Merry Christmas from Microsoft! (or How I Plan on Hooking Up the Xbox 360 to Our Network Without Paying Microsoft Another $99)

One of the oldest's Christmas presents this year was one year of Xbox Live for his Xbox 360.  What we didn't realize when we bought the service and a wireless controller to make playing MMPGs super-easy is that the XBox 360 requires a special wireless network adapter to be able to connect to our home network.  The bastards at Microsoft couldn't be bothered to design a connection that would allow a "generic" network adapter to work, and because I've been able to hook up all nature of things to our network, like say our Tivo, with standard network adapters it never occurred to me that we'd have to buy a special one for the Xbox 360.  And what does one of Microsoft's little gizmos cost?  Oh, a cool $99.

Luckily we have two alternatives.  One is to hook the Xbox 360 directly to the router with an ethernet cable, but since our router is in my office on the second floor and the Xbox is hooked to the TV in our den in the basement that would have to be one very long cable.  Our other option is to use a powerline adapter which is the way I plan to go.  I've already set up a powerline kit to connect Celeste's computer to the network so I only need to get one more adapter to hook up the boy's XBox 360 which should save us at least $50, not to mention the little bit of satisfaction I'll be getting from not letting Microsoft screw me yet again.  I figure 20 years of this abuse is enough.

Keeping Them Honest in Houston

According to this article a woman in Houston named Marsha Farmer has spent the past seven years exposing a scam in the city's Department of Housing and Community Development.  In 2001 when her home was damaged in a flood and 17 months later she received an estimate from a contractor in the city's home repair program and realized that the numbers didn't add up.  Unfortunately for the contractor and the Department she had a background in bookkeeping and construction as well as a strong sense of right and wrong and she spent the next seven years exposing the sham.  All the while her home was never repaired until the Houston newspaper got hold of her story and starting asking questions, so now repairs are finally scheduled to be done.  The following excerpt from the article shows what a person with a little know-how, a lot of gumption and access to Google can do:

Farmer's first contact with the home repair program came in January
2001, when she applied for new windows and electrical repairs to the
Oak Forest house where she had lived since 1987. Farmer, who is
disabled, met the requirements of the program, which provided free
repairs to needy homeowners.

She was placed on a waiting list, and after her house flooded during
Tropical Storm Allison in June 2001, her case was assigned to the
Houston Area Urban League, one of four nonprofit home repair
contractors working with the city.

Four months later, Farmer received a letter from the city saying her
house had been approved for repairs. Nothing more happened until the
day in June 2002 when she saw the report that triggered her suspicions
about the program.

Over the course of the next year, Farmer complained to HUD about her
own case, obtained files on other repair jobs under open records laws
and began compiling a database.

In her examination of Urban League files covering more than two
years, Farmer found that the city paid for excessive roofing material
in at least 18 of 24 projects. She found charges for installing a
400-foot sewer line and a 300-foot water line, even though in most
places these lines are about 50 feet from the house to the main
connection.

Almost half of the files she examined showed that bids were for exactly the program limit of $20,000.

It's not clear who benefited from the overpayments. The city
essentially outsourced the program to the Urban League and other
nonprofits, which paid companies that did the repairs based on
often-erroneous quantities determined by initial inspections.

There's much more in the article, including the fact that she unsuccessfully sued as a "whistle blower" under the False Claims Act which would have entitled her to compensation, but even in losing that lawsuit her key role in exposing the fraud was acknowledged by the judge:

"Even though Ms. Farmer's legal claims failed," he wrote, "the
litigation was productive in that it led to the city's emergency home
repair program being shut down by HUD."

And we also learn that her contributions were not insignificant:

Two months after Farmer filed her lawsuit, HUD shut down Houston's
home repair program. The agency cited evidence of poor workmanship and
"huge differences between the estimates of materials needed and the
actual units of materials applied" — the same problem Farmer had
noticed in the estimate for her house.

HUD allowed the program to resume the following year, subject to the
city's agreement to reinspect and, where necessary, repair 2,214
previously repaired houses by July 31, 2010. Farmer's review of 530
reinspection reports — about one-fourth of the total to be performed —
identified $717,000 in overcharges.

What I like about this story is that it shows the importance of oversight in government affairs, the power of individual citizens to make a difference and the important role that media plays in our daily lives.  Let's be honest, if the newspaper hadn't been there to put the screws to the government Ms. Farmer might not be getting her home repaired any time soon. She's made their lives miserable so what would their motivation have been to help her?  But bad publicity tends to motivate people and as soon as the newspaper exposed the government's (in)actions to hundreds of thousands of people they suddenly had a fire lit under them.

I know that at times I've given the folks at the Winston-Salem Journal a hard time on this blog, but believe me when I say I want them to figure things out and succeed.  We need them almost as much as they need us.

Should Insurance Pay for Acupuncture or Aromatherapy?

