| Or at the Apple store! omg, the number of times I've walked in, gone directly to a sales person to request that they kindly go to the back room and retrieve a specific item for me so that I can give them money and been stalled, interrogated, and counter advised on other products when really I already know what I want and just want them to get it for me. me: "Hi, I'd like to buy a White 13" Macbook with a 500gb HD and 8gb of RAM. Could you please get one for me?" sales person: "What are you using it for? Do you browse the internet? look at photos? do a lot of word processing?" me: confused "um, I do web development and use Photoshop sometimes..." sales person: "Oh well you need a Macbook Pro then." me: "no, I can't afford that and the regular Macbook is plenty powerful for what I need. Can I just buy one please?" sales person: "Photoshop won't run well on the regular Macbook. What you really want it the Macbook Pro. You'll need at least 16gb of RAM and if you're editing photos you'll want a bigger harddrive, not to mention the extra power that comes from the Pro's CPU." me: "um, I have money in my hand right here that I will give you in exchange for a regular Macbook. Can you please go get one and take my money?" |
You present identically to the kind of person who is completely non-technical and was mis-advised by a friend of theirs, and who will come back in a week complaining about how Photoshop doesn't run well enough and their hard drive is full.
Apple has decided that they want to ensure that you are happy with your purchase, and part of that process involves the salesperson being convinced that you are buying the right thing.