Monday, November 17, 2008

Bygge hus, pusse opp bad eller kjøpe ny baderomsløsning?

Kjen til merkegodkjenningene.

Her følger en liten oversikt over de viktige merkegodkjenningene for deg som skal bygge hus, pusse opp bad eller kjøpe ny baderomsløsning

Mesterbrevnemnda.

Merterbrevnemda tilbyr fagkunnskap. Fagkunnskap gir trygghet er ikke bare et slagord, det er målet med ordningen. Å være Mester er en lovbeskyttet tittel som kun innehavere av godkjente mesterbrev kan benytte seg av. Se derfor etter dette merket!

Godkjent for ansvarsrett.

Godkjenning som tildeles av Statens Bygningstekniske Etat til bedrifter som har dokumentert at foretaket innehar tilstrekkelig fagkompetanse til å kunne frambringe et sluttprodukt med den kvalitet eller beskaffenhet som er fastsatt i plan- og bygningslovgivningen.

Fagrådet for våtrom. (FFV)

Før du engasjerer profesjonelle til å bygge badet ditt, så sjekk at firmaet er en Godkjent bedrift.

Godkjente bedrifter er forpliktet til å bruke godkjente produkter og håndverkere som er sertifisert etter Byggebransjens våtromsnorm, BVN. Dette er meget viktig om du skal pusse opp bad eller kjøpe deg en ny baderomsløsning.

Det er også viktig å vite litt om de ulike forbundene for deg som skal bygge hus, pusse opp bad eller kjøpe ny baderomsløsning.

Noen gir egne gode garantier (som for eksempel Norske Låsesmeders Forbund), mens andre igjen ikke gir noen garantier ut over normal reklamasjonsrett.

nAlt om forbundene kan du lese mer om på; http://www.fagmann.no/go/hva-betyr-merkene/bransjer-sertifiseringer-og-merkegodkjenninger

Kilde; Fagmann.no – Bygge hus

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Wiki: The history of paypal

History

Beginnings

PayPal is the result of a March 2000 merger between Confinity and X.com.[3] Confinity was founded in December 1998 by Max Levchin, Peter Thiel, and Luke Nosek, initially as a Palm Pilot payments and cryptography company.[4] Both Confinity and X.com launched their websites in late 1999. X.com was founded by Elon Musk in March 1999, initially as an Internet financial services company. Both companies were located on University Avenue in Palo Alto. Confinity's website was initially focused on reconciling beamed payments from Palm Pilots [5] with email payments as a feature and X.com's website initially included financial services with email payments as a feature.

At Confinity, many of the initial recruits were alumni of The Stanford Review, also founded by Peter Thiel, and most early engineers hailed from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, recruited by Max Levchin. On the X.com side, Elon Musk recruited a wide range of technical and business personnel, including many that were critical to the combined company's success, such as Amy Klement, Sal Giambanco, Roelof Botha, Sanjay Bhargava and Jeremy Stoppelman.[6]

To block potentially fraudulent access by automated systems, PayPal devised a system (see CAPTCHA) of making the user enter numbers from a blurry picture, which they coined the Gausebeck-Levchin test. According to Eric M. Jackson, author of the book The PayPal Wars, PayPal invented this system now in common use; however, there is evidence AltaVista used a CAPTCHA as early as 1997, before PayPal existed.[citation needed] The neutrality of The PayPal Wars, which was self-published by Eric Jackson through his company World Ahead Publishing, funded in part by Peter Thiel, is disputed. eBay watched the rise in volume of online payments and realized its fit with online auctions. eBay purchased Billpoint in May 1999, prior to the existence of PayPal. eBay made Billpoint the official payment system of eBay, dubbing it "eBay Payments", but cut the functionality of Billpoint by narrowing it to only payments made for eBay auctions.

For this reason, PayPal was listed in several times as many auctions as Billpoint. In February of 2000, there were approximately an average of 200,000 daily auctions advertising the PayPal service while Billpoint (in beta) had only 4,000 auctions. By April of 2000 there were more than 1,000,000 auctions promoting the PayPal service. PayPal was able to turn the corner and become the first dot-com to IPO after the September 11 attacks.

[edit] Acquisition by eBay

In October 2002, PayPal was acquired by eBay. PayPal had previously been the payment method of choice by more than fifty percent of eBay users, and the service competed with eBay’s subsidiary Billpoint. eBay has since phased out its Billpoint service in favor of retaining the PayPal brand. Most of PayPal’s major competitors have shut down or have been sold; Citibank’s c2it service closed in late 2003, and Yahoo!'s PayDirect service closed in late 2004. Western Union announced the December 2005 shut down of their BidPay service but subsequently sold it in 2006 to CyberSource Corporation. Some competitors which offer some of PayPal’s services, such as Wirecard, Moneybookers, 2Checkout, CCNow and Kagi, remain in business.

