no more “you’ve got mail”

I just cancelled my AOL account, which is notoriously difficult to do. I’ve had the account, as the customer service technician noted with what sounded almost like awe, for about sixteen years, back before Quantum Computer Services was even known as America Online. I don’t even use AOL, and haven’t for years, except as a backup connectivity method–e.g., when travelling, or when visiting my Mom, where’s there’s nothing except AOL. But with ubiquitous hotel wireless and broadband when travelling, and the ability to use Mom’s account when I’m visiting her, there’s really no reason at all for me to keep paying for the service.

In 1996, when they moved to the $19.95 unlimited-use pricing, I had switched to a limited-use plan at $4.95/month for up to three hours, plus an additional per-hour charge for anything over that. However, I actually had so many free hours on credit with them from when I used to be a gm for one of their online games that I never had to pay more than the $4.95 base.

Recently, though, they sent me an email telling me that they were increasing the price to $6.95 and for some reason that finally felt like too much, so I decided to follow through on cancellation.

What a pain. There’s no way to cancel online or via email, nor could I find any information on the AOL service itself about how to go about the task. Thanks to the Internet, I benefitted from those who have gone before, and found the right toll-free number to call along with some tips on making the process slightly less painful. Even so, it took about 10-15 minutes (but at least not the 50 minutes others have reported. First you have to deal with an automated voice-recognition system that asks you for your name, screenname, phone number, answer to your security question and the last four digits of the credit card with which you pay for the service. Then you’re transferred to a queue for a customer support technician in India who asks exactly the same questions all over again, plus full mailing address. Why even have the automated system if I’m just going to have to repeat it all? Then there’s the repeated attempts to get you to stay–offering to switch you back to the lower rate, offering several free months of service, etc.; I wouldn’t have been surprised if the next offer had been to come over and paint my house. As a commenter to Lifehacker noted, the technicians ask you the same questions again and again and again, continuing to try to pressure you to keep the service, until after about the fifth time you say “No, I just want to cancel my account; I don’t want any special deals, I don’t want any free time; I don’t want to upgrade to AOL Broadband; I don’t want to answer any more of your questions. I just want to cancel my account. Now.” Finally you get a confirmation number, and a warning–repeated to me six times–that you have to stay online through a legal disclaimer before the service can really be cancelled.

So keep your fingers crossed and hope that the cancellation really takes. I’ve heard the horror stories of people who go through the cancellation process over and over only to find charges continuing to appear on their credit card statements month after month.

california dreaming

Last year I wrote about the possibility/likelihood that Jeff and I would be moving to California. For a few months, at least, I put out some feelers, sent out a few resumes, and talked to some contacts, though nothing much came of it at the time after some initial excitement about some specific prospects. Then we put the move planning temporarily on hold while Jeff considered whether or not to apply for a promotion at his current company. A couple of months ago he decided not to pursue the new job here but to focus on moving back west; by then, however, we were preparing for our London vacation, so we decided we’d really focus on the job search and move planning after February.

The past few weeks, then, I’ve updated my resume and my account information on various online job sites, and have begun scouring job postings on craigslist, monster.com, theladder.com, 6figurejobs.com, and various corporate and university sites. I’ve sent cover letters and resumes off to a few, and have made some tentative inroads into networking with some folks out there. I’m very open to advice, leads and additional networking contacts.

I also need to turn my attention to the condo, and decide whether to sell or to rent. For now I’m leaning towards the latter, but either way there’s clearly some work that has to be done: the carpet throughout–original, and more than 20 years old, and in bad enough shape even before Alex decided that he prefers it to a traditional scratching post–absolutely must go, the walls need a fresh coat of paint, and the dishwasher that broke three-and-a-half years ago still hasn’t been replaced. On the plus side, the refrigerator and heat pump both already were replaced within the past four years. So only the range, washer and dryer are still the original appliances, but they all seem to be in really good condition (as I superstitiously look around for some wood to knock)–certainly good enough for a rental.

cherry blossom special

sunset at the tidal basin, with cherry blossomsMonday after work Jeff and I met by the Tidal Basin to see the cherry blossoms and take some photos; on the way back to the car we also stopped by the World War II Memorial, which neither of us yet had visited. We arrived only half an hour before sunset, and many of the trees were only just beginning to blossom, but we each managed to take some shots we considered worth posting.

london undone

As I wrote to several friends shortly afterward:

London didn’t actually happen. Strong winds caused delays that cut what was supposed to have been a two-and-a-half hour layover at JFK to 30 minutes. Then a screwup by American Airlines found our plane docked at the right gate but the AA agent at the wrong one at the other end of the terminal, so there was no one to bring the jetway to the plane. It took the pilot 25 minutes to finally get someone on the radio who could straighten things out and let us all off the plane; meanwhile, we could see all the luggage being offloaded below. That left us five minutes to get from the end of one terminal to the middle of the next terminal, through security, and down to our gate. Needless to say, we didn’t make it.

