Quite a nice post
I almost stood there, making a hard decision to sue KFC for fetching me poorly fried chicken, over fried potato fries and disappointingly dried up salad. I was burning with rage as it happened for the second time. The counter staffs were all sorry and we regret sir and it took my wife hella efforts to calm me down.
When the rage and insult took control over me, I was thinking about suing KFC for one million dollars :D, a pretty handsome amount of money at this part of the world. Then I got settled down, referred my other meals from different restaurants, especially the lousy ones which are scattered around my work place, which are affordable etc. All of a sudden I realized those sorry gestures were more than sufficient to settle the anger I felt towards KFC. I am sure I will never go and sue one of those lousy restaurants nearby my workplace just for one of the reasons I said above (poorly fried chicken...)
I think, if I had gone ahead and sued KFC for what I experienced, there was a chance to win that one million dollar, which right now I consider as an indirect way to make money by stealing or robbery against a ?crime? which was just ignorable or could be forgiven once after the counter staff apologized and assured won't be repeated.
A nice post buddy
In reply to: "Making sense of the million-dollar iPhone lawsuit"
October 3, 2007
0 replies
Corporate ease vs personal ease
I work for a firm where we are rebuilding the entire IT infrastructure from last couple of years and at this hour, putting all our efforts license MS products. Ridiculously, the Microsoft licensing methods are so complex and costly. We were looking around for cheaper products or services like google?s office products as this part of the world also started cracking down on illegal or pirated products.
Through CNET I came across OpenOffice product and yes, once after the lab testing if I feel the product can suit our basic word, spreadsheet and presentation requirements, definitely would try to convince my organization to embrace it, rather than sweating ourselves against direct or indirect threats from Microsoft representatives which hardens as we are delaying to forward them the number of office users.
By the way Office 2003 was the best office product from Microsoft and personally I am quite familiar with most of the products included with the professional edition. Still I am ready to make a changeover to OpenOffice product(s), if they are financially beneficiary for my organization in a long run. People will get used to them :), or you make people to become used to new ?things?. That?s another scenario
In reply to: "Office of the future?"
October 3, 2007