Tuesday 28 September 2010

Let the Bottom Fall Out of PC World



PC World do some generic re-manufactured ink cartridges for a variety of printers. Good value, you may think, when asked to pay the frankly obscene prices charged by the printer manufacturers.

Having to do a lot of printing some months ago, I popped into the Exeter branch of PC World and purchased two colour and two black printer cartridges for my Canon Pixma iP1800.  The approved Canon cartridges cost £19.99 each for colour, and £15.15 each for black. The PCW Essentials ink cartridges cost £14.99 and £13.99 each respectively - so a considerable saving seems to be possible. Great! Approx. £70 from Canon, approx. £56 from PC World. Saving approx. £14 (or 5 pints of good bitter in my local pub). Rejoice!

Well, not quite. When I installed the first set of cartridges, they seemed to work OK. The colour was a bit iffy, certainly not up to the standard of Canon's output. But you pays your money...

Then the black cartridge started a slow leak - splodging inky droplets onto every page, smudging into what looked like dirty lines over each page. No amount of cartridge/roller cleaning would get rid of it. But I soldiered on (by this time the 5 pints of bitter were gone, drunk in a desperate bid to alleviate my disappointment).

Finally, the cartridges ran out. I replaced them with the second set. Black worked fine! "Huzzah!", I yelled in the approved theatrical Shakespearian manner. But the colour cartridge? Nada. Nuffink. Pining for the fiords.

So I repacked it into its shiny PC World packaging...


...and took it back to the store.

I was dealt with by a very nice young lady. She asked me for my postcode. I gave it to her. She said she couldn't find any record of this purchase under my address. I said, "so what?". "How do we know you purchased this item from us?", she demanded. I pointed out that the item was packaged and branded by PC World and I couldn't have purchased it anywhere else. She then asked my to go through my bank statements and bring in a photocopy of the transaction, otherwise she wouldn't give me a refund.

I had already driven 14 miles to Exeter PC World. I told her to forget the whole thing, and to keep the defective cartridge as a pleasant reminder of good customer relations. I also asked her to check the average amount that I spend at PC World per month, and that I would now be shopping for essential computer supplies elsewhere.

PC World have forgotten the important truth that good experiences are remembered, and bad ones reported to others. I won't be using them again - and have already sourced replacements that are less expensive online. PC World Essentials? Rubbish products, rubbish quality. And rubbish customer service.

Friday 24 September 2010

Finally - an Email Notifier That Integrates With Gnome: Popper

One of the most amazing things about Open Source Software in general and Linux in particular, is the amount of customisation that can be done to the graphical user interface (GUI). One of the things that's been missing for a long time is a generic email notification system that integrates into the Gnome System Tray and will also give you bubble notifications of incoming mail.

Ubuntu users who use the default Evolution PIM and mail client have already seen the benefits of a fully integrated notification system. However, in my humble opinion, Evolution is broken, clunky and hard to configure. I've been using Thunderbird as my preferred email client, and together with Google Calendar and shared Google Contacts, it's unbeatable.

I've been relying on Firetray, an extension for Thunderbird which minimises the mail client to the system tray and notifies you of incoming mail, but you have to struggle a bit to get it working with the newest version of Thunderbird, and some of the publicised features do not work 'out of the box'.

I read about Popper on OMG Ubuntu, a fabulous site full of ideas and inspiration geared towards making Ubuntu the best operating system on the planet (and getting there, too!).

Popper works with all POP3 or IMAP mail accounts, and can be configured in a multitude of ways. It is not resource hungry, works straight out of the box and I heartily recommend it. You can download the latest .deb file here. I think this application should be included by default in new versions of Ubuntu.