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Home Archives for 2012

Archives for 2012

Fun with DirecTV

Posted on September 20, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

DirecTV
DirecTV
Now, if we could only solve the damn rain fade problems we encounter during Florida thunderstorm season…

Hey, I’m over the imaginary flu, so the lapse in posting is officially done. But before I get back to football, I want to rant for a while—and what better subject to rant about than my favorite satellite TV service, DirecTV?

Yesterday morning, I spent an hour on the phone with DirecTV, trying to order one of their newfangled HR-34 Home Media Center DVRs that allow one to record five programs simultaneously. This is a “must” for football season.

All I wanted to do was get them to send me the new DVR in a box and I would self-install it. But no, moaned the human robot I finally reached after six minutes of struggling with the menu system, “this product requires professional installation.”

Because I was getting annoyed, the human robot went the appeasement route. “I can offer you $100 off the price of the HR-34.” OK, fine. So send it to me in a box. “We can’t do that, Sir. The product requires professional installation.” (Yeah, well what if I got it from Solid Signal, a third-party seller of DirecTV equipment? I could install it myself, but they wouldn’t give me the $100 off, so I was ready to captitulate — almost. I asked how much in total I was going to pay. The answer was a number that was approximately the undiscounted amount for the HR-34 plus sales tax.

“WAIT!! You didn’t take off my $100!” I groused, fully into annoyed curmudgeon mode, “What’s the deal?”

The human robot responded that she did indeed take off my $100, but she had to add $49 for professional installation and another $49 for something that was lost in the bright splash of red that obscured not only my vision but also every other one of my geriatrically impaired senses.

“WHAT???? You took off $100 and then added back $98 for services I don’t want???? What the hell!?!?!?!?” 

I know. Professional installation is required. I’m going to need to have professional installation of pressure relief valves for the damn steam coming out of my damn ears, already!

I’ve had eighteen years’ experience installing and configuring DirecTV stuff and I regularly read their installers’ message board to bring my knowledge up to date when new products, services, and techniques are introduced. I also have, um, thirty-some years experience in all aspects of computer networking because I’ve worked at KEF Media for a considerable amount of time. I can handle this installation. If only my mama on the phone would grant me the forbearance…

“Why is professional installation required?” I asked all too calmly. “Why can’t I just do it myself?”

“To make sure it’s done correctly,” saith the human robot. “This is a complex installation.”

My ass.

“OK!! I can see I’m getting nowhere with you. I’m not paying for installation services I don’t want or need!! If you don’t relent on this issue, then I’m hanging up and you won’t be selling me the HR-34 or the extra $6 per month fee that goes with it.”

She then offered to take off the other, unexplained $49 that I was too busy bursting cranial arteries to have comprehended.

“Thanks. Now would you please escalate this thing to someone who can make some decisions around here? I just want you to send the damn thing to me in a box at the price you offered, without the so-called ‘professional’ installer who doesn’t know his ass from a hole in the ground showing up at my door.”

My anger was abating—slightly.

“I’m going to transfer to someone who can help you. One moment, please.”

A new human robot got on the line and confirmed my account details.

I should tell you at this point that after haven taken Effexor for a couple of years I’ve recently gotten off all this class of SSRI/SNRI type drugs, which are anti-depressant mood levelers. So, now, for the first time in recent history, I can get mad, or did you not notice?

And by this time, 45 minutes into a simple order call, I was seriously pissed off!

“What can I do for you today, Mr. Goldfrab?”

(Mispronouncing my last name is not something you can do for me today or any other day, if you know what’s good for you.)

“That’s Goldfarb — F-A-R-B, got it?”

“Yes, Mr. Goldfrab. What can I do for you today? I see you’re ordering an HR-34.”

“Yes I am—trying to, anyway!” I told her, with as much patience and level-headedness as I could muster. “I just want the HR-34, in a box, on my doorstep, without the so-called professional accompanying it. That’s all. And I want it for the price that was originally committed, with the $100 discount and no add-ons for stuff I don’t want.”

“That $100 discount shouldn’t have been given to you, as we have no promotions for this equipment. Furthermore, professional installation is required, so we have to do it th—”

[Sound of cork blowing in background.]

“What??? We’re moving backwards here! Now you don’t want to even give me the discount? What kind of crap is that???”

“If you’d let me finish, I was going to tell you that I would give you the $100 and I would also waive the $49 fee for professional installation, but an installer has to deliver the equipment to you. You can tell him you’re going to install it yourself and tell him to leave without doing anything, just as long as you sign his work ticket.”

Now, we’re cooking! The red veil that had been obscuring my vision was suddenly lifting.

“Hmmm,” I said. “I think you’ve got a deal. You’ve successfully calmed me down. I’m grateful.”

“Not a problem, Mr. Goldfrab!” 

I decided that I would let the name slight slide. Discretion is the better part of value—I mean valor.

“And since I see that you’ve been a valuable customer of DirecTV for 18 years, I’m going to give you a $100 discount on this year’s NFL Sunday Ticket®. I’ll also give you a credit of $20 per month for a year. Is that acceptable, Mr. Goldfrab?”

