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Messages - ergophobe

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1
Marketing / Re: FCC: BIG changes for US Lead Generation sites.
« on: May 14, 2024, 06:10:07 PM »
Semi-related rant...

<rant style="angry, tired">
Meanwhile, Google called at 5:30am today after I had finally gotten to sleep after an unusually restless night.

My wife still consults on Google Ads for a few small clients. She used to have an account with a couple hundred thousand a month in spend, and even there the Google reps are usually really bad, but sometimes you would get someone with actual knowledge.

Now she's just doing some small accounts and you get the bottom of the barrel reps in a rotating circle who move up the food chain as soon as they are able. They seem to be under pressure to call every account monthly with utterly useless advice (usually trying to get you to turn on some new automation and, of course, to increase your spend).

She keeps telling them not to call, but they keep calling and they do so at ALL hours - 5:30am, 11:00pm. If she succeeds in getting them to stop, it starts back up as soon as the account gets passed to the next person.

Google knows what I had for breakfast, my secret desires and the chemical composition of my farts, but they do not seem to know that I live in California and do not want calls at 5:30am or 11:30pm.

It is so bad that when the phone rang at 5:30am today. I knew it was Google. I'm not sure exactly why, but it is a measure of how much you are annoying people if you call at 5:30am and their first guess is that it is you.

Me: "Is this fuc... Is this Google?" I bit my tongue on the 10% chance it was not Google. It was.

Once again, and the nth time, I told him, "Never call this number again. Never."

Usually lasts about a month until they roll one of the accounts over the newest junior employee to cut their teeth on customers that don't matter.

It used to be that we constantly got calls from scammers representing themselves as Google and offering ad management services. Those have dropped to zero. I haven't gotten one in a few years. But actual annoying spam calls from Google are constant.

At least the scammers of old had the decency to call when I was awake. Not so with actual Google. I hate them.

And no, this isn't because the client address is in another time zone. These are all California businesses with no presence elsewhere.

</rant>

[BTW, because of some family medical stuff going on in another time zone, I don't want to just ignore calls at 5:30am, because some of them are from good, busy people trying to help out as soon as they can, and I don't want to miss those]

2
Meanwhile, our landline service is degrading rapidly (crackles, dropouts, etc). It's like a bad cell connection a lot of days and neighbors report the same thing, so it's at a system level. We get the feeling that AT&T is planning to degrade the service to the point that even people who have no other reliable option will voluntarily drop off so they have even fewer subscribers the next time they bring this up.

For the cheapest, most basic service available, we are at $63/month (local plus 5000 minutes of long distance with no features like caller ID or anything like that). A similarly priced cell plan is a much better value.

Quote
The report, based on data through the second half of 2022, estimates 72.6% of adults and 81.9% of children live in homes with only wireless phone services.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2024/02/22/att-phone-companies-eliminate-landlines/72574152007/

Sooner or later, maintaining all that copper becomes untenable.

Meanwhile, Verizon sent out their propaganda talking about how they ares hardening their cell system against disasters with more generator and battery capacity.

At the same time, the cellular telcos are rolling out direct phone-satellite connectivity. There may or may not be enough capacity during a disaster, but that at least will provide service in a power outage as long as you can charge your cell phone (i.e. you don't have to keep a router and a Starlink dish running, which can be 100W for Starlink alone if it's snowing, for example). If this rolls out broadly and successfully, that reduces the case for a landline even more. Especially now that even Bluetooth can connect to satellites - https://th3core.com/talk/hardware-technology/humble-bluetooth-device-connects-to-satellite/

So the cell system is getting more robust and the landline system more and more fragile. At a certain point, even in rural areas where land-based cell coverage sucks, people will abandon POTS lines due to the cost and decreasing reliability.

All that is just a long-winded way of saying that I expect AT&T will raise this issue every few years until they get what they want.

I think the hard part is the transition phase. Nobody has a clear story, but one of the AT&T techs and a high-voltage electrician for NPS have told me that they don't have enough space and enough power to add to the current service equipment, so they can't add a cell tower and then remove the POTS system. They would need to do it in the other order.

I'm sure there are ways around that in the short term, but they are pricey (temp structure plus generator). People don't realize how much this takes. One cell tower with 3-4 antennas operates here off the grid on a propane generator. It takes roughly 1,000 gallons of propane every four weeks to keep it running. This is 9 miles from the nearest plowed parking lot, which means that in winter they deliver two 500-gallon tanks every 4 weeks by snowcat (so assuming the tanks are not empty after four weeks, let's say it's 200 gallons per week).

