canon loyalty program

Blogged in deals, camera by ben Saturday August 2, 2008

Those who know me know I am a big fan of Canon cameras, and have advised many of my friends and relatives to get one.

If you have a really old or broken Canon camera laying around this might be a way to upgrade it less expensively.

Customer Loyalty Program’s direct number is 866-443-8002.
You can call, find out what they offer, and call back later after you have decided.
This deal has been going on since 2006.

Note: Plus tax and $10 for 2 days shipping.

S45, S50, S100, S230, S300, S400, S500, SD110, SD200, SD400, SD600, SD1000, S1-IS, S2-IS trade for:
SD850 IS - $150
G9 - $250
Rebel XT Silver with 18-55 mm lens - $275

A40, A60, A75, A80, A610 trade for:
A560 - $89
S1000 - $100
SX100 IS - $125

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  • Wargamez 2008 announcement

    Blogged in Uncategorized, geek stuff, Linux/FOSS, security by ben Tuesday March 25, 2008

    This is a fun event. I attended last year and learned a lot and had a good time. Highly recommended. Here’s the announcement.

    South East Idaho’s 2nd Annual hands on computer security event will be here April 12 at the Newberry building. Registration begins at 14:00 and the games start at 16:00 and run to roughly 1 or 2am. The cost of entry is $10 or $5 with two cans of food.

    This year the challenges include:

    * Programming challenges
    * Reverse Engineering Challenges
    * Capture the Flag (or a variant of ctf at least)
    * Web Challenges
    * Video Game Challenges
    * And more…

    All skill levels are welcome. The emphasis of this event is on teaching and learning (although winning is fun too). If you are a beginner, there are a lot of easy challenges and there is a lot of help. If you are an expert, some of these challenges should still be very very difficult… As long as you are computer literate and have some interest in computer security, this event should be a lot of fun - and you will probably learn some things to.

    There are some cool prizes this year like R/C Pirate vs. Ninja, Alber Einstein Action Figures, Computers, Penguin Mints, USB Memory Watch, The Zombie Survival Guide, and more.

    For more information go to http://wargamez.org or reply to me.

    Want to help make this event a success? Post fliers (some can be found http://wargamez.org/pages/posts/fliers–200816.php), tell your computer-minded friends and co-workers about it, and most of all show up!


    Rich Lundeen
    http://webstersProdigy.net

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  • Ubuntu countdown

    Blogged in geek stuff, Linux/FOSS by ben Wednesday October 3, 2007


    I’m excited for the release of Ubuntu 7.10, the Gutsy Gibbon the above is a countdown to the release date. Here is a review showing what is new.. http://tech.tolero.org/blog/en/linux/review-ubuntu-710-gutsy-features-changes

    With Ubuntu 7.10 and Apple OSX 10.5 (Leopard) coming out this month, it will be an exciting time.

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  • Software Freedom Day

    Blogged in Linux/FOSS by Ben Friday August 31, 2007

    I’m excited for Software Freedom day, the T-shirts are here, the Ubuntu CD’s just got here, but it looks like they had a rough trip.

    Please put ISLUG’s SFD event on your calendar, it will be September 13th, (2 days early!) from 7-9 pm. It will be in the Wood River Room at the Pond Students Union Building at ISU. We will have several talks on FOSS programs including FOSS 101: A critical look at Free Software in Education (me), Gaming (zuggy), Programming in a Linux environment (mopey), Free Software on Windows (vog), and getting stuff done (peltkore). I hope to have FretsOnFire running with a Guitar Hero 2 controller that we can play on a projector.

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  • Good deal on a good camera, $130

    Blogged in deals, camera by Ben Wednesday August 29, 2007

    Those who know me know I’ve been a big fan of Canon’s A series digital cameras. They offer a nice mix of size, point and click functionality and they take standard AA batteries so you don’t have to replace the $40 battery pack down the road when you get an new camera and want to give this one to a relative.

    For those of you looking to upgrade your aging Canon A series camera for a great price this looks like a good deal. the Canon A560, which has Canon’s new, improved DIGIC III image processor, for $130. The deal might not last, but my recommendation for the camera will until next spring when something better comes along. http://www.buy.com/retail/product.asp?sku=204230694 The A560 would be a great camera if you want to mostly point and click, If you are a more experienced photographer, or want to add more features like optical image stabilization, read on for my recommendations for upgrades. With the prices coming down and and an A570 available for less than $160, I’d recommend the upgrade (Read more…)

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  • Using ddclient and zonedit.com for dynamic DNS

    Blogged in geek stuff, Linux/FOSS by ben Tuesday July 24, 2007

    If you have a dynamic web server and want to run a server or remote desktop at home and be able to access it with an ip address, you can use zoneedit.com for free dynamic DNS service. (Read more…)

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  • Free culture manifesto

    Blogged in geek stuff, Linux/FOSS, business, good businesses, disruptive technologies by ben Tuesday July 17, 2007

    This is pretty heady language, but pretty inspiring if you take the time to read it. Think if consumers actually did this.. we’d change the world.

