Your Austin game writer thought you might appreciate this video: Weekend Update: Hypnotist Linus Minus on Hypnosis – SNL.
Hypnotist Linus Minus (Mikey Day) stops by weekend update to give a hypnosis demonstration.
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via YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-fep2hVIIc
Have you noticed that you can’t comment on a product review on Amazon any more? One of my favorite uses of this feature was to ping a buyer for updates on their initial reaction to a product. A product really shows its stripes after a few months of usage, not at the initial unboxing.
Additionally, organic discussion is a strong indicator of whether a review is authentic or not — a real problem in the Amazon ecosystem. If Amazon were serious about cutting down review spam, they’d leave this already-operational system running.
I got this email from Amazon Services last winter explaining their action.
On 2020-12-15 03:25, Amazon Services wrote: > Dear seller, > > You are receiving this email because you recently left a comment on a review. > > While reviews and feedback are important to our customers and sellers, > the comments feature on customer reviews was rarely used. As a result, > we are retiring this feature on December 16, 2020. > > We are committed to your continued success and will innovate and > develop other opportunities for you to connect with customers. > > Thank you. > > Amazon Services
Rarely used? Really? I think this is foolish. It’s important for users to discuss products months after the initial honeymoon period has ended.
Forward Google Voice Messages to SMS/Your Cellphone
Google Voice just turned off “message forwarding to linked numbers” and yeah, that’s a big deal. Thanks a lot, Google. But there are some workarounds — less than ideal, but workarounds — that I’ve yet to see written up so it’s not quite time to give up on Voice.
Why GV Message Forwarding to Linked Numbers Is a Big Deal
Voice used to be a fantastic utility layer you could add to your cellphone. Instead of giving out your true phone number, you could give out a Google Voice number, and use it to route intelligently all your texts and calls. Want your texts to go to your brother’s phone when you’re in class, but not on weekends? Sure. Want your incoming calls to ring three burners but not before 8 AM? No problem. And if your phone number changes, all you have to do is update the setting in Google Voice — no more spamming your friends with your new number.
Well, Google just shut down the whole text message part of the picture. No more message forwarding to other numbers. As you probably know, this is exquisitely painful because now you don’t get texts immediately if you don’t have wifi or data. You can have tons of bars but GV refuses to send texts to your cell number. Just ridiculous. How is GV a complete service without timely texts?
The #1 Google Voice Text Forwarding Fix Is… Gmail
As many have noted on Reddit and Androidpolice and elsewhere, you can get Voice to forward your incoming text messages to email. So… that’s nice. Wouldn’t it be nicer if you could get your email to autoforward those messages to your cellphone? Wouldn’t that do the same damned thing as what Voice was doing in the first place?
Kind of. It’s uglier. A lot uglier. And you can’t reply to it to get a message back to the sender. But at least you’ll get the message and know that something urgent is going down, even if you have a bad data connection.
Anyhow, here’s the trick.
First, find out what the email address is for your cellphone. “Email address for my cellphone huh?” you may be asking. Yeah, the email for your phone. Almost all providers have an email address for each customer, like 5558761234@txt.att.net; emails sent to that address will be converted to texts and delivered to the customer. Here’s an article on the topic that has a handy list of email formats for popular carriers. If you use an MVNO, try the format for the carrier that your MVNO licenses from. Email your phone to make sure it’s working.
In Google Voice, go to Settings > Messages and turn on “Forward messages to email.”
Assuming you use Gmail, switch to Gmail. (If you don’t use Gmail, that’s okay; you just need to do these same steps with your mail provider’s forwarding rules.)
In the inbox, type “from:txt.voice.google.com” into the Search mail box at the top. If your message forwarding to email hasn’t kicked in yet, you may not find anything, but that’s ok. Now click the goofy settings icon to the right of the X button in the search bar and click Create Filter in the dropdown that appears.
Next to “Forward it to” is a link to “Add a forwarding address”. That’s the stuff. Click that and put in the email address for your phone. Google Voice will require you to authenticate.
Once authenticated, click the “Forward it to” checkbox and choose the email address for your phone. Click “Create filter” and you are almost done.
Repeat steps 4 and 6 for the search “from:voice-noreply@google.com“. This is the email address that Google Voice uses to notify you of group texts. You won’t get the actual content, but at least you’ll know when your buddies are trying to get you for a hang.
OPTIONAL: SteveTN writes, “Problem I have found is that the forward to my mobile number from Gmail is usually not immediate. I have texts that take over a half hour.” This is a good point. Gmail is not exactly snappy. Suggestion: use your own outgoing mail server! If you have a website (and who doesn’t?), use that mail server. If not, you can sign up for a SMTP email service. (Sendinblue’s forever free basic plan sends 300 emails per day; that should cover you, right?) Then just go to Gmail’s settings > Accounts and click on “edit info” for the account you’re using to send your messages.
Is this anywhere as clean as the original Google Voice message forwarding? Hell no. You’ll have stupid formatting and all the extra text that Google Voice puts in its email notifications, and as I mentioned before, replying to these texts via text is pointless. But at least you won’t be in the dark if your data craps out and your friends are desperately trying to reach you.
The #2 Google Voice Text Fix is… TextNow
The alternate fix is, well, ugly but cheap. TextNow is a new service that gives you real, free voice and text service on the T-Mobile network. You buy a SIM card for $5 and off to the races. It’s ad-supported and calls default to network (VOIP) if you’re on wifi. As you’ve probably guessed, they charge a LOT for data so see fix #3 if that’s a killer.
So what’s the fix for the Google Voice text forwarding mess? Get TextNow and tell your friends to use that number to text you but use your real number for calls. If you don’t want to carry two phones (and there are some really tiny secondary phones out there fyi), get a phone that has two SIM slots so you can get messages from both of your numbers on your phone.
Yeah, yeah, it sucks. This fix might work for you but honestly you’re probably just better off with solution #3.
Google Voice Text Forwarding Fix #3: Go MVNO
It might be time to give up on GV. This is really the worst-case scenario but now that phone number portability is a given, it’s okay. I’d hate to give up the ability to send texts from my computer and access voicemail and texts from any device, but at this point that’s the only feature I’m really loving.
You doubtlessly already have service somewhere. Consider switching to an MVNO for the best deals. The biggies – Verizon, T-Mo, AT&T – all charge ridiculous rates for brand recognition. MVNOs sell access to the same cell networks but slap on their own support and UX, and the big win is a monthly rate of about $12-30 per month depending on how much data you need. If you can live with a data cap (you can, you’re on wifi all the time) this could save you $900+ a year.
Your Austin game writer thought you might appreciate this video: Passenger taped to seat after attacking flight attendants on flight to Miami, police say.
(Flight Attendant Speaks) Passenger Taped To Seat After Attacking Flight Attendants On Flight
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Your Austin game writer thought you might appreciate this video: Daniel Camarena, a Padres reliever called up today, hit a GRAND SLAM off Max Scherzer!.
Camarena is the first reliever to hit a grand slam since 1985.
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