Survey Says Most iPhone Users Love AT&T
Hugh Pickens writes "In a report sure to raise eyebrows, CNN Money claims that despite a very vocal group of detractors, the vast majority of iPhone users love AT&T. A survey released this week by Yankee Group reports that 73% of iPhone owners scored their satisfaction with the carrier as an 8, 9, or 10 on a 10-point scale. The results seem surprising, given the pounding AT&T has taken in the media and on the blogosphere about its service-related issues with the iPhone and AT&T's recent iPad-related security glitch. For its part, AT&T says its network really isn't as bad as many people think. 'There's a gap between what people hear about us and what their experience is with us. We think that gap is beginning to close,' says Mark Siegel, an AT&T spokesman. 'It doesn't mean we're perfect; we still have work to do. But that's no surprise to us, because we have a great network.'" Buried in the penultimate paragraph is the somewhat alarming note that "77% of iPhone owners say they'll buy another iPhone, compared to 20% of Android customers who say they'll buy another Android phone."
Ah forced ignorance. I'm sure you think you are clever trying to prove a point, but anyone with two braincells can tell that the only fucking idiot here is you.
(Hint: Telephones != smart phones and smart phones, like most consumer technology, becomes obsolete pretty quick. But don't let that get in the way of you and the five people who think you're method of reasoning is somehow intelligent).
You did the switch wrong. If you aren't a Mac-fanboy you need to find the relative that is the one that gets fed up and tries a Mac and begins drinking the kool-aid. Then you need to let them evangelize Macs so your other relatives purchase them. Then when a computer eventually has a problem, HDD crashes, they delete something they didn't want to, who knows. When they come to you for help you just turn around and say, "I don't know/support Macs". At this point you are no longer the family tech support guy.
You really believe all of this plotting and planning is better than setting clear boundies concerning what is and is not a reasonable degree of assistance, making it understood that any help rendered is out of the kindness of your heart and not out of obligation, and that if anyone is dissatisfied with the quality or quantity of your free assistance then there are many for-pay options available? There's nothing rude about deciding not to allow people to walk all over you, so long as it's done matter-of-factly and not out of anger. If they hate you for that and withdraw their kindness or affection for this reason, then their kindness was always phony, a way to get you to do their bidding, you haven't really lost anything, and you are better off without such people.
It's called having a spine. Do that wrongly, with anger, and you'll just be an asshole. Do that correctly and it is genuinely respectable and others can see that anything you do for them is a free choice motivated by genuine kindness. By contrast, what you suggest is more like out-manipulating the manipulators who would try to make you take care of their problems not because service to others is a genuine joy, but because of false obligation where none really exists and to avoid the unspoken threat of some kind of retaliation from them. Why would you want to play their game and engage in these petty, catty politics when it isn't difficult to see what sort of person (knowingly or unwittingly) plays these games?
The funny thing is that when you see the truth of this, people generally won't try to manipulate you in the first place. It is as though understanding the dynamic places you above or outside of it. When you are afraid of losing the approval of anyone, to where you replace loving service with reluctant subservience, you actually tempt them to take advantage of that. That's how you end up being the guy who runs around putting out everyone else's fires, receiving little gratitude for doing so but hearing much complaint when not. This applies to many things, not just technical support.
It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein