I seem to have experienced a run of bad luck recently when
it comes to household systems and technology, and just when I thought my
troubles were over, up crops a new issue. Since June there’s been a problem
with the central heating system - necessitating the replacement of a motorised
valve, a toilet cistern that wouldn’t refill after flushing, and
Matthew’s
shower scaled up and non-operational. There has also been the ongoing issue
with a squeaky wheel on my car, but despite visits to two different
garages/vehicle repair shops, no one can find anything wrong with the vehicle.
(It made it to
Scotland and back, last month!)
Yesterday morning, thinking my troubles were behind me, I
logged on to
Blogger, in order to access my dashboard, to discover I was denied
access. I’m talking about my own site here, the one I post all sorts of articles
that come under the beer, pub and travel banner, but the browser I use –
Firefox, would not let me in. You can see the message below.
The problem seemed to start after I set up my new
Samsung
Galaxy, mobile phone, purchased the previous weekend. I experienced all sorts
of trouble trying to sync my contacts across from the old one, before
Mrs PBT’s
– who’s rather more tech-savvy than me, came to the rescue and said I had to
save the contacts, on the old device, to the sim card, before installing the
card in the new phone. That worked, but now I’m looking for a music app that
will work off-line as well as when connected to the net, and one that will
enable me to listen to the umpteen
MP3 files copied onto this
PC, from my
extensive
CD collection. Physical music is making a comeback, don't you know, and it's not just vinyl I am referring to.
It was an interesting process buying the new device, and
despite a faultless four year run from my
Xiaomi Mi 9T, I wanted a phone, with a
decent camera, good memory and plenty of storage – the latter was important as over
the
4+ years I had with the
Mi 9T,, I managed to completely fill the
64 GB memory
with photos,
MP3 files and all the other stuff that accumulates over the years.
Work colleagues had recommended a
Samsung, and as I’d owned one previously, it
seemed a good suggestion. Unlike a lot of tech geeks, I didn’t want the latest
version or top of the range model, although I did want a phone that was
slightly larger than my current.
So last Sunday, I took the bus over to Tunbridge Wells and
pitched up in the O2 shop. It was far busier than I imagined it would be, so
they were operating an appointment system. I consequently left my details, and
the staff advised they would text me in an hour or so. Time for a beer, I thought,
even though the original plane had been to go for a drink after completing my purchase. Fuggles was the nearest pub, as well as the most convenient and there
were a couple of people I knew in there, as well.
Not knowing quite how long it would take for
O2 to call me
back, I thought I’d better stick to smaller measures than pints, so I ordered a
two thirds – government approved, glass of
Paulaner Oktoberfest. I then sat
down for a chat with a friend I know from
CAMRA. Despite its strength the beer
slid down remarkably quickly, so I decided to push the boat out with a half of
Wally
Winker’s Death by Chocolate, from
Westerham Brewery, as I’d heard good reports
about it.
I’d only just sat down to enjoy my drink, when the text from O2
came through. I necked the beer down as quick as I could, before heading back
to phone shop. I took the precaution of calling in at the Gents at the RVP on
the way, as I knew the sales process wouldn’t be quick, and I was right. I was
served by a pleasant young lad who, although obviously a techy, (it goes with
the territory, I suppose), knew his stuff. I did have to tell him to slow down
on a number of occasions, but in the end, he made a sale, and I got what I
wanted, a shiny, new Samsung Galaxy A55 5G on a 36-month contract. I didn’t’
get the phone out the box until I’d bought a suitable case, plus screen
protector, and that’s where my troubles began.
Leaving this issue aside, it’s worth mentioning that also in
Fuggles, and sitting at the bar, was another
West Kent CAMRA member, who works
for a well-known
Hop Factoring group, whose roots are in
Southern Germany, but
have sites in the
US, Australia, China, Bavaria, plus the
UK. The group’s
UK offices are based in
Paddock Wood, a large village formerly at the centre of the
Kentish hop growing area, and is where this particular character works.
He had recently returned from a visit to the
United States
where along with a group of colleagues, they had witnessed part of this season’s
hop harvest. Talk about nice work if you can get it, but there’s more to come
as the group was due to make a rare visit to
Samuel Smith’s brewery at
Tadcaster.
As well as being tantamount to the
Holy Grail of brewery tours, long-serving company
chairman,
Humphrey Smith is due to step down by the end of the year. Like others,
I look forward to hearing about this visit, although given
Humphrey’s reclusive
nature, his disdain for modern technology, plus his views on a whole host of
different topics, I don’t expect we’ll be seeing any photos!
8 comments:
Paul,
Life was much simpler, and I think we were just as happy, before we had central heating, showers, cars and computers.
Agreed, Paul. There was far less to go wrong, or break down, including not being able to post a comment on my own beer blog! 😃
I'm sure others have similar fond memories of yesteryear.
Before central heating and televisions, watching the flickering flames and glowing coals of a proper fire,
before showers, relaxing in a warm bath,
before cars, walking to and from school and most memorably during the winter of 1962 to '63,
and before computers, engaging in various pastimes such as making fireworks at this time of year.
We're not likely to see times like that again.
As you follow me on Facebook, Paul, you may be familiar with my travails on getting a new mobile phone (now resolved) and full-fibre broadband (tumbleweed). The problem with so many issues of this kind seems to be getting anyone in an organisation to take responsibility.
But I'm not old enough to remember life without television or a family car, and it's hard to argue that central heating doesn't actually make life much more pleasant than it was before.
C,
I've never properly understood Facebook and haven't noticed anything, at least for a long time, from you on it and thus can't be following you, hence me missing out on those recent travails.
I must admit to enjoying only about five years without a television set and six years without a family car, severe travel sickness in the rear of a second hand Austin Somerset then replacing Manor class locomotives taking us from Wolverhampton Low Level railway station to our annual holiday on the Cambrian Coast.
Most of those Paul, although despite an interest in chemistry, I only dabbled in making fireworks!
Turn it on, turn it off again. Works for most things.
But not this time!
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