Search This Blog

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Buzzwords

Groundbreaking, paradigm shift and the like.  We've all heard them, and maybe we've even slipped up and uttered such words.  Let's begin a list of words that should never be spoken or written--unless you're a writer for Family Guy!

Flexible
Unsurpassed
Interoperable
New rules
Grounbreaking
Reaching anything
Industry standard
A wide range of
Cutting edge
Next generation
Anything 2.0
Robust/bigger/smarter/faster
World class
In a league of its own
Revolutionary
Scalable
Modifiable 
Easy to use
Mission anything
Turnkey
Out-of-the-box
Best of anything
User friendly
Leading anything
We're excited about anything
Solutions
News snackers
Staycation
Leveraging knowledge capital
Empowerment/empowered
Tipping point
Next generation

See the Buzzword Generator to create your own!  http://www.elfqrin.com/buzzwgen.html

My own generated word: triple-buffered neutral port

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Home Insurance


Thank you for your recent inspection of my mother's home and property and the recent correspondence--copy enclosed for your edification.

In regards to the three areas of concern, I offer the following responses.

1. "Trim tree limbs away from roof."  Recently several entire trees were removed that, although unbeknownst to the casual eye, posed potential minor damage pending high winds.  As such, no "tree limbs" presently pose a danger to the dwelling.

2. "Clean tree debris from the roof."  Although from time to time, I am certain, that "tree debris," i.e., leaves and small twigs, do gather on the roof of her house, I doubt, with any regularity, that substantial "tree debris" is located on the roof.  By substantial, I'm referring to abnormally sized limbs, trees, or other trash that would pose a hazard to people on the ground or to the structure of the roof itself. 

3. "Clean up overgrown backyard (i.e [sic] trim trees, shrubs, bushes etc)."  I agree that the backyard is "overgrown," at least by suburban standards.  However, the backyard poses no danger to the house, its inhabitants, or neighbors.  Given the residential nature of the neighborhood, and the city itself, the backyard does not pose a fire danger either.  As stated prior, trees in close proximity to the house have been removed. 

While I appreciate the "safety" motif of the letter, I'm disconcerted that you would threaten "cancellation of the policy" because of untrimmed shrubs.  I sincerely doubt that NAIC, IIPRC and similar organizations would find the utility in such claims.

Do contact me, via any method below, should you have any questions or concerns regarding this letter.  Otherwise I will consider the matter resolved and assume no further action is necessary and accept the implicit apology therein. 

Warmest regards,

A Nice Letter

Dear Frommert Gang,


It is with much sadness that I write this letter asking for a
sublease of my current residence (address above).  I have
immensely enjoyed the stay at my apartment and even more so
enjoyed the staff at Frommert Real Estate.  Alicia is the
kindest, most loving and most competent property manager that I
have ever had the pleasure of working with.

I would be more than happy to stop by your office and pick up a
rental sign to place in my yard, and I would be delighted to
assist you in any way in this process.


Your loving, but sad, tenant,

More Parking Ticket Woes & Collection Agency!

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

Termite Inspection

Re: Termite Inspection

As impressed as I might be with your wake-up call at 8:00am, I am equally appalled at your lack of professionalism with your supposedly inspection; that, in fact, consisted of a balding middle-aged man walking around my apartment tapping the handle-end of a flat-head (presumably this “tool” works better than the ubiquitous Phillips head, or heaven forbid, the torque-head screwdriver)  at the bottom of various walls.  One might assume that the bottom of the wall divulged more secrets than, say perhaps, the top of the wall; or the middle of the wall?  And really, do the termites congregate at the bottom of the wall in greater frequency than at the top?  One might, I say might as I only have a masters degree, so bare with me, that termites might, just...ok bare with me here, just might “hang-out” where, gasp, there’s wood?  You think you could get that fat bastard to venture up into the attic?  I mean, hold on here, there’s wood up there, right?  And, still there?, the termites might be hanging out munchin’ on some wood and stuff? 

I know, I know, I’m just jealous.  Forty-thousand in student loans; sixty-five hours a week of work for a minimal forty-hour stipend; you might think I was bitter and jaded?  Not really.  I just want to know how I, someone with all, ok most, of my teeth and my complete cortex can land such a lucrative “career” as termite inspector?  I mean, I can supply my own screwdriver!  Think of the savings in employee expenses you can have?  

