged by this. But there were some indiscrepancies on the web site, like the name of the road, and its distance from Port Angeles. Finally, half way up this windy road I saw a guy on a bicycle going full throttle up the hill. I stopped just a few meters in front of him, and I guess by my BC number plates and what not, he knew I was a little lost, came up to the side of the van and confirmed we were on the right path and gave me the goods on the good pool. He was sort of a hippy type dude, and spoke to me like “I knew what the mission was to be accomplished”. I felt honored by that acceptance into the brotherhood despite my disguise as “a nice family man with his family on the way out in the national park”.

Finally when we reached the end of a long windy road through the park, we came to this place that says “hotsprings, 2.5 miles”. Here there was a large group of cars very similar in appearance to the cars parked on Marine Drive on the way down to Wreck Beach in Vancouver.

However, we were way behind schedule. I knew that 2.5 miles meant a long walk for little kids. My faith was dwindling again. Just then our hippy-bicycle friend caught up with us and said “see ya up there”.

I knew that we were rushed, and ended up carrying Leon up most of the way. After twenty minutes we came to this river that was impossible to cross unless you hat deep rain/fishing boots on, or… did as we did and took our socks and shoes off, and piggy backed the kids across. Since the water was near zero degrees, I threw my shoes across so that I’d have to go…. After drying my feet off and putting my dry socks and shoes back on, it was the most wonderful feeling… (like getting dressed after canoe-dumping practice in April in Alberta, something I did in 86′).

After that I was convinced the worst was over and I’d shown my dedication to the mission. Up until then we met groups of young hippy looking people with tents and what not going up and down. But just then we met the first respectable family, two parents in their mid 40s with a 10 year old girl. They told us to reconsider, as their girl had a hard time, but they had gone all the way in two hours… TWO HOURS I’m thinking.. If we left at 3:15, then it’ll be … dark on our way back.. Part of their warning was there was a much worse crossing than the river I just beared, with an ice-covered-log bridge with only one handle… It turned out to be much worse than that.
We decided that we’d turn back at 5pm no matter what.

A few years ago a family friend, Hayashi-san and Susumu (Otoosan) were surveying some mountains in Mie Prefecture when they got split up. Hayashi-san was lost in the heavy raining pitch-black forest for more than 14 hours until a search crew found him. We didn’t want our family to have the same experience. Also I realized that we were out of liquids. Nana and I had each thought the other had the drinks, so the 500 ml bottle of juice we had was long gone and I was thirsty. However not long after, we discovered a little stream. I had my drink and filled up the 500 ml bottle and away we went.

Nearly forty-five minutes later, we stopped for lunch, and resigned to the fact that we’d probably not make it before 5. Just as we finished, a gentleman coming back from the top, asked me “first time up?” He then proceeded to advise me that we turn around immediately, as a 10 year-old-girl almost didn’t make it across. After we walked on, a younger member of his party turned to me and nodded as if to say “go for it”.

Just around the next bend we discovered the icy-log bridge. Up until this time, Taz had been in regular “park mode” enjoying himself taking little side paths and catching up with us ( which wasn’t hard when Leon was walking). But here I stopped and explained to Taz like this: “Taz, when we’re in Stanley Park, I don’t mind so much when you jump from boulder to boulder or what not, because we are always 5 minutes from a hospital. But here we are 5 hours from a hospital. So you need to be extra careful. No more climbing or jumping than is absolutely required. And don’t worry, there is plenty of required climbing.” Taz was incredible. He understood the gravity of the situation and was really in survival mode.

The terrible part was getting down to this icy-log bridge. The path was at a 30 deg angle down and total ice. I tried to convince Nana that the snowy edge was the safest, but it was the edge that went almost straight down into a rocky river, so chances of… being OK after a fall were slim. Once we got down to the icy-log bridge, I carried Leon under my right arm like a painting or something. ON the other side I found an equally challenging icy path up. At one point I found it only possible to get us up by slightly throwing Leon up onto a level path. He was so in-tune to my gestures and movements. It was 20 mins to 5pm and we were still OK. We went on and on and then found the easy bridge (see pics). A little past that, I saw the steam…

4:59 and we were stripping in to get going. Only Nana came equipped with swim-suit but that wasn’t a problem. Apparently the lower pool or first one is like Tower-beach, friendly to both nudists and swim-suits, where as the upper pool is the nudist only pool. Time was our only concern. I was surprised how perfect the water was. No taps or electronic-controls could have made it more perfect. Our efforts were rewarded and we were having a lovely time…
Sometimes the wind would blow and it would make snow crystals shower down over us. One gust made it feel like a snow storm for about 10 seconds. But it was mild and clear and aside from the time, perfect winter bathing conditions.

Just then our hippy-bicycle friend came by. Gave us the scoop on the upper pool. I said we’d definitely make it next time.

It was time to go. We were in a race to get over the two great hurdles before it got dark.

It did get dark, but a near full moon was on our side. In fact everything was on our side, we made it down in 1 hour 40 mins, made the last ferry for the evening at 8:30, cleared the Canadian boarder with little problems and made it home in 5 hours, a trip which took 8 to make in the morning.

It was a little hard for a day trip but well worth it…
We will be exploring more natural hot springs this year.

One unfortunate thing happened, my compact flash card was corrupted and I lost a huge number of pictures. We did manage to save the best ones of the family in the snowy natural hotspring. Log in to view the album and click on 050220 to see the pics of this adventure.