I was dumbfounded. Now, they’re giving me valuable consideration I didn’t even have to pry out of them!

“Absolutely. Thank you!”

She then scheduled the “professional installation” for Friday and told me that I would have to confirm the details with a third-party. (I’m not sure why they do that. It’s their policy to have someone with an almost inscrutable accent from the Maldives or some other cheap labor outsourcing place ask questions about the order that was just placed, essentially looking over the shoulder of whoever the regular American person was who interacted with the customer.)

“I’ll transfer you now. Have a wonderful day, Mr. Goldfrab!”

All’s well that ends well, name slight notwithstanding. The call took just about exactly an hour. Moreover, as long as the “professional” installer they send isn’t an ignorant slob like the last one they sent, I’ll actually let him do a free “professional installation.”

Then I’ll clean up after him, eradicating the shoddiness and the shortcuts, as always.

Persistence pays with DirecTV, which has always maintained a certain entrepreneurial bent in dealing with customers. Negotiation is entirely possible with this satellite TV company;  if you want to save money, you should bargain hard during each encounter. They’ll throw some hurdles in your path, but you should ignore them and tell them what you want. You wont be sorry.

I hope I don’t have to deal with them again for a while. And I wish they would turn down the damn volume on their commercials!

EPILOGUE

The professional installer showed up on time on the appointed day. I explained to him that it would be his easiest installation of the day, in that it was so simple that I would be glad to do it myself—in fact,  I would prefer it that way. But he was a nice guy and he demonstrated knowledge of the subject, so I let him do it. All 15 minutes of it.

Of course, the order taker(s) had screwed up the order. Par for the course. Yeah, they got the HR-34 part right, but the order was written as if I had an AVU TV I wanted to hook up and it said nothing about my turning in the old HR-20 in exchange for the HR-34. So, the 15-minute installation turned into a 30-minute installation by virtue of the installer’s need to contact the dispatcher.

I now await the current bill, so I can determine whether the supervisor babe gave me all the credits she had offered. You have to watch these people. In my 18-year history with DirecTV, I might have had a rare order that didn’t get screwed up in some manner, but I sure as hell can’t remember it!

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Filed Under: General, Television Tagged With: DirecTV, HR-34, satellite TV

The Imaginary Flu

Posted on September 19, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Ouch!
Ouch!
Ouch!

(The Turkey is impaired, so the next two issues of the football columns will be delayed for a day or so until the imagined ailment abates.)

So it’s like this. Being a so-called “senior” (in other words, old fart), I fit into some kind of high-risk category for getting the flu and dying from it if I get it. This being the onset of flu season, I was determined to stay ahead of the proverbial curve, as usual, by dropping into the nearest Minute Clinic in a CVS pharmacy. (I’m giving them a free plug because they have their act together. I’ve been going there for years. My doc appreciates it, as he doesn’t have to stock influenza vaccine, and I appreciate it because it is as close to a commodity priced medical care model as we are likely to get.)

Well, every year, I get a flu shot and every year, I imagine that I have the flu. This year, I qualify for the “high-dose” shot, which means that my imagination is running wild. Now, I have an imaginary high dose of the flu.

Wait, but that’s not all! I decided to get a Tdap immunization in the other arm. The nurseperson told me that his arm was sore for a couple of days after receiving this shot, so that’s no big deal. Tdap is tetanus, pertussis, diptheria, and I don’t know what the “a” is. I’m too lazy to look it up in Wikipedia, but people make stuff up in there, too, so why would I believe it anyway?

(Okay, you talked me into it. I checked the CDC site, and unless it’s a Washington conspiracy in action, T is for Tetanus, DA is for DiphtheriA, and P is for Pertussis. That last one is whooping-cough, which is what whooping cranes get when they breath our polluted air flying from Wisconsin to Florida every year. What the hell does that have to do with me? I sure as hell don’t know, but I digress.)

Now, I am obviously in the throes of lockjaw, and I’m beginning to cough a lot. I think that there’s a membrane forming in my throat. On top of the joint and muscle aches of influenza, I’m a basket case.

But there’s more. I recently decided to get off the mood stabilizer I had been taking (Effexor), which made me a zombie without the ability to eat brains to recharge mine. Being a weanie [sic],  I weaned myself off the nasty antidepressant as per the prescribed procedure. The side effects of doing so were to have been “brain shocks”, but I have experienced only one. I now wonder, though. While taking the stuff, caffeine barely worked on me. I could fall asleep on my desk at 10:00 a.m., which wasn’t hard because I was up most of the night. Now, off the stuff, my mood is no longer stable, and caffeine puts me right through the ceiling. So, I’m now an energetic influenza case with a cough and lockjaw and an occasional brain shock, unless I’m mistaking it for a brain fart.

But that’s not all. My girlfriend is pissed off at me because I — well, because I’m me. That one, I don’t think I imagined. I love her dearly, but she has no patience for me being me. So, I’m now a lonely old fart with influenza, a cough, lockjaw, brain farts, and enough energy to have worked two days straight on projects around the house.

What’s worse, I just read that I’m likely to develop geriatric autism from the thimerosol preservatives in the vaccines, because the whackos on the Internet say so. Oy vey! It’s mercury already! Like in my Star-Kist! Sorry, Charlie!

