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Archive for January, 2009

The A-Team has a new Director – Ridley Scott!

January 31st, 2009 No comments

Ridley Scott, serious man
Those of you who were arsed to read one of my first posts on the site will remember I put up a story about John Singleton directing the A-Team movie. Well it has now been 100% confirmed by Fox and Ridley Scott, that the director of Alien and Blade Runner will be looking after one of the most popular TV shows of the 80′s.

In an interview with Variety magazine that they plan was to boot a franchise that he hoped would be around for “many years to come”. The film will be modernised, taking the action away from Vietnam and updating it with the Middle East. Scott also wants to dump the “campiness” of the TV show and bring to us a “fast paced” show that is “emotional, real and accessible as possible without cheesing it up.”

Co-creator of the original series Stephen J Cannell is also on board as a producer. Release date is June 2010.

Categories: Movies Tags: ,

More CLinks

January 31st, 2009 No comments

How to make a complaint and succeed, here.

Movies posters gone mental here.

Google Maps kills a deer here.

Live action RPG below *shudders*

Attn: Entrepreneurs, Accountants, Company Directors and Business Owners! Please take a moment to complete this Survey!

January 25th, 2009 No comments

Given the existing economic climate that we’re in and the increase in company liquidations, I’ve put together a survey to assess how important cash flow is to companies at present and to determine how satisfied the decision makers are with the credit control and collections.

Please take a moment to complete this brief survey with your company’s view. All responses are taken in complete confidence and only the aggregated results will be published. User’s will not be identified.

Click Here to take survey

Thanks for your help!

Latest CLinks

January 25th, 2009 Comments off

Ok so its been a while since I have put up some CLinks, let hope these are up to scratch!!

Check out Irishboy John Williams and his quest to win in the Twitter Shorty Awards here.

The recently successful Teen Camp Ireland event in Ireland has a few clips on YouTube, check them out below!

One of my favourite blogs, 2 Weeks on a Trolley can be found here. Its written by Irish people who work in the medical profession are doctors or nurses, some in Ireland and some abroad. Very interesting read.

The lads over at the excellent ifoods.tv prepare for the launch of their new name here.

BBC 3 news presenter Tasmin Lucia Khan learns that running to your desk with seconds to spare before live broadcast leaves you breathless here.

“Just throw it in with your waste, it’s cheaper”

January 25th, 2009 No comments


So we in a fastly accelerating American made car called the Recession. There is no escaping from it now. Japan, the UK, we’re all screwed until somebody speculates that there is no longer a recession. Sure tis great gas

People are losing their jobs faster than Steve Martin became unfunny but don’t panic there are are still some things in life that are free, such as recycling. Or so I thought.

I’m relatively environmentally aware. I say relatively because if I was to do everything I’m expected to do, then I’d have to carry around a checklist of what I should and shouldn’t do. And I’m not keeping a worm farm just because John Gormley says so.

So get to the point, what am I talking about. A post December trip to the local landfill with some waste and some recycling met me with some surprising results. It seems that Local Authorities are now charging the public to recycle. The one time free service that the government rolled out at local landfill to encourage less waste is no longer free. But wait, that’s not the money shot yet!

When the employee told me this, he had a look in the car at what I had and said, “sure just throw your recyclables in with the waste, it’ll be cheaper for you”

And for shame, I did.

Judge me as you wish, we are in a recession but at least I spent my money locally rather than being “unpatriotic” and bring my waste up North…

“Slumdog Millionaire”

January 19th, 2009 No comments

Slumdog Millionaire
Many of you have probably seen this movie by now, so I will keep this post brief. If you haven’t seen it, stop reading this and go see it now.

I get very antsy at this time of year when if comes to what is advertised as “Oscar”movies or “feel good” movies. At this time of year those kind of movies are no different than drunken men in a Dublin pub on a Saturday night. Except instead of looking for the ride, they’re only after awards.

When Danny Boyle’s latest film was being tagged as a feel good movie and award worthy material, I was nervous. BUT it is Danny Boyle and he has demonstrated his mastery of story telling on screen. I gave it a look.

In summary, the film opens with a young man as a contestant on the Indian version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, one question for hitting the jackpot. He is arrested for attempted fraud and the story then intercuts with his explanations as to how he knows the answer, which in essence translates to his life story.

