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Robert I feel for Patrick, hope this turns around for him fast, and looking forward to hearing the outcome.
Part of dealing with technology is accepting the fact that issues like the randon shutdown do crop up on occasion. Expecting an immediate firmware fix or replacement machine from Apple over a holiday weekend is a bit of a stretch and you and your son both know it.
Constantly complaining about the problem doesn't do any good and expecting personal one-on-one customer service from Apple for issues like this has never been part of Apple's protocol so why would you expect anything different?
If you don't like the way Apple deals with these kinds of issues you're more than welcome to go back to Microsoft, or try out any one of the Linux variants.
Apple *will* fix the issue, but you need to give them time. Seems like common sense to me.
This was a behavior I learned on System 7.0 back in 1992 when I was a page designer at San Jose State. It takes an extra minute in the morning to boot up, but that's why I never hit this bug.
By the way, fixing these kinds of bugs isn't easy and even if they were, deploying the fix isn't easy either. Someday I'd like to introduce Robert to some of the developers here so that he can see the process that changing one line of code would take.
Telling someone to wait two weeks to get his machine back is ridiculous when he just purchased it -- Apple sold us a defective box. It should have been replaced on the spot. But, nonetheless, Patrick already read your comment and told me "hey, dad, you should tell me to grow up."
Bob: touche! (for everyone else, this is an inside joke, cause I defended Tablet PCs that had a memory leak, which is far far better than a shutdown problem which causes you to lose all your work, by saying that I shut down my computers every evening. Something I still do, by the way, even on my Mac. Mostly now cause I'm worried about batteries catching fire).
What, because they don't have a blog saying they are working on it, they aren't? Are you that brainwashed that the ONLY way anyone can fix a problem in your eyes anymore is to blog about it?
"We haven't fixed it yet, but we're aware of it."
Yeah, that's great.
Robert, they're doing exactly what they should be doing. They're taking it back and looking at it. Let me ask you this, would you rather get a new one from the same lot, and have the same problem hit you? Would that be better? Somehow, I think not.
I can tell you that when it comes to corporate purchases NOT from a Microsoft, Dell or HP, I don't get same day return service. I get, if I'm lucky, a day or two of phone tag, because there's no brick and mortar store to take it to. If you're on a corporate contract, Best Buy does you no good. If you bought a Dell, you have to play phone tag with them, that's the only way to get support. You like Dell phone tag? Thought not. So, where was I. Oh yeah. A couple of days of phone tag. Then I have to box it up and send it to them. How long does it usually take with Dell or HP?
That's right, 7 to 10 days. Or longer. If it's a consumer rig, you better hope it wasn't a Dell, that way you at least have a chance of a "place" to take it back to. There's nothing particularly bad or good about what you're seeing. Blogs don't change turnaround time. Blogs don't change the fact that Dell has no physical store to do service from, unless you count a Kiosk that can't actually sell you a computer.
You say it's "brand new". Care to put a timeframe on that? Is brand new six days old? Six weeks? Six months? It makes a difference.
Did you back it up first? I hope so, because if they have to wipe the drive as part of the troubleshooting process, dear god, you're going to be whining in overdrive.
Honestly, I bet Patrick's being more mature about this than you are.
But blogging doesn't fix a problem. It just fools you into thinking it does.
When I had a problem with a camcorder purchased at Best Buy, they replaced it on the spot.
Of course blogging doesn't fix a problem.
The computer was received a few days before Christmas. Less than a month old.
Yes, Patrick backed it up before we took it in. He only had it a few days anyway, so didn't have a chance to get a lot of stuff onto it.
Whenever an expensive piece of equipment malfunctions you always feel like the company that is responsible is doing a bad job.. that's just human nature. Is it worthy of being covered by the Wall Stree Journal? Not so much.
People bet their lives on their machines. Imagine a business who gets this kind of response?
