sometimes
Thursday, February 26 2015
Samsung's SmartHub
[15:55:31] matt [wronka.org]/Trip Two nights ago, my wife went to bed, and I tried to watch some Columbo on Netflix (I was up to the Great Santini, who sets up his own alibi through a fragile, technical, contrivance). We've only recently subscribed to Netflix since I've always been leary of the reliability of cloud services and rental subscriptions like this in general. It turns out the flakey Samsung implementation was more to blame.
This isn't abnormal. First off, the Samsung equipment (we own two of their TVs and one DVD player, all with essentially the same software) seem to arbitrarily forget WiFi passwords, which makes supporting them frustrating if not useless (they're all on the unsecured network now). Sometimes it fails to connect for a short period, and I need to just wait; that wasn't happening.
Obviously, there was a larger problem. I gave up and watched TopGear on my MythTV box instead, expecting whatever issue Samsung was having to resolve itself the next day. Why a box can't trust that it's on the Internet, or at least be optimistic about it once it's gotten an IP address, and a DNS server that resolves what it needs is an open question that I've tried to ask Samsung support (like the TV's software, I'm not optimistic for a response).
Yesterday while I was at work, I got a message from my wife, complaining about the DVD player not thinking it had Internet access. Obviously, she wanted to think it was a problem with our network—which is reasonable, given that's what the software said—but it turns out Samsung still didn't have their system up. It seems that there was some DNS hokeyness with their Akamai DSA settings. After a chain of CNAMEs (some of which included "china-" prefixes for some reason) eventually we got very short TTL addresses, which were not returning appropriate answers for the TV.
A Web search found somebody who *had* found an IP address that worked, also being served through Akamai DSA:
http://www.myce.com/news/smart-tv-mayhem-sony-samsung-users-central-servers-go-75137/
The resulting IP for www.samsung.com was 23.66.247.46; while you're setting-up your own DNS for your Samsung devices, I also suggest making ad.samsungadhub.com and rd.samsungadhub.com either fail or point to localhost since these are what send and track impressions for the annoying little piece of real estate in the top right corner.
I strongly discourage anyone from buying one of these devices (and apparently Sony devices) for these features, since they seem to be fragile. As I was trying to find information on the current outage (Samsung was not forthcoming and even mentioned on their support page of no known issues), I found references and news articles for outages regularly going back to 2013. It's clear Samsung doesn't treat this as production functionality.
More coverage today, after a couple days of this:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/02/26/samsung_sony_tv_outage/
[15:55:31] matt [wronka.org]/Trip Two nights ago, my wife went to bed, and I tried to watch some Columbo on Netflix (I was up to the Great Santini, who sets up his own alibi through a fragile, technical, contrivance). We've only recently subscribed to Netflix since I've always been leary of the reliability of cloud services and rental subscriptions like this in general. It turns out the flakey Samsung implementation was more to blame.
This isn't abnormal. First off, the Samsung equipment (we own two of their TVs and one DVD player, all with essentially the same software) seem to arbitrarily forget WiFi passwords, which makes supporting them frustrating if not useless (they're all on the unsecured network now). Sometimes it fails to connect for a short period, and I need to just wait; that wasn't happening.
Obviously, there was a larger problem. I gave up and watched TopGear on my MythTV box instead, expecting whatever issue Samsung was having to resolve itself the next day. Why a box can't trust that it's on the Internet, or at least be optimistic about it once it's gotten an IP address, and a DNS server that resolves what it needs is an open question that I've tried to ask Samsung support (like the TV's software, I'm not optimistic for a response).
Yesterday while I was at work, I got a message from my wife, complaining about the DVD player not thinking it had Internet access. Obviously, she wanted to think it was a problem with our network—which is reasonable, given that's what the software said—but it turns out Samsung still didn't have their system up. It seems that there was some DNS hokeyness with their Akamai DSA settings. After a chain of CNAMEs (some of which included "china-" prefixes for some reason) eventually we got very short TTL addresses, which were not returning appropriate answers for the TV.
A Web search found somebody who *had* found an IP address that worked, also being served through Akamai DSA:
http://www.myce.com/news/smart-tv-mayhem-sony-samsung-users-central-servers-go-75137/
The resulting IP for www.samsung.com was 23.66.247.46; while you're setting-up your own DNS for your Samsung devices, I also suggest making ad.samsungadhub.com and rd.samsungadhub.com either fail or point to localhost since these are what send and track impressions for the annoying little piece of real estate in the top right corner.
I strongly discourage anyone from buying one of these devices (and apparently Sony devices) for these features, since they seem to be fragile. As I was trying to find information on the current outage (Samsung was not forthcoming and even mentioned on their support page of no known issues), I found references and news articles for outages regularly going back to 2013. It's clear Samsung doesn't treat this as production functionality.
More coverage today, after a couple days of this:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/02/26/samsung_sony_tv_outage/
Friday, June 29 2012
Sears.com
[17:39:43] matt [wronka.org]/Trip I recently looked at purchasing a washer and dryer online at Sears.com.
a) The compare tool often hides prices that you could see on the previous page
b) The compare tool offers no way of highlighting differences, or hiding similarities between all shown items.
c) I can configure installation on the washer, but the dryer always throws an error when trying (or vice versa; I forget which way it was now).
d) The dryer doesn't come with all required parts. That's fine, and helpfully sears at check-out has a section for me to select necessary parts. This selection uses radio controls, so I can select the power cord if I want, or the exhaust vent, but not both. This almost certainly came about because the default option is "no required parts", and someone testing said "Hey, how can you select "no required parts" and a required part? They shouldn't be able to select both!" and thus this cluster was birthed. This wouldn't be as frustrating except that:
e) On the item page, or even at check-out when viewing the cart, there is no list of related accessories or parts, like pedestal bases or power cables; the best you can do is search through the product sheet for the serial number and then search for it, comparing numbers. (Sometimes the numbers included are for the wrong/non-matching colour.) BHPhoto is an example of a site that does this correctly, and remarkably so.
[17:39:43] matt [wronka.org]/Trip I recently looked at purchasing a washer and dryer online at Sears.com.
a) The compare tool often hides prices that you could see on the previous page
b) The compare tool offers no way of highlighting differences, or hiding similarities between all shown items.
c) I can configure installation on the washer, but the dryer always throws an error when trying (or vice versa; I forget which way it was now).
d) The dryer doesn't come with all required parts. That's fine, and helpfully sears at check-out has a section for me to select necessary parts. This selection uses radio controls, so I can select the power cord if I want, or the exhaust vent, but not both. This almost certainly came about because the default option is "no required parts", and someone testing said "Hey, how can you select "no required parts" and a required part? They shouldn't be able to select both!" and thus this cluster was birthed. This wouldn't be as frustrating except that:
e) On the item page, or even at check-out when viewing the cart, there is no list of related accessories or parts, like pedestal bases or power cables; the best you can do is search through the product sheet for the serial number and then search for it, comparing numbers. (Sometimes the numbers included are for the wrong/non-matching colour.) BHPhoto is an example of a site that does this correctly, and remarkably so.
Friday, May 11 2012
[03:50:56]
matt [wronka.org]/Amabel
The Asus WL-330N does seem to have a problem in that after a short time of use it stops transmitting its WiFi network, effectively dying even though its LEDs indicate everything is working. Sometimes it stays working for hours without an issue though, so it does not seem to be a necessarily consistent problem.