ME
Sunday, December 24, 2017
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
The EPSON saga continues .....
additional DMs from
Epson & my response: 11.16hrs 20/12/17
Hi Malcom, In order
to assist you can you please confirm where in the setup process the connection
fails? do you have a WPS buttton on your router?
this message
sent 13 minutes ago from Epson UK
17m 13 minutes ago
Epson UK
I am sorry, the consmer pritners do not come
with a USB included. Please see the following article regarding the USB cable:
http://kb.epson.eu/article.aspx?article=1034&p=7 …
this message
sent 12 minutes ago from Epson UK
15m 12 minutes ago
Malcolm Evison
(my response)
Yes, the hub has a WPS button - but tried that
last night - same negative result! Just having emerged from bed (my active
hours limited by chronic illness) will look at article about USB cable later
on.
Malcolm Evison (my next response)
Yes, I did try using the A-B USB
cable (much less than the 1.8 metre length) when initially struggling to set-up
the tetchy machine for wireless use. Something odd is going on!
Malcolm Evison (my extra response)
Incidentally, don't your keyboards allow you to use
the second L in the word Malcolm. Maybe your keyboards aren't up to scratch******************************
P.S: this evening tried to print 1 15x10cm photo you maybe won't want to believe what happened next!
Malcolm Evison (DMd & tweeted @EpsonUK at 20.50hrs)
First time I've tried to print since all the faffing about - won't print as it can't find the printer (ethernet connected) - tried all pop-up suggestions but still failing to find the printer. All other items have and always do work with this hub! Won't connect wireless & lost existing connection.
@EpsonUK First time I've tried to print since all the faffing about - won't print as it can't find the printer (ethernet connected) - tried all pop-up suggestions but still failing to find the printer. All other items have and always do work with this hub! Won't connect wireless
Approx 15 minutes later via Epson diagnosis gadget finally told that there was a printer and it was ready to print - Epson machines seem to hate consumers!
At 22.40 hrs I have just sent the following DM to Epson UK - I do hope that they will not keep upsetting me with their temperamental machine. I have never before been fazed by the installation of any consumer electronics gizmo!
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
PRINCIPLES carry a COST
Because of
HPs collusion in Israel ’s Human
Rights Abuses (see http://www.ipsc.ie/event/derry-iaw-2017-stop-hp-collusion-in-israels-human-rights-abuses-saturday-information-stall-ipsc
}
I was unable
to purchase another HP printer,
although I’ve always been pleased with those I had previously purchased. As a
result I purchased an Epson XP55
which has been the source of deleterious effects on my health (see https://sinnaluvva.blogspot.co.uk/2017/12/epson-woes-just-for-record.html
}.
Sadly, having principles
invariably entails a cost.
Whilst
working as an accounts manager, late 1970s to mid 1980s, for a reputable
furniture retailer, I refused to adjust invoice details, with reference to
delivery addresses etc., in order to enable certain privileged business customers
to avoid VAT payments on the items. This didn’t make for a happy working
relationship with the stores general manager and, ultimately, led to my
tendering my resignation.
Sadly, having principles entails a
cost.
Labels:
accounts manager,
BDS,
cost,
Epson,
integrity. HP,
principle,
VAT
EPSON WOES - just for the record
EPSON WOES – just for the record
Malcolm Evison (tweeted)
@sinnaluvva
Dec 16
More
@EpsonUK took me two
hours to connect to new XP55 machine - wouldn't reognize wireless or ethernet -
after a while did accept fixed IP
Address via ethernet. Never had such problems with any printer connection over
many years. Displeased!
Epson responded to my tweet:
Epson UK
@EpsonUK
2h 2hours ago (Dec
18)
More
Replying to @sinnaluvva
Hi Malcom, Sorry to hear that, If you require any assistance
please follow our profile and DM us your query. We will be happy to help. Kind
Regards.