More Parking Ticket Woes

Citation Review Center
1380 Howard Street, #1000
San Francisco, CA 94103

July 24, 2004

RE: Parking ticket appeal, citation # 8564145 

Visiting San Francisco for the first time, I had breakfast in the Haight-Ashbury district on the morning of July 16th.  I had the usual difficulty that many tourists and San Fran natives alike have of finding a parking place. 

I managed to find one spot on a crowded street of parked cars.  I could not find a parking sign that indicated the acceptable parking days/times as what appeared to be the “normal” parking sign (see Appendix A) was missing.  The sign directly across the street was unreadable (see Appendix B) as it was covered with a mix of graffiti and what appeared to be the glue-resin from stickers.  Appendix C is a copy of the ticket.

Not knowing the rules for parking in this area of town—or in any part of San Francisco for that matter—I parallel parked and placed several quarters in the parking meter.  I found this option logical as both sides of the street were covered in parked cars; all, I might add, with California plates. 

I asking for a careful review of this appeal on two factual grounds: (1) the parking sign was completely missing from the side of the street where I parked—normally a legal parking space; (2) the parking sign on the opposite side of the street is completely unreadable.  I might add that had the parking sign on the opposite side of the street been readable, and indicated a no-parking zone, I would have parked elsewhere. 

Thank you for your consideration in this matter,
Transportation & Parking
Customer Service Office, Bldg. 112,
North South Drive

Re: Citation Appeal

 On August 20th I received a letter from Budget Rent-a-Car that I had received a parking violation while I was in possession of a car I had rented from them.  See enclosed: copy of “Customer Parking Citations Notice.”

As project manager for the Closure Clinics at the neurology department, I regularly, over the summer months in 2004, utilized a service drive pass (see enclosure copy) to unload/load a vehicle for out-of-town data collection sessions.   My maximum time in the service drive is 30 minutes; the more typical average is 15 minutes.  Considering I have utilized the service drive since 1999 for this purpose, I am well-adept at time management, i.e., not going over the hour time limit.  Do, however, feel free to check my parking record here on campus.   

My reason for appeal is two-fold:

1.      I never received a parking violation on my car.  Hence, the Budget letter two months after the alleged violation. 
2.      Second, I never go over the allotted time in the service drive.  My sole purpose in using the service drive permit is to pack or unpack my vehicle and get to my destination as quickly as possible—frequently I drive 2+ hours to my destination.   

My assumption is the parking attendant was unfamiliar with the rental car, as my usual vehicle was broken—hence the rental car—or the attendant did not see the parking permit.  I am only guessing, since I did not receive a parking violation and I can only imagine the reason.

Please do contact me should you have any questions as Budget, see copy of enclose letter, is demanding an additional fee. 

University Parking Ticket

Re: reason for citation #W10341 appeal:

On April 4, 2003 at approximately 8:00pm, I parked my motorcycle (parking decal # MC20984386517) by the eastern-most bicycle rack at Bloompie Hall Plaza

The motorcycle was not on a sidewalk, nor was it impeding: pedestrian, bicycle or vehicle traffic. 

During the day, many scooters (not go-peds)—at times approaching a dozen—are parked at various locations on Bloompie Plaza.  These locations include: bicycle racks, next to buildings, on sidewalks, and in breeze-ways.  In order for these scooters to park in these locations, the drivers must first drive around the fence barricade that the university has erected to keep non-official traffic out of the university roadways.  Driving a non-official vehicle during business hours around these barricades is prohibited.  And Bloompie Plaza is not alone is its occupancy of scooters; many other locations in the inner university are littered with these scooters—all driven illegally around the barricades. 

I fail to see the logic in this double standard.  Why do I receive a ticket for parking, well after hours, my motorcycle in a non-obtrusive location and the scooters not? 

If the university Police Department is going to enforce no-motorcycle parking, then the same needs to apply to scooter parking.  I am basing my appeal on this glaring inconsistency.  

Vacuum this!

Dear National Vacuum,

I was driving by your 6th Street store the other day, like most days, when I noticed your current sign.  Now, I must say that I usually enjoy your signs; I find them witty and a nice break from the usual grind of traffic.  In fact, you are the first business I turn to when I need parts or service for my vacuum.  I mean, a vacuum isn’t the most important item in my life—until, that is, it breaks down.  My immediate recollection, in times of “vacuum need,” is your store; this is, no doubt, a result of your creative marketing.