And people wonder why Apple has 5.62% marketshare.
http://www.apple.com/retail/procare/
Though I wasn't talking about you getting a replacement on the spot (a lot of that is left to the discretion of the Genius) but rather to the idea that an Apple rep would call/email you personally. That may happen since you're a well known blogger, but most folks don't get that kind of treatment.
My Suggestion is to follow this:
http://store.apple.com/Catalog/US/Images/salesp...
Now tell them that Patrick is dissatisfied and return it if it is within the guidlines.
When it is returned, I don't know about your area, but my Best Buy now carries Macs. Go and buy it there.
It is the same thing for a 12 year old.
Not sure if you already know this or if I missed it but Apple has a pretty cool "program" which enables one to use a refurbished Mac when one's own Mac needs to go in for servicing.
My MacBook Pro (purchased April 2006) needed to go in for a new logic board (the mooing sound thing). Anyhow, the manager at the Apple store here in Boston explained to me that I could "buy" a refurbished MacBook Pro (assuming they have one for sale at the store in question) and then "port/copy" the contents of my MacBook Pro onto the refurbished MacBook (similar to what you do when you buy a new Mac).
Anyhow, once my own Mac gets sent back to me fixed I can then again port/copy any content/data changes back from the refurbished Mac to my own and then return the refurbished MacBook WITHOUT a stocking charge.
In essence, Apple enables me to use a "loaner" while my machine gets fixed. Since I was using a refurbished MacBook Pro it was as if I was using my own actual computer. I could've cared less how long it took Apple to return my own machine (It took less than 1 week).
If Patrick has already sent his MacBook back in then this option won't be available but at least you'll know for the next time.
Happy New Year!
They do from Google in a lot of areas. Microsoft employees help out tons of bloggers, even Z listers. I've seen Dell help out too, although they told Jeff Jarvis to pound sand before getting involved in the blogosphere.
>I guess you would like journalists to cover your son’s problems though reports that suggest Apple’s product quality isn’t that big a problem.
It's becoming a much bigger problem. I know many people who've had problems with their MacBooks rebooting (you should have followed Dave Winer's reports -- he linked to at least a dozen bloggers who were having similar problems). They told him to wait 10 working days too to get his problem fixed.
By the way, I didn't deal with the store at all. One thing I've done is make Patrick do all his dealings with Apple. I didn't talk to the salesperson. So, maybe they thought that a 12-year-old didn't need the deluxe treatment.
But it sounds like the guy in Canada has issues a lot bigger than the random shutdown issue -- it looks like the wrong machine got packaged in his box! Maybe Apple Canada needs a kick in the pants.
But notice he doesn't tell us key things like what version of the software he's running.
There's an Apple Doc outlining the problem and giving a firmware solution. And a Digg solution as well - it's the top post at your poster-child site right now, btw.
Robert, I don't know what Apple Store you have where you are -- but the one at Alderwood Mall in Lynnwood WA is awesome. They were great when I had to send my G4 PB back under extended warranty -- and yeah, it was gone more than a week. It was also 2 years old.
I watched them do a data swap on a new(ish) iMac that was having problems ... I don't know how old it was, but the Genius Bar guy I was talking to said that they weren't going to make the owner wait for service, they were replacing the machine. The Apple Store guys felt bad because it was the couple's first Mac. [I was in for a Garage Band lesson.]
What was the reason given for not replacing the unit? You didn't tell us that.
Best of luck to Patrick.
I don't know. I didn't deal with the Apple store. They just said it needed to be sent in, according to Patrick. Maybe he wasn't forceful enough. One thing I've been doing with Patrick is teaching him to deal with computers himself so he gets confidence (and experience) dealing with people.
Keep in mind that Patrick knows more about Apple than any Apple store employee I know. If you ever meet him that'll become instantly apparent.
The Apple store he was in was the Palo Alto store, about a mile from Steve Jobs' house, and it's always been one of the best managed Apple stores I've visited for that reason. Imagine if Steve Jobs walks in and a customer has a bad experience?
