I used to have a lot of respect for Korean products. I have
also been quite impressed with Korean dramas. And having visited Korean, albeit
on a package tour, I was quite convinced that Koreans have “arrived” – until my
wife bought a Samsung’s iBot – a robot that can take over the chores of a maid:
cleaning up your floor and return to its base after the work is done. In short
it is an i-Maid. But this Samsung iBot proves to be dump maid. Surprisingly it
is not sensitive enough to detect drops in floor levels. It would tip over and
hangs up when it comes to one. When it meets an obstacle, like the base of a
chair, it would struggle and try to climb it – like a dogged mountaineer trying
to climb Mount Everest! And from the following picture you can see how
ridiculous it can behave when it goes near a bed. It would mobilise its entire
might to squeeze itself into the gap, only to lose its power and ends up
stranded in that place. Samsung should have offered it in golden colour!
If your product is not ready, it is best that you don’t introduce it to the market. It will cause irreparable damage to your brand. Ask me to buy a Samsung phone or a tablet now? I will certainly think more than twice.
Microsoft likes to hit you where it hurts most. As recent as last month, even though my Office suite was the 2010 version, for Outlook, I still used the 2003 vintage. Outlook, as we all know, is the most expensive component of Office and I was too stingy to change, since the old "Morris Minor" was still very much functioning.
Lately I was attracted by Microsoft’s new offer. For A$9 a month, I could have its Office 2013. I lost no time in signing up. The next couple of days were very frustrating. Error messages kept popping up: Error 40x800blahblahblah. They were worse than Greek to me. Its Technical Support was not available during weekends and non-office hours. I went to its web notes to look for solutions. I got nowhere. Finally, I spoke to their support team. Despite my handicap in Filipino English, I managed to get the programs activated. However, I have yet to be able to access my contacts with one click, a feature which Microsoft proudly claims.
If your product is not ready, it is best that you don’t introduce it to the market. It will cause irreparable damage to your brand. Ask me to buy a Samsung phone or a tablet now? I will certainly think more than twice.
I have never bought a car from Cycle & Carriage Bintang
before. When Mercedes Benz introduced its new A-class, I thought it suited me –
small, economical and, of course, “prestigious”, at least my ego told me so.
Mine was the lower end version. The car turned out to be
disappointing. The accelerator response is worse than the Perodua I replaced. And
its frugality in fuel consumption was nowhere near what the brochure claimed.
Its appetite is in fact as big as the C-class I use in Melbourne. I wrote to
give them the feedback. Guess what? A lukewarm response from both Cycle &
Carriage Bintang, followed by Mercedes Benz AG, but nothing useful was offered.
One day I took the car for a trip up north – the first long-distance run – and found
that the car keep towing to one side. A Chinaman mechanic told me the obvious.
He suggested that I sent it back to Cycle & Carriage Bintang to have it
fixed, since it involved camber adjustments. The service consultant confirmed
it was the case, but slapped me with a huge bill. The car had only done less
than 10,000 km, including the long trip to Penang. I wrote in to protest. Guess
what? A case number was given to me, but it has been months, I have yet to hear
from Cycle & Carriage Bintang. Ask me to patronize the company again? You
must be joking!!!
ASUS’s Wifi thumb drive is another case in point. It asks
you to connect, then you are supposed to enter your password, next it asks you
to save, which attracts another question like: Do you want to override the old
one. You can click yes or no to your heart’s content; it will take you back to
the same series of questions one more time!
It is strange that these IT designers don’t get users,
especially those who are new, to walk through the process. Sure, such silliness
is not a problem since they know the system. But others, especially older dinosaurs
like me? Microsoft likes to hit you where it hurts most. As recent as last month, even though my Office suite was the 2010 version, for Outlook, I still used the 2003 vintage. Outlook, as we all know, is the most expensive component of Office and I was too stingy to change, since the old "Morris Minor" was still very much functioning.
Lately I was attracted by Microsoft’s new offer. For A$9 a month, I could have its Office 2013. I lost no time in signing up. The next couple of days were very frustrating. Error messages kept popping up: Error 40x800blahblahblah. They were worse than Greek to me. Its Technical Support was not available during weekends and non-office hours. I went to its web notes to look for solutions. I got nowhere. Finally, I spoke to their support team. Despite my handicap in Filipino English, I managed to get the programs activated. However, I have yet to be able to access my contacts with one click, a feature which Microsoft proudly claims.
The gold medal for the most laughable brochures in English,
I reckon, has to be awarded to suppliers of Chinese products and services. Many
volumes have been written on this phenomenon. I would just like to contribute a
little here. I love to cite CCTV’s English Channel. Is it for the West? If it
is, then its producers have certainly not been doing their job. I have yet to
come across any westerner who bothers to tune in to this channel. If it is for
English-speaking Chinese, then I must say that it is also a very mediocre do,
notwithstanding the money spent. Even I find the commercials irritating; same
voices are being used over and over and they sound as if they were doing a
drama! The so-called experts that have been brought in to talk about global
issues would always start their sentence “I think” or “You understand” or the
likes. These are direct Chinese translations from the way we Chinese tend to
speak. Even the former chief economist of the World Bank, who is supposed to
have a PhD from one of the top universities in the States, also displays the
same thought process.
Jia Qing Ling was a governor and later party secretary of
China's ujian Province before he went on to become the mayor of Beijing and later a politburo member. I
thought I had made a friend out of him when he visited Genting. I wrote to him
to suggest that China should start a clearing house for English translations of
the products and services that it exported. Guess what, it must have ended up
as a piece of junk mail in his secretary’s rubbish bin.
I can go on and on with examples like these. Fortunately,
there are still many good companies around.
If you forget to turn off data-roaming when you are
overseas, you are likely to end up with a fat bill after your return. I believe
Maxis, Digi and all their buddies don’t alert you about this; they only want to
trap you to pay more. I like my Optus. For an old man like me, I tend to forget
things. The moment I turn on my Australian phone overseas, I am sure to see a
message from Optus that my data roaming facility was on and this would incur
costly charges. Why do you need this on when Wifi is quite readily available in
many places nowadays? Turn the feature off! Before Optus introduced this alert,
I was hit by a couple of hundred Aussie dollars because I was overseas and did
not turn off data roaming. I telephoned to explain; the lady over the line was
happy to credit much of the amount back. There are also another two occasions
when they informed that their internal audit had discovered that I had been
overcharged. Credits were promptly given.
Do you get that from Maxis or Digi or their likes in Malaysia? Fat hope!
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