Your current sign, a tribute to former president Reagan, is a bit over the top.  Ronald Reagan left office with one of the worst approval ratings of any president—rating just a smidgen above Richard Nixon.  Reagan created a shadow government that secretly dealt with terrorists; practically everything out of Reagan’s mouth was a fabrication—what, that is, he could remember.  Reagan’s massive deficit, bested only recently by the current dolt in office, left this country in a massive turmoil.  Reagan did NOT decrease the size of government as many uninformed types believe—the size of the military (a government agency) ballooned and the tax breaks for the ultra wealthy created a greater need for social services and similar government agencies.

In the future, stick to mindless catchy slogans for your signs and leave political science to the educated.  One must imagine the level of intelligence needed to sell vacuums; what’s the average IQ in your stores?  54?  65?  I can imagine the National Vacuum family: “passed down from generation to generation, reach-around optional.”

Oh in case there was any doubt, I will never step foot in your stores again.  By the time you receive this letter my protest against you ignorant white-trash rednecks, will have circulated the greater Posttown area.  I know, I know you’re “thinking” why should we care?  You’ll care because the Posttown area, sans limbic-system only functioning types such as yourself, is an intellectual and educated town. 

Should you have the inclination to reply, not bloody likely, please write out (legibly) your response and mail to the above address.  Try to use complete sentences and remember those grammar rules.  You should probably have an eight-year old look it over first.

Insincerely,

Incomprehensible Rant for the Incompetent

You’s lawn mowers types have onc’er ‘gen mowed over mores of my’s greenerys.  Why’s you can’t sees what’s in plains sites of yer’s own eyes, is beyond me’s comprehension.  I know’s tis bee’s so difficults to operates such difficult machineries, but maybes you’s needs to drink less old miluwakees (is does get beeter than that) and focuses more on theses blades of grasses.  Perhaps you’s needs some better glasses?  Perhaps you’s should have studdied betters in grammers scools and spent less times with them theres sheeps in ag classes.  I means, hows hards tis it to mow some grass?  Where be da problems with doing dat?  Whys cant bees you numb knuts just foliage 

Maintenance Services

Re: landscaping (sic) services

Dear Ms. Avery,

Practically every time you and your crew mow the lawn at 919/921 NE 6th Avenue, you manage to destroy something.  For you convenience, and to minimize the destruction of property at said address, I have provided you and your crew with a simple check-list of do’s and don’ts.

  1. Under no circumstances are you to ever mow, weed-wack, mangle, trample or generally destroy my garden again.  The only reason I took time to border the perimeter of my garden with wood and raise the bed and stake it off, was to provide a clear delineation of where the garden stops and the grass begins.  You and your crew hold the distinction as the only morons to ever mow my garden. 
  2. Under no circumstances are you to ever use that leaf-blower under my carport or on the skirt leading up to the carport again.  Do you think the dirt particles magically disappear as soon as they disappear from the concrete?  This is where they go: through the screens of my open windows and then settle on everything inside the apartment.  In addition, my motorcycle is parked under the carport, and I am sure you don’t want a bill to repaint it after you have sand blasted it.  If you must use that abhorrent machine, use it in the street only.
  3. I want to remind you that spring is here.  This means that much of the foliage surrounding the apartment is growing.  Spring is NOT the time to hack back the growth.  Also, please refrain from running the riding-lawn-mower too close.  If you are even the slightest unsure that you will not clear the shrubbery, leave it!  I will gladly come behind you and clip any grass (weeds) that are too close. 
  4. Last, if you ever have any issues with my garden, or anything that you perceive is within your grass-duties domain, you need to contact the owners of the property or Turlington Real Estate.  I will not tolerate any more of your disregard for my property.  Should you continue in this regard, the next contact you will have from me will be a subpoena to small claims court—and given the mass of complaints against you, I feel rather confident in this regard.
cc
921 NE 6th Avenue
Turlington Real Estate

Holiday Inn

At the beginning of this year I stayed one night at your hotel.  I found the accommodations to be rather shabby and overpriced, but, alas, this is not the reason I am writing you.