The movie is being badly touted in the media. There are far better feel good movies out there. There is no melodrama here to warrant being called an “Oscar” movie. Instead, what we have is a fine example of film making, story telling and character development. The performances are top notch.

Oh and it has this girl…
Frieda Pinto

An excellent film and it has given 2009 a nice start. Although things get remarkably worse if you go see Bride Wars afterward….

Categories: Movies Tags:

Um, that was a nice flight actually… Aer Lingus

January 19th, 2009 No comments

Crossing Swords
I will never feel guilty saying it. I like Ryanair. I enjoy flying with them to most locations. I know that if I fly Ryanair I will get there on time or earlier and in one piece. The only thing I don’t like about is the mad rush for a seat/queue for boarding which reminds me of getting a bus in Dublin during the 80′s. (only they don’t smoke on the Ryanair flights!) Despite what Ryanair tell us, priority boarding doesn’t get us onboard any stress free than waiting.

Anyway, I have something nice to say so I figure what the heck, lets blog about it. I feel its only fair. I had to fly Aer Lingus twice in the past 2 weeks and both experiences were pleasant and efficient. I know, its fairly shocking and almost oxymoronical to say that.

For a start both flights were on time at both ends. (So I can’t refer to Aer Lingus as Aer Lategus for the purpose of this post). The cabin crew were very friendly and much to my surprise, fluent in English. Best part of all was I had a fry on both flights, even though one of the flights was an afternoon flight. And after eating continental breakfasts with poxy tea for some time, an airline fry with Lyon’s Tea was like a gift from Heaven.

I don’t really have anything anecdotal to add or witty to say. I still like Ryanair and I still consider Michael O’Leary to be one of the greatest Irishmen since, well take your pick. But I can’t knock Aer Lingus this time. As a result, I wont be so hesitant to select them for future flights. It was nice to have my seat already selected.

Sorry Michael

Categories: Rant and Raves Tags:

My O2 Experience….

January 15th, 2009 4 comments

Drowing Under Water
I’ve unashamedly been an O2 customer for many years. I say unashamedly, because I have had good experiences as well as bad hence why I’m still their customer. I have at times looked at their competitors as an option and even on my darkest day, O2 managed to rescue me (?) from switching.

But over the past 12 months I have had an increase in bad experiences. From their blatent disregard for non business pay monthly customers who can’t avail of offers like O2 Freedom which Speakeasy customers can, to their inability to offer free roaming to the UK, unless of course you ring and ask them for it. But they don’t give it to everyone seemingly.

I’ve been tempted to rant about O2 for some time but I was never truly pushed that far, until last week. And while my story may sound simple, it is probably the most frustrating experience I have ever had.

Cut to Monday evening, 5th January. I was happily doing my domestic chores at home when my phone was possessed by the Devil himself and lept out of my pocket into a bowl of water. It died a painful and unforgiving death. No amount of radiator or hairdryer tricks were going to save it. I was in a panic the next day as I was due to leave the country on Wednesday and needed a replacement handset. Being the technogeek that I am I needed a new iPhone. I say a new iPhone because the phone that took a water trip was an iPhone, albeit not an iPhone I purchased direct from O2, much to my pleasure I must ad.

In a moment of weakness spawned by a flurry of reply tweets on Twitter I opted for upgrading to a 3G iPhone. I was under time pressure on the Tuesday and I need to act fast with a company that could cater for me efficiently. O2 weren’t that company.

I rang the Carphone Warehouse which was closest to my place of work to see if they had an iPhone in stock and they said they hadn’t. Ok no problem. Plan B. I rang the O2 Helpdesk who gave me some upgrade advice that I wasn’t aware of and told me that the Carphone Warehouse doesn’t at present have any iPhones in stock but O2 Retail definitely do.

Great says me. I hopped in my car and made my journey to Henry Street O2 Store. The queuing system is very poor. O2 appear to have semi borrowed some ideas from Apple and implemented them pretty poorly in my opinion. After queuing with other confused customers for 5 minutes, I was served by a helpful staff member. She proceeded to tell me they had no O2 phones in stock but the Grafton Street store did and Dundrum O2 did too. (She told me this after checking her computer terminal)

I travelled by foot with flask of tea and sandwiches to Grafton Street with a wad of cash in hand and time eating into my lunch break. I arrive to the Grafton Street store to queue bigger than the queues for the shops in Newry at Christmas time. It wasn’t that there was a special offer, they were just busy. There was about 5 staff on although I wasn’t sure what 2 of them were doing and if it was customer related. While queuing for 15 minutes, the instore Speakeasy top up machine went faulty creating a new “special” queue adding to the chaos. My tummy was rumbling and I had to get back to the office.

