Andy Rooney, the curmudgeon who used to make closing comments on 60 Minutes letting the world know what was on his mind in the smoothest of ways, commonly used this phrase. And those words pop up in my mind regularly. Particularly in regard to computer things. Many years ago when I was working with my Apple II Plus, I wrote my own software so when something went wrong I knew it was my fault and I knew that with enough effort I could dig into the lines of code and find the 'O' that was supposed to be '0'. Now I have no idea what my computer is doing unless the software chooses to function flawlessly. I want to know what my computer is doing when it is spinning some kind of wheel on the screen. (It used to be a flipping hour glass. Guess it's gone digital now. Wonder who made that decision?) But why can't it give me a running dialog of what it is doing? Doesn't it know what it's doing?
What particularly bugs me is when I get a message like:
Your account does not meet the necessary requirements. Please review the requirements and update your account.
And then it sends me off to a massive page of gibberish and rules without telling me which requirements I have failed to meet! It's like the software is laughing, "I know, but I'm not going to tell you." How about this? "Nope, hah, hah, hah." If it laughed, that would be more entertaining.
I'm sure that Andy would have a lot to say about the remote controls for mini-split air conditioners. There was a massive learning curve with programmable thermostats. Can we really expect people to understand the DRY mode in a mini-split operation? And what if you have multiple distribution heads in different rooms? Can I have heat in the living room and AC in the bedroom? Nope. If it actually said that, it would be helpful.
I won't go on. One of Andy's consummate skills was knowing when to stop and leave us thinking. But I suggest that we don't need Andy to point out that we need to improve our customer education.
Let me know what's bugging you and we can commiserate!
Stay well,
Paul
Paul H. Raymer
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