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Virtuality: the nexus between the virtual and the real, the
place where the virtual becomes real and reality becomes
virtual, a matrix of appearances.
Apple Tech Support or Pop Psychology?- April 7, 2000
David
Schultz
We just bought a new PowerBook
(FireWire) 400. We love it to death! It has changed our lives. My
first true love is the new G4/450
sitting in my study. But my new true love is the Pismo, which
I take everywhere. I sit on the couch and surf and even write
articles. Yes, we love it. I know that PowerBooks are called "lap warmers," and for good
reason: They do get warm underneath. That is the way it is. But we
noticed something more: The trackpad button on the Pismo gets really,
really hot - almost too hot to touch at times. It does not happen
all the time, just when the battery is being recharged through the AC
adapter. When it is recharging, the trackpad button gets very hot;
the trackpad is okay, but the button is gets hot. What follows is a
log of my experiences with Apple tech support on this issue. Let me
say this up front: I was not happy with their response. It seemed
more like pop psychology than an honest search for the truth. Let me
explain. The first call was to a level-one tech. He was kind and helpful.
He had me reset the power manager because that determines how the
power is distributed through the machine. It didn't help. So he said
he would have a level-two tech call me. At least he seemed concerned
and realized that I thought I had a problem. It was a good experience
overall. That was two weeks ago. The level-two tech never called. So I
called them on March 30. Here's what happened. Notice how the
response becomes more and more subjective. The level-two tech was nice enough, too, but I got the impression
he was trained to make an end user feel that there is no problem,
even when the end user thinks there is. In fact, he seemed more
interested in trying to convince me that there was no problem than in
taking the time to discover if there really was one! He made it known
that a very hot trackpad button is "normal." Um . . . am I
abnormal? I explained the situation to him. He gave me three reasons for
heat. First, laptops run hot. Well, I already knew that. This seemed
like a test: "Tell the end user the obvious, and if he protests, then
you are dealing with a knowledgeable end user and other tactics are
required." So I asked about the fan, and he said it is designed not to come
on until the machine hits about 150-180 degrees, which my machine has
not even gotten close to. So he offered the next insight: "The Pismo
is much thinner and so there is less room between the power supply
and the trackpad (which is just above it)." Okay, I thought, I
understand this. But again I protested: "I have received messages
from forums about what others are experiencing, and no one has the
same complaint. Besides, it is really, really hot, and I can't
believe it should be this hot." This was the end of the line. To this point he had given me some
facts which were mostly objective. They also made sense overall, but
failed, in my mind, to explain the problem. Now the call took an
inner turn. He began to talk less about facts and more about, well,
my psychology. "People's sense of touch is different. You may just
have a greater sensitivity to heat than others. That's the way it is
in my family. I am not being rude, I just am saying it differs from
person to person. I can eat hot food, but my wife cannot." I knew at this point that he would listen to no more protests. I
am a trained philosopher, for crying out loud - I debate all day
long. But I was left speechless at this point. How can one disagree
with a statement like this? Sure, heat sensitivity is different, and
some philosophers even deny that there is such a thing as heat apart
from a mind. But what on earth does this have to do with my problem?
If I think it is too hot, then that is a problem to me. I knew at this point I had one more avenue to travel down. Sure, I
can accept a subjective explanation, but what if others have the same
complaint? That would seem to take it out of the sphere of
subjectivity and at least partially into facts. So I asked, "Have you
received other calls about this issue?" Pause. "No." I gave up. Imagine what would have come next. It could have grown
weirder: "Beyond a sensitivity to heat, you might just be imagining
it - or maybe you dreamed it, or maybe you are really a brain in a
vat and all experiences are programmed into you by an evil
programmer. . . ." That seemed to be the direction it was going
anyway. I started to doubt myself. Was that the goal he had? A few days later I told this story to another Mac user. He said
that he had AppleCare and always got superb service. Perhaps, he
suggested, if I had AppleCare, then I would have received a better
answer and service. What?!?! To me this was the same as saying, "If
you pay Apple, then you'll get the truth. If you want honest answers,
then it'll cost you." Do techs really have two sets of answers, one
for regular customers and one for AppleCare customers? The advantage
of AppleCare is speed and extent of coverage, not the truth, isn't
it? I can only say I hope this is not the case. It is downright
Microsoft, in fact! Now I am stuck. I will be taking my Pismo to a service tech here
in town to have things checked out and verified. A bad battery?
Something wrong with the power supply? Or maybe bad design, putting a
power supply underneath a plastic trackpad button in a thinner
machine? I will try to get some facts that cannot be psychologically
explained away by a level-two tech. But my experience this time
around was simple: His job seems to be to talk us out of problems, to
convince us things are normal when we think they are not. I would
have liked at least some effort from him, some kind of acknowledgment
that there might be a problem - and then an attempted solution. At
least a test or something. Anything! I just wanted him to try. But it
seemed that the fact I may really have a problem never even crossed
his mind. Sure, talk me out of anything. Just recognize that I think
there's a problem. I have had pretty good experiences with Apple tech
in the past. But this one just rubbed me the wrong way. We'd like to get some feedback on this. I don't mean about
level-two techs, but whether your Pismo trackpad button gets too hot.
What has your experience been? I'll keep you up to date. . . .
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