In the future, you might have him search the Mac specific sites, or even the Apple support forums, before heading to the shop. Who knows, he may have found a solution and be happy right about now. Here's some starter links...
MacSurfer... http://www.macsurfer.com/
MacFixIt... http://www.macfixit.com/
ArsTechnica/Mac... http://episteme.arstechnica.com/eve/ubb.x?a=frm...
Apple Discussions... http://discussions.apple.com/index.jspa
Self sufficiency is a good thing to teach. Whining isn't and looking for star treatment isn't.
That's the other problem. They won't give you replacement parts for a laptop. One of the Powerbooks had a dead hard drive. I called up and they told me I'd have to ship it back or bring it to an Apple store. What kind of business takes their machines to the mall to get them fixed? Isn't that the point of having an IT department? If I call up Lenovo, it takes two minutes to get a replacement drive shipped out and I receive it the next day.
I'm IT Director now and we'll never use any Apple products. The hoops you have to jump through to get hardware fixed or replaced aren't worth the time they take.
I disagree with the person above who said your son should grow up. From what you said it sounds like he his handling it well for someone his age. But it really sounds like you might want to consider that advice.
Is the problem heat related? If he didn't already try it, Patrick should run one of the utilities that monitors the CPU temperature. He can also try adjusting the fan speed using SMCFanControl to keep the machine from getting too hot. Mine usualy runs about 145F.
Also, check the console logs for any messages related to the reboot.
Will you and Patrick be at MacWorld Expo next week?
As a side note, I have the distinct impression that the apple stores throughout the US are more like an interactive web store than a Best Buy or a Fry's (or a Microcenter on the east coast). The staff are able to help you play with a device (the primary mission of an Apple store), answer questions about products (the secondary mission), and provide the Genius Bar (the third mission). However, once a problem crops up, the policies seem to be identical to those that the website has - and if you have purchased the computer online via apple.com someone would have told you to ship it back and they would fix it and return it when it was fixed (and I'll bet in most cases they promise 2 week).
However, in classic Apple form, they did a horrible job managing the perception of the customer(s) affected by this problem. There are no real success stories that people can refer to for this. There is no "real" message from Apple, only canned corporate speak letting the world know that there was a problem and that they are working on it. This is a customer perception problem.
I have had an HP laptop for a little over a year. I purchased this machine from HP.com. About 4 months ago I had to send it in for repairs (some random shutdown issue that I'm pretty sure was related to the video card). As I waited on hold to talk to the service department that scheduled my repair I was very prepared to send the machine off into the ether and a month later would get it back. When I spoke to the service guy, he immediately acknowledged that this was a problem they had seen before, *apologized* that I got one of the machines affected, and said they could get this fixed. He told me I would see a UPS box the next day and let me know it would take 7-10 business days to repair. The box arrived, I shipped it back (receiving an email from HP when they received it at the repair center), received another email 3 days later saying that they repaired it and sent it back (with a tracking number), and it arrived the next day. HP's customer service team understood that they need to manage my perception and expectations very carefully for me to stay a happy HP customer - and more importantly a repeat customer. I now recommend HP laptops to anyone who is asking and doesn't want an Apple.
Apple needs to learn this level of customer service and customer perception management to be truly successful - or at least successful in the mass market.
My son IS special. Thanks for noticing! So is yours, if you have one.
But, it isn't about that. It's about customer service. Best Buy beats Apple stores. Fry's beats Apple stores. Dell beats Apple stores. Costco beats Apple stores.
They treat EVERYONE special (they all take back laptops for the first few weeks without any questions, not to mention they replace defective equipment. Costco even lets you bring back computer equipment for the first year). Apple just has a nice looking interior but their service policies don't back up the pretty look.
I suddenly flashed on the scene in Lawrence of Arabia, the evening after the Arabs have captured Aqaba from the Turks and Auda abu Tayi (Anthony Quinn) is livid that he hasn't found the gold that Lawrence promised would be there. He reluctantly accepts a promissory note for 5,000 guineas in ten days from Lawrence. then turns to Sherif Ali (Omar Sharif) and says, "He said there was gold here. He lied. He is not... perfect."