And after letting us wait on standby through the next three flights to London, the American Airlines gate agents finally admitted that they didn’t think they’d be able to get us on a confirmed flight to London–considering they’d oversold all of their flights by 20-25 seats–for 48 hours. They did finally agree to give us two rooms at the airport hotel while we were waiting, though they said they would not reimburse us for the two days of the trip we’d lose, even though they admitted that we missed the flight through a fault of theirs.

We went downstairs to get our luggage to discover that it–despite TSA regulations that require that luggage be taken off a plane if the passengers aren’t on-board–was actually already about two-thirds of the way to London. The airline refused to send it back to us, saying that it might take as long to get back as it would take us to get there. So with only the clothes on our back, we went to the hotel where we expected to spend the next two days.

And we awoke the next morning to an email from my Mom that my grandmother had died at midnight.

We cancelled the trip [“sorry, sir, no refunds, you didn’t get travel insurance? oh, so sorry”], went back to the airport to ask them to return our luggage to Arlington, and they agreed they would do so right away [“it’s all taken care of, no problems, you’ll have it tomorrow morning” (oh, so now it can get back in less than a day?)] and in fact we watched them type those instructions into an email to the London crew, and then took the subway to the train station where we bought tickets for the next train back to DC.

When I got up the next morning, I called to check on our luggage, to see if it might arrive early enough for us to wait for it before driving to my Mom’s. No, it’s still in London, and the crew there won’t release it since there’s been no formal claim filed. Why didn’t they tell us to file a claim while we were physically in the baggage office in New York, and were told it was all taken care of? The women on the phone didn’t know that, but she’s sure that that’s not the way it should have been done and we never should have been told that our bags would be sent back. “In fact,” she said, “you’ll need to come here to JFK to file a claim.” I explained that I was at JFK the previous day, but that now I’m four states away, heading to my grandmother’s funeral, and really can’t get back to New York to file a claim. “Well,” she noted cheeringly, “there’s nothing I can do for you. You could try calling the main baggage office in Dallas, and maybe they’ll file a claim for you.”

So I did. And they did. And they said our luggage would be back on Tuesday morning. We scrounged around for a couple of pairs of underwear that were still stateside, grabbed some clothes from among those we hadn’t liked well enough to take to London, and drove to Covington for the viewing Monday night and the funeral Tuesday afternoon.

Our luggage finally got back to Arlington on Tuesday night. We got back on Wednesday.

On the one hand, it’s probably a good thing we hadn’t actually made it to London, since it would have been messy either way trying to get back to Covington mid-way through the trip, or feeling guilty about not being able to get back and therefore not enjoying the trip. And, in a “the grapes really are sour” kind of way, London apparently experienced one of its worst weeks of weather all winter. England’s not going anywhere, so we’ll plan another trip sometime when it should be warmer and sunnier. It is weird coming back to work after a week off, though, and not feeling at all rejuvenated or recharged, in fact quite the opposite.

And even if I’d still had any doubts about our relationship (I hadn’t), they’d have been erased by just how well we weathered the week together. Jeff really came through for me, and helped me (mostly) keep my perspective and my cool, when I really just wanted to wipe the smirk off the face of every unhelpful, unfriendly, smug, lying, buck-passing American Airlines employee we encountered along the way.

Whew… not yet completely over it, I guess.

That was a month ago. Tonight over dinner I was retelling the story to a friend who hadn’t yet heard it, and still felt a twinge of anger and disappointment over the whole experience.

We are already planning the second attempt to get to London, though. More about that over the new few days, as the plans and arrangements take shape.

