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Yeah, I'm going to get after it. He's replied again referencing my (outdated) website and calling me a hypocrit because I have a contact form there.
Elephant elephant elephant, sunshine sunshine sunshine
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I would.. He's a business and you're the customer. No customer should every be treated that way.
Call the office, ask for someone important, get their email address, and forward them.
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Then email this guy back and ask him if his resume is up to date
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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I got ahold of service, and then I attached him on the complaint email along with our full email thread.
Quote: Sure. I put the thread in order below. I was initially just irritated that
I had to be contacted by a sales person just to find out about the
information there. This guy did a superb job at getting me calmed down and
interested in training.
Not just that he took the time to reply, but that he was a complete dick
about it. Spending energy to be a douche bag on your companies behalf,
rather than spending that energy in any service related fashion. And he
just kept coming back.
Word of mouth advertising doesn't seem to bother him, nor does the
companies image. I suppose you could guess what I would say to anyone I
know if they asked me about training camp....
Elephant elephant elephant, sunshine sunshine sunshine
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Nice
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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loctrice wrote: it is how the majority of companies in our space I would then be inclined to ask "what space is that? The space under the pebble at the bottom of the pond next to the cow turd?"
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
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If he makes the mistake of carrying the conversation further, simply point out that the polite thing to do is to know when to quit, and going beyond that is just arrogance.
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Spam is in the eye of the beholder; no one gets to define it for me.
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Time: Fri Aug 07 10:05 PM, Visible: 6 min, Max Height: 87 degrees, Appears: W, Disappears: E
This is around the London area, yours may be different.
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...and it's kinda weirding me out.
I mean: it's a good browser: I've seen no problems, no crashes, no rendering issues. I'm still getting used to the Search box being the default input (though if you put in a URL it acts just like an address bar) but this, at least, reflects how it's actually being used. However it's IE. OK, it's not, but it has the blue "e" and it's from Microsoft and I've signed the IE must die petition and everything, yet here I am using, and enjoying using, a browser by Microsoft starting with "e".
It makes me nervous.
It's my default browser because as a web developer I need to ensure the stuff I write will work on the platforms most used, and Windows 10 will be big. So I've made Edge my default browser, and I thought it would bug me, and...it's not.
I'm liking Windows 10. A lot. In spite of my deep fears. Fears that have been honed from decades of frustration and disappointment with overhyped underdelivery.
So far so good.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Lipstick on a pig
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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Tasty Kool-Aid no?
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I find the karmic implications of your post... disturbing.
You are asking for a Murphy strike from orbit, just to be sure.
Software Zen: delete this;
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If you click above it, I think, where the URL normally is, the URL box appears.
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Talk about living on the edge.
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Chris Maunder wrote: I'm liking Windows 10. I'll always be a Mac fanboy, but I even like Win 8.1. People just fear change.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: People just fear change. I welcome improvements, not random change.
So, yes. As should be.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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It's time to change RAM eater Chrome.
Wonde Tadesse
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Wonde Tadesse wrote: It's time to change RAM eater Chrome.
Such truth, there.
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From what I heard/read, Microsoft could not make a decent browser anymore based on the old framework of IE, Edge allowed them to do something totally different, with a different model. Hopefully, the browser continues to do well. I also hope that Windows 10 does well, both for us the consumer/user, and for Microsoft, as a company.
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I, personally, want to see Apple get its arse kicked and force it to go back to focussing on quality and user experience.
I love Apple products. Or I did. If Windows 10 makes Apple sit up and actually properly updates iOS, and makes MacOS stable, and hires some devs who understand networking and multithreading, then we have two really good systems that will compete and innovate and keep each other honest.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Who the hell do you think you are? Coming here spewing your bullsh*t. You like W10? Nobody likes W10! Nobody is allowed to like it around here! You think you own this place? Get back to your cave, troll! /s
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Joke icon...perhaps?
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One would assume that /s at the end would be enough.
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