Several weeks after staying at your hotel I received a packet in the mail from the Priority Club Rewards with, among other paperwork, a credit-card-like card with my new account number and name on it. 

I DID NOT sign up for this “service” while at your hotel and I DID NOT give you authorization to use my personal information to register me for this service.  You knowingly violated my privacy by using this information.  Whether or not the Priority Club is a subsidiary of Holiday Inn or the faction(s) that own it, is irrelevant. 

As you might suspect, I will never stay at a Holiday Inn, Intercontinental, Crowne Plaza or Staybridge or any other hotel/organization/etc. owned, operated or mismanaged by you ever again.  Just so you know, I am in the process of locating those businesses.

I am sending a copy of this letter and a further explanation of what happened when you stole my information to the organizations listed below.  I will also send these documents to other organizations that watch over unethical companies such as yourself.

It is with much sorrow that I can not leave my name nor address for which to receive your pathetic groveling; should I do as much, one might surmise my name and personal information ending up on another “service” offered by you.  But, do not take my omission of personal information as any indication of my leniency in pursuing this matter.

cc.
Better Business Bureau
Electronic Privacy Information Center
Priority Club

Letter to management before fake management letter sent to tenant

Dear KKI,

This is, yet another, formal complaint about the prolonged and excessive volume of apartment three’s stereo.  The “music” is audible from the sidewalk and throughout the 402 building.  This scenario continues for, at times, over an hour; to say nothing of the cigarette butts and the smelly garbage dripped down the stairwell by the inhabitants. 

I hasten to add this is not the first time I have contacted the “management” of KKI regarding this matter.  The last complaint resulted in your Saturday “B shift” staff answering his personal cell phone and placing me on hold for the duration of his call. 

Given the general malaise about this Field’s of Rockville tenant and their insubordinate behavior and the less than mildly adequate follow-through by Field’s team, this will be the final complaint—either written or via phone.  The next complaint goes directly to the organizations that subsidize the Field’s operations; if I’m feeling particularly giving that day, I’ll send KKI a copy.

Sincerely,

Your frustrated tenant  

Fake letter from management sent to noisy tenant

Re: Surprise visitation

Dear Tenant,

Periodically throughout the year, our Team at KSI conducts random, unannounced, visits to our various “the Fields” locales.  We do this unannounced because we garner a more true analysis of the status of our apartments than if we gave each of our Field’s managers a prior notice.

Overall, we were mildly satisfied with our Rockville location.  We did notice, in addition, several gross violations regarding your apartment.  To assist you in correcting these oversights, we have listed them below for you.  KSI expects immediate compliance.

  1. Loud music
  2. Cigarettes on the stoop
  3. Excessive yelling inside and outside of your apartment
  4. Trash spillage down the stairs
  
Sincerely,

KSI Management

Academic incompetence

Dr. Kricos,

It is with much regret that I write this to you.

As I mentioned on Friday, Friday’s meeting did not go as I had expected.  Many of the items or “conclusions” that were discussed in our meeting on Thursday in your Dauer Hall office were contradicted in Friday’s group meeting at the Center.  In fact, I found most of your responses to be the exact opposite of what we had discussed less than 24 hours earlier.

Thursday, you seemed entirely supportive of me having a key to the Center; in fact, you asked for “justifications” that you could give Betty in order to facilitate this.  I gave you several suggestions, e.g., during the times Betty is absent from the office, I will be able to run errands without leaving the Center door unlocked. 

Second, I explained why “so many” copies were made this past month, offering several concrete examples, e.g., course flyer forms. I believed this explanation was satisfactory to you.  In addition, I explained that, in fact, the number of copies for this month was not out of the ordinary for any given month, and I further explained that I had not received any notification from Betty, either written or verbal, that restrictions were placed on using the copier. 

After so many years of service, I am deeply saddened that Betty was unwilling to discuss the copies with me; instead, she chose to consult with the OIR staff and then change the locks. 

At some point after this Betty informed you of problems she was having with me.  You can imagine the amount of distrust this has instilled in me.  Further, coupling this with the complete turn around of our recent meetings together, I have lost trust and faith in you.  I can not and will not work in an environment where I am not trusted and where the meeting outcomes, no matter how tentative, change so dramatically within such a short period of time.  In addition, I had suggested you contact Dr. West regarding, not only my past performance, but to obtain an impartial perspective on these issues.  I suggested this because Dr. West has worked extensively with Betty both as Director and previously as Associate Director, but you chose not to do this. 