PayPal’s total payment volume, the total value of transactions in Q4 2006, was US$11 billion, up 36% year over year. The company continues to focus on international growth and growth of its Merchant Services division, providing online payments for retailers off eBay.

[edit] Business today

As of the end of Q4 2006, PayPal operates in 103 markets, and it manages over 133 million accounts. PayPal allows customers to send, receive, and hold funds in 17 currencies worldwide. These currencies are the U.S. dollar, Canadian dollar, Australian dollar, Euro, Pound sterling, Japanese yen, Chinese renminbi, Czech Koruna, Danish krone, Hong Kong dollar, Hungarian forint, New Zealand dollar, Norwegian krone, Polish zloty, Singapore dollar, Swedish krona, and Swiss franc. PayPal operates locally in 13 countries.

Residents in 48 new markets can now use PayPal in their local markets to send money online. These new markets include Peru, Indonesia, the Philippines, Croatia, Fiji, Vietnam and Jordan. A complete list can be viewed at PayPal's website.[1]

In China PayPal offers two kinds of accounts:[2]

* PayPal.com accounts, for sending and receiving money to/from other PayPal.com accounts. All non-Chinese accounts are PayPal.com accounts, so these accounts may be used to send money internationally.
* PayPal.cn accounts, for sending and receiving money to and from other PayPal.cn accounts.

It is impossible to send money between PayPal.cn accounts and PayPal.com accounts, so PayPal.cn accounts are effectively unable to make international payments. For PayPal.cn, the only supported currency is the renminbi.

PayPal’s operation center is located near Omaha, Nebraska and PayPal’s international headquarters is located in Dublin, Ireland. The company also recently opened a technology center in Scottsdale, Arizona.

PayPal's online troubleshooter

ayPal's online troubleshooter turns customer service into a public -- and profitable -- affair.

Damon Billian takes a lot of abuse. While that may seem par for the course in the often thankless field of customer service, Billian is essentially asking for it.

As customer relations manager for the online payment service PayPal (PYPL), based in Mountain View, Calif., Billian doesn't spend his days attached to a headset like the company's 380 customer service representatives in Omaha, Neb. Instead, he trolls 17 bulletin boards -- from eBay (EBAY) to AuctionWatch to Slashdot.org -- hunting for problems before they light up PayPal switchboards halfway across the country. There, reps deal with one complaint at a time. Billian addresses the concerns of hundreds with a single posted response.

Inspired by the popular new-economy creed The Cluetrain Manifesto -- which exalts the role of customer service in a networked world -- Billian, 31, started monitoring three boards as an extension of his job shortly after he joined the company two and a half years ago. And though PayPal's customer base has since rocketed from just 1,800 to more than 16 million, he says his workload hasn't increased with nearly the same trajectory. PayPal grew primarily through viral marketing, as existing customers persuaded new ones to sign up. A similar phenomenon is happening on the boards, Billian says. More and more, customers are taking on the burden of defending and explaining the service to newbies. "In some ways," he admits, "a lot of the users are more knowledgeable about the operation of the service than I am."

While he can't resolve individual disputes, Billian welcomes direct dialogue with customers, who often ask for him by name in a posting. It's not always an online love-in, though. Flame wars erupt around him, incited by customers who blame PayPal for a locked account or an errant transaction. PayPal officials intervened to have a particularly incendiary Yahoo (YHOO) board shut down last year, and Billian has even received a death threat. "I'm actively engaged in the community," Billian says, matter-of-factly. "Some people like what I do. Some don't."

Two groups that clearly like what he does are his customer service colleagues and the company brass. More than 200 co-workers, including chief operating officer David Sacks, subscribe to his daily e-mail summary of what customers are saying on the boards, which have proven to be hotbeds of new ideas. One poster's suggestion, for a debit card that allows PayPal users to tap their accounts offline, now generates $1.5 million in almost pure profit each quarter, according to CEO Peter Thiel. Too bad we all can't squeeze that sort of productivity out of employees who spend their days surfing the Web.

Why PayPal sucks

PayPal is a brilliantly simple idea. Unfortunately, only half of that statement applies to PayPal Customer Service, who are without a doubt, the biggest bunch of useless tossers - not a word I use often, but in this case, even I can't find a better one - on the Internet.

