Posts tagged Review
Windows 8–An Early Impressions Review
Sep 14th
As many of you may or may not know, last night marked the official release for the Windows 8 Developer Preview build. This is, of course, free for all to download and test.
After having a chance to play around with it a bit, I have some first impressions to share, in hopes that Microsoft will take notice and make some quality of life changes for us.
I tested both 32-bit and 64-bit builds of Windows 8 under VirtualBox. I was unable to successfully get the 32-bit version to work. 64-bit installed without any issues, however that’s not to say it runs without issues.
While I can appreciate the simplicity of Microsofts “Metro” style desktop, I am sure it will be great on tablets, which is something we know Microsoft is betting on. It is not, however, intuitive on a desktop system.
The old start menu is completely gone, instead bringing up the Metro desktop, even if you switch to the old Windows desktop. You switch between sets of tiles by (ugh) dragging a horizontal scrollbar on the bottom of the screen. The start button is hidden until you mouse over it. The start button here only provides contextual options and settings.
The included Twitter client, Tweet@rama, is certainly well designed. With vertical scrolling, and its two pane view, it feels natural to use. I am a fan of this one.
A stocks app is also included by default, although as of the time of this writing, it only tracks the Dow Jones, Nasdaq, and MSFT markets. I could find no way to add my own stocks to track, which is a deal breaker for most of us (I need to track my IBM stock!).
As mentioned, the new start menu is hidden until moused over in the far bottom left corner, and even then, is a shell of its former self. I certainly hope for an option to revert to the old start menu behavior. I could not find this option myself, but I only spent 5 minutes looking for it.
You can still access your old control panel if you want, but for non-power-users, you get a new, simpler interface that provides quick access to common settings.
It’s nice to have an RSS reader built in, which is another default app I am sure tablet users will appreciate, but there is no clear defined way to add your own feeds aside of the defaults provided here. I hope that option makes it way into the final build, or I can see this RSS app being rarely, if ever, used by anyone, especially on a desktop.
The built-in weather app is certainly nice, although with no options for location settings. I’m beginning to understand that the developer preview is basically void of any real settings, and is more or less just a preview of things to come (obviously) with basic functionality. The clouds in the background here are animated, so I look forward to seeing this when it’s done.
The new star button is a dark grey, and stands out from the taskbar very noticeably. I hope this is something that doesn’t stick around. Contrast is nice to have, but I hope to find an option for changing this later, but I would hope when you’re on the old Windows desktop that you can get your old start menu back.
Oh, that dreaded Office ribbon. It’s definitely in Windows 8, and I am proud to announce that you CAN hide it.
Final Notes
I know that a final release for Windows 8 is a long ways off, but I have some notes that I hope Microsoft will listen to.
- Give people the option of using their old Windows desktop, please. If this functionality is not included, most people will not upgrade. I don’t know of any enterprise clients who would.
- Provide infinite customization options. If you’re going to try and make a prettier desktop environment, let people tweak it any way they want. Not everybody likes the same thing.
- Horizontal scrolling may be second nature on a tablet, but it’s AWFUL on a desktop, especially when it doesn’t work with the scroll wheel on the mouse. Provide an option for vertical scrolling, or the Metro desktop will never be a part of my desktop.
- Turn the Explorer ribbon off by default. Some power users MIGHT want this, but most people will not. It’s horrible by design, and will confuse non-tech-savvy users.
- Give me back my old start menu! It’s been a cornerstone of Windows for years, don’t change a good thing now.
I also have additional concerns regarding Microsofts plans to get into the tablet market. I understand that most (if not all) Windows 8 tablets will run under an ARM processor. While this is fine and dandy for battery life, I know there will be software compatibility issues, since most of us use x86 software. Here’s the important part: If I can’t run my desktop apps on my tablet, I won’t get the tablet, especially if the tablet costs more than an iPad or Android tablet with similar functionality. If it doesn’t run all Windows apps, it isn’t Windows!
Your move, Redmond.
How Hardees Lost a Lifetime Customer
Sep 8th
It pains me to have to do this, because I have always loved Hardees as a restaurant. It was my opinion before that a Hardees meal was every bit as good as a Five Guys meal, at around half the cost. Sadly, I cannot make this recommendation any more.
Why? What happened to taint my experience so badly against Hardees? Here’s my story.
