I have recently,
in a past blog, written about The New-Fangled -Technologies that confront us on
an almost daily basis.
It’s time I
attacked the cost and the use of that commodity which one must have to operate
the New-Fangled-Technologies, i.e. DATA!
For almost ten
years I made use of an internet company, which for the meagre sum of ninety
Rand a month supplied me with 2 Gigs of internet usage. Unfortunately, they
were forced to close.
They kindly
offered me the chance to join another company that would give me a Wi-Fi
service of 2 Gigs usage, but at over twice the cost, two hundred Rand. After
quickly looking at all other offers, I realised that this was going to be the
cheapest on the market, so I signed on the dotted line and accepted the offer.
I have now been in
the cloud, so to speak, with this company and the Windows Microsoft 10 operating
system, for five months. Some things have been OK; I’ve managed to keep writing
my blog; helped edit a couple of play-scripts for friends and continued to make
posts on Facebook and send emails. All well and good, you might say. But!!!
I’ve continually
been bombarded with annoying adverts and distractions asking me if I want to
buy something or upgrade to some new-fangled-distraction!!
These adverts I’ve
now realised are using up my paid for internet Data!!
Last month, for
the first time ever!!! I found that I had used my 2 Gigs three days before the
end of the month!
I do not download
movies, I do not use U-tube! All I do is blog, Facebook and send emails!
Very annoying!!!!
Another complaint
I have is that, in the past I’ve always enjoyed a game of “Free-Cell”. Now,
with Windows ten, I must play this game in the cloud, so to speak, and this
also means that almost every ten minutes or so, I’m hit with another wave of Ads
offering me other games which I don’t want!
Microsoft
does offer the ability to avoid these infuriating advertisements, but this
means I must upgrade and pay an additional cost! Galling to say the least! It
seems that every way there is to try and keeps costs down, the technology
companies have a way to increase the cost!
At least when my late grandfather
flew his racing pidgeons, way back in the nineteen-hundreds, the only cost he
had was the feed, as he had me to clean their loft and from their effluent, he
made the most efficient fertiliser! A pity there is no effluent from Data, or
its usage!
Recently, The Independent
Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) compared the cost of data
within Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – the BRICS nations, because
of a request by the public.
Its findings are published in a report analysing the tariff plans offered by local operators.
Icasa looked at the price of
500MB, 1GB and 2GB packages. In South Africa, the body found that the
difference between the cheapest ($7.15 aproximately 90 Rand) and most expensive
2GB package ($19.57 aproximately R230).
Do a google search, “Ways to
reduce your Data cost!” and you’ll find numerous ways to reduce your DATA
usage, particularly when on holiday and using your smart phone. Most of the
advice is common sense, like switching of your “roaming facility”. But it
seems, unless you’re a hacker or computer boffin, there is no way to stop the
technology companies charging fucking exorbitant rates.
If any of you readers have
simple method, I would be extremely grateful if you could pass on the
information.
This morning I came across another
“Rip-off”. My over twenty-year-old Hansa gate motor is malfunctioning. I took a
quick look and realised that the latch mechanism, which is a slightly bent
metal bar with a free-wheeling plastic nodule at its end, was not working. This
mechanism stops the gate motor by hitting a rise on the horizontal bar and the
plastic nodule at the end of the metal bar had completely worn away.
Considering that the Hansa motor is over twenty-four years old, not bad.
I tracked down a gate repair
company who specialises in Hansa motors and took the metal bar to them to get a
spare part. I was knocked sideways when I was told the replacement would cost two
hundred and twenty Rand. The offered alternative was to bring the motor in to
them, and they would replace the mechanism totally for one thousand and forty
Rand!!
I am now at work with some 20mm
electrical plastic conduit and my Pratley’s quick-set glue and putty “Magyer-ing”
a solution and making a new plastic nodule to fit on the end of the 4cm long
slightly bent metal bar.
I am totally confused by the
ingenuity that technology companies have in created new products that work
twice as badly as the old ones that they created. This money-grabbing formula
seems to be entering our lives daily.
I have a little tool-box draw
in which I store all the Cadac-gas-valves I have accumulated over the past
fifty years. I do not think I’ve bought a new one for at least twenty-five
years. Every time one of my gas filling valves gets blocked I unblock an old
one, fit it on the appliance and hey-presto the light, cooker, blow torch is
working again.
However, to unblock the valve a
device is needed, a Cadac-valve-cleaning tool. A small device, a metal strip
with a very thin, less than a millimetre in circumference. After a search of my
tool shed, I couldn’t find mine.
So, I popped down to my local hardware store to be told that Cadac no longer make them and I would have to buy a new valve at forty-three Rand!!
I can announce success! The
contraption for the gate is repaired and installed and it work! The marvel of
Pratley’s quick-set putty and glue.
Maybe, I am wrong to assume
that today is a totally a throw-away society. Everyone follows the easiest
solution, throw it away and get a new one. Perhaps I am fortunate as my grandfather
was an electrician and a joiner and he took great pleasure in teaching me his invaluable
knowledge, which I still use today.
It seems as if today’s youth
have not the foggiest idea how to use a nut & bolt; they do not understand
the function of a washer. When it comes to the theory and the practical use of electricity
their minds are a complete blank. The changing of a plug, connecting a three-way
switch, changing a light-fitting, making a Janus cable extension, are all
problems they are not educated to solve.
And I need not even mention
gas! No wonder there are so many fires and explosions in the world!
I even solved the problem of the
missing Cadac vale-cleaner. I made one using a fine stand of electrical wire!
If it works, if it can be
repaired, don’t throw it away! and whatever you do; don't buy a new one!!!!!
3 comments:
Well said, Sir Cess Poole. Hear Hear !
That was I
More people should read this one.
Well said indeed.
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