1. Aug 1st, 2007

    Like the world needs another Verizon rant

    So I visit the local Verizon store to see if there’s anything they can do about my schizophrenic RAZR. It’s a shitty phone to begin with, the only phone I know where you can set up the alarm to Mon-Fri and it will still wake you up on Saturday. Recently it got worse and the phone developed some glitches that to the untrained eye (and the untrained I) look like hardware problems.

    The first person to greet me at the store cracks open the battery door and inspects the white dot. It’s red on both sides, indicating the phone came in contact with water. I use the phone. I carry it with me. So yes, it came in contact with some unsavory things, mostly asphalts and concrete. Water, I don’t remember, unless you count sweaty fingers pressing against the was-white dot every time I replace the battery.

    So here I am, not even logged into the system, and being on the receiving end of a “pin the blame” game.

    A few minutes later one of the customer reps calls my name and I’m off of the tech counter. I hand them the phone, and they proceed with the ceremonial unveiling of the not-all-white dot, after which the conversation goes something like this:

    Rep: What’s wrong with it?
    Me: A few things. The Bluetooth dies after ten minutes, and …
    Rep: Do you have the bluetooth device with you?
    Me: No.
    Rep: Then we can’t diagnose it.
    Me: I tested with a couple of devices, the problem is with the phone.
    Rep: We need the bluetooth device.
    I look around. I’m standing in the middle of a Verizon store. I can see that one wall is covered with headsets. Another wall is covered with potential pairing devices. In front of me, presumably equipped technical lab.
    Me:
    So you don’t have a device to test it with?
    Rep: No.
    Me: [do I laugh? do I cry? is it April already?]
    Me: Well, it worked for over a year, and then about a month ago started developing these problems.
    Rep: So by your own admission you’ve had this phone over a year, so now the phone is out of warranty.
    Me: Are you here to help me or sue me?

    Ok, I didn’t say the last line, but being the defendant in this trial I decided to appeal to a superior judgement and involved a manager. Once again we go through the ceremony and the discussion turns into the lack of available bluetooth devices. I decide to break it up and remind them both that I originally complained about “a few things”. So we go over all the other issues.

    The court reminds me that the phone is no longer under warranty. Yes, it did lock me into a two year service agreement under penalty of law, but the phone is only serving half that sentence. I smell a class action lawsuit.

    So we’re back to reviewing my options. The device is not built to be fixed, and is not priced to be replaced, Verizon has long left the business of selling equipment and is now in the contract industry, so I can’t even offer to pay for a working one. But the court is sympathetic to my needs. Again, I mis-quote from memory:

    Manager: So what do you want us to do?
    Me: I’m trying to figure out my options.
    Manager: We can upgrade your phone with new software.
    Me: I want to know what do do about the display going blank.
    Manager: This is an old phone and it needs a software upgrade.
    Manager: Motorolla listens to customer complains and fixes these issues with software upgrades.
    Me: [we've switch from the blame game to make believe, follow up!]
    Manager: You look like you’re technical, so you must understand that upgrading the software can fix old problems.
    Me: [especially hardware problems! see, I can play this game]
    Me: So let’s do that. Can you give me a list of changes?
    Manager: Excuse me?
    Me: A list of what changes with the upgrade.
    Manager: I can’t give you that. You can go online to the Verizon Web site and check it yourself.
    Me: You can’t give me that.
    Manager: Was that sarcasm?
    Me: Yes.

    Though at this point the tone was sarcasm, the feeling was despair. And just before my phone disappears into the operating room, the manager decides to voice out that “this may not fix the display problem”. Damn, I was getting good in this make believe game.

    Anyway, I’m in the waiting room, patient is still inside, taking advantage of the great EV-DO coverage inside the store, and searching for that official change list that can’t be disclosed. Not on Google. Or Motorolla if you can figure out their mess of a site. Or Verizon which is still undecided whether my phone is a v3c (for billing purposes) or v3m (for support issues).

    According to the good folks in the Howard forums, I can expect a fix to a (different) bluetooth glitch, a few more hours of sleep every Saturday, and different colors on the UI.

    Well, I’m happy to report that indeed the UI colors are different.

    I might just have to buy a better taken care of, no obvious sweaty finger marks, RAZR off eBay. I’m pretty set on getting the same phone. You see, while waiting for my turn in techell I decided to play with some of the phones on display. Starting with the new LG, aka RAZR done better, and only $350 boxed. I tried the soft keys, and the hard keys, and the myriad of menus, even the contact list but I couldn’t find how to start the Web browser(*). And in those few minutes of not finding the Web I managed to freeze up the phone.

    So yeah, the RAZR may be a buggy phone, but I’d rather stick with the bugs I know.

    (* Turns out that was a glitch caused by my ginormously regular-sized fingers hitting the decorative navigation keys on the LG. Still it’s a lovely phone for people who need form over function)

    Photo by SocialBreakfast

    1. Aug 2nd, 2007

      Crosbie Fitch

      Any sufficiently advanced technology is regarded as magic by the average consumer, who is consequently far more forgiving of enchanted items that clearly depend upon astrological traits of the user and a karmically sound ambience.

      This means that there is an underclass of IT wizards who must suffer this superstitious ignorance, and be cursed to understand and recognise incompetence , faulty design, buggy software and hardware failure, and yet be held in contempt as a churlish knave with no respect for the almighty mages in their dark towers of the far east.

      Unless you truly possess the power and magic diagnostic tools to open up a Razr in front of a shop clerk, debug/upgrade the software, and fix the hardware in front of their eyes, you are a charlatan.

      Taking a phone back to a shop to get it fixed is like taking a dog back to the puppy farm to get a congenital defect fixed by gene therapy. They won’t know what the heck you’re on about, and will suggest you ditch the one you’ve got and get a pup from a recent litter.

    2. Aug 2nd, 2007

      matthew

      You should submit this article to Consumerist. Sure, the world doesn’t need another rant — but we do need stories like this to assist us in deciding who (or who not) to do business with.

    3. Aug 2nd, 2007

      Assaf

      @matthew, I wish I could just say “Verizon is evil, avoid! avoid!”, but on a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 being evil and 10 being the company I’d love to do business with, I would rate them an AT&T. Or Sprint.

      @Crosbie, good one!

    4. Aug 2nd, 2007

      Labnotes » Rounded Corners – 130 (Cats & Dogs)

      [...] your dog fixed. Crosbie Fitch comments on my naive attempt to get my cellphone fixed: Taking a phone back to a shop to get it fixed is like taking a dog back to the puppy farm to get a [...]

    5. Aug 4th, 2007

      People Over Process » links for 2007-08-04

      [...] Like the world needs another Verizon rant “The device is not built to be fixed, and is not priced to be replaced.” (tags: cusotmerservice verizon cellphones) [...]

    6. May 20th, 2008

      Labnotes » Finally Divorced Verizon

      [...] in our relationship started showing up late last year, when my RAZR decided to take a break from this world. A phone plan without a phone, how pointless is [...]

    7. Jun 7th, 2008

      Chris

      Everytime I walk into a VZW store I have this feeling of impending doom (I know I’m not going to walk out of here happy). If I have a problem with a phone, I usually just get another one from craigslist and activate it online (or atleast try to if VZW doesnt grab me by the balls and interrogate me why I want to do such a thing). I bought a voyager and they wouldn’t let me activate it without switching to a 450 minute $80/month plan. I sold the phone promptly and gave a few key words to the customer support line. They state the phone was so advanced that the only way it would function was with this plan. I informed them the phone was just like any other vcast phone, their response was- “again, you can go to the verizon wireless website for more information on plans” IDIOTS.

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