I was eventually greeted by an employee. He proceeded to tell me that they had no iPhones in stock. In fact he told me (without checking his terminal), that the only places in Ireland I could get an iPhone at the moment were Letterkenny or Kilarney. He couldn’t give me a reason why the sister store on Henry Street told me that he did have iPhones nor why they told me Dundrum did too. But much more to my frustration he couldn’t tell me why they didn’t have a sign on the door saying “Sorry no iPhones in stock” rather than lavishing the store and store window’s with ads for the iPhone. It wouldn’t have been so bad had the queue not been so big. But after queuing in one store to queue in another to be told “sorry none in stock” and being made feel like a plonker for even suggesting buying one, I admit I had to bite my tongue leaving the store.

The story doesn’t end there though. On my sorrow filled walk back to the car park, I passed a large Carphone Warehouse Store on North Earl Street. It had an iPhone ad in the window. With a mischievous grin on my face, I went into the store to ask where their iPhones were.

I was shocked to find there was no queue. I was even more shocked to see a sign on the wall saying iPhones in stock. The employee who sold me my iPhone was equally shocked to hear that O2 were telling people that Carphone Warehouse does not have any iPhone stock at present.

I purchased an iPhone in the colour and GB size that I wanted in a swift and friendly transaction. I was even more furious with O2′s inability to communicate simple information to their customers and potential customers at that point.

But the story doesn’t end there. On checking my phone last night I discovered that O2 neglected to move my phone tariff to the iPhone tariff. Perhaps this time I will wait for them to contact me before I alert them to it. In the interim I shall enjoy carrying minutes forward, as little as they may be!

In a totally unrelated comment, I have always been confused as to why O2 use water bubbles in their marketing imagery.

How Smart Workers Survive a Downturn

January 5th, 2009 No comments

Broken Computer, broken heart.
It’s about time I wrote something about work life. After all, my working career has been good to me so far, although I have been good to my career by working at it. I work in a finance role at the moment managing a small global team for a large multinational. I have been in my limited career, project managed, insourced, outsourced, invented the wheel, fit square pegs in round holes and drank lots of tea. You don’t need to be a coffee drinker to succeed in life – trust me!

Given its all doom and gloom in the papers today, Ireland is hemorrhaging jobs, let me share with you some thoughts and ideas to maintain a healthy career. Some of it may seem obvious, some of it may seem like common sense, but hopefully there is something in it for everyone. Granted this is a very brief article, hopefully it can inspire some ideas.

We all need some level of security in our place of work, be us a cog in the corporate wheel or an up and coming entrepreneur. What sets us out from everyone? Think about the reasons that you shop in Dunnes Stores instead of Tesco, or go to one gym instead of another. After price, whats the reason? For many of us its Value.

Have you set yourself career goals, short, medium or long term? You probably have one of the following answers:

* Nah, what’s the point, sure I’m in X career, there is only so far I can go unless I go back to college or sumthin.
* Haven’t had a chance or given it much thought really.
* Yes

Now if you are reading my blog, you’re already a walking genius so lets assume you’ve your goals written down. Well done, you’ve given yourself a head start on everyone else. There are plenty of books that will quote you stats on how much more successful it will make you. But lets be honest, writing down “Goal 1: I want to be rich and successful” isn’t going to make you rich and successful no matter what Rhonda Byrne (author of The Secret) may tell you!

Its all about the detail.

If you goal is to be rich and successful, where do you begin? I’m fecked if I know! So get specific. Write down goals such as; “Goal 1: I want to own a 03 Mercedes in 2010.” Now we’re getting somewhere. You’ve set yourself a specific goal with a timeframe. Same goes with the workplace. E.G. “Goal 2: I want to project managing the outsourcing of X tasks to Site B by 2010.” Bingo. Same thing. Specific, time frame.

I could go on, but there are plenty of books out there on goals and realising them. Lets look at the roadmap to realising your goal.