    From http://freeculture.org/manifesto/

    Get involved over on their site.


    Manifesto

    The mission of the Free Culture movement is to build a bottom-up, participatory structure to society and culture, rather than a top-down, closed, proprietary structure. Through the democratizing power of digital technology and the Internet, we can place the tools of creation and distribution, communication and collaboration, teaching and learning into the hands of the common person — and with a truly active, connected, informed citizenry, injustice and oppression will slowly but surely vanish from the earth.

    We believe that culture should be a two-way affair, about participation, not merely consumption. We will not be content to sit passively at the end of a one-way media tube. With the Internet and other advances, the technology exists for a new paradigm of creation, one where anyone can be an artist, and anyone can succeed, based not on their industry connections, but on their merit.

    We refuse to accept a future of digital feudalism where we do not actually own the products we buy, but we are merely granted limited uses of them as long as we pay the rent. We must halt and reverse the recent radical expansion of intellectual property rights, which threaten to reach the point where they trump any and all other rights of the individual and society.

    The freedom to build upon the past is necessary for creativity and innovation to thrive. We will use and promote our cultural heritage in the public domain. We will make, share, adapt, and promote open content. We will listen to free music, look at free art, watch free film, and read free books. All the while, we will contribute, discuss, annotate, critique, improve, improvise, remix, mutate, and add yet more ingredients into the free culture soup.

    We will help everyone understand the value of our cultural wealth, promoting free software and the open-source model. We will resist repressive legislation which threatens our civil liberties and stifles innovation. We will oppose hardware-level monitoring devices that will prevent users from having control of their own machines and their own data.

    We won’t allow the content industry to cling to obsolete modes of distribution through bad legislation. We will be active participants in a free culture of connectivity and production, made possible as it never was before by the Internet and digital technology, and we will fight to prevent this new potential from being locked down by corporate and legislative control. If we allow the bottom-up, participatory structure of the Internet to be twisted into a glorified cable TV service — if we allow the established paradigm of creation and distribution to reassert itself — then the window of opportunity opened by the Internet will have been closed, and we will have lost something beautiful, revolutionary, and irretrievable.

    The future is in our hands; we must build a technological and cultural movement to defend the digital commons.

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  • Teachers should use Free Software

    Blogged in geek stuff, Linux/FOSS, Education by ben Wednesday June 13, 2007

    This article suggest that educators and especially teacher educators should use F/OSS whenever possible and that the freedom offered by F/OSS can outweigh shortcomings in the software itself.

    Training teachers and students to use a piece of software makes that software more valuable. Vendors know this. Business sense, not altruism, is what drives deep discounts on software for education. I once spoke to a vendor of an online grade book who, upon learning that I train teachers, was very interested in my using it in my classes.

    The article suggests many alternatives to proprietary software and how they may be used.
    http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/57760.html

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  • How Hollywood, Congress, And DRM Are Beating Up The American Economy

    Blogged in geek stuff, disruptive technologies by ben Wednesday June 13, 2007

    Nice article by Cory Doktorow about how America messed up by trading it manufacturing sector for dubious protection of American copyrights and as a result risks falling behind in the world economy.

    http://www.informationweek.com/shared/printableArticle.jhtml?articleID=199903173

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  • May 2007 family newletter

    Blogged in Ohana/family, security by ben Tuesday May 1, 2007

    Tricia Elbl has put together a new May newsletter for the Nickell family. She asked me to put it online, but I was reluctant to put everyone’s contact info out there in a searchable place where spammers and identity thieves could find it.

    First, if you’re just here for the file, here is the newsletter, and to access it you will need to type “letmein” without the quotes in order to, well, let you in.

    Here are some of the options I considered, I decided on #3.
    1) put it in a folder and tell search engines not to index that folder. (not perfect, spammers could still ignore that and grab the info)
    2) chop out the address and phone info, and put it online. (that really makes it less useful)
    3) create a password protected file, and include the password online. This might make it less useful, since the file won’t be very useful without the password, but if I post the password with the file, a human could type it in, but search engines can’t index it, and automated spam tools won’t bother. It won’t stop a determined scammer, but it is pretty unlikely someone would go to that trouble with all the low hanging fruit out there. If you are a scammer, move along, nothing to see here..

    Let me know what you think… a good balance, too much of a pain?

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