From the category archives:

Musings, Rants & Humour

Paypal F’s it up on User Experience

by Robert Bond on April 27, 2012

confused user e1303146234773 Paypal Fs it up on User ExperiencePayPal is one of those things that SHOULD be an extremely powerful ally to people who want to process credit card payments online. Turns out it’s exactly what budding entrepreneurs need it to be, and one thing they definitely don’t want it to be: broken.

I don’t want to get into all boring details, but let it suffice to say that PayPal kind of “shit the bed” with an important client of mine. It was a payment “Send Limit” issue, and there was apparently “nothing to be done” about it.

I will concede that the customer support wait times were refreshingly minimal, but that does not detract from the fact that both my client and I came away from the situation in a very frustrated and confused state. And this is not anything new for PayPal. They’ve made many improvements over the years, but they’re clearly still more interested in getting my customers to sign up and sign in than they are in simplifying everyone’s experience and getting merchants their money; which is baffling since they get 3% of every transaction! What good is a payment processor that doesn’t process payments, I ask you?!

So at this point, the options are: GIVE our products and services away, or sign up for a legit merchant account and work flexibly from this point on. The decision was obvious to us, and within the next few weeks, we should be all signed up with Moneris Solutions (who’ve been very helpfull, and are surprisingly affordable) and able to process payments the right way. This of course will require some hours to implement on mindfull.co, but I believe it’s worth it.
More launch and product updates soon!

 

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Top 3 Things to Note About Blogs

by Robert Bond on March 8, 2012

 Top 3 Things to Note About Blogs I love my RSS reader and check it frequently. When reading posts from many of the blogs I follow though, here are some things I’ve realized.

1. Lists are Lazy: Top X lists are fantasic in their brevity, but after a few of them where points are not elaborated on in any depth, they start look like lazy “writing” and shameless link bait.

2. Advice Repeats: Repetition often makes me wonder why I bother. After a year or less of following a blog, you start to notice a pattern of the same simple advice being packaged in different ways and passed off as fresh material. I don’t know how many times productivity/happiness blogs have told me to smile in the morning, breathe, turn off my phone, or not check my email.

3. You can just make the shit up: I’ve read the same author on the same blog, tell me to set goals in one post, and then several posts later tell me to skip the goals; “Hey, sometimes it’s good to knock down boundaries!”. Well fine, but why do I want to just read in circles?!

I have no plans to discontinue the use of my Google news reader for valid, well-written news sites, or even for the offending fluff-filled blogs. Gems of real info and/or wisdom still happen depending on when/where you look. But I figure if some of the web’s most followed info sources get to pump out cheap content, I should at least get a cheap blog post out of it myself. icon wink Top 3 Things to Note About Blogs

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A Grammar Cheat Sheet!

by Robert Bond on February 5, 2012

 A Grammar Cheat Sheet! A Grammar Cheat Sheet!I often get indecisive about the capitalization of titles in the English language. For fear of being inconsistent, or (gasp) incorrect, I put together this little cheat sheet for myself. Hopefully it helps someone else out too! The first part tells you what types of words should and shouldn’t be capitalized, and the second part describes what those word type names actually mean. Sourcesgrammartips.homestead.com, dummies.com


These are the words that should be capitalized in a title:
• The first and last words of the title
• All nouns, pronouns, verbs, adverbs, and adjectives
• Any conjunction or preposition of five letters or more –(This is optional. You can choose to go with an older rule that says not to capitalize prepositions or conjunctions regardless of length. The five letters or more standard has developed over the last two decades or so. Either form would be acceptable, as long as you use it consistently.)

These are the words that should not be capitalized:
• Articles (the, a, an), unless the article is the first or (less likely, of course) last word of the title
• Prepositions of four letters or fewer (unless the preposition is the first or last word of the title)
• Conjunctions of four letters or fewer (unless theconjunction is the first or last word of the title)
• The particle “to” used with an infinitive (unless the “to” is the first or last word of the title)**

Parts of Speech in English Grammar

Every time you write or speak, you use nouns, verbs, propositions, conjunctions, and other parts of the English language. Knowing how to use these parts of speech can help you speak more eloquently, write more clearly, and feel more confident when communicating with others.

