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Heard in our local Sony outlet...
....an assistant explaining that the picture on their Freeview TVs was not as
good as it would appear at home because the aerial is fed from an amplifier and splitter so the picture quality is poorer. Of course there was no sign of any digital problems, just an apparently poorly set up TV with very red faces on the screen. Paul DS. |
Heard in our local Sony outlet...
Paul D.Smith wrote:
...an assistant explaining that the picture on their Freeview TVs was not as good as it would appear at home because the aerial is fed from an amplifier and splitter so the picture quality is poorer. Of course there was no sign of any digital problems, just an apparently poorly set up TV with very red faces on the screen. Paul DS. If they employed intelligent people in retail outlets, the stuff would be more expensive. Checkmate. I wouldn't mind working in technology retail but the money is ****. Rob. |
Heard in our local Sony outlet...
On Jan 6, 12:53*pm, brushhead
wrote: If they employed intelligent people in retail outlets, the stuff would be more expensive. *Checkmate. *I wouldn't mind working in technology retail but the money is ****. Rob. Of course there are exceptions. My daughter was a salesgirl at several retail electrical shops before she became a solicitor. She was keenly aware of her ignorance about many of the things she was employed to sell, but took steps to learn what she needed to know. According to her the problem is a lack of training, not intelligence. After all, if you're intelligent enough to dress yourself in the morning and find your way to work you are intelligent enough to understand the basic facts about consumer electronics. Bill |
Heard in our local Sony outlet...
Ah, the old dodge when the staff have no idea where the remote went to
earlier in the day. Brian -- Brian Gaff - Note:- In order to reduce spam, any email without 'Brian Gaff' in the display name may be lost. Blind user, so no pictures please! "Paul D.Smith" wrote in message ... ...an assistant explaining that the picture on their Freeview TVs was not as good as it would appear at home because the aerial is fed from an amplifier and splitter so the picture quality is poorer. Of course there was no sign of any digital problems, just an apparently poorly set up TV with very red faces on the screen. Paul DS. |
Heard in our local Sony outlet...
Brian Gaff wrote:
Yup, I remember a person in a queue I was in talking to someone saying as it was then, Dixons wanted to send them on a course about new stock, and yet they were not going to up the money, so he was not going. I do wonder sometimes whether the people running retail are fit for purpose themselves! Brian To be fair Brian you could argue that one either way. You have to continually train in order to keep up with development, and the guys suitability to be employed selling consumer tech you have to question. I used to be a Software Developer and you had to train continually just to tread water....same applies. Rob. |
Heard in our local Sony outlet...
"Brian Gaff" wrote in message
m... Ah, the old dodge when the staff have no idea where the remote went to earlier in the day. Brian Given my experiences of remote clashes even with hardware from different manufacturers, trying to set up any single set in a multi-set shop must be amusing. Can't help thinking the entire shop has to watch whatever channel the boss likes because trying to change one set causes lots of them to change channel! Paul DS |
Heard in our local Sony outlet...
"Paul D.Smith" wrote in message ... ...an assistant explaining that the picture on their Freeview TVs was not as good as it would appear at home because the aerial is fed from an amplifier and splitter so the picture quality is poorer. Of course there was no sign of any digital problems, just an apparently poorly set up TV with very red faces on the screen. Paul DS. Might be true if they took and analogue feed off a digital receiver... |
Heard in our local Sony outlet...
wrote in message
... On Wed, 6 Jan 2010 16:35:48 -0000, "Paul D.Smith" wrote: "Brian Gaff" wrote in message . com... Ah, the old dodge when the staff have no idea where the remote went to earlier in the day. Brian Given my experiences of remote clashes even with hardware from different manufacturers, trying to set up any single set in a multi-set shop must be amusing. Can't help thinking the entire shop has to watch whatever channel the boss likes because trying to change one set causes lots of them to change channel! Paul DS Changing the channels or colour settings with a remote aimed through the door of Rumbelows where a mate had a Saturday Job used to be fun,especially when he was demonstrating a set. G.harman Back in the days of Astra 1, the local TV shop had terrible trouble with TVs in the window tuned to say Sky News, in the middle of the night ended up on Sat1 with the volume up. Tutti-frutti and other adult entertainment being the order of the day ;-) Steve Terry -- Get a free Three 3pay Sim with £2 bonus after £10 top up http://freeagent.three.co.uk/stand/view/id/5276 |
Heard in our local Sony outlet...
It worked a treat outside Radio Rentals in the days when most of their
sets were variations of the Ferguson / Thorn type. The shop was right by the traffic lights and a carefully aimed remote from the car before pulling away from the lights was all that was needed. All volumes up at the same time etc. |
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