Summer alarm sales "scam"

Not technically a scam, but still something that I consider to be shady business practice …

This evening I had a young college-age kid knock on my door wearing an Apex Security polo with an official-looking badge on a lanyard around his neck. He had seen the ADT sign in my front yard and basically starting giving me the lowdown on a new Honeywell security system to replace my current one.

He explained that criminals knew alarm systems used the phone line so would always cut the phone line first before breaking into a home (“maybe you’ve seen that on the news or in movies like ‘The Bourne Identity’, cool movie” he said). This Honeywell system he was pitching used GSM cellular so it was always in contact with home base (“except we have better signal than regular cellular”). He had just installed one for my “neighbors down the street.”

Then he started talking about how Honeywell would be through my neighborhood in the next few months “upgrading” systems for free, he wanted to put a sign for my yard, and I started getting more suspicious. I seemed to recall reading/hearing about door-to-door alarm sales “scams.” Once I started getting that vibe I ended his pitch saying I would do my own research, thanks for stopping by, etc.

After he left I immediately called ADT to speak with a representative and of course they had heard about Apex and their door-to-door sales pitches. The rep told me that yes, they’re a legitimate business, they (ADT) don’t approve of their tactics, but there’s nothing they can really do about it. A few Google searches about Apex, APX, etc. turns up a lot of info on the company. Apparently they’re part of the summer alarm sales “industry” and college students can earn “good money” selling these systems for companies like Apex. They tend to downplay the Apex part and stress known brands like Honeywell or GE.

I can’t fault them (the college kids) for that, but I do disagree with their (Apex’s) hard-sell scare tactics. I can easily see the elderly in my neighborhood falling for this method (I found a local article from last summer where that actually happened). I also found this interesting blog on the subject.

Just a heads up … watch out for these guys.

I was “on” Buzz Out Loud!

Tom and Molly read my e-mail about AT&T’s Enterprise Data Plan (and the lack of text messaging) on yesterday’s episode of Buzz Out Loud (#743). The text of my e-mail is in the show notes and their discussion of it starts at the 30:28 mark in the podcast.

This is the second time I’ve had an e-mail read “on-air” by the Buzz crew. My first was back on episode #521 (Veronica’s last episode) when I pointed out that Molly mistook X-Wings for TIE fighters. The fun in that one starts at right at the very beginning and then continues 32:00 in. I felt kinda like the comic book guy on “The Simpsons” after pointing that out. Sorry, Molly! 😳

If you don’t listen to BOL (“CNET’s podcast of indeterminate length”), give it a listen!

The Heron takes flight

Today I did an in-place upgrade on my server from Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon) to 8.04 (Hardy Heron) and it went pretty smoothly (considering I did it remotely over an SSH connection). I had to re-apply a few customizations to various config files but for the most part all of the hard work I’ve done tweaking server since initially setting it up last October was preserved. Nice work, guys!

Vista SP1 + ZoneAlarm = no VPN

When I wrote about my Vista woes I mentioned how ZoneAlarm would keep causing Vista’s tcpip.sys driver to BSOD, which forced me to go back to the Windows Firewall. Well, a month had gone by so I figured that I would give ZoneAlarm on Vista SP1 another try. I installed the free version (7.1.254.000) and went a whole week without a single crash! I was happy in thinking the problem had been resolved.

Then on Wednesday I needed to VPN into work to fix a problem … and couldn’t connect. At first I thought that I had just forgotten to configure ZoneAlarm’s trusted zones properly, but the settings all checked out. There was nothing in the firewall logs about any connections being blocked either.

A few Google searches later, I learned that apparently SP1 and some third-party firewalls (like ZA) have broken the VPN client in Vista. There are a lot of posts on Checkpoint’s forums and even MS TechNet about the issue, but there’s no resolution yet.

Well, no resolution except uninstalling ZoneAlarm. πŸ™

So that was it … I’ve removed ZA and my VPN connection is working again. It’s back to the Windows Firewall for me until I can find a suitable replacement.

Labels in the sidebar

Apparently if you host your Blogger blog on your own server (like I do) instead of Google’s blogspot.com you miss out on some cooler features of the service (like advanced Layouts). Another missing feature is the widget that inserts a list of tags/labels used in posts into the sidebar.

Thankfully, I found a blog post that detailed a way to dynamically add the list of labels using embedded PHP. It doesn’t put the total number of posts with each label at the end like the blogspot widget does, but it’s better than nothing.

The joy of coincidence

I received an e-mail from Bob of Stormbringer’s Thunder blog who wanted to share the joy of coincidence: we both use Blogger and both use the same Blogger template. Okay, no coincidence there as there are probably hundreds (or thousands?) of other bloggers using those same tools. The funny part is that we both posted about how we love PortableApps.com on Monday (mine, his).

Maybe this is proof of the Infinite Monkey Theorem in action? πŸ™‚