Category Archives: Personal

Apple Got It Right In The End

This is a consumer’s tale. It starts ugly, but ends in the right place.

A couple weeks ago, my iPod Nano died. iPods have a “lock” switch on them that turns off the wheel control so you can shove it in your pocket and not inadvertantly turn the volume up to 11. I got on the T, headed into work, locked the iPod, and put it in my shirt pocket. I took it out to change the volume, and the lock switch was stuck. It wouldn’t unlock. My iPod was going to keep playing until the battery died. I went to the Apple website and found that I had a 1-year warranty. The iPod was 10 months old, so I figured I was set. I filled out the online form, they sent me a box, I sent them my iPod – it was very smooth. Here’s where it got sticky.

They sent me back my iPod, still broken, with a form letter. The form letter indicated that there were four possible reasons why it was rejected – but they didn’t check any of the boxes. I’m a bit suspicious that the iPod was in the same plastic bag. I’m not sure they even opened it, though I’m not sure of that. Obviously, I wasn’t happy.

So, I took the iPod to the Apple store in the Cambridgeside Galleria. The guy at the desk in the back of the store listened to my story and looked at the iPod and the form letter. He decided that the rejection was because the screen was cracked. I showed him that it wasn’t a crack, but it was a protective plastic film (that I’d bought at Apple!) for the screen that was a bit delaminated. He pointed to a dent in the back of the iPod, and said that voided my warranty. As far as I was concerned, he didn’t have to fix the dent, but he did have to fix the switch at the top. He offered to take my iPod as a trade in, and he’d give me 10% off my next iPod. I told him quite clearly that that was not an option. There were a lot of ways this might end, but me giving Apple a few hundred bucks in order to get them to honor the warranty was not one of them. I asked to speak to a manager.

She was equally polite and listened. She also pointed to the dent, but I repeated that I didn’t care about the dent, I only cared about the switch. She said that she’d go in back and check the service record and see if that gave any more information. I thought that was a great idea.

Several minutes later, a third guy, Ed, came out. He told me the system was down and they couldn’t check the iPod history. He said that it was unusual, but he would replace my Nano with a new one. I thought that was a perfectly fine solution. Black wasn’t available (like I care!), and I got silver instead. I’ve been using it this week, and it’s been good.

Bottom line: Apple should have honored the warranty in the first place, but they got it right in the end. It was a legitimate claim. If it wasn’t legitimate, they needed to explain why: checking a checkbox on the form letter is a good start. Similarly, the first guy at the Apple store should have been more interested in helping me. I get the feeling that he was just doing what he was told, meaning that it wasn’t his fault. And in the end, compliments to Ed and to Apple. They got it right, kept me happy, get a good posting, and my continued business.

Ignore the Harpoon Tabblo Post

If you read this by coming to my website, you can ignore this message.

For those of you with RSS readers, please ignore the last post I just made. I was testing some new Tabblo feature stuff, and I inadvertantly published a link to our test environment. You’d be really bummed if you made a tabblo on the test area, and then we deleted the test database. . . .

Disaster at the Office

I was at my desk. I was doing the final QA cycles on a new mini-feature (if you use Tabblo, and you have a blog, you’ll like it, but it has been . . . delayed by events). The feature was working for most cases, and Eddie and Dave were ironing out the final implementation details while I was trying to break it.

Suddenly, I heard shouting and a loud roaring noise. I jumped up and ran to the door of the office and was met by a spray of water. The sprinkler was hosing down the central hallway outside the door. I turned back inside and Dave closed the door. Eddie, Dave, and I ran around in circles lifting computers, hubs, power cords etc. off the floor and onto high ground as fast as we could. Water was coming in under the door at a good clip, and the fire alarm had started to go off.

We opened the door and scooted across the hallway to the fire exit on the opposite wall, and went outside. We had time to catch our breath and contemplate (dread) what was happening to our office. The fire trucks came and, a few minutes later, the water slowed from a deluge to a dribble. By 8:30 it was stopped for good.

The rest of the night was a lot of sweeping water, shop vacs, brooms, and separating trash from salvage – nothing worth reliving, let alone asking anyone to read about.

Antonio made a tabblo right after it happened (heck, as it happened). I took photos too (more after the fact than during) and created a variation of his tabblo. Despite how tired I am at this point, I like the variation. You get to see Antonio’s perspective and my perspective on the same event. Some things look the same, but others are very different.

Good night.

Manny and Theo, Theo and Manny

My favorite Red Sox reading is a comic called Soxaholix. I guess it is a blog, but it’s not in the standard model.

Today’s episode is typical. Good critique of Boston media. Witty writing – check out the “arms” entendres. Good links to content on the web. And, best of all, the comments. The Sox have a lot of smart, articulate fans, but I think Soxaholix has the highest signal-to-noise of all of the fan sites.

June ’04 is when I realized the brilliance. There is no way to link Michael Moore’s anti-Bush tirade to the Saudi oil sheiks to Babe Ruth – or so you’d think.

The Week In Review

I haven’t found my writing rhythm yet, as evidenced by this week’s output. Catching up with a grab-bag of topics.

It was a very busy week. We pushed a bunch of minor features and good bug fixes that kept me hopping. I had lunch on Tuesday with Jason Butler. He’s at Boston.com with a very interesting job. Ask him about search – he’s doing some vThat night I went to the Red Sox game. I was hoping to see Ortiz hit 50. Instead I stood in the rain and watched Wakefield give up 6 runs. I’ve enjoyed better games.

Wednesday, or course, was Grandma and Grandpa’s 65th.

Grandma and Grandpa’s 65th Anniversary

On Wednesday I was in Dedham for my grandparent’s 65th anniversary. I made a tabblo of the event. Check out the tabblo to see photos and recap of the event.

I did a couple new things with that tabblo. First, I used my camera’s video mode to record a few clips of Grandma and Grandpa talking about their wedding. Then, I uploaded the clips to YouTube and linked to YouTube from the tabblo. I wonder how we can make video “work” as a product within Tabblo.