Again, yes, it would be nice to have Apple participating in the blogosphere (there is a tinge of that want coming through here, but don't miss the bigger issue here: Apple's customer support sucks when compared with its industry competitors).
Dell is known for having good customer service. Not great, but good. At least consistent customer service, and they are pretty open about communicating with the customer. So is HP.
HOWEVER, you can not fairly compare Dell, HP, and Apple to the Big Box stores like Costco, Fry's, Circuit City or (shudder) Best Buy. Why? Because when you buy a computer from Best Buy you are buying that HP from Best Buy, not HP. Best Buy will do everything they can to keep you as a customer. They don't really care what you have or what the problem is, only that you keep coming through their doors. If they have a defective product, they just mark is as an RMA and return it to their supplier, who returns it to the wholesaler they got it from (who may return it to HP or may sell it as a refurb).
When you buy from Apple, HP and Dell you are buying from Apple, HP, and Dell. HP and Dell understand that. Apple seems to think that the people who buy a mac will always buy a mac, and that they don't have to work to retain those people. HP and Dell work to retain their customers since there is so much competition in their segments.
Robert...You keep bringing up Best Buy, search Google for stories about their customer service. It certainly doesn't match your exhortations nor my experience. I've had a better experience returning stuff at Apple than BBY, and not restocking fee either.
The notebook started to have the random shutdown thing in august. I will not go in details about the history here, but it seems enough to say that I had to wait more than 3 months 'till they really fixed the issue. Now the MacBook battery just died on me. And they say I have to wait at least 1 month to get a new one.
On 6 months after the purchase, the MacBook managed to work only 2 months without glitches.
On Brazil you pay more than double the Apple's price on USA. And every issue you have with Apple hardware seems to put you on a wait list that lasts for months. See, things can always get worse... ;-)
There's an issue with Apple employees 'writing back' to bloggers about the issue - it makes Apple seem like a Big Brother that is lurking around for anytime someone says something negative about them - and then "ohhh, Apple only talks back to defend themselves".
That, and I'm sorry, but Apple does make it very clear where and when you can contact them about certain issues. Yelling on a blog about your issues is fine, but it's not Apple's place to monitor all blogs all the time and treat them as customer service centers.
And if you argue that it's worse for Apple to not acknowledge these issues raised on blogs than to risk being the 1984 Big Brother of anything said about them, I'd argue that you're completely wrong. A blogger blogs, and companies should be neutral participants - not customer service vigilantes.
A customer is in pain. You saying companies shouldn't react to that? I TOTALLY disagree.
Think of what Apple could be if the best OS on the market and the best hardware available was married to the best customer service - like American Express level service (they are the best in any biz). They would be able to tip every computer sales scale currently tracked.
I've never been charged a restocking fee at BestBuy and I've returned a number of things (at Microsoft I did tons of business with them, and I've bought several things at PodTech from them too).
I could have told you that Apple service sucks.
Aside: Note I use that word "suck" becuase it fits. This despite what your friend says here Robert when analizing Yuvi's blog: http://thinklab.typepad.com/think_lab/2006/12/g...
(and he apparently isn't on-line as his moderated comments aren't being moderated ...)
I always try to take the time to compliment a couple of companies who I find to be top notch any time I level criticism. So anytime you say something bad, say something good too, and not just about Seagate, your sponsor ;-) perhaps?
Good luck to your son and you are right, if he decides to go Windoze or go renegade and adopt Linux or better yet develop his own operating system -- heck just call it scobes 2007 -- well Apple's loss.
If it was Microsoft someone else would release a patch in the meantime because they are so slow to fix it. So maybe two weeks isn't the end of the world. Or maybe it is.
I have only been back once, and my skin was crawling the whole time.
This is a fact? Got some insider info?