Lets say your goal is to be your team supervisor by such and such a date. However there is rarely an opportunity for promotion because the person currently doing it has been there for years yada yada. Sound familiar? Yeah we’ve all been there at some point. I couldn’t be arsed, blah blah blah, hate the place blah blah blah. You get my drift. One day though that person will leave, or new position is created or a new opportunity within your company or externally. Its definitely going to happen. The question is how are you going to be prepared for it?

Let me give you an example from some years ago when I managed a large team of 20 people with 4 supervisors. The supervisors were institutionalised and happy with their positions. No signs of them moving on. One of the core feedback items from their subordinates was there was rarely opportunity for promotion. 2 people in particular came to me asking me for advice on moving up the ladder and expressed interest in progressing the management route. Over a 12 month period, the penny dropped with one of the girls, she started taking on additional responsibilites from her supervisor, getting more involved in task and decision making where she could and started to do more in house training. All off her own back and without (a) brown nosing and (b) working any extra hours. The other girl moaned about it the lack of progress in the company and how “shite” morale was. 12 months passed and one of my supervisors annouced she was unexpectedly pregnant. No prize for guessing which of the team members was first in line to cover her maternity benefit. The same individual is now a team manager in another industry, for another company. Progress with little effort.

So what has this to do with riding out a downturn? Well its an analogy for your effectiveness in the workplace. Take a step back from yourself at work. Are you good at your job? How do you know? Are you grade against your responsibilities or are you graded on what you do above and beyond your responsibilties? What value do you you add to your department and organisation? Just because its not in your job description does not necessarily mean you shouldn’t take heed or just get it done. The buck stops with each of us individually regardless of whether we are customer facing or not.

As a manager I surround myself with good people. (Some will argue its because Im a lazy fecker who wants to skive as much as possible!) If you are part of an effective team, your strengths far outway your weakness and in many cases, null and void them. For the same reason the dragons on the Dragon’s Den dont invest in the new and interesting products but rather the individuals who create them, companies like to keep good people. Are you one of them?

Its a busy pace of life both at home and in the office. I generally use the Outlook calendar and Tasks to manage my daily routines. Whenever I need to set my goals for the week or even the day, I write them all down and then shave 30% of them off the list. That way I know I have a good chance of achieving them. Afterall, the work week never goes as planned. We get distracted from all directions. Bespoke requests from management, dragged out customer request, or just even the computer network being down. It all adds up.

Finally the last thing I will say (if you’re still reading and chances are you’re not!) is try stay positive. Nothing worse than a grumpy employee!

Living with Tinnitus

January 5th, 2009 5 comments

Tinnitus
HUMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM.
Thats tinnitus described in one line. Although to a tinnitus sufferer, the line is probably alot longer, and much louder.

I’ve had tinnitus since I was 15 and it has had a major impact on my life since then. Family and friends often comment that I don’t speak about it much, so I decided to write about it instead.

What is tinnitus? Well it affects people in many ways. Its believed that as many as 1 in 10 people suffer from it throughout their life. For most sufferers its an incurable condition. So what exactly is it? Well this is what Wikipedia has to say:

Tinnitus (pronounced /tɪˈnaɪtəs/ or /ˈtɪnɪtəs/,[1] from the Latin word for “ringing”[2]) is the perception of sound within the human ear in the absence of corresponding external sound.
Tinnitus can be perceived in one or both ears or in the head. It is usually described as a ringing noise, but in some patients it takes the form of a high pitched whining, buzzing, hissing, humming, or whistling sound, or as ticking, clicking, roaring, “crickets” or “tree frogs” or “locusts”, tunes, songs, or beeping.[3] It has also been described as a “wooshing” sound, as of wind or waves. Tinnitus can be intermittent or it can be continuous. In the latter case, this “phantom” sound can create great distress in the sufferer.

Thats about right. What causes it ranges from long exposures to loud noise or “you just get it” syndrome. For me, I have it in both ears although it is slightly louder in my left ear. I have it 24/7, 365 days a week. Even on bank holidays. And its fucking annoying.

I first noticed it at about 15 years of age one night, when I heard a ringing noise but I wasn’t sure where it was coming from. Its now far louder than what it was then, I suppose I can blame that partly for my love of music and my involvement in bands some years ago!