I’m getting bad at remembering stuff, which means I must have Alzheimer’s. So now, I’m a —

Never mind. This is beginning to sound like the Twelve Days of Imaginary Hypochondriacal Christmas.

I’m taking my damn imaginary flu to bed.

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Filed Under: General, Health Tagged With: Alzheimer's, angry girlfriend, autism, Ben sick, CDC, geriatrics, gerontology, imaginary disease, immunization, influenza, kayak on wall, mercury, Tdap, thimerosol

I Was Wrong!

Posted on September 16, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

My Official Turkey Poop Prediction for yesterday was so far off the mark that I felt I must own up to my epic fail. This is probably my worst prediction of all time.

As you know Penn State (1-2, 0-0) beat Navy (0-2) 34-7. Navy actually outgained the Lions by 50 yards and thoroughly dominated time of possession, but their four turnovers stick out like a sore thumb on the stat sheets. Navy shot themselves in the foot. The Nits didn’t fix their third down problems; they converted three out of eight. But Navy was far worse, at four for fifteen. Total Yards for the Midshipmen were 391 (17.8 chains) , for the Lions, 351 (1.6 furlongs).

Matt McGloin threw four touchdown passes and no interceptions. Allen Robinson became the first PSU player in three years to notch three touchdown passes in a single game.

Four turnovers by Navy. Gerald Hodges’ first quarter interception of a Trey Miller pass at the Penn State 10 saved a score and turned into six points for the Nittany Lions. I bet they’re kicking themselves all the way back to Annapolis. Penn State was able to convert only one of three recovered fumbles into points, that being on a Mike Hull run back 74 yards for a touchdown. Navy’s possessions came in fits and starts, and they couldn’t mount a decent drive until the fourth quarter when they scored their only points. They punted only once, because they were too busy handing the ball to Penn State to kill drives.

Sam Ficken, you ask? Whither of ol’ Samme? Well, no field goals attempted, so we don’t know if he improved there, but he sailed a no-excuses extra point attempt wide left to give us an indication that he’s still a work in progress, to be kind about it. And did you see the nose on that kid?

The running back situation was temporarily resolved by running Mike Zordich out of the tailback position instead of fullback, supplemented by Curtis Dukes. Together they ground out 97 terrestrial yards or 17.6 rods.

McGloin was 13-21, spreading the ball — sort of — among eight receivers. I say “sort of” because looking past the five catches by Allen Robinson and two by Zordich, the other six had one each. Converted quarterback Paul Jones was one of them, gaining seven yards on his catch.

There is still much reason to worry about the defensive secondary when Navy, a triple-option team, can beat them deep for receptions of 38, 28, and 21 yards.

All in all, this Turkey thinks the Lions are improving somewhat. They were turnover free, thank God. They’re beat up at running back and they have a ragtag receiving corps. It seemed clear to me that the defense was uncomfortable with the triple-option. Navy is a pretty mediocre team, so in meeting mediocrity with mediocrity, the better mediocrity won. Don’t be expecting any 34-7 routs of Ohio State or anything. If you’re about to put on the rose colored glasses (with blue and white trim), please wait until these guys have beaten someone good, which is still not likely to happen. But keep smiling at least until Saturday. Savor the win. Bill O’Brien sure did.

O’Brien got his first Gatorade shower, but he was smiling. It was also his first win with the New Nittany Lions. One down, 408 to go.

Announced attendance was 98,792.

Around the B1G, Minnesota, Nebraska, Illinois, Purdue, the #17 Mishiganers, and Iowa beat patsies. #12 Ohio State avoided an upset by Cal, 35-28; Northwestern scored late to cinch a win over Boston College, 22-13; #10 Moo U. was clobbered by the #20 Fighting Irish, 20-3; Wisconsin narrowly escaped a loss to Utah State, 16-14, as the Aggies missed a late field goal try; and Indiana dropped a close, high-scoring contest to Ball State, 41-39.

Expect a shake-up in the Top 25 in da morning, as the #21 Cardinal of Stanford shocked the #2 USC Trojans (ribbed and lubricated for her pleasure), 21-14. They shut down our boy Silas Redd, who had 13 carries for 17 yards (albeit with two touchdowns). But Alabama is a solid #1, having beaten the Razorbacks 52-0, and LSU should move into the #2 slot vacated by the Trojans after whipping Idaho by the slightly lopsided score of 63-14. Oregon will be sucked up to #3 with a 63-14 win over Tennessee Tech; #5 FSU beat Wake 52-0, so there’s your #4; and #5 Oklahoma was idle.

I’ll be back with a prediction for the tilt over across the state with Temple, now that I’m thoroughly confused.

 

 

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: Bill O'Brien, college football, Navy, Sam Ficken

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The Nittany Turkey is a retired techno-geek who thinks he knows something about Penn State football and everything else in the world. If there's a topic, we have an opinion on it, and you know what "they" say about opinions! Most of what is posted here involves a heavy dose of hip-shooting conjecture, but unlike some other blogs, we don't represent it as fact. Read More…

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