Eish! Fake Hard Drives next…

From the Eish! DepartmentMany South Africans (and I see a few overseas readers) have been scammed by purchasing the “Transcend 32Gb Flash Disks” that are actually fake – read my article here if you don’t know what I am talking about.

Well I suppose it was only a matter of time until some clever person low life scum thought about really taking advantage of the method of reprogramming the controller chip on USB flash drives and really making some money…by selling a Fake Hard Drive! I saw an article on Slashdot, which posted a link to a translation of a Russian blog and forum telling the sad story about a guy that bought a hard drive at a insanely low price, only to discover that he could only watch the last 5 or so minutes of the movie that he copied to it…

To quote the site:

A Russian friend of mine has posted this absolutely amazing story.
(here‘s the original but it’s in Russian).

He works at a hard-drive repair center in a Russian town, located near the Chinese border. A couple of days ago a customer has brought a broken 500Gb USB-drive that he had bought in a Chinese store across the river, for an insanely low price. But the drive was not working: if you, say, save a movie onto the drive, playing the saved movie back resulted in replaying just the last 5 minutes of the film.

The whole service center was rolling on the floor laughing. This was not the first time someone has brought a disk like that. And the previous drives were also bought in China… They opened up the drive right before the astonished customer’s eyes. This is what they saw:

It’s a 128-MB flash-drive. Working in a “looped” mode – when it runs out of space, it starts overwriting from the beginning. My friend said they’re still trying to figure out how did the Chinese do that. Because the drive reports “correct” file sizes and disk-capacity. And the “looped-overwriting” does not touch the other files present on the drive.

The device looks pretty convincing – lots of tech labels and stuff… The Chinese salesman even saved something to the drive to demonstrate that it “works” in the store.

Here are the pictures:

And what was actually inside…

I guess one could say he really got “screwed” on that deal…

I am still trying to verify if this is real or not, but I would not put it past someone to try and pull this scam on the unsuspecting public, and it will eventually come to our shores…

So once again folks – remember if it is to good to believe … it probably is!  Rather pay a little more and buy from a reputable seller… and no “Philemon at the Robots” is not one of them…

(Source: Slashdot, JitBit Blog)

South African Taxi Drivers…

You know what they say about South African taxi drivers… well here is proof on just how bad they drive!

Thanks Shaughn for passing this classic on.

 

 

The History of the Internet

The Internet has almost just become an extension of one’s self. There really is almost nothing that gets done without it. And with nearly all mobile phones giving Internet capability to the individual right in the palm of the hand, it truly is hard to fathom that there once was a time without the World Wide Web at the touch of the fingertip.

The Internet has become such an entrenched part of our daily lives, it’s components have even become a part of our lexicon, with site names becoming verbiage – Google, YouTube, Wiki, and Facebook, to name a few. But as with all things, it’s vital to remember where such things come from, to trace the roots…

MBA Online
(Source: OnlineMBA.com)

Monday Mix – Classic Citi Golf Adverts

Continuing last weeks classic South African VW adverts I now focus on one of their popular vehicles until 2009 – the Citi Golf.

For those non-South African readers, the Citi Golf was for many years the budget car that VW South Africa produced. It was basically a VW Golf Mark 1 that had small tweaks done (like a groove on the back pillar, special colour scheme and different rear lights) to it and was relatively affordable to South Africans…

It was introduced in 1984 and production finally came to an end on 21 August 2009.  Here is a look at Citi Golf adverts till the end…

1. Citi Golf Aircraft Carrier Ad

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NnHod-Wbd6M]

2.Citi Golf Tatoo Advert

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCBy37M90PI]

3. Citi Golf Forever Young Ad

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62_ouMRT96E]

4. Citi Golf Garfield Ad

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrPX-2KLyAo]

5. Citi Golf Toll Gate Ad

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBsDIAjzNIw]

6. Citi Golf Changes Ad

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T6UYH7jV42Q]

7. Citi Golf Goodbye Ad

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUm5NbAnP2Y]

 

(Source: YouTube)

How fast does your website load?

Today is the first post for a new category that I am starting on this blog specifically aimed at webmasters (people who dabble in webpage design 🙂 )

If you have your own website, the thought may have crossed your mind already on “How fast does my website open in another country?”. Well that question can now be answered!

You will want to check out: http://loads.in


It’s as easy as typing in your website URL, clicking START and then waiting…

Once it does the initial test it shows you what the speed is, then gives you the option to select country, city and browser. There is also a nice Waterfall chart that you can see exactly what is holding up your website from loading…

Check it out – http://loads.in

Not Game Over…

My buddy Murray Purdon – of Photosphere.co.za and MurrayPurdon.co.za – is getting married today.

Congrads buddy! Here’s wishing you and Heather many wonderful years together.

 

You have successfully unlocked the next level to life

It is far from Game Over 🙂