| ▲ | ivraatiems 4 hours ago |
| > Does any CEO actually use their own company's products? ...yes? Quite often? I'm all for ragging on CEOs but this seems misguided. The CEO has been a user of the core product at every company I've ever worked for. If you think Tim Cook is pulling a Samsung Galaxy out of his pocket, I don't know what to tell you. |
|
| ▲ | curtisblaine 26 minutes ago | parent | next [-] |
| > If you think Tim Cook is pulling a Samsung Galaxy out of his pocket, I don't know what to tell you. He should. He should literally be using competitors for real work, at least half of the time, deep in their ecosystem, to understand where Apple products need to improve. |
|
| ▲ | wormius 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] |
| What's funny is I was doing online shopping from a national chain and got so frustrated by the UX that I gave up. I thought : If only the CEO would dogfood this instead of farming it out to their lackeys/gofers/personal assistants, etc... Instead these poor people deal with stuff like that (if they're doing online shit). "Privatize the profit, socialize the (pain in the ass enshittification, or whatever)." |
| |
| ▲ | pear01 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | Is this some parody of bad social critique? You know not every trope applies in all cases, right? A greedy CEO not using his own product doesn't readily apply the higher in the value chain you get. You replied to a comment mentioning how it's obviously silly to think Tim Cook uses a Samsung Galaxy. Yet it seems like maybe you missed the point... or do you also think decision makers at Apple are using Samsung Galaxy or Google Pixel phones? Or Windows surfaces or Dell laptops instead of MacBooks? Or maybe there is some designer bespoke OS or Ferrari level brand equivalent you are privy to that I'm missing? Or is your theory that he is so wealthy his use of personal butlers and subordinates ensures he never does any computing himself? He never sends a text or gets a personal phone call, or if he does some man-servant picks it up so he doesn't have to deal with the iOS interface that has been clearly designed for "poor people"? Then the ending comment that again can't seem to distinguish a generalized slogan re a broad social grievance with a specific claim or discussion. And the sense of personal victimization. Because something is annoying you, well clearly you are being taken advantage of. You didn't even contribute anything pertinent to the discussion except to complain about a wholly unrelated UX experience, only to limply tie it together by doing nothing more than conclude that obviously both CEOs are richer than you are. |
|