  • Noun: names a person, place, thing, idea (Lulu, jail, cantaloupe, loyalty, and so on)
  • Pronoun: takes the place of a noun (he, who, I, what, and so on)
    Possessive Pronoun: my, his, our, your
  • Verb: expresses action or being (scrambled, was, should win, and so on)
  • Adjective: describes a noun or pronoun (messy, strange, alien, and so on)
  • Adverb: describes a verb, adjective, or other adverb (willingly, woefully, very, and so on)
  • Preposition: relates a noun or a pronoun to another word in the sentence (by, for, from, and so on)
  • Conjunction: ties two words or groups of words together (and, after, although, and so on)
  • Interjection: expresses strong emotion (yikes! wow! ouch! and so on)

English Grammar Basics: Parts of a Sentence

After you get a good grip on the different parts of speech, it’s time to put them all together to form the proper sentence. The right words and punctuation in the right order can make all the difference in good communication. Keep in mind that you need a minimum number of parts to make a complete sentence: subject/predicate/endmark.

  • Verb (also called the predicate): expresses the action or state of being
  • Subject: the person or thing being talked about
  • Complement: a word or group of words that completes the meaning of the subject-verb pair
  • Types of complements: direct and indirect objects, subject complement, objective complement

Pronoun Tips for Proper English Grammar

The Beatles sang of “I, Me, Mine,” but understanding pronouns takes a little practice. Pronouns can be objective or subjective, and can show possession. You, me, him, her, them, us . . . everyone can speak and write more clearly by understanding pronouns.

  • Pronouns that may be used only as subjects or subject complements: I, he, she, we, they, who, whoever.
  • Pronouns that may be used only as objects or objective complements: me, him, her, us, them, whom, whomever.
  • Common pronouns that may be used as either subjects or objects: you, it, everyone, anyone, no one, someone, mine, ours, yours, theirs, either, neither, each, everybody, anybody, nobody, somebody, everything, anything, nothing, something, any, none, some, which, what, that.
  • Pronouns that show possession: my, mine, your, yours, his, her, hers, its, our, ours, their, theirs, whose.

English Grammar Tips for Subject-Verb Agreement

Someone or something must be present in a sentence, and that someone or something doing the action or being talked about is the subject. Verbs are the words that express the action the subject is doing or the state of being the subject is in. Subjects and verbs must agree if you’re going to get your point across as clearly as possible. Otherwise, you end up with an incomplete sentence or a sentence that makes no sense.

  • Match singular subjects with singular verbs, plural subjects with plural verbs (I run, she runs, they run).
  • Amounts of time and money are usually singular (ten dollars is).
  • Either/or and neither/nor: Match the verb to the closest subject (neither the boys nor the girl is).
  • Either and neither, without their partners or and nor, always take a singular verb (either of the apples is).
  • All subjects preceded by each and every take a singular verb (each CD is mine; every one of the cheeses is different).
  • Both, few, several, and many are always plural (both/many are qualified; few want the job; severalwere hired).

Placing Proper Punctuation

Can you imagine what a sentence without any punctuation would be like? Without proper punctuation, it would be unreadable. Knowing when and how to use the period, comma, colon, semicolon, and other punctuation marks will make your writing smoother and more understandable.

  • Endmarks: All sentences need an endmark: a period, question mark, exclamation point, or ellipsis. Never put two endmarks at the end of the same sentence.
  • Apostrophes: For singular ownership, generally add’s; for plural ownership, generally add s’.
  • Commas: In direct address, use commas to separate the name from the rest of the sentence. In lists, place commas between items in a list, but not before the first item. Before conjunctions, when combining two complete sentences with a conjunction, place a comma before the conjunction. If you have one subject and two verbs, don’t put a comma before the conjunction.
  • Hyphens: If two words create a single description, put a hyphen between them if the description comes before the word that it’s describing. Don’t hyphenate two-word descriptions if the first word ends in -ly.
  • Colon: Use a colon after an independent clause that precedes a list and to separate an explanation, rule, or example from a preceding independent clause.
  • Semicolon: Use a semicolon to join independent clauses in compound sentences that do not have coordinating conjunctions (and, or, but, nor, for, so, yet) and commas as connectors. Words like however, moreover, thus, and therefore, are often used as connectors in these sentences. You can also use semicolons to separate long or complicated items in a series that already includes commas, and to separate two long or complex independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction if confusion would result from using a comma.