DM to Epson as requested 2 hours earlier 1920hrs 18 Dc 2017
setting up my new
Epson XP55 took ovr two hours on Saturday, would not connect to wireless or
ethernet Eventually had to set up a fixed IP. Never had a machine with these
problems over many years and with a chronic I'm totally knackered by the
effort. What is wrong with your machines. Suggestion of temp USB connection to
aid wireless set up totally useless but, only USB cable I had to try was an
Epson one from over a decade ago - maybe not right now - (that printer
collapsed, as did another Epson in just over a year's light use) don't know
what's wrong with me that I gave Epson another chance.
addendum DM at 2000hrs
sorry, I omitted the
important word "illness" after word chronic. And, having paid £83 for
1 set of XL inks ( I misread thinking it was 24 cartridges) I think you should
supply a technician gratis to set up your machine with its set-up inks! *
*[Not part of transcript - I usually rely on compatible inks but was hoping for something more impressive!]
19 december from Epson UK (below)
Hi Malcom, I am very sorry that you are unhappy with your
Epson XP-55, It is never our intention to disappoint customers in any way and I
would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused. Were you able to connect
the printer in the end? Is there anything we can do to assist you?
my response to Epson UK via DM
I don't understand
why it can't find a wireless signal or an automatic IP address via ethernet - I
now have it situated in an upstairs room close to our Virgin hub (100 Mbps) -
never had these problems with HP or Canon printers - I've even been able to
troubleshoot others problems. Unfortunately, constant re-attempts at setting up
are not at all conducive to retaining my already low stamina levels (ME &
FM sufferer since 2003).
plus my DM
its current position
is of course most inconvenient!
plus my DM
After another unsuccessful
and exhausting attempt to achieve a wireless connection to your product, which
leaves me shattered, I am more than ever regretting my purchase. IF A USB
CONNECTION WOULD ASSIST IN SETTING UP THE WIRELESS CONNECTION (as your set-up
disk suggests) WOULD IT NOT BE THE DECENT THING TO DO TO SUPPLY (GRATIS) THE
APPROPRIATE USB LEAD. There is definitely something odd in the way your machine
is constructed.
Friday, November 03, 2017
When Purgatory Beckons
I’ve
always heard about the road to hell being paved with good intentions and, have
more recently discovered that another’s good intention can bring severe
dis-ease to the one being benefited by
their deed. The past few weeks have not been easy for me to cope with, the
aftermath of my minor stroke and that of my step-daughter’s accident, the
latter needing my beloved’s assistance to dress and shower herself.
Over many
years I learned to live both in communal houses and alone, much of the time at
peace with myself. In more recent years I have lived in relative peace and
harmony solely alongside my beloved OH. As I’ve mentioned before, since the
onset of my chronic illness I have become increasingly tetchy, even over
apparently trivial matters.
This
morning my semi-invalided step-daughter suggested that the dust in our (that of
mine and my OH) bedroom was rather
un-healthy and, decided with her one (currently) usable arm to take the vacuum
cleaner upstairs to do the cleaning. You
can only imagine, or maybe not, my dismay at being told, by a young lady who
has four cats romping about in and out of all rooms, that our bedroom was
unhealthy! I had already been made to
feel guilty at my relative inactivity when a person with one arm
immobilised, and purportedly in intense
pain, could manage domestic duties of a kind which my physical and
emotional stamina levels require that I ration.
The final
hump-breaking straw was her decision
to mop the floor using a pot pourri
scented thick disinfectant, as a result of which I later had to struggle to
regain my balance as I took a slipper shod slide across part of the bedroom
floor! Fortunately that struggle ended successfully but, it was yet a further
warning that a good deed, if ill
considered, is certainly a step into purgatory.
Thursday, November 02, 2017
CHANTING PSALMS out of ANGER and FRUSTRATION
Currently,
my temper is running on a very short fuse, swift to anger but sluggish in
calming down. At its worst I end up upsetting those whom I love and even, at
times, keeping temper simmering long after the immediate (sometimes trivial)
cause for letting it loose has disappeared. There are many times my anger is
justified especially when I look at the policies pursued by our Tory government,
that of the US of A and, indeed, the governments and people of all nations that
punish the vulnerable and worship private wealth. Very little regard seems to
be paid to the unethical practices that have enabled that wealth accumulation
in the first place!
