Just Another Writer

My World, My Opinion…

Jumping through HOOPS at L.A. Fitness… November 5, 2008

Filed under: Life, Money, Reviews — Just another writer... @ 9:09 pm
Tags:

ccI think it’s time someone come up a way to monitor online purchases for subscriptions, downloads and member fees. All too often, I find charges popping up on my credit cards for things I KNOW I canceled months before, however, the company seems to think they can just continue charging the card as their Terms of Service (TOS) has some type of bullshit “hoop” to jump through in order TRULY cancel your membership (or subscription). I have two examples to share with my readers:

LA Fitness - I joined two years ago and then had to cancel the membership, as I just did not have the time to hit the gym a few days a week. I called them over one dozen times and told them to cancel the membership. However, they just kept charging my card. In the last four days I received ten calls from these knuckleheads informing me they could not charge my card anymore, I replied - “oh, finally woke up over there and figured out that you can’t steal my money anymore?” They replied - “But, sir, you have to go into the gym and cancel directly”. I replied - “click”.

Channel Advisor (ChannelAdvisor.com)- This group has been charging my card since 1/2007 and although I canceled the account in 2/2007, they have continued to charge my credit card. I have been fighting through email and telephone calls with this group for the past eight days. “Sir, you must go to our site, cancel your account and then send an email to our billing department and inform them as well”. “Screw you asshole! I’m not jumping through hoops to cancel a membership when I canceled it two years ago. In fact, you knew I canceled this membership as even the email I registered with does NOT work (to this day) to log in to your site”. This company canceled the membership but, still (to this very day) charges $29.95 (without fail) on the 4th of every month.

This is the bad part about using a credit card online. There are thieves on the net who think they can get away with making free money over and over again. Use PayPal and you can get double-dutched and if you don’t pay attention, PayPal is behind the scenes working its magic by doling out a dollar here and dollar there to merchants with subscription accounts.

Go into PayPal and try to find an easy way to cancel a subscription and your name might as well be Helen Keller, as there’s no clear-cut way to do it without knowing where to look. (The best way is click on the long reference number and click on the details of the transaction. Be sure to scroll all the way down to the CANCEL SUBSCRIPTION button or they won’t cancel it).

Another tip is to NEVER (EVER) use a debit card online, as it’s harder to get the money back once the thieves have charged a debit card. One more thing, if you are going to join something that’s some type of membership or subscription, be sure to untick the box that states “Bill Me Monthly” as if you don’t - you become the gift that keeps on giving.

 

How to make money Blogging… June 17, 2008

Filed under: Metablogging, Money, You're Reading It Now — Just another writer... @ 1:57 pm

No doubt, the writing style on Bloggrrl has changed a bit and the topics are no longer confined to writing just about “blogging for money”. It’s funny, but readership will go down if Bloggrrl has too many ads displaying and increase when ads are decreased. 

In addition, the post on Gay Marriage summarily self-removed 162 readers in less than 14 hours. Whoa! I guess when you’re not writing about how to make money on blogging or, alienate your audience with statements such as “if you don’t like the blog entry, then move on” peeps will go away (and that’s fine by us). No doubt, 50% of our readers removed themselves and that may translate into 50% that don’t agree with gay marriage rights.

Pretty sad (in this day and age) when people are still a few decades behind the times.

There may be some who thought “how could the author of Bloggrrl take such a departure from her usual fare”. It was not the original creator of Bloggrrl who published that entry, it was posted at the direction of a new owner. Bloggrrl has been sold to a multi-media organization.

Future topics will range from the sublime to highly controversial. We have a staff of writers who contribute to national publications and as such, those editorial contributions will find their way into Bloggrrl’s personality.

While Bloggrrl’s goal was to inform on how to make money blogging (with mad tips and tricks) Bloggrrl (for all of its advice) was not monetized to its full potential.

In the end, Bloggrrl did finally pay off for its creator, as the owner of Bloggrrl sold her blog for an undisclosed sum. So, to say that Bloggrrl was not successful in “blogging for dollars” would not be correct, as the blog was sold at a premium.

Interestingly enough, if you have a blog and its has personality, traffic and a memorable domain name, it’s worth money. I think that’s all anyone needs to know on the topic of “Blogging for Dollars”. Large entities will come along and buy you out and take what you have created to the next level. Whether you’re seeking to “cash out” of a blog or simply get “Blog Burnout” your blog will always have value.

Update: Feedburner was not accurate. Will know true number on Weds.

 

Going Green with Envy over Green Machines? June 16, 2008

Filed under: House, Life, Money, Reviews — Just another writer... @ 1:20 pm

I got this great idea! I had to visit LA and decided to drive across country in three days, as opposed to flying into LAX in four short hours. I just bought an H2 Hummer and wanted to break her in. So, we get into the car and began our cross-country tour. The price of gas kept climbing, as we headed north toward Atlanta, however, started to come down (dramatically) as we headed West and into Texas (go figure). In fact, gas prices in Texas were $0.50 a gallon cheaper. No doubt, I spent a good chuck of change on gas and would have spent less had I flown into LAX and rented a car.