"Alternative medicine" is a burgeoning business and I think most people would agree that it has its share of hucksters, so the question of what types of "alternative" procedures your health insurance company should pay for is a potentially huge deal.  The Wall Street Journal has a great article about the issue, and with the incoming Obama administration putting health care reform near the top of its domestic agenda I think that the question of coverage of "alternative medicine" is going to be a potentially divisive point in the debate.

Hat tip to Ed Cone for the pointer.

Thriving on Less – Free eBook for Dealing with Tough Times

Leo Babauta has written a book titled The Power of Less and has also released a free companion ebook titled Thriving on Less. You can read about the ebook here and download the free version here.

I did a quick read of the 27-page ebook and it's chock full of common sense hints on simplifying your life and living frugally.  As you'd expect it's a teaser for the print book which the author recommends that you buy, but the ebook is of value in and of itself and is a good quick read for tips on simplifying your life.

Babauta also writes a blog at ZenHabits that you will probably enjoy if you like the book.  In these times I think we can all benefit from a little more simple living.

Knowing Each Other

Ed Cone offered a very thoughtful post on Christmas.  He begins with the controversy over Obama's selection of Rick Warren as one of the people to do the invocation at the inauguration and weaves it into his thoughts on the benefit of communicating with people of opposing viewpoints as happened between Warren and Melissa Etheridge. Ed ends with this:

There are many places on earth where no grievance is ever forgotten,
and people are invested in keeping conflicts going. If one is more
interested in seeking grievance than finding common ground, one can
always find reasons to perpetuate discord.

One good thing about
living in Greensboro is that it affords those who would seek it the
chance to know many different types of people. I count among my friends
many who hold very different views on any number of issues. That
doesn't make us agree, but it makes us more agreeable.

Obviously
knowing each other is no panacea. But it can be a start. Life outside
the silo is healthy. Good for Etheridge and Warren for seeking it, and
good for Obama for trying to broaden the common ground.

Peace. Merry Christmas.

Holiday Smile

This really is a rough Christmas for many people so it's great when you see something unexpected that just brings a smile to your face.  My thanks to Brian Leon for pointing to the video below, which features a guy doing what I'll call "The Happy Dance" at places all around the world.  BTW, the last I checked the video had been viewed more than 14 million times. (Update: The folks at College Humor did a spoof on this called Where the Hell is Matt's Girlfriend that's a tad on the raunchy side, but I mention it because one of the locations that the fake Matt is dancing is Winston-Salem. Go figure.)

Merry Christmas! Wanna buy an Ice Cream Shop?

Merry Christmas!  I wish I could give this to you, but I don't have $99,000 lying around so I'm just going to point you in the right direction.  If you've ever dreamed of owning an ice cream shop you can buy a Cold Stone Creamery in Winston-Salem for a low, low, low $99,000.  If you end up buying it please remember me when I show up with one of my kids' teams in tow.  Discounts and gifts are always welcomed:)

Esbee’s Gift to Winston-Salem

Esbee's been running a "Shop Local" series over the last few weeks and she's done us all the favor of compiling the local listings into two pages so you can check them out in two easy clicks.  Considering the traffic that Esbee gets to her site I have to believe that her features were a God-send to the local merchants she highlighted.

Actually the title of this post isn't quite accurate since Esbee is a gift to Winston-Salem; the series is just more of that gift.

How Much is Netflix Really Costing You?

We've been members of Netflix forever and I've noticed that we use it in fits and starts.  Really it's my fault because I'm generally the one that goes to the website and selects the movies, and I get in trouble when I try to anticipate what everyone will want to watch.  When I do I pick "blah" movies that no one wants to watch, but I think the family is afraid to tell me because they don't want me to feel offended.  On the other hand, I don't want to turn them in because I figure at some point we'll all sit down to watch them.  So there they sit on top of the DVD player, sometimes for weeks on end.

Our heavy usage tends to occur when I find something I really like, say The Wire, and order all of the DVDs and watch them as soon as they come in and return them promptly so that I can watch the next DVD in the series.  Unfortunately that happens about every third month so our droughts are longer than our downpours and I've suspected for a while that we've been paying more than we would renting on an as-needed basis from Blockbuster.

All that's to explain why I immediately tried out FeedFlix when I read about it on Lifehacker.  I just plugged in an RSS feed from our account and within a few seconds I had all the info I could ever want on my family's Netflix usage (see image to the left).  Because our droughts are so long our average hold time for a movie is 7 days and our average cost to rent a movie over the lifetime of our account is a whopping $23.79.  That's nuts!

Now we could pull that down over time by making sure that we recycle our movies very quickly, and now that we can watch Netflix movies online at no additional cost and/or watch them via Tivo once our Tivo is updated then we could really pull that number down quickly.  As it is we're Netflix's dream customer and I hate being that.

So you Netflix customers out there: what are you spending per movie?