I don’t mean to gloss over my grandmother’s death. Certainly it was sad, but it was also a relief in many ways. My grandmother had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s thirteen years ago–a very long time to live (if you can call it that) with that horrible disease. She hadn’t known any of us for at least five years, and hadn’t been capable of producing a recognizable word, much less a meaningful utterance, for probably three. She’d likely suffered a stroke over the past year, couldn’t move or feed herself, and had lost control of her excretory functions a couple of years back; at the end, her body finally forgot even how to swallow, and her living will stated that no artificial measures be taken to prolong her life. My sister and brother-in-law have patiently fed, cleaned, changed and sat with her every day for almost two years. I said goodbye to the essence of who she was quite a while ago, and the actual passing came as no shock. While my dad’s and grandfather’s deaths had come somewhat unexpectedly and suddenly, and their funeral services had been excruciatingly painful, my grandmother’s funeral was almost pleasant in a way, a family reunion that really did focus more on the positives of her life and her influence rather than taken over by the raw, overwhelming grief of the earlier two.

And Jeff was with me through it all; when I said to my Mom, shortly after we arrived at her house, that it was important to me that he be with me at the funeral home, at the service and at the cemetery, she said “But of course he will! He’s family.”

coining a new mint

Yes, I’m back. After a too-long hiatus, I’m blogging again, with a fresh start, an updated Movable Type installation, a new design and a new name.

[Edit 31 March 2006: Speaking of the new name, the blog also is now officially at the root URL http://www.elfintech.com/ . While the former URL http://www.elfintech.com/reflection/ will continue to work for a while, I’d like to ask that you change any links to the blog to the former. If you’re just reading the feed, there’s no need to change anything, as the feed URL won’t change from http://feeds.feedburner.com/thomwatson .]

My intention, in fact, had been to relaunch the blog during our planned trip to London last month, with moblogged reports and Flickr photos of what we were doing and seeing. Those of you who’ve followed Jeff’s blog, and a few friends I’ve emailed separately, however, know that the February trip just was not meant to be. That merits its own post to follow, though, since this initial entry, at least, is intended to have a more forward-looking tone.

memory

Saturday night, Jeff and I saw Betty Buckley in performance at the new Music Center at Strathmore, an amazing new venue in North Bethesda, Maryland that opened only this past February (information and photos). It’s a stunningly gorgeous building–swaths of curves and walls of rectangles, all of glass–and concert hall–full of warm woods, amazingly comfortable seats, and echoes of the same organic curves and rectangles, with the semicircular boxes seemingly extruded from the sides of the auditorium like living pods in some futuristic bioengineered structure (or, more mundanely, like balconies on the outside of a cruise ship)–with breathtaking acoustics. Even sitting as we were two rows from the back in the Grand Tier it felt and sounded as though La Buckley were singing directly and only to us. She even got a little teary herself, gushing about the site and its acoustics.

And she gave a powerful performance to match the space. In a lengthy (solidly two hours) concert that nonetheless sped by like mere minutes, she and her small band–piano, bass and drums–covered a wide range, from familiar standards to belted Broadway anthems (“With One Look” from Sunset Boulevard and “Memory” from Cats, both of which she originally had performed on stage in London and/or New York) to a wonderful selection of songs from contemporary American singer-songwriters, including Leonard Cohen, Nanci Griffith, Sarah McLachlan, Joni Mitchell, James Taylor, Tom Waits and Ms. Buckley’s own stated favorite, Mary-Chapin Carpenter.

I had turned to Jeff at one point and whispered “Hopefully she won’t sing “Memory,” to which he had replied that he was hoping she would. A song I normally consider overdone and overexposed, her incredible, heartfelt rendition of it as her encore for the evening nevertheless left me with chills running down my spine and tears running down my face and so grateful that she’d included it after all. The song from the performance that won her a Tony, it really was the perfect way to close the evening. At some level, she really is the embodiment of Grizabella, the Glamour Cat.

She also came across, from her descriptions of her life and childhood, as a truly warm, approachable person, and she stayed after the concert to sign CDs and greet her fans. We didn’t wait in line to shake her hand, but we did stay long enough to watch her come out and take her seat at the table, and I was struck by her smiles and humility, which felt quite genuine. On her personal website, she often even refers to herself, charmingly, as “Betty Lynn.”

london calling

After more than three years with only the occasional long weekend holiday, last week I took Thursday and Friday off which, combined with the Monday federal holiday for Columbus Day, gave me a full five days away from the office, my longest break since I began this job the summer of 2002.

