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MSN Money’s article on the “Customer Service Hall of Shame”

Christopher Oster writes in MSN Money about the “companies topped a list of more than 400 nominated by MSN Money readers,” and ranked the worst performers in the poll in their own “Top Ten” list. 



Customer Service: The Hall of Shame“Last month, we asked readers to tell us about their worst customer service experiences, and more than 3,000 responded within 24 hours of our request. Now, with the help of pollster Zogby International, we are introducing MSN Money’s Customer Service Hall of Shame, a ranking of the companies whose service is most often rated “poor” by consumers.


“The results are in, and one company ranks below all the rest: Sprint Nextel, one of the country’s largest wireless-phone carriers.
great customer service is not hard.


“At right is the Bottom 10, ranked by the percentage of people who said a company’s customer service was “poor.”


Some included in the list are not surprising (this is my personal view, having shopped at several of the retailers mentioned), but I was surprised at a couple of the “dishonorable mentions” in the article (listed here). In my opinion and experience, Wells Fargo and Dell rank consistently high.


I have had excellent in-person customer service at Wells Fargo: the latest experience was when my son opened up his first savings account, and without first knowing if I even had an account at the branch, the staff (thanks, Efi) treated him like a high-roller flying into Vegas for a six-figure weekend. Better, when he came back to make a deposit of a whopping few bucks in birthday haul, they remembered his name and once again rolled out the red carpet (and cookies).


As for Dell, we have Dell computers at home and I have a desktop in my office, among others, and have written here and here about some of my (generally positive) experiences with Dell’s customer support (all, so far, via chat and email). Related to the experiences we have at home, AFAIK Dell had no idea of my affiliation with MS when I pinged them, and they’ve always been professional and courteous. There was one experience where we ‘stumped the band’ with an esoteric software application problem, that was eventually solved with a bump up to second level support… and they called me back on their dime when they had the answer, rather than keep me on hold.

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Your questions: how do I edit video on my computer?

This in today’s mail…



How do I edit video on my computer?


First, a suggestion… want to know how something works? A good first stop I use at home is howstuffworks.com – it’s full of useful information on may different topics.


Now, for home video editing, click here for how computers work (many subsections), with this entry focused on computer-based video editing




 

Inside This Article


See also my posts on…



…and other useful posts on the web…



Tags: , , .

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BusinessWeek’s Wildstrom says the Sansa Connect is slick

Stephen H. Wildstrom of BusinessWeek applauds the new SanDisk Sansa Connect in this article, calling it a “slick Wi-Fi music player.” This new device integrates Yahoo’s subscription music service…



“The $250 Sansa Connect is the result of a collaboration among SanDisk, Yahoo!, and Zing Systems, which is responsible for the software and network infrastructure. The Connect, which is smaller than the standard hard drive iPod and bigger than the nano, has 4 gigabytes of memory, which you can double by adding a memory card. You download music to it—MP3s and copy-protected or unprotected Windows Media files—from a Windows PC. But the important advance is the device’s deft use of Wi-Fi networking.


“To get the best experience with Wi-Fi, you really need an all-you-can-eat subscription plan. The iPod/iTunes pay-per-song approach that forces you to sync with a PC just doesn’t cut it. Apple (AAPL) never believed its customers would spring for subscriptions, which is why there’s no Wi-Fi iPod. Even the upcoming iPhone, which will have Wi-Fi, won’t be able to download content from the iTunes Store over the air.


“It remains to be seen if Wi-Fi plus subscription can give SanDisk, Yahoo, and Zing traction against the iPod juggernaut. But I find the Sansa Connect a welcome addition to the field of music players.”


Cool. I am tripping down to the electronics store this weekend to take a look. Great to hear how the Connect works well with on-line photos, too (it can access Flickr).

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Apple announces “one to one” personal Mac training at the Apple Store

From the email files… today I received a promotional mail from Apple Computer, promoting their new “one to one” training at the Apple Store.



One to One Card“Now you can get a whole year of hands-on learning, with a personal trainer who can help you get the most from your Mac—and yourself. Choose sessions that cover everything from getting started on a Mac, to mastering the latest pro software. Your trainer will customize every hour to match your capabilities—and even help you with any project you can dream up. It’s like having a best friend who knows how to do just about anything on a Mac.”


All this — access to trainers that are “experts in all things Apple” (which would include Entourage and our Mac products) for $99 per year. That get’s you a 50 minute sessiononce per week, booked online via the Apple Store Concierge. 


This sounds like a good move. I’m curious to see the level and proficiency of the trainers.

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Gordon Bell and MyLifeBits in Levy’s article “This Is Your Life, Every Bit of It!”

This in a recent Newsweek magazine, Steven Levy’s article “This Is Your Life, Every Bit of It!” with a look at individuals (such as Gordon Bell) who are working on “capturing everything [they] see and hear… a Pandora’s box for the digital age.”



“Since 2001, Gordon Bell, a 72-year-old computing legend now at Microsoft Research, has been heading a project called “My Life Bits.” The idea is to accumulate a definitive record of one’s life, from images and sounds captured by a “SenseCam,” to phone calls, e-mail, Web searches and so on—and then to develop techniques to search those disparate media on demand. You won’t be surprised to hear that Google is also developing its own solutions to searching video and audio. And a start-up called Ustream (now in beta) lets anyone do Webcasts live—sort of Justin.tv lite.”


And, for reference, this on Bell’s MyLifeBits…



“He is putting all of his atom- and electron-based bits in his local Cyberspace. It is called by MyLifeBits the successor to the Cyber All project. This includes everything he has accumulated, written, photographed, presented, and owns (e.g. CDs). In February 2005 an epiphany occurred with the realization that MyLifeBits goes beyond Vannevar Bush’s “memex” and is a personal transaction processing database for everything described in June 14, 2005 SIGMOD Keynote.”


As noted in a previous entry, see “How To Build Your Own version of Gordon Bell’s “MyLifeBits” (Wired)” Wired, Nov 2006. See the complete article “A head for detail.” 


At home, we’ve attempted our own small slice of MyLifeBits, with a couple of scanners (sheet fed and a slick yet inexpensive see-thru HP Scanjet 4600 Scanner), Paperport software (for collecting scans and managing image files) and Windows Desktop Search. In addition, we have the bulk of our bills and statements sent in electronic form.


But we’re not as hard-core as Bell: one of the biggest collection of papers so far that we simply don’t have (or make) the time to process? Paper receipts (a drawer in the kitchen is just easier, thank you), our children’s artwork and schoolwork, and hard copies of a select few magazines: I enjoy having the paper versions of Wired, Fast Company and Fine Homebuilding. Everything else is scanned or referenced on the web, especially nice as so many magazines are now available via on-line archives (usually free for subscribers).