-
Cash vs Credit
It seems that these days very few businesses besides gas stations charge a different price for cash vs. credit. I know that there is a cost to accepting credit cards (transaction fee and percentage of sale), but companies consider it a cost of doing business and absorb the cost. Years ago when I started accepting credit cards for NotfiyMail, I too realized this and if I wanted to get more customers, I'd have to accept credit cards and charging different prices would not sit well with customers. It would seem that either gas stations are on a super slim margin or just want to milk customers. There are 2 gas stations near my house; for a long time neither accepted credit cards, so I always got cash before going (they charged a $0.35 convenience fee for ATM transactions). Then one of them starting accepting credit cards for the same price as cash. Well, the second station started accepting credit cards at a different price (6 cents higher), so the station I was going to just started doing the same thing. This really annoys me, but it won't stop me from going there as the bank is in the same shopping center so I can get cash and it is convenient.
-
My tax dollars hard at work
I tend to use the phrase "my tax dollars hard at work" when describing wasteful spending of tax dollars. Today's paper gave me another opportunity to say this. San Diego is looking to build a bigger airport and has selected some military sites (currently in use) as options where they would be dual use (military and civilian). They have done this despite the fact that the military has said absolutely no. The airport authority has paid a consultant to come up with ways that the airport could be dual use. If the military said no, is there any chance it will happen?
-
Viruses on Navy computers, i.e. I'm paying to get spammed
It looks like the Navy needs to update their virus software as they have a machine trying to send me spam:
-
Nice work, RapidWeaver
Over the past 24 hours, I've been bombarded by bounced email that appears to have originated from my server. Turns out, there is a security flaw in the php script that RapidWeaver uses for its contact page so people have been exploiting it to send spam. Reading the message boards for the software shows that the authors knew about this about 1.5 weeks ago. It would have been nice for them to inform their users to turn this feature off until they can patch it. Even after they patch it, I'll find another way to handle the contact page so I don't have to deal with this again.