My less
justified outbursts usually occur when I am in rather acute pain and
discomfort; one word out of place, from another party, can so easily release a
vehement stream of verbal chastisement and abuse from yours truly. These are
times when my response / reaction leaves me ashamed and guilty for the distress
which I may have caused.
Having
expressed that mea culpa I can move
on to the more regular occasions when the air around me becomes filled with
expletives and near blasphemy. The frequency with which limbs and torso are
acutely and crushingly subjected to intense discomforting pain has recently
increased, reverting to that state I experienced not long after ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) first held me
in its thrall. The main trouble is that the discomfort strikes so suddenly,
whether in wrists, elbows, knees or elsewhere on the torso, it almost
inevitably transforms the axillary lymph nodes into a discomforting, nausea
inducing, dis-ease. During the night, as I futilely hope and pray for refreshing
sleep, restless legs, painful feet, and lymph node tenderness compete for my
attention, the only reaction that rears its head is a ferociously spitted out “Jesus
Christ” followed by a torrent of expletives as I vainly attempt to find a
comfortable position either in or out of bed.
This
morning, as I checked out my Facebook homepage, I stumbled upon this quote from
Blake Chastain – “Sometimes swearing is just a minimalist psalm”.
So, even
when I find it difficult to pray, I find myself enthusiastically chanting
Psalms.
In the Book of Psalms there is so much anger and despair amongst the ritual hymns but, none as succinct as the involuntary F-word that spews from my mouth when pain and discomfort is at its keenest.
In the Book of Psalms there is so much anger and despair amongst the ritual hymns but, none as succinct as the involuntary F-word that spews from my mouth when pain and discomfort is at its keenest.
Tuesday, October 24, 2017
On the Opening and Closing of Doors
ON THE OPENING & CLOSING OF DOORS
Well, life has certainly been eventful, and
frustrating, since my fall (http://sinnaluvva.blogspot.co.uk/2017/09/a-fall-becomes-set-back-and-shaggy-dog.html
& http://sinnaluvva.blogspot.co.uk/2017/09/gratitude-for-nhs.html)
but, nothing really much in any way I could regard as positive. Because my PPI
(omeprazole) was not compatible with the clopidogrel, the GP switched my
prescription back to lansoprazole; I had taken lansoprazole for a number of
years and had discovered the most effective dosage was 30mg twice per day,
morning and evening. It, therefore, came as something of a surprise to find
that I had only been prescribed 15mg once per day.
The new medication regime began on the 19th
September but, so painful and discomforting had my GORD and IBS symptoms
become, that by the 27th September it became essential for me to
have an emergency appointment at my GP surgery. The appointment was with a
nurse practitioner who duly increased my dosage to 30mg once per day. Even with this dosage, I still had to resort
to a strong antacid each evening.
Meanwhile, I was twice proffered an earlier appointment
(in a saga which began a few months back)
with the surgeon to discuss removal of my gall bladder but, I automatically
declined as I now needed to get into a pattern with the amlodipine & clopidogrel
and, I realized that if an operation was to take place I would need to be off
the clopidogrel for around one week.
By way of diversion, we have an
additional resident chez nous. Beth, the eldest of my two step-daughters, was
discharged from hospital in York
on 10th October following a bicycle accident on the 3rd.
She has a fracture in the neck of her humerus, necessitating immobilizing of
her right arm and plates in her jaw at the sites of two of her three jaw fractures.
This latter condition means that she is only able to manage soft / pureed food.
My beloved OH has to help her both to dress and to bathe / shower.
Eventually the pre-arranged appointment, on the 23rd
October arrived and ma belle chauffeuse accompanied me to the clinic at the District Hospital . The doctor soon explained to
me that as I had recently had a stroke, albeit a minor one, she would be unable
to carry out the operation as the anaesthetic required could trigger a further
more severe stroke and, although I could apply for referral after six months of
reasonably good health, she personally didn’t seem much in favour of this, as
she felt there would still be the risk of a more major stroke. When my beloved
asked the surgeon what should happen if I had a further infection of the gall
bladder, she suggested that antibiotics, albeit with the possibility of
increased antibiotic resistance, were much preferable to a risk of paralysis.