The only thing that makes me sceptical about an iPod is that it's the WWDC. With Leopard, 8-core Macs, etc. it's too crowded. And this is a developer's conference after all.
I get where you're coming from and I do agree that companies need to be involved, I am not saying they should not be active in the blog community (because they most definitely should be). My argument is that if a company steps in everytime there are complaints - it opens the flood gates for horrible possibilities that maybe some companies can handle, but most currently can't.
In a good world, companies would hire smart, sensible people who understand and could deal with the whole "blog thing". Unfortunately, a lot of companies do lurk around reading what everyone says about them and instead of taking it 'like a man', a lot become extremely defensive and angry. Why? Because as bloggers, we don't check every little tiny fact like a regular news source usually does - and as such, it would take a lot of time and a whole team to respond to all the blogs that are either complaining about the product or spreading wrong information about the product.
Ok, next issue, companies do understand the power of blogs, thus, before responding to any blog, a lot of execs would like any communication to go through their legal departments, exec heads, etc. before even replying - by the time a company could reply, it'd already be a month old.
Now, the whole customer service issue - there are reasons why there are customer service centers - and if someone is bitching on a blog about an issue and never seeked customer service otherwise (not saying this is you, just an example), then how can a company help them other than to say "you know, if you went to our customer service center, they may be able to resolve this for you." An example I heard of a while back is Verizon's "bring all your issues here" blog - this is the best that Verizon can do and is a decent work-around for now - they can't interact with a blog's post, but they can create a blog as an alternative customer solution center.
Okay, there's a lot of other points I could make (I work at an agency, and so I hear the good and the bad thoughts about blogs everyday from clients), but I guess, in closing of this comment - yes, I really wish it was as simple as it easily COULD be for someone in a company to just respond and communicate, I really, really do. Until companies grow some balls or someone is willing to go above exec's heads, it will be a battle to DIRECTLY respond to a blog's post. Please understand that this argument I'm raising is not how *I* think things should be - but just the realistic side of the battles that I have to make everyday with clients.
Genius: How can I help you?
Patrick: My MBP is randomly rebooting.
G: Alright, we'll take it and it will take 10-14 days to get it back to you.
P: OK, thanks for your help.
Robert, if you were so worried about this you should have been there to make sure Patrick wasn't blown off due to his age. I'm sure you were there to hand over the credit card.
Second, from Apple's perspective, at least over the phone, it has no idea if what you are saying is correct. Often if you go into an Apple store, you get assistance immediately. Also, if you think one Apple representative is not assisting you properly, ask for a manager. Sometimes, that gets resolution quicker.
After-all, you are dealing with people, and people are not always good company representatives.
For what it's worth, the Apple Store here in Rochester _did_ replace Lane's MacBook with a new one when we had trouble, which I blogged about.
But, on the other side of the fence, in Best Buy (or Fry's, or Costco) even a jerk can return stuff: all they need to do is point to the policy on the wall.
>Often if you go into an Apple store, you get assistance immediately.
They did give him assistance immediately. That wasn't the problem. The problem was that he wasn't treated as well as BestBuy or Fry's or Costco would have treated him.
I really don't expect to get anyone from Apple listening to me. They haven't demonstrated they listen to anyone but Steven Levy from Newsweek or Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal.
Oh, and you might try a little squeek yourself sometime! Everyone can use blog search engines. Maybe if hundreds of us complained we'd get attention?
You don't have to be a young person to appreciate Steve Jobs. Even the engineers and management at Microsoft acknowledge the man's genius. The comment though comes off a bit put-offish implying people use Macs for superficial and immature reasons. Maybe you didn't mean it that way.
I don't know what to say to a young person with an infatuation. I do know that if it were me, I'd be embarrassed to have it discussed in public in this way.
This is very personal topic. I would love to connect with my son someday on something like computers. Maybe you would too. Of course that can only happen by being open to each other (mostly from the adult, i.e. you). On the other hand, if a strong will is the desired trait, then your son is fine. The apple doesn't fall far from the tree after all.
