snathanb said:A class action would result in:
1) 1 lawyer getting richer
2) you getting a few pay per view coupons
3) the 811 not getting fixed any faster.
Get real.
Nicu said:"Then I'll start asking questions of the tech I've been conversing with via email again"
And then the tech will tell you to wait 3 more weeks and so on ad infinitum. A class action suit can be won in this case - the 811 is definitely a piece of crap.
N
Dominic said:I believe it's now time for all members of this forum and all owners of 811's to take action. I'm getting tried of time after time corporations like Dish network lying to customers with no accountability. If a customer failed to pay for their subscription dish network would have the legal dogs on them in a heart beat.
If a person can sue McDonalds because coffee is hot and win, I’m sure we have a chance. Also anybody out there work for the media, I’ve heard the pen is mightier then the sword.
WeeJavaDude said:WOW new record on call for Class action suite!!!
If you are trumpeting the masses to a war, you might want to have your facts straight. The McDonalds hot coffee lawsuit was overturned... Yes there is justice.. and if you are liking an 811 class action lawsuit to the moron that tried to sue McDonalds for spilling coffee, you can count me out.
The dark svideo was known from day one.
HOW IS SERVEING SUPER HOT COFFEE GONNA SAVE MCDONALDS MONEY? :shockedkeith said:If you really care to learn about the McDonalds "coffee" lawsuit, here you go:
McDonalds lawsuit
McDonalds deliberately served super hot coffee to save money, and knew it would cause bodily injury. The victim received third degree burns over 6% of her body, was in hospital for 8 days, had skin grafts and is permanently scarred. Those are the straight facts.
Let's see if I have this straight about the 811. All buyers should have known that the s-video output is defective, so they are the fools for buying the 811? It's true that nobody is going to need skin grafts after buying the 811, and I won't be part of any class action lawyer enrichment program, but to say that ALL 811 buyers are or should be aware of ALL product defects, is ludicrous to say the least. The original 811 deals were offered to all new customers, the vast majority of which do not sit behind a computer screen looking for Dish forums. How exactly were these customers supposed to know about the 811 defects? Did Dish disclose them? NO.
When you buy an 811, it should be functional to meet the intended purpose. A High Definition receiver with mediocre quality images does not meet the minimum standards for the product category. If the published specifications say that the product has a 48 hour program guide, the product should have a 48 hour program guide (a "feature" that was originally only 2 hours and is now only partially fixed. Don't watch OTA for a while and then go to the guide).
I have been waiting for Dish to fix these "obvious" defects. But for the majority of buyers the defects are obvious only AFTER they purchase the 811. Had my 811 since December, and did NOT expect garbage dark images from a new HD receiver. Guess I am too stupid to have known better.
Keith.
juan said:HOW IS SERVEING SUPER HOT COFFEE GONNA SAVE MCDONALDS MONEY? :shocked
GaryPen said:Did you read the following article? http://asktog.com/columns/059QualityAssurance.html
keith said:The motion is seconded. All in favor...
Just make sure you have your dark video complaints logged with Dish. This might get you some recourse when Dish finally admit the 811 can not be fixed with a software update. End of April is my timeline to give up on the 811 and make some waves.[/B]
Keith.
keith said:If you really care to learn about the McDonalds "coffee" lawsuit, here you go:
McDonalds lawsuit
McDonalds deliberately served super hot coffee to save money, and knew it would cause bodily injury. The victim received third degree burns over 6% of her body, was in hospital for 8 days, had skin grafts and is permanently scarred. Those are the straight facts.
Let's see if I have this straight about the 811. All buyers should have known that the s-video output is defective, so they are the fools for buying the 811? It's true that nobody is going to need skin grafts after buying the 811, and I won't be part of any class action lawyer enrichment program, but to say that ALL 811 buyers are or should be aware of ALL product defects, is ludicrous to say the least. The original 811 deals were offered to all new customers, the vast majority of which do not sit behind a computer screen looking for Dish forums. How exactly were these customers supposed to know about the 811 defects? Did Dish disclose them? NO.
When you buy an 811, it should be functional to meet the intended purpose. A High Definition receiver with mediocre quality images does not meet the minimum standards for the product category. If the published specifications say that the product has a 48 hour program guide, the product should have a 48 hour program guide (a "feature" that was originally only 2 hours and is now only partially fixed. Don't watch OTA for a while and then go to the guide).
I have been waiting for Dish to fix these "obvious" defects. But for the majority of buyers the defects are obvious only AFTER they purchase the 811. Had my 811 since December, and did NOT expect garbage dark images from a new HD receiver. Guess I am too stupid to have known better.
Keith.
WeeJavaDude said:...Just that if one would have done a little homework they would have seen this as a potention problem and could have weighed it in their decision.
You are partially correct. LG makes the current Hughes, Sony, and LG branded DirecTV HD receivers. The current SD Tivo box, branded Hughes, RCA, Philips, and possibly others, are all made by one company, as well. (I'm not sure which.)Dominic said:"There are at least three or four manufactures that make HD receivers that work with the DirecTV system: Mitsubishi, Sony, Toshiba, RCA, Philips and other that are one of these re-badged. ie. Samsung is really Sony, Mits is really Hughes.
.
keith said:NO more excuses for serious Dish product bugs, please. Put the heat on Dish and demand they fix their products. Stop blaming consumers for buying products that they expect to work as advertised.
Keith.
keith said:We are a very thin slice of the consumer pie and it is incredibly arrogant to assume that users need to research Dish product bugs before they buy them. This is totally backwards.
keith said:When buying a product that is sold with a feature set, the consumer has expectations that the product is not fraudulent. This has NOTHING to do with doing homework. Either the product meets the published specification or it doesn't. We are not talking about minutae here. Ridiculously dark images and losing the guide when switching from extended OTA back to Dish (often needing a reset to fix the guide - just reset my 811 about 1 hour ago for this exact bug) are serious bugs, plus many more.
keith said:I can just imagine my mother with the 811. Watches local news on OTA for a couple of hours, then switches to Lifetime to watch The Nanny and the picture goes black. Turning the 811 on and off does nothing, still black picture. Doesn't know how to reset the 811, and wouldn't accept having to reset the box every day anyway. The huge majority of folks that have flashing 12:00am on their VCR's will be totally screwed with the 811. NO more excuses for serious Dish product bugs, please. Put the heat on Dish and demand they fix their products. Stop blaming consumers for buying products that they expect to work as advertised.
Keith.
WeeJavaDude said:Since this is heating up.. time to bail and I am also anxiously awaiting an update. Either my threshold is customer higher than yours or I am running into less issues or a combination. Either way.. This is loosing it productivity and value.
long_time_DNC said:I too fail to understand why a discussion has to degenerate into an argument. The simple point is, as consumers, we make choices. We can complain, or not. We can switch, or not. We can be patient, or not.
I've made my choices and I too will not argue about something like coffee or whether or not something should work 100% of the time out of the box. I have a limited amount of time to spend reading here and won't spend it arguing either.
Constructive, interesting discussion is much more useful than arguing (one man's opinion).
Joe