Last night (September 7, 2011) my girlfriend didn’t want to eat at home for some reason. After a little while of debating over where to eat, I had an idea: Hardees! We love(d) Hardees, and it had been a while since we had been, since we live in Daytona Beach, and would have to drive to the far end of Port Orange to get there (not a terribly long drive, but very much so for fast food).
After getting caught up in a long conversation with a neighbor on our way out, we begin our journey, one filled with peril as apparently every driver on the road at this time was apparently suicidal.
About a half hour later, we arrive at our destination, now starving. My girlfriend orders a 1/4 lb burger with chili cheese fries, and a shake. I order a Frisco burger without tomatoes (because I love those sourdough buns) with fries and a drink.
We sit at our table, with our order number sign neatly placed on the corner as we wait. It takes about 10 minutes, but we finally get our food. The first thing I notice is the tomatoes on my burger, when I had clearly asked for none. I am not one to just pick them off myself, because then I have to get all messy disassembling a burger that should have been made right the first time. I catch the employee who delivered the food before he even makes it back to the counter. The employee at the counter who took our order looks and sounds agitated, but apologizes and tells me he will bring a replacement out to me.
So now, here I am, starving, foodless, watching my girlfriend eat her food. That’s bad enough, just ending up out of sync with your meals when eating out with someone. I was already getting into a pretty bad mood from this. I took out my PV (Personal Vaporizer, aka electronic cigarette, an invention made for the purpose of “healthy” “smoking” and mainly being able to use it indoors where smoking is not allowed) and began to “vape” on it.
After about 5 minutes of using it, and several customers eyeing it and smiling, as is the usual routine because it is still so new to many people, the “agitated” employee approached me to tell me that smoking is not allowed in the store. I kindly explain to him that I am not smoking, it is a water vaporizer, etc. He just stood there and looked at me like he was dumbfounded. He then told me that it was corporate policy not to allow use of these in the restaurant. That’s not a policy I’ve ever heard of, since I’ve used it in hundreds of establishments without issue, including several times in previous visits to Hardees. If this truly IS a company policy of Hardees, would someone please link me to a legitimate place proving it?
That was strike two. Mess up my order and then deny me the thing that calms me down? Not a very good idea. Regardless, rather than argue the point, I just complied, because I don’t want to be rude.
Another 5 minutes go by, and my food, now tomato free, is delivered. At this point I am pretty angry, but too hungry to care, I just want to enjoy my food and go home. I notice that this burger has what appeared to be buttered, untoasted sourdough bread for a bun. My previous bun was toasted, and this confused me. “Whatever” I thought, I can’t wait ANOTHER ten minutes for them to get it right, I am too hungry.
I bite into the burger… only to discover that I cannot physically bite into the burger.
This was the hardest, most stale thing I had ever tasted, and the bread tasted like expired buttermilk.
I tried to bite into it again, as hard as I can, just to see if maybe it was just that edge that was bad. I got a mouthful of meat that tasted like Styrofoam.
At this point, I am furious. I’m done, over it, I want my money back. I take the food back to the counter yet again, and the employee is clearly very angry at this point, as am I. He went to take it into the back to replace it again, when I told him I just wanted a refund. He hands me back cash instead of putting the money back on the credit card we paid with (seriously?).
I am now fed up, and begin filling out a comment card, because this has been the second most horrifying eating out adventure ever.
That’s when my girlfriend reaches the bottom of her chili cheese fries, and discovers the short, curly black hairs.
Seriously? What the F**K?!?!?
AGAIN, I go back to the front counter, this time with pubic-hair-laced chili cheese fries, and the employee at the front counter just looks even more agitated than before, and just looks at the black guy in the back of the kitchen angrily, then says “Let me guess, you want a refund for these too?”
You’re damn right I want a refund for this too.
And to top things off?
My girlfriend had food poisoning from it, and was up all night in the bathroom until about 1:30am.
The only time I have ever received worse treatment in a business establishment was Taco Bell, and they have been on my “Never again” list for years. (The manager there cursed me out for returning my food because the order was wrong… I had ordered soft tacos and got hard tacos, with none of the ingredients I had requested. According to the manager I was supposed to just “suck it up”)
I did turn in my comment card to Hardees, and I also emailed them on their web site this morning, because I know the employees there will likely toss out my comment card so they don’t look bad.
I had always regarded Hardees as one of my favorite restaurants, but this experience has been so bad, and so disgusting, I can never go back, ever. There is nothing they can do to win me back as a customer at this point. I do, however, want to know what they are going to do to satisfy my anger from being treated like this.