Anyway, that's 10,000 gallons of propane per year for that tower, not counting all the fuel that goes into transporting those tanks, especially in the winter.

The climate impact of that one cell tower is pretty large.

3
Marketing / Re: FCC: BIG changes for US Lead Generation sites.
« on: May 14, 2024, 12:50:14 AM »
Has the Do Not Call list actually cut down on calls?

I suppose it has cut down on calls from legit businesses, just not from all the scammers, which is useful - you can basically know a robocall is a scammer

4
Water Cooler / Re: NOAA declares a G5 (extreme) geomagnetic storm
« on: May 14, 2024, 12:46:47 AM »
>> friends posted pics

>> Cracking pictures

One of the sad things of our age is that photos are often better than the real thing due to sensors that work well in low light and long exposures. In Yosemite there is an annual "lunar spraybow" event. The photos are amazing, but when you're there in person it's just a faint shimmering. For a red/green colorblind guy like me, it's a non-event since that end of the spectrum is dominant.

So if you're looking at a 2-second exposure with an F1.2 lens, you're not seeing anything like what people saw live. I know this was true for the impressive photos people took here.

5
Water Cooler / Re: NOAA declares a G5 (extreme) geomagnetic storm
« on: May 12, 2024, 02:55:09 AM »
It appears we missed the aurora at this latitude. Apparently it was quite spectacular last night but we didn't hear about it until this afternoon.

Supposed to still be quite good in the northern part of the US still... and we just left Minnesota two days ago.

6
Water Cooler / Re: Quotes that hit home
« on: May 11, 2024, 06:05:26 PM »
I'm going to have to remember that one.

7
As the advice goes, it’s all about location, location, location.

36 million dead trees in the Sierra Nevada (2023)
https://www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r5/news-events/?cid=FSEPRD1088646

48.9% mortality in 2014-2017 in SN
https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/treesearch/58262

It’s rough times to be a tree around here

8
A friend thought he was going to save the planet by doing conversions to biodiesel from waste cooking oil, but when he started getting down into the nitty gritty of how that scales, it doesn’t.

But note that the article says “like waste cooking oil.”  It doesn’t actually say anything about the source of fuel for this test. It could be algal sources or who knows what.

It could be human poo (was that posted here?). And if human poo can make jet fuel, so could cow and pig poo. There’s a lot more poo than there is waste cooking oil.

I suspect like most climate solutions, it’s less about finding the One New Thing and more about finding lots of 5% solutions

9
https://www.techspot.com/news/102866-humble-bluetooth-device-has-successfully-connected-satellite-orbit.html

Quote
Earlier this year, the Seattle-based startup launched its first two satellites into orbit on SpaceX's Transporter-10 rideshare mission from Vandenberg Space Force Base on the central coast of California. Since then, they have successfully received signals from a simple 3.5mm Bluetooth chip over a distance of 600 km... According to the company, connecting any off-the-shelf Bluetooth device to Hubble's satellite network via a software update - even without cellular reception - could potentially offer global coverage with 20 times less battery drain and 50 times lower operating costs. Countless applications utilizing existing low-power, low-cost sensors could be developed without the need for additional expensive space-enabled hardware.

10
Yes sir. You are correct.

11
>> public squalor

Today's case in point: can't make a landline call because all circuits are busy. Apparently AT&T shutdown a major switching center in California (6000 nodes, whatever that means) and now the landline service is spotty and, in our area in the summer, IF you can get a cell signal, the circuits are often too busy to get a call out by cell. Bit by by we are losing phone service by any means.

12
People generally have no idea that power can jump to $3/KWH (aka $3000/MWH).

The spot prices on the wholesale market fluctuate so much. If this were passed on, people would be installing batteries like mad, which would eventually reduce the problem and thus the value of the batteries. But realistically, I think among the upper 25%, major battery banks are going to become normal in new home builds, especially custom homes.

As the Romans said: private luxury, public squalor. That seems to be working its way through every system in the US.

13
I think the retail side is also great marketing. I believe that's still the high-revenue end, if not the high-profit end, so that makes Amazon a huge gorilla that gets covered by the media. If all they had was AWS and that was a total standalone company, I guarantee this news would not have come up in my feeds.

14
“AWS accounted for 62% of total operating profit”

!!!!

Amazon is basically a web services company plus an ad marketplace with a retail operation on the side.

15
Hardware & Technology / Re: stick a fork in it; TV is dead
« on: May 08, 2024, 10:03:57 AM »
Will this kill local tv journalism in the same way online national text media and  marketplaces killed local text journalism?

For the most recent part, Sinclair has already taken care of that in smaller markets. The journalism is dead but they’re still putting it on the air.

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