Hp and Microsoft are two sides of the same shit coin.
Do a lot of tech support for older retired professionals. I believe 90% of hps business are these people. They used their products when they were working and believe they are still a reliable product.
Between the ink subscriptions and the absolute nightmare of that fucking app have had 7 hp printers stop working since January exclusively because of software.
There was an article on here a while ago showing the sticker that hp put over the usb port in an effort to get you to register the product and use their app. It’s literally a sticker covering the port direct from the manufacturer. Saw one in real life last month and was still dumbfounded.
Everyone wants you on the subscription tit it seems.
And they can’t even dig that tit from their shirt properly.
They can deliver managed enterprise printers quickly, but getting necessary onboarding info requires kidnapping a product manager and removing few fingers…
I was and still more or less am a fan of HP for their business-class products. I’ve strayed away for my current gen of personal machines only because of budget, but their tablet PCs were absolutely awesome with Linux.
I got into an accident with my bicycle, the tablet chipped a corner of its magnesium case, but the screen and internals were a-ok even though I broke my shoulder.
They used their products when they were working and believe they are still a reliable product.
There are almost no products that stay good forever. They make great products for a while, develop a stellar reputation, get bought out by a greedy corporation, then the new owner exploits that reputation for short term profits.
Hp and Microsoft are two sides of the same shit coin.
Do a lot of tech support for older retired professionals. I believe 90% of hps business are these people. They used their products when they were working and believe they are still a reliable product.
Between the ink subscriptions and the absolute nightmare of that fucking app have had 7 hp printers stop working since January exclusively because of software.
There was an article on here a while ago showing the sticker that hp put over the usb port in an effort to get you to register the product and use their app. It’s literally a sticker covering the port direct from the manufacturer. Saw one in real life last month and was still dumbfounded.
Everyone wants you on the subscription tit it seems.
And they can’t even dig that tit from their shirt properly. They can deliver managed enterprise printers quickly, but getting necessary onboarding info requires kidnapping a product manager and removing few fingers…
Was HP ever a reliable product?
I was and still more or less am a fan of HP for their business-class products. I’ve strayed away for my current gen of personal machines only because of budget, but their tablet PCs were absolutely awesome with Linux.
I got into an accident with my bicycle, the tablet chipped a corner of its magnesium case, but the screen and internals were a-ok even though I broke my shoulder.
There are almost no products that stay good forever. They make great products for a while, develop a stellar reputation, get bought out by a greedy corporation, then the new owner exploits that reputation for short term profits.