A month goes by and I have to go back out LA and this time I decided to fly into LAX and rent a Prius. I figured I would think “green” and try to fit in with all the other “green” conscious California types who drive Hybrid cars, adorn their homes with solar panels and collect rain water in colorful buckets. When I was last in LA, I got some dirty looks from those driving Hybrid cars (it seems there’s an abundance of Hybrid’s dominating the highways of California these days).

At traffic lights, drivers to my left or right (or both) would send over a look of scorn or, simply shake their head in disbelief that someone had the nerve to actually drive a Hummer in this day and age of global warming and high gas prices. However, drive a Prius and all the other little Prius people will wave at you (as they go by) and even toot their horn in approval.

I drove 1500 miles up the California coast (in four days). I drove through national parks, up an 8,000 foot mountain and into Nevada. I made it to Reno and then came south back to LA. It was a beautiful ride and I don’t regret one minute my trip. However, I’ve got to say that while the Prius is great on fuel, it lacks the comfort features that we have all come to enjoy in our big, beautiful (sometimes tricked out) land yachts.

It cost more to rent a Prius than a comfortable convertible and any savings in gas was eaten up by the rental car company. When I returned home, I actually thought  about replacing my Hummer with a Prius. I spent a few days searching on line and visited all of my local Toyota dealership’s in search of the little “green machine”. Considering I’ve seen Prius’s all over the roads in the California (and in even Tampa, Florida where I live), I figured there has to be plenty of them to go around, especially in the secondary market.

To my dismay, I could not find ONE Prius available (or even on display at three Toyota dealerships). I went online and every listing I found seeks to add a high premium (in the thousands) to the price of the car. In other words, it cost plenty of “green” to go “green”.

The Prius is NOT a comfortable car. It rides low to the ground, has no optional comforts, no leather seats and looks like any other compact car on the road. It’s basically a golf cart with doors. In addition, it lacks personality, which may be one reason why my first car was an H3 (loved it) and my follow-up to the H3 was an H2 (love it even more). Yes, I get crappy gas mileage but, the H2 can go “green” when off roading and the gas mileage is no worse than other trucks - if you don’t pump her down the highway at 80 mph.

One of my friends got his hands on a new Prius. He paid a $7K premium and then spent another $1000.00 on leather seats and a few thousand more adding some extra stuff like a cd player radio, new speakers, new rims and interesting paint job. It seems as though he spent enough to build a brand new car. Why go through all of this trouble to go green?

It seems that anything “green” is sold at a premium. My buddy, who has his tricked out Prius, is paying $300.00 more on his monthly car payment then on the SUV he traded in toward his Prius…huh? He already figured out that what he would have spent on gas during the next five years (if gas prices stay the same) comes out to be about the same if he kept his two-year old SUV.

No doubt, the next few years will be all about going “green”, however, at what cost?

I just learned that Hummer is considering halting production of the H2. OK, that makes sense and I hope they do stop production, as once they do, my H2 will be worth that much more, as you won’t be able to get them except on the secondary market.

When I went to Toyota to look at a Prius (they didn’t have), I looked at other Toyota’s and tried them ALL out. The experience was akin to that of the three bears story. One was too small, another too uncomfortable and there just wasn’t one Toyota (that I could find) that was just right.

Here’s what I’m going to do to go “green”. I’m no longer using my dishwasher (just two people in the household). We’re washing our dishes after dinner and have found we actually enjoy the chore and get to talk about the days events and have a few laughs.

We’re turing off all the lights in the house we don’t use (ambient lighting I call it). We bought two bicycles to do short runs to the local store for eggs and milk. We’re taking shorter showers (together). We’re more conscious at the grocery market and bring our own cloth bags to tote groceries home (no more plastic bags). We even set our air conditioning to a comfortable/hot temperature, as opposed to the comfortable/cool we’ve become to be used to in hot, muggy Florida.

In other words, we’re not wasting water, electric or filling up the garbage dumps with plastic. However, one luxury that we will keep is the H2. We drive to the office (8 miles round trip per day) and enjoy that eight mile ride. Gas prices will more than likely go up (maybe down, who knows) but, we won’t be buying a tricked-out golf cart to make a statement of being green:-)

 

FREE Web Hosting by 10GBFREEHOST.com… June 14, 2008

Filed under: Money, Stuff — Just another writer... @ 5:18 pm

Time to take stock of what’s FREE and what works. I found a site, which ten’s of thousands are using to host their sites and blogs for free. Mind you, you have to know a thing or two about a thing or two in order to use 10GB. The site offers the following:

  1. 20 GB Bandwith
  2. 10 GB of space
  3. PHP and MySql Support
  4. FTP Access
  5. FREE Sign-Up
  6. No Banner ads

Downtime is zip! Just another FREE resource that may work well for some.
 

