Originally posted by Bryn
View Post
Grumble Thread
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View Post
Any of my friends telling me a tale of woe about their Apple products are met with "but I thought they all rectified themselves, at the latest overnight - that's why there is such hefty price premium, isn't it?".Last edited by Bryn; 14-11-23, 13:00.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bryn View PostI simply stay well away from Apple products. I have always found them unreliable and restrictive since my first encounter with the Apple II.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI have an iPhone and a MacBook Air. I recently had a problem with the latter and phoned the helpline late at night. I was talked through the issues with a helpful, patient man in Sydney Australia, who gave the impression of having infinite time and patience for my issues. We arranged for him to be able to see the screen I had up - without himself being able to *do* anything; and we got the problem defined and partially resolved. I was dead impressed. Whether that justifies the premium price for the kit must be a matter of personal choice. Relatively early built-in obsolescence troubles me a bit. But as Stuart Lee wrote in last Sunday's Obsever - under, for me, headline of the year - 'Will the planet outlast my laptop?'
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bryn View Post
I simply stay well away from Apple products. I have always found them unreliable and restrictive since my first encounter with the Apple II.
Win PCs can work quite well in corporate environments where knowledgeable technical teams can keep things working.
I still have my original Apple laptop - from 1997 - and I checked that it worked a year or two back. It is now of course horrendously slow compared with what most of us are used to nowadays.
I have a coupe of iMacs from around 2010 - and some later machines - all of which still work.
I have known iMacs to fail - but not my own.
Oh - yes - I did also use Apple IIs - and liberated one or two when they were being deleted from inventory. I wanted to keep one - maybe as a museum piece - but it did go to the dump eventually, along with the similar Commodore PET. Perhaps that would now be worth quite a lot!
Comment
-
-
This is not an answer to any post on this thread/page....it is more general than that....
Is AI writng any of these posts ??....it sometimes seems that way....Last edited by eighthobstruction; 17-11-23, 22:43.bong ching
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostThis is not an answer to any post on this thread/page....it is more general than that....
Is AI writng any of these posts ??....it sometimes seems that way....
I know a little song; shall I sing it to you? It goes like this: 'Daisy, Daisy, give me an answer do....'
Comment
-
-
I supose some robots can already pass those on-screen 'tests' which are there 'to check that you are not a robot'. I've had cold sales calls which sound very human until gradually you suspect that the answers betreay the fact that you're talking to a robot. I feel like the barman in 'A New Hope ' who says 'we don't serve droids in here'.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostThis is not an answer to any post on this thread/page....it is more general than that....
Is AI writng any of these posts ??....it sometimes seems that way....
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by smittims View PostI've had cold sales calls which sound very human until gradually you suspect that the answers betreay the fact that you're talking to a robot. I feel like the barman in 'A New Hope ' who says 'we don't serve droids in here'.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View Post
I suppose you can ask 'it' directly - I think it would give an honest answer. But that might be considered a bit rude if 'it' was a human being. Perhaps 'Do you have a middle name?' would be a suitably veiled enquiry, but either or both might give the Dirac-ian response 'Why do you want to know?' - over to you, squire ...
I think there are a lot of methods being used - possibly against us all. One would be to track people who do puzzles online. Spot those people who can do well on difficult puzzles, and either recruit them or shoot them - in the case of an internal coup.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post. But this is just part 1 of what turned up to be a double grumble - one from me, the other on behalf of "Big" Charles upstairs, who had had his passport photos rejected by renewals as being "not good enough". "They said my eyes weren't sufficiently open", he told me, "but I wasn't p*ssed or hungover, or anything; and they look fine to me". They did, but anyway, he then asked me to take some more photos using his mobile phone camera. I did, in various locations of his well-lit fourth floor flat, following the scrupulous passport dept instructions to the letter. To both our eyes, the results looked no different in quality from the examples given in the guidance document, yet, on assessment through the passport office's vetting app, these, too, were deemed inadequate, "too much like black and white photos". Quality-wise I can vouch that they were far better than ones I myself had accepted for a replacement senior travel card, done in a photo booth. In the end we will have to try again tomorrow morning, in hopefully better light conditions, assuming this to be the presiding problem, but I am left feeling doubly confirmed in my despair at the compliance requirements for what once would have been the most elementary necessities for living now being fallaciously dumped on ordinary folk in the name of "e££iciency".
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Beresford View Post
I had home brewed passport photos rejected, even though they were taken by a camera and uploaded to my laptop. I found that if I increased the brightness and contrast quite a lot, more than you would expect, so they looked like a 1950's advertising picture, they were accepted. I use Fastone software to do this, but any simple editor should be able to cope, and crop to get rid of vertical lines etc.
Comment
-
Comment