I can appreciate the difficulty of the situation.  Sorting out who said what and who did what and to whom is no easy task. This is not a case of who you might or might not have “sided” with in today’s meeting, but rather an issue of you trusting what I have told you, accepting or not accepting of the concrete evidence that I presented to you, and lastly and really the crux here, trusting that what we talk about in one meeting will carry over to other meetings without being completely contradicted. 

I am having a hard time reconciling last semester’s glowing graduate assistant evaluation you wrote for me, and the fact that you have “had no problems with my performance” to date with the end result of Friday’s meeting.

Because of these many issues discussed above, I will be unable to continue my employment at the Center, effective immediately.  

Five Star Pizza

Re: incompetent service at the 39th Ave branch


It is with great sorrow that I write this letter to my beloved 5 Star—or as I frequently write, my 5*.  Having been a long-time consumer of your Large Pepperoni—going back to the late 80s—it’s with great regret that I am forced to write this.   

I’ve enjoyed your downtown (210 SW 2ND AV) service for many years with little if any complaint.  I found the service to be extremely prompt; the pizza to always be hot and exactly what I ordered.  To give you an idea: I’ve consistently, i.e., at least once a week, ordered pizza from your downtown branch since 1994 for over 8 addresses though the years.  Prior to that I was a take-out consumer of your W. University location. 

Recently I moved over by NW 39th Avenue and NW 13th Street.  The service at the 39th Avenue branch is unacceptable.  The phone personnel are completely incompetent—often hanging up on me before I finish my order.  My order is frequently wrong, but above all, the time from placing order to delivery is completely unacceptable.  Frequently the drivers complain to me that, “they got lost.”  My pizza is often cold; in addition, the toppings on my pizza are so scarce that I need to order double of said toppings.  There seems to be a general lack of communication and work ethic at this 5 Star locale. 

I ask you to take this letter in all sincerity; as it is not my practice to send letters of complaint to fast food restaurants.  Yet, it will be a cold day in hell before I order pizza from your 39th AVE locale again.

Your former loyal customer

  
cc. 5 star @ 210 SW 2ND AV
      5 star @ 600 NW 75TH ST
      5 star @ 818 W UNIVERSITY AV

Alamo Car Rentals

Dearest Alamo Bastards,

Recently I had the experience that every traveler dreads: hop onto an airplane, fly 3000 miles away from home, get to the rental-car counter (or hotel counter) and the ever-so competent attendee informs you that, “we are unable to honor your reservation.”  I try to remain calm and reason with your employee, “but, I made the reservation over a month ago and here is my conformation number (I hand him the printed e-mail, in its entirety).”  “Yes,” he says, “I have your reservation in the computer, but we’re unable to honor it.”  I refrain from saying that I heard him perfectly well the first time, and that, so far, he has been unable to answer any of my retorts to his pre-programmed set of responses that he learned, no doubt, in Alamo training school before he was set out onto the public—I figured, why clog his already overloaded brain? 

He adds some extra data to the conversation, “have you ever rented from us before?”  I exclaim, “I’m not sure, but my guess would be yes.”  “Did you return the car late” he said; as if that would suffice as I stood there, 2 O’clock in the morning my time, 3000 miles away from my home.  I said, “probably not, but even if I did, my credit card paid the balance.”  He retorted, “I can’t help you anymore; here’s the number for ‘problem-renters.”  I refrained, once again, from informing him that he hadn’t helped me in the first place, so saying that he would not longer be able to help me would not be entirely correct as ‘no longer’ indicates some form of previous help; that, in fact, he had not accomplished, but alas, I digress.

He gave me the number to call to “straighten things out.”  He informed me, after I asked to use the phone, that he would be unable to let me use their phone.  I refrained, once again, from asking him what exactly he is able to do as all I get from him is what he is unable to do.  I walk to a pay phone and call the 1.800 number; thankful it is a toll-free call.  I am directed directly to voice mail; I am confused.  If Alamo is unable to rent a car to me that they reserved to me, why is no one able to honor this reservation?  And more importantly, why am I given a number that goes to voice mail?  I walk back to the counter and inform your employee that the number goes to voice mail.  He informs me that, you guessed it, he is unable to help me. 