And, learning to deal with criticism for one's beliefs is an important lesson too. I'm very proud of his ability to stand up for himself, though.
But, what I get on him about is religious belief in a company or a guy. That won't serve him well in the world because it'll keep him from looking for a better way to do things. It'll also let him down, as he found out this week. Better to have a little cynicism.
Note that I too admire Steve Jobs. He has skills I never will have. The way he talked IBM out of $400 million without having a product in hand (when he started NeXT) was sheer genius and balls.
And, last time I looked I hadn't started one of the world's great companies.
You weren't there so your comments are as third-hand as many above. Maybe Apple are retaining Books with specific problems in order to determine the scale of the issue? Maybe the store didn't have a Book to replace or lend? Maybe the Apple Store employee explained more but it got lost in the retelling of the story? Most likely the frailty of humans was at play and this person made a boo-boo by not offering all the options to Patrick.
Most likely you yourself was at fault for letting Patrick deal with this solely on his own - you love your son, he loves Apple stuff, so why didn't you just go into the Apple Store with him to make sure he got the best possible result? And I seem to remember that you have a close relative who works at Apple? Mmm!
If it were only my story, I'd probably let it slide. But Dave WIner has been pointing to various people having shutdown problems (and getting the "you gotta give us your computer for two weeks" line) for months now. Do you want me to point to all of them?
Do you find it interesting that a guy started an entire Web site to track this problem? I do.
Do you find it interesting that Best Buy and Costco treat their customers better than Apple does? I do.
Do you find it interesting that the mainstream press will beat up Dell for customer service issues, but I haven't seen much about Apple in that same press? I do.
I'm not an apologist for Apple - I thought my opening comment made that clear.
If you were actually in the store why couldn't you drag yourself over to the Genius Bar and support Patrick? Wasn't that the responsible parent thing to do with a minor in any store?
Anecdotal evidence of customer service may be accurate - or not - but it just doesn't matter whether Best Buy or CostCo is better it is what happens when you need service that matters and you could have influenced the outcome for Patrick - but didn't.
"Do you find it interesting that a guy started an entire Web site to track this problem? I do." Well, doesn't this sort of thing go on a lot these days for all sorts of people who feel aggrieved that something they've acquired isn't perfect in every way? Winer may be entirely correct in highlighting an Apple approach that doesn't measure up. I'm sure he's contacted Apple and had the brush-off as a no-nothing, unknown on the Internet!
Influence is a wonderful thing. And what happened with that relative at Apple in helping to get to the bottom of the problem?
My relative is an engineer on the Mac team. He's powerless to help out here. He doesn't even know who runs PR or who runs customer service (they compartmentalize everything -- he's working on something secret and he only gets to see his own part on the motherboard and doesn't get to see how it works in a bigger whole. So you expect him to get me some help? Heheh, funny, not to mention that he's not allowed to talk with me about anything Apple).
Also, lots of people know who I am, so if I start "influencing" the world for Patrick, then you'll just bash me for getting Patrick some extra special treatment (just read above for other people already playing that card cause I'm complaining on my blog).
Maybe I'm not a good parent, but I'd rather Patrick learn some negotiating skills on his own and I'd rather him get the self confidence that comes from a parent letting him solve his own problems.
That said, I see evidence of a larger trend here that goes beyond Patrick's computer. That's why I'm bringing it out on my blog and making a big deal about it.
A friend's MacBook Pro Core Duo needs to have the keyboard replaced. Apple told her it would take 1 week to order the part and another 2 days to do the repair. That is bad customer service, especially for such a seemingly simple repair as a keyboard replacement.
We have 1 MacBook Pro Core 2 Duo with zero problems, 1 month old.
http://store.apple.com/Catalog/US/Images/salesp...