This started when I tried to open a personal account - we've got one here, for the Trash City jewellery business, but I wanted a separate one of my own. If I was buying Chris a birthday present, the last thing I wanted was for its purchase to turn up on our account! Already being a business member, this should be a piece of cake.

Or so I thought. And the first part was, indeed, plain sailing. But when I typed in the credit card details, it was rejected because, so they claimed, they could not verify the billing address. A call to PayPal Customer Services (or, to be more exact, an unanswered email, on February 8th, and a follow-up call - it's nice to see PayPal supporting care in the community by employing the mentally retarded) revealed that I had to type it in exactly as it is on my credit card statement. This I did. Still no dice.

A further flurry of attempting to communicate with the dead followed. Here's PayPal's next letter to me, dated March 8th - a month down the line:

"I apologize for the inconvenience in not being able to add/use the credit card ending 1134 in the PayPal system. Since we are a non face-to-face transaction provider, our process for accepting cards is more stringent and complicated. This process helps prevent the use of stolen and unauthorized cards for making PayPal payments. Because this process is very complex, it does occasionally impact valid cards. The denial of this credit card is not reflective of your credit worthiness. In these instances where a good card fails these checks, we suggest you try another card in the system."

To which I replied, that same day:

Unfortunately, trying "another card" is not possible. The credit card you rejected is my sole one, which I have held for over a decade - without, I might add, having ever exceeded my credit limit or abused it in any way.

While I accept that you need to be stringent about accepting cards, you are the first company to refuse to acknowledge it; other "non face-to-face transaction providers" (for example, Amazon) have been quite happy to accept it for on-line purchases. It would thus seem that the problem is with your system, rather than my card.

But even if an automated system refused to accept it, a single phone-call would surely be sufficient to confirm that the details I provided were accurate, and that the card is neither "stolen" nor "unauthorised". But I want to work with you to solve the problem - although you have yet to explain what that actually *is*! If, as my original attempt suggested, it is an inability to verify my billing address, I am willing to supply copies (or even originals) of my statements, or whatever other evidence you require to verify the card.

My fiancee and I have been business members of PayPal in good standing for a significant length of time, with tens of thousands of dollars having been processed through us. Yet when I try to set up a simple personal PayPal account, you are unable to assist. This is unacceptable: it gives the impression of a company indifferent to customer satisfaction, and that goes totally against our own standards of practice. If we do not receive a satisfactory explanation, we will certainly have to reconsider our association with you - I am writing from the account associated with my business, to stress the seriousness of this matter.

Paypal's response?

Your card was denied due to a difference in the address where you receive your monthly billing statements for this credit card and the billing address indicated on your PayPal account. Please check your credit card statement to make sure that the address where you receive your monthly billing statements for this credit card is exactly the same as the address on your account. This includes abbreviations, CAPs, punctuation, etc. Please also note that his declination of your card is not reflective of your credit or credit worthiness.

Can you spell F-O-R-M-L-E-T-T-E-R? Ironically, at the bottom of this response was a footnote: "We at PayPal would like to know how well this response accommodated your request...If this email did not meet your expectations: mailto:didnotmeetexpectations@paypal.com". Needless to say, my next letter was copied to that address as well...

This is rapidly becoming a complete fiasco. Your email tells me nothing I did not learn the very FIRST TIME I emailed customer services... The email which I sent...follows AGAIN, because your reply above is obviously a stock response, sent without actually bothering to look at my email in any detail, and completely fails to address any of the issues I raised. Please *read* it this time!

You might also want to look and see how many people my fiancee and I have referred to PayPal through the business account detail above; I think that, given this, we deserve better customer service than a standard email when we try to open a personal account. Once again, I look forward to hearing from you shortly - this time with a proper resolution of the problem.

Okay, so that last paragraph smacks of desperation a little bit. :-) But after the usual automated acknowledgement thanking me for my interest, and only three days later:

Thank you for contacting PayPal. We apologize for the delay in responding to your service request. We apologize for not meeting your expectations and for the difficulty you have had in trying to add this credit card.

Unfortunately, because of our security procedures, the website is not accepting the address that you are entering for your credit card. If you have checked your credit card billing statement and you are entering your address exactly the way it is seen on your billing statement and we still are not accepting it, you will need to obtain another card to add to this account. We do apologize for the frustration and inconvenience this is causing you. However, if the system will not accept it, there is nothing we can do.

