Friday, July 29, 2011
Yelp, Rental Cars, and Breakfast - The Import of First Impressions
So, what do Yelp, Rental Cars, and Breakfast have in common?
Well, let me start with a tale of travel.
Shortly before my business trip, I was made aware that I needed to be in a different city...different enough that I needed to change my flights, hotel, etc. There is confusion on the part of the American Airlines, and I end up having to take care of it in person at the airport. I have maybe 50 minutes until my desired flight leaves when I get to the desk...no pressure. :P
The person at the airport has never done this. She doesn't reveal that until we are 15 minutes into her unsuccessfully working on it. I reach down and muster up more patience, smile, and roll with the punches, knowing that getting upset will only delay things further.
Eventually, my tickets get sorted and I mange to buy a quickie "to go" breakfast from the restaurant near my gate, where they are already boarding, and squeeze onto the plane on time. The flight is crowded as is often the case nowadays, and I arrive at my destination sore from the contortions of sitting in coach class, but that is normal.
I spot the National rental car shuttle and race up to it, only to find it is full. Fortunately, the next one is not, and I get to the lot. They drop me off in the Emerald Aisle (a free membership that gets you into a car faster), and I am surprised to see that instead of a selection of cars for me to hop in and drive off (just like the commercials), I see a cluster of fellow travelers.
You see, normally, the Emerald Aisle means you get dropped off by a wide variety of cars that you can hop into, drive to the gate, and be on your way in less than 5 minutes. Not today.
So...we wait. There is quite a lot of confusion about who is next...and rain is starting to fall. Did I mention we were not under a cover?
Finally, a car is pulled up for me. I open the trunk to put my bags in and find it is covered in sand and debris. After a short while, another car is brought out. It's not very clean, it's small, and it's a little worse for the wear, but hey, at least it's a Ford with Sync, so I can hook up my music player via USB and rock my way across Connecticut (why does rocking my way across CT sound like cognitive dissonance?).
Did this impact my desire to use American or National? Not one bit. I have had consistently good experiences with them for years. This was absolutely an outlier. And frankly, most of the issues with American started with last minute changes prompted by business requirements. These experiences would need to be repeated before I would question the choice.
And yet, I don't treat restaurants the same way when it comes to Yelp.
I generally won't write off a restaurant from a single visit unless it is a very bad experience. People have good and bad days, and sometimes a bad experience at a restaurant can come down to a single person, whether that be the cook, server, manager, bartender, host, etc.
However, there are many times I will only visit a restaurant once, e.g., when I travel. In such a case, I have to decide if some data is better than no data. Now, as a former scientist, I would prefer a good set of data, but then I remind myself that I am but one data point in a sea of data points and most of those other data points are based on a single experience. So...it should all work out in the end. A generally good restaurant gets better reviews on average and a generally bad restaurant gets worse reviews on average.
For example, while traveling in CT for work, I ventured out to a highly rate place called O'Rourke's Diner for breakfast this week. After a gauntlet of mediocre restaurants, I did not have my hopes very high. The place blew me away. It was awesome and surprisingly Irish. Sure, maybe *you* expected a diner with an Irish name to have Irish food, but I merely expect a diner to have eggs, bacon, and mundane choices of toast. It was really cool to experience what I will call an Irish diner, for want of a better label.
I wish they would build one where I live. If I ever travel in the area again, I will absolutely make an effort to go back. So I gave it five stars! Was it an unusually good day for them? I don't know, but I doubt it. I ended up there because of high ratings and, unlike the other highly-rated places I visited over those few days in CT, this place actually deserved it.
Seriously, if you get anywhere near Middletown, CT, give this place a try. Now, back to the discussion.
Basically, I err on the side of contributing to more data. That means that there is a greater importance placed on the meals I eat when traveling.
It just reinforces the conventional wisdom that first impressions are important. They bias your future experiences.