I suspect that the physical stores have similar policies even if they're not posted. I've seen people return merchandise at the Apple store before and don't believe in the over-legalization of our daily lives. Perhaps Apple actually gives its customers too much credit (you view this as arrogance) by thinking that a clearly stated two week repair period would be considered reasonable by many people, especially when the strategy is to under-promise and over-deliver (my experiences with Apple service, though few, have always been professional and timely). As you wrote, your son just wanted the problem fixed. Hence, Apple assumed that he wanted the problem fixed. Apple did not assume that he wanted the problem replaced, which still may have been an option. Perhaps you would not be blogging about this if this had transpired instead:
Your Son: I just got this MacBookPro as a present but it's defective (explain problem). Can I get it repaired today?
Apple: Not for this problem. I don't think so.
Your Son: OK, then I'd like to return it for a full refund.
Apple: OK.
Patrick gets the money back (via you), and buys another new MacBook Pro.
just wondering, why isn't your son blogging his experience? Or his he and I just missed the link to his blog?
First off - my sympathy is entirely with Patrick. When I was 12 I was dealing with tech support folks too (I handled a lot of tech stuff for my Dad as he felt he was too "technologically dyslexic" to interact with the "techie types" and he thought it was good for me) and it can be really frustrating for a kid (gets more frustrating as you get older Patrick *grin*).
Once I finished writing the rest of this this I realised it was way too long for a reply so please find full post here: http://salubri.journals.ie/2007/01/02/customer-... (Trackbacks from my blog do not seem to be working)
But the skill is choosing the occasion to do this and he really wanted his MacBook fixed, didn't he? Time and place, Robert; even if he bought it himself, it wasn't the occasion to leave him solely to his own efforts? I wouldn't do this for my two 16 year olds and one aged 17 if they were up against a big company especially around Christmas time.
What I just cannot accept is that you can be so certain that if Patrick had been left to go back on his own to Best Buy or CostCo (if he'd got the laptop from either of these) that he would have been treated any better. All you are doing is comparing an actual experience with paper on a wall.
Duh we're a pampered society and expect results.
Dude, perspective much? Unless you can show me someone who will DIE WITHOUT A LAPTOP, you need to stop confusing a laptop with a life. I know it's hard, but there is in fact a difference.
I do have Macs that are running critical services. Oddly enough, I have purchased the appropriate support contracts. Are they standard AppleCare? Um..no. A bit more expensive.
Keep in mind that Patrick knows more about Apple than any Apple store employee I know. If you ever meet him that’ll become instantly apparent.
Dude, please, a guy hired by Apple two weeks ago can spank you on Mac knowledge, so your claims here are shall we say...inane?
Secondly, wtf man, you let a kid, smart though he may be handle this? Lame much, or do you just like watching shit break when it's a Mac so you can prove a point. Would you leave him to the wolves if it was a Thinkpad or a Tablet?
Survey says: Oh Shit No, you'd become THE SCOBELIZER so fast it would leave scorch marks.
Man, that's just lame. You know there's a dozen ways to handle this without treating either the employee or Patrick poorly, and you let someone just twist in the wind. Then again, you did that enough with MS employees when you worked there, so it's a fairly standard modus. I just figured you'd not do that to your kid. Good job man. Way to lead by example.
Face it, the only reason you did this was to mask your own inadequacy with regard to Macs, and that you can't pull any strings here. It would be fun to see you whining about how Patrick told you "Figure it out your own damned self" the first time you needed help from him with a problem with your MBP. Sheesh dude, learn some leadership.
I had an eye-opening experience with Apple support a couple of weeks ago. Like you described your son as being, I think (thought?) of myself as a huge Apple loyalist and likely even, bigot and have bought only Apple product since January, 1984 both for myself and my various business ventures.
I always found Apple to be not only more innovative than its PC counterparts, but the quality of the workmanship to be unmatched. Moreover, I fount the customer care to be just that, CARING, sympathetic, and urgent. Until now.
I had a recent problem, albeit, not critical, with my new MBP. I could no longer get Front Row to start as it seemed to disable itself each time I installed it. I brought it to the Genius Bar at my local mall store where I was dismissed as having an OS problem and was sent packing until I agreed to reload the Operating System.
