Shoestring Theory

Currently documenting the house that is eating our lives, we will return to regularly scheduled programming in a couple of more months

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Quitting, again

April 20, 2008 at 12:53 pm by thetheorist
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Close up shot of cigarette.
Photo by SuperFantastic on Flickr (Creative Commons license).

I hated that my parents smoked when I was a kid, especially my mom. Sometimes I took one or two cigarettes out of her pack and threw them away. Once I poured a can of soda into an entire carton, which really wasn’t a very effective way of getting rid of her smokes, as they were wrapped in a protective sheath of cellophane. So mom just ended up with really sticky packs of cigarettes for awhile.

My brother and I always bought those cigarette loads at the Fourth of July. He liked playing practical jokes. I had another agenda. I can still hear mom’s voice…”What would happen if I was driving and one of those damn things went off in my face? I could have an accident,” she would say, carefully inspecting the next cigarette before lighting it. As a kid, I couldn’t explain that her being afraid of smoking was the entire point. No, I didn’t want her to have an accident, but I did want her to think twice every time she lit up.

The walls of our house were yellow. Not by intention either. In the kitchen, we had one of those big ugly wall phones, the size of high school text book. It was canary yellow and had a chalk board built into it so you could leave messages for people. No one ever did. It was hollow so you could store phone books and other assorted phone necessities inside it to have them easy at hand. We finally got rid of it about the time I was hitting high school. Mom had bought a set of refurbished cordless phones from the Home Shopping Network (“Jim, we’ve only got 38 left and this deal ends in 93 seconds, Call Now!”). When we pulled the canary yellow behemoth off the wall, we discovered a perfect white square of wallpaper. The phone had protected the wall behind it from mom and dad’s smoke. All around, the wallpaper had been turned into the same tar yellow color of used cigarette filters. Every wall in the house was like that, we just hadn’t realized it. Mom put a calendar in front of it. Kittens, puppies, horses, Scenic Sites of America. On the odd day that I would pull the calendar up to show someone what our walls looked like, Mom would snap at me. It embarrassed her.

I remember seeing an anti-smoking commercial on television that seemed so brilliant. It was just a little pocket timer. You entered in how many cigarettes per day you smoked on average. The timer would break up your day and sound a little alarm to let you know when you could smoke (something like this). Every few days, the timer subtracted a cigarette from your day, slightly lengthening your time between cigarettes. Gradually, you were weaned off them until one day, you didn’t need any at all. Brilliant, my ten-year-old brain thought. That’s so easy. As a kid, I couldn’t understand what addiction actually meant. That cravings didn’t come hourly. That there are dozens of little Pavlovian cues throughout the day that make smokers reach for their pack and lighter.

Now I do. I’ve been smoking for 14 years. Ug, that hurts to even admit. A few weeks ago, Mom told me she quit. I’m proud of her. And I want to quit too. Now I have a step-daughter, who hates that her parents smoke…and the cycle repeats.

I’m trying the timer trick I thought was so brilliant as a child, even though I know its flaws now. Today, I’m setting my phone alarm to go off every hour and 30 minutes. Yesterday, I smoked 10 cigarettes. A half a pack. Normally, I smoke a pack a day. It’s a start.

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Speed’s Place: A fabulous discovery in the Unmuseum

April 4, 2008 at 2:28 pm by thetheorist
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File under bizarre. We went to Cincinnati’s Contemporary Art Museum on March 22 (traveling for Easter weekend). On the top floor is the Unmuseum, a child themed, interactive display to entertain the kiddies (and the very young at heart, which happened to include our entire party).

The gem of the Unmuseum was Speed’s Place, a video art installation featuring a small room with an old movie projector and a bunch of antiques scattered about to create the feeling of some old timer’s work room (created by Michael C. McMillen). The projector played a fascinating video loop, but seemed odd installed in the kid’s floor of a museum. The video featured footage from World War II, old movie clips, skulls, distorted, horrifying faces and short, enigmatic quotes between scenes.

Speed's Place
Speed’s Place (pic by thetheorist).

One asked:

“Why does the working man die for corporate gain?” Ed Note – That isn’t a perfect quote, it went by before I could write it down and didn’t repeat again while I was sitting there watching it.

A trailer for the installation at lalouver.com, had this saying between scenes:

“I dreamed I had a three-way in Cincinnati.”

The entire installation was more horror movie than museum. The charm of the piece, for me, was finding such a dark and surreal piece of art on the kid’s floor of a museum. It was like finding a secret room in a strange house (which is how it was designed to feel). I wondered if the museum folk just couldn’t figure out where else to put it.

I just can’t imagine the logic behind the placement of this piece. Hmmm, let’s see:

Images of the dead, check.
Anti-capitalism messages, check.
Creepy images of distored faces and insects, check.
Sexual innuendos, check.

