Archive for the ‘misc’ Category

tårevåt avskjed

December 18th, 2006

Hei!

Vi har ikke registrert at du har betalt medlemskontingenten til Europeisk Ungdom for 2006. Hvis du vil ha Norge inn i EU så fort som mulig – er det enkleste du kan gjøre å betale kontingenten så fort som mulig.

Mange medlemmer gir oss tyngden vi trenger – både økonomisk og organisatorisk – til å være synlige og kjempe for norsk EU-medlemskap hver eneste dag.

Fortsetter du som medlem vil du fortsette å få medlemsblad og utsendelser, og muligheten til å delta på arrangementer i Norge og i hele Europa.

Hvis du ikke betaler innen årets slutt vil du meldes ut av Europeisk Ungdom f.o.m. 01.01.2007.

Du skal ha fått tilsendt giro i Posten for over en uke siden, og har du ikke det har vi feil adresse i vårt register. Meld adresseendring ved å svare på denne e-posten så får du tilsendt utgave 2 av medlemsbladet.

Du kan betale kontingenten enten med den giroen, eller ved å sende følgende SMS til 2040:

EU10

Eller

EU50

(Hvis du bor i Oslo)

Vi håper du fortsetter å støtte EU-saken og fortsetter som medlem i Europeisk Ungdom!

God jul,

Mvh

Europeisk Ungdom

Ai, så fort tiden går. Har det gått ti år allerede? Jeg husker jeg meldte meg inn da jeg gikk på videregående, ca. 97-98. Jeg var littegrann aktiv det første året, men så ebbet det ut fullstendig. Saken har alltid vært god, men til tider har det skjedd lite. Jeg aner virkelig ikke hvordan de har holdt på meg som medlem alle de årene, jeg har betalt kontingent kanskje 3-4 ganger i alt.

Dette er imidlertid første gang de truer med å melde meg ut. Siden jeg ikke lenger engang bor i landet, så er vel det like greit. Jeg skjønner godt at de vil ha de ti spenna, det er sikkert statlig støtte å få per medlem.

De hjemme fikk visstnok en telefon også, man står på. :)

Harvard or MIT?

December 9th, 2006

And some people claim I over-analyze movies, pah! Read this. Now we also know the difference between Harvard and MIT people.

the summer cyclist

December 2nd, 2006

In the summer of 2003 I was in Stockholm on vacation and at one point I found myself at a TGI Fridays. You can spot the place like two blocks away for their ugly decor. Anyway, the place was pretty busy, and noisy. I was staring in the menu at a long list of names, none of which looked familiar to me. Finally I turned it over and there was their smoothie menu. Ah, something more to my pallet. I can usually tell when I've made a good choice and I was pretty confident about the Summer Cyclist. It turns out I wasn't mistaken, it was awesome. The drink has become somewhat of a legend to me, but today it occurred to me to google it and I found a recipe. :party:

Summer Cyclist Smoothie

Ingredients:

  • 55g Pureed Strawberries
  • 50g Grapefruit Juice
  • 30g Pineapple Juice
  • 1 scoop Orange Sherbert
  • 1/2 cup Crushed Ice

Directions: Use a blender

Granted I've no idea where to find this sherbert stuff, but I'm one step closer to reproducing this drink. :D

people say the darndest things

November 21st, 2006

On a forum today I got this strange message, I don't know what to think of it..

During a lot of time, I was thinking you were a girl. Don't ask me why, but I did.

:lala:

slashdotted

October 2nd, 2006

The other day I had the idea to write an opinion of the Yahoo Mail Beta webmail service, which I found particularly disappointing, in a consumer oriented review style, which I thought would have wider interest than the average blog entry I write. I posted the story on digg and reddit, and noone was interested in it. Then I posted it on slashdot (they have an open submission policy, every submission gets reviewed by their editors to be either published or discarded) and it was accepted, so yesterday it appeared on the frontpage of slashdot.

Slashdot is the biggest technology news site, and one of the oldest geek establishments, so my review was destined for a lot of traffic. So much so that I used three times more bandwidth in a day than I did the previous month. I got lots of comments on the blog, and many many more on slashdot. So that was pretty interesting to see how people responded to something I wrote, which wasn't the most controversial of viewpoints.

What strikes me is how many people are unable or unwilling to accept an article on the merits that it's written. My review was from the point of view of a user who has been using Yahoo Mail for a long time, tried the new service and was not impressed with it. And that's honestly my standpoint. I never pretended to take into account the concerns of other users, I just focused on my needs all the way. It wasn't a news article by the criteria of a news site, Yahoo Mail Beta has been around for months. It is still news to many users, however, who have been using Yahoo Mail for years. So as a user, this beta software is news to me. And as it was just my opinion, I didn't try to make it out to be some kind of complete review either, I didn't research the service thoroughly, I just used it for a bit, as most users would before forming an opinion.

I would actually love to respond to every comment I got and clear up many misunderstandings, but I realize that people who make a comment don't come back, so it would be pointless. There were two points that came up again and again and I should probably mention those. One is about opening messages in tabs. Well, I did know there were tabs, and that folders open in tabs, I didn't know that messages also open in tabs. I suppose I should have tried to double click on the message header, but then again I'm not used to double clicking on anything in a browser window, and Yahoo never gave me a hint to try that either. So silly me for missing that point. The other thing was that apparently I thought "Yahoo Mail Beta" was the name of the service. Well, strictly speaking, that is what they're calling it right now. Of course, I realize that beta means the software is still in development (or testing, more likely), but I find it somewhat confusing that you would slap the word beta on a product that already exists (the old Yahoo Mail). It would be like Microsoft calling their next operating system "Windows XP Beta" instead of "Windows Vista beta". Which is why I assumed Yahoo called it Yahoo Mail Beta, because Google called their service Gmail Beta (and again, Beta isn't part of the name, but Google seem to have started a fad as they slap the beta tag on just about every service their launch).

Then there are some people who point out one factual error (or sometimes just what they perceive to be a factual error), write "get your facts straight" and then leave.

But, on the whole I'd say the response was largely positive. As I read comments on slashdot, there is rarely a story that doesn't get heavily criticized, so it would be downright disturbing if that didn't happen here. But what is a bit out of the ordinary is quite a few people saying "I agree completely with the review, I'm also very disappointed with the new webmail service". Then there were those who say they really like the service, to whom I'd say "go tell Yahoo about it" (which I did about my opinion), because that's important feedback.

So that was an interesting experience..