Verb Tense Tips in English Grammar

Besides showing the action or state of being in the sentence, the verb also indicates the time the action or “being” took place. By learning about the different kinds of simple, perfect, past, and present tenses, your speaking and writing will be clear and concise.

  • Simple present tense: tells what is happening now
  • Simple past tense: tells what happened before now
  • Simple future: talks about what has not happened yet
  • Present perfect tense: expresses an action or state of being in the present that has some connection with the past
  • Past perfect tense: places an event before another event in the past
  • Future perfect tense: talks about something that has not happened yet in relation to another event in the future

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Quick Recommendations : 50/50, Through the Wormhole, Downton Abbey

January 29, 2012

Hello, folks! Mindfull people like to know what’s worth their time so’s to avoid wasting it. So here are a few things I’ve been watching recently, along with links, trailers, and brief, to-the-point reviews. 50/50: A story about a young man who discovers he has cancer, and how he and the people around him cope [...]

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Canvassers: Rethink Your Approach

January 24, 2012

 Last night an overly-excited man came to my door with great intentions of collecting some money to feed starving children. I personally don’t think door-to-door is a great way to accomplish anything nowadays, but I guess it still works with some people. Regardless, there’s a right way to do everything, so here are some pointers. [...]

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Helping Prevent the Ruining of the Minds of the Youth

December 30, 2011

This is one of those “this would also make a good blog post” posts.  Over Christmas, the topic of evolution came up in conversation between some younger people and some older people (names and places omitted to maintain proper focus, and to protect the innocent). To my horror, a person younger than myself stated that [...]

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Top 10 Things I Learned While Attempting the Slow Carb/4-Hour Body Diet

November 23, 2011

Since October 11th, 2011 I’ve been trying out the slow-carb way of life as described in Tim Ferriss’s book, “The 4-Hour Body“. To get the full layout of how the diet works you’ll have to read the book, but here are the main points condensed and simplified before I start my list: Avoid White Carbohydrates; [...]

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Avery Label Templates in Usable Formats

April 21, 2011

I was just trying to print out some wine labels I made up in illustrator, and discovered that pre-made templates are really only available in MS Word format, at least for the labels I was trying to output. I also know from experience that Adobe makes you sign in to download any of the ones [...]

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Childhood Mall Quarter Eaters

April 6, 2011

After watching a recent episode of the Totally Rad Show in which classic wrestling games were discussed, a very fond memory popped into my brain. It was of an awesome arcade game my crappy local small-town shopping mall had when I was a kid.  It was from Taito, and it was called Mat Mania (Exciting [...]

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Javascript Mouseover Menus (Ignore if you’re not a web designer)

April 6, 2011

Constructing javascript mouseover/pop-up/dropdown menus for a website is a pretty basic task, but it’s usually so long between instances where I need to build them, that I usually have to look a thing or two up in the process. And I don’t like using jQuery or Moo Tools for such basic functionality. This time, I [...]

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Some Tips on Getting Things Done

March 30, 2011

I had one of those days yesterday where I didn’t want to do anything. I had work to do, but my mind was throwing a temper tantrum. To push through this wall of abhorrence, I called upon some bits of advice I’ve gathered from blogs like Zen Habits, and from my own experiences. Let’s cut [...]

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Introtox

March 29, 2011

Initial transmission which will be short and sweet since all the good stuff made it onto the latest edition of the cast. Time for a little philanthropy, if you will, and some soon to be had delicious treats for a great cause. More goodness can also be found at my home.  

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