Facebook More Hated Than Banks, Utilities
jfruhlinger writes "According to the American Customer Satisfaction Index, Facebook raises a lot of ire among its customers — more than Bank of America or AT&T Mobility. This bodes ill for the company — as blogger Chris Nerney points out, many of the others on the most-hated list are utilities and other companies with monopolies, which can hold customers despite bad service. At least Facebook edged out MySpace." Unsurprisingly, the most important thing about Google+ is that it's not Facebook.
Dr. Bob, You are a better troll than I. Would you like to join forces? --TSP
You complain about people asking for proof, but if it has saved millions of lives, then proof shouldn't be hard to find.
Open minded means accepting possibilities, not jumping at them as fact. For example, saying chiropractic care can can't cure cancer, is closed minded, but so is saying it does. Without proof, either way, holding to one belief is closed minded.
A common misconception is that believing different from the norm makes you open minded. It doesn't.
Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
The problem with stuff like chiropractic treatments is how much is placebo effect in action. Right now I lump chiropractic care above acupuncture (http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/index.php/acupuncture-does-not-work-for-back-pain/) in plausibility, but not enough to rule out a placebo effect in play.
Not to say all alternative health doesn't work. Just like super natural effectively means [(unproven natural)+(faerie tales)], alternative medicine right now means [(treatments untested, but work)+(all snake oils)]. With heart disease, autism, etc., I am curious to see how people who go to chiropractic practicenor also at the same time change their diets and other health related life styles in even minor (but potentially more effective) ways, but lump it into the big flashy treatment.
That's the problem I have with alternative medicines. They help? Good, let's test them to see why they help and maybe that can lead to more and better cures for other things. I want to be sure that your arm bending or herb is what saved those "millions" and not just a placebo.
by Anonymous Coward: I, for one, welcome the shift from car analogies to pizza analogies. um.. overlords?