She was of course aware of my family history [my mother suffered a major stroke
within seven days of experiencing a TIA – spending her remaining years with total
paralysis of one side of her body – when she was of an age only marginally
advanced from my current state of being].
Whilst I was somewhat relieved that the doctor hadn’t
pussyfooted about the rather stark options, it did seem to emphasize the whole
mortality issue as, later in the day, I began to feel a sense of desolation
regarding an apparent futility of existence. I wondered, for a while, if I was
reverting to a state of depression! In the clear light of a new day, chronic
illness notwithstanding, I was so blessed with a loving wife and family, a catholic
taste and enjoyment of various musical genres, literature, fine arts, and a
faith that never lets go of me even when belief has evaporated.
Labels:
amlodipine,
chronic illness,
clopidogrel,
faith,
gall bladder,
GORD,
GP surgery,
health & wellness,
hospital,
IBS,
lansoprazole,
ma belle,
ma belle chauffeuse,
medication,
omeprazole,
stepdaughter
Thursday, September 21, 2017
Gratitude for the NHS
Saturday and Sunday I still felt
somewhat shocked and shaken, by the fall I had on Friday evening, as full sensation
and feeling hadn’t yet returned to my right foot and ankle. As I stood up it
still felt as though I had a spongy platform sole on that foot.
My beloved rang my GPs surgery
first thing on Monday morning and, she explained to them what the paramedics
recommended, so the Wednesday appointment offered wasn’t soon enough. About
half-an-hour after that, a practice nurse ‘phoned me back and, when I explained
the situation, I was soon granted an appointment with Dr Desha at 12.40pm.
Although there was a delay before getting in to see the doctor she was
extremely thorough in her examination of me, blood pressure, reflex, touch,
response to hot & cold in the foot etc. She prescribed 4 dispersible aspirin
to be taken immediately, Clopidogrel and Amlodipine, to be taken each morning,
to deal with my high blood pressure, and prepared a referral to the TIA clinic
at Harrogate District Hospital .
As the time was getting close to
that for the House Group / Bible Study chez nous, my beloved left me waiting for
my prescription at the local pharmacy whilst she went home for the car to
collect one of the attendees at our meeting. Sat in the over-chilled air
conditioned pharmacy I suddenly felt quite shaky and weepy. The pharmacist
kindly phoned my beloved to see if she would bring the car around to collect
me.
The house group had already
started in the meantime and I was eager to participate rather than sit on my
own, feeling broodingly sorry for myself. Around 3.00pm, mid-way through the
meeting, the ‘phone rang and, it was the hospital informing me that I had an
appointment at the TIA clinic at 10.00am Tuesday.
Next morning I saw Dr Brotheridge
at the clinic and, as the symptoms had not completely cleared within 24 hours
it couldn’t be classed as a TIA but was likely some kind of minor stroke.
Within an hour I’d had a CT brain scan done and, on returning to the clinic he
informed me there was no sign of a bleed and the brain looked normal and
healthy. He also said that the medication my GP had prescribed was exactly
right and he would expect me to remain on that. Meanwhile an appointment was
made for me to have an ultrasound of my Carotid and Aortic arteries at 1.00pm;
this left time for ma belle chauffeuse and I to pop home for a cuppa and a
snack, but before that we had time to go for some blood tests which my GP had
requested.
The attention given, and the
efficiency, in each department was really special.
Saturday, September 16, 2017
A Fall becomes a Set Back and a Shaggy Dog Tale
Yesterday’s events brought back a memory from 1962
when I was a student nurse in Exeter .
I especially recalled a young man on the orthopaedic ward who had a talent for
inappropriately releasing the cot sides from his bed. He was recovering from an
above the knee amputation but, to his mind and nervous system, the phantom
lower limb was far too tangible. Eventually he became an expert user of
crutches as he scooted around the ward and, he was soon performing acrobatics
on these supports. This young man later returned, on several occasions, to
offer encouragement to children both preparing for and having undergone lower
limb amputations.