I went nowhere, but spent my days reading and playing on the computer (oh, and on Saturday we baked a really delicious carrot cake, with crushed pineapple, raisins, coconut and hazelnuts in the mix). It was marvelous.

And Jeff and I finally made plans for our first long vacation together (we’ve been together to New York many times, and to Seattle and the Bay Area once each, but for no more than four days, including the weekend, at the most): we’ve taken advantage of a great American Airline Vacations/Thistle Hotels deal to book six nights in London this coming February. Yes, ok, so Thistle’s hotels aren’t the greatest (but then London’s notorious for its poor hotels generally), and February’s perhaps not the best time to visit the U.K. But the six nights and roundtrip airfare from Washington National to Heathrow (by way of JFK) set us back just over $700 each, inclusive of taxes and fees, and including some extras: afternoon tea at one of the hotels, a 30-minute Thames cruise, a ride on the London Eye, two-for-one lunch and dinner at the hotel, free admission to one of the local castles, and a few other perks. It was a deal we felt we couldn’t pass up, as we’d been wanting to plan a trip to Europe or the U.K. either this winter or next spring, and each has renewed his passport this year (Jeff’s had his a couple of months, and mine should arrive any day now).

I’ve been to London only once before, for three days, and Jeff not at all, so we’re both very excited about having a full week there. And I’m especially eager to finally be able to take an entire week off from work.

Any sights off the beaten path we should see? Any day trips from London we should consider? Any special tips from your own travel in the U.K.? (For example, we’re already planning to buy our local travel passes, for tube and bus, ahead of time, having looked into that on Saturday.)

anyone want to buy a silver 2004 prius?

From an announcement about the new 2006 model year for the Toyota Prius:

Already featuring a high level of safety technology, Prius gains even more for 2006. The new advanced airbag system uses variable-force front airbags for both driver and front passenger. Sensors determine the severity of the impact and in turn the force with which to deploy the front airbags, helping to provide an appropriate level of occupant restraint.

A Tire Pressure Monitoring System can detect a significant loss in pressure in one or more tires and alert the driver by a warning light.

A new optional rear back-up camera, available with the optional Navigation system, automatically projects an image of what the lens can detect behind the vehicle onto the dash-mounted LCD display when the vehicle is in reverse gear.

Outside, the 2006 Prius features restyled headlights and taillight clusters. Inside, new darker seat fabric and a textured instrument panel center accent the high-tech interior styling. Prius offers enhanced comfort with the new option of leather seating (choice of two colors) and a leather-wrapped steering wheel. Customers can also order a new audio system upgrade that features MP3-media capability and a mini-jack port located in the center console. The mini-jack port allows connectivity to most portable music players and allows users to listen to their portable music collection through the JBL audio system.

I know it’s horribly Western and materialistic of me, but I so would love to trade-up my 2004 model for the 2006, primarily for the MP3-enabled stereo system and mini-jack port… and that oh-so-cool rear-view camera. I’m such a tech-slut.

looking forward to some weekend serenity

Tomorrow, September 30, is the opening date for two movies for which I’m feeling great anticipation: Josh Whedon’s Firefly-based movie, Serenity, and Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean’s magical Mirror Mask (Mirror Mask trailor).

So, in addition to the AIDS Walk on Saturday morning (Jeff and I together have raised over $600, though he’s garnered by far the lion’s share of that; in fact, he was the number two fundraiser for the local Arlington Gay and Lesbian Alliance, and is being awarded a messenger bag for that accomplishment), I’m hoping to see at least one of these films over the weekend.

corpse brides and were rabbits – the films of october

As Jeff notes, he and I have been pretty lucky at scoring free passes to movie screenings through various sources–Metro Weekly, [The Washington Post] Express, ytic, and others. Two weeks ago we saw Just Like Heaven, and last week Jeff went to see Proof (we’d both separately won two tickets to the latter, but I ended up not really wanting to see it that night). For this evening we were both entered for tickets to the new Tim Burton film, The Corpse Bride, in the same style as The Nightmare Before Christmas and with the voice talent of Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, and Emily Watson), and to the new Wallace and Gromit film, Curse of the Were Rabbit. This morning I was notified that I’d I won two passes to the former, so we’re meeting at the Cineplex Odeon Wisconsin Avenue for a 7:30 showing.