Update: 9/10/11
I received a phone call from the district manager, apologizing profusely for our experience. He wants to make it up to us, and is sending us coupons for free meals so we’ll give Hardees one more chance. He assures me this kind of thing will never happen again.
He also informed me that he has never heard of a policy regarding the banning of electronic cigarettes in their restaurants.
HTC EVO 4G vs. Samsung Epic (Galaxy S) – Review
Aug 31st
Recently, I’ve hit a state of extreme wanting of new technology, particularly in the cellular phone market. I had been using MetroPCS for several years, and despite the fact the service has always been good to me, and I strongly recommend it for anyone who wants to save money, I decided to stray so that I can acquire a level of technology more suiting to my level of geek.
So yesterday, I went out and bought an HTC EVO 4G from Sprint after getting a call from a sales rep that they finally got some in stock. Of course, I had a change of heart today when Sprint released the Samsung Epic 4G, and managed to arrive at the store at the exact minute of it’s release… so I feel obliged to write a comparative review of these phones, and help out with others making their choice between the two. So here I go.
HTC EVO 4G
Overview:
Truthfully, from the moment I first tried it, my instinct was “This phone is great!” And that still stands true, don’t be fooled from the fact I exchanged mine. This is a solid device, but as with any other, has it’s own caveats.
Specs:
I’m not going to cover too much here, because the specs on both phones are in fact VERY close, however, there are some key differences.
The EVO supports up to 8 devices with Sprints own mobile hotspot feature, where as the Epic only supports 5. This isn’t a big deal really though, because who wants that many people using the internet on their PHONE?
The EVO also features an 8MP camera on the rear of the device, while the Epic provides a 5MP camera. That being said, somehow, the Epic seems to take better pictures. The EVO camera can capture 720p video at 24 frames per second, but the Epic does it at 30fps. This is a minor difference, but might matter to some.
Processor-wise, these phones are basically the same. The only other thing the EVO has that the Epic does not, is HDMI output.
The Good:
The phone feels pretty solid, despite rumors I’ve heard around the web. The interface is pretty responsive, and the phone came with Froyo (Android 2.2) pre-installed. The 4G internet was blazing fast, and aside from a few twitches, the phone was fast.
Also impressive, was that after first getting the phone, and playing with it all day trying out all the features, I had a damn hard time killing the battery. I guess some people either got unlucky, or just ran too many apps at once and let it go. It wasn’t until I was streaming Sprint TV over 4G while signed on to AIM, Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace that I was able to finally kill the battery, after 6.5 hours of continuous usage from a half dead battery on a phone I just bought and hadn’t charged yet. NICE!
The Bad:
BLOATWARE! Sprint, get it through your head: not everyone wants a Nascar app. We certainly don’t want the Amazon MP3 store running on our phones constantly, checking in with home servers and killing our battery. Despite my best efforts with task killers, this one particularly was hard to kill. Please also give us the option to disable Qik, your video chat app. We don’t need it on 24/7.
Also, the phone is quite cumbersome to use for me, and I have very large hands. Be warned. It definitely does not feel like it would survive a drop on a hard floor either.
Summary:
If you want an iPhone killer, this phone will do the trick. I don’t have a lot of bad to say about it, overall it is a good device for the power user.
SAMSUNG EPIC 4G (Galaxy S)
Overview:
The Epic might be slightly thicker, but it’s worth it for the extras in my opinion!
Specs:
Again, both phones are very similar. However, the EPIC features a Super AMOLED screen instead of a traditional LCD, with over 16 million colors available. The screen on this phone is absolutely gorgeous!
The Good:
The EPIC for right now comes with Android 2.1 instead of Froyo, but with the Samsung Touchwiz interface, you won’t miss 2.2 at all. This phone genuinely feels like working an iPhone on steroids. You have a dock at the bottom for basic tasks such as the phone, contacts, text, and access to your apps menu.
What I like best about this is that the apps menu is arranged horizontally, and swiped through a panel at a time like on the iPhone. I find this a much easier way to find the app I need.
Overall, camera quality is much better on the EPIC, and feels worth the price increase alone. Additionally, the super AMOLED screen should provide better battery life in theory. I cannot attest to that yet because I have not had the phone long enough to tell you.
Samsung improved where HTC failed with the task management, making the majority of apps automatically close when you back out of them, and providing a built in widget for managing running apps. The pull down menu on the top is also more useful, providing shortcuts to enable or disable WiFi,, GPS, etc.