I remind myself that it’s a service economy; that those folks that, 15 years ago, would have been hanging off the back of a garbage truck, are now servicing customers. 

Luckily I was traveling with another person; to which he said, “I can rent a car to her.”  “Only if she didn’t previously return a car late, though?” I said.  I realized I shouldn’t have said this as he was confused and trying to think about what I said and type at the same time.  I informed him that I was only joking, and to please transfer everything over to my traveling partner’s name. 
My traveling partner was on the cell phone off in the corner when your employee informed me that the rental for one day would now be $79.00 for one day.  “I have to” he started to explain after I shrieked at this, “treat you as a walk-up now.”  I informed him that was fine, being treated as a common walk-up now, but that the convertible that he was now trying to rent to me, and at the price he was trying to rent to me, was a but much.  When I asked him what happened to the car I reserved he exclaimed, “that car is no longer available.”  I retorted, “did it disappear in the last 5 minutes?”  “No,” he said, “it’s just no longer available.”  I tried to do my best to explain to him that the sole purpose of the reservation is to hold the car until the customer pick up said car, but he was unmoved; speaking only to inform me that the car was unavailable. 

To make a long and very un-necessary story short, I spoke to the manager and had my original car applied to the “walk-up” status that myself and my traveling companion had thrust upon us.  I am a bit lost at why an Alamo employee would not go to great lengths to do everything to ameliorate this problem; this problem that is, no doubt, the result of some blundering data-entry clerk at Alamo mixing my name up with someone else.  But, I know it is a service economy and with that, the service cares nothing of the customer as there are always ten customers behind every customer turned away—turned away, even 3000 miles away from their home.

Had the above been the only problem with Alamo, I might not have written this tome, but alas, and of course, it is not.  It seems the Alamo corporation is plagued with many and varied mis-management issues.

Awaking at 3:00am the next morning—that is less than 4 hours of sleep after haggling with the desk clerk at the San Diego Alamo rental car counter—and having to be in Los Angles at 6:00am, I place the key in the ignition of the Alamo and the car furiously turned over and over but did not start.   I thought I was doing something wrong and turned the ignition back and pulled the key out and reinserted it and tried it again, but to the same result, or lack of result.  I left the key in the accessory position for several minutes and tried to start the car again, but, again, to no avail.  I tried every “trick” I could think of to start the car; save consulting the stars for guidance. 

I decided to call your road-side “assistance” for, well, assistance.  I was placed on hold for over 10 minutes—yes, I kept track.  As it was 30 minutes later, and I had budgeted 40 extra minutes for u-turns and such, I was a bit eager to get-a-moving.  To Alamo’s credit, and believe me I am hesitant to give an ounce, your roadside assistance operator was quite nice and helpful—even if she was reading from a pre-prepared script.  I explained to her what was going on.  She asked the obvious, if necessary, questions, “did you leave the lights on; does it seem like the battery is dead?” etc.  

I spent about 8 minutes, yes I counted, on the phone with her trying every bizarre suggestions she had—including the ever-puzzling, “pull the key out and wipe it off and try again.”  The final suggestion was to try the “other” key on the ring.  Now, before I reveal the punch line here, let me just say that the key I was using was, in fact, turning the engine over; it fit perfectly; it unlocked the steering wheel and turned on all accessories; now why would a key exist that did all that but didn’t actually start the car?  Perhaps a better question is, why would this key be on a key-ring that you give to customers?  So, the “extra” key did in fact start the car.  Your roadside assistance person tried to assuage my frustration by suggesting the key was a valet key.  This, of course, is absurd as the sole purpose of a valet is to drive the car; hence, the car would need to start. 

This is the point in the letter where I tell you how 90% of your employees are bumbling idiots.  This is the point where I ask you if you are in the car rental business or the, “let’s be complete fucking assholes” business.  This is the point where I suggest you should fire every asshole at your San Diego branch and relegate them to garbage detail; where I suggest that you remove any fucking key that doesn’t start a car—it’s kinda like renting a car without an engine, eh?  This is the point where I say I will never rent from Alamo or National or do business (yes I’ve starting looking into who owns you and who you own) with any of your subsidiaries.  And lastly, go fuck yourself.