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Comment Re:They didn't ask me (Score 1) 187

When did you switch from Sprint? I've been using them for about a year and a half now, and I must say that I have been impressed with the customer service:
They called me up a couple months into my plan saying "You know how we gave you free Sprint to Sprint calls? Now you have free mobile to mobile."
At about the one-year mark they told me that even though I signed a two-year contract, I could resign and get a reduced phone rate.
They've called me up to see how my weekend was going. (Really)
And I can get capless internet, more than enough voice (with free mobile/mobile and 7pm nights I use ~20 anytime minutes/month) and phone insurance for $72 after taxes.

I really feel like they're trying to hold on to me as a customer, but maybe it has to do with the fact I live in largish cities and *knew* I would need the insurance (Palm Pre Classic) and got it, avoiding a lot of the hassle that comes with interfacing with a phone company.

I also heard that they used to be just awful and changed their ways about 2 years ago.

Comment Re:More useful... (Score 1) 151

So the whole dog argument is a little confusing to me. I heard somewhere that having a dog is the best deterrent (hardly the cheapest though) against a burglar, and I also heard that most professional burglars will agree. I have two counter points, however:

Point one: Do people really train their guard dogs to attack strangers? Who wants a friend to visit, only to be bitten by the dog? And why should a thief be afraid of a housebroken dog? If it's the middle of the day and everyone's at work, the dogs will definitely bark at a stranger, but all it takes is a couple treats and a toy to win their friendship. It Takes a Thief confirmed this, say what you will about the Discovery Channel.

Point two: My least favorite sound when I knock on a door to a friend's house it the loud barking of dogs. I find it uninviting and normally if they bark at the doorbell, they will jump on the visitor and probably tear his clothes with their claws. Do you want to live your life answering the door with "sorry about the dogs; they're friendly, don't worry!" You might train them *not* to bark at the doorbell and jump on visitors, but then what good is a guard dog that doesn't bark?

Comment What about here? (Score 2) 247

The bigger question is: how many people support domestic cyber-spying? I can see support for foreign espionage, since it's widely assumed that every country does that anyways, but in my little circle of acquaintances I have been seeing more and more people actually support and push domestic spying as not only acceptable but something to be praised.

Comment Re:why can't MS have easy to get iso's for windows (Score 1) 551

Because if the iso was free but locked, and "buying the software" involved simply getting an unlock code, the average person would start to wonder what he was buying. (If I can get the iso for free and *guess* an unlock code, I must not be doing anything wrong!) On the same note, if people buy something for $150, they'll want $150 dollars worth of product whether it's a DVD/CD encased in an over sized hard plastic container or a 16GB file that you have to make space for. It's kind of like being able to get a car for free but having to pay 10K for the sparkplug.

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