Saturday, January 16, 2010

Dumb Business & Smart Phones

I was back on my current mission again this morning: looking up information on cell providers and phones. You see, my contract with Sprint expired in December and I'm ticked off at them.

DUMB
They saw fit to give away the Blackberry I wanted at that time to new Sprint customers at Best Buy. Great deal, I thought, being a 10-year customer of Sprint. I'll call up and ask for that, too, since I'm due for a new phone.

But no. They wanted me, a customer of 10 years, to pay $49.95 for that same phone. When the rep said I couldn't get that phone free, even knowing I was a long-time customer and that I was due a new phone, I asked for a higher-up. And I got the same response: "No. But you can buy it for only..." I also got, "When your contract expires, you can go up to Best Buy and sign up as a new customer, and then get it free."

WTF?! Is there a word to describe how stupid that is?

Yes, of course, I could have gone out in subzero temperatures and fought my way through the blizzard and the holiday shoppers...but why should I have to? Why make your customers go out of their way to continue to be your customers? Make it easy to continue to be your customer!

What I said to that was, "Thanks but no thanks. I'll just look for another service provider." (See how polite I was? Trust me, that is not what I was thinking.)  They proceeded to try to talk me out of that, while sticking to their guns about not giving me what I had asked for.

No dice. Thank you and goodbye.

SMART
So, now I'm looking. I would love to get T-Mobile because a) they have a cool smart phone I'd like to have, b) the phone would be unlocked and you could take it to another provider and use it if you chose, and c) #4 in the market probably works harder to please their customers. However, T-Mobile's coverage map shows that while their signal would be great where I live, it wouldn't be so hot where I work and do some freelancing.

Two big questions remain:
What service provider should I go with?
Do I need/want what a smart phone offers over other phones sufficiently to justify the extra $30/mo. data plan?

I would really like to know what people are using their smart phones for the most. Is it making phone calls? Is it PDA functionality? Texting? You Tube? Is it necessary, or really just for fun? Could you do what you do on a nice not-smart phone with texting and camera and get by just fine?

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Food, Inc., Watch It

I watched a documentary about a week or so ago called "Food, Inc."  Not a pretty story, but one I'm very glad I watched. (See a trailer here.)

It lifted the veil for me on some ugly realities, among them, the shameful, inhumane conditions under which many animals intended for our dinner tables are raised.

There was much more. Roger Ebert summarizes it well here, and frankly, I don't often agree with his reviews, but he's covered this one well. (Scared the bejesus out of me, too, Mr. Ebert.)

Lacking political muscle individually, the best thing we can do as consumers, is to "vote" to affect our food supply for the better by making moral, healthy and responsible choices at the cash register. Even those of us who may not be able to afford all organic and/or local products can make some effort for the good. Even if it's only contacting local school districts and looking into their school breakfast and lunch programs, and insisting on more healthy food choices if they're lacking.

Since I saw the movie, I've been very much more deliberative about what I'm buying. Have I made all the best choices in what I've bought since then? No. But I've made a start. I have absolutely made a few changes already in what I will no longer buy or eat. I will continue to adopt more changes in my purchasing as I grocery shop over the next few months, and am likely to be changing where I shop, as well.

I won't ask for any comments on this topic, lest any of us inadverdently break the Veggie Libel Laws (/eyeroll...can you believe that?!).  But that's another whole blog topic which I will leave to folks with consititutional law expertise. ;>

~M

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Lest Anyone Wonder...

I have not gotten lost running after more squirrelez.  I have two posts in progress that I wish to spend some time "thinking on" before I spring them.

In the meantime, some words to live by:

"There are two primary choices in life: to accept conditions as they exist, or accept the responsibility for changing them." 

          ~ Denis Waitley 
           (Tweeted by Ron Dubois today.)


Hope you all are having a lovely weekend.

Friday, January 1, 2010

Questions on Shaping Your Life

Ah yes. Chasing squirrelez.

So, back to the Wednesday post:  I try to pay attention when Life is smacking me upside the head about something. This past week it was all about Shaping the Life You Are Living.

I was led to read a couple of manifestos on the topic of exiting the traditional work-world, a.k.a.: Jail, for those who might otherwise truly flourish given the freedom to pursue their own Thing on their own Timetables. My particular brand of ESP has been bubbling up a lot the last few months around this idea, too, so I know I am closer to taking action on it. (Don't ask; this is just the way I was wired. ;))

Before I decide whether I am ready to jump ship, I would love more information from people already in the water. Please feel free to answer any one, two, or all of the points below, if you would be so kind. :)

How Did You Do It? How Do You Do It? How Do You Do?
  • I wonder what it is that makes some people just know from the outset (or if they jump ship at some later point) that the traditional 9-to-5 is never ever going to fit their lives, and what happens to or around them when they make that known. What is the range of reactions people have to their choice not to be part of "the system"? 
  • I wonder if they had some sort of financial security going into their off-the-beaten-path ventures, or whether they had 'not a pot to piss in', starting off. 
  • What formal education (or lack thereof) did they set off with, and do they use that in their non-cubicle life's work? 
  • Are there more sharks or dolphins in the waters of self-employment? (This can be people or unpleasant details you were not aware you would have to manage.)
  • I wonder what it is exactly, that these adventurous people are doing as their Thing, and how satisfied they are with it and whether they are making a reasonable living (just for the sake of discussion, let's call that at least $50k a year.)
Please share!