Biscuits!
Hmm, bit of an Administration Error in the old Jammy Dodger department!
the life of me, by me
Hehe, not quite what you may be expecting, but it’s just been brought to my attention that there is a Gaylord Indian Restaurant in Manchester Spring Gardens!! This is awesome news, and I must visit ASAP! I went to a Gaylord in London, back in July 2007 with Jon Butler and it was great!
I used to own As Good As It Gets on DVD. Someone borrowed it a long time ago, I never got it back. That’s another rant.
Today, I decided the time had come to replace said DVD, so pointed Camino in the direction of play.com and made the appropriate search.
Success! £5.99 delivered, I was a happy bunny.. But you know how these kinds of sites can get, so I had a browse around. No BluRay offers on, but a massive “Mix n Match” sale on DVDs, CDs, Books, Clothing, and so-called Gadgets; 2 for £10!. “Ok”, I thought; “that sounds good - I wonder if As Good As It Gets is included in the offer”. Despite there being no signs of an offer on the DVD in my basket, I went to the DVDs section, sorted alphabetically and on page 2 I found it, As Good As It Gets - 2 for £10. Excellent! After much scrutinizing I decided on The Last of the Mohicans as my other choice.
The problem began now. I had the items in my basket, but the total was £11.98 - not the alleged £10. Knowing how play.com’s system usually applies offers, in the basket as opposed to at the checkout, I thought this odd. I added the As Good As It Gets DVD from the Mix n Match listing, and my basket value came to £15.99 - meaning that removing the As Good As It Gets that the search picked up brought the basket total to £10. The advertised offer.
Why do I not get the Mix n Match offer if I’m searching? Is this some form of low-cpu-usage green-computing scheme masterminded by play.com? Sounds more like dodgy marketing to me. Who in their right mind will search through 800 odd DVDs just to save £1.98? It happened by chance for me, but I’d probably check any DVDs on play.com that are reduced to £5.99 while that Mix n Match offer is on - they’re probably hidden in there somewhere! Sneaky bastards.
Edit: Obligatory “I love Louise, ‘cos she’s megas” *looks at date*
For a while now, I’ve thought it’d be pretty cool if I could run an sql query, without having to worry about sql injections and the like. In my head, there would be a magic function that escaped all the strings in my query, making it safe for execution. That is exactly what I made today and you can see the source code here.