This is why I’ll never shop at OfficeMax again—even if everything is free

I’ve often remarked to anyone who would listen that robots are becoming more like humans, and humans are becoming more like robots.

When it comes to the latter, nowhere is that more true than in my recent dealings with cashiers, managers, and so-called “customer service” agents at the merged office-supply powerhouse of Office Depot and OfficeMax.

“I do apologize” or words to that effect was the robotic mantra I received literally dozens of times when speaking to company employees on the phone, and in person, about OfficeMax’s absolutely asinine corporate return policy, and the company’s inability to actually carry out that asinine corporate return policy.

I am writing this as my first step toward recovering from an ordeal that started with the simple task of purchasing a router—a common chore that most of us have done, or will do, in the future. And I confess, however, that I lacked the willpower to refrain from being a jerk to every OfficeMax employee I dealt with. I plead guilty. I literally could not help myself. But I had my reasons.

Mesh Wi-Fi

I am running an old Airport Extreme router from Apple, and I didn’t want to be left out of the new consumer mesh Wi-Fi frenzy that everybody, including Ars, is talking about. I suspected my Airport Extreme was failing, as the signal at my California East Bay residence was intermittently turning my normal connection of 500 Mbps down and 20 Mbps up into a crawl.

After reading several reviews, including one here at Ars, I chose the Velop Whole-Home Mesh Wi-Fi product from Linksys. The single unit was advertised everywhere for $199.99. But OfficeMax had it for $179.99.

The first sign that I should have avoided OfficeMax was the online checkout page. The $179.99 advertised price, when clicking to buy, turned into $199.99.  As I was scratching my head about how bogus this was, up popped the site’s chatbot. Either a robot or a human robot gave me their name and typed, “It will be my pleasure to assist you today.”

from Ars Technica http://ift.tt/2yu5AEY
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