So what did I do when I got it? I went to my local GP. He was the family doctor and very down to earth. He explained the ins and outs on it, but admitted he doesn’t have that many patients for it and “you’ll just have to learn to live with it”. Yeah thanks doc. It seems what he said is an immortal line that is said to many of us “T” sufferers around the world.

What happened next was I went mad. I went through periods of depression, withdrawal from life and a fear of going to bed. It’s at it’s worst at night when things are quiet. Falling asleep can be awful on a bad night.

The doc referred me to an E.N.T. (Ears, nose and throat specialist) in case it was something more serious. At this stage I had tinnitus for a number of years. I was a a shy late teen with plenty of anxiety. The ENT was pricey and to be honest, useless. His did some hearing tests with my ears (which later confirmed my hearing was perfect) and sent me for an MRI scan. He was able to recreate the sounds I hear, via his sound desk and in an effort to “phase” or mask out the sound temporarily, he played it into my ear at the same pitch that I hear. It reduced my tinnitus slightly for a day or 2.

As expected the MRI confirmed I had a brain and 2 ears. It also confirmed I didn’t have a brian tumour. It was a nice result but not really what I was expected. The ENT wrapped up my visit with a lovely letter telling me I didn’t have that brain tumour. Thanks doc.

So I ended up being in a worse place than I was before. The pricey ENT couldn’t help, and the Dark Years began. I started to drink most nights. Not heavily, not to get drunk, but to help me fall asleep quicker. I was really depressed and at my wit’s end. I often feel asleep in tears with cheap headphones wrapped around my ears or stereos beside my pillow. I didn’t know what to do. The National Deaf Association had a tinnitus support group but as far as I remember, they met only once a month. I didn’t know what to do and I couldn’t bear the thought of a life like this and even considered suicide.

Then one day the internet was invented.

I got into the habit at night of getting up if I couldn’t sleep and browsing the net. I didn’t tell my family or friends how bad it really was at the time. It was pointless. Unlike a broken leg, the tinnitus wouldn’t heal so I didn’t see the point in offloading my problems all the time. Besides, none of them truely understood how awful it was. Most of us when we go to a niteclub or concert, suffer temporary ringing in the ears depending on how loud it was, but it subsides. Its hard for people to imagine having it all the time.

One sleepless night when browsing the internet on a dial up connection, (Broadband was the name of an overweight lady’s clothes shop in those days!), I discovered a Tinnitus support forum online (which unfortunately is no longer around). It was fecking marvelous. People from all over the world just like me. Some worse, some better. In the middle of all the users was a man, who indirectly changed my life.

His name was/is, Dr. Stephen Nagler. He is a US doctor who suffers from tinnitus. He has dedicated much of his life to helping those with Tinnitus. HIs website can be found here.

While I never met the chap and couldn’t tell you what he looks like, I did read his posts, and study up on his TRT – Tinnitus Retraining Therapy.

He inspired me to tackle my condition. I attended acupuncture, took some herbal remedies to better my well being. (Although I avoided the controversial Ginkgo Bilbao herb). On studying TRT, I began to teach myself how to tune out to Tinnitus, to turn the Tinnitus noises, into something similar to the buzzing of a fridge or the air conditioning noise in your office. Over the space of a year, my life started to improve.

I’m now 31 and I can sleep at night. Even though I will probably never sleep in a room without some form of audio distraction (fancy talk for a radio or ipod!), I don’t fear bed. I have a set of rules and routines I live by.

To friends and family, they have probably forget I have tinnitus and that’s a good thing. I don’t feel the need to ever raise it in conversation. When I have a “bad day”, I can deal with it on my own. I don’t get depressed and my self confidence is just like William Shatners. Why Willliam Shatner? Well because he has tinnitus. As does, Neil Young, Leslie Nielson, James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich from Metallica, Bono, Beethoven, Van Gogh, Thom Yorke and Sylvestor Stallone. To name but a few.

Every tinnitus sufferer has their story. Some of us come out the other side, some of us don’t. My story, albeit short summarised here, isn’t one shared by all sufferers unfortunately. Since my coming to terms with my tinnitus, I feel comfortable talking to fellow sufferers (in the past I would avoid them as they depressed me even more!) I hope that I have helped some of them in recent years. Or at least provide an understanding, um, ear!

Anyway that’s my story. Are you still listening?