Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by burnt-resistor 316 days ago
Wired sold-out to Condé Nast long ago. They're the tired ones.

This sounds like something Louis Rossmann should cover as a counter-example of mfgrs trying to do the right thing but fickle, corporate reviewers behaving in a petty, unfair manner.

3 comments

The reviewer bought the product and received a broken unit. Why is it unfair to write about their actual experience with the product? Sure, warranty exists but none of the other products being tested needed a warranty cycle.

AirGradient (and several commenters here) feels like they're trying to spin their own QC problems as an indictment of modern journalism.

What have we learned about AirGradient improving their product in response to the review?

That they "immediately sent replacement parts and a new unit, including repair instructions, as repairability is one of our core differentiators".

That's good, I genuinely respect that. But are there going to be improvements in QC protocol? Consideration of a bigger display? Apparently not, or at least there's no mention of this.

Instead they launch into a distracting and unproductive discussion about reviews in general, missing the entire point of the review's critiques and an opportunity to make a better product, or at least to clarify why they don't see a need for better QC, or don't think a bigger display would be a good idea.

> AirGradient (and several commenters here) feels like they're trying to spin their own QC problems as an indictment of modern journalism.

That's my take as well. I have seen several reviews where there were issues with the unit received where the unit was replaced and an update was made to the review. It's not like this is the only situation to have ever happened. A manufacture complaining about someone else complaining about a valid problem with what they received is just petty. Man up, admit there were problems, accept the loss in revenue by sending out replacement units. You screwed up the product during manufacturing/design/wherever, own it. Once you do that, stop whining about people correctly calling out defects in the units even if you did fix it. Until you recall/replace every defective unit (not just the ones with owners making noise about it), you have no standing to be upset someone making valid points about the defects.

This is what you could call a learning opportunity. Instead, they come across as petulant and whiny. Just take your medicine and grow and learn to not make the same mistake on future products

Agree.

I actually tried to reach out to Louis Rossmann a few times but haven’t got a response (yet).

I think what’s most interesting is that we figured out a business model based on open source hardware that’s sustainable. Thus a win-win for the manufacturer and the customer.

Repairability was actually a feature we design into the product from the start.

Oh you totally need to send him a diy kit to assemble for a video!
I think people are missing the fact that Wired has been about “vibes” since the beginning.

Wired vs. tired is literally about what’s “cool.” That’s it. It has never been rigorous about anything.

Yeah, and video games were just a way to distract kids for a few hours so parents could watch tv or read a book without being bothered.

It's become something else, Wired has a brand name and a reputation, so when they pooh-pooh something that has more weight that if you or I do.