Not believing the OS was at fault and remaining convinced it was a hardware failure, I went to a different, further, mall store where I was greeted reasonably promptly (I am, after all, a Procare customer) and the system diagnosed as having a cable failure connecting the IR card. When I was told it would still take 7 days to fix, I was shocked, since I rely on the laptop as my principal computer and would be crippled without.
Where bad went worse, I inquired why (how) they could fix iPod problems with far greater sense of urgency, when in fact nobody's business relied on a working iPod, the Genius replied "Sir, iPods ARE our business!"
It hit me like a ton of bricks.
Apple has changed. They have transformed from a low-voume, high quality PC manufacturer to a high-volume, lower quality consumer electronics company.
The Mac has become an afterthought to Apple, it seems, as their futures seem closely tied to the success of the iPod, and everything else is an alsoran. Or so it seems to me.
Sadly shocking. Undeniably true.
As someone else pointed out, buying from the Apple store is not the same thing as buying from a big box retailer, on many levels.
I realize that Patrick is smart and fairly comfortable with adults - but Robert, he's a kid. He went without any adult? I'm amazed. [Note, I'm not a parent.]
Oh. And Costco's return policy at the Biz store in Lynnwood and costco.com is six months, not a year.
I have owned seven Macs -- four desktops and three laptops. My first one was a PowerPC desktop back when Apple did house calls. Yes, this was the 90s and they sent a tech to my house and he fixed the machine under warranty. And it was an open-box online purchase. I had no problems with the other three desktops.
I always buy extended warranty for laptops. Seems like I had a screen issue with the first one. And this G4 Aluminum had power issues. I dropped it off at the Lynnwood WA Apple Store and picked it up there. They notified me by e-mail each step along the way.
And, like the person above who talked about HP -- I got a sales person who was empathetic -- who diagnosed a warranty problem that I didn't know I had (pixel loss) and who told me what would happen and how long it would take. And I watched another employee on another day apologize to a couple who had a problem with their iMac (as I related above).
So there are employees who are good representatives of the company and employees who are not.
And if you have a way to ensure that every employee is an excellent customer service rep EVERY hour of the work day, maybe you need to write another book. ;-)
By the way, turns out his Mac is fixed and is being shipped back to the store. He might have it back on Friday. So, at least they get kudos there.
I have a G3 Lombard with a broken keyboard, DVD drive and power socket. OK, so it's well out of warranty being nearly 8 years old.
The local store won't supply the parts for a self repair, instead wanting £53 /per incident/ to repair the laptop on top of the parts (each counting as a single incident.
Now, considering I can pick an OEM laptop DVD burner for £45 or so brand new, they wanted £90 not including the incident fee.
They wanted £135 for a new keyboard. I can source one of those for £30.
As for the power socket; £370 for a new mainboard. Only way they'd do it. I've spent the last three years repairing laptop power sockets and gotten bloody good at it. £0.35 for the required component.
The other thing I have is a 20" aluminium Cinema display with a damaged cable and no PSU.
For the modest(!) sum of £90 I can get a new PSU from Apple. Provided I furnish them with a serial number (WHY??). Thing is I bought the panel secondhand, the PSU lasted a month and fried the cable when it went. I've tested the panel and know it still works, so all it needs is the PSU and cable. Apple will not supply me with a new fifteen Dollar cable.
Sorry, Apple, but that just won't do.
On the x86 side of the fence, I have a few Dell laptops. My C640 recently developed a motherboard problem. I asked Dell tech support about options, and after reading them the service code on the unit I was told that even though I had bought the unit secondhand, it was still under Platinum warranty. Two weeks later it was returned to me by courier with a spanking brand new mainboard and two new batteries. All at Dell's expense. Can't beat it.
May add even more to the point raised above about Apple being something other than the "company that built the Mac"....
But, I'm not going to debate parenting skills with someone who can't even spell very well or use his/her own name. Have a good one!