Let’s put it in the kid’s museum!

Most kids (especially the smaller ones) would probably wander straight out of this room after glancing at the projector and the junk, while only somebody obsessed with the bizarre would actually sit down and be captivated by it. It strikes me as a piece just waiting for controversy when some prude discovers some of its more disturbing elements and throws a hissy-fit to museum management. Maybe that’s why I like it so much. It appeals to my naturally subversive nature.

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North Carolina is the National Champion!

April 3, 2008 at 1:28 pm by thetheorist
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North Carolina Championship T-Shirt
One of two North Carolina Championship shirts being offered by CBS.

This is completely off-topic, but as a loyal Jayhawk I have to point it out. Patrick over at Fortuna Faveat has posted that the CBS Sports Store is selling North Carolina 2008 Men’s Basketball Championship shirts (I’m sure this link will go dead soon) before this weekend’s Final Four games have even been played. Thanks for the vote of confidence CBS!

The pic above is of a second NC championship shirt that even shows the bracket on the back.

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TotD: Take some time off

March 31, 2008 at 6:01 pm by thetheorist
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Tip of the Day: Take some time off

Sorry for the long delay between postings. We took a few days off over Easter weekend to visit family in Cincinnati. Since then, we’ve been getting the business ramped back up to full speed.

This is a good lesson for those of you thinking about becoming self employed. Taking a break is a good thing. Sure, you get no vacation time, no sick time. If you take a few days off work, the income for those days is likely gone (or less than it normally would be). You may miss out on some sales or some opportunities. That’s okay. There will be more. This was the first time we’ve taken anything resembling a vacation for about three years (minus one wedding). We waited too long and it was high time for a break.

One of the reasons I originally started a home based business was flexibility. I had returned to school, suddenly had a family to worry about and needed a lot of flexibility in my schedule to balance everything. Working at home created a ton of room in my schedule on a day-to-day basis. That flexibility broke down though when we started talking about taking several days off. I felt chained to my house or desk a lot of the time. Sure I could take a few hours off whenever to go to the littletheorist’s activities or run into Kansas City for something. The thought of going days without making sales, contacting my customers, or buying new inventory almost paralyzed me though. It’s like the entire house of cards could collapse if I didn’t have my eye on it all the time. This was not a healthy way to do business, and I knew it. It wasn’t even true. The business was fine and healthy and growing at a nice clip. My own insecurities and fears were just popping up.

The ladytheorist has really been working on me to relax and take time off every week. For a long time, I worked 7 days a week, usually 10 or more hours a day. I had to when I was in school. But, things are a little more relaxed now. First, I started taking Sunday’s off. The business kept growing, perhaps even more than before. Now, we only work a half-day on Saturday. Our customer base didn’t revolt because I wasn’t answering their emails at 4:30 on a lovely Saturday afternoon. We’ve got our weekday hours balanced out so the evenings are free for the family (though I’m still prone to do some work after the girls have gone to bed). Forcing myself to take time off also forced me to streamline the time I spent working, so I was more productive.

I still check my email more than I probably should, even when I’m not supposed to be working, but the reply sometimes waits until the next morning. So, do yourself a favor and plan some time off into your schedule. Even if it seems like that time doesn’t exist, you’ll find out that taking a break makes you and your business healthier in the end.

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eBay introducing its own affiliate network, dropping ValueClick

March 18, 2008 at 12:55 pm by thetheorist
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The Register is reporting that:

eBay is dropping ValueClick’s Commission Junction as the manager of the affiliate programs for eBay’s auctions and Half.com sites. Monday’s announcement came as the Federal Trade Commission announced ValueClick would pay a record $2.9m to settle charges it engaged deceptive advertising and failed to secure sensitive customer data.

About 100,000 eBay and Half.com affiliates will be required to migrate away from ValueClick’s Commission Junction by May 1. ValueClick has managed the affiliate programs since 2001. For now, eBay will continue to use Commission Junction to manage programs for properties including StubHub, ProStores, eBay Stores and Tradera AB, but it left the door open to drop ValueClick on those sites as well.

To state the obvious, this does not bode well for ValueClick. You can read eBay’s official press release for more details. The program, eBay Partner Network, will launch on April 1.

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TotD: Print shipping labels through PayPal for orders without a PayPal payment

March 18, 2008 at 12:30 pm by thetheorist
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Tip of the Day

Occasionally, you may need to print labels for shipments that weren’t paid for through PayPal or purchased through eBay. PayPal Multiorder Shipping allows you to create new United States Postal Service labels, but not UPS. It’s also a hassle, slower than the normal PayPal shipping screen, and can’t print some types of labels. Sure, you could just go to USPS.com or UPS.com, but I find printing labels through PayPal to be significantly faster than using either individual site.

