2001-05-17»
Thu May 17 17:00:00 2001»A Silicon Valley morality play, with puppets
Mozilla is now my default browser. Actually, it has been for a while, but it’s only since Build 2001042608 that it hasn’t been a test of faith, rather than an invisible pleasure.
It’s nice to have the Virtual Richard Stallman congratulate me every month about this. I still miss RealPlayer though: and nobody tell it about the Windows installation I’ve got on the other partition. Or the Flash plugin. Or the BIOS.
Ordered three tickets back to the US (one for me, one for my mother and one for my nephew). Spent a good few hours at it; servers fell over, flight availability changed from minute to minute, and I was bloody-minded enough to persist until I’d got exactly what I wanted. It’d been much quicker using the phone, but I don’t think I would have ended with precisely my choice. I’m more comfortable being assertive with Web interfaces than bullying call center slaves.
All the same, I still made some big errors on each order – nothing fatal, but I had to follow up each with e-mails begging the support staff to correct the mistake. This isn’t unusual; in the past I’ve even had to pay out to reschedule flights that I’d misbooked. In most cases, it’s been a sucky UI that led me into the trap. (This time, it was a default “Mr” entry for a name on Travel Select, and a really confusing Expedia oversight. If you need a separate billing and delivery address on Expedia, it makes you abandon your current order, and fill in a brand new form – without changing the “I’d like a separate billing and delivery address” option. You dutifully enter a new address, which Expedia blithely ignores by default. Separate billing and delivery addresses are a UI nightmare, I remember Jared Spool saying.)
I’d kill for a desktop-based flight availibiity bot. Autonomy never understood – the only time you need a bot on your own machine is when no-one else has a vested interest in performing that service for you.