These days with all my sundry aches, pains and other
ailments, I envy that resilience. What brought those memories to the fore last
night was my having a fall, in the living room at home. I’d just decided to go
for a shower but, after the first step I suddenly felt as if my right ankle and
foot had just disappeared. No sooner had the thought occurred than I plummeted
to the ground, my head landing on the dog’s snout. The dog was on the sofa near
the door and, as I fell I heard a growling bark very close to my ear. That
growling bark was the dog’s defensive call as this figure fell directly in his
direction.
My beloved’s immediate reaction was a desire to drive
me down to A&E at the District
Hospital but, as I still
had no sensation of there being anything below the calf of the offending limb I
was reluctant to venture out. Whereas the young man, referred to in the opening
paragraph, fell because of the imagined / phantom lower limb. My fall was
because I had an intact limb but had suddenly lost all sense of there being an
ankle and/or foot there.
We phoned the out of hours doctors number from which
we were referred to the 111 service, (? against using the word service), to
whom my wife first spoke about me having a fall due to loss of sensation in my
foot and ankle. They then spoke to me and went through their usual script –
attempting to detect a stroke or the like – but I became increasingly
frustrated as she questioned whether I’d had the numb sensation before I got up
to walk, despite my constant reiteration that the loss of sensation and my fall
were a simultaneous occurrence, even though the numb sensation was still
present. She then asked if there was any bleeding and I mentioned I’d had a
little bleed from the base of the ear but, that was probably due to falling
onto the shocked dog. There were also the usual questions about whether I was
running a temperature, “place your fingers on your chest do you feel as if
you’re running a temperature” was their suggestion. I explained that in my case
I’ve been diagnosed with an infection by a GP even when there was no sign of me
running a temperature. Ever since I succumbed to ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis)
some 14 years ago, my body thermostat has proved somewhat erratic).
The person on the switchboard then returned to the
stroke detection questions – can you raise your arms above your head, can you
smile, is your mouth twisted – to which I replied that I didn’t think it was
anything like a stroke, having witnessed my mother when she had a major stroke
and several TIA’s but, it wasn’t like what I was experiencing. I was just
concerned about the loss of sensation in the right foot and ankle and the
consequent fall which had proved most unnerving.
I eventually became rather fed-up with the inane repetition
of questions I’d already answered from a person who on their own admission had
no medical experience, nursing or otherwise, but she did have a list of
questions she had to ask. Eventually in frustration I hung up. A short while
after that, they rang back to say that there was an ambulance on its way. The
ambulance duly arrived expecting to see a dog-bite victim who’d had a stroke!
The paramedics most conscientiously carried out tests
on blood sugar, blood pressure, pulse rate and a couple of ECGs. Blood pressure
was rather high and the one carrying out the tests did at first wonder if there
was a sign of AF. They suggested that I contact my GP on Monday to arrange for
a review.
The setback, referred to in the posts title, is that
temporarily at least I’ve had to once again resort to the use of walking
sticks, albeit as a precaution against a further fall. The shaggy dog tale /
story is I believe even more obvious.
Even an hour
after the fall, as feeling gradually returned to my foot, it felt as though I
had a crepe platform shoe on that foot, whilst the evidence of my eyes and the
rest of my nervous system reassured me that my foot was actually touching the
ground.
There was a time when calling my out of hours doctors
number would put me through to the out-of-hours doctors clinic at the hospital.
There also used to be a service called NHS Direct which had a far higher
proportion of medically trained staff dealing with enquiries than is apparent
in the 111 service. After this experience I’m rather pleased that for many of
us it is, at present, still possible to have a face to face appointment with a
flesh and blood GP even though the waiting time is sometimes a problem. I have
never felt much adept at communicating with a telephonically disembodied voice,
especially one that is so obviously reciting questions from a script!
Thursday, September 14, 2017
New Poem on Mal's Factory
I've just posted a freshly minted new poem (at least current draft - Draft V) "PROPRIETARY RITES" on MALs FACTORY
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