My experiences with National's Emerald Aisle had been wonderful until this week; that makes me more forgiving of occasional lapses. My experience with American Airlines has also been good. Well, that's relative; being crowded into coach class in a 90%+ full airplane is hard to describe as good...maybe "sucks the least" is a better choice of words. Again, with them I am now forgiving of occasional lapses.
And as for places like O'Rourke's, well, they are off to a great start and if my next visit was not as good, I would be more likely to give them another shot or two before considering adjusting my Yelp rating for them.
So, to all of those businesses where I will be a one-time customer, please do your best to be consistent. Then the first impression will be accurate and the ratings will always be fair. :)
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Deus Ex, Morality, and Choice - Would You Upgrade?
Deus Ex:Human Revolution releases in about one month and as I type a friend is callously enjoying a Deus Ex gathering at Comic-Con with out me. But that is not the point of this post.
I read William Gibson's cyberpunk novels and I have spent many hours running Shadowrun (I gave you the wikipedia entry because it seems that every time I check up on the product line, another company has bought the license).
In all of that time, I never could settle on an answer to one simple question - if I could, would I get cyberware (or human augmentation, as some say)?
Sure, the extreme example is the street samurai. Wired to the gills and so augmented that one starts to ask how human they are. Or perhaps that's just a "glass half full" vs. "glass half empty" point of view, depending upon whether you favor humanity or ass-kicking technology.
The makers of Deus Ex have done some wonderful marketing. They have created a website for the fictitious Sarif Industries, as well as producing two great videos, one promoting Sarif Industry augmentations and another video refuting the benefits of such augmentations. You can find these videos and more on the Eidos Montreal YouTube channel.
They are great videos, I recommend you check them out.
As fantastic as these implants may seem, I think our current technology already gives us some insight into the challenges and limitations. We are all painfully aware of how vulnerable technology is to being compromised.
Hacking is annoying enough. Do you really want to get to a point where someone can hack your mind or body? Implants will almost certainly include wireless access to facilitate firmware updates or even simple tweaks and repairs.
I think that would be too much for me, but then again I viewed cell phones very differently when they were just beginning to become commonplace. A silly luxury, a risky dependence on a wireless network, you name it. And yet here I am, with the latest iPhone in my pocket.
Which is to say, maybe I am naive. Maybe I will protest and resist, but eventually succumb to the lure of the benefits...assuming we come anywhere close to what our science fiction fantasies have created. The only thing I know for sure is that the impact will be profound.
So, would *you* upgrade?
I read William Gibson's cyberpunk novels and I have spent many hours running Shadowrun (I gave you the wikipedia entry because it seems that every time I check up on the product line, another company has bought the license).
In all of that time, I never could settle on an answer to one simple question - if I could, would I get cyberware (or human augmentation, as some say)?
Sure, the extreme example is the street samurai. Wired to the gills and so augmented that one starts to ask how human they are. Or perhaps that's just a "glass half full" vs. "glass half empty" point of view, depending upon whether you favor humanity or ass-kicking technology.
The makers of Deus Ex have done some wonderful marketing. They have created a website for the fictitious Sarif Industries, as well as producing two great videos, one promoting Sarif Industry augmentations and another video refuting the benefits of such augmentations. You can find these videos and more on the Eidos Montreal YouTube channel.
They are great videos, I recommend you check them out.
As fantastic as these implants may seem, I think our current technology already gives us some insight into the challenges and limitations. We are all painfully aware of how vulnerable technology is to being compromised.
Hacking is annoying enough. Do you really want to get to a point where someone can hack your mind or body? Implants will almost certainly include wireless access to facilitate firmware updates or even simple tweaks and repairs.
I think that would be too much for me, but then again I viewed cell phones very differently when they were just beginning to become commonplace. A silly luxury, a risky dependence on a wireless network, you name it. And yet here I am, with the latest iPhone in my pocket.
Which is to say, maybe I am naive. Maybe I will protest and resist, but eventually succumb to the lure of the benefits...assuming we come anywhere close to what our science fiction fantasies have created. The only thing I know for sure is that the impact will be profound.
So, would *you* upgrade?
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