So, they were suggesting that I should go to all the trouble of applying for and obtaining another credit card, purely to accomodate the deficiencies of their system! How nice of them! I even tried applying from an entirely separate email address - still, no luck. As for their "there is nothing we can do" comment, here are the suggestions I came up with for them:

  • 1) Explain why your system is rejecting a valid credit card. I am quite prepared to PROVE that I am supplying the correct address.

  • 2) Fix your system so that it works properly.
  • 3) Verify the credit card details manually.
  • 4) Activate the account manually? I will then transfer in money from the business account and charge my credit card with the amount. Oddly, OUR system - along with Amazon and, it seems, everyone else on the Internet apart from PayPal - is quite willing to accept my card as valid.

  • If you're trying to
    contact Customer Service,
    you'd better...

    To which they replied: "I would suggest you contact your credit card company and see what the correct mailing address would be, to use for a verification." No: fuck you - I amn't going to waste any more time trying to work around the inadequacies of your system. So there, for the moment, the matter rests: option 4 is exactly what I did anyway. They keep very quiet about it, but you don't need a credit card or a bank account to use PayPal, just get someone who does to transfer money across. It thus doesn't matter whether or not I hear again from PayPal Customer Service (a true oxymoron), but if I do, I'll post it here.

    If anyone else is having PayPal problems, I'd like to here from you. We are rapidly discovering that it has all the bureaucracy of a bank, with none of the safeguards. On the business side, we have noticed a steady increase in the numbers of people using Billpoint rather than PayPal - if I were you, I would certainly consider keeping as small a balance in there as you can...

    It's not just me who has an appalling opinion of their Customer Service.

    Neil from Canada writes: "So I recently had a dealing with a fraudulent seller (purchased a software application that was bogus) on paypal, and when I contacted paypal regarding this they said “Yes, we are aware that you’ve gotten ripped off, but there’s nothing we can do, since the product you purchased is an intangible item. You are going to have to contact your credit card company.”

    So I contacted my credit card company and the fraud investigations department investigated and found it a clear case of fraud and charged back the amount. What does Paypal do? They put a whole bunch of limitations on my account (limited my purchase amount to $100, from $1500) and dispute the verdict from the fraud department of my cc. I didn’t really want to be a buyer on Paypal anymore after this anyway but just for shits and giggles I emailed them asking why my account was limited. This was their response:

    “Thank you for contacting PayPal with your concern. If a buyer goes outside of PayPal to dispute, we reserve the right to limit the account. This is dependent upon many factors.”

    So basically “if a buyer” tries to resolve a dispute through the very means that PayPal in fact suggested since they weren’t going to do anything to help me, they will basically punish me by making sure I can’t buy anything of value anymore."

    CalculatePayPal.com - Free PayPal fee calculator

    The idea of CalculatePayPal really came to me when I was about to send a payment to a friend of mine with PayPal. After a few minuttes looking on PayPal for some kind of fee calculator I thought to my self, lets make a free PayPal fee calculator. The result is CalculatePayPal.com. This allows anyone with or wthout a PayPal account to quickly and easily find out how much they will need to pay in PayPal fees. If you what to get money sent to online, PayPal is one way to do so, but its hard knowing how much to send. Or if you where to accept a payment is hard to know how much you will need to charge, that way I also added a "reverse" version of the PayPal fee Calculator. I really hope that you find this PayPal fee calculator handy and will help you keep controll over you PayPal transactions. Also if you would like you can link to us, banners and text links you can find in our Link to us section. If you have any questions or whant to ask us about anything regaring this PayPal fee calculator please send us an email, you can do so in here .
    Check out the great paypal fee calculator here:



    CalculatePayPal.com

    Saturday, October 13, 2007

    CalculatePayPal.com - Free PayPal fee calculator

    CalculatePayPal is a tool made for eBay sellers which allows them to quickly and easily calculate their PayPal fees before accepting money online. It is an off-line extension to the CalculatePayPal website (CalculatePayPal.com), a free online PayPal fee calculator. It includes support for all the different PayPal fee rates (including the Standard Rate and all levels of the Merchant Rate) and it also supports all the different countries and currencies that PayPal supports. You can even choose to calculate in the 2.5% currency conversion fee that is used in some multi-currency transactions. You can also use it to "reverse" calculate your PayPal fees to determine the exact amount a person must send you in order for you to get the amount you want. (For example, if you want to actually receive $75 in your PayPal account a person would have to send you $77.55). So take a look at CalculatePayPal for the best PayPal fee calculator!

    Sunday, December 31, 2006

    Thanks Google!

    Lenker: Spill, 123spill,gratis spill,1001spill,