The Bad:
Not much bad to say here, at least not yet. The phone does feel as big as the EVO, but easier to hold. It is certainly lighter, yet it feels more delicate. Having the small power button located on the side is awkward. Lacks a kickstand like the EVO, which would have been VERY useful given the quality of this phone.
Summary:
I’m playing favorites. I love this phone, and if you don’t absolutely insist on working strictly with a touch screen, or don’t hate slider phones, get this, it won’t disappoint.
Boost Mobile Blackberry Curve 8330 Review
Jun 20th
Recently I have decided that I wanted to get a better phone and service than what I’ve been using for a long time, and after doing some research and trying to avoid high rates and expensive phones with contracts, I decided to take a stab at the new offering from Boost Mobile, the Blackberry Curve 8330. I was quite excited to get this phone, as I was a fan of my old CrackBerry, and wanted to have a legit BlackBerry on the service, particularly since Boost offers unlimited 3G data with a $60 per month plan. This is my review of the Blackberry Curve 8330 for Boost Mobile after trying the phone out.
The Good
The phone is stylish, and smaller than my old smart phone, the Samsung Code. I chose the BlackBerry for the plethora of apps available, at least for the things I needed. Purchasing the phone is painless, save for the price, you just pay for it and take it home, where you activate it yourself. After the phone was activated, several apps I thought I would have to hunt down on my own started getting pushed to my phone, or rather direct links to them. All the basics were there, such as AIM, Google Talk, Windows Live Messenger, Facebook, MySpace, Flickr, etc. This made it pretty simple getting setup.
I liked that messages from all my apps and services were pushed into a consolidated inbox, which did simplify things. Unfortunately, this is where the good stopped.
The Bad
After activating my phone, and paying my first month of service, the phone was still not working. No calls, no text, no internet. I had to call Boost Mobile customer support and wait for about 20 minutes, just for a rep to walk me through a process on the phone that was simple enough that it should have been included in the directions, but it wasn’t. The apps being pushed to the device was a handy feature, but it lagged the phone badly, and made it impossible to do anything else.
Reception Quality
I’ve owned a Boost Mobile phone before, and was extremely impressed at the signal quality, and the voice quality. This was not the case with the BlackBerry, as it runs on the old Sprint CDMA network. I was barely able to get a signal in my house at all, most often having 1 bar or less of reception. The ironic thing of this is that I live within a mile of the Daytona International Speedway, which is Sprint sponsored, and has Sprint towers at that location. I didn’t drop a call, but it was just a matter of time.
Internet Connection
I am probably the most irate about this feature. A main feature advertised on this phone is the ability to use Sprints 3G network for internet. Not once did this feature work. Even in major metropolitan areas, with full signal, it took several minutes to download a file that was less than half a megabyte in size. The kicker? Sprint has total 3G coverage of the entire area I live, so there is no excuse for this not working for me.
Battery Performance
The battery on this device performs extremely poorly, not even able to make it through a single day of idle use with email and AIM only running in the background. This is piss poor given that this is advertised as having over a week of stand by time. My Metro PCS Samsung Code has a constant email connection, AIM, and Facebook constantly running at all times, and after a full day of heavy use, it is rare to even see one bar drop off my battery. Impressive for a phone that costs the same and runs on a smaller network. Sadly my “3G” connection was no faster than the edge connection on my Metro PCS phone.
The Ugly
Thankfully, Best Buy lived up to their word, and they accepted a return of the phone with no restocking fee, as promised, so I can not fault them here for anything. The worst part though, is when I call Boost Mobile to cancel my account and demand a refund because I did not receive the service as I was promised, and they refused. No way, no how, even though the phone was activated less than 48 hours previous to the cancellation, would they give even a partial refund.
Bottom line? If you want to pay premium prices for a shitty phone with even shittier service, and the worst customer service experience on the planet, get this phone.
No, really, it’s horrible. Worst phone and service ever, with the exception of Sprint about 10 years ago, which is still technically the same thing, when text messages take up to a day to arrive. I can’t recommend this phone or Boost Mobile to anyone now, because I feel burned.
I’m hoping the new Sprint network is better. I have decided to wait another 10 days until Best Buy can get some more stock, and I am going to buy an HTC EVO 4G. I’ll have a contract, but it will be a working 4G phone that acts as a WiFi hotspot and runs Android.
Been burned by Boost Mobile? Want to know more? Leave a comment below.