There is an easy solution though. Just log into your PayPal account and then enter the following address.

https://www.paypal.com/us/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_ship-now

This will bring up the normal shipping label creation screen for PayPal, but without any information filled in and not affiliated with any payment. Presto, easy label creation.

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TotD: How to save money on USPS internatioanl shipping

March 14, 2008 at 12:16 pm by thetheorist
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Post Office Box
Smallest box you can get from the post office.

Tip of the Day

When I launched this blog, part of my plan was to offer tips and stories about what I’ve learned running a small online business and hopefully help others do the same. But, since I started at the same time eBay announced all of this year’s big changes, I ended up writing predominantly about that for awhile. I’m finally getting around to writing up some guides and anecdotes about running a small business.

So, here’s a trick I learned from a clerk at my local post office to get maximum protection for your items at the least cost. It ‘s particularly effective for international shipments going via Priority Mail.

International shipping is expensive. Through the post office, you basically have three options. First Class International is cheap, but slow and provides no tracking. Express International is expensive, but relatively fast and provides full tracking. Unfortunately, most customers won’t want to pay for Express. Priority International is still expensive, but delivers packages in a reasonable time and provides some tracking (not to all destinations). We prefer Priority International for most of our overseas shipments.

[Click to read more →]

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German group demonstrates security flaw in eBay

March 13, 2008 at 3:29 pm by thetheorist
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AuctionBytes has an in-depth piece up on a security vulnerability in how eBay handles scripts in auction pages. A German watchdog organization, Falle-Internet.de, demonstrated the exploit this week. The vulnerability allows scammers to capture a wealth of information about an eBay user that visits an auction with the malicious script in it:

By loading the auction into our browsers, with Javascript and Flash enabled, AuctionBytes was able to see the private information for our account on a separate website page set up by Falle-Internet.de. The information included IP, Name, address, eBay User ID, email address, Bank Routing number, the last 4 digits of our bank account number, the last four numbers of our credit card, and the credit card expiration date. The page also showed auctions that were being watched, as well as saved searches and favorite sellers.

eBay, of course, said they had tools in place to stop such activity…which didn’t stop Falle-Internet.de from proving that the exploit works with a live auction.

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Updated: eBay search badly broken this morning

March 11, 2008 at 9:51 am by thetheorist
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eBay search results
Click for larger image (where time is visible).

Updated: This afternoon eBay put up a post on the Systems Announcements board that the restructuring of some categories was resulting in not everything being displayed correctly:

Some items affected by last night’s category updates have not been moved to their new categories yet, which is affecting how these items appear when browsing.

We are working on resolving this as soon as possible.

As of 9 p.m. tonight, it’s still not showing as resolved, though Search did seem to be working better this afternoon. You can review the category changes here.

Thanks to Ina Steiner over at AuctionBytes for pointing out the official update by eBay.

Original Post:

Heads up, eBay search doesn’t seem to be working properly this morning. I search for the same items every week (some to cross check my selling prices, others to buy). This morning, eBay showed far fewer listings than is normal.

But, I re-did the same searches again about 30 minutes later and they are now returning two to three times as many listings as they were previously. These aren’t items that were just listed either, some of the “new” auctions in the second search end in just a few hours. As an example, you can see some screen captures of my search for “Tecra 8200” in Laptops (first search is the top image, second is at the bottom). I used the same search criteria: Ending Soonest, Location US Only, and US Dollars only. The first time, I got one auction for a driver cd. The second time, I got four auctions. Two of those end later today and none of them could have been listed in the time between the two searches (if you click on the images, you’ll be able to see a larger picture with the time left). This pattern was repeated across every single search I made this morning.

I used the Tecra 8200 search as an example because I could fit all the listings in one shot. For another item, it jumped from 29 to 82 listings in that same half-hour.

eBay search results
Click for larger image (where time is visible).

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eBay promises to refund money to scammed Aussies

March 10, 2008 at 11:04 am by thetheorist
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The Gold Coast Bulletin in Australia is reporting that eBay will refund thousands of Australian eBayers who lost money on fake vacation packages they purchased from an eBay seller. Refunds could amount to $1 million (I would assume that’s in Australian dollars).

The Bulletin originally broke the story of the holiday sales Mar. 8.

GOLD Coasters are among about 4000 people who have paid for Queensland holidays that did not exist in a year-long scam that has netted a Melbourne man about $1 million.

Unsuspecting would-be holidaymakers went on the eBay auction website and connected with seller beachesaustralia — operated by a Robert Kobis who listed his business as Cyber Blue Booking Agency — and paid between $125 and $350 for three, five and seven-night holidays in Queensland resorts including ones on the Gold Coast.

This is the first time I remember seeing eBay promise to make thousands of customers whole due to fraud committed on the site (not to say it hasn’t happened before, but it’s the only time I know of). Usually fraud is dealt with on a case by case basis. Anyone remember similar large batch refund promises?

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