 

Like To Write? Really Broke? June 9, 2008

Filed under: Metablogging, Money — Just another writer... @ 9:39 pm

Butterfly Garden

Here’s moneymaking idea number 2,504. (I have about that many in my head, at any rate. They keep me up at night.) This one is good if you need some cash, but it will not make you rich, and unless you are a very fast writer, you won’t even make $10 an hour. Still, it’s good to have a variety of strategies at your disposal if things get tight.

Here’s what you do.

    1. Pick a niche topic that will appeal to quite a few people. Gardening comes to mind.

    2. Write 10-20 articles about the topic. Articles should be between 300-500 words.

    3. Make sure that all of your work is completely original. Potential buyers will most likely check it with Copyscape.

    4. Give your work a very affordable (cheap) price and advertise it on a forum that has a content thread, like Digital Point.

    5. Be careful about who you let buy your work. Make sure they have a good feedback rating so that you don’t get chargebacks on PayPal!

I would (and may) do this if I just feel like writing about a topic for the heck of it. If the topic involves research, it wouldn’t be worth my time. But…if you’re bored, and feel like writing about different species of butterflies or whatever, why not?

Of course, you could always take that information and turn it into an ebook, or an Adsense site…

 

What Do You Think About Porn? May 30, 2008

Filed under: Life, Money, Political - Oh, don't get me started... — Just another writer... @ 1:59 pm

body.jpg
Photo: JJ and Special K

Note: This photo is the opposite of what I am talking about here…

I’ve been wondering about the value of porn lately, especially after finding out about RedTube.com, which I am not going to link to here, because it is so very, very NSFW, and I don’t want to be responsible for any headlines in someone’s local paper.

Anyway, I was looking at that site, which is like a porno YouTube, and I realized that I could create my very own adult site just by typing in a fetish and then embedding the videos that come up with their convenient embedding code. There are thousands of videos on there, and they are all completely free to look at. Some of them are 20 minutes long. No, I did not look at ALL of them. And no, I will not be creating my own adult site. Just in case you’re wondering.

So porn is free to look at and free to share. What does this mean for the people making the porn sites? Less money? I would think so. Who would pay for “new pics” and video when this is available?

What does it mean for the actors in the videos?
I’m quite sure they get paid little to nothing. Which leads me to the question of WHY THE HELL WOULD ANYONE IN THEIR RIGHT MIND put their nibbles and bits (and their face) on the internet for everyone to see? I mean, talk about a career killer. Also, personally, I would really hate to be in the local grocery store and find out that people were talking about how I style my pubic hair. People think that the Internet is totally anonymous, but it doesn’t always turn out that way, does it?

I think we can agree that porn itself has become devalued.
By my logic, this means that participating in porn devalues people more than it did before. At least before, you could rationalize that people did it for the money. If someone is doing it for free, they are either doing it for the kicks (and those are some mighty risky thrills there) or they don’t care who sees them doing what with who. This bugs me. Don’t the thrill seekers realize that this is a little more high stakes than the Mile High Club?

Of course, if the person’s face is not showing, it is not as risky. If you look at who’s face shows, it is more often than not the woman’s. Why is this? What does it say about the respect that woman has for herself?

Of course, the really big issue I have with this new era of online porn is that it is so darn accessible. I wish online communities would police themselves better. Even requiring a credit card charge of one cent would keep out lots of underage folks.

computer.jpg
Photo: Paulo Fehlauer

I have a story that I am ashamed to tell.

My computer is located in the family room, and my nine year old is always supervised on it. He is only allowed to go to specific sites that have been preapproved. Anyway, one morning, he woke me up and asked if he could play on the computer. I mumbled “yes” and turned over and went back to sleep for an hour.

The next week, I realized that the Google search bar had been used to search for “naked girls”. My son was eight at the time. Believe me, naked girls aren’t what they used to be. I was appalled, and I wanted to hit myself upside the head for letting him on it for even a moment unsupervised. I hadn’t thought that at age eight, I needed to worry about my son being curious about these things. Even worse, it turns out that a friend of his had told him how to find the pictures.

Net nanny software is not a cure-all, and it is fantasy to think that most children are supervised on the computer. They aren’t. I can say that my child won’t be unsupervised again, but that’s not the point. What do we do about kid’s ideas about sex becoming warped at such a young age? Personally, I want the government out of my computer, but it certainly doesn’t seem like self-policing on the part of parents or Internet porn sites is taking place. So what to do? It’s a problem I don’t see going away.

I hate that some of my students, who have problems seeing the beauty that the future could hold for them, may be the people in free porn videos someday.

I dunno. This one has me stumped.

 

Is eBay Dead? May 9, 2008

Filed under: Money — Just another writer... @ 12:03 am

The Consumerist has a nightmarish story about a guy who desperately tried to sell his laptop on eBay, only to be foiled by Nigerian spammers several times. Did he receive any help from the company? Would it be a story if he had? I don’t know about you guys, but I really miss the old days of selling and buying on eBay. Now I just need to wait for Craigslist to make its way to the boonies.

Disclaimer: Don’t